The Arizona Republic

Archaeolog­ists find new tunnel in Mexican ruins

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MEXICO CITY - Archaeolog­ists at Mexico’s Teotihuaca­n ruins have found evidence that the city’s builders dug a tunnel beneath the Pyramid of the Moon and researcher­s said one of its purposes may have been to emulate the underworld.

The National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History said researcher­s used a kind of computeriz­ed tomography scan to discover the apparent tunnel about 30 feet (10 meters) below the surface of the plaza in front of the pyramid.

The CT scan suggests the tunnel may have been filled in antiquity. Other tunnels have been discovered at Teotihuaca­n, and one at Temple of the Plumed Serpent has been explored.

Experts say the tunnels may be associated with sacred flows of water and the underworld.

“The discovery would confirm that the inhabitant­s of Teotihuaca­n followed the same pattern in their large-scale temples, and that their function would be to emulate the underworld,” said INAH archaeolog­ist Veronica Ortega.

More studies are needed to determine whether the apparent tunnel should eventually be excavated.

The ruins north of Mexico City remain shrouded in mystery.

Teotihuaca­n had its apex between 100 B.C. and A.D. 750, with about 100,000 residents. But it was abandoned before the rise of the Aztecs in the 14th century.

The 340-foot (103-meter) tunnel found under the Temple of the Plumed Serpent early in this century yielded relics from ranging from seeds to pottery to animal bones.

Researcher­s have still to find the tombs of the city’s elite that they had hoped might be in the tunnel.

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 ?? AP ?? Tourists walk down the Pyramid of the Moon in the ancient city of Teotihuaca­n, Mexico.
AP Tourists walk down the Pyramid of the Moon in the ancient city of Teotihuaca­n, Mexico.

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