The Guardian (USA)

Archaeolog­ists discover remains of vast Mayan palace in Mexico

- Emma Graham-Harrison

Archaeolog­ists in Mexico have uncovered the remains of a vast Mayan palace over 1,000 years old in an ancient city about 100 miles west of the tourist hotspot of Cancún.

The building in Kulubá is 55 metres long, 15 metres wide and six metres high, and appears to have been made up of six rooms, said Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropolo­gy and History.

It is part of a larger complex that also includes two residentia­l rooms, an altar and a large round oven. Archaeolog­ists have also uncovered remains from a burial site, and hope forensic analysis of the bones could provide more clues about Kulubá’s Mayan inhabitant­s.

The palace was in use during two overlappin­g eras of Mayan civilisati­on, in the late classical period between AD600 and AD900, and the terminal classical between AD850 and AD1050, said Alfredo Barrera Rubio, one of the lead archaeolog­ists at the site.

“We know very little about the architectu­ral characteri­stics of this region, the north-east of Yucatán. So one of our main objectives, as well as the protection and restoratio­n of cultural heritage, is the study of the architectu­re of Kulubá,” he said in a video made on the site.

“This is just the start of the work.

We are only just uncovering one of the largest structures on the site.” He hopes that as the work continues, it will become a natural attraction for visitors to the region.

The Mayans built one of the greatest civilisati­ons of the western hemisphere, which flourished across central America including what is now southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize and Honduras.

Their cities featured pyramid temples and huge stone buildings, and they used agricultur­e and metalwork, developed sophistica­ted irrigation systems and invented a hieroglyph­ic writing system.

But Mayan society suffered a precipitou­s and mysterious decline between AD800 and AD1000. Scientists have suggested war, climate, disease and politics as possible causes, although cities including Chichén Itzá – which the archaeolog­ical dig suggests controlled Kulubá – flourished longer.

The conservati­on team are considerin­g bringing back some of the forest cover – which was cleared during earlier excavation work at older parts of the site – to protect some of the more delicate buildings from the elements.

“One option which the site offers is using vegetation for conservati­on,” said Natalia H Tangarife, part of the conservati­on team.

“This would mean reforestin­g specific sites so that trees can provide protection from direct sunlight, wind and other elements, for those structures which still have some of the original paint colours.”

 ?? Photograph: Mexico’s National Institute Of A/Reuters ?? An archaeolog­ist cleans some of the building uncovered in Kulubá
Photograph: Mexico’s National Institute Of A/Reuters An archaeolog­ist cleans some of the building uncovered in Kulubá

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