Sabtu, 24 September 2011

Maya Royal Tombs Found With Rare Woman Ruler

Photograph courtesy Wiesław Koszkul, Nakum Archaeological Project

A woman ruler's skeleton—her head mysteriously placed between 2 bowls—is one in all 2 royal burials recently found at the Maya ruins of Nakum in Guatemala.

The roughly a pair of,000-year-old tomb was found beneath another, 1,300-year-old tomb stuffed with treasures like jade gorgets—normally used to safeguard the throat—beads, and ceremonial knives.

The higher tomb's corpse had been badly destroyed by rodents inside the previous few centuries, however the body was clearly that of another Maya ruler—perhaps another feminine, primarily based on the little size of a hoop found in that tomb.

The royal burials are the primary discovered in Nakum, once a densely packed Maya center. Study co-author Wiesław Koszkul and colleagues are investigating Nakum's surroundings, called the Cultural Triangle, for many years. (Explore an interactive map of key Maya sites.)

"We assume this structure was one thing sort of a mausoleum for the royal lineage for a minimum of four hundred years," said Koszkul, of the Jagiellonian University Institute of Archaeology in Krakow, Poland.

The Maya royal-tomb discoveries are described within the September issue of the journal Antiquity.

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