Discovery of 'superhighways' suggests early Mayan civilization was more advanced than previously tho
Discovery of superhighways suggests early Mayan civilization was more advanced than previously thought
By Taylor Nicioli, CNN
With the thick vegetation of the northern Guatemala rainforests hiding its 2,000-year-old remnants, the full extent of the early Mayan way of life was once impossible to see. But laser technology has helped researchers discover a previously unknown 650-square-mile (1,683-square-kilometer) Maya site that offers startling new insights about ancient Mesoamericans and their civilization.
The researchers detected the vast site within the Mirador-Calakmul Karst Basin of northern Guatemala by using LiDAR (light detection and ranging) technology, a laser mapping system that allows for structures to be detected below the thick tree canopies. The resulting map showed an area composed of 964 settlements broken down into 417 interconnected Mayan cities, towns and villages.
A 110-mile (177-kilometer) network of raised stone trails, or causeways, that linked the communities reveals that the early civilization was home to an even more complex society than previously thought, according to a recent analysis on the architecture groupings, published in the journal Ancient Mesoamerica.
Theyre the worlds first superhighway system that we have, said lead study author Richard Hansen, a professor of anthropology at Idaho State University. Whats amazing about (the causeways) is that they unite all these cities together like a spiderweb
which forms one of the earliest and first state societies in the Western Hemisphere.
More:
https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/16/world/maya-civilization-causeways-lidar-discovery-scn