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22 Nov 2009

The Rise and Fall of the Mayan Empire

- 6 Jan 2001
By Patrick L Barry   
Page 3 of 3

Sever and co-worker Dan Irwin have been looking at satellite photos and, in them, Sever spotted signs of ancient drainage and irrigation canals in swamp-like areas near the Mayan ruins. Today's residents make little use of these low-lying swamps (which they call "bajos," the Spanish word for "lowlands"), and archeologists had long assumed that the Maya hadn't used them either. During the rainy season from June to December, the bajos are too muddy, and in the dry season they're parched. Neither condition is good for farming.

Sever suspects that these ancient canals were part of a system devised by the Maya to manage water in the bajos so that they could farm this land. The bajos make up 40% of the landscape; tapping into this vast land area for agriculture would have given the Maya a much larger and more stable food supply. They could have farmed the highlands during the wet season and the low-lying bajos during the dry season. And they could have farmed the bajos year after year, instead of slashing and burning new sections of rain forest.

image
Image courtesy NASA/MSFC

IKONOS satellite image revealing linear features that may have been Mayan irrigation canals

Could today's Petén farmers take a lesson from the Maya and sow their seeds in the bajos?

It's an intriguing idea. Sever and his colleagues are exploring that possibility with the Guatemalan Ministry of Agriculture. They're working with Pat Culbert of the University of Arizona and Vilma Fialko of Guatemala's Instituto de Antropología e Historia to identify areas in the bajos with suitable soil. And they're considering planting test crops of corn in those areas, with irrigation and drainage canals inspired by the Maya.

A message from 900 A.D.: it's never too late to learn from your ancestors.

For more information

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Beyond the beautiful Mexican scenery lie the clues to the horrific killings that occurred during the Aztec rule over 700 years ago. The deformed skull of a child was found near an Aztec temple at Mixquic, a suburb of Mexico City. Aztec specialist Dr Elizabeth Baquedano investigates who he was and how he might have died.

 
Have your say
 
Why can't the DNA of Mayan people be tracked to their origins or the region they came from?
Posted by: fawcett1999 - 2009-05-20 - 09:40 GMT

There should be some more info on intellectual status on here.
Posted by: guest - 2009-03-12 - 09:32 GMT

Oh cool but did they have diseases?
Posted by: guest - 2009-01-30 - 17:51 GMT

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