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Prehistory
of Chunchucmil
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corn fields and pasture lands of Chunchucmil are filled with rubble
mounds - the remains of house platforms and temples of the ancient
Maya. This region was once the site of one of the largest Maya cities.
An ongoing archaeological project as been mapping the site of Chunchucmil
for over five years, and has not yet been able to discover where the
city stops. Their map of the ancient settlement currently covers over
6.5 square kilometers, territory owned by at least five separate communities.
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| The
Chunchucmil region was first settled by around 300 BC but flourished
during the Early and Late Classic periods (AD 250-900). The site is
unique in its layout, as every home is found within large yards bounded
by boulders. This practice of marking yards with stone fences is common
in Yucatán today, but was not previously thought to extend back to
the Classic period. Even more fascinating, the mapping project has
found that the walls join to form small streets for foot traffic throughout
the city. |
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ancient inhabitants of Chunchucmil were very concerned about delimiting
their territory from their neighbors. This may have been because,
in addition to being one of the largest Maya sites, Chunchucmil was
once one of the most densely populated sites in the Maya area. It
is estimated that the urban core of Chunchucmil may cover 14 square
kilometers, and contain nearly 600 structures per square kilometer,
creating population estimates as high as 46,650 inhabitants for just
the urban core. |
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city likely thrived as a trade center. It was strategically located
at the edge of western resources (wetland products and salt pans),
and was likely tied into a vigorous maritime canoe trade route that
went right by Celestún bringing products in from central Mexico and
Guatemala. Archaeologists have found an extremely high number of knives
made from obsidian (volcanic glass) that came from areas as far away
as Mexico City. |
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so many people living next to each other, and a steady stream of foreign
traders, it is no wonder that the inhabitants of Chunchucmil were
so concerned with enclosing their yards and marking footpaths through
their neighborhoods. In the end, their fears may have been validated.
During their final days, the remaining inhabitants of Chunchucmil
must have known they were threatened, as they hastily built a defensive
wall around a small portion of downtown. It was constructed by ripping
stones away from houses and fences. This wall was never completed
on the city's western side, and may mark the city's demise at the
hands of an army that arrived too soon. |
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History of Chunchucmil
Geography and Ecology of Chunchucmil
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