GT (ISO Country Code) (Geographic Keyword)
126-150 (199 Records)
Head of Burial 196 at excavation with an in situ diadem of jade disks, composite ear ornaments, necklace of long, carved beads, and scattered jade pebble beads. The reddish tinge is from cinnabar pigment.
Color Plate 23 (2008)
Long, four-sided bead of jade carved with a diving figure on each face, traces of cinnabar pigment, Burial 196.
Color Plate 24 (2008)
Carved jade pendant from Burial 77.
Color Plate 25 (2008)
Celt-shaped pendant from Cache 209.
Color Plate 26 (2008)
Serpentine mask with Spondylus shell inlays from Burial 85.
Color Plate 27 (2008)
Carved bowl of calcite (tecalli) from Burial 196.
Color Plate 28 (2008)
Minor sculpture of crouching figure of soft, dark green stone from Burial 167.
Color Plate 29 (2008)
Above, perforated peccary tusk and two bone tubes. Below, eight pendants cut from white marine shell, part of a necklace found with Burial 121.
Color Plate 3 (2008)
Incised obsidians.
Color Plate 30 (2008)
Carved pendant of Spondylus shell, one of a pair, and one of a pair of Spondylus shell bead bracelets with polished bone clasps, from Burial 167.
Color Plate 31 (2008)
Large unworked stingray spine with traces of red pigment. Two parts of a composite pendant of cut nacreous shell with a large, round pearl bead-pendant between them, from Burial 116.
Color Plate 32 (2008)
A display of ornaments from Burial 196, Tikal Museum, 1968. From the top, jade diadem, pair of smaller composite jade ear ornaments, carved jade bead with diving figures, multi-strand necklace of pearl bead-pendants, pair of larger jade and shell composite ear ornaments, pair of bracelets of collared cylindrical jade beads.
Color Plate 33 (2008)
Shell trumpet from Problematical Deposit 7, scallop shell perforated for suspension from Burial 10, and an unworked Spondylus shell from Burial 116.
Color Plate 34 (2008)
A display of jade ornaments and Spondylus shells found with Burial 116, Tikal Museum, 1964. Note the large shell set over the top of the skull, the worked valves arranged over and along the body, and the unworked shell near the right ankle. Jade ornaments shown are a diadem, composite ear ornaments, a necklace of long beads with square sections, a necklace of graduated large pebble beads, bracelets and anklets of long cylinder beads, and scattered pebble beads.
Color Plate 35 (2008)
The upper portion of a long, carved bone object from the set of inscribed and plain bones from Burial 116. It is heavily coated with red cinnabar pigment.
Color Plate 36 (2008)
A battered minor sculpture of the head of a deity carved of dolomite, from Group 5D-11, the Central Acropolis.
Color Plate 4 (2008)
A set of Class 8 incised obsidians.
Color Plate 5 (2008)
Head of a mosaic statuette from Cache 43.
Color Plate 6 (2008)
Head of a mosaic statuette from Cache 140A.
Color Plate 7 (2008)
Reconstructed mosaic statuette from Cache 197.
Color Plate 8 (2008)
One of a pair of mosaic earflares from Burial 10.
Color Plate 9 (2008)
Stone and Spondylus shell mosaic mask from Burial 160.
Cosmology, Calendars and Horizon-Based Astronomy in Ancient Mesoamerica (2015)
Cosmology, Calendars, and Horizon-Based Astronomy in Ancient Mesoamerica is an interdisciplinary tour de force that establishes the critical role astronomy played in the religious and civic lives of the ancient peoples of Mesoamerica. Providing extraordinary examples of how Precolumbian peoples merged ideas about the cosmos with those concerning calendar and astronomy, the volume showcases the value of detailed examinations of astronomical data for understanding ancient cultures. The volume...
Fashioning Meaning through Ceramic Candeleros in the Terminal Classic Naco Valley, Northwestern Honduras (2015)
Candeleros are simply made ceramic artifacts that consist of one or more cylindrical chambers that are usually circularly arranged and often show signs of burning. These objects are found widely across Mesoamerica though they are rare in most locales. The 100 km2 Naco Valley in northwestern Honduras diverges from this pattern in that: candeleros are frequently found in Terminal Classic (800-1000 CE) assemblages here; they vary in size from items containing a single chamber to others with upwards...
The Great Maya Droughts in Cultural Context: Case Studies in Residence and Vulnerability (2014)
In The Great Maya Droughts in Cultural Context, contributors reject the popularized link between societal collapse and drought in Maya civilization, arguing that a series of periodic "collapses," including the infamous Terminal Classic collapse (AD 750), were caused not solely by climate change-related droughts but by a combination of other social, political, and environmental factors. New and senior scholars of archaeology and environmental science explore the timing and intensity of droughts...