Exploring Two Thousand Years of Human Habitation in the Belize Valley: Situating Cahal Pech in Lowland Maya Prehistory
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
The Belize Valley has traditionally been considered a peripheral region of the southern Maya lowlands. Twenty Eight years of research by the Belize Valley Archaeological Reconnaissance project at Cahal Pech have, however, demonstrated that the medium-sized polities of the Belize Valley actively participated in the socioeconomic and political processes that unfolded in the central Maya lowlands. Research in the Belize Valley has also provided critical information for understanding the rise of cultural complexity in the Middle Preclassic period, and the subsequent growth, fluorescence, and decline of Classic period Maya civilization in this sub-region of the Maya lowlands. Besides elucidating two thousand years (ca. 1100/1000 B.C.-AD1000) of prehistory at this major Belize Valley site, this session will also serve to demonstrate that Cahal Pech, and other Belize Valley sites, were important participants in the events occurring in the Maya world from the Middle Preclassic to the Terminal Classic periods. It is expected that participants of the session employ a broad range of methodologies (e.g., settlement patterns, architectural analysis, mortuary analysis, ceramic studies, and etcetera) to accomplish the purpose of the session.
Other Keywords
Maya •
Cahal Pech •
Maya archaeology •
Social Complexity •
figurines •
bioarchaeology •
Pottery •
Archaeology •
Households •
Climate Change
Geographic Keywords
Mesoamerica
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-10 of 10)
- Documents (10)
- Architectural Planning and Shared Political Traditions in the Belize River Valley (2016)
- Artifact Distributions, Interaction Networks, and Social Complexity: Middle Preclassic development at Cahal Pech from a small-world perspective (2016)
- Building a Typology: The Formative Period Figurine Assemblage from Cahal Pech, Cayo, Belize (2016)
- Cahal Pech Mortuary Practices in Regional Perspective (2016)
- Climate, Chronology, and Collapse: Comparing the Classic Maya and the Roman Empire (2016)
- The Early Ceramic History of Cahal Pech: Implications for Local Identity and for the Rise of Regionalism in the Maya Lowlands (2016)
- Paths towards Complexity in the Maya Lowlands: Implications of Architectural Change at Cahal Pech (2016)
- Paying Homage to the Ancestors: The (Preclassic) Cunil Phase Maya of Cahal Pech (2016)
- Timing the Development of Household Complexity at Cahal Pech, Belize (2016)
- Tracing mortuary trends at Cahal Pech using Stable Isotope data (2016)