ArchaeologyWater and Land at the Ancient Maya Community of La Milpa
Part of the Water Insititutional Response to Social-Envrionmental Change: A Maya Case Study project
Author(s): Vernon L. Scarborough; Matthew E. Becher; Jeffrey L. Baker; Gary Harris; Fred Valdez, Jr.
Year: 1995
Summary
The Late Preclassic to Classic period (400 B. C.-A.D. 900) Maya community of La Milpa, Belize, has recently revealed an ancient water and land-use system. As demonstrated at other southern Maya Lowland sites, the Maya created a microwatershed to store and convey water during the four months of seasonal drought. In addition to water conservation measures associated with reservoirs, deliberate channelization, diversion weirs, and postulated fields, the importance of rainy-season erosion control is indicated. Given the ancient population densities identified in the Maya area, coupled with the seasonal scarcity of water, we posit a "skill-oriented" economy.
Cite this Record
ArchaeologyWater and Land at the Ancient Maya Community of La Milpa. Vernon L. Scarborough, Matthew E. Becher, Jeffrey L. Baker, Gary Harris, Fred Valdez, Jr.. Latin American Antiquity. 1995 ( tDAR id: 374744) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8R49NZJ
File Information
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water-and-land-at-the-ancient-maya-community-of-la-milpa.pdf | 805.27kb | Feb 3, 2012 10:02:07 AM | Public |