Tikal in Environmental Context: Peter Harrison and Ancient Maya Water Management and Subsistence
Author(s): Nicholas Dunning; David Lentz; Vernon Scarborough
Year: 2015
Summary
Through the lens of Tikal, Peter Harrison developed an interest in how the ancient Maya thrived in the seasonally arid central Maya Lowlands. Initially this interest stemmed from his investigations of Tikal’s Central Palace and its adjacent reservoir. However, soon his interest spread beyond the elite center to questions of basic subsistence and the potential use of wetlands (bajos) for intensive agriculture. Our work at Tikal, the Bajo de Santa Fe, and smaller bajos benefitted from some of Peter’s work and ideas, though even his imaginative mind was ultimately impressed by the complexity of water management and agriculture being revealed today.
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Cite this Record
Tikal in Environmental Context: Peter Harrison and Ancient Maya Water Management and Subsistence. Nicholas Dunning, Vernon Scarborough, David Lentz. Presented at The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, California. 2015 ( tDAR id: 395303)
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Keywords
General
Maya Lowlands
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Tikal
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Water Management
Geographic Keywords
Mesoamerica
Spatial Coverage
min long: -107.271; min lat: 12.383 ; max long: -86.353; max lat: 23.08 ;