Cities of the Future or a Relic of the Past? The Universality of Low-Density Urbanism among the Ancient Maya

Author(s): Timothy Koch

Year: 2025

Summary

This is an abstract from the "SAA 2025: Individual Abstracts" session, at the 90th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.

Low-density urbanism is ubiquitous in the industrialized world, with suburbs and sprawling urban zones like the American Northeastern Seaboard being classified as such. Due to outsized environmental impacts and perceived unsustainability, this settlement pattern is often maligned. As one of the few prominent examples of agrarian-based low-density urbanism, the ancient Maya can provide a much-needed case study on the sustainability of low-density urbanism. Therefore, a thorough assessment of the universality of low-density urbanism among the ancient Maya is warranted. Maps of 11 Maya sites were collected from published sources, digitized, and used to calculate household group densities. No significant difference was observed between Classic and Postclassic sites, but sites in the northern Lowlands were significantly denser than those in the southern Lowlands. Additionally, no significant inverse correlation was found between site density and area, which would be expected if low-density urbanism was ubiquitous among the ancient Maya. This study is intended to serve as proof of concept for a more thorough assessment of the applicability of the low-density urban model to the ancient Maya.

Cite this Record

Cities of the Future or a Relic of the Past? The Universality of Low-Density Urbanism among the Ancient Maya. Timothy Koch. Presented at The 90th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. 2025 ( tDAR id: 511045)

Record Identifiers

Abstract Id(s): 53366