The Nature of an Ancient Maya City: Resources, Interaction, and Power at Blue Creek, Belize
Thomas H. Guderjan
For two millennia, the site now known as Blue Creek in northwestern Belize was a Maya community that became an economic and political center that included some 15,000-20,000 people at its height. Fairly well protected from human destruction, the site offers the full range of city components including monumental ceremonial structures, elite and non-elite residences, ditched agricultural fields, and residential clusters just outside the core. Since 1992, a multi-disciplinary, multi-national research team has intensively investigated Blue Creek in an integrated study of the dynamic structure and functional inter-relationships among the parts of a single Maya city. Documented in coverage by National Geographic, Archaeology magazine, and a documentary film aired on the Discovery Channel, Blue Creek is recognized as a unique site offering the full range of undisturbed architectural construction to reveal the mosaic that was the ancient city. Moving beyond the debate of what constitutes a city, Guderjan’s long-term research reveals what daily Maya life was like.
Kategori:
Tahun:
2007
Edisi:
1
Penerbit:
University of Alabama Press
Bahasa:
english
Halaman:
244
ISBN 10:
0817315659
ISBN 13:
9780817315658
Nama siri:
Caribbean Archaeology and Ethnohistory
Fail:
PDF, 2.69 MB
IPFS:
,
english, 2007