El Mirador, the Lost City of the Maya
Now overgrown by jungle, the ancient site was once the thriving capital of the Maya civilization
- By Chip Brown
- Photographs by Christian Ziegler
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 8)
The dig Hansen joined was headed by his thesis adviser, Ray Matheny, from Brigham Young University, and Bruce Dahlin of Catholic University. “[Hansen] was a real go-getter,” Matheny told me later. “I’m very proud of him.” Twenty-six years old at the time, Hansen had grown up in Idaho in a Mormon family, the oldest of three brothers. He got a bug for archaeology at age 6 hunting arrowheads on his father’s potato farm in Rupert. He planned to become a lawyer, but his undergraduate degree was delayed after he shattered his right leg in a ski accident. As all he needed for law school were good grades and test scores, he thought the fastest way to get them would be to major in Spanish, which he spoke, and archaeology, which he loved. Degrees in hand, he postponed law school for the chance to join an excavation north of Tel Aviv for two years, an experience that buried the lawyer and begot the archaeologist. It also turned up his wife, Jody, a scientific illustrator who first impressed him with her dogged work hauling buckets of sand. When they returned from Israel, Matheny invited Hansen to assist with a newly funded project at El Mirador.
So it was that Hansen found himself in March 1979 excavating a room on Structure 34, the Jaguar Paw Temple. The temple, one of the most intensively studied of all the ruins at El Mirador, is part of the Tigre complex in the western side of the city. Hansen had been given to understand it was most likely from the Classic period, but as he cleared the chamber, he came to the original plaster floor littered with pot fragments that had not been disturbed for centuries. “When the Maya walked away, they left everything in place,” he said. “We’ve found flakes of a stone tool right around the tool.” The potsherds had the colors and the waxy telltale feel of the Chicanel style, which dated the temple to two centuries before Christ. Hansen stared at them in disbelief.
“I realized at that moment the whole evolutionary model for the economic, cultural and social history of the Maya was wrong. The idea that the Maya slowly became more sophisticated was wrong. And I thought, ‘Man, I’m the only person in the world at this moment who knows this.’”
By morning Tropical Storm Richard had eased, but the sky was still overcast and Hansen was surprised to hear the helicopter arriving out of the clouds. “You made it! Welcome!” he cried as three Californians scurried clear of the rotor: Andre Lafleur, an officer for a land trust in Santa Cruz; a travel consultant named Randy Durband; and Joanna Miller, a board member of the Walt Disney Family Museum, established in San Francisco to commemorate her famous grandfather. They joined us at the dining hall for a breakfast of eggs, tortillas, beans and fried Spam. Dominga, the cook, tossed a few stale tortillas into the woods and called “Pancho! Pancho!” Duly summoned, a white-nosed coati appeared, wary and cute, striped tail high. He looked like a lanky raccoon.
Andre, Joanna and Randy had been invited by the Global Heritage Fund, a Palo Alto-based conservation group—and one of several foundations that financially support Hansen’s work in the basin, including the Foundation for Cultural and Natural Maya Heritage (PACUNAM) and Hansen’s own Foundation for Anthropological Research and Environmental Studies (FARES). The FARES board includes actor Mel Gibson, who has given several million dollars to the cause and who hired Hansen as a consultant for his 2006 Maya chase film Apocalypto.
We headed east on a dirt track in two Kawasaki all-terrain vehicles. At more than 14 square miles, greater El Mirador is three times the size of downtown Los Angeles; for many years Hansen would routinely hike 10 to 12 miles a day to check on various sites. The ATVs, donated by a family of prominent Central American brewers, were much appreciated by his now 58-year-old knees. We were bound for La Danta, the pyramid complex we had circled on the flight in.
The trail climbed over what was once possibly a 60-foot-high perimeter wall surrounding a portion of the western part of the city—it was built in the Late Preclassic, Hansen said— and followed one of the elevated causeways to La Danta just over a mile east. We parked and started our ascent.
Hansen has excavated, mapped and explored 51 ancient cities in the Mirador basin. “What you had here was the first state-level society in the Western Hemisphere, a thousand years before anyone suspected,” he said. It was not just the monumental architecture of La Danta and structures at sister cities like Nakbe and Tintal that were sophisticated. The achievements of the Preclassic Maya were reflected in the way they made the leap from clans and chiefdoms to complex societies with class hierarchies and a cohesive ideology; in the technical sophistication that enabled them to quarry huge limestone blocks without metal tools and move them to building sites without the wheel; how they collected rainwater off building roofs and stored it in reservoirs and cisterns; how they projected time in their calendars and preserved the records of their civilization in their still-enigmatic histories on stelae in images and glyphs that scholars have yet to decipher (unlike glyphs from the Classic period that have been decoded); how they constructed their homes with posts, stone and stucco; decorated their teeth with jade and brownish-red hematite inlays; imported exotic items such as obsidian, basalt and granite; wrapped the craniums of their infants to modify the shape of their skulls; and adorned themselves with shells from the Caribbean and Pacific Coast—as if civilization were keyed as much to aesthetic refinement as to written language, the specialization of labor or regimens of religious and social control.
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Comments (31)
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Those pyramids look more to Epi-Olmec ( Zoque type) than Classic Mayan. OLMECS again?
Posted by sead cesarisky on January 21,2013 | 03:07 PM
Great article and insight. As with many I am certain, I find the lack of available resources to support research into such a discovery disheartening and tragic.
Posted by RReid on January 9,2013 | 05:58 AM
Mirader Basin is the place to be for me
Posted by Roy Bauer on January 6,2013 | 06:53 AM
Do you have more pictures from the Pottery perhaps the whole?
Posted by Mario on January 13,2012 | 09:12 PM
The Mayans were very a very smart people. Look what coquorers did to them. It's a shame.
Posted by wayne on October 24,2011 | 02:10 AM
Awesome article! I have only made three trips to Mayan ruins (Tulum, Cahal Pech, and an unnamed village in Belize), and they are incredible to see. I cannot wait to see el Mirador and as many of the other 51 cities Dr. Hansen has excavated. What still amazes me is how fast these civilizations disappeared. I'm sure the answer lies somewhere in those ruins.
Posted by James Redmond on July 27,2011 | 12:00 AM
The article was wonderful, but I have a nagging question about the three Orion stars mentioned. The three belt stars are most prominent together and would easily be seen by most cultures since it is on the celestial equator. But why would Saiph and Rigel be the 2 stars to go with Alnitak -a belt star? I wish there had been some pottery painting or whatever it was to explain those stars given. Is there somewhere I can look to get more on this?
Posted by Billie Chandler on June 29,2011 | 01:49 AM
Infinitely attuned by natural history of the planet, all of terra firma, a continuim of a single continent, transformed, Mother Earth and birthing of celestial satellites. Evermore becoming larger, more mysterious of compost and magna forma.
Posted by Jalmer on June 27,2011 | 04:10 PM
Much of the architecture and customs of the ancient people of central america are similar to the mediteranean rather than the oriental cultures. This truly indicates that the use of boats to cross the vast oceans was accomplished far before originally thought. The similarity of the Mayan pyramids and the Egyptian is no accident. They had a similar background. The more we find out about this people the more similarities the to the mediteranean we will find.
Posted by Raymond Pearson on June 5,2011 | 09:06 PM
Great article, including detail on the calendrics, astrology knowledge, societal operations and detail describing the size and dimensions of this fantastic place. I hope to visit. Thanks.
Posted by Chewy on May 28,2011 | 01:41 PM
can any body tell me the characteristics of La Danta complex? I have read the article, but I just figure it ou a couple of them...I dont speak English So for me this homework is really difficult!! please!!! help!!!;)
Posted by maria on May 19,2011 | 07:41 PM
Shortly before I read this very interesting article, I had fininshed "The Asiatic Fathers of America" by Hendon Harris, with added info by his daughter Charlotte Harris Rose. Hendon was a missionary to China, and found maps and documentation about Asians from China, Korea, Japan and Mayla traveling to the Americas in ancient times. He covers that information and the influences on the peoples living in north and south America from a very early time. Much of the information in this article correlates with that in the Herndon book, and could explain why and how such an advanced civilization developed so rapidly, without any apparent earlier lower levels of culture.
Posted by Al Chamberlin on May 19,2011 | 04:33 PM
I had completely forgotten that I was interested in archeology as a child, but this article reminded me. Even more, it made me discover that I still am. It's so cool! For one of the first times in my college experience, I'm actually excited to write a paper. Thanks for making Preclassic Maya Culture come to life!
Posted by Michelle on May 17,2011 | 10:17 PM
WONDERFUL ARTICLE! I had the pleasure of visiting El Mirador in December, via helicopter, and was absolutely amazed by the beauty of the site! Chip Brown provides a very accurate picture of just how remarkable the entire Mirador Basin is- from the abundance of wildlife to the sheer magnitude of the Maya ruins. Having traveled to other ancient sites like Tikal, Tulum, Lamani, Copan... Mirador was exceptional. Everywhere I looked, there were ruins! Raw, engulfed with vines and plants, towering all around me. The moment my eye could recognize the forms and shapes of the structures, the causeway, & the triadic structures on the tops of the pyramids, an entire city just seemed to appear before me. For anyone that has not yet made the trek- DO IT! The moment you climb to the top of Danta, and look out over the forest... everything changes.
I have been a big supporter of FARES and Dr. Hansen since that trip- thank you Smithsonian for bringing it to life again and for showcasing this remarkable project!
Posted by Brandi on May 6,2011 | 12:50 PM
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