"Haunted" Maya Underwater Cave Holds Human Bones
Underwater archaeologists have found human bones at the bottom of a Maya cenote in Mexico.
Published January 16, 2014
A flooded sinkhole in southern Mexico so frightens nearby villagers that they won't go anywhere near it. The ancient Maya seem to have kept their distance too.
A recent underwater survey in the cavern, or cenote,
located in Mexico's Yucatán, has found a likely reason for its fearsome
reputation—the floors of its two chambers are littered with human
bones.
To investigate the cenote, archaeologist Bradley Russell and his team spent two weeks last August diving into its submerged reaches. Russell received a grant from the National Geographic Society and the Waitt Foundation for this work.
The photos in this gallery reveal what they found.
A rappel of 40 feet (11.5 meters) took Russell from the lip
of the cenote (photo below) to the water's surface within the cave. On
the way down he passed massive stalactites and the long roots of thirsty
trees stretching toward the moisture below.
The locals have named this natural well Sac Uayum (pronounced sock-wye-OOM).
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
The cenote sits just outside the ruins of the ancient Maya city of Mayapán, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) south of Mérida, the capital of the Mexican state of Yucatán.
In its heyday, between 1150 and 1450, Mayapán was a major
political center with at least 17,000 residents and a stone wall that
enclosed 1.5 square miles (4.2 square kilometers) of the city.
Russell was especially intrigued by the location of Sac
Uayum. Mayapán's wall curved in a way that put the cenote just outside
the city limits, then turned back to include a nearby cenote known as
X'coton (pronounced eesh-coh-TOHN).
"The rest of the wall doesn't zigzag like that," Russell
said in a phone interview. "This part is noticeably different from
everything else that the path of the wall does."
About 40 cenotes were included inside the city wall and
would have served as vital sources of water in the semi-arid limestone
plateau of the Yucatán Peninsula.
In fact, Mayapán was probably built in this location
precisely because there were so many cenotes in the area. As part of
their research last summer, Russell and his team identified 150
previously unknown cenotes around Mayapán, located during four days of
aerial laser mapping.
Offerings to the Gods
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
Before
the archaeologists begin their dives, shaman Teodormio San Sores
prepares for a traditional ceremony amid the steam from food offerings
cooking on a fire.
In the modern Maya language, the ceremony is called jeets' lu'um (pronounced hets loom), literally "calming of the Earth."
Its purpose is to ask the gods for permission to enter the
cenote, and to placate the cenote's legendary guardian—an enormous
feathered serpent with a horse's head that the locals believe will
snatch children who get too close.
The demon guardian is a combination of the feathered
serpent of ancient Mexican myth and the steeds that the Spanish
conquistadors brought to the New World.
Similarly, the ceremony combines beliefs from the ancient and colonial eras.
San Sores set up an altar on the table, oriented to the
four cardinal points of the Maya universe and to the central axis that
was thought to connect the Earth to the sky and the underworld. But he
also placed a Christian cross on the altar.
His prayers addressed the old gods but included modern religious references as well.
He offered three foods to the east, west, north, and south: stewed chicken; a mixture of cornmeal, sugar, and water called saka'; and a thickened, spiced broth called k'ol.
He also left an offering at the cenote's entrance for the serpent—a gourd bowl filled with saka'.
When the divers finally penetrated deep into the cenote,
their motions created a spooky parallel to the clouds of steam in this
image. As they swam, they stirred up the limestone sediment, which then
clouded the water.
At the same time, a limestone fog arose outside the cenote
from a small fissure in the ground. "It was genuinely strange the first
time we saw it," says Russell.
Taking a Dive
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
Several
days into the cave exploration, archaeologist Lisseth Pedroza Fuentes
checks out a submerged rockfall filled with bones in the first chamber.
"From the very first dive, we had seen skulls," says
Russell. "At the time of this dive, we were still doing an initial
assessment and putting together a plan of action for mapping the
cenote."
Flattened Skull
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
An adult skull sitting upright amid the first chamber's rockfall debris likely belonged to a woman.
The top of the cranium was intentionally flattened during
infancy. This method of deformation was widely practiced by the ancient
Maya and is consistent with skulls that have been found in the customary
burials from this same period.
"The hole in the forehead is probably postmortem," says Russell, "not the cause of death."
So far his team has identified ten skulls in this chamber, with more likely awaiting discovery among the rocks and sediment.Skulls and Bones
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
Skeletal
remains scattered at the bottom of the rockfall slope include pieces of
several human skulls and some long bones from modern cattle.
Drowned Cow
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
A bovine skull lies upside down on the rocky debris in the first chamber.
"This must have been a cow that wasn't smart enough to
avoid the hole in the ground," says Russell. "It's definitely not
pre-Hispanic." If a cow takes a tumble into a cenote, there's no
escape—it drowns, and eventually its bones drift to the bottom.
Herds of free-roaming cattle graze in the bush here, and ranchers use the area's cenotes like wells to water them.Nice Teeth
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
The light from Russell's flash illuminates a brown, horseshoe-shaped lower jaw lying on the debris slope of the first chamber.
"All the molars have emerged, but the teeth are in
beautiful condition—they weren't worn down over a long time," says
Russell. "That means this is a young adult, about 18 years old."
The hard enamel of teeth often protects internal tissue, so Russell is hoping that this set will provide a good carbon-14 date for the cenote's human remains.The Abyss
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
At the bottom of the first chamber, Lisseth Pedroza Fuentes follows an intriguing tunnel that leads to a second chamber.
"This is very technical diving," says Russell. "You're
crawling on your belly with your tanks against the ceiling." And there's
no popping to the surface if something goes wrong.
The second chamber, completely filled with water, is about two times
the size of the first. It has no opening to the sky and plunges to a
depth of about 115 feet (35 meters). Part of its floor was also strewn
with bones.
Aftermath of an Avalanche
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
Human remains in the second chamber include this partial skull that sits topsy-turvy amid rocks and sediment.
Russell believes that all the bones lay in the first chamber,
originally. But at some point the floor collapsed, sending skulls, ribs,
and femurs cascading down into the second chamber along with chunks of
limestone.Bare Head
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
In the second chamber, the top of another skull emerges from the sediment.
Russell's team spotted five skulls here. That brought the
total from both chambers to 15, with indications that there may be more
hidden in the debris.
Why does this cenote hold the remains of so many people, who appear to be males and females, teenagers and adults?
Most residents of Mayapán were buried under or near their houses, so this wasn't a normal cemetery.
The bones bear no marks that would indicate cause of death, so the people probably weren't sacrificed.
Other artifacts found here are mostly pieces of plain water
pitchers, so there's nothing to indicate that these people were among
the elite and getting some kind of special treatment.
Russell wonders whether the location of Sac Uayum is a clue.
For starters, it lies to the south of Mayapán, the
direction that the Maya associated with the underworld—humankind's
mythical place of origin, known as Xibalba (pronounced shee BALL bah).
The dead might have been buried here to await the next cycle of
creation.
Also, the builders of the city wall seem to have deliberately excluded the cenote from the city.
"Suppose these were plague victims," says Russell. "You
wouldn't want them near the rest of the population. And you wouldn't
want to drink the water either."
The evidence fits that theory, and so does the long-standing taboo.
Over time, the real reason to stay away from the cenote may
have been forgotten, but the legend of the feathered, horse-headed
serpent continued to keep people at a distance.
Older residents of the nearby village of Telchaquillo tell
stories of people seeing the serpent perching in a tree, leaping up,
spinning around three times, and diving into the water. But those
sightings all happened once upon a time, as the stories go.
Younger villagers tend not to believe such tall tales.
At the Brink
Photograph courtesy Bradley Russell, National Geographic Grantee
Perched on the limestone cap that partly covers the entrance to Sac Uayum, Russell contemplates the future.
He hopes to return to the cenote to continue mapping, and to excavate the debris slopes in both chambers.
He and his team have been working at Mayapán since the year 2000. "This was our best season ever," he says. "I don't know how we could top that."
But who knows? He could very well uncover more clues as to why people were once laid to rest in this watery grave.
Follow A. R. Williams on Twitter.
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