Laser surveys have revealed a massive centuries-old Maya city in Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula.
The city contains up to 6,674 structures, including pyramids like the ones at Chichén Itzá and Tikal, according to a study published Tuesday (Oct. 29) in the journal Antiquity. The researchers used previously created lidar (light detection and ranging) maps, which are created by shooting laser pulses at the ground, to reveal the potentially 1,500-year-old site.
With the rise of lidar technology over the past few decades, the discovery of ancient settlements has risen dramatically. However, this technology is expensive and often not accessible to early-career scientists like Luke Auld-Thomas, an archaeologist at Northern Arizona University and first author of the study. But the researchers had an idea of how to get around this barrier.
“Scientists in ecology, forestry and civil engineering have been using lidar surveys to study some of these areas for totally separate purposes,” Auld-Thomas said in a statement. “So what if a lidar survey of this area already existed?”
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By combing through previously commissioned lidar studies, Auld-Thomas located a survey created to measure and monitor carbon in forests in Mexico. By analyzing 50 square miles (129 square kilometers) in east-central Campeche, Mexico, that had never been searched for Maya structures before, Auld-Thomas and his colleagues found hidden imprints of a Maya city tucked within modern farms and highways.
The city, which the researchers named Valeriana after a nearby freshwater lagoon, dates to the Classic period (A.D. 250 to 900), and shows “all the hallmarks of a Classic Maya political capital,” including multiple enclosed plazas connected by a broad causeway, temple pyramids, and a ball court, the researchers noted. Farther from the Valeriana city center, terraces and houses dot the hillside, suggesting a dense urban sprawl. This study is the first to reveal Maya structures in east-central Campeche.
“The government never knew about it; the scientific community never knew about it,” Auld-Thomas said. “That really puts an exclamation point behind the statement that, no, we have not found everything, and yes, there’s a lot more to be discovered.”
“Unfailingly, everywhere that this sort of work is done, there’s more settlement [discovered],” Thomas Garrison, an archaeologist at the University of Texas at Austin who was not involved in the study, told Live Science. “It all provides more pieces for this huge puzzle, and every puzzle piece counts.” The next step in the research is for archaeologists to confirm the city on-site, Garrison added.
As the diversity and density of the Maya civilization is slowly revealed, study of this time period becomes even more important, Auld-Thomas noted.
“Given the environmental and social challenges we’re facing from rapid population growth, it can only help to study ancient cities and expand our view of what urban living can look like,” Auld-Thomas said. “Having a larger sample of the human career, a longer record of the accumulated residue of people’s lives, could give us the latitude to imagine better and more sustainable ways of being urban now and in the future.”