Hostname: page-component-cc8bf7c57-n7pht Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-10T12:26:13.352Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

AT WATER'S EDGE: RITUAL MAYA ANIMAL USE IN AQUATIC CONTEXTS AT CANCUEN, GUATEMALA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 April 2019

Erin Kennedy Thornton*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, College Hall 150, Pullman, Washington 99164
Arthur A. Demarest
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Vanderbilt Institute of Mesoamerican Archaeology and Development, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 37235
*
E-mail correspondence to: [email protected]

Abstract

Excavations at the Late Classic Maya site of Cancuen (Petén Department, Guatemala) uncovered a small-scale hydraulic system including stone-lined canals and reservoirs within the architectural core of the site. The abundance of other nearby potable water sources along with the elaborate form of the system demonstrate that it served an ideological rather than practical function. Artifacts deposited in the reservoirs support this interpretation. Moreover, the reservoir located in front of the site's royal palace contained the remains of at least 30 individuals who may represent members of the royal court massacred during the site's collapse. This paper reports the animal remains found within the site's reservoirs to further explore the nature and extent of ritual and disposal activities within these aquatic contexts. Inter- and intrasite comparisons are used to contextualize the results within broader discussions of how we identify ritual activity in the zooarchaeological record, and the role of water in ancient Maya ideological and political systems.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Alvarado, Silvia 2011 Análisis functional de las reservas de agua en Cancuen. Unpublished licenciatura thesis, Escuela de Historia, Área de Arqueología, Universidad de San Carlos, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Alvarez, Ticul 1976 Restos oseos rescatados del Cenote Sagrado de Chichen Itza, Yucatan. Cuadernos de Trabajo Vol. 15. Instituto Nactional de Antropología e Historia, Departamento de Prehistoria, Mexico City.Google Scholar
Anderson, Elyse M. 2009 Exploring Maya Ritual Fauna: Caves and the Proposed Link with Contemporary Hunting Ceremonialism. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Andrews, E. Wyllys IV, and Andrews, E. Wyllys V. 1980 Excavations at Dzibilchaltun, Yucatan, Mexico. Middle American Research Institute, Tulane University, New Orleans.Google Scholar
Andrews, Anthony, and Corletta, Robert 1995 A Brief History of Underwater Archaeology in the Maya Area. Ancient Mesoamerica 6:101117.Google Scholar
Barrett, Jason W., and Scherer, Andrew K. 2005 Stones, Bones, and Crowded Plazas: Evidence for Terminal Classic Maya Warfare at Colha, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 16:101118.Google Scholar
Barrientos, Tomás 2008 Hydraulic Systems in Central Cancuén: Ritual, Reservoir and/or Drainage? Electronic document, http://www.famsi.org/reports/05082/05082Barrientos01.pdf, accessed January 3, 2018.Google Scholar
Barrientos, Tomás, Demarest, Arthur, Alvarado, Silvia, Martínez, Horacio, Wolf, Marc, and Luin, Luis Fernando 2006 Hidáulica, ecología, ideología y poder: nueva evidencia y teorías en el sur del Petén. In XIX Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala, 2005, edited by Laporte, Juan Pedro, Arroyo, Bárbara, and Mejía, Héctor, pp. 291302. Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Becker, Marshall 1988 Caches as Burials, Burials as Caches: The Meaning of Ritual Deposits among the Classic Period Lowland Maya. In Recent Studies in Pre-Columbian Archaeology, edited by Saunders, Nicholas J. and de Montmollin, Olivier, pp. 117134. BAR International Series No. 421. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
Brady, James E. 1989 An Investigation of Maya Ritual Cave Use with Special Reference to Naj Tunich, Peten, Guatemala. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Brady, James E. 1997 Settlement Configuration and Cosmology: The Role of Caves at Dos Pilas. American Anthropologist 99:602618.Google Scholar
Brady, James E., and Rodas, Irma 1995 Maya Ritual Cave Deposits: Recent Insights from the Cueva de los Quetzales. Institute of Maya Studies Journal 1:1725.Google Scholar
Brown, Linda A. 2001 Feasting on the Periphery: The Production of Ritual Feasting and Village Festivals at the Ceren Site, El Salvador. In Feasts: Archaeological and Ethnographic Perspectives on Food, Politics and Power, edited by Dietler, Michael and Hayden, Brian, pp. 368390. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Carnegie Institution of Washington 1955 Ancient Maya Paintings of Bonampak Mexico. Supplementary Publication No. 46. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Carr, H. Sorayya 1985 Subsistence and Ceremony: Faunal Utilization in a Late Preclassic Community at Cerros, Belize. In Prehistoric Lowland Maya Environment and Subsistence Economy, edited by Pohl, Mary, pp. 115132. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Carr, H. Sorayya 1996 Precolumbian Maya Exploitation and Management of Deer Populations. In The Managed Mosaic: Ancient Maya Agriculture and Resource Use, edited by Fedick, Scott, pp. 251261. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Clarke, Mary, and Sharpe, Ashley 2017 Depictions and Deposits: A Joint Look at the Fauna Associated with a Classic Period Maya Sweat Bath. Paper presented at the 116th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Coe, Michael D. 1978 Lords of the Underworld: Masterpieces of Classic Maya Ceramics. Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton.Google Scholar
Coggins, Clemency Chase (editor) 1992 Artifacts from the Cenote of Sacrifice, Chichen Itza. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Davis-Salazar, Karla L. 2003 Late Classic Maya Water Management and Community Organization at Copan, Honduras. Latin American Antiquity 14:275299.Google Scholar
Demarest, Arthur A. 2006 The Petexbatun Regional Archaeological Project: A Multidisciplinary Study of the Maya Collapse. Vanderbilt Institute of Mesoamerican Archaeology Monograph Series, Vol. 1. Vanderbilt University Press, Nashville.Google Scholar
Demarest, Arthur A. 2013 Ideological Pathways to Economic Exchange: Religion, Economy, and Legitimation at the Classic Maya Royal Capital of Cancuen. Latin American Antiquity 24:371402.Google Scholar
Demarest, Arthur A., Andrieu, Chloé, Torres, Paola, Forné, Mélanie, Barrientos, Tomás, and Wolf, Marc 2014 Economy, Exchange, and Power: New Evidence from the Late Classic Maya Port City of Cancuen. Ancient Mesoamerica 25:187219.Google Scholar
Demarest, Arthur, Quintanilla, Claudia, and Suasnavar, José 2016 Variability in the Violent Destruction of the Pasion Valley Cities and Cancuen: Implications for the Early Collapse in the West. In Ritual Violence and the Fall of the Classic Maya Kings, edited by Iannone, Gyles, Houk, Brett, and Schwake, Sonja, pp. 159186. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Demarest, Arthur, Martínez, Horacio, Wolf, Marc, Torres, Paola, Belches, Walesk, Andrieu, Chloé, Luin, Luis Fernando, Mansky, Matt O’, and Quintanilla, Claudia 2009 Economá interna y relaciones internacionales de Cancuen y de sitios de su reinado. In XXII Simposio de investigaciones arqueológicas en Guatemala, 2008, edited by Laporte, Juan Pedro, Arroyo, Bárbara, and Mejía, Héctor, pp. 655674. Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Emery, Kitty F. 2003 The Noble Beast: Status and Differential Access to Animals in the Maya World. World Archaeology 34:498515.Google Scholar
Emery, Kitty F. 2004a Animals from the Maya Underworld: Reconstructing Elite Maya Ritual at the Cueva de Los Quetzales, Guatemala. In Behaviour Behind Bones: The Zooarchaeology of Religion, Ritual, Status and Identity, edited by O'Day, Sharyn Jones, Neer, Wim Van, and Ervynck, Anton, pp. 101113. Oxbow Books, Oxford.Google Scholar
Emery, Kitty F. 2004b In Search of the “Maya Diet”: Is Regional Comparison Possible in the Maya Tropics? Archaeofauna 13:3756.Google Scholar
Emery, Kitty F. 2014 Aguateca Animal Remains. In Life and Politics at the Royal Court of Aguateca: Artifacts, Analytical Data, and Synthesis, edited by Inomata, Takeshi and Triadan, Daniela, pp. 158200. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Emery, Kitty F., Thornton, Erin K., Cannarozzi, Nicole R., Houston, Stephen, and Escobedo, Héctor 2013 Archaeological Animals of the Southern Maya Highlands: Zooarchaeology of the Southern Maya Highlands: Zooarchaeology of Kaminaljuyu. In Archaeology of Ancient Mesoamerican Animals, edited by Götz, Christopher and Emery, Kitty F., pp. 381416. Lockwood Press, Atlanta.Google Scholar
Fahsen, Federico, Demarest, Arthur, and Luin, Luis F. 2003 Sesenta años de historia en la escalinata jeroglífica de Cancuén. In XVI Simposio de investigaciones arqueológicas en Guatemala 2002, edited by Laporte, Juan Pedro, Suasnávar, Ana Claudia, and Arroyo, Bárbara, pp. 703713. Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología de Guatemala, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Fahsen, Federico, and Barrientos, Tomás 2006 Los monumentos de Taj Chan Ahk and Kan Maax. In Proyecto Arqueológico Cancuen: Informe de temporada 2004–2005, edited by Barrientos, Tomás, Demarest, Arthur, Luin, Luis, Quintanilla, Claudia, and Mencos, Elisa, pp. 3556. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, and Universidad del Valle de Guatemala, Dirección General del Patrimonio Cultural y Natural, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Fash, Barbara W. 2005 Iconographic Evidence for Water Management at Copan. In Copan: History of an Ancient Maya Kingdom, edited by Andrews, E. Wylls V. and Fash, William L., pp. 103138. School of American Research, Santa Fe.Google Scholar
Fash, Barbara W., and Davis-Salazar, Karla L. 2006 Copan Water Ritual and Management: Imagery and Sacred Place. In Precolumbian Water Management: Ideology, Ritual, and Power, edited by Lucero, Lisa J. and Fash, Barbara W., pp. 129143. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Forné, Mélanie, Alvarado, Silvia, and Torres, Paola 2011 Cronología cerámica en Cancuen: Historia de una ciudad del Clásico Tardío. Estudio de Cultura Maya 26:1139.Google Scholar
Gossen, Gary H. 1974 Chamulas in the World of the Sun: Time and Space in a Maya Oral Tradition. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Grayson, Donald K. 1984 Quantitative Zooarchaeology: Topics in the Analysis of Archaeological Faunas. Academic Press, Orlando.Google Scholar
Halperin, Christina T., Garza, Sergio, Prufer, Keith M., and Brady, James E. 2003 Caves and Ancient Maya Ritual Use of Jute. Latin American Antiquity 14:207219.Google Scholar
Hamblin, Nancy L. 1984 Animal Use by the Cozumel Maya. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Hammond, Norman, and Gerhardt, Juliette C. 1991 Offertory Practices: Caches. In Cuello: An Early Maya Community in Belize, edited by Hammond, Norman, pp. 225231. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Harrison-Buck, Eleanor, McAnany, Patricia A., and Storey, Rebecca 2007 Empowered and Disempowered During the Late to Terminal Classic Transition: Maya Burial and Termination Rituals in the Sibun Valley, Belize. In New Perspectives on Human Sacrifice and Ritual Body Treatments in Ancient Maya Society, edited by Tiesler, Vera and Cucina, Andrea, pp. 74101. Springer, New York.Google Scholar
Hopkins, Mary Randolph 1992 Mammalian Remains. In Artifacts from the Cenote of Sacrifice, Chichen Itza, Yucatan, edited by Coggins, Clemency, pp. 369385. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Houston, Stephen D. 1996 Symbolic Sweatbaths of the Maya: Architectural Meaning in the Cross Group at Palenque, Mexico. Latin American Antiquity 7:132151.Google Scholar
Houston, Stephen, Stuart, David, and Taube, Karl 2006 The Memory of Bones: Body, Being, and Experience among the Classic Maya. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Houston, Stephen, Taube, Karl, Matheny, Ray, Matheny, Deanne, Nelson, Zachary, Ware, Gene, and Mesick, Cassandra 2005 The Pool of the Rain God: An Early Stuccoed Altar at Aguacatal, Campeche, Mexico. Mesoamerican Voices 2:3762.Google Scholar
Inomata, Takeshi, Triadan, Daniela, Ponciano, Erick, Terry, Richard, and Beaubien, Harriet F. 2001 In the Palace of the Fallen King: The Royal Residential Complex at Aguateca, Guatemala. Journal of Field Archaeology 28:287306.Google Scholar
Isendahl, Christian 2011 The Weight of Water: A New Look at Pre-Hispanic Puuc Maya Water Reservoirs. Ancient Mesoamerica 22:185197.Google Scholar
Ishihara, Reiko 2007 Bridging the Chasm between Religion and Politics: Archaeological Investigations of the Grietas at the Late Classic Maya Site of Aguateca, Peten, Guatemala. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Riverside.Google Scholar
Ishihara, Reiko 2008 Rising Clouds, Blowing Winds: Late Classic Maya Rain Rituals in the Main Chasm, Aguateca, Guatemala. World Archaeology 40:169189.Google Scholar
Johnston, Kevin J. 2004 Lowland Maya Water Management Practices: The Household Exploitation of Rural Wells. Geoarchaeology 19:265292.Google Scholar
Kovacevich, Bridgette 2006 Reconstructing Classic Maya Economic Systems: Production and Exchange at Cancuen, Guatemala. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville.Google Scholar
Kovacevich, Brigitte, Quintanilla, Claudia, and Arriaza, Moises 2003 Excavaciones en el Grupo N11. In Proyecto Cancuen: Informe preliminar No. 5 - quinta temporada, edited by Demarest, Arthur A., Barrientos, Tomás, Kovacevich, Brigitte, Callaghan, Michael, and Luin, Luis F., pp. 111121. Instituto de Antropología e Historia de Guatemala, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Koželsky, Kristin L. 2005 Identifying Social Drama in the Maya Region: Fauna from the Lagartero Basurero, Chiapas, Mexico. Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, Florida State University, Tallahassee.Google Scholar
Kunen, Julie L. 2006 Water Management, Ritual, and Community in Tropical Complex Societies. In Precolumbian Water Management: Ideology, Ritual and Politics, edited by Lucero, Lisa J. and Fash, Barbara, pp. 100115. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Lucero, Lisa J. 2002 The Collapse of the Classic Maya: A Case for the Role of Water Control. American Anthropologist 104:814826.Google Scholar
Lucero, Lisa J. 2006a Water and Ritual: The Rise and Fall of Classic Maya Rulers. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Lucero, Lisa J. 2006b The Political and Sacred Power of Water in Classic Maya Society In Precolumbian Water Management: Ideology, Ritual, and Power, edited by Lucero, Lisa J. and Fash, Barbara W., pp. 116128. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Lucero, Lisa J., and Kinkella, Andrew 2015 Pilgrimage to the Edge of the Watery Underworld: An Ancient Maya Water Temple at Cara Blanca, Belize. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 25:163185.Google Scholar
Lyman, Richard L. 2008 Quantitative Paleozoology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Martos López, Luis Alberto 2010 Objects Cast into Cenotes. In Fiery Pool: The Maya and the Mythic Sea, edited by Finamore, Daniel and Houston, Stephen D., pp. 223225. Peabody Essex Museum and Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
McNatt, Logan 1996 Cave Archaeology of Belize. Journal of Cave and Karst Studies 58:8199.Google Scholar
Mock, Shirley B. 1998 Prelude. In The Sowing and the Dawning: Termination, Dedication, and Transformation in the Archaeological and Ethnographic Record of Mesoamerica, edited by Mock, Shirley Boteler, pp. 318. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Moholy-Nagy, Hattula 1985 The Social and Ceremonial Uses of Marine Molluscs at Tikal. In Prehistoric Lowland Maya Environment, edited by Pohl, Mary D., pp. 147158. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Moholy-Nagy, Hattula 2004 Vertebrates in Tikal Burials and Caches. In Maya Zooarchaeology: New Directions in Method and Theory, edited by Emery, Kitty F., pp. 193205. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, Monograph 51. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Morehart, Christopher T. 2005 Plants and Caves in Ancient Maya Society. In Stone Houses and Earth Lords: Maya Religion in the Cave Context, edited by Prufer, Keith M. and Brady, James E., pp. 167185. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Morin, Eugéne, Ready, Elspeth, Boileau, Arianne, Beauval, Cédric, and Coumont, Marie-Pierre 2016 Problems of Identification and Quantification in Archaeozoological Analysis, Part II: Presentation of an Alternative Counting Method. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 24:938973.Google Scholar
Navarro-Farr, Olivia R., Freidel, David A., and Prera, Ana Lucía Arroyave 2008 Manipulating Memory in the Wake of Dynastic Decline at El Peru-Waka: Termination Deposits at Abandoned Structure M13-1. In Ruins of the Past: The Use and Perception of Abandoned Structures in the Maya Lowlands, edited by Stanton, Travis and Magnoni, Aline, pp. 113146. University of Colorado Press, Boulder.Google Scholar
Ohnstad, Arik, Burgos, Walter, and Arriaza, Claudia 2004 Operación 39A: Excavaciones en el grupo K9 “Los Patos”: Un complejo residencial y su sistema hidráulico. In Proyecto Arqueológico Cancuén, informe temporada 2003, edited by Arthur Demarest, Tomás Barrientos, Brigette Kovacevich, Michael Callaghan, Brent Woodfill, and Luis Luín, pp. 211–250. Instituto de Antropología e Historia, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Ortiz, Ponciano, and Rodríguez, María del Carmen 2000 The Sacred Hill of El Manatí: A Preliminary Discussion of the Site's Ritual Paraphernalia. Studies in the History of Art 58:7493.Google Scholar
Pagliaro, Jonathan B., Garber, James F., and Stanton, Travis W. 2003 Evaluating the Archaeological Signatures of Maya Ritual and Conflict. In Ancient Mesoamerican Warfare, edited by Brown, M. Kathryn and Stanton, Travis W., pp. 7590. Alta Mira, Walnut Creek.Google Scholar
Pendergast, David M. 1998 Intercessions with the Gods: Caches and Their Significance at Altun Ha and Lamnai, Belize. In The Sowing and the Dawning: Termination, Dedication, and Transformation in the Archaeological and Ethnographic Record of Mesoamerica, edited by Mock, Shirley B., pp. 5563. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Pohl, Mary D. 1981 Ritual Continuity and Transformation in Mesoamerica: Reconstructing the Ancient Maya Cuch Ritual. American Antiquity 46:513529.Google Scholar
Pohl, Mary D. 1983 Maya Ritual Faunas: Vertebrate Remains from Burials, Caches, Caves and Cenotes in the Maya Lowlands. In Civilization in the Ancient Americas: Essays in Honor of Gordon R. Willey, edited by Leventhal, Richard M. and Kolata, Alan L., pp. 55103. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, and Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Pohl, Mary D. 1985 Osteological Evidence for Subsistence and Status. In Prehistoric Lowland Maya Environment and Subsistence Economy, edited by Pohl, Mary, pp. 107113. Harvard University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Pohl, Mary D. 1994 The Economics and Politics of Maya Meat Eating. In The Economic Anthropology of the State, edited by Brumfiel, Elizabeth M., pp. 121149. Monographs in Economic Anthropology, No. 11. University Press of America, New York.Google Scholar
Pohl, Mary D., and Feldman, Lawrence H. 1982 The Traditional Role of Women and Animals in the Lowland Maya Economy. In Maya Subsistence: Studies in Memory of Dennis E. Puleston, edited by Flannery, Kent V., pp. 295311. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Pollock, Harry E. D., and Ray, Clayton E. 1957 Notes on Vertebrate Animal Remains from Mayapan. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Current Reports 41:633656.Google Scholar
Quintanilla, Claudia M. 2013 Estudio y análisis de los enterramientos humanos del sitio arqueológico Cancuen. Licenciatura thesis in Archaeology, Escuela de Historia, Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Reitz, Elizabeth J., and Wing, Elizabeth S. 2008 Zooarchaeology. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Robin, Cynthia, Gerhardt, Juliette Cartwright, and Hammond, Norman 1991 Ritual and Ideology. In Cuello: An Early Maya Community in Belize, edited by Hammond, Norman, pp. 204234. Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Salazar, Carmen, Zizumbo-Villarreal, Daniel, Brush, Stephen B., and Marín, Patricia Colunga-García 2012 Earth Ovens (Píib) in the Maya Lowlands: Ethnobotanical Data Supporting Early Use. Economic Botany 66:285297.Google Scholar
Saturno, William, Taube, Karl, and Stuart, David 2005 The Murals of San Bartolo, El Petén, Guatemala, Part I: The North Wall. Ancient America, No. 7. Center for Ancient American Studies, Barnardsville.Google Scholar
Scarborough, Vernon L. 1998 The Ecology of Ritual: Water Management and the Maya. Latin American Antiquity 9:135159.Google Scholar
Sharer, Andrew K. 2015 Mortuary Landscapes of the Classic Maya: Rituals of Body and Soul. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Stanchly, Norbert 2007 Postclassic Maya Ritual Faunal Use at Lamanai, Belize: Interpreting the Faunal Assemblage from Structure N10-10. Paper presented at the 72nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Austin.Google Scholar
Stanton, Travis W., and Negrón, Tomás Gallareta 2001 Warfare, Ceramic Economy, and the Itza: A Reconsideration of the Itza Polity in Ancient Yucatan. Ancient Mesoamerica 12:229245.Google Scholar
Stanton, Travis W., Brown, M. Kathryn, and Pagliaro, Jonathan B. 2008 Garbage of the Gods? Squatters, Refuse Disposal, and Termination Rituals Among the Ancient Maya. Latin American Antiquity 19:227247.Google Scholar
Stone, Andrea 1992 From Ritual in the Landscape to Capture in the Urban Center: The Recreation of Ritual Environments in Mesoamerica. Journal of Ritual Studies 6:109132.Google Scholar
Suasnávar, José, Robinson, Alan, Quezada, Heidy, Ixpatá, Oscar, Vásquez, Guillermo, and Ixcot, Patricia 2007 Investigación antropológico forense de la aguada sur del sitio arqueológico Cancuén, Operación 42. Fundación de Antropología Forense de Guatemala, Guatemala City.Google Scholar
Suhler, Charles, Ardren, Traci, Freidel, David, and Johnstone, Dave 2004 The Rise and Fall of Terminal Classic Yaxuna, Yucatan, Mexico. In The Terminal Classic in the Maya Lowlands: Collapse, Transition, and Transformation, edited by Demarest, Arthur A., Rice, Prudence M., and Rice, Don Stephen, pp. 450484. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Taube, Karl A. 2001 The Breath of Life: Symbolism of Wind in Mesoamerica and the American Southwest. In The Road to Aztlan: Art from a Mythic Homeland, edited by Fields, Virginia M. and Zamudio-Taylor, Victor, pp. 102123. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Teeter, Wendy G. 2004 Animal Utilization in a Growing City; Vertebrate Exploitation at Caracol, Belize. In Maya Zooarchaeology: New Directions in Method and Theory, edited by Emery, Kitty F., pp. 177191. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, Monograph 51. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Thornton, Erin Kennedy 2012 Animal Resource Use and Exchange at an Inland Maya Port: Zooarchaeological Investigations at Trinidad de Nosotros. In Motul de San Jose: Politics, History, and Economy in a Maya Polity, edited by Foias, Antonia E. and Emery, Kitty F., pp. 326356. University of Florida Press, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Thornton, Erin Kennedy, and Emery, Kitty F. 2016 Patterns of Ancient Maya Animal Use at El Mirador: Evidence for Subsistence, Ceremony and Exchange. Archaeofauna 25:232264.Google Scholar
Tozzer, Alfred M. 1941 Landa's Relacion de las Cosas de Yucatán: A Translation. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 18. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Tozzer, Alfred M., and Allen, Glover M. 1910 Animal Figures in the Maya Codices. Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 4. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Tsukamoto, Kenichiro 2017 Reverential Abandonment: A Termination Ritual at the Ancient Maya Polity of El Palmar. Antiquity 91:16301646.Google Scholar
Vail, Gabrielle, and Hernández, Christine 2014 Rain and Fertility Rituals in Postclassic Yucatan Featureing Chaak and Chak Chel. In The Ancient Maya of Mexico: Reinterpreting the Past of the Northern Maya Lowlands, edited by Braswell, Geoffrey E., pp. 285305. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Walker, William H. 1995 Ceremonial Trash. In Expanding Archaeology, edited by Skibo, James M., Walker, William H., and Nielson, Axel E., pp. 6779. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Walker, William H., and Lucero, Lisa J. 2000 The Depositional History of Ritual and Power. In Agency in Archaeology, edited by Dobres, Marcia-Anne and Robb, John E., pp. 130147. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Weiss-Krejci, Estella, and Sabbas, Thomas 2002 The Potential Role of Small Depressions as Water Storage Features in the Central Maya Lowlands. Latin American Antiquity 13:343357.Google Scholar
Wing, Elizabeth S., and Steadman, David 1980 Vertebrate Faunal Remains from Dzibilchaltun. In Excavations at Dzibilchaltun, Yucatan, Mexico, edited by Andrews, E. Wyllys IV and Andrews, E. Wyllys V, pp. 326331. Middle American Research Institute Publication, No. 48. Middle American Research Institute, New Orleans.Google Scholar
Wing, Elizabeth S., and Scudder, Syliva J. 1991 The Exploitation of Animals. In Cuello: An Early Maya Community in Belize, edited by Hammond, Norman, pp. 8497. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Woodbury, Benjamin B., and Trik, Aubrey S. 1953 The Ruins of Zaculeu. New York United Fruit Company, New York.Google Scholar