News

In Mexico where systemic obstacles persist ... Giving value to Indigenous pottery makers’ ancient system of producing and consuming in balance with the earth—what Barrera and Mier y ...
Archaeologists in Mexico have discovered ancient Mayan pottery in a cave system a little more than 10 miles away from downtown Playa de Carmen. Members of Mexico’s Cenotes Urbanos organization ...
Even after 2,000 years of exposure to the intense heat and humidity of the Yucatán jungles, the temples, statues, and murals painted with the fabled pigment known as "Maya blue" remain as vibrant as ...
Pottery unearthed at the site appears ... with vegetation that it has been little explored. Mexico's National Institute for Anthropology and History (INAH) said that its discovery was the result ...
It turned out to be the real deal: an artifact that’s at least 1,200 years old from the ancient civilization ... Indigenous communities in Mexico, said that the pottery was a special find ...
The objects in the tomb have now been deposited in the Department of Archæology, Mexico City ... Some finely polished pottery vessels suggest a Toltec origin. The nearest important city site ...
Archaeologists exploring the deep jungles of Mexico uncovered the remains of a previously unknown ancient Mayan city. A team from the Archeology Council of the National Institute of Anthropology ...
The ancient pot was discovered by members of the Urban Cenotes organization, which preserves caves around the Yucatán Peninsula. Photo by the National Institute of Anthropology and History ...