Base of an excavated depression
showing evidence of limestone quarrying for building material. Credit: Jeff
Brewer
Collection,
storage and management of water were top priorities for the ancient Maya, whose
sites in Mexico, Belize and Guatemala were forced to endure seven months out of
the year with very little rainfall. As researchers expand their explorations of
the civilization outside of large, elite-focused research site centers, aerial
imagery technology is helping them locate and study areas that are showing them
how less urbanized populations conserved water for drinking and irrigation. The
NSF-supported research by Jeffrey Brewer, a doctoral student in the University
of Cincinnati's Department of
Geography, and Christopher Carr, a UC research assistant
professor of geography, was presented at the 81st annual meeting of the Society
of American Archaeology. The meeting takes place April 6-10, in Orlando,
Florida.
The
UC researchers used a surveying technology called LiDAR (Light Detection And
Ranging) - along with excavation data - to examine the spatial characteristics,
cultural modifications and function of residential-scale water
tanks - a little-investigated component of Maya water management by commoners
versus the more powerful and visible elites, says Brewer.
LiDAR
is a remote sensing technology that collects high-resolution imagery shot from
an airplane at 30,000 points per second, allowing researchers to map ground
surfaces through dense vegetation. The technology saves a significant amount of
time in the field, compared with trekking through forests to locate these small
depressions at ground level.
The
specific area under study is the ancient Maya site of Yaxnohcah, located in the
Central Yucatan. "One of the unique aspects of this particular site is
that it appears to date a little earlier than many regional sites of the same
size in terms of displaying significant cultural activity," says Brewer.
"So, we're still at ground level with our discoveries here."
Although
the LiDAR analysis revealed more than 100 potential small reservoirs scattered
throughout the site, only five have been excavated so far. Brewer says three
out of the five reservoirs appear to be water features based on the
archaeological evidence.
"We
looked specifically at small depressions that were adjacent to residential
structures, and we could assume they were household accessible," explains
Brewer. "We found modified reservoirs, a limestone quarry that would have
served as a resultant water tank, and a depression that appears to have served
as an area for localized horticulture or agriculture.
"Based
on recovered ceramic material, we know that some of these residential-scale
reservoirs at Yaxnohcah date to the Middle Preclassic period (around 900 B.C.).
We also have evidence from the soil layers that shows these systems were lined
with a thick, clay 'plaster' that would help them hold water," Brewer
says. "The geology in this region is all limestone, so if they hadn't been
modified or sealed in some way, the water would have just seeped through them."
Local project workers clearing
vegetation within a depression prior to excavation.
Agricultural
communities also would have needed water to farm maize, cotton and possibly even
tubers, so Brewer says future examination will explore how the water features
would have been used for agricultural purposes. "If the reservoir was
elevated, it could have released water into agricultural fields for irrigation.
If it was lower, it could have collected runoff from a paved surface or a
field. We're still examining the elevation profiles."
Brewer
adds that one of the depressions appears to have originated as a quarry for
limestone, which would have been used in construction at the adjacent
residential complex. Although not lined with clay, the resulting limestone tank
floor could opportunistically hold water for the extended annual period that
the region received very little rainfall - extremely useful for agricultural
purposes if not for drinking water.
Brewer
says investigating how the commoners existed at these ancient sites is becoming
a growing trend in research among archaeologists, anthropologists and
geographers.
http://phys.org/news/2016-04-discoveries-ancient-civilization.html#jCp
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