Explaining the Mystery of the Vanished Maya


Main plaza of Mayan ruins in Tikal, Guatemala (Image Credit: weisserstier [Flickr])


Jaguar Temple in Tikal (Image Credit: erushing [Flickr])


Mayan ruins at Calakmul, Mexico (Image Credit: von Kinder [Flickr])

We tend to think of the Dark Ages as a bleak time when King Arthur was caught in the grip of lusty princesses and clashing knights. But while Europeans were busy eating giant turkey legs and trying to act interested in converting pagans to Christianity, a great culture was flourishing in Southern Mexico and northern Central America. Between 200 B.C.E. and 900 C.E., the Mayan civilization was anything but dark. Kings and queens rules over a huge empire of cities, palaces, and temples adorned with fine art and steeped in gold and gems.

Its people were highly advanced, mastering disciplines as varied as astronomy, engineering, architecture, and urban planning.

Today, however, these once-great Mayan cities lie hidden under dense rainforest. To the average American, how this happened is a mystery. We say the Maya “disappeared” and blame it on alien invaders. But the Maya aren’t gone. Millions of them still live in Guatemala and Honduras, and thousands more come to the United States to eke out livings as migrant laborers. It didn’t take a supernatural force to put their civilization into decline, either. In fact, archaeologists now blame the fall of the Maya on deceptively simple flaws that could topple any culture - even ours.

RAIN DROPS AREN’T FALLING ON MY HEAD

These days, so few people live in the region once dominated by the Mayan empire that researchers believed there weren’t a lot of Maya living there in the past, either. But the landscape is deceptive. Decades of research reveal that the Maya had completely transformed the land on which they lived by turning jungles into a vast area of plains filled with cities, farms, and an ever-growing population. In fact, settlements around centers like Tikal reached population densities of up to 2,600 people per square mile. That’s more than half the population density of modern-day New York City.


The ancient ruins of Tikal, as captured by the IKONOS satellite
(Image: Space Imaging, Inc.)

Archaeologists have even found evidence of a kind of Mayan urban sprawl. In the spans between large cities, they’ve uncovered thousands of house foundations connected by what were paved roads. Even more spectacular, recent satellite imagery from NASA shows that may areas where the Maya used limestone plaster as floor and wall coverings can still be seen in the colors of the rainforest trees.

As the Mayan population grew, however, the society became vulnerable to the limitations of their environment. They gobbled up the resources around them, but failed to develop new technologies that might have allowed them to adapt to changes in their natural surroundings. So when change finally did arrive in the form of drought, catastrophe wasn’t too far behind.

Archaeologist Richardson Gill blames the Mayan collapse on an extended period of drought that affected most of Mexico and Central America in the 9th century C.E. Of the more than 15 million Maya inhabiting the region at the time, many lived far from major rivers, so people relied on water collected in reservoirs during the rainy season. Of course, when climate changes caused these reserves to drop to dangerous levels, it became impossible to feed the huge Mayan population. In 2003, Gill’s theories received support following the analysis of mud from lake bottom in the Yucatan. Essentially, the find confirmed they spread of deforestation, soil erosion, and drought. Sadly, famine and thirst appear to have contributed to widespread death and disease, eventually driving people out of the Mayan heartland.

While widely accepted, this theory of the Mayan collapse still leaves a lingering question. Evidence shows that most ancient civilizations dealt successfully with drought at one time or another; so why weren’t the Maya able to cope? The answer, according to recent research, was war.

AN OPEN WAR POLICY


Mayan ruler Chaan Muan with prisoners from a raid for sacrifices and slavery - from the murals of Bonampak (Image Credit: Ancient Mexico)

At the same time the drought was taking hold, it appears the Mayan city-states had their resources and attention focused on something else - fighting. In a way, some evidence of this has always existed in the form of smashed monuments and burned palaces found in the region. In the early 20th century, the Bolshevik Revolution in Russian inspired a theory that rapid Mayan collapse was the result of a popular peasant revolt, fueled by the lavish lifestyles and oppressive rule of the theocratic Mayan kings. Mayan revolutionaries, rejecting religions hocus-pocus from rulers who claimed to be able to bring rain for crops while stuffing their houses and tombs with expensive artwork and jewels, overthrew their priest-kings and, in the process, ruined everything. It wasn’t a bad theory, but it seems that the rulers, not the people, deserve most of the blame.

In the wake of new research, it appears that Mayan cities were locked in something similar to the Cold War, only hotter. Hieroglyphs in the area reveal that two metropolitan “super-powers,” Tikal and Calakmul, were bitter rivals for centuries. Skirmishes between the kings of each city grew increasingly violent, prompting both dynasties to build alliances with other cities via raids, conquest, and royal coups. But, as more and more cities got involved, the warfare spread.

In 2002, a few more clues came to light after archaeologists discovered a stunning new set of hieroglyphic texts carved into the steps of a palace staircase at Dos Pilas (uncovered thanks to an earthquake that hit the region the previous summer). The texts told the surprising story of renegade princes from Tikal, who tried to create an empire of their own by waging a full-force attack on their home city with the help of neighboring allies. Unfortunately, their timing was poor. The invasion occurred during the height of the drought, and the result was pure devastation. Pyramids and temples were torn apart to build fortifications, and what few trees were left in the razed rainforest were cut down to build fences. Eventually, farmers had to retreat to the fast-growing weeds. The war destroyed the cities, leaving behind ruins and refugees. The land could no longer support the population due to the drought, and the government was too weak to do anything about it due to the war. Rather than to remain in the cities and face death, the people scattered, and the jungle eventually reclaimed the land.

NOT-SO-UNSOLVABLE MYSTERIES

In the end, it was neither laser beams nor a migration to Atlantis that destroyed the Maya, but a simple failure to plan. Leaders put the majority of their resources into warfare, while simultaneously forgetting that those resources weren’t infinite.

Then, when a severe but conquerable drought crisis appears, they were unable to cope. In his new book Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed, Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jared Diamond claims that the scenario is more common than you might think, and that it maybe responsible for the fall of many ancient cultures we deem “mysterious.” Environmental destruction and the depletion of natural resources create vulnerability, especially in the face of natural disasters. And just like the Maya, the ultimate fate is rarely disappearance or extinction, but usually a decline from opulence to poverty.

The article above, "Vanishing Act: Explaining the Mystery of the Maya" written by John W. Hoopes, is reprinted with permission from mental_floss magazine (March - April 2005 issue).

Don't forget to feed your brain, subscribe to the magazine and visit mental_floss' extremely entertaining website and blog!


"They gobbled up the resources around them, but failed to develop new technologies that might have allowed them to adapt to changes in their natural surroundings."

It's a good thing we learn from history so this will never happen again....oh, wait....
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Climate change did the Mayans in, huh? How can that be when they didn't have SUVs? Perhaps they just had overly large "carbon footprints"? Or maybe, they just did not purchase enough "credits" in the form of carbon indulgences. When you cut out your enemy's heart and burn his remains on a pyre, is that carbon-neutral? You are reducing *their* carbon footprint, after all.

I subscribe to the print Mental Floss and it's a great magazine, but one thing irks me a little bit about this article. Nowhere is it mentioned that the Mayans killed TENS of THOUSANDS of themselves (within tribes and enemy Mayans) in human sacrifices. What effect did this have on their subsequent downfall and the disappearance of their civilization? It's not adressed at all and the only indication of any sacrifice is a small reference in the caption of one of the art photos.

Unfortunately, it's very PC to talk about how ingenious and technologically sophisticated these ancient cultures were, all while ignoring or just glossing over the "bloodthirsty savage" qualities. Yes, in years past, the opposite was true, but now we have WAY overcorrected.

Straight talk from Sid.
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From the article, I gathered that it was the combination of both severe weather events and warfare that did the Mayans in.

The Mayans had been in war with each other for a long, long time - and the population managed to grow even with the "bloodthirsty savage" qualities. It was the combination of this AND severe draught (plus deforestation) that collapsed the ancient Mayan civilization.

Severe weather events do happen throughout history - even without significant contribution from human activities back then - but one thing should be clear: we're going to see a higher frequency of severe weather events due to changes in climate triggered by human activities since the industrial revolution.

Alex talks in a slightly crooked but charming way. ;)
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There's another theory of the collapse of the Mayan empire:

Disease.

When the Spaniards came to the Americas in the 1500's, they brought with them successive waves of plagues that decimated vast populations.

There's a fascinating article about it in the Atlantic:
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200203/mann

Here's a paragraph about the Incas;

Smallpox was only the first epidemic. Typhus (probably) in 1546, influenza and smallpox together in 1558, smallpox again in 1589, diphtheria in 1614, measles in 1618—all ravaged the remains of Incan culture. Dobyns was the first social scientist to piece together this awful picture, and he naturally rushed his findings into print. Hardly anyone paid attention. But Dobyns was already working on a second, related question: If all those people died, how many had been living there to begin with? Before Columbus, Dobyns calculated, the Western Hemisphere held ninety to 112 million people. Another way of saying this is that in 1491 more people lived in the Americas than in Europe.

The article goes on to say that the collapse brought on by the plagues fueled the fires of war which finished off the culture.

The article says that the combined plagues in such a short time took out about 95 - 98 % of the native American populations.

The article says that if the same type of collapse hit New York City today, only about 56,000 survivors would be left -- not enough to fill Yankee stadium. If that hit America as a whole, whoever was left would be knocked back to the Stone Age in about a generation or two.

So the answer to the vanished Maya (and Inca): Us. Or more precisely: our many plagues and diseases, never before seen on this continent.
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Shaun's comment about the mean white Europeans wiping out the Mayans with their diseases is a popular myth, but it's way misplaced. The Maya civilization, was pretty much "done" by A.D. 1000, LONG before the Europeans arrived. Sure, some of their descendents survived (and do today), but the organized temple-building child murdering society we like to wax poetic about was long gone when the Europeans showed up. You can still blame conquistadors for knocking off the peaceful Incas and Aztecs, though.

Straight talk from Sid.
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The article focused on some aspects I've never known about, such as draught and deforestation. Very interesting and, unfortunatly, actual. But, I would like to leave a remark: in that time, european kings didn't eat turkey!

Turkey is a bird from north america. Therefore, europeans only started to eat it after they re-discovered the Americas, in 1942 - the vikings already discovered the continent in the X century.
Only, the american people have thanksgiving day and it's principal plate is turkey - I'm not very sure since, I'm not american. You should look for thanksgiving day history!

I hope my english is understandable!
Continue the good work.
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Barbara Wright, against the Doctor's express wishes, tried to get them to discontinue human sacrifice all to no avail. She almost got herself and Ian killed in the process.
Or was that the Aztecs? Unlike Barbara, Mesoamerican history isn't my specialty.
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The conclusions just seem all to convenient. Anytime someone invokes the old " after the recent earthquake a newly discovered cave revealed evidence that indicates....", a red flag goes up.
Several years ago, a few prominent government whistleblowers came out and spoke about how the Illuminati would use these exact events ( earthquakes and new found evidences) to prove or disprove previously accepted theories and/or facts ranging from archeology to religion. The speculation as to what would be accomplished by such an act is evident to those who understand what the New World Orders agenda is.
Therefore I am almost certain that the answer is still out there and the mystery goes on.
Respectfully submitted
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My theory about the mysterious end of the maya people is irrelevent to the mysteries of the extra-terrestrial visitations. I sort of believe the mayans had some personal connection with their claimed gods. Perhaps, these visits were not only ceremonial tradition to the maya, but an offering or trade betwwen alien-kind and mayans. At a certain time in history they vanished after one of their gods left at sea in a strange water like-chariot. The god said he'd return someday. This puzzles me! PLEASE respond back for more of my beliefs, if interested.
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Hey ppl these pictures and other stuff is flippen cool i like it hey i am so bored of doing these weird pictures for projects lol. Love you all bye for now.
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