Abstract
David Webster, Timothy Murtha, Kirk D. Straight, Jay Silverstein, Horacio Martinez, Richard E. Terry, and Richard Burnett
The Great Tikal Earthwork Revisited
Journal of Field Archaeology 32 (2007) 41--64
In 1966 University of Pennsylvania archaeologists discovered impressive
earthworks near the Classic Maya center of Tikal, Guatemala. They were
provisionally interpreted as part of a vast "emic" defensive and
boundary system that defined the political capital and the agricultural
core of the Tikal polity around A.D. 400--550. These conclusions have
heavily influenced conceptions of Classic Maya warfare, urbanism,
polity, settlement, demography, and subsistence for 40 years, despite
the fact that very little research was ever done on the earthworks.
Three seasons of mapping and excavation in 2003--2006 support some of
the conventional interpretations, but call others into question. That
the earthworks were ever a functional defensive system seems doubtful.
The new fieldwork has also yielded a wealth of new data about
settlement distributions, household remains, soils, vegetation, and
land use at Tikal.
Volume 32 Number 1 (Spring 2007)
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