David Carballo publishes in Journal of Social Computing
Communication, Computation, and Governance: A Multiscalar Vantage on the Prehispanic Mesoamerican World.
David Carballo publishes article in Frontiers in Political Science
Governance Strategies in Precolonial Central Mexico
August 13th marked 500 years since the fall of the Aztec empire …
David Carballo has an article and blog to commemorate.
David Carballo published in the SAA Archaeological Record
David Carballo has co-authored an article in the SAA Archaeological Record, titled “Archaeological Perspectives on the Spanish-Aztec War on its Quincentennial” (article starts on page 19). The article offers perspectives 500 years since the Spanish invasion of Mexico and fall of the Aztec empire. Congratulations David!
Latin American Antiquity Blog on Teotihuacan Research
Blog post for Latin American Antiquity that links to three different articles on the Tlajinga Project at Teotihuacan. David Carballo co-author of “Neighborhoods Life, Migration, and Social Infrastructure in Teotihuacan’s Southern Periphery” and “New Perspectives on Migration into the Tlajinga District of Teotihuacan: A Dual-Isotope Approach,” and on another article with students, Daniela Hernandez Sarinana […]
David Carballo promoted to Professor
David Carballo has been promoted to full Professor. Congratulations David!
David Carballo, new evidence from both Teotihuacan and the Maya region in Science Magazine
“Maya travelers visiting Teotihuacan during the fourth century would have encountered a city like no other they had ever seen. Three enormous pyramids loomed over the main street, now known as the Avenue of the Dead, their shapes reflecting snow-capped volcanoes visible in the distance. An orderly grid of roads extended from the avenue, and the […]
David Carballo recipient of Whiting Public Engagement Seed Grant
David Carballo will receive $10,000 to lead a community-engaged archaeology project with youth living near the ancient city of Teotihuacan, one of the largest cities of the pre-Columbian Americas. A heavily visited tourist destination and iconic national treasure, Teotihuacan is nonetheless threatened by the urban sprawl of Mexico City. Carballo and colleagues, including artist Pedro Cahuantzi […]
David Carballo Teotihuacan Tlajinga article in Reuters
‘“We’re now finding that life on the periphery was pretty good,” said Boston University archeologist David Carballo, who discovered brightly-colored paintings over fine stucco on three buildings he began excavating there in July,” David Alire Garcia of Reuters. Read entire article here.
David Carballo interviewed for Archaeology Magazine “The City of the Gods: Inside the neighborhoods of Teotihuacan, Mesoamerica’s first great metropolis”
Click here to read entire article. (PDF)