Sounding Circle: Ancient Nicaraguan Society Found

 Ancient Nicaraguan Society Found2 comments
picture 21 May 2003 @ 10:55, by Raymond Powers

Ancient Nicaraguan Society Found

By Richard Black
BBC science correspondent

Archaeologists have discovered what they describe as a previously unknown ancient civilisation in Central America.

The site, near the Atlantic coast of Nicaragua, dates from before the Mayan era, and relics include what appears to be a centre for mass production of ceremonial columns.
Researchers have been working on the site at El Cascal de Flor de Pino, near the town of Kukra Hill for six years.

They've found evidence of an ancient town and several outlying villages, which developed around 2,700 years ago and lasted for a thousand years.

There are monuments, petroglyphs (rock carvings) and pottery, and most remarkably, an area where many huge columns were formed out of rock - columns which may have been used at burial sites.

Extends Range

"The pottery is similar to pre-classical pottery found at sites of similar age in Belize," Dr Ermengol Gassiot, of the Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain, told BBC News Online.
"And the columns resemble those found at Mexican sites where they had ritual uses.

"The society had political centres. Kukra Hill, we believe, was a small town, and at least three villages lay around it and were dependent on it."

The newly discovered civilisation is similar to the societies that preceded the Mayan civilisation further to the north.

Independent experts say this shows that the process that led to the founding of the Mayan cities, such as Tikal, Palenque, or Copan (in Guatemala, Mexico, and Honduras respectively) covered a much larger geographical region than archaeologists have supposed up to now.
Time before

Much research remains to be done at El Cascal de Flor de Pino but it promises to reveal a vast amount about the various societies and customs which were eventually assimilated into the great culture of the Mayas.

Commenting on the discovery, Jeremy Sabloff, Williams Director of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, US, said: "This site sounds very exciting and full of potential.

"We're learning lots now about the pre-classical era - the groups which came before the Maya - and this discovery greatly extends the range of these pre-classical civilisations."
In addition to researchers from the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), the Kukra Hill archaeological team includes members from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua (UNAN-Managua), and the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC).


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2 comments

26 Aug 2008 @ 13:29 by Kenneth Gutierrez @172.172.76.7 : On the discovery of the site
The ruins became nationally famous and officially declared as an archiological site during the 80's. Unfortunatelly, due to the Contra War that lasted 11 long years, it was impossible to either assign a budget to it or to begin digging. Nevertheless, the locals had already known the site _perhaps all their lives_ until UNAN (National Autonomous University of Nicaragua) heard about it and decided to investigate.

Now, there other important archeological sites famous among older Nicaraguans, but virtually unknown to younger generations and the rest of the world.
1) Garrobo Grande Pyramids in Chontales State, 160mi (200km) E of Managua, found in 1853 by cattle rancher named Mr Estrada which are previous to Mayan civilization.
2) El Bosque Cave, in Esteli State, 100 N of Managua, found in the 70's, where there are ancient human and animal remains that might date back to more than 30 000 years.
3) San Rafael del Sur Whale, in Managua State, 50 mi S of Managua, found in the 80's but barely studied and assumed to be between 1.5 to 5 million years old.  



26 Aug 2008 @ 13:32 by Kenneth Gutierrez @172.172.76.7 : On the discovery of the site
The ruins became nationally famous and officially declared as an archeological site during the 80's. Unfortunatelly, due to the Contra War that lasted 11 long years, it was impossible to either assign a budget to it or to begin digging. Nevertheless, the locals had already known the site _perhaps all their lives_ until UNAN (National Autonomous University of Nicaragua) heard about it and decided to investigate.

Now, there are other important archeological sites famous among older Nicaraguans, but virtually unknown to younger generations and the rest of the world.
1) Garrobo Grande Pyramids in Chontales State, 160mi (200km) E of Managua, found in 1853 by cattle rancher Mr Estrada, which are previous to the Mayan civilization.
2) El Bosque Cave, in Esteli State, 100 N of Managua, found in the 70's, where there are ancient human and animal remains that might date back to more than 30 000 years.
3) San Rafael del Sur Whale, in Managua State, 50 mi S of Managua, found in the 80's but barely studied and assumed to be between 1.5 to 5 million years old.  



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