The Maax Na Archaeology Project: Documentation of Stelae, Altars, and Cave Entrances in the West Ceremonial Group
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Publication Date
1-1-2002
Abstract
A short field project was conducted at the Maya site of Maax Na in northern Belize in the spring of 2001 to investigate an area of cave entrances and associated monuments. Eleanor King (Howard University) and I, along with a small crew, documented what turned out to be a single stela, or perhaps more correctly, a megalith, and excavated a portion of the platform supporting it. The cave entrances were cleared and documented and it appears that all entrances open into a tubular cave that likely carries water during the rainy season. Our current interpretation of this locus at Maax Na is that it was an important place for the collection of water, with the megalith placed to acknowledge the sacredness of underground springs.
Keywords
Maya
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Shaw, Leslie C., "The Maax Na Archaeology Project: Documentation of Stelae, Altars,
and Cave Entrances in the West Ceremonial Group" (2002). KIP Articles. 8235.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/kip_articles/8235