Title
An investigation of Maya ritual cave use with special reference to Naj Tunich, Peten, Guatemala
Files
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Publication Date
January 1989
Keywords
Anthropology
Description
Abstract of the Dissertation by James Edward Brady, Doctor of Philosophy in Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles, 1989, Professor C. Rainer Berger, Chair. This dissertation provides a basic paradigm for the investigation of Maya ritual cave use. The historical development of Maya cave archaeology is drawn beginning with the travels of Stephens and Catherwood. A chapter focuses on Maya cave use and updates J. Eric Thompson's famous studies of the subject. The second portion of the chapter deals with the meaning of caves in Maya ideology. The report on the cave of Naj Tunich begins in the fourth chapter with a description of the site and its investigation. The fifth chapter provides a discussion of the ceramics including functional aspects within the ritual context. An analysis of the artifacts makes up the sixth chapter. This analysis is distinctive in providing the first detailed comparison with other cave artifact assemblages. The symbolic meaning and possible ritural use of a number of artifacts are discussed and a characterization of the cave artifact assemblage is made. Chapter 7 discusses the chronological significance of the obsidian hydration data obtained from blades found in the cave. A number of blades were subjected to X-ray fluorescence and the trade implications of the resulting data is analyzed. The chapter discussing the human skeletal material attempts to determine why particular individuals were bured in the cave. Data is presented to support the proposition that many of the individuals were sacrificial victims. The ninth chapter attempts to test a number of proposals by Mary Pohl concerning the character of faunal remains recovered from sacred contexts. Possible differences between cave and non-cave faunal collections are also discussed. The final chapter provides an historical reconstruction of the utilization of Naj Tunich. An analysis of the spatial distribution of the artifacts finds that there is a public and private aspect to Maya cave rituals. Other aspects of Maya cave ritual are also discussed. Open Access - Permission by Author(s) See Extended description for more information.
Subject: topical
Anthropology
Type
Article
Genre
Thesis / Dissertation; serial
Identifier
K26-00410
Recommended Citation
Brady, James E., "An investigation of Maya ritual cave use with special reference to Naj Tunich, Peten, Guatemala" (1989). KIP Theses and Dissertations. 1.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/kip_etd/1