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A new ancient city was just discovered

Tuesday, 7 January 2025

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In the world of archaeology, advancements in technology have enabled discoveries that may never have happened otherwise, including that of an ancient Maya city.

A new ancient city was recently discovered.

Science & Industry

I n the world of archaeology, advancements in technology have enabled discoveries that may never have happened otherwise, including that of an ancient Maya city. Located under dense jungle canopy in the southeastern Mexican state of Campeche, the lost city was rediscovered in October 2024 using lidar, a laser radar technology.

Lidar works by sending out laser light pulses from an aircraft and measuring how long they take to bounce back — not unlike how some animals use echolocation. The information helps create detailed maps of the Earth's surface, showing things such as land shapes and structures. The site was discovered by researchers at Tulane University, but they didn't deploy the radar themselves; they found a 2013 lidar survey of the area several pages deep into a Google search. The survey was initially done to measure carbon in Mexico's forests, and the results had never been studied by archaeologists before. Once the research team processed the data, it was clear to them what they were looking at. 

The city, which the researchers named Valeriana after a nearby lagoon, had all the markings of a capital city. It's thought that upwards of 50,000 people may have called Valeriana home at its peak between 750 and 850 CE — a population second only to that of Calakmul, one of the largest ancient Maya sites. The researchers determined that Valeriana was once home to pyramids, ball fields, dense housing, causeways connecting distinct districts, and amphitheaters. The exact reason for its eventual abandonment isn't clear, but archaeologists suggest that, not unlike other Maya cities, its dense population could not be sustained when faced with challenging conditions such as drought. 

By the Numbers

Year the first lidar prototype was built by Howard Hughes' company

1961

Federal entities in Mexico (31 states and the capital city)

32

Years ago that Plato first mentioned the lost city of Atlantis

2400

Characters, both hieroglyphic and phonetic, in the Maya writing system

~800

Did you know?

The Maya ball game wasn't just a sport — it was also political and spiritual.

The Maya are known for their ball game "pitz," which was so central to their culture that some settlements, such as Chichén Itzá, had multiple courts dedicated to it. While the sport was indeed played for entertainment, it was also much more than that — it held a great deal of political and spiritual significance. Archaeologists believe the players used the trunks of their bodies to propel a heavy rubber ball to the other side of the court. The game was often played to settle conflicts and territory disputes, and captives of war could be forced to play, with the leader of the losing team sometimes being sacrificed. Pitz was also thought to symbolize the eternal struggle between life and death, light and darkness, and even the movement of celestial bodies, with the court itself serving as a connection to the underworld.

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