About to breeze right by what looked like a typical museum reproduction of a cave with a skeleton and the obligatory saber-tooth skull lying outside, I stopped when my peripheral vision caught the figures of a man and woman working by a fire at the back of the cave. Even more stunning was finding this fascinating and informative archaeological display amid the high-rise palaces of all-inclusive indulgence in Cancun's hotel zone. The Palacio de la Civilizacion Maya (Palace of Maya Civilization) in Yaxaba, about 8 miles southwest of Chichen Itza, was designed around the village's cenote - one of the Yucatan's many surface openings to the underground rivers coursing through the peninsula's limestone foundation - to display the fruits of excavations in the World Wonder's Cenote Sagrada (Sacred Well). [...] visitors to the Yucatan Peninsula, where Mexico's Maya are concentrated, had to journey to the state capital of Chetumal, at the Mexican Caribbean's southernmost reaches, to find a museum devoted to Maya culture. Along the way, displays illustrate funeral rites, architectural elements, everyday domestic objects and those used in rituals, ending with the conquest, the colonial era and the devastating Caste War in the 19th century. Tracing Maya pathMerida's Museum of the Maya World is a true big-city museum, crowned by an abstract steel sculpture representing the canopy of a ceiba tree. More than 500 pieces, gathered from a variety of sources, include textiles, religious objects, artifacts from ancient cities and everyday belongings. Where the Merida museum has re-created artifacts or entire building facades, it doesn't try to make them look just like the original. The result is a simplified version - of the widespread jaguar-mouth temple door, for example, or the facade of Kohunlich's Palace of the Masks - whose features are clear and far easier to interpret than the originals, ultimately making it easier to appreciate the originals when you see them. A few smaller pieces, such as a Virgin Mary dressed in a huipil (traditional white dress with brilliantly colored embroidery) and a replica of a burial ground in Campeche containing nearly 200 skeletons from Maya, European, black and mixed-race people, are as striking as the towering temple representations. The wrap-around window walls present a panorama of the overbuilt shore lapped by Caribbean waves, never letting you forget your own location and time, though the San Miguelito archaeological zone is a peaceful and approachable little ruin that seems to be inhabited by ancient souls.

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BING NEWS:
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    New plaques at each structure offer detailed information in English and Spanish, part of the government’s investment in improving displays at Maya sites for the train project. Most tourists ...
    04/18/2024 - 1:00 pm | View Link
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