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Exploring the Mesoamerican Subterranean Realm

  • edited by James E. Brady and Cristina Verdugo
University Press of Colorado - Exploring the Mesoamerican Subterranean Realm
  • Hardcover Price: $110.00
  • Ebook Price: $87.00
  • 30-day ebook rental price: $43.50

“Shines a light on the subtle and almost whimsical ways that peoples in the past symbolically blended physically distinct domains. Fascinating.”
—Dominique Rissolo, Cultural Heritage Engineering Initiative
 
“A critical and welcome addition to the literature on Mesoamerican landscapes. If not for Brady, the study of ancient Maya cave ritual, and now subterranean realms, would be confined to the chthonic depths of Xibalba.”
—Jeremy Coltman, University of California, Riverside

Exploring the Mesoamerican Subterranean Realm brings together recent work and interpretations on the use of underground cavities by Mesoamerica’s pre-Columbian cultures, demonstrating their invaluable cultural purpose. Case studies from across the region investigate the ways in which these highly charged points in the sacred landscape were the focus of countless political and religious activities.

The volume expands the study of caves to focus on the broader realm of subterranean space, introducing the concept of the constructed subterranean, a space in which the Maya deliberately created sacred landmarks through excavation. Chapters critically examine chultuns, previously thought to be subterranean storage chambers, and sascaberas, previously considered mines, demonstrating that the traditional archaeological models are deeply flawed. A wealth of data on both features is used to envision a new sacred landscape filled with thousands of subterranean sacred landmarks. Natural caves are also examined; a survey conducted around the ancient site of Yaxchilan considers the obvious importance of large stalagmites set up in the site core as monuments. Long-distance pilgrimages to these caves fundamentally reevaluates the nature of pilgrimage and reveals an economic and political importance that structured settlement and activities around the pilgrimage sites. Finally, evidence is analyzed to show that the human bones recovered from Midnight Terror Cave, Belize, were the result of human sacrifice.

Dealing equally with the archaeology of both natural and constructed subterranean spaces, Exploring the Mesoamerican Subterranean Realm challenges preconceived notions of these spaces and their meanings, dramatically shifting the field’s focus and extending the understanding of the critical importance of this “dark side” of archaeology.

The ebook edition will be made open access within three years of publication thanks to Path to Open, a program developed to bring about equitable access and impact for the entire scholarly community, including authors, researchers, libraries, and university presses around the world.

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Contributors: Margaret Berrier, Guillermo de Anda, Ileana Echauri Pérez, William J. Folan, Christophe Helmke, Christina M. Iglesias, Wendy A. Layco, Myles Miller, Ismael Arturo Montero García, Scott Nicolay, Michael G. Prout, Thomas Ruhl, Melanie Saldaña, Ann M. Scott, Rebecca Sload, Eduardo Arturo Tejeda

  • Cristina Verdugo

    Cristina Verdugo is the lab director at Astrea Forensics. She has extensive experience performing forensic anthropological casework, coauthoring over a dozen case reports for various law enforcement agencies in California, and her research has been published in archaeology and osteology journals.


    James E. Brady

    James E. Brady is professor of anthropology at California State University, Los Angeles. He is the coeditor of Stone Houses and Earth Lords and Exploring the Mesoamerican Subterranean Realm

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  • Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-64642-695-9
  • Other Format: CD-ROM
  • EISBN: 978-1-64642-696-6
  • Publication Month: September
  • Publication Year: 2025
  • Pages: 386
  • Illustrations: 95
  • Discount Type: Short
  • ECommerce Code: 978-1-64642-695-9
  • Member Institution Access : Mountain Scholar

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