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Maya Civilization at the Millennium: A Research Guide
 9781407307916, 9781407337821

Table of contents :
Front Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Table of Contents
MAYA CIVILIZATION AT THE MILLENNIUM
1 INTRODUCTION TO MAYA CIVILIZATION
2 CULTURAL HISTORY AND SOCIETY
3 MATERIAL CULTURE
4 INTELLECTUAL LIFE
5 NEW DIRECTIONS
6 REGIONAL AND SITE REPORTS
7 NON-PRINT RESOURCES
AUTHOR INDEX
SUBJECT INDEX

Citation preview

BAR S2229 2011

Paris Monographs in American Archaeology 27

Maya Civilization at the Millennium: A Research Guide

WEEKS MAYA CIVILIZATION AT THE MILLENNIUM

B A R Weeks 2229 cover.indd 1

John M. Weeks

BAR International Series 2229 2011 19/05/2011 13:15:34

Paris Monographs in American Archaeology 27

Maya Civilization at the Millennium: A Research Guide

John M. Weeks

BAR International Series 2229 2011

Published in 2016 by BAR Publishing, Oxford BAR International Series 2229 Paris Monographs in American Archaeology 27 Series Editor: Eric Taladoire Maya Civilization at the Millennium: A Research Guide © J M Weeks and the Publisher 2011 The author's moral rights under the 1988 UK Copyright, Designs and Patents Act are hereby expressly asserted. All rights reserved. No part of this work may be copied, reproduced, stored, sold, distributed, scanned, saved in any form of digital format or transmitted in any form digitally, without the written permission of the Publisher.

ISBN 9781407307916 paperback ISBN 9781407337821 e-format DOI https://doi.org/10.30861/9781407307916 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library BAR Publishing is the trading name of British Archaeological Reports (Oxford) Ltd. British Archaeological Reports was first incorporated in 1974 to publish the BAR Series, International and British. In 1992 Hadrian Books Ltd became part of the BAR group. This volume was originally published by Archaeopress in conjunction with British Archaeological Reports (Oxford) Ltd / Hadrian Books Ltd, the Series principal publisher, in 2011. This present volume is published by BAR Publishing, 2016.

BAR PUBLISHING BAR titles are available from: BAR Publishing 122 Banbury Rd, Oxford, OX2 7BP, UK E MAIL [email protected] P HONE +44 (0)1865 310431 F AX +44 (0)1865 316916 www.barpublishing.com

CONTENTS MAYA CIVILIZATION AT THE MILLENNIUM ……………………………………………………………………………………. Recent Research in the Maya Area Guide to Research

xiii xv

X

Serials List

1. INTRODUCTION TO MAYA CIVILIZATION……………………………………………………………………………………. 1 General Summaries Bibliography Guides to Archaeological Sites History of Maya Research Biography Environment

1 2 8 9 10 13

Linguistics Ethnography Ethnohistory Historical Archaeology Underwater Archaeology

18 24 37 45 46

2. CULTURAL HISTORY AND SOCIETY……………………………………………………………………………………..… Cultural Evolution and Development Economics Development Education Medical Anthropology Ethnobotany

47 49 55 56 56 58

Physical Anthropology Politics Religion Folklore, Mythology, and Literature Social Organization and Social Structure Women

59 61 71 78 80 82

3. MATERIAL CULTURE……………………………………………………………………………………………………..… Art Photography Preservation of Cultural Patrimony Architecture Bone Painting Sculpture

85 88 88 89 94 94 94

Pottery Lithics Shell Abrasives Resins Textiles Wood

47

85

95 97 98 98 98 99 100

4. INTELLECTUAL LIFE………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 101 Astronomy Calendar Mathematics

101 101 102

Hieroglyphic Writing Performance Arts

102 107

5. NEW DIRECTIONS …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 110 New Directions Simposio de Investigaciones

110

Arqueológicos en Guatemala 2012 Phenomenon

115 126

6. REGIONAL AND SITE REPORTS …………………………………………………………………………………………… 128 Abaj Takalik Acanmul Actún Tunichil Muknal Actuncan Aguacate Aguateca Ah Kin Chen Ake Altun Ha Ambergris Cay Antigua Guatemala Arroyo de Piedra

Bajo Hill Site Baking Pot Balam Na Balamkú Balancan Balche Barcohaltun de las Dos Cruces Barton Creek Cave Barton Ramie Becan Belize River Blackman Eddy

128 128 128 128 128 128 129 129 129 129 130 129

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130 130 130 130 130 130 130 130 130 130 130 131

Blue Creek Bolonchen Bonampak Bolonk’in Buenavista del Cayo Cacaxtla Cahal Pech Calakmul Campeche Cancuen Cancún Cara Blanca Caracol Caucel Caye Coco Cerén Cerro de Cheyo Chaac Creek Chac II Chac Mool Chaculá Chakil Chalchuapa Champotón Chan Chan Chich Chan Noohol Channa Sur Chau Hiix Chechem Ha Chiapa de Corzo Chicanna Chichén Itzá Chinkultic Chiquibul Chocohá Chocolá Chunchimai Chunchucmil Chundsinab Cihuatán Cival Cobá Cochuah Colhá Comalcalco Copán Corriental Cozumel Cuchumatanes Mountains Cuello Cueva de las Pinturas Cumpich Cumtum Dolores Dos Ceibas Dos Hombres Dos Pilas Dzancab Dzibanche Dzibilchaltún Ecab Eckixil Edzna Ek Balam

Ek Xux El Baul El Cafetal El Cajón El Coyote El Mirador El Naranjal El Pajaral El Paraiso (Guatemala) El Paraiso (Honduras) El Perú-Waka El Petén El Pilar El Portar El Pozito El Salto Este El Tigre El Ujuxté El Zacatal Flores Gloria-Sacul Guijarral Holmul Holotunich Hultún Huntichumul Hunto Chac Ichmul Islas de los Cerros Itzan Iximché Ixtutz Izamal Jaguar Hill Jaina Jalapa Jonuta Kakoch Kaminaljuyu K’axob Kinal Kohunlich Kuluba La Blanca (Pacific Coast) La Blanca (Peten) La Caldera La Corona La Joyanca La Milpa La Muertita La Pasadita La Sufricaya Lacanha Lagartera Lagartero Laguna de On Island Laguna Las Pozas Laguna Pucteal Lamanai Lamay Las Pacayas Los Cerritos Los Horcones Los Naranjos Louisville

131 132 132 132 132 132 132 132 134 134 134 135 135 135 135 136 137 137 137 137 137 137 137 138 138 138 138 138 138 139 139 139 139 140 140 140 140 141 141 141 141 141 141 142 142 142 142 146 146 146 146 146 146 146 146 146 146 146 147 147 147 147 147 147 147

iv

148 148 148 148 148 148 148 148 148 148 148 149 149 149 149 149 149 149 149 149 149 149 149 150 150 150 150 150 150 150 150 150 150 150 150 151 151 151 151 151 152 152 152 152 152 152 152 153 153 153 153 153 153 153 153 154 154 154 154 154 154 154 154 154 154

Machaquila Macoba Manantial Monos Rojas A Marco González Maya Mountains Mayapán Medicinal Trail Mérida Minanha Molobka Montes Azules Moral-Reforma Motul de San José Mountain Cow Muklebal Tzul Naachtún Nacimiento Naco Valley Naj Tunich Nakúm Naranjo Nébaj Nixtun-Ch’ich’ Noh-Bec Nohcacab Nochoch Ek Nohpot Opchen Oxkintok Oxpemul Oxtakah Pacbitún Palenque Palo Verde Paso de la Amada Petexbatun Piedras Negras Pocboc Pol Bol Pomona Pomuch Potonchan Progresso Lagoon Pueblito Punta de Chimino Punta Ycacos Lagoon Pusilhá Puuc Quexil-Petenxil Quincux Quintana Roo Quiriguá Río Bec Río Bravo Río Chiquibul Río Grijalva Río Mopán Río Salsipuedes Río Usumacinta Roaring Creek Sabana Piletas Sacul Saktunha San Bartolo

San Claudio San Estevan San Gervasio San Jerónimo II San Lorenzo (Belize) San Lorenzo (Mexico) San Mateo Ixtatán Santa Bárbara (Petén) Santa Bárbara (Yucatan) Santa Rita Corozal Santa Rosa Xtampak Sayil Seibal Semetabaj Sibun River Sierra de Lacandón Sisila Site Q Site R Southeast Periphery Sihó Soconusco Tabasco Tabasqueño Tabí Tamactún-Acalan Tecolote Temozon Tenam Puente Tikal Tila Tixchel Tohcok Toniná Topoxte Tortuguero Tres Lunas Tulum Tzum Uaxactún Uaymil Ucanal Uxmal Uxul Vaca Plateau Victoria Vista Alegre Wild Cane Cay X’kala-ka X-ual-canil Xanaba Xbaatun Xcakochna Xcalumkin Xcambo Xchan Xcoch Xculoc Xicalanco Xkakatz Xkipche Xkombec Xocen Xpilha Xpostanil

154 155 155 155 155 155 155 156 156 156 156 156 156 157 157 157 157 157 157 157 157 158 158 158 158 158 158 158 158 158 159 159 159 159 161 161 161 161 162 162 162 162 162 162 163 163 163 163 163 163 163 163 164 164 164 164 164 164 164 164 165 165 165 165 165

v

165 165 165 165 165 165 165 165 165 166 166 166 166 166 166 166 166 166 166 166 167 167 167 167 167 167 167 167 167 167 169 169 169 169 169 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 170 171 171 171 171 171 171 171 171 171 171 171 172 172 172 172

Xpuhil Xtampuc Xuch Xuental Xunantunich Yalbac Yalahau Yarumela Yaxche Xlapek

172 172 172 172 172 173 173 173 173

Yaxchilán Yaxha Yaxuna Yo’okop Yotoch Xooc Yucatán Zacpetén Zaculeu Zapote Bobal

173 173 174 174 174 174 174 175 175

7 NON-PRINT FORMAT……………………………………………………………………………………………………..… 176 DVD and VHS Machine Readable Data

176 179

Internet Resources Archaeological Site Pages

180 187

INDEXES……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Author Index Subject Index

195

195 221

TABLES 1. North American Institutions Granting Graduate Degrees on Maya Subjects, 2000-2010 …………………………………. 2. European Institutions Granting Graduate Degrees on Maya Subjects, 2000-2010 …………………………………………

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ix ix

MAYA CIVILIZATION AT THE MILLENNIUM migration the Mexican government decided in 1971 to declare a large part of the forest (6140 km2) a protected area: the Montes Azules Biosphere Reserve. They appointed one small population group (the 66 Lacandon families) as tenants (thus creating the Lacandon Community), thereby displacing 2000 Tzeltal and Ch'ol families from 26 communities, and leaving non-Lacandon communities dependent on the government for granting their rights to land. In the decades that followed the government carried out numerous programs to keep the problems in the region under control, using land distribution as a political tool; as a way of ensuring loyalty from different campesino groups. This strategy of divide and rule led to great disaffection and tensions among population groups in the region.

The ancient and modern Maya are a diverse population of Native Americans located in the southern Mexican states of Campeche, Chiapas, Quintana Roo, Tabasco, and Yucatan, as well as Belize, Guatemala, and adjacent western Honduras and El Salvador. There are an approximately 7 million Maya living in this area at the beginning of the twenty-first century. Ethnic Maya have managed to maintain substantial remnants of their ancient cultural heritage. Some are fully integrated into the dominant cultures of the nations in which they reside, while others continue a more traditional culturally distinct life, often speaking one of the Mayan languages as a primary language. Among Mayan speakers, Spanish is commonly spoken as a second or first language. The largest group of modern Maya is found on Mexico's Yucatan peninsula. They commonly identify themselves simply as "Maya" with no further ethnic subdivision, and speak the language which anthropologists term "Yukatek Maya", but is identified by speakers simply as "Maya".

The Maya population in Belize is concentrated in the Cayo, Toledo and Orange Walk districts, but they are scattered throughout the country. They are divided into the Yukatek (Yucatec), Q’eqchi (Kekchi), and Mopan. The Mexican state of Tabasco is home to the Chontal Maya.

Historically, as a consequence of the Caste War in the nineteenth-century, the population in the eastern half of the peninsula was less affected by and less integrated with the dominant Hispanic culture than those of the western half. Today in the Yucatan peninsula (Mexican States of Campeche, Yucatan and Quintana Roo) between 750,000 and 1,200,000 people speak Mayan. However three times more than that do not speak their native language, but are from Maya origins.

In Guatemala, the largest and most traditional Maya populations are in the western highlands. The departments of Baja Verapaz, El Quiché, Totonicapán, Huehuetenango, Quezaltenango, and San Marcos are majority Maya. The Spanish colonial pattern in Guatemala of keeping the indigenous population legally separate and subservient continued well into the twentieth century. This resulted in many traditional customs being retained, as the only other option than traditional Maya life open to most Maya was entering the Hispanic culture at the very bottom rung.

The area in the Mexican state of Chiapas officially assigned to the Lacandon Maya community is the Montes Azules Biosphere Reserve, which partly overlaps with the Tzeltal, Tojol’abal and Ch'ol areas. Chiapas was for many years one of the regions of Mexico that were least touched by the reforms of the Mexican Revolution. The Zapatista Army of National Liberation, which launched a rebellion against the Mexican state in Chiapas in 1994, declared itself to be an indigenous movement and drew its strongest and earliest support from the Chiapas Maya, a number of whom still support it today. Maya groups in Chiapas include the Tzotzil and Tzeltal, in the highlands of the state, the Tojol’abales, concentrated in the lowlands around Las Margaritas, and the Ch'ol in the jungle.

Considerable identification with local and linguistic affinities, often corresponding to pre-Columbian nation states, continues, and many people wear traditional clothing that displays their specific local identity. Clothing of women tends to be more traditional than that of the men, as the men have more interaction with the Hispanic commerce and culture. The southeastern region of Guatemala (bordering with Honduras) includes groups such as the Ch'orti'. The northern lowland Petén region includes the Itzá, whose language is near extinction but whose agro-forestry practices, including use of dietary and medicinal plants, may still reveal much about precolonial management of the Maya lowlands.

The most traditional of Maya groups are the Lacandon, a small population avoiding contact with outsiders until the late twentieth century by living in small groups in the rainforest. These Lacandon Maya are thought to have come from the Campeche/Petén area (north-east of Chiapas) and moved into the Lacandon rainforest at the end of the eighteenth century, 1000 years after the so-called “collapse” of the ancient Maya civilization (around 850 A.D).

The recent history of the Maya people has been turbulent, especially in Guatemala. Political, religious, and social injustices addressed in the 1996 peace accords ending a 36 year civil war have begun to resurface. Much of this activity has resulted from the reactivation of right-wing groups connected to the 2003 election campaign of presidential candidate General Efraín Ríos-Montt, the founder of the Guatemalan Republican Front (FRG) party who was Guatemala's dictator during the 1982-1983 period.

In the course of the twentieth century, and increasingly in the 1950s and 1960s, other people, mainly Mayan people and subsistence peasants from the highlands, also entered into the Lacandon region. This immigration led to land-related conflicts and an increasing pressure on the rainforest. To halt the

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and an assistant priest for the 1998 murder of Bishop Juan Gerardi, the Coordinator of the Archbishop's Office on Human Rights (ODHA). In October 2002, an appeals court annulled the 2001 conviction and ordered a retrial, which the ODHA immediately appealed to the Supreme Court. In February, the Supreme Court Appellate Chamber confirmed the 2001 conviction, a decision that the defense then appealed to the Constitutional Court.

Historical social practices and apathy in the government continue to result in political exclusion of indigenous people, including limited access to the civil service and high public office. While constitutional law permits universal suffrage, indigenous people's voting rights are still constrained by numerous exclusionary practices involving overly complex registration requirements, the scheduling of elections during the harvest season, and inadequate transportation. It is further reflected when national political parties restrict the election of their indigenous members to decision-making leadership posts in the party structure, effectively excluding them from the wider political arena.

In April 2003, human rights activist and Mayan priest Diego Xon Salazar was murdered in Chichicastenango, El Quiché. Xon Salazar had reportedly received multiple death threats related to his work denouncing the resurgence of the civilian defense patrols (ex-PACS) in the Quiché region. During the investigation conducted by the Special Prosecutor's Office for Human Rights, prosecutors theorized that Xon Salazar was killed because of an interfamilial land dispute. In May 2003, Mayan priest Gerardo Camo Manuel was killed during a religious ceremony in Rabinal, Baja Verapaz, after reportedly receiving death threats from one or more members of his community. The only witness in the case was unable to identify a suspect. In December 2003, a controversial Catholic priest well known for his support of the poor, José María Ruiz Furlón, was killed in Guatemala City. In October 2002, Mayan spiritual leader Antonio Pop Caal was kidnapped and killed in Cobán, Alta Verapaz. Seven individuals were arrested after trying to ransom Pop Caal for profit. In December 2002, Mayan priest Marcos Sical Pérez was killed by assailants in Salamá, Baja Verapaz, allegedly in relation to an attempted car theft. In March Reverend Ron Retner, an American Lutheran missionary, was threatened in a neighborhood of Guatemala City after trying to enter the community to preach. The threats allegedly were related to a dispute between the Lutheran Church and community members over land owned by the Church. Bishop Alvaro Ramazzini and Catholic priest Bernando Castro reportedly received death threats due to their activism in support of indigenous land rights.

Despite some minimal and superficial gains in recent years and the gradual emergence of a slightly more tolerant climate, little of significance has occurred to improve the situation of the indigenous population following the end of the civil war. The free expression of Mayan religion, language and other factors continues to be hampered by a shortage of resources and a lack of political will to enforce laws and implement the 1996 peace accords. Indigenous Guatemalans continue to have a number of significant grievances. Among these are protection, redistribution and access to land, and improved wages and working conditions. Less than 1 percent of export-oriented agricultural producers still control 75 percent of the best land, leaving indigenous people to continue to seek wage labor through internal and external seasonal migration. Other issues include lack of constitutional support for indigenous civil rights and status; the location and identification of indigenous persons disappeared or dead since the internal armed conflict; the prosecution of war crimes and human rights abuses committed during the civil war; the right to teach, publish and deal with the government in indigenous languages; less discriminatory police services; greater political rights in their own communities; access to justice, including the right to administer indigenous justice; and greater participation in central state decision-making.

These crimes represent a disturbing trend of targeting voices of leaders who dissent against the corruption and impunity that plague society, and reflect poorly on the ability of the justice sector to swiftly investigate and prosecute violent crime.

Discrimination also continues in the restrictions on indigenous rights in judicial proceedings. Many Maya continue to be tried in Spanish, even though they do not speak the language. This is due to a shortage of both bilingual judges and/or interpreters. In practice, too few interpreters are trained or hired; consequently, in some localities, provisions mandating the presence of a suitably qualified interpreter are ignored.

Many non-literate indigenous men continue to be forced into the military against their will, but only a small fraction of the police force is indigenous in a country that is overwhelmingly indigenous. Much of this is due to persistent discrimination linked to the key role the police play in everyday social control and cultural suppression.

The government's efforts to acknowledge and prosecute human rights abuses, including its cooperation with a United Nations-sponsored 'truth commission', have been marred by charges of judicial corruption evidenced by the light sentencing of human rights cases. None of the people responsible for the genocide of nearly 200,000 indigenous people during the civil war have been brought to justice.

While there is no government policy of discrimination, an inability to implement the Peace Accords greatly limits the free expression of indigenous religious practice. Indigenous leaders state that Mayan culture does not receive the official recognition that it is due. The Government has not provided mechanisms for indigenous control of or free access to ceremonial sites considered sacred within indigenous culture. Individuals seeking to practice traditional religious ceremonies at sites considered sacred must pay an entrance fee or request permission far in advance from the Instituto de Antropología e Historia de Guatemala. The Government's use of sacred sites

Widespread impunity in the justice sector restricts the investigation of crimes that may have had religious or political motivations. An appeal remains pending in the Constitutional Court of the June 2001 conviction of three military officers

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Table 1. North American Institutions Granting Graduate Degrees on Maya Subjects, 2000-2010.1 American Institution Tulane University University of Pennsylvania University of California, Riverside University of California, Los Angeles Harvard University State University of New York, Albany; Yale University Southern Illinois University; University of California, Davis; Vanderbilt University State University of New York, Buffalo Boston University; Indiana University; Southern Methodist University; Stanford University; University of Arizona; University of Florida; University of Georgia Pennsylvania State University; University of Massachusetts; University of New Mexico; University of Pittsburgh City University of New York; Louisiana State University; McGill University (Canada); Ohio State University; Texas A&M University; University of Calgary (Canada); University of California, San Diego; University of California, Santa Barbara; University of Colorado, Boulder; University of Connecticut; University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign; University of Michigan; University of North Carolina; University of Texas, Austin Columbia University; Cornell University; Florida State University; State University of New York, Stony Brook; University of California, Berkeley; University of California, Santa Cruz; University of Chicago; University of Iowa; University of Kansas; University of Toronto (Canada); University of Virginia; York University (Canada) Arizona State University; California Institute of Integral Studies; Catholic University; Claremont Graduate College; Colorado State University; Dalhousie University (Canada); Emory University; Florida Atlantic University; Florida International University; Johns Hopkins University; Lancaster Theological Seminary; McMaster University (Canada); New York University; North Carolina State University; Northwestern University; Purdue University; Rice University; State University of New York, Binghamton; Syracuse University; Union Institute and University; University of Alabama; University of Alberta (Canada); University of British Columbia (Canada); University of Illinois, Chicago Circle; University of Minnesota; University of Missouri, Columbia; University of Ottawa (Canada); University of Texas, Arlington; University of Waterloo (Canada); Virginia Commonwealth University; Wayne State University Trent University (Canada) California State University, Dominguez Hills; Southern Illinois University Florida Atlantic University; University of Calgary (Canada) Université Laval (Canada); University of California, San Diego; Northern Illinois University; Queen’s University (Canada); Texas Christian University; University of Central Florida; University of Cincinnati Baylor University; Emory University; Florida International University; Florida State University; McGill University (Canada); San Diego State University; University of Alberta (Canada); University of Arizona; University of Houston; University of Kansas; University of Manitoba; University of Massachusetts; University of Missouri, Columbia; University of Ottawa (Canada), University of Texas, Arlington; University of Texas, San Antonio; University of Victoria (Canada); University of Western Ontario (Canada); Vancouver School of Theology (Canada)

N Doctoral Degrees 21 17 15 12 10 8 7 6 5 4 3

2 1

N M.A. Degrees 19 6 4 3 2 1

Table 2. European Institutions Granting Graduate Degrees on Maya Subjects, 2000-2010.1 European Institution

N Doctoral. Degrees

Université de Paris I (France) Université de Leiden (Netherlands) Lunds Universitet (Sweden); Uppsala Universitet (Sweden); Universidad Politecnico Valencia (Spain); Universidad de Valencia (Spanish); Université Libre de Bruxelles (Belgium); University of Essex (England)

13 2 1 N M.A. Degrees 49 1

Université de Paris I (France) Université de Paris X (France) 1

Data contained in these tables are derived from electronic bibliographic databases. Those institutions which do not register their graduate dissertations and theses are not included. A comprehensive list of dissertations and theses from the Université de Paris I was provided by Eric Taladoire

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and the University of Pennsylvania, impressive numbers of doctoral degrees in Maya subjects have been granted by the University of California at Riverside and at Los Angeles, as well as the State University of New York at Albany. Trent University in Canada has awarded a large number of M. A. theses based on archaeological work in the Maya region (see Tables 1 and 2). In recent years European institutions, especially the Université de Paris I, has produced numbers of doctoral and masters degrees as a result of its various research projects in the Petén area and northern Yucatan.

as revenue-generating tourist destinations is considered by some indigenous groups to be an affront to their spiritual rights. In October 2001, the Government swore in the Commission for the Definition of Sacred Places to address such issues. However, the Commission has not taken action to open, or restrict, any sacred sites to religious use since its establishment. While there is legislation protecting indigenous dress in public and private schools, individual school officials have the right to enforce their own specific non-Mayan dress codes. Furthermore, traditionally dressed Mayan women, regardless of income level, still face discrimination in all spheres of social life. There is also continuing opposition to obligatory bilingual education displayed by teachers in certain indigenous areas. This means that even those children living in municipalities that are densely indigenous are still taught in Spanish.

Recent decades have also witnessed the increased participation into Mayanist research of Spanish, French, German, Polish, and Japanese scholars. Perhaps more importantly, scholars from the Maya region itself have entered the field with great impact. Some of these include the Mexicans, Guatemalans, Hondurans, and Belizeans. The Asociación Oxlajuuj Keej Maya Ajtziib (OKMA) was founded in Guatemala in 1990 as a development out of initial linguistic training acquired at the Proyecto Lingüistico Francisco Marroquin in order to promote serious linguistic research on Mayan languages by speakers. A group of Maya from the western highlands of Guatemala, is producing descriptive grammars for various indigenous languages.

One of the major ongoing issues affecting Mayan communities is the increasing activity of the mining industry. According to Rights Action, a United States’-based NGO that supports indigenous land reclamation efforts, protesters in the Q'eqchi' Mayan village of Chichipate located atop a large deposit of nickel have claimed mining company complicity in the forced removal of indigenous residents to begin mine construction.

The Yax Te’ Press (http://www.yaxtebooks. com/index.htm) was founded in 1994 to disseminate materials by and about the contemporary Maya of Guatemala. Activities include the translation and publishing of non-Spanish language ethnographies in Spanish, Maya oral and written literature, and the traditional arts of contemporary Guatemala. Profits from sales are used to distribute copies of volumes to Maya institutions in Guatemala and Maya social services agencies in the United States.

Another area of conflict has been the Marlin gold mine which prompted considerable community concern once locals became aware of the mining presence in their municipalities and the possibility of discharging untreated water from the tailings pond into local rivers.

Yax Te' supports the use of Mayan literary and cultural products in classrooms in the United States, in Mayan communities, and around the world. It provides services and training in the use of their products to promote literacy, cultural awareness, and global citizenship. Proceeds support the production of new materials and the free distribution of materials to appropriate audiences. Since Fall 2006, Yax Te’ has been a project of the Maya Educational Foundation (MEF), with which it shares the mission of education and dissemination of information about Mayan culture.

The Maya Sipakapense municipality of Sipakapa held the first community referendum rejecting the presence of the gold mining company and open pit mining activities in their territory. Since then 20 other Guatemalan highland municipalities with mining concessions have held community referendums. However in 2007 the Guatemala Constitutional Court ruled against the validity of the community referendum processes deeming them legal, but not binding. As a result the people of Sipakapa took their case in favor of referendum legality to the Inter-American Court on Human Rights which accepted the petition.

The period 2000-2010 in Maya research was marked by the death of several prominent scholars, including William R. Coe, Monro S. Edmonson, Kathryn Josserand, Juan Pedro Laporte, Gareth Lowe, Alejandro Martínez Muriel, Enrique Nalda, Lorenzo Ochoa Salas, Gordon R. Willey, and Wolfgang Wurster.

RECENT RESEARCH IN THE MAYA AREA There has been a phenomenal increase in the literature published about the ancient, historical, and modern Maya between 2000 and 2010. The field, traditionally dominated by North

Primary ethnographic research in the Maya region continues to be productive on such topics as issues of ethnicity and identity, ethnobotany, human rights, the impact of tourism, and participation in national political systems. In 2002 and 2003 once again there was a rise in death threats and abductions against human and indigenous rights leaders in Guatemala. This involved activists working to bring government officials and military officers to trial over civil war-related atrocities, and there were scattered reports of murders of indigenous and human rights leaders.

American scholars from the Carnegie Institution of Washington, the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University, the University Museum at the University of Pennsylvania, and the Middle American Research Institute at Tulane University, has been expanded by the large number of universities and colleges which now support a range of research in the Maya region. In addition to Harvard, Tulane

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available through conventional means such as library catalogs, indexes, and bibliographic data bases. Much of it also has a more limited distribution, especially by epigraphers and other scholars working with the enigmatic hieroglyphic inscriptions. In addition to problems of access, the modern Maya scholar is faced with a bewildering assortment of venues and a poorly constructed bibliographic apparatus. Bibliographic awareness was largely a function of informal information exchanges, and not especially footed on any singular bibliographic tool.

Several significant ethnohistorical works were issued, including the publication of an important volume on Mexican auxiliaries in the conquest of Guatemala, as well as publication of primary documents such as the Calkini chronicles, several of the books of Chilam Balam, the lienzo de Quauhquecholan, Memorial de Sololá, Rabinal Achí, and the Xiu chronicles, as well as analysis of the Codex Madrid. Noteworthy has been the publication of the Popol Vuh in several highland Maya languages. Research on archaeological cultures continues to produce most of the literature on the Maya. In terms of geography, Belize is a particular focus for archaeological field investigations. Some of these include investigations in the Belize River valley, Blue Creek, Caracol, Caye Coco, K’axob, La Milpa, Lamanai, Minanha, and Progresso Lagoon, Sibun River, and Xunantunich. In the Mexican state of Campeche, important work has been published on Calakmul, Rio Bec, and Edzna, and in Chiapas work is continuing at Bonampak and Palenque. In the state of Yucatan investigations have been active at Chichén Itzá, Chunchucmil, Ek Balam, Mayapán, and Xkipche. In lowland Guatemala archaeological research has been conducted at Aguateca, El Perú-Waka, Holmul, La Blanca, La Joyanca, Motul de San José, Nakum, Piedras Negras, Tikal, Topoxté, and Zacpetén. There continues to be very little archaeological research in the highlands of Guatemala, with the exception of an important dissertation on archaeological settlements in the Cuchumatanes Mountains.

The growth of this field of study is partially a function of the ability of its practitioners to strive for the superlative. During the decade covered in this volume, headlines from the various news services have included the following:  

    

In Honduras the results of long-term research are being published for Copan and the Naco Valley. Reports from other excavation projects on the Pacific coastal piedmont of Guatemala, continue to be issued.



Several important volumes of collected essays have considered the archaeology of the eastern Maya lowlands, the nature of ancient Maya urbanism, death ritual, relationship to water, religion practices, and survivalism. Festschriften honoring important scholars were published for Fernando Camara Barbachano, Robert M. Carmack, Alain Ichon, and Edwin M. Shook



Long sought Maya city, Site Q, found in Guatemala (9/05); University of Calgary archaeologist and her international team of researchers have discovered the earliest known portrait of a woman that the Maya carved into stone (12/05); Maya politics likely played role in ancient large game decline (11/06) What do dinosaurs and the Maya have in common? (9/09); Classic Maya history is embedded in commoners’ homes (4/10). Royals weren’t the only builders of Maya temples (2/10). Mayan king’s tomb discovered in Guatemala … packed with carvings, ceramics, textiles, and the bones of six children who may have been sacrificed (7/10). Laser beams penetrating thick canopy detect thousands new structures, show Maya adept at ‘building green (5/10).’ Maya plumbing first pressurized water feature found in New World (5/10).

In 1993 the partially annotated bibliographic research guide, Maya Civilization, was published in the Research Guides to Ancient Civilizations series, published by Garland Publishing in New York. It soon became obvious that the literature of the Maya was increasing with great intensity. Any thoughts of a supplement were extinguished when the publisher decided to withdraw from issuing bibliographic works. It was then decided to issue five-year supplements to maintain reasonably adequate bibliographic coverage for the rapidly increasing corpus of published results of current anthropological research on the ancient and modern Maya. In 1997 Maya Civilization 1990-1995: A Bibliographic Guide was published by Labyrinthos in Lancaster, California. This was followed in 2002 by Maya Civilization 1996-2000: A Bibliographic Guide, also published by Labyrinthos. A third supplement, Maya Civilization 2001-2005 was compiled and submitted to Labyrinthos for publication. Unfortunately, during the editing process the publisher decided to retire from the publishing business.

Research on Maya hieroglyphic writing and iconography remains an area of continued growth, with important contributions appearing at a rapid pace. An important related trend is the incorporation of epigraphic studies into major excavation projects in the Maya lowlands at Caracol, Copan, Calakmul, and Piedras Negras. The catalogs from several major exhibitions of preColumbian art held in Museum für Völkerkunde in Vienna, Musée de Picardie in Amiens, France, Centro Cultural de la Villa de Madrid, National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, and Instituto Hondureño de Antropologia e Historia in Tegucigalpa. Issues regarding privatization and issues concerning cultural patrimony were published on resources in Belize, Guatemala, and Mexico. The controversy surrounding 2012 developed into an international event.

At about the same time the Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc. (FAMSI) provided the opportunity to begin work on Bibliografia Mesoamericana, an electronic bibliographic database based on their server in Crystal River, Florida. A meeting was held in Philadelphia with Dr. Sandra Noble, Executive Director, FAMSI, Justin and Barbara Kerr, mem-

The anthropological investigation of the ancient and modern Maya has developed into a publishing niche cottage-industry. This includes monographs and books, essays, festschriften and edited volumes, essays and articles, and a gray literature ranging from limited distribution progress reports and miscellaneous worldwide web-based items. Much of this material is

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the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. The scope of the literature in the bibliography includes archaeology, cultural/social anthropology, biological/ physical anthropology, linguistics, ethno- history, and related disciplines such as art history, ecology, and so forth.

bers of the Board of Directors, FAMSI, a software engineer, and the author. The general parameters of the project were discussed, a budget was developed, and a plan of action was agreed upon. Initially the Penn Museum Library staff would enter bibliographic records, and the web development would take place in New York City. As the bibliography developed it would be downloaded to a server in Florida. Soon after the meeting, Greg Borgstede, then a graduate student in the Department of Anthropology at Penn, and the author developed a template for inputting bibliographic data. This template was developed in less than an hour and without the benefit of alpha or beta testing. It has survived intact for over ten years.

Several people have assisted with the preparation of this volume. At the Penn Museum Andree Suplee, Robey Callaghan, Scott Piquette, Chelise Pykles, Richard DeWitt and John H. Whitham entered most of the bibliographic data. Anita Fahringer monitored the content of library materials received at the Penn Museum Library and routed monographs and periodicals to be indexed. Dr. Sandra Noble, Executive Director, FAMSI, generously supported this project both intellectually and financially and, despite difficult circumstances, was committed to keeping the project alive as a web product. For many of us who work in the study of Mesoamerica a great debt is owed to Dr. Sandra Noble. In addition to overseeing FAMSI’s extensive grating program which funded field research for many graduate students and young faculty, she also actively sought digital content for the FAMSI web site. Some of this included high quality facsimiles of all known Maya and Mexican codices or illustrated manuscripts, the digitization of much of the nineteenth-century manuscript collection assembled by Karl Hermann Berendt and now curated at the University of Pennsylvania, as well as full text reporting of the results of all FAMSI funded research projects.

The data to be inputted represented primarily the holdings of the Penn Museum. The initial plan was to involve student workers who would participate with great enthusiasm. Unfortunately few were found with any interest and, through the years, the database was assembled by unemployed electricians, social workers, graduate student wives, financially strapped doctoral students, and others who did actually bring a great deal of enthusiasm to the project. The database grew rapidly and there were several modifications which simplified the downloading of data. It is hosted on the FAMSI web site along with a variety of other scholarly resources. It is heavily used by students and scholars in the United States and Europe, as well as those in Latin America, and is available to scholars and others worldwide. The database is seen as part of FAMSI’s commitment to the democratization of information and there is no charge for the use of the resource.

Prof. Eric Taladoire, Series Editor, Paris Monographs in American Archaeology, reviewed the manuscript before publication and offered numerous suggestions which have greatly improving the accuracy and completeness of the manuscript. This project would probably not have been completed without his involvement. Ing. Virginia Ramírez Zabala checked the accuracy of the Spanish entries. I wish to acknowledge support from the welcoming community of Mayanists at the University of Pennsylvania Museum. At various times during the last three decades these have included Sharon Aponte Misdea, Wendy Ashmore, Wendy Bacon, Ellen E. Bell, Gregory Borgstede, Arlen and Diane Chase, Elin Danien, Nancy Farris, Charles Golden, John Harris, Christopher Jones, Richard Leventhal, Simon Martin, Nuria Matarrodona Desantes, Cynthia Robin, Jeremy A. Sabloff, Paula A. Sabloff, Frauke Sachse, Edwin M. Schortman, Robert Schuyler, Judith Storniolo, Patricia A. Urban, Jason Yaeger, and Jaroslav Zralka. Hillary Marin Weeks and Isabela Marin Weeks were the cheering section.

At present the data base is generally acknowledged as the primary bibliographic apparatus for Mesoamerican studies. However, by the early 2000s, interest in Mesoamerican studies shifted to other venues and the funding programs sponsored by FAMSI were dissolved. The bibliographic project continued to survive, albeit on a gradually decreasing basis until 2010 when most FAMSI holdings were acquired by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA). Because of the increasing uncertainty of the continuation of Bibliografia Mesoamericana, it was decided in the summer of 2010 to revive the publication of Maya Civilization. This volume provides bibliographic coverage for the literature pertaining to the ancient and modern Maya of southern Mexico and northern Central America published between 2000 and 2010. Coverage is somewhat selective, being based on materials accessioned into the collection of the Library of

SERIALS LIST Annual Review of Anthropology. Palo Alto. Anthropologie et Sociétés. Quebec. Anthropology and Humanism. Arlington, VA. Anthropology and Medicine. Abingdon. Anthropology News. London. Anthropology of Work Review. Stewartsville, NJ. Anthropology Today. London. Anthropos. Salzburg. Antike Welt. Mainz. Antiquity. London. Antropología e Historia de Guatemala. Guatemala.

Acta Archaeologica. Kobenhavn. Agroforestry Systems. Boston. Alma Mater. Krakow. American Anthropologist. Washington, DC. American Antiquity. Washington, DC. American Archaeology. Albuquerque. American Indian Rock Art. Tucson. American Journal of Human Biology. New York. American Journal of Physical Anthropology. Hoboken. Americas. Washington, DC. Anales del Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas. Mexico. Ancient Mesoamerica. Nashville.

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Journal de la Société des Américanistes. Paris. Journal des Anthropologues. Montrouge. Journal for the American Institute of Conservation. Washington, DC. Journal for the History of Astronomy. Chalfont St. Guiles, England. Journal of American Folklore. Boston. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. Amsterdam. Journal of Anthropological Research. Albuquerque. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. Tucson. Journal of Archaeological Research. New York. Journal of Archaeological Science. Amsterdam. Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology. Boston Journal of Ethnobiology. Washington, DC. Journal of Field Archaeology, Boston. Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology. Arlington, VA. Journal of Latin American Anthropology. Arlington, VA Journal of Latin American Lore. Los Angeles. Journal of Latin American Studies. London. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology. Arlington, VA. Journal of Navigation. London. Journal of Osteoarchaeology. Chichester, England. Journal of Social Archaeology. London. Journal of the American Institute for Conservation. Washington, DC. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. London. L’Oeil. Lausanne. Language in Society. Cambridge, England. Latin American Antiquity. Washington, DC. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal. McKeesport, PA. Latin American Perspectives. Thousand Oaks, CA. Linguistics and Education. Norwood, NJ. Lithic Technology. Tulsa. M2 Presswire. New Haven. Mayab. Madrid. Medical Anthropology Quarterly. Arlington, VA. Mesoamérica. Antigua Guatemala. Mesoamerican Voices. Chicago. Mexicon. Markt Schwaben. Microchemical Journal. New York. Minerva. Berlin. Multicultural Review. Westport, CT. Museum Anthropology. Flagstaff. National Geographic Deutschland. Hamburg. National Geographic. Washington, DC Native Americans: Hemispheric Journal of Indigenous Issues. Ithaca, NY. Native Peoples. Phoenix. Natural History. New York. Oriental Art. Surrey, England. PARI Journal: Quarterly Publication of the Precolumbian Art Research Institute. San Francisco. Piecework. Loveland, CO. Political and Legal Anthropology Review. Middletown, CT. Practicing Anthropology. Oklahoma City. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. Philadelphia. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Washington, DC. Public Archaeology: Archaeological Ethnographies. London. Quaternary Research. New York. Recherches Amérindiennes au Quebec. Quebec.

Archaeoastronomy: The Journal of Astronomy in Culture. College Park, MD. Archaeological Method and Theory. Tucson. Archaeologies: Journal of the World Archaeological Congress. New York. Archaeology International. London. Archaeology. Boston. Archaeometry. Oxford, England. Archäologie. Mainz. Arqueología Guatemalteca. Guatemala. Arqueología Mexicana. Mexico. Art Nexus. Paris. Athena Review. Naples, FL. Baessler-Archiv. Berlin. Beiträge zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie. Mainz. Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica. Mexico. Bulletin of Latin American Research. Oxford, England. Business Mexico. Mexico. Cahiers des Amériques Latines. Paris. California Anthropologist. Los Angeles. Cambridge Anthropology. Cambridge, England. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. Cambridge, England. Ceramics Monthly. Columbus, OH. Civilisations. Paris. Codex. Philadelphia. Comparative Studies in Society and History. London. Connaissance des Arts. Paris. Critique of Anthropology. London. Cross-Cultural Research. Thousand Oaks, CA. Cultural Survival Monthly. Cambridge, MA. Cultural Survival. Cambridge, MA. Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry. Dordrecht. Current Anthropology. Chicago. Current World Archaeology. London. Development and Change. The Hague. Developmental Psychology. Arlington, VA. Dimensión antropológica. Mexico. Discovery. Austin. Earth, Moon, and Planets. Dordrecht. Estudios de cultura maya. Mexico. Ethnographisch-Archäologische Zeitschrift. Berlin. Ethnohistory. Durham. Ethnologia Polona. Poznan. Ethnology. Pittsburgh. Expedition. Philadelphia. Explorers Journal. New York. Faits de Langues. Evry, France. Fontes Archaeologici Posnanienses. Posnan. Frontiers: A Journal of Women’s Studies. Boulder, CO. Geoarchaeology. New York. Geographical Review. New York. Geographical. London. Hispanic American Historical Review. Washington, DC. Histories of Anthropology Annual. Lincoln. Human Ecology. New York. Human Mosaic. New Orleans. Human Organization. Oklahoma City. Indiana. Berlin. Inquiry.Oslo. Institute of Maya Studies Newsletter. Miami. International Journal of American Linguistics. New York. Investigadores de la cultura maya. Campeche. Itinerarios. Mexico.

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U tz’ib. Guatemala. Visual Resources, Redding Ridge, CT. World Archaeology. London. Written Language and Literacy. Amsterdam. Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin. New Haven. Yaxkin. Tegucigalpa. Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft. Göttingen.

Reporter. New York. Res: Anthropology and Aesthetics. Cambridge, MA Research in Economic Anthropology. Amsterdam. Revista de Arqueología. Madrid. Revista de Dialectologia y Tradiciones Populares. Madrid. Revista Española de Antropología Americana. Madrid. SAA Archaeological Record. Washington, DC. SAS Bulletin. Washington, DC. Science News. Washington, DC. Science. Washington, DC. Smithsonian. Washington, DC. Techniques et Culture. Paris. Temas Antropologicos. Merida. Textile Museum Journal. Washington, DC. Tlalocan. Mexico. Trace. Mexico. Tribal. San Francisco.

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1 INTRODUCTION TO MAYA CIVILIZATION 8. Houston, Stephen D., Takeshi Inomata. 2009. The Classic Maya. New York: Cambridge University Press. 383 p. “This book is the first in-depth synthesis of the Classic Maya. It is richly informed by new decipherments of hieroglyphs and decades of intensive excavation and survey. Structured by categories of person in society, it reports on kings, queens, nobles, gods, and ancestors, as well as the many millions of farmers and other figures who lived in societies predicated on sacred kingship and varying political programs. The Classic Maya presents a tandem model of societies bound by moral covenants and convulsed by unavoidable tensions between groups, all affected by demographic trends and changing environments. Focusing on the Classic heartland but referring to other zones, it will serve as the basic source for all readers interested in the civilization of the Maya.”

GENERAL SUMMARIES 1. Breton, Alain, and Anne Cazales. 2002. Mayas. Chambryles-Tours, France: CLD Editions. 251 p. General overview, with color photographs, of Maya civilization. 2. Coe, Michael D. 2005. The Maya. 7 rev. ed. New York: Thames and Hudson. 272 p. See also Michael D. Coe, Mayalar; The Maya (Ankara: Arkadas, 2002. 256 p. Translation of Coe's The Maya from English to Turkish by Meltem Ozdemir). 3. Demarest, Arthur A. 2003. Ancient Maya: The Rise and Fall of a Rainforest Civilisation. Case Studies in Early Societies, 3. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 240 p. “In this new archaeological study, Arthur Demarest brings the lost pre-Columbian civilization of Maya to life. In applying a holistic perspective to the most recent evidence from archaeology, paleoecology, and epigraphy, this theoretical interpretation emphasizes both the brilliant rain forest adaptations of the ancient Maya and the Native American spirituality that permeated all aspects of their daily life. Demarest draws on his own discoveries and the findings of colleagues to reconstruct the complex lifeways and volatile political history of the Classic Maya states of the first to eighth centuries. He provides a new explanation of the longstanding mystery of the ninth-century abandonment of most of the great rain forest cities. Finally, he draws lessons from the history of the Classic Maya cities for contemporary society and for the ongoing struggles and resurgence of the modern Maya peoples, who are now re-emerging from six centuries of oppression.”

9. James, N. 2009. Aztecs & Maya. Stroud, Gloucestershire: History Press 192 p. 10. Longhena, Maria. 2001. Ancient Mexico: The History and Culture of the Maya, Aztecs, and Other Pre-Columbian Peoples. New York: Barnes & Noble Books. 292 p. 11. López Bruni, Ricky. 2006. Ciudades sagradas mayas; Sacred Maya Cities: Peten, Guatemala. Guatemala: Fundación G&T Continental. 269 p. 12. Love, Michael. 2007. Recent research in the southern highlands and Pacific coast of Mesoamerica. Journal of Archaeological Research 15(4): 275-328.

4. Dominici, Davide. 2006. The Maya: History and Treasures of an Ancient Civilization. Vercelli: White Star Publishers, 2006. 207 p. “This lavishly illustrated volume enables readers to chronologically trace the cultural development of Mesoamerica. From the imposing monumental sculptures of the Olmecs in 1500 BC to the extraordinary development of the Mayan city states of the classical period to the militaristic fervor of the kingdom of Chichen Itza to the conquest of the Mayans by the Spanish armies in the 1500s.”

13. Mathews, Peter. 2001. Mesoamerica. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 2, pp. 870-871. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio. 14. McKillop, Heather. 2004. The Ancient Maya: New Perspectives. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. 453 p. Includes chapters on geography and environment, history and chronology, economics, social structure, politics, religion and ideology, material culture, and intellectual achievements. A concluding chapter looks at controversial topics and unanswered questions that are driving research forward. Includes an A–Z reference section of key concepts, events, persons, and institutions, numerous illustrations and drawings, and depictions of important artifacts such as the murals of Bonampak and the hieroglyphic stairway of Copan, and provides detailed maps of major Maya cities as well as other research sites.

5. Estrada Monroy, Agustín, and Carlos Rivera Sandoval. 2001. El despertar del jaguar; Ru k'astajic balam; cultura intelectual de los mayas. Guatemala: Editorial Unipres. 215 p. A general study of Mayan culture, including philosophy, religion, calendar, mathematics, astronomy, architecture, agriculture, health, family, archeology and literature. 6. Evans, Susan T. 2004. Ancient Mexico and Central America: Archaeology and Culture History. New York: Thames and Hudson. 608 p. 7. Gugliatta, Guy. 2007. Geographic 212(2):68-109.

Maya

mysteries.

15. Ruz, Mario H. 2006. Mayas. Mexico: CDI, Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indígenas: PNUD México, Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarollo. 2 v.

National 16. Sharer, Robert J., and Loa P. Traxler. 2005. The Ancient Maya. 6 ed. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. 931 p. 1

Cristina Mapes, and Eduardo Espitia, Amaranth (pp. 13-14); Michel Graulich, Ancestor worship (pp. 15-17); Dana Leibsohn, Annals (pp. 17-21); John D. Monaghan, and John P. Hawkins, Anthropology: sociocultural anthropology (pp. 21-25); William L. Fash, Anthropology: archaeology (pp. 2534); Anthony F. Aveni, Archaeoastronomy (pp. 35-37); John F. Schwaller, Archives and libraries (pp. 37-41); Eduardo Matos Moctezuma, Armillas, Pedro (pp. 41-42); Beatriz de la Fuente, Art and Architecture: pre-Hispanic period (pp. 42-47); Jeannette F. Peterson, Art and Architecture: colonial period (pp. 47-51); Stacie G. Widdifield, Art and Architecture: nineteenth and twentieth centuries (pp. 51-54); Flora S. Clancy, Art history (pp. 54-59); Anthony F. Aveni, Astronomy (pp. 59-60); Cecelia F. Klein, Autosacrifice and bloodletting (pp. 64-66); Karl A. Taube, Bacabs (p. 75); Heather S. Orr, Ballgame (pp. 75-78); Francisco Morales, Baptism (pp. 78-79); Clara Bargellini, Baroque (pp. 79-81); Eileen M. Mulhare, Barrios (pp. 81-82); Jose F. Hinojosa Hinojosa, Bats (pp. 82-83); Robert A. Bye, Beans (pp. 83-84); Gabrielle Vail, Bees and honey (pp. 84-85); Sonia Corcuera de Mancera, Beverages (pp. 85-88); Karl A. Taube, Birth (pp. 88-89); Bernardo García Martinez, Bourbon reforms (pp. 102104); Nadia P. Urkidi, Brasseur de Bourbourg, Charles Etienne (pp. 104-105); Guilhem Olivier, Bundles (pp. 105106); Karl A. Taube, Butterflies (pp. 107-109); Matthew B. Restall, Cabildo (pp. 111-112); Michael D. Coe, Cacao (p. 113); Clara Bargellini, Cabrera, Miguel (pp. 112-113); Rebecca Horn, Caciques (pp. 115-117); William J. Folan, Calakmul (pp. 117-121); John S. Justeson, and Terrence Kaufman, Calendar round (p. 121); David H. Kelley, Calendars: Christian calendar (pp. 124-126); Harvey M. Bricker, and Victoria R. Bricker, Calendars: Correlation of calendars (pp. 126-128); Susan Milbrath, Calendar wheels (pp. 128-130); Pedro Carrasco, Calpulli (pp. 131-133); Juan P. Viqueira Alban, Calendaria, María de la (pp. 133-134); Allen Wells, Canek, Jacinto (pp. 134-136); Elizabeth P. Benson, Canines (pp. 136-137); Kay A. Read, Cannibalism (pp. 137139); Arlen F. Chase, and Diane Z. Chase, Caracol (pp. 143145); Marjorie Becker, Cardenas, Lazaro (pp. 145-146); Ilona Katzew, Castas paintings (pp. 149-150); Christopher M. Nicholas, Caste wars (pp. 150-152); Doris Heyden, Caves (pp. 152-153); Edward B. Kurjack, Cenotes (pp. 154-155); Elizabeth H. Boone, Central Mexican pictorials (pp. 155-158); David Carrasco, Ceremonial centers (pp. 165-168); Lawrence G. Desmond, Chacmool (pp. 168-169); Xavier Noguez, Chalma (pp. 174-175); Ruben G. Mendoza, Chenes (pp. 176178); Thomas R. Hester, Chert (pp. 178-180); Rafael Cobos, Chichen Itza (pp. 183-187); Meredith D. Paxton, Chilam Balam, books of (pp. 190-195); Robert A. Bye, Chilies (pp. 195-196); Susan Schroeder, Chimalpahin Quauhtlehuanitzin, Domingo Francisco de San Anton Muñon (pp. 196-198); Teresa Rojas Rabiela, Chinampa agriculture (pp. 200-201); Geoffrey G. McCafferty, Cholula (pp. 202-206); John G. Fought, Chorti (p. 206); Daniel P. Dwyer, Christianity: Catholicism (pp. 206-210); George L. Scheper, Christianity: Evangelical Protestantism (pp. 210-214); Clara Bargellini, Churches and cathedrals (pp. 214-218); Rebecca Horn, Civil records (pp. 220-223); John K. Chance, Civil-religious hierarchy (pp. 223-225); George E. Stuart, Coba (pp. 225226); Dorothy Tanck de Estrada, Cofradia (pp. 227-230); Rebecca Horn, Colonial administration (pp. 232-236); Edwin C. Krupp, Comets (p. 237); John W. Fox, Community kingdoms: Maya Highlands (pp. 241-242); Wendy Ashmore, Community kingdoms: Maya lowlands (pp. 242-244); Hugo

17. Sharer, Robert J. 2009. Daily Life in Maya Civilization. 2 ed. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. 280 p. 18. Wilhelmy, Herbert. 2001. Mundo maya; maya' amaq'. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. 654 p. Translation of the German Die Welt der Maya, originally published in the mid-1990s; contains scholarly articles on Maya culture and society, a catalog of objects, and a collection of color photographs. Contents include: Federico Fahsen, Presentación (p. 7); Ried Seipel, Preámbulo (pp. 8-9); Federico Mayor. Prefacio (p. 10); Arne Eggebrecht, Prologo (pp. 11-12); Nikolai Grube, Introducción (pp. 13-14); Herbert Wilhelmy, Espacio vital de los Mayas (pp. 15-35); Juan Antonio Valdes, Los Mayas en el periodo clásico tardío (pp. 36-56); Robert J. Sharer, El mundo clásico maya (pp. 57-111); Nicholas P. Dunning, Población y alimentación en la época clásica de los Mayas de las tierras bajas (pp. 112-128); Wolfgang W. Wurster, La arquitectura maya (pp. 129-160); Oscar Quintana, Problema de la conservación de las sitios arqueológica mayas (pp. 161-164); Stephen D. Houston and David Stuart, La corte maya del clásico (pp. 164-181); David A. Freidel, Guerra-mito y realidad (pp. 182-202); Daniel Graña Behrens, El juego de pelota maya (pp. 203-228); Linda Schele, Religión y universo (pp. 229-246); Nikolai Grube, Escritura e idioma de los mayas (pp. 247-270); T. Patrick Culbert, El colapso de una civilización (pp. 271290); Diane Z. Chase and Arlen F. Chase, Los Mayas del postclásico (pp. 291-316); Carolyn Tate, La magia de la representación: la perspectiva maya del arte (pp. 317-323). BIBLIOGRAPHY 19. Gómez, Arturo. 2002. Caribe maya: historia y bibliografía de los mayas antiguos. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 151 p. 20. MacLeod, Philip S. 2002. La Colección Centroaméricana de la Universidad de Yale. Mesoamérica 44:134-150. Author describes the history of the Latin American Manuscripts Collection at Yale University, describes a project aimed at reorganizing the collection in order to make it more accessible, and presents a listing of items in the collection. 21. Weeks, John M. 2001. Maya Civilization 1996-2000: A Research Guide. Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos. 368 p. Third five-year increment in a series of bibliographic research guides to Maya civilization. Atlases 22. Hall, Carolyn, and Hector Pérez Brignoli. 2003. Historical Atlas of Central America. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 336 p. The first two sections of the atlas review five centuries of territorial organization, demography, and culture. The final three sections focus on the economic, political, and social issues specific to each century from the colonial period to the present. Illustrated with 140 color and black-and-white illustrations and more than 400 full-color maps. Encyclopedias 23. Carrasco, David, ed. 2001. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures: The Civilizations of Mexico and Central America. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. 3 v. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Volume 1: Hugo G. Nutini, Acculturation (pp. 1-3); Teresa Rojas Rabiela, Agriculture (pp. 3-8); Robert V. Kemper, Aguirre Beltran, Gonzalo (pp. 8-9); Carolyn E. Tate, Altars (pp. 10-12); 2

Gender roles: pre-hispanic period (pp. 427-430); Susan M. Kellogg, Gender roles: colonial period (pp. 430-432); Christine E. Eber, and Robin O’Brien, Gender roles: contemporary cultures (pp. 432-434); Cecelia F. Klein, Gender studies (pp. 435-438); Constance Cortez, Genealogical manuscripts (pp. 438-439); George L. Scheper, God (pp. 439-441); Martin Biskowski, Grinding implements (pp. 441-442).

G. Nutini, Compadrazgo (pp. 244-246); Louise M. Burkhart, Confession (pp. 247-248); Susan L. Cline, Conquest narratives (pp. 248-251); Joyce Marcus, Conquests: PreHispanic Period (pp. 251-254); John E. Kicza, Conquests: Spanish conquest (pp. 254-257); Augusto Molina-Montes, Conservation and restoration (pp. 257-259); William L. Fash, Copan (pp. 259-263); Margarita Megenus Bornemann, Corregidores and alcaldes mayores (pp. 264-265); Delgado Gomez, Cortes, Fernando (pp. 265-267); Philip P. Arnold, Cosmic trees (pp. 267-268); Alfredo López Austin, Cosmovision (pp. 268-274); Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, Cotzumalahuapa (pp. 275-277); Michael D. Coe, Covarrubias, Miguel (pp. 277-278); Catherine Good, Craft production (pp. 278-280); Michel Graulich, Creation myths (pp. 280-284); Michel Graulich, Creator deities (pp. 284-286); William B. Taylor, Cristos de caña (pp. 286-287); Charlene Villaseñor Black, Crosses and crucifixes (pp. 287-289); Janet LongSolis, Cuisine (pp. 292-295); Edward M. Schortman, and Patricia A. Urban, Cultural interaction (pp. 295-300); Arthur J. Rubel, and C. H. Browner, Curing and healing (pp. 300304); Karl A. Taube, Dance (pp. 305-308); Max Harris, Danzas (pp. 308-311); Hugo G. Nutini, Day of the Dead and Todos Santos (pp. 311-314); Martha J. Macri, Day-signs (pp. 314-318); Eduardo Matos Moctezuma, Death (p. 318); Leonardo López Lujan, Death deities (pp. 318-320); Elizabeth P. Benson, Deer (pp. 320-321); George L. Scheper, Devil (pp. 321-322); Rolena Adorno, Diaz del Castillo, Bernal (pp. 322324); Frances Karttunen, Dictionaries and grammars (pp. 324326); Xavier Noguez, Diego, Juan (p. 327); Alan R. Sandstrom, Divination (pp. 327-329); John S. Justeson, and Terrence Kaufman, Divinatory cycle (pp. 329-331); Karen Melvin, Dominicans (pp. 331-333); Nikolai Grube, Dresden, codex (pp. 337-339); Patricia R. Anawalt, Dress, costume, and adornment (pp. 339-344); Jill L. Furst, Duality (pp. 344-345); Luis A. Torres Montes, Dynasties (pp. 346-348); Elizabeth P. Benson, Eagles (pp. 349-350); Elizabeth Baquedano, Earth deities (pp. 350-351); Francisco Morales, Ecclesiastical records (pp. 351-353); Francisco Morales, Historical and hagiographical texts (pp. 354-358); Francisco Morales, Devotional texts and manuals (pp. 358-360); Edwin C. Krupp, Eclipses (pp. 360-361); Frances F. Berdan, Economic and tribute manuscripts (pp. 361-363); Pedro Carrasco, Economic organization and development: pre-Hispanic cultures (pp. 363-366); Stephen M. Perkins, Economic organization and development: post-conquest cultures (pp. 366-369); Paul Hart, Ejidos (pp. 370-371); Rafael Alvarado, Electronic resources (pp. 372-373); Ray T. Matheny, and Deanne G. Matheny, El Mirador (pp. 373-377); Margarita Megenus Bornemann, Encomiendas and repartimientos (pp. 380-381); Michael D. Coe, Epigraphy: Maya (pp. 382-384); Maarten Jansen, Epigraphy: Mixtec and Central American (pp. 384-387); Frederic Hicks, Ethnicity (pp. 388-392); Susan D. Gillespie, Family and kinship (pp. 393-396); Catherine Good, Fasting (pp. 396-397); Henry B. Nicholson, Feathered serpent (pp. 397-400); Frances F. Berdan, Feathers and featherwork (pp. 400-401); Philip P. Arnold, Fertility (pp. 404-406); Johanna Broda de Casas, Festivals and festival cycles (pp. 406-409); Silvia Limon Olvera, Fire deities (pp. 409-410); James R. McGoodwin, Fishing (pp. 410-412); Marion Oettinger, Folk art (pp. 415-417); David H. Kelley, Förstemann, Ernst (pp. 417-418); Guillermo A. Najera Najera, Franciscans (pp. 418420); Elizabeth P. Benson, Frogs and toads (p. 421); Linda Manzanilla, Gamio, Manuel (pp. 423-424); Francisco Morales, Gante, Pedro de (pp. 424-425); Cecelia F. Klein,

Volume 2: Gisela von Wobeser, Haciendas and plantations (pp. 1-2); Peter T. Furst, Hallucinogens (pp. 2-3); Louise M. Burkhart, Heaven and hell (pp. 4-5); María de los Angeles Romero Frizzi, Herding and livestock (pp. 6-7); Richard Haly, Hero twins (pp. 7-8); John K. Chance, Historiography (pp. 813); Bernard R. Ortiz de Montellano, Human body (pp. 2325); Eloise Quiñones Keber, Humboldt, Alexander von (pp. 25-26); Elizabeth P. Benson, Hummingbirds (pp. 26-27); Amos Megged, Idolatry (pp. 29-30); Patrick J. Carroll, Immigration (pp. 31-33); Cecelia Klein, Impersonation of deities (pp. 33-37); Duncan M. Earle, Incense (pp. 37-38); Eric van Young, Independence wars (pp. 38-42); Holly Barnet-Sanchez, Indigenismo and pre-hispanic revivals (pp. 42-44); Howard B. Campbell, Indigenous rights movements (pp. 44-46); John F. Chuchiak, Inquisition (pp. 46-48); Rafael Alvarado, Institutions, projects, and meetings (pp. 49-54); Grant D. Jones, Itza (pp. 54-56); Karl A. Taube, Itzamna (pp. 56-57); Ronald M. Spores, Ixcatec (pp. 57-58); Mary E. Miller, Ixchel (pp. 58-59); Benjamin N. Colby, Ixil (pp.5960); John W. Fox, and Timothy J. Smith, Iximche (pp. 60-61); Edward E. Calnek, Ixtlilxochitl, Fernando de Alva (pp. 6263); John E. Clark, Izapa (pp. 63-64); Ruben G. Mendoza, Jade and greenstone (pp. 65-66); Nicholas J. Saunders, Jaguars and pumas (pp. 66-68); Antonio Benavides Castillo, Jaina (pp. 68-69); George L. Scheper, Jesus (pp. 71-73); Francis R. Chassen-López, Juarez, Benito (pp. 76-77); Robert S. Carlsen, Judas (pp. 77-78); Antonia E. Foias, Kaminaljuyu (pp. 79-85); Robert S. Carlsen, Kaqchikel (pp. 85-87); Barbara Tedlock, K'iche' (pp. 87-89); Pedro Carrasco, Kirchhoff, Paul (pp. 89-91); Thomas F. Reese, Kulkulcan (pp. 91-92); Rik Hoekstra, Labor (pp. 93-97); R. Jon McGee, Lacandon (pp. 97-98); Cecilia Rodriguez Milanes, La llorona (pp. 98-99); George E. Stuart, Landa, Diego de (pp. 99-100); Salomon N. Sitton, Language policies (pp. 100-102); Bertina Olmedo Vera, Lapidary (pp. 102-103); Daniel Castro, Las Casas, Bartolome de (pp. 104-106); Sonya Lipsett-Rivera, Law: pre-Hispanic and Colonial periods (pp. 110-112); Laura Nader, Law: Contemporary cultures (pp. 112-114); Lawrence G. Desmond, Le Plongeon, Augustus (pp. 117-118); Terry Rugeley, Liberalism (pp. 118-120); Barbara E. Mundy, Lienzos (pp. 120-123); John S. Justeson, and Terrence Kaufman, Calendars: Mesoamerican calendars (pp. 121-124); Yolanda Lastra de Suarez, Linguistics (pp. 123-131); Mary E. Miller, Architecture (pp. 131-133); Miguel León-Portilla, Literature (pp. 133-136); John E. Clark, Lithic technology (pp. 136-139); Michael P. Closs, Long count (pp. 139-141); Gabrielle Vail, Madrid, codex (pp. 143-146); Bruce F. Benz, Maize: origin, domestication, and development (pp. 147-150); Karl A. Taube, Maize: iconography and cosmological significance (pp. 150-152); Luis D. León, Mal de ojo (pp. 152-153); Ian Graham, Maler, Teobert (p. 153); John P. Hawkins, and John S. Robertson, Mamean (pp. 159-163); Takashi Iwasaki, Man-gods (pp. 163-164); Atanasio Herranz Herranz, Manguean (pp. 164-165); Barbara E. Mundy, Maps (pp. 165-167); Xavier Noguez, Marian devotion (pp. 1673

meanings (pp. 439-441); Alan R. Sandstrom, Papermaking (pp. 442-443); Bruce Love, Paris, codex (pp. 443-446); Jorge E. Traslosheros, Parishes (pp. 446-448); Joseph B. Mountjoy, Patolli (p. 448); Atanasio Herranz Herranz, Pech (pp. 448450); Matthew B. Restall, and Alexander F. Christensen, Periodical literature and reference works (pp. 450-453); Peter T. Furst, Peyote (pp. 453-454); Elizabeth H. Boone, Pictorial manuscripts (pp. 454-456); Stephen D. Houston, Piedras Negras (pp. 456-458).

168); Richard E. Blanton, Markets (pp. 168-171); Ronald M. Spores, Marriage alliances (pp. 171-172); M. de Jesus Rodriguez-Shadow, María E. D'Aubeterre, and Robert D. Shadow, Marriage and weddings (pp. 172-175); Cecelia F. Klein, Masks (pp. 175-177); Ian Graham, Maudslay, Alfred Percival (pp. 178-179); Robert S. Carlsen, Maximon (pp. 179181); William L. Fash, Maya (pp. 181-189); Robert M. Hill, Maya highlands (pp. 189-193); Clifford T. Brown, Mayapan (pp. 193-196); Gabrielle Vail, Maya screenfolds (pp. 196198); Robert S. Carlsen, Menchu Tum, Rigoberta (pp. 202203); Georges Baudot, Mendieta, Geronimo de (pp. 203-205); Rafael Cobos, Merida-Ti'ho (pp. 210-212); Frances F. Berdan, Merchants (pp. 208-210); David Carrasco, Mesoamerica: an overview (pp. 212-216); Nicholas P. Dunning, Mesoamerica: geography (pp. 216-219); Hugh Cross, Mesoamerica: geological and natural history (pp. 220-222); Ruben G. Mendoza, Mesoamerican chronology: periodization (pp. 222226); Richard S. MacNeish, Mesoamerican chronology: early development and the Archaic period (before 2600 BCE)(pp. 226-236); David C. Grove, Mesoamerican chronology: Formative (Preclassic) period (2000 BCE-250 CE)(pp. 236243); Michael E. Smith, Mesoamerican chronology: Postclassic period (900-1521)(pp. 248-257); William B. Taylor, Mesoamerican chronology: Colonial period (15211821)(pp. 257-264); John Tutino, Mesoamerican chronology: Postcolonial period (1821-present)(pp. 264-271); Robert H. Cobean, and Alba G. Mastache Flores, Mesoamerican studies (pp. 271-287); Eric van Young, Messianism and millenarianism (pp. 287-291); Robert D. Cope, Mestizaje (pp. 291-296); Ulrich Köhler, Meteors and meteorites (pp. 296297); Holly Barnet-Sanchez, Mexican rural movement (pp. 298-300); John M. Hart, Mexican revolution (pp. 300-302); Carlos Martinez Marin, Migrations (pp. 305-309); Dorothy Hosler, Mining and metalwork (pp. 309-311); Jorge E. Traslosheros, Missionization: an overview (pp. 311-314); Jesus Gomez Fregoso, Missionization: missionaries (pp. 314317); Jesus Gomez Fregoso, Missionization: missions (pp. 317-320); Francisco Morales, Missionization: missionary college (pp. 321-323); Charlene Villaseñor, Monasteries and convents (pp. 334-336); Susan Milbrath, Moon (pp. 340-342); George E. Stuart, Morley, Sylvanus Griswold (pp. 342-343); Jacqueline de Durand-Forest, Mother goddesses (pp. 345347); Mary E. Miller, Murals (pp. 349-351); Holly BarnetSanchez, Museums and exhibitions (pp. 351-356); Peter T. Furst, Mushrooms (p. 356); Robert M. Stevenson, Music (pp. 356-358); Michiyo Sasoa, New fire ceremony (pp. 366-368); Flora S. Clancy, Nobility (pp. 370-371); E. Wyllys Andrews, V, and Anthony P. Andrews, Northern Maya lowlands (pp. 378-385); Michael P. Closs, Numerical notation (pp. 388391); Luis A. Vargas, and Leticia E. Casillas, Nutrition (pp. 391-393); Alejandro Pastrana, and Ivvone Athie, Obsidian (pp. 399-400); Payson D. Sheets, Oceans (pp. 400-401); Leonardo López Lujan, Offerings (pp. 403-404); Leonardo López Lujan, Old gods (pp. 404-405); Peter Lodewijk van der Loo, and David Carrasco, Omens (pp. 412-413); Alfredo López Austin, Opossums (pp. 414-415); Tomoko Taniguchi, Oracles (pp. 415-416); John D. Monaghan, Oral sources (pp. 416-418); Nikolai Grube, Owls (pp. 425-426); Peter Mathews, Pacal (pp. 427-428); Beatriz de la Fuente, Painting (pp. 428431); Susan T. Evans, Palaces (pp. 431-433); George E. Stuart, and David Stuart, Palenque (pp. 433-435); Teresa Rojas Rabiela, Palerm, Angel (p. 436); David Frye, Pame (pp. 436-437); Kay B. Warren, Pan-Mayanism: cultural meanings (pp. 438-439); Victor D. Montejo, Pan-Mayanism: political

Volume 3: Thomas S. Bremer, Pilgrimage (pp. 1-3); Edwin C. Krupp, Planets (pp. 3-4); Patricia J. Sarro, Plazas (pp. 4-5); Miguel León-Portilla, Poetry, songs, and prose sources (pp. 56); Joyce Marcus, Political organization and development: pre-Hispanic cultures (pp. 6-14); Robert M. Hill, Political organization and development: post-conquest cultures (pp. 1419); Dennis Tedlock, Popol Vuh (pp. 20-22); William H. Beezley, Porfiriato (pp. 23-24); Scott Sessions, Prescott, William Hickling (pp. 24-25); John F. Schwaller, Priests: Catholic priests (p. 25); John D. Monaghan, and Byron Hamann, Priests: pre-Hispanic priests (pp. 25-26); John D. Monaghan, Priests: contemporary ritual specialists (pp. 2829); Rebecca Horn, Primordial titles (pp. 29-31); Gary H. Gossen, Processions (pp. 31-34); Hanns J. Prem, Property and land tenure (pp. 34-37); Clemency C. Coggins, Proskouriakoff, Tatiana (pp. 37-38); Bye, Robert A., and Edelmira Linares, Pulque (pp. 38-40); Jeff K. Kowalski, Putun (pp. 40-41); Gair Tourtellot, Puuc (pp. 42-43); George F. Andrews, Pyramids (pp. 43-45); Victor D. Montejo, Q'anjob'al (pp. 47-48); Jon Schackt, Q'eqchi' (pp. 48-50); John M. Weeks, Quichean (pp. 50-51); Wendy Ashmore, Quirigua (pp. 51-53); Jill L. Furst, Rabbits (p. 55); Philip P. Arnold, Rain deities (pp. 56-57); Hugh Cross, Rain forests (pp. 5759); Rebecca Horn, Recordkeeping (pp. 59-62); Charles M. Leslie, Redfield, Robert (pp. 62-63); Barbara E. Mundy, Relaciones geograficas (pp. 63-65); Gretchen Starr-LeBeau, Relics (pp. 65-66); Lorenzo Ochoa, Remojadas (p. 68); John Tutino, Resistance and rebellion (pp. 68-73); Clara Bargellini, Retablos (pp. 73-74); Jeff K. Kowalski, Rio Bec (pp. 74-76); Luis F. Nieto Gamiño, and Donald P. Brown, Rio Laja (pp. 76-78); Arthur A. Joyce, and Stacie M. King, Rio Viejo (pp. 79-81); Philip P. Arnold, Rites of passage (pp. 81-83); Ben Thomas, and Kimberly Berry, Rivers and lakes (pp. 84-86); Oscar Mazin, Roman Catholic Church: Colonial period (pp. 86-89); Carlos Martinez-Assad, and William B. Taylor, Roman Catholic Church: nineteenth and twentieth centuries (pp. 89-92); David Stuart, Ruler accession rituals (pp. 95-96); Susan D. Gillespie, Rulers and dynasties (pp. 96-98); Augusto Molina-Montes, Ruz Lhuillier, Alberto (pp. 98-100); Yolotl Gonzalez Torres, Sacrifice and ritual violence (pp. 102-104); John D. Monaghan, Sages (p. 105); John F. Chuchiak, Saints (pp. 113-116); Jeffrey R. Parsons, Salt (pp. 116-117); William B. Taylor, Santiago (pp. 122-124); Michael D. Coe, Scribes (pp. 124-125); Carolyn E. Tate, Sculpture (pp. 125-130); Gordon R. Willey, Seibal (pp. 130-133); Henry B. Nicholson, Seler, Eduard (pp. 134-137); Mary B. Moser, Seri (p. 137); John F. Chuchiak, Serna, Jacinto de la (pp. 137-138); Karl W. Luckert, Serpents and snakes (pp. 138-139); James M. Taggart, Sexuality (pp. 139-141); Nicholas J. Saunders, Shamanism: pre-Hispanic cultures (pp. 141-142); Alan R. Sandstrom, Shamanism: contemporary cultures (pp. 142-144); Gary M. Feinman, Shells (pp. 144-145); Elizabeth H. Boone, Mapa Siguenza (p. 146); Louise M. Burkhart, Sin (pp. 146147); James Oles, Siqueiros, David Alfaro (pp. 147-148); 4

Archaeology: research design and field methods p. 26-30); Richard S. MacNeish, Archaic Period (c. 8000-2000 BC)(pp. 30-33); Lorraine A. Williams-Beck, Architecture: Civicceremonial (pp. 33-37); Elliott M. Abrams, Architecture: Vernacular-mundane (pp. 37-41); Eric R. Wolf, Armillas, Pedro (1914-1984)(p. 41); Richard A. Diehl, Arroyo Pesquero (Veracruz, Mexico)(p. 41); Carolyn E. Tate, Art (pp. 41-51); Randolph J. Widmer, Artifacts and industries (pp. 51-53); John B. Carlson, Astronomy, archaeoastronomy, and astrology (pp. 53-54); Susan T. Evans, Atlantean figure (p. 56); Florentino García Cruz, Balamku (Campeche, Mexico)(p. 66); Mary E. Pye, Balcon de Montezuma (Tamaulipas, Mexico)(p. 66); Vernon L. Scarborough, Ball game (pp. 67); Barbara L. Stark, El Balsamo (Escuintla, Guatemala)(p. 71); David L. Webster, Becan (Campeche, Mexico)(p. 80); Kent V. Flannery, Bernal, Ignacio (1910-1992)(p. 81); Joyce Marcus, Blood and bloodletting (pp. 81-82); Mary E. Miller, Bonampak (Chiapas, Mexico)(pp. 82-); David Stuart, Bundles (p. 86); Christopher Jones, Caches (pp. 87-88); Kenneth G. Hirth, El Cajon (Honduras)(p. 88); William J. Folan, Calakmul (Campeche, Mexico)(pp. 88-90); Janine L. Gasco, Calendrics (pp. 90-92); Michael Blake, Canajaste (Chiapas, Mexico)(p. 93); Elsa M. Redmond, Cannabalism (pp. 93-94); Arlen F. Chase, and Diane Z. Chase, Caracol (Cayo District, Belize)(pp. 96-97); Emily G. Umberger, Castillo de Teayo (Veracruz, Mexico)(pp. 98-99); James E. Brady, Caves (pp. 99-101); David Carrasco, Central American religion (pp. 102108); Payson D. Sheets, Ceramics (pp. 108-112); Rosemary A. Joyce, Cerro Palenque (Cortes, Honduras)(p. 114); Henry B. Nicholson, Cerro Portezuelo (Mexico, Mexico)(p. 114); Joseph B. Mountjoy, Cerro Zapotecas (Puebla, Mexico)(p. 115); David A. Freidel, Cerros (Corozal, Belize)(pp. 115116); Robert J. Sharer, Chalchuapa (Santa Ana, El Salvador)(p. 121); Gareth W. Lowe, Chiapa de Corzo (Chiapas, Mexico)(pp. 122-123); John E. Clark, Chiapas interior plateau (pp. 123-127); Clemency C. Coggins, Chichen Itza (pp. 127-133); Harry J. Shafer, and Thomas R. Hester, Chipped stone tool production and products (pp. 135-137); Michael D. Coe, Chocolate and cacao (p. 138); Geoffrey G. McCafferty, Cholula (Puebla, Mexico)(pp. 138-142); William R. Fowler, Cihuatan and Santa María (San Salvador, El Salvador); David M. Pendergast, Cinnabar and hematite (p. 145); Stephen D. Houston, Civic-ceremonial center (pp. 145147); Robert S. Santley, Classic Period (pp. 147-152); Patricia R. Anawalt, Clothing (pp. 152-159); Linda Manzanilla, Coba (Quintana Roo, Mexico)(pp. 160-161); Thomas R. Hester, and Harry J. Shafer, Colha (Orange Walk District, Belize)(p. 162); Janine L. Gasco, Colonial period (pp. 162-166); George F. Andrews, Comalcalco (Tabasco, Mexico)(pp. 166-168); David L. Webster, Copan (Copan, Honduras)(pp. 169-176); David L. Webster, Copan Region (Copan, Honduras)(pp. 176180); Frank P. Saul, and Julie M. Saul, Cosmetic alterations of the face and body (pp. 180-183); Joyce Marcus, Cosmology (p. 183); Frances F. Berdan, Cotton (pp. 184-185); Frederick J. Bove, Cotzumalhuapa sites: Bilboa, El Baul, and El Castillo (Escuintla, Guatemala)(pp. 185-186); Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, Cotzumalhuapa style (pp. 186-187); Robert H. Cobean, and Alba G. Mastache Flores, Coyotlatelco (pp. 187189); Jeremy A. Sabloff, Cozumel Island (Quintana Roo, Mexico)(pp. 189-191); Gary M. Feinman, Crafts and craft specialization (pp. 191-195); Norman Hammond, Cuello (Orange Walk, Belize)(pp. 196-197); Rosemary A. Joyce, and James E. Brady, Cuyamel Caves (Colon, Honduras)(p. 199); AnnCorrine Freter, Dating methods (pp. 202-208); Rebecca

Shirley B. Mock, Skull racks (pp. 148-150); Juan de la Serna, Slavery (pp. 150-152); Frederic Hicks, Social stratification (pp. 152-155); Jill L. Furst, Soul (pp. 155-156); Arthur A. Demarest, Southern Maya lowlands (pp. 156-160); Rosemary A. Joyce, Southern Mesoamerica (pp. 160-163); James E. Brady, Springs (pp. 163-164); Edwin C. Krupp, Stars and constellations (pp. 164-165); Barbara L. Stark, States and empires (pp. 165-167); Ian Graham, Stephens, John Lloyd (pp. 167-168); Michael D. Coe, Stirling, Matthew W. (pp. 168-169); Clemency C. Coggins, Stormy Sky (pp. 169-170); Merle G. Robertson, Stucco (pp. 170-172); Susan Milbrath, Sun (pp. 172-174); Luis D. León, Susto (pp. 174-175); Teresa Rojas Rabiela, Swamps (pp. 175-176); Hugo G. Nutini, Syncretism (pp. 177-181); Jeff K. Kowalski, Temple complexes (pp. 194-197); Manuel Miño Grijalva, Textile industry (pp. 215-217); Guilhem Olivier, Tezcatlipoca (pp. 217-219); Norman Hammond, Thompson, J. Eric S. (pp. 220222); Peter D. Harrison, Tikal (pp. 222-226); Robert A. Bye, Tobacco (pp. 235-236); George F. Andrews, Tombs (pp. 244246); Michael J. Schreffler, Torquemada, Juan de (pp. 247249); Robert V. Kemper, Tourism (pp. 250-252); Gordon R. Willey, Tozzer, Alfred Marston (pp. 253-254); Michael E. Smith, Trade and exchange (pp. 254-257); Robert S. Carlsen, Transculturation (pp. 257-260); Ruben G. Mendoza, Transportation (pp. 260-262); Frances F. Berdan, Tribute (pp. 262-264); Jorge Hernández-Diaz, Triqui (pp. 267-268); Walter R. T. Witschey, Tulum (pp. 274-276); Carmen Aguilera, Turquoise (pp. 276-277); Elizabeth P. Benson, Turtles (pp. 277-279); Robert M. Laughlin, Tzotzil (pp. 281284); Robert S. Carlsen, Tz'utujil (pp. 284-286); Carolyn E. Tate, Uaxactun (pp. 287-289); Timothy J. Knab, Underworld (pp. 289-290); Michael E. Smith, Urbanization (pp. 290-294); John W. Fox, Utatlan (pp. 295-296); Danna A. Levin Rojo, Utopias (pp. 296-299); Jeff K. Kowalski, Uxmal (pp. 299303); Elizabeth P. Benson, Vultures (pp. 314-315); Ross Hassig, Warfare (pp. 317-321); Ross Hassig, Warriors (pp. 321-323); Elizabeth P. Benson, Waterfowl (pp. 323-324); Patricia R. Anawalt, Weaving (pp. 324-328); John E. Clark, Workshops (pp. 336-338); Stephen D. Houston, Writing systems: overview and early development (pp. 338-340); David Stuart, Writing systems: Maya systems (pp. 340-343); Javier Urcid Serrano, Writing systems: Zapotec systems (pp. 343-344); Hanns J. Prem, Writing systems: Central Mexican systems (pp. 346-347); Dana Leibsohn, Writing systems: Colonial development (pp. 347-350); Rosa H. Chinchilla, Ximenez, Francisco (pp. 351-352); Carolyn E. Tate, Yaxchilan (pp. 360-363); David Stuart, Yax k'uk mo' (pp. 363-364); John S. Justeson, and Terence Kaufman, Year cycle (pp. 364-365). 24. Evans, Susan T., and David L. Webster, eds. 2001. Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America: An Encyclopedia. New York: Garland. 948 p. Contents include: Frederick J. Bove, Abaj Takalik (Retalhuleu, Guatemala) (p. 1); Virginia E. Miller, Acanceh (Yucatan, Mexico) (p. 2); Randolph J. Widmer, Activity areas and assemblages (pp. 24); Jeffrey R. Parsons, Agave (pp. 4-7); Scott L. Fedick, Agriculture and domestication (pp. 7-15); Phil C. Weigand, Ahualulco (Jalisco, Mexico)(pp. 15-16); Susan T. Evans, Alta Verapaz region p. 16); Gordon R. Willey, Altar de Sacrificios (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 17-19); David M. Pendergast, Altun Ha (Belize, Belize)(p. 19); Patricia A. McAnany, Ancestor veneration (pp. 20-21); Randolph J. Widmer, Archaeology: Analytical methods (pp. 22-26); Susan D. Gillespie, 5

limestone (pp. 402-403); Frederick W. Lange, Lothrop, Samuel K. (1892-1965)(p. 404); Francisco Estrada Belli, Lubaantun (Toledo, Belize)(p. 405); Emily S. McClung de Tapia, Maize (pp. 407-410); Susan T. Evans, El Manati (Veracruz, Mexico)(p. 410); Barbara E. Mundy, Maps and place-names (pp. 411-412); Mary G. Hodge, Market systems (pp. 412-414); Herbert R. Harvey, Mathemetics (pp. 416417); Ian Graham, Maudslay, Alfred Percival (1850-1931)(pp. 417-418); Edward M. Schortman, and Patricia A. Urban, Maya: Motagua region (pp. 418-424); David L. Webster, Maya culture and history (pp. 424-430); Karl A. Taube, Maya deities (pp. 431-433); Joseph W. Ball, Maya lowlands: North (pp. 433-441); Stephen D. Houston, Maya lowlands: South (pp. 441-447); David L. Webster, Maya religion (pp. 448451); Anthony P. Andrews, Mayapan (Yucatan, Mexico)(p. 451); Arthur A. Demarest, El Mesak (Retalhuleu, Guatemala)(p. 454); Dorothy Hosler, Metal: tools, techniques, and products (pp. 454-457); Helen P. Pollard, Michoacan region (pp. 458-464); Ross Hassig, Militarism and conflict (pp. 465-470); Norman Hammond, La Milpa (Orange Walk District, Belize)(p. 470); Peter S. Dunham, Minerals, ores, and mining (pp. 470-472); Gareth W. Lowe, and John E. Clark, Mirador (Chiapas, Mexico)(p. 472); Ray T. Matheny, El Mirador (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 472-473); Karl A. Taube, Mirrors (pp. 473-474); Nelly M. Robles García, Mitla (Oaxaca, Mexico)(pp. 474-475); Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, Mixco Viejo (Chimaltenango, Guatemala)(pp. 475-476); Michael E. Smith, Mixteca-Puebla style (pp. 481482); Richard A. Diehl, La Mojarra (Veracruz, Mexico)(pp. 482-483); Michael E. Smith, and Kenneth G. Hirth, Morelos region (pp. 487-490); Ian Graham, Morley, Sylvanus Griswold (1883-1948)(p. 491); Beatriz de la Fuente and Leticia Staines Cicero, Mural painting (pp. 491-494); Nancy Gonlin, Museums, archives, and libraries (pp. 494-504); Sophia Pincemin Deliberos, Music, dance, theater, and poetry (pp. 504-508); John S. Henderson, Naco Valley (Cortes, Honduras)(pp. 509-510); Florentino García Cruz, Nadzcaan (Campeche, Mexico)(p. 510); Andrea J. Stone, Naj Tunich (Peten Guatemala)(pp. 510-511); Joyce Marcus, Names and titles (pp. 511-512); Scott L. Fedick, Naranjal and environs (Quintana Roo, Mexico)(p. 512); Joseph W. Ball, Naranjo (Peten, Guatemala) p. 512); George E. Hasemann, and Boyd Dixon, Los Naranjos (Cortes, Honduras)(p. 513); Francisco Estrada Belli, Nohmul (Orange Walk, Belize)(p. 522); Randall H. McGuire, Northern arid zone (pp. 522-528); Ben A. Nelson, Northwestern frontier (pp. 528-534); Alejandro Pastrana, and Ivonne Athie, Obsidian: Properties and sources (pp. 546-551); John E. Clark, Obsidian: Tools, techniques, and products (pp. 552-554); F. Kent Reilly, Olmec-Guerrero style (pp. 557-558); Miguel Rivera Dorado, Oxkintok (Yucatan, Mexico)(pp. 561-562); Dana Leibsohn, Painting (pp. 563-572); Merle G. Robertson, Palenque (Chiapas, Mexico)(pp. 572-577); Thomas R. Hester, Paleoindian period (pp. 577-581); Rabiela Teresa Rojas, Palerm, Angel (19101980)(pp. 581-582); S. Jeffrey K. Wilkerson, Panuco (Veracruz, Mexico)(p. 582); Alan R. Sandstrom, and Pamela E. Sandstrom, Paper (p. 583); Michael Blake, Paso de la Amada (Chiapas, Mexico)(pp. 583-584); Richard S. MacNeish, Pavon (Veracruz, Mexico)(p. 584); S. Jeffrey K. Wilkerson, Paxil (Veracruz, Mexico)(pp. 584-585); Arthur A. Demarest, Petexbatun region (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 587591); Stephen D. Houston, Piedras Negras (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 591-592); Rosemary A. Joyce, Playa de los Muertos (Yoro, Honduras)(pp. 594-595); Hector Neff,

Storey, Demographic trends (pp. 208-212); Mary Glowacki, Diaz del Castillo, Bernal (1496-1584)(p. 213); David M. Reed, Diet and nutrition (pp. 213-215); Bernard R. Ortiz de Montellano, Disease, illness and curing (pp. 215-22); Barbara Tedlock, Divination (pp. 220-221); Kent V. Flannery, Dog (pp. 221-222); Arthur A. Demarest, Dos Pilas (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 222-223); Marta T. Wallace, Dyes and colors for cloths (pp. 223-227); Edward B. Kurjack, Dzibilchaltun (Yucatan, Mexico)(pp. 227-228); Gary M. Feinman, Economic organization (pp. 229-234); Ray T. Matheny, Edzna (Yucatan, Mexico)(pp. 234-235); David Stuart, Emblem glyphs (p. 236); John K. Chance, and Barbara L. Stark, Ethnicity (pp. 236-239); Susan M. Kellogg, Ethnohistorical sources and methods (pp. 240-248); Richard E. Blanton, Exchange media (pp. 249-250); Nancy Gonlin, and Susan T. Evans, Family and household (pp. 251-255); Ross Hassig, Famine (p. 255); Kitty F. Emery, Fauna (pp. 255-265); Nicholas J. Saunders, Feathered serpent (pp. 265266); Sue Scott, Terracotta figurines (pp. 266-270); Robert A. Bye, and María Edelmira Linares, Flowers (pp. 270-274); Frederick W. Lange, Gulf of Fonseca (El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua)(p. 274); Sophie Coe, and Michael D. Coe, Food and cuisine (pp. 274-278); John E. Clark, Formative period (c.1600 BC- AD 250)(pp. 278-283); Jay Silverstein, and David L. Webster, Fortifications (pp. 283-284); Frederick W. Lange, Gamboa, Hector (1934-1993)(p. 285); Martin Wasserman, Games and gambling (pp. 285-287); Susan T. Evans, Gardens (pp. 287-288); Geoffrey G. McCafferty, Gender roles (pp. 288-292); Andrew Sluyter, and María T. Cavazos Pérez, Geography and climate (pp. 292-299); James F. Garber, Ground stone tools (pp. 300-303); Wendy Ashmore, Gualjoquito (Santa Barbara, Honduras)(pp. 303304); Michael S. Foster, Guasave and related sites (Sinaloa, Mexico)(pp. 304-306); John M. Weeks, Guatemala highlands region (pp. 306-311); S. Jeffrey K. Wilkerson, Las Higueras (Veracruz, Mexico)(pp. 345-346); George F. Andrews, Hochob (Campeche, Mexico)(p. 346); Francisco Estrada Belli, Holmul (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 346-348); Vernon L. Scarborough, Hydrology (pp. 352-356); Frederick W. Lange, Intermediate area: Overview (pp. 357-365); Edward M. Schortman, and Patricia A. Urban, Interregional interactions (pp. 365-371); Peter T. Furst, Intoxicants and intoxification (pp. 371-375); Kevin J. Johnston, Itzan (Peten, Guatemala)(p. 376); Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, Iximche (Chimaltenango, Guatemala)(p. 377); Joseph B. Mountjoy, Ixtapa (Jalisco, Mexico)(p. 377); Clement W. Meighan, and Christopher S. Beekman, Ixtlan del Rio (Nayarit, Mexico)(pp. 378-379); David L. Webster, Izamal (Yucatan, Mexico)(p. 379); John E. Clark, Izapa (Chiapas, Mexico)(pp. 379-380); Virginia G. Smith, Izapa style (p. 380); Ronald L. Bishop, Jade (pp. 381-385); Nicholas J. Saunders, Jaguars (pp. 385386); Susan T. Evans, Jaina (Campeche, Mexico)(p. 386); Michael P. Smyth, Kabah (Yucatan, Mexico)(p. 387); Marion Popenoe de Hatch, Kaminaljuyu (Guatemala, Guatemala)(pp. 387-390); Michael P. Smyth, Labna (Yucatan, Mexico)(p. 391); Joel Palka, Lacandon Maya (pp. 391-392); Sonia Rivero Torres, Lagartero and environs (Chiapas, Mexico)(p. 392); David M. Pendergast, Lamanai (Orange Walk, Belize)(p. 394); George E. Stuart, Landa, Diego de (1524-1579)(p. 395); Judith M. Maxwell, Languages at the time of contact (pp. 395399); Randolph J. Widmer, Lapidary industry (pp. 400-401); Joyce Marcus, Leadership and rulership (p. 401); John E. Clark, La Libertad (Chiapas, Mexico)(p. 402); Joyce Marcus, Lightning and thunder (p. 402); Elloitt M. Abrams, Lime and 6

Project (pp. 791-792); Robert M. Carmack, Utatlan (Quiche, Guatemala)(pp. 792-793); Michael P. Smyth, Uxmal (Yucatan, Mexico)(pp. 793-796); Arthur A. Demarest, Las Victorias (Ahuachapan, El Salvador)(p. 801); Ross Hassig, Weaponry (pp. 809-812); David L. Webster, Warfare (pp. 805-809); Patricia A. Anawalt, Weaving and textiles (pp. 812817); Phil C. Weigand, West Mexico (pp. 818-824); Mary E. Pye, Wood: tools and products (pp. 824-825); Joyce Marcus, Writing (pp. 825-826); Elizabeth M. Brumfiel, Xaltocan (Mexico, Mexico)(pp. 827-828); Ray T. Matheny, Xicalango (Campeche, Mexico)(p. 828); F. Kent Reilly, Xochipala style (p. 832); Wendy Ashmore, and Richard Leventhal, Xunantunich (Cayo, Belize)(p. 833); Carolyn E. Tate, Yaxchilan (Chiapas, Mexico)(pp. 839-841); Don S. Rice, Yaxha (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 841-842); David A. Freidel, Yaxuna (Yucatan, Mexico)(p. 842); Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, Zaculeu (Huehuetenango, Guatemala)(pp. 845846).

Plumbate ware (pp. 595-596); Heather I. McKillop, Ports of trade (pp. 596-597); Michael E. Smith, Postclassic Period (pp. 597-603); Leah D. Minc, Pottery (pp. 603-610); Joyce Marcus, Proskouriakoff, Tatiana (1909-1985)(p. 610); Patricia P. Nagoda, and Gabriela Uruñela, Puebla-Tlaxcala region (pp. 611-617); John S. Henderson, Puerto Escondido (Cortes, Honduras)(p. 617); Mary D. Pohl, and Kevin Pope, Pulltrouser Swamp (Orange Walk, Belize)(pp. 617-618); Ray T. Matheny, Putun (p. 619); Robert J. Sharer, Quirigua (Izabal, Guatemala)(pp. 623-624); S. Jeffrey K. Wilkerson, Remojadas (Veracruz, Mexico)(p. 625); Richard E. W. Adams, and Fred Valdez, Rio Azul (Peten, Guatemala)(p. 626); Paul F. Healy, Rio Claro (Colon, Honduras)(pp. 626627); Arthur A. Joyce, Rio Verde region (Oaxaca, Mexico)(pp. 627); Arthur A. Joyce, Rio Viejo (Oaxaca, Mexico)(p. 631); Joseph B. Mountjoy, Rock art (p. 635); Richard F. Townsend, Sacred places and natural phenomena (pp. 637-638); David Carrasco, Sacrifice (pp. 638-640); Kent V. Flannery, Salinas la Blanca (Guatemala)(p. 641); Kenneth G. Hirth, Salitron Viejo (Honduras)(p. 641); Anthony P. Andrews, Salt (pp. 642-643); Arthur A. Demarest, Santa Leticia (Ahuachapan, El Salvador)(pp. 650-6); Diane Z. Chase, Santa Rita Corozal (Corozal District, Belize)(p. 654); Michael P. Smyth, Sayil and Chac (Yucatan, Mexico)(pp. 654-655); David Stuart, Scribes (pp. 655-656); Emily G. Umberger, Sculpture (pp. 657-659); David L. Webster, Seibal (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 659-660); Gordon R. Willey, Settlement patterns and settlement systems (pp. 660-661); Michael S. Foster, Shaft tombs (pp. 661-662); Edward M. Schortman, and Patricia A. Urban, La Sierra (Santa Barbara, Honduras)(pp. 662-663); Thomas R. Hester, and Harry J. Shafer, Silex (pp. 663-665); Rebecca Storey, Skeletal analysis (pp. 665-666); S. Jeffrey K. Wilkerson, Smiling face figurines (pp. 666-667); Randall H. McGuire, Snaketown (Arizona, United States)(p. 667); Barbara Voorhies, Soconusco: South Pacific Coast and Piedmont region (pp. 667-671); John D. Monaghan, Soul and spirit companion (pp. 671-673); Edward M. Schortman, and Patricia A. Urban, Southeast Mesoamerica (pp. 675-684); Ian Graham, Spinden, Herbert Joseph (18791967)(p. 684); Elizabeth A. Graham, Stann Creek District (Belize)(pp. 684-686); Elizabeth A. Newsome, Stela cult (pp. 686-687); Stephen D. Houston, Stelae p. 687); George E. Stuart, Stephens, John Lloyd (1805-1852) and Frederick Catherwood (1799-1854)(p. 687); Frederick W. Lange, and E. Wyllys Andrews, Stone, Doris Zemurray (1909-1994)(p. 688); Stephen D. Houston, and Susan T. Evans, Sweat baths (pp. 688-690); Patricia J. Sarro, El Tajin: architecture and murals (p. 693); S. Jeffrey K. Wilkerson, El Tajin: chronology (pp. 694-696); Boyd M. Dixon, Tenampua (Comayagua, Honduras)(p. 711); John E. Clark, Tenam Rosario and environs (Chiapas, Mexico)(pp. 710-711); Evelyn C. Rattray, Thin Orange Ware (p. 746); Norman Hammond, Thompson, J. Eric S. (1898-1975)(p. 746); David L. Webster, Thrones and benches (p. 747); Paul Tolstoy, Ticoman (D.F., Mexico)(p. 748); Peter D. Harrison, Tikal (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 748-755); Peter Mathews, Tonina (Chiapas, Mexico)(p. 767); Ross Hassig, Transport (pp. 767-768); Rosemary A. Joyce, Travesia (Cortes, Honduras)(pp. 768769); Frances F. Berdan, Tribute (pp. 772-774); David L. Webster, Tulum (Quintana Roo, Mexico)(p. 783); Kent V. Flannery, Turkeys (p. 783); George E. Stuart, Tuxtla statuette (p. 784); Marion Popenoe de Hatch, Uaxactun (Peten, Guatemala)(pp. 789-790); Linda Manzanilla, Underworld (pp. 790-791); S. Jeffrey K. Wilkerson, Usumacinta River Dam

25. Young, Peter A. 2003. Secrets of the Maya. New York: Hatherleigh Press; New York: W. W. Norton. 203 p. The most fascinating discoveries pertaining to the ancient Maya published in Archaeology magazine are presented in this volume. Contents include: Peter A. Young, A Journey from prehistory into history (pp. 1-4); T. Patrick Culbert, The New Maya (pp. 5-14); William L. Fash and Barbara W. Fash, Scribes, warriors, and kings: the lives of the Copan Maya (pp. 15-24); Angela M. H. Schuster, Uncovering a royal tomb in Copan: rescue excavations after Hurricane Mitch yield a ruler’s burial (pp. 25-27); Simon Martin and Nikolai Grube, Maya superstates: how a few powerful kingdoms vied for control of the Maya lowlands during the Classic period (pp. 28-32); Angela M. Schuster, Maya Palace uncovered extensive palace found at the Maya site of Cancuen in Guatemala’s Peten region (pp. 33-34); Charles Suhler and David Freidel, Life and death in a Maya war zone; within a Yucatan pyramid lie the grim traces of a violent change in rulership–the remains of a slaughtered royal family (pp. 3541); Arlen F. Chase and Diane Z,. Chase, A Mighty Maya nation: how Caracol built an empire by cultivating its “middle class” (pp. 42-48); Payson D. Sheets, Tropical time capsule: an ancient village preserved in volcanic ash yields evidence of Mesoamerican peasant life (48-51); James, Wiseman, The Art of gardening: eating well at a Mesoamerican Pompeii (52-58); Paul F. Healy, Music of the Maya: A grave-site trove of flutes and figurine ocarinas in western Belize suggests musical sophistication among the ancient Maya (pp. 59-66); Mary Miller, Imaging Maya Art: infrared video “prospecting” of Bonampak’s famous murals yields critical details no longer visible to the naked eye (pp. 67-71); Angela M. H. Schuster, The search for Site Q; for years scholars have been looking for the source of an array of unprovenienced Maya sculptures in collections here and abroad (pp. 72-77); Ian Graham, Mission to La Corona: a new Maya site may fail to qualify as Site Q (pp. 78-79); Richard A. Wertime and Angela M.H. Schuster, Written in the stars the celestial origin of Maya creation myth (pp. 80-84); Dennis Tedlock and Barbara Tedlock, Living constellations: a Mayan reading of the story of the stars (pp. 85-89); Angela M.H. Schuster, Rituals of the modern Maya: a strong undercurrent of Precolumbian belief pervades much of today’s religious practice (pp. 89-93); Andrew L. Slayman, Seeing through Mayan eyes: a vernalequinox appearance of the feathered serpent highlights a 7day cruise to the Yucatan (pp. 94-98); Spencer P. M. 7

y Deportes. v. 1, no. 1, 2008- . 4/yr. Glossy, Spanish-language magazine, devoted to the archaeology of Guatemala.

Harrington, Cruising the Maya coast: an expedition highlights ancient sites in Mexico, Honduras, and Guatemala (pp. 98104); Tom Gidwitz, The Great Chronicler of Mayan Art: Merle Greene Robertson has spent a lifetime documenting Mesoamerican sculpture, carvings, and paintings (pp. 105111); John Dorfman and Andrew L. Slayman, The Maverick Mayanist: Ian Graham’s 37-year crusade to record every known Maya monument has earned him a place in the constellation of great Mesoamerican explorers (pp. 112-125); Gillett Griffin, The Glyph decoder: pioneering epigrapher, scholar, and communicator, Linda Schele has helped shape a whole new vision of the humanity of the Maya (pp. 126-132); Angela M. H. Schuster, Honoring Linda Schele: students and colleagues gather to pay homage to magnificent Mayanist (pp. 133-136); Michael D. Coe, A triumph of spirit: how Yuri Knorosov cracked the Maya hieroglyphic code from far-off Leningrad (pp. 137-143); Mary McVicker, From parlours to pyramids: fleeing the “gilded cage of English civilization,” artist and adventurer Adela Breton became a skilled copier of Maya murals and reliefs in the early 1900s (pp. 144-150); Richard D. Hansen, Plundering the Peten: Maya sites in northern Guatemala have been systematically looted for decades. Now the government is fighting back (pp. 151-153); Angela M. H. Schuster, A run for their lives: an archaeologist and his colleagues narrowly escape a mob of angry villagers (pp. 154-155); Archeology news briefs document recent efforts to prevent looting: antiquities scandal (Boston Museum under fire)(pp. 156-157); Copan tomb looted (Peten Sites Also Ravaged)(pp. pp. 157-158); Maya past protected (El Pilar Reserve established)(p. 158); Maya Art Return (Carving from the Guatemalan site of El Zotz goes home)(pp. 158-159); Maya stela fragment returned (pp. p. 159); David Freidel, Mystery of the Maya façade: astute detective work gives new meaning to a looted artwork (pp. 160-165); Tom Gidwitz, Pioneers of the bajo: jungle surveyors in Guatemala uncover the breadbasket of the Maya world (pp. 166-177); Angela M. H. Schuster, On the healer’s path: A journey through the Maya rain forest (pp. 178-183); Mark Rose, The enduring Maya: henequen plantations like Yaxcopoil in the northern Yucatan attest a peoples’ (pp. 184-186).

28. Cholb’al q’ij: Agenda ejecutiva. Guatemala: Editorial Cholsmaj; Editorial Maya Wuj, 2000- . 1/yr. Calendar/diary with dates according to Western (Spanish) and Mayan calendars. 29. Mesoamerican Voices: Journal of the Chicago Maya Society. Chicago. v. 1- , 2003- . 1/yr. “This journal series developed during meetings of the Chicago Maya Society, a group of local Mesoamerican enthusiasts and scholars … The goal of the publication series is to present new findings throughout Mesoamerica to a wide audience in high quality and richly illustrated articles in an annual volume.” 30. Garza, Mercedes de la. 2001. Estudios de cultura maya: un dialógo entre mayistas a lo largo de 40 años. Historia mexicana 50(4):719-729. Review of 40 years of the Mexican journal Estudios de cultura maya. GUIDES TO ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES 31. Archaeological Yucatan: English Guide. 3 ed. Mérida: Editorial Dante, 2006. 107 p. 32. Archaeological Sites of Yucatan; Historical Images. Mérida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán/Editorial Dante, 2005. 59 p. Covers the major Mayan archaeological sites of the Yucatan Peninsula and illustrated by photographs of the Pedro Guerra photo archive. Pedro Guerra flourished in the Yucatan in the nineteenth century and the archive numbers over 5000 images preserved at the Anthropology Department of the Autonomous University of Yucatan 33. Awe, Jaime. 2007. Maya Cities and Sacred Caves: A Guide to the Maya Sites of Belize. 2 ed. Belize: Cubola Books, 2007. 104 p. Guide to Mayan cities and other sacred archaeological sites. Features numerous sharp color photo plates of sites, as well as of ceramic works. 34. Ferguson, William M., and Richard E. W. Adams. 2002. Mesoamerica's Ancient Cities: Aerial Views of PreColumbian Ruins of Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, and Honduras. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 274 p.

Handbooks 26. Foster, Lynn V. 2002. Handbook to Life in the Ancient Maya World. New York: Facts On File; London: Michael O'Mara. 416 p. Useful source is arranged in 12 readable chapters covering topics such as archaeology, geography, government, cosmology, architecture, astronomy, and daily life. These chapters are subdivided into sections that are usually several pages in length (e.g., Agriculture in the chapter Economy, Industry, and Trade. The subdivisions are in turn divided into smaller sections that each address a specific topic, such as Soil Conservation and Intensive Cultivation. An extensive index gives access to all of the topical subdivisions, and there are cross-references within the essays. Each chapter includes a reading list. The volume also includes a chronological chart of Maya history, an extensive bibliography, black-and-white illustrations and photographs, and maps. See also Lynn V. Foster, The Handbook to Life in the Ancient Maya World (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005. 416 p.).

35. Kelly, Joyce. 2001. An Archaeological Guide to Central and South America. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 432 p. Includes descriptions, photographs, and current tourist information on 70 major archaeological sites and 60 museums. 36. The Mayan World Rebuilt. Merida: Dante, 2008. 143 p. Amply illustrated guide to 84 Mayan archeological sites in Mexico and Central America. With six acetate images which lay over original to demonstrate what the ruins would have looked like originally. Travel Guides 37. Eltringham, Peter, John Fisher, and Iain Stewart. 2001. Rough Guide to the Maya World. 2 ed. London: Rough Guides. 601 p. Travel guide with coverage of Guatemala, Belize, southern Mexico, Honduras, and El Salvador.

Serials 27. Arqueología Guatemalteca. Guatemala: Dirección Géneral del Patrimonio Cultural y Nacional del Ministerio de Cultura 8

51. Evans, R. Tripp. 2004. Romancing the Maya: Mexican Antiquity in the American Imagination, 1820-1915. Austin: University of Texas Press. 202 p. Evans explores why nineteenth-century Americans felt entitled to appropriate Mexico's cultural heritage as the United States' own. He focuses in particular on five well-known figures: American writer and amateur archaeologist John Lloyd Stephens, British architect Frederick Catherwood, Joseph Smith, founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and the French émigré photographers Desire Charnay and Augustus Le Plongeon. Setting these figures in historical and cultural context, Evans uncovers their varying motives, including the Manifest Destiny-inspired desire to create a national museum of American antiquities in New York City, the attempt to identify the ancient Maya as part of the Lost Tribes of Israel (and so substantiate the Book of Mormon), and the hope of proving that ancient Mesoamerica was the cradle of North American and even Northern European civilization.

38. Faubert, Denis. 2001. Cancun and the Riviera Maya. 3 ed. Montreal: Ulysses. 284 p. Excellent guidebook to Cancun and surrounding region. 39. Gómez Cárdenas, Luis. 2001. El Estado de Yucatan: A Pictorial Guide; A view of the Mayan World. Mexico: Editorial Fotográfica Marina Kukulcan. 24 p. Guide of Yucatan, Mexico. Full color plates of its architecture, ancient structures and natural surroundings; text in Spanish and English. 40. Martos L., Luis A. 2002. The eastern coast of Quintana Roo. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):90-92. Spanish translation: La costa oriental de Quintana Roo. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):26-33, 2002. 41. Navarrete, Carlos. 2001. Arqueología de los altos orientales de Chiapas. Arqueología mexicana 9(50):32-37. 42. Por los caminos del sur del estado de Yucatán: Guía práctica para recorrer los atractivos turísticos del municipio de Oxkutzcab, rutas Puuc y conventos. Merida, Yucatan: Talleres de Impresos GraffiColor, 2006. 90 p. Tourist guide through the state of Yucatan, with focus on Oxkutzcab and Puuc.

52. Die Faszinierende Welt der Maya und der Grossen Kulturen Mesoamerikas; National Geographic Special: Das Beste aus 100 Jahren National Geographic, National Geographic Deutschland. Hamburg: Gruner und Jahr Verlag, 2003. 183 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Hanns J. Prem, Die Faszination des Unbekannten (pp. 6-9); Wilbur E. Garrett, Die Welt der Maya: Eine Reise auf den Spuren ihrer Hochkultur in Mexiko, Belize, Honduras und Guatemala (pp. 10-26, 30-36); Siebo Heinken, Der Chronist der Maya [Teobert Maler](pp. 26-29); George E. Stuart, Das grosse Reich von Copan (pp. 40-61); Mary Miller, Bonampak: Das Masterwerk der Maya (pp. 74-89); Luis Marden, Dzibilchaltun: Aus den Tiefen der Zeit (pp. 90-101); Arthur A. Demarest, Krieg im Maya-Land: Der Kampf um Dos Pilas (pp. 138-153).

43. Pulido Solis, María T. 2001. Guía de viajeros: altos de Chiapas desde San Cristobal a la meseta y depresión centrales. Arqueología mexicana 9(50):78-85. 44. Reed, Mike. 2008. Site-seeing: Notes from the field: visiting the remote Maya sites of the northeast Peten. The Codex 16(3):3-11. 45. Shreve, Dwayne. 2003. Getting to El Mirador and Nakbe. The Codex 11(3):3-8.

53. Hammond, Norman, Julia Guernsey Kappelman, and F. Kent Reilly. 2001. Stone People: Early Drawings of Monuments at Tikal, Ixkun, and Ixtutz, Guatemala. Barnardsville, NC: Center for Ancient American Studies. 52 p.

46. Vera Castillo, Victor. 2008. Mundo Maya: arqueología; guía de 75 sitios arqueológicos. Merida: Dante. 130 p. Guide to Mayan archaeological sites, with numerous maps, and color illustrations.

54. Hamann, Byron. 2002. The social life of pre-sunrise things: indigenous Mesoamerican archae-ology. Current Anthropology 43(3):351-383. Using the Postclassic site of Chichen Itza and the 20th-century Yucatec Maya community of Chan Kom and other locations within Mesoamerica, author draws on archaeological, ethnographic, and historical evidence to explore a tradition of indigenous Mesoamerican archaeology.

47. Villar, Mónica del, Olga Cano, Adriana Velázquez, and David Arrevillaga. 2002. Traveller's guide: coast of Quintana Roo. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):101-105. Spanish translation: Guía de viajeros: costa de Quintana Roo. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):80-87, 2002. 48. Thomas, Victoria, and David A. Bjorkman. 2001. Books of Stone: Travel to 13 Maya Pyramids in the Yucatan Peninsula. Niwot, CO: Zone 913 Press. 200 p.

55. König, Eva, ed. 2002. Indianer 1858-1928: Photographische Reisen von Alaska bis Feuerland: Katalog zur gleichnamigen Ausstellung vom 28.4.2002-15.6.2003 im Museum für Völkerkunde Hamburg. Hamburg: Edition Braus im Wachter Verlag. 400 p. Contents include: Erika Billeter, Kleiner Abriss der Geschichte der Fotografie in Lateinamerika, 1850-1930 (22-27); Eva König, Teobert Maler: MayaForscher und Fotograf (1842-1917)(pp. 41-45); Eva König, Gottfried Hurter, der Kaufmann von Quetzaltenango (18661951)(pp. 52-54); Nikolai Grube, Am Ort der “Wesen Männer”: Teobert Maler in Xcalumkin (pp. 99-103);

HISTORY OF MAYA RESEARCH 49. Aguirre, Robert D. 2005. Informal Empire: Mexico and Central America in Victorian Culture. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.198 p. An examination of how objects of Mesoamerican, including Maya, culture stirred Victorian interest and “how such objects were incorporated into British museum collections, panoramas, freak shows, adventure novels, and records of imperial administrators.” 50. Audouze, Francoise. 2001. Les fouilles françaises dans les Amériques. Nouvelles de l'Archéologie 83-84:79-86.

9

56. Lerner, Jesse. 2006. The Ruins of Modernity: The Maya in the Modernist Imagination, 1839-2003. Doctoral dissertation, The Claremont Graduate University. 260 leaves.

Canegie Institution of Washinghton 63. Weeks, John M., and Jane A. Hill, eds. 2006. Carnegie Maya: Carnegie Institution of Washington Maya Research Program, 1913-1957. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 803 p. Republication of annual reports originally in Carnegie Institution of Washington Year Books series, 1913-1957; includes searchable CD-ROM.

57. McVicker, Donald. 2003. A tale of two Thompsons: the contributions of Edward H. Thompson and J. Eric S. Thompson to anthropology at the Field Museum. In Curators, Collections, and Contexts: Anthropology at the Field Museum, 1893-2002. Stephen E. Nash and Gary M. Feinman, eds. pp. 139-152. Fieldiana: Anthropology, 36. Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History.

Tikal Digital Archive Project 64. Misdea, Sharon A. 2003. Documenting the histories of Tikal. The Codex 11(3):12-17. A overview of the Tikal Digital Access Project (TDAP), a monumental project to facilitate access to and preservation of the Tikal Archive. http://www.museum.upenn. edu/ tdap/TDAP_About_the_Project.html.

58. Marcus, Joyce. 2003. Recent advances in Maya archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Research 11(2):71-148. 59. Matos Moctezuma, Eduardo. 2002. Historia de la arqueología en México: II. La arqueología y la ilustración (17501810). Arqueología mexicana 9(53):18-25. A history of archaeological illustration in Mexico considers the work of Antonio del Rio, Ricardo Armendáriz, José Antonio Calderón, and Antonio Bernasconi at Palenque. Continued by: Jose Alcina Franch, Historia de la arqueología en México: III. La época de los viajeros (1804-1880): el registro de las antigüedades (Arqueología mexicana 9(54):18-23, 2002); Luisa Fernanda Rico Mansard, Historia de la arqueología en México: IV: Proyección de la Arqueología mexicana (1880-1910): descubrir, ordenar y mostrar nuestro pasado (Arqueología mexicana 10(55):18-25, 2002); Miguel León-Portilla, Historia de la arqueología en México: la época de la revolución (19101939) (Arqueología mexicana 10(56):10-17, 2002); Joaquín García-Bárcena, Historia de la arqueología en México: La etapa de la posrevolución (1939-1968): primeras décadas del INAH (Arqueología mexicana 10(57):8-15, 2002).

BIOGRAPHY Richard E. W. Adams (1931- ) 65. Biografía del Dr. Richard W. Adams, homenajeado del XV encuentro. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1):9-12, 2007. Florentino Pedro Ajpacaja Tum (1935-2002) 66. Deceased: Florentino Pedro Ajpacaja Tum. Mexicon 24(5):94. Ajpacaja Tum was a K’iche’ linguist from Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan, Solola, Guatemala and the author of the first monolingual K’iche’ dictionary. Gertrude Duby Blom (1901-1993) 67. Robison, Mary L. 2006. The House of the Jaguar: The Engaged Anthropology of Gertrude Duby Blom at Museo Na Bolom. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

60. Rubinstein, Robert A., ed. 2002. Doing Fieldwork: The Correspondence of Robert Redfield and Sol Tax. rev. ed. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. 354 p. Republication of the 1991 Westview Press edition; describes issues associated with fieldwork in the western highlands Guatemala at Panajachel and Santo Tomas Chichicastenango.

Daniel G. Brinton (1837-1899) 68. Weeks, John M., ed. 2002. The Library of Daniel Garrison Brinton. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. 445 p. Includes the manuscript collection of Karl Hermann Berendt. Full-text available at http://www.library.upenn.edu/ eresources/ brinton.html.

61. Perry, Richard D., ed. 2001. Exploring Yucatan: A Traveler's Anthology. Santa Barbara, CA: Espadaña Press. 320 p. An interesting anthology of travel writing begins with the first Spanish explorers up to the present day. Authors include Channing Arnold, Frans Blom, Peter Canby, Desire Charnay, Antonio de Ciudad Real, James Cook, Bernal Diaz del Castillo, Macduff Everton, David Freidel, Thomas Gann, Richard Halliburton, Diego de Landa, Augustus and Alice Le Plongeon, Teobert Maler, Gregory Mason, Alfred P. Maudslay, Henry Mercer, William Miller, Arthur Morelet, Sylvanus G. Morley, Earl and Ann Axtell Morris, Benjamin M. Norman, Frederick A. Ober, Michel Peissel, Nelson Reed, Phillips Russell, Juan Cueva Santillan, Robert Stacy-Judd, John Lloyd Stephens, Edward H. Thompson, J. Eric S. Thompson, Tomas de la Torre, Alfonso Villa Rojas, JeanFrederic Waldeck, and Wilhelm, Prince of Sweden.

Robert J. Burkitt (1869-1945) 69. Danien, Elin C. 2008. Treasure in the stable; the long lost papers of Robert Burkitt. Expedition 50(2):40-41. 70. Danien, Elin. 2010. How to Build a Maya House. The Codex 18(1-2):13-20. Notes on Maya house construction extracted from the notes of Robert Burkitt. 71. Weeks, John M., and Elin C. Danien. 2008. The Lost Notebooks of Robert Burkitt, Maya Linguist: A Record of Languages of Ancient Guatemala. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press. 659 p. Transcription of linguistic notes on Ixil, Mopan, Q’eqchi’, Tojolabal, Tzotzil, and Yucatec. Jose Alcina Franch (1922-2001) 72. José Alcina Franch: curriculum vitae (1922-2001). Revista española de antropología américana 32:13-68, 2002.

62. Stephens, John L. 2004. Incidents of Travel in Yucatan. Washington, DC: National Geographic Society; New York: Simon and Schuster. 594 p. Reprint of the classic narrative first published in 1843.

Frans Blom (1893-1963) 73. Leifer, Tore, Jesper Nielsen, and Toke Sellner Reunert. 2002. Det urolige blod: Biografi om Frans Blom. Kobenhavn: 10

Høst & Søn. 382 p. Interesting biography, in Danish, of Frans Blom.

273-282); Elizabeth P. Benson, Los mayas y los mochicas: expresiones en el arte (pp. 283-298).

John Bourne (c.1920- ) 74. Bourne, John. 2001. Recollections of My Early Travels in Chiapas: Discoveries at Oxlahuntun (El Perro), Miguel Angel Fernández, Bonampak, and Lacanha. Santa Fe: Couldbridge Printing. 46 p. Also available at: http://www.mesoweb.com/publications/Bourne/ Recollections.pdf

Antonio Goubaud Carrera (1902-1951) 83. Adams, Abagail. 2008. ¿Diversidad cultural en la nacionalidad homogenea?: Antonio Goubaud Carrera y la fundación del Instituto Indigenista Nacional de Guatemala. Mesoamérica 29(50):66-95. Gillett G. Griffin (1928- ) 84. Colburn, Forrest D. 2006. Gillett G. Griffin. Tribal Arts 43(2):136-139.

Michael D. Coe (1929- ) 75. Coe, Michael D. 2006. Final Report: An Archaeologist Excavates His Past. New York: Thames and Hudson. 224 p. Autobiographical account of the childhood, student life, and professional career of Michael D. Coe, including his excavations in Belize, Guatemala, and Mexico, and the decipherment of Maya inscriptions.

William Henry Holmes (1846-1933) 85. Meltzer, David J. 2001. Holmes, William Henry. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 2, pp. 640-641. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio. Kathryn Josserand (1942-2006) 86. With great sadness we mourn the passing of Dr. Kathryn Josserand. The Codex 15(1-2):24-25, 2006-2007.

William Robertson Coe II (1926-2009) 76. William Robertson Coe II (1926-2009). Mexicon 32(3):55. Obituary for the archaeologist who directed excavations at Tikal for the University of Pennsylvania Museum.

Justin and Barbara Kerr 87. Bach, Caleb. 2001. Rolling out the Maya universe: Justin Kerr's innovative peripheral camera has revolutionized the study of glyphs and imagery, unfurling new perspectives on this sophisticated pre-Columbian culture. Américas 53(6):3039. Justin Kerr developed a peripheral camera for the specific purpose of rolling out artifactual images as one sustained strip. In the words of Michael Coe, author of Breaking the Maya Code and himself a great pioneer in the field of Mesoamerican archaeology, “For those of us who work with Maya iconography and hieroglyphic writing, Justin's invention of the rollout camera ranks with the discovery of carbon-14 dating.”

T. Patrick Culbert 77. Fowler, William R., and Molly Morgan. 2003. Introduction to special section: Papers in honor of T. Patrick Culbert. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):47-48. 78. Yoffee, Norman. 2003. T. Patrick Culbert: appreciation. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):49-59.

an

Ursula Dyckerhoff (1930-2004) 79. Grube, Nikolai. 2004. Ursula Dyckerhoff (1930-2004). Mexicon 26(4):76.

88. Gidwitz, Tom. 2003. Picture perfect: How an ingenious former fashion photographer managed to capture on film the mind and spirit of the ancient Maya. Archaeology 56(6)42-49. Delightful profile of Justin and Barbara Kerr, photographers, restorers, inventors, epigraphers, and publishers of the Maya.

Munro Sterling Edmonson (1924-2002) 80. Bricker, Victoria R. 2003. Munro Sterling Edmonson (1924-2002). American Anthropologist 105(3):682-684. Donald Forsyth 81. Biografía de Dr. Donald Forsyth, homenajeado del XVI encuentro. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1):13-16, 207.

Juan Pedro Felipe Laporte Molina (1945-2010) 89. Juan Pedro Felipe Laporte Molina (1945-2010). Mexicon 32(3):53-54.

Beatriz de la Fuente (1929- ) 82. Uriarte, María T., and Leticia Staines Cicero, eds. 2004. Acercarse y mirar: homenaje a Beatriz de la Fuente. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas. 486 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Miguel León-Portilla, Beatriz de la Fuente: universitaria (pp. 11-19); Sergio Raul Arroyo, Beatriz de la Fuente: historiadora del arte (pp. 21-24); María Elena Ruiz Gallut, Beatriz de la Fuente: una vida en la enseñanza (pp. 25-32); María Teresa Uriarte, La obra de Beatriz de la Fuentes y la valoración del arte mesoaméricano (pp. 33-38); Mercedes de la Garza, La idea del hombre en el arte clásico maya (pp. 189214); Diana Magaloni Kerpel, El proceso creativo y su contenido simbólico en la pinturas mural maya (pp. 215-238); Leticia Staines Cicero, Las tapas de bóveda pintadas y su lugar en el cosmos (pp. 239-254); Alfonso Arellano Hernández, Como un mar que estalla en espumas (pp. 255-272); Mary Ellen Miller, Lo que sí se sabe y lo que no se sabe de Bonampak (pp.

Augustus Le Plongeon (1826-1908) 90. Arnold, Kenneth. 2003. Augustus Le Plongeon: un soñador en el Yucatan. Revista de arqueología 259:56-61. Richard Stockton MacNeish (1918-2001) 91. Ferrie, Helke. 2001. An interview with Richard S. MacNeish. Current Anthropology 42(5):715-735. 92. Flannery, Kent V. 2001. In memoriam: There were giants in those days, Richard Stockton MacNeish, 1918-2001. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):149-156. 93. Flannery, Kent V., and Joyce Marcus. 2001. Richard Stockton MacNeish, 1918-2001. National Academy of Sciences Biographical Memoirs 80:2-27. 94. Hammond, Norman. 2001. Richard S. Scotty MacNeish, 1918-2001. Mexicon 23(1):9-10. 11

working on Mesoamerican archeological projects. He draws parallels between mythic Mayan heroes undergoing tests in Xibalba, the underworld; his encounters with bureaucracy while working on sites including Templo Mayor, Chichen Itza, and Cañada de la Virgen; and problems facing contemporary Mesoamerica.”

95. Richard Stockton MacNeish (1918-2001). The Codex 9(3):37, 2001. 96. Woodbury, Richard B. 2002. Richard Stockton MacNeish (1918-2001). American Anthropologist 104(1):299-302. 97. Zeitlin, Robert N. 2001. Richard Stockton MacNeish, April 29, 1918-January 16, 2001. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 87:393-395.

Román Piña Chan (1920-2001) 106. Benavides C., Antonio. 2001. Roman Piña Chan, 19202001. Institute for Maya Studies Newsletter 30(5):3. See also Roman Piña Chan (1920-2001). The Codex 9(3):36, 2001); Vera Tiesler Blos, Roman Piña Chan (1920-2001)(Mexicon 23(3):58, 2001).

Heather McKillop (1953- ) 98. McKillop, Heather. 2005. In Search of Maya Sea Traders. College Station: Texas A&M Press. 226 p. A personal account of McKillop’s archaeological fieldwork experiences at Wild Cane Cay, Frenchman’s Cay, and other locations on the coast of Belize.

Dorothy Hughes Popenoe (1899-1932) 107. Joyce, Rosemary A. 2001. Popenoe, Dorothy Hughes. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 1060-1062. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio.

Teobert Maler (1842-1917) 99. Bonaccorsi-Hild, Doris. 2001. Teobert Maler: Soldat, Abenteurer, Gelehrter auf den Spuren der Maya. Vienna: Ibera Verlag. 245 p.

Martin Prechtel 108. Prechtel, Martin. 2002. The Toe Bone and the Tooth: An Ancient Mayan Story Relived in Modern Times: Leaving Home to Come Home. London: Thorsons; Shaftesbury: Element Books, 2004. 384 p. An interesting blend of polemic, autobiography, travel adventure, and myth.

100. Gutiérrez Ruvalcaba, Ignacio. 2008. Teoberto Maler; Historia de un fotógrafo vuelto arqueólogo. Mexico: CONACULTA/INAH/SINAFO/Fototeca Nacional del INAH. 171 p. “Ignacio Gutiérrez Ruvalcaba presenta aquí su investigación en torno al personaje y la obra de Teoberto Maler, (1842-1917) a partir de la revisión de archivos institucionales y particulares en nuestro país así como del extranjero, y aporta nuevos datos al quehacer fotográfico en México”.

Tatiana Proskouriakoff (1909-1985) 109. Mathews, Peter. 2001. Proskouriakoff, Tatiana. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 1074-1075. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio. 110. Solomon, Char. 2002. Tatiana Proskouriakoff: Interpreting the Ancient Maya. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 218 p. Interesting biography of a pioneering woman who successfully changed established beliefs about the ancient Maya and provided scholars with a revolutionary approach to the decipherment of ancient Maya hieroglyphs.

Alfred P. Maudslay (1850-1931) 101. Graham, Ian. 2001. Alfred Maudslay and the Maya: A Biography. London: British Museum. 323 p. A biography of Alfred P. Maudslay (1850-1931) who was a pioneer in the exploration and documentation of the monuments and architecture of ruins at Palenque, Copan, Chichen Itza, and elsewhere.

Dennis Puleston (1940-1978) 111. Parsons, Jeffrey. 2010. Denny Puleston and the “Brechero Saga”: Tikal 1966. The Codex 18(3): 21-36.

Rafael Morales Fernández (1919-2003) 102. Jones, Christopher. 2003. Rafael Morales Fernández, 1919-2003. Expedition 45(2):45.

Miguel Rivera Dorado 112. Ares, Nacho. 2009. Entrevista a Miguel Rivera Dorado. “La arqueología y la antropología deben ir de la mano.” Revista de Arqueología 336:42-47.

Sylvanus Griswold Morley (1883-1948) 103. Givens, Douglas R. 2001. Morley, Sylvanus Griswold. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 2, pp. 900-901. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio.

Georges Raynaud (fl. 1925) 113. Wichmann, Søren. 2002-2003. Georges Raynaud: an overlooked figure in the history of Maya epigraphy. PARI Journal 3(2-3):15-17.

104. Morley, Sylvanus G. 2001. Morley’s diary. PARI Journal 2(2):17-19. See also Morley's diary, Tuesday, April 5, 1932 (PARI Journal 2(1):25-27, 2001); Morley’s diary, 1932: April 9-Saturday (PARI Journal 2(4)-3(1):28-29, 2001-2002); Morley’s diary, 1932: April 10 – Sunday (PARI Journal 3(23):20-21, 2002-2003); Morley's diary, 1932 (PARI Journal 7(1):15-16, 2006); Morley's diary, April 23, 1932 (PARI Journal 6(3):1-6, 2006); Morley's diary: April 10-13, 1932 (PARI Journal 6(2):10-16, 2006).

Merle Greene Robertson (1913- ) 114. Into the land of the Maya: an interview with Merle Greene Robertson. Explorers Journal 86(3):30-45, 2008. 115. Gidwitz, Tom. 2002. Doyenne of Mayanists. Archaeology 55(3):42-49. “A profile of Merle Greene Robertson. In 1962, Robertson's love of Maya art became an obsession when University of Pennsylvania archaeologists working at Tikal, Guatemala, asked the artist to record their findings. Maya relief sculptures are a web of subtle details that defy reproduction, with many carvings in damp, cramped tombs inhospitable to both cameras and sketch pads. Robertson

Don Patterson 105. Patterson, Don. 2007. Journey to Xibalba: A Life in Archaeology. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 304 p. “In this autobiographical account addressed to his daughter, Patterson (National Institute of Anthropology and History, Mexico) reflects on his many years of experience 12

125. Schoetz, David. 2004. Evon Vogt, 85, anthropologist, authority on Mayans. New York Times, May 17, 2004. p. C5.

brought a new tool to Maya studies when, in 1962, it occurred to her to do life-size rubbings of the carvings. These reveal details that escape even the most experienced observers. In the 40 years since, she has ventured deep into the jungle, spending weeks in dank tombs and recording thousands of Maya masterpieces before their ruin by looters and time. She has also written five books and many scholarly articles, edited a dozen studies of Maya art and history, and helped bring about the decipherment of the Maya script.”

Gordon R. Willey (1913-2002) 126. Fash, William L. 2003. In memoriam: sprinter, wordsmith, mentor, and sage: the life of Gordon Randolph Willey, 1913-2002. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(2):169-177. A biographical remembrance of Gordon R. Willey. See also William L. Fash, Deceased: Gordon Randolph Willey (Mexicon 24(3):49, 2002); Shirley Gorenstein, Gordon Randolph Willey (1913-2002)(American Anthropologist 104(4):1254-1256); Jeremy A. Sabloff, Gordon Randolph Willey (1913-2002)(Nature 417:504, 2002); Jeremy A. Sabloff, Gordon Randolph Willey (Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 405-410, 2004).

116. Robertson, Merle G. 2006. Never in Fear: The Memoirs of Merle Greene Robertson. San Francisco: Pre-Columbian Art Research Institute. 256 p. Autobiographical account by prominent art historian and field archaeologist. See also Merle G. Robertson, A selection of rubbings, part two (PARI Journal 6(4):9-16, 2006); A selection of rubbings, part three (PARI Journal 7(1):11-14, 2006), The lost field notebook restored (PARI Journal 8(2):1-12, 2007).

Wolfgang Wurster (1937-2003) 127. Vogt, B. 2004. Nachruf Wolfgang W. Wurster. Beiträge zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie 24:1-8.

Linda Schele (1942-1998) 117. Mathews, Peter. 2001. Schele, Linda. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 1149-1150. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio.

128. Prümmers, Heiko. 2004. Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Wurster (7 July 1937-29 December 2003). Mexicon 26(2):26.

Edwin M. Shook (1911-2000) 118. Love, Michael. 2002. In memoriam: Edwin M. Shook (1911-2000). Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):1-2.

ENVIRONMENT 129. Anderson, E. N. 2010. Managing Maya landscapes. In Ethnoecology: Concepts of Biotic and Physical Space. Leslie Main Johnson and Eugene S. Hunn, eds. pp. 255-276. New York: Bergbahn Books.

John Lloyd Stephens (1805-1852) 119. Glassman, Steve. 2004. On the Trail of the Maya Explorer: Tracing the Epic Journey of John Lloyd Stephens. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. 296 p. “In 1839 John Lloyd Stephens, then 31 years old, and his traveling companion, artist Frederick Catherwood, disappeared into the vast rain forest of eastern Guatemala. They had heard rumors that remains of a civilization of incomparable artistic and cultural merit were moldering in the steamy lowland jungles. They braved Indian uprisings, road agents, heat, and biting insects to eventually encounter what is today known as the lost civilization of the Maya.”

130. Arce Ibarra, Ana M. 2007. Livelihoods, Aquatic Resources and Non-Monetary Values of Local Natural Resources in Mexico's Lowland Maya Area. Doctoral dissertation, Dalhousie University (Canada). 183 leaves. 131. Arnauld, Marie-Charlotte, et al. 2001. Au pays maya des lacs et des marais; recherches archéologiques et géographiques (1999-2001). Journal de la Société des Américanistes 87:283-302. 132. Ayers, Meredith. 2010. Stable Isotopes of Speleothems From the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. M.S. thesis, Northern Illinois University. 156 leaves.

120. Murray, Tim. 2001. Stephens, John Lloyd. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 1210-1211. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio.

133. Baker, Jeffrey L. 2003. Maya Wetlands: Ecology and Pre-Hispanic Utilization of Wetlands in Northwestern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Arizona. 329 leaves. Author examines several issues related to ancient Maya utilization of wetlands. Fourteen hypotheses associated with one model of wetland utilization, the Pohl-Bloom model. The Pohl-Bloom model views the use of wetlands as being restricted in time and space, with wetlands only being utilized in the Late Preclassic along the Rio Hondo drainage. Rising sea levels caused a rise in the freshwater table, which ultimately forced the Maya to abandon their wetland fields at the end of the Preclassic. Patterns observed in wetlands outside of the Rio Hondo drainage are, according to this model, the remnant of natural features called gilgai. Examination of the PohlBloom model resulted in the rejection of all fourteen hypotheses.

Marion Stirling Pugh (1911-2001) 121. Marion Stirling Pugh (1911-2001). The Codex 9(3):36, 2001. Doris Zemurray Stone (1909-1994) 122. Joyce, Rosemary A. 2001. Stone, Doris Zemurray. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 1212-1214. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio. William Duncan Strong (1899-1962) 123. Woodbury, Richard B. 2001. Strong, William Duncan. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 1214-1215. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio. J. Eric S. Thompson (1898-1975) 124. Mathews, Peter. 2001. Thompson, Sir J. Eric S. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 1267-1268. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio. Evon Z. Vogt (1919-2004)

134. Balam, Carlos. 2007. Reforestar la ternura. Guatemala: Maya Na'oj. 105 p.

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147. Hageman, Jon B., and David J. Goldstein. 2009. An integrated assessment of archaeobotanical recovery methods in the neotropical rainforest of northern Belize: flotation and dry screening. Journal of Archaeological Science 36(12):2841-2852.

135. Brown, Jon C. 2005. A Study of Forest Communities and Woody Plant Distributions in the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, Campeche, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 153 leaves. 136. Bruchez, Margaret S. 2007. Artifacts that speak for themselves: sounds underfoot in Mesoamerica. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 26(1): 47-64. Authors suggests “that noises generated by subterranean ground movement, water, wind, and wildlife are a reason why residents in Mesoamerica perceive caves, waterholes, limestone sinks, and mountains as sacred”. See also Clara Garza, Andrés Medina, Pablo Padilla, Alejandro Ramos, and Francisca Zalaquett, Arqueoacústica maya: la necesidad del estudio sistemático de efectos acústicos en sitios arqueológicos (Estudios de cultura maya 32: 63-88, 2008); and María E. Gutierrez Gonzalez. 2004. La personificación del tiempo entre los mayas (Estudios de cultura maya 25:17-32, 2004).

148. Hlebakos, Jason L. 2006. Diversity, Land Use, and Belief Systems of the Cenotes of the Yucatan Peninsula, With a Case Study of Quararibea funebris. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 132 leaves. 149. Janson, Thor. 2001. Maya Nature: Belize, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador. Guatemala: Vista Publications. 128 p. Ecosystems, plants, and animals of the Maya world. 150. Kunen, Julie L. 2001. Study of an Ancient Maya Bajo Landscape in Northwestern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Arizona. 356 leaves.

137. Campbell, David G., John Guittar, and Karen S. Lowell. 2008. Are colonial pastures the ancestors of the contemporary Maya forest? Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2):278-289.

151. Levesque, Manon. 2007. Terre convoitée, terre de conflits: conservation et développement dans la forêt lacandona du Chiapas. Recherches amérindiennes au Québec 36(23):107-116.

138 Carr, David L. 2002. Rural-Frontier Migration and Deforestation in the Sierra de Lacandon National Park, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 327 leaves.

152. Luzzadder-Beach, Sheryl, and Timothy Sheryl. 2008. Water chemistry constraints and possibilities for ancient and contemporary Maya wetlands. Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2):211-230.

139. Carr, David L. 2008. Farm households and land use in a core conservation zone of the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala. Human Ecology 36:231-248. 140. Chinchilla Mazariegos, Oswaldo. 2004. Arqueología y medio ambiente del Peten. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):2027.

153. MacKinnon, Barbara. 2005. Birds and Reserves of the Yucatan peninsula; Aves y reservas de la peninsula de Yucatan. Mexico: Amigos de Sian Ka'an. 76 p. Includes color photographs list of bird names in Spanish, English and Mayan, and a lengthy bird checklist.

141. Clark, Charles R. 2002. Understanding Deforestation in the Maya Tropics: Land Tenure Evolution, Institutional Delegitimation and the Revindication of Local Norms. Doctoral dissertation, University of New Mexico. 225 leaves.

154. Neff, Hector, Deborah M. Pearsall, and John G. Jones. 2006. Climate change and population history in the Pacific lowlands of southern Mesoamerica. Quaternary Research 65(3):390-400.

142. Colli Ek, Alma de María, and Victor M. Colli Borges,. 2006. La armonía y respeto del hombre maya por la naturaleza” propuestas para una nueva visión ecológica. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2):553-558.

155. Neff, Hector, Deborah M. Pearsall, John G. Jones, Barbara Arroyo, Shawn K. Collins, and Dorothy E. Freidel. 2006. Early Maya adaptive patterns: mid-late Holocene paleoenvironmental evidence from Pacific Guatemala. Latin American Antiquity 17(3):287-315.

143. Collins, Darron A. 2001. From Woods to Weeds: Cultural and Ecological Transformations in Alta Verapaz, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 393 leaves.

156. Nigh, Ronald. 2008. Trees, fire, and farmers: making woods and soil in the Maya Forest. Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2):231-242.

144. Dull, Robert A., John R. Southon, and Payson Sheets. 2001. Volcanism, ecology, and culture: a reassessment of the Volcan Ilopango TBJ eruption in the southern Maya realm. Latin American Antiquity 12(1):25-44.

157. Schlesinger, Victoria, and Juan C. Chab-Medina. 2002. Animals and Plants of the Ancient Maya: A Guide. Austin: University of Texas Press; Chesham: Combined Academic. 400 p. This field guide highlights nearly 100 species of plants and animals that were significant to the ancient Maya and that continue to inhabit the Maya region today. Drawing from the disciplines of biology, ecology, and anthropology, the author describes each plant or animal's habitat and natural history, identifying characteristics, and cultural significance to the ancient and contemporary Maya. An introductory section explains how to use the book and offers a concise overview of the history, lifeways, and cosmology of the ancient Maya. The concluding section describes the collapse of ancient Maya

145. Dunning, N. P. 2002. Arising from the bajos: the evolution of a neotropical landscape and the rise of Maya civilization. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 92(2):267-283. 146. Ford, Anabel, and Kitty F. Emery. 2008. Exploring the legacy of the Maya forest. Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2):147153. 14

167. Manuel-Navarrete, David. 2004. Ecological Integrity Discourses as a Heuristic Tool for Understanding Conservation Initiatives: The Case of the Maya Rainforest in the Usumacinta Watershed. Doctoral dissertation, University of Waterloo, Canada. 339 leaves.

society and briefly traces the history of the Maya region from colonial times to the present. 158. Seele, Enno. 2001. Hipótesis sobre el medio ambiente maya: consecuencias de una catástrofe natural en la península de Yucatán/México. Mexicon 23(4):92-101.

168. Martinez-Reyes, Jose E. 2004. Contested Place, Nature, and Sustainability: A Critical Anthropo-Geography of Biodiversity Conservation in the “Zona Maya” of Quintana Roo, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts Amherst.208 leaves.

159. Shaw, Justine M. 2003. Climate change and deforestation: implications for the Maya collapse. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):157-167. 160. Steines, Susanne, and John Mack. 2005. La Xibalba: los sueños perdidos de la selva lacandona; Lost Dreams of the Mexican Rainforest. Mexico City: Vector Casa de Bolsa/Lindero Ediciones-MVS Editorial/Gutsa. 257p. Handsomely illustrated survey in color by John Mack, of the wonders of the Chiapas forest area: Selva Lacandona; important not only because of what it represents in terms of ecological and biological diversity, but also historically, due to the mayor Mayan cultural developments that took place there.

169. Milian, Bayron. 2008. Poverty, Deforestation and Land Tenure Institutions: The Case of the Communities Living in Guatemala's Maya Biosphere Reserve. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts Amherst. 235 leaves. 170. Murphy, Julia E. 2003. Ethnography and Sustainable Development in the Calakmul Model Forest, Campeche, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, York University. 331 leaves. Cenotes 171. Beddows, Patricia, Paul Blanchon, Elva Escobar, and Olmo Torres-Talamante. 2007. Los cenotes de la península de Yucatan. Arqueología mexicana 14(83):32-35.

161. Villalobos González, Martha H. 2006. El bosque sitiado, asaltos armadas, concesiones forestales y estrategías de Resistencia durante la Guerra de castas. Mexico: CONACULTA: INAH/ CIESAS/Miguel Ángel Porrúa. 299 p. “Esta obra analiza la economía de guerra implementada por los indígenas mayas durante la llamada Guerra de Castas de Yucatán iniciada en 1847”. Incluyes the following topics of discussion: “La selva, cobijo para la autónomia indígena”, “La Casa Comercial Crammer” and “Mayas e ingleses durante el ciclo de explotación del palo de tinte”, among others.

172. Gallareta Negrón, Tomas. 2007. Cenotes y asentamientos humanos en Yucatan. Arqueología mexicana 14(83):36-43.

162. Wright, Jim. 2006. Jungle of the Maya. Austin: University of Texas Press. 138 p. “Environmental writer Jim Wright invitingly describes the Selva Maya's natural and human history, helping visitors and residents appreciate the riches to be found in the forest and the need to protect and preserve them for generations to come.”

174. Medina Chemor, Alfredo. 2008. Cenotes, Imprints of Water and Light in the Jungle: Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. Cancun: Pixel Press. 167 p. History of and guide to underwater caves and sinkholes in the Yucatan Peninsula. With 120 color photographs, an introduction to their geological formation and Mayan legends.

Environmental Preservation 163. Biosfera Maya: patrimonio natural y cultural de Guatemala. Galería Guatemala, 4(10). Guatemala: Fundación G & T, 2001. 110 p. Examination of the Reserva de la Biosfera Maya.

Climate 175. Brenner, Mark, Michael F. Rosenmeier, David A. Hodell, and Jason H. Curtis. 2002. Paleolimnology of the Maya lowlands: long-term perspectives on interactions among climate, environment, and humans. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):141-157. A discussion of the paleolimnology of the Maya lowlands.

173. Martos López, Luis A. 2007. Los cenotes en la actualidad; entre la veneración y la explotación. Arqueología mexicana 14(83):66-70.

164. Carr, David L. 2002. Rural-Frontier Migration and Deforestation in the Sierra de Lacandon National Park, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 327 leaves.

176. Dahlin, Bruce H. 2002. Climate change and the end of the Classic period in Yucatan. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2):327-340. Author attempts to resolve the paradox that many northern lowland Maya sites persisted and thrived throughout a period of prolonged and severe drought conditions around AD 850.

165. Clark, Charles R. 2002. Understanding Deforestation in the Maya Tropics: Land Tenure Evolution, Institutional Delegitimation and the Revindication of Local Norms (Guatemala, Belize, Mexico). Doctoral dissertation, University of New Mexico. 225 leaves.

177. Fowler, William R. 2002. Introduction: Historical climatology in the Maya area. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):7778.

166. Haenn, Nora. 2002. Nature regimes in southern Mexico: a history of power and environment. Ethnology 41(1):1-26. Author explores the popularized history of a state-peasant conservation alliance in the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve in southern Mexico.

178. Fowler, William R., and Molly Morgan. 2002. Introduction: Historical climatology in the Maya area. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2):265.

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185. Leyden, Barbara W. 2002. Pollen evidence for climatic variability and cultural disturbance in the Maya lowlands. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):85-101. Author summarizes the pollen evidence for climatic variability in the Maya lowlands, and proposes a palynological reconstruction for climate in the region for approximately 40,000 years.

179. Gill, Richardson B., and Jerome P. Keating. 2002. Volcanism and Mesoamerican archaeology. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):125-140. Proposal that large-scale volcanic eruptions contaminate the stratosphere with volcanic products which absorb or reflect incoming solar radiation causing weather change on a global scale and disastrous droughts in Mesoamerica.

186. Me-Bar, Yoav, and Fred Valdez. 2003. Droughts as random events in the Maya lowlands. Journal of Archaeological Science 30(12):1599-1606.

180. Gunn, Joel D., John E. Foss, William J. Folan, María del Rosario Dominguez Carrasco, and Betty B. Faust. 2002. Bajo sediments and the hydraulic system of Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2):297-315.

187. Me-Bar, Yoav, and Fred Valdez. 2004. Recovery time after a disaster and the ancient Maya. Journal of Archaeological Science 31(9):1311-1324. See also Y. Me-Bar and F. Valdez, On the vulnerability of the ancient Maya society to natural threats (Journal of Archaeological Science 32(6):813-825, 2005).

181. Gunn, Joel D., Ray T. Matheny, and William J. Folan. 2002. Climate-change studies in the Maya area: a diachronic analysis. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):79-84. Authors offer a historical perspective and a methodological context for climate change studies in the Maya area.

188. Messenger, Lewis C. 2002. Los mayas y El Niño: paleoclimatic correlations, environmental dynamics, and cultural implications for the ancient Maya. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):159-170. Author explores the study of El Niño events and the implications for ancient Maya civilization.

182. Hansen, Richard D., Steven Bozarth, John Jacob, David Wahl, and Thomas Schreiner. 2002. Climatic and environmental variability in the rise of Maya civilization: a preliminary perspective from northern Peten. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2):273-295. Various lines of paleoecological data suggest a perennially wet marsh system supported large Preclassic populations in the Mirador basin of the northern Peten.

189. Popenoe de Hatch, Marion, Erik Ponciano, Tomas Barrientos Q., Mark Brenner, and Charles Ortloff. 2002. Climate and technological innovation at Kaminaljuyú, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):103-114. Analysis of microfossils and pollen from sediment cores taken from Lake Amatitlan and the extinct Lake Miraflores associated with Kaminaljuyú, authors provide a reconstruction of the paleoclimate in the Valley of Guatemala.

183. Haug, Gerald H., Detlef Günther, Larry C. Peterson, Daniel M. Sigman, Konrad A. Hughen, and Beat Aeschlimann. 2003. Climate and the collapse of Maya civilization. Science 299:1731-1735. In the anoxic Cariaco Basin of the southern Caribbean, the bulk titanium content of undisturbed sediment reflects variations in riverine input and the hydrological cycle over northern tropical South America. A seasonally resolved record of titanium shows that the collapse of Maya civilization in the Terminal Classic Period occurred during an extended regional dry period, punctuated by more intense multiyear droughts centered at approximately 810, 860, and 910 AD. These new data suggest that a century-scale decline in rainfall put a general strain on resources in the region, which was then exacerbated by abrupt drought events, contributing to the social stresses that led to the Maya demise. See also Larry C. Peterson, and Gerald H. Haug, 2005. Climate and the collapse of Maya civilization: a series of multi-year droughts helped to doom an ancient culture (American Scientist 93(4):322, 2005). Between 750 and 950 A.D, the Maya suffered a demographic disaster brought on in part by the increasing frequency of multi-year droughts as evidenced by sediment cores from the Cariaco basin, off the coast of Venezuela.

190. Robichaux, Hubert R. 2002. On the compatibility of epigraphic, geographic, and archaeological data, with a droughtbased explanation for the Classic Maya collapse. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2):341-345. Author suggests that culturehistorical events and ecological factors interplayed with the terminal Classic period drought in such a way as to render the collapse possible. 191. Rosenmeier, Michael F. 2002. A 4000-year lacustrine record of environmental change in the southern Maya lowlands, Peten, Guatemala. Quaternary Research 57(2):183190. 192. Rosenmeier, Michael F. 2003. The Holocene Paleolimnology of Lake Salpeten, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Florida. 93 leaves.

184. Hodell, David A., Mark Brenner, Jason H. Curtis, and Thomas Guilderson. 2001. Solar forcing of drought frequency in the Maya lowlands. Science 292:1367-1370. “Paleoclimatologists argue that subtle variations in the sun's brightness helped trigger a drastic climate change, and that, in turn, played a role in the downfall of a whole civilization. Drawing on a mucky lake-bottom core from the Yucatan Peninsula, home to ancient Mayas, they confirm that the area's worst drought in many millennia struck just a Maya civilization began its accelerating decline. That drought was only one of many that tended to return every 200 years, in step with and presumably driven by 200-year oscillations in solar activity.”

193. Rue, David, David Webster, and Alfred Traverse. 2002. Late Holocene fire and agriculture in the Copan Valley, Honduras. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2):267-272. Pollen and charcoal analysis of a sediment core from Aguada Petapilla, a peat bog, provides evidence of late Holocene vegetation and fire history in the Copan valley, Honduras; authors suggest the possibility of domesticated maize as early as 2300 BC. 194. Siemens, Alfred H., Jose Angel Soler Graham, Richard Hebda, and Maija Heimo. 2002. Dams on the Candelaria. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):115-123. Argues that the chinampa-like features of the Candelaria Basin in 16

southwestern Campeche were constructed as acts of desperation in response to climatic change.

Valderde Valdes, El jaguar entre los mayas: entidad oscura y ambivalente (Arqueología mexicana 13(73):47-51, 2005).

195. Vargas Pacheco, Ernesto. 2002. El impacto del cambio climático en la región del Río Candelaria, Campeche, Mexico. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2):317-326. Examines the impact of changing water levels along the Rio Candelaria on the local Chontal Maya.

203. Emery, Kitty F. 2004. Maya Zooarchaeology: New Directions in Method and Theory. Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA. 320 p. “In the past three decades, zooarchaeological research in Mesoamerica has intensified, in tandem with an increasing sophistication of analytical techniques, and a growing complexity and diversity of theoretical questions. This volume combines traditional zooarchaeological reports and various state-of-the-art summaries of methods and theoretical perspectives. This combination of detailed discussions of basic zooarchaeological data with reviews of important themes in Maya zooarchaeology emphasizes the central issues that guide our research from basic data collection through final comparative interpretation. The chapters emphasize the newest developments in technical methods, the most recent trends in the analysis of social zooarchaeology, and the broadening perspectives provided by a new geographic range of investigations. The main focus of the volume remains on fostering cooperation among Mesoamerican zooarchaeologists at the levels of both preliminary analysis and final theoretical reconstruction.” Contents include: K. F. Emery, Maya zooarchaeology: historical perspectives on current research directions (pp. 1-14); K. F. Emery, In search of assemblage comparability: methods in Maya zooarchaeology (pp. 15-34); N. Stanchly, Picks and stones may break my bones: taphonomy and Maya zooarchaeology (pp. 35-44); H. F. Beaubien, Excavation and recovery of a funerary offering of marine materials from Copan (pp. 45-54); H. McKillop, and T. Winemiller, Ancient Maya environment, settlement, and diet: quantitative and GIS spatial analysis of shell from Frenchman’s Cay, Belize (pp. 57-80); K. Emery, Environments of the Maya collapse: a zooarchaeological perspective from the Petexbatun (pp. 81-96); M. A. Masson, Fauna exploitation from the Preclassic to the Postclassic periods at four Maya settlements in northern Belize (pp. 97122); C. D. White, M. Pohl, H. P. Schwarcz, and F. J. Longstaffe, Feat, field, and forest: deer and dog diets at Lagartero, Tikal, and Copan (pp. 141-158); K. L. Seymour, Empirical data for archaeological fish weight analyses (pp. 159-173); W. G. Teeter, Animal utilization in a growing city: vertebrate exploitation at Caracol, Belize (pp. 177-192); H. Moholy-Nagy, Vertebrates in Tikal burials and caches (pp. 193-205); T. A. Wade, A vertebrate archaeofauna from the Early Formative period site of Paso de la Amada, Chiapas, Mexico: preliminary results (pp. 209-222); J. S. Henderson and R. A. Joyce, Human use of animals in prehispanic Honduras: a preliminary report from the Lower Ulua Valley (pp. 223-236); D. M. Pendergast, Where’s the meat? Maya zooarchaeology from an archaeological perspective (pp. 239248); E. S. Wing, Maya zooarchaeology from a zooarchaeological perspective (pp. 249-253); Appendix: Taxonomic list of important Mesoamerican species mentioned in Maya Zooarchaeology (pp. 255-266).

196. Wahl, David B. 2005. Climate Change and Human Impacts in the Southern Maya Lowlands: A Paleoenvironmental Perspective From the Northern Peten, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley. 115 leaves. 197. Wahl, David, Robert Byrne, and Thomas Schreiner. 2006. Holocene vegetation change in the northern Peten and its implications for Maya prehistory. Quartenary Research 65(3):380-389. 198. Webster, James W. 2000. Speleothem Evidence of Late Holocene Climate Variation in the Maya Lowlands of Belize, Central American and Archaeological Implications. Doctoral dissertation, University of Georgia. 232 leaves. 199. Werner, Louis. 2002. Great storms of the four winds. Americas 54(5):39-45. Discussion of hurricanes in prehistory includes coverage of Popol Vuh and Chilam Balam of Mani. Earthquakes 200. Kovach, Robert L. 2004. Early Earthquakes of the Americas. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. 268 p. Includes chapters on earthquakes at archaeological sites in Mexico (Mitla, Monte Alban) and the Maya region (Quirigua, Xunantunich, Copan, Seibal, Altar de Sacrificios, Xutilha, and Pusilha). Fauna 201. Anderson, Eugene N., and Felix Medina Tzuc. 2005. Animals and the Maya in Southeast Mexico. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 251 p. Ethnozoological study of the Chunhuhub region of Quintana Roo includes information on the Maya and the animal world, beekeeping, and hunting. Two appendices consider the animal classification of the Maya of Chunhuhub and area, and birds observed in Chunhuhub and environs. 202. Emery, Kitty. 2003. The noble beast: status and differential access to animals in the Maya world. World Archaeology 34(3):498-515. “In the Maya world of Central America some animal species were used as luxury goods and foods, access to which was differentially available on the basis of social rank or authority. Zooarchaeological research in the Petexbatún region of Guatemala reveals complexity in the distribution of animal remains between hierarchically ranked residences. In a comparison of animal use between elite households at Aguateca, resource access reflects variations in social rank, not occupational differences between high-status families. Diachronic analyses of species used throughout the Petexbatun region also indicate changes in status-differentiated use of favoured animals during periods of political stress. Variability in both samples is explained as the effect of individual or household responses to locally specific social and historical conditions.” See also María del Carmen

204. Emery, Kitty F., and Erin K. Thornton. 2008. Zooarchaeological habitat analysis of ancient Maya landscape changes. Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2):154-178.

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LINGUISTICS 205. England, Nora C. 2003. Mayan language revival and revitalization politics: linguists and linguistic ideologies. American Anthropologist 105(4):733-743. Author documents the extent of the contribution of linguistics to Mayan language vitality through an analysis of language ideologies and how they have been reformulated by Maya linguists.

217. Kaufman, Terrence, and John Justeson. 2009. Historical Linguistics and Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2):221-231.

206. Bourdin, Gabriel. 2007. El cuerpo humano entre los Mayas. Merida: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan. 432p. An ethnolinguistic and symbolic study into the significance of the human body in Mayan grammar semantics.

219. León-Portilla, Miguel. 2004. Estratigrafía toponímica: lengua y escritura. Arqueología mexicana 12(70):26-31.

218. Law, Danny. 2007. Poetic style in colonial Ch'olti' Mayan. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 23(2):142168.

220. Manrique Castañeda, Leonardo. 2004. Lingüística y arqueología. Arqueología mexicana 12(70):54-57.

207. Krotz, Esteban, ed. 2008. Yucatan ante la ley general de derechos lingüísticos de los pueblos indígenas. México: Instituto Nacional de lenguas Indígenas, Universidad de Oriente. 470 p. Scholars investigate the origins and content of the “Ley General de Derechos Lingüísticos,” its political and cultural context, and its institutional applications. Appendix includes a summary of the text as well as the law in Spanish and Mayan.

221. Schildmann, Kurt. 2003. Maya Transition Epigraphic Dictionary: Connections to Old World Languages. Wien: Odyssee-Verlag. 166 p. “The author shows a possible expedition [of] Near East seafarers reached Maya-Land around 500 BC. They brought their script symbols and a lot of expressions to their new horizon, which can be found in the Mayan context as far as they are open for our understanding.”

208. Law, D., J. Robertson, and S. Houston. 2006. Split ergativity in the history of the Ch'olan branch of the Mayan language family. International Journal of American Linguistics 72(4):415-450.

222. Wichman, Soren. 2006. Mayan historical linguistics and epigraphy: a new synthesis. Annual Review of Anthropology 35:279-294.

209. Navarijo Ornelas, María de L. 2006. La naturaleza alada en el lenguaje pictórico. Estudios de cultura maya 27:83-100.

Linguistic Atlases 223. Richards, Michael. 2003. Atlas lingüistico de Guatemala. Guatemala: Instituto de Lingüístico y Educación de la Universidad Rafael Landivar. 137 p. and CD-ROM System requirements for accompanying CD-ROM: Pentium II or higher, Windows 95/98/XP, 14” color monitor, 64 Mb RAM. Atlas of Guatemala’s indigenous languages, including detailed maps and textual material on the evolution on dialects, distribution of languages, forced migration, the politics of “castellization,” and current status.

210. Norcliffe, Elisabeth. 2009. Head Marking in Usage and Grammar: A Study of Variation and Change in Yucatec Maya. Doctoral dissertation, Stanford University. 282 leaves. 211. Rojas Nieto, Cecilia, and Lourdes de León Pasquel, eds. 2001. La adquisición de la lengua maternal; español, lenguas mayas, Euskera. México: UNAM; Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas. 280 p. Ten studies on various aspects of the remarkable early acquisition of language: Basque, Spanish and Yucatec.

Sociolinguistics 224. Berkley, A. R. 2001. Respecting Maya language revitalization. Linguistics and Education 12(3):345-366.

Descriptive Linguistics 212. England, Nora C. 2001. Introducción a la gramática de los idiomas mayas. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. 172 p.

225. Cunill, Caroline. 2008. La alfabetización de los mayas yucatecos y sus consecuencias sociales,1545-1580. Estudios de cultura maya 31:163-194.

Historical Linguistics 213. Bolle, Jette. 2001. Notas sobre los conflictos y contactos lingüísticos entre el maya yucateco, el español y el ingles en la region de Rio Hondo. Estudios de cultura maya 21:217230.

226. Cotji Cuxil, Waqi' Q'anil Demetrio, Ixtz'ulu' Elsa Son Chonay, and Raxche' Demetrio Rodriguez Guajan. 2007. Ri k'ak'a' runuk'ik saqamaq'; nuevas perspectivas para la construcción del estado multinacional. Guatemala: WAQIB'KEJ. 208 p.

214. Diaz Fuentes, Belynda. 2008. Arqueología de la artilleria: canones en Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 201-210.

227. Fox Tree, Erich. 2004. Word and War: The Local Politics of Pan-Mayan Philology and Changing Language Ideologies in Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Stanford University. 332 leaves.

215. Fuente, Jose A. de la. 2007. Proto-maya lingüistica diacronica: una (breve y necesaria) introducción. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 93(1):49-72.

228. French, Brigittine M. 2001. Language Ideologies and Collective Identities in Post-Conflict Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Iowa. 204 leaves. The author examines the relationship between language and collective identities in post-conflict Guatemala through a focus on language ideologies, meaning, the culturally and historically specific construals of language that shape and are shaped by consciousness and lived social relations.

216. Kaufman, Terrence, and John Justeson. 2007. The history of the word for “cacao” in ancient Mesoamerica. Ancient Mesoamerica 18(2):193-238.

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229. Grinevald, Colette. 2002. Linguistique et langues mayas du Guatemala. Faits de Langues 20:17-25.

Awakateko 242. Mendoza Solis, Johanna L., and María V. Rodriguez. 2007. Pujb'il yool awakateko: diccionario bilingüe. Guatemala: OKMA. 528 p.

230. Hoenes del Pinal, Eric. 2002. Language as Power: Maya Language Activism in Guatemala. M.A. thesis, University of California, San Diego. 93 leaves.

243. Mendoza Solis, Johanna L. 2007. Xhchajb'il xtxolb'il yool awakateko: Gramatica pedagogica awakateka. Guatemala: OKMA. 195 p.

231. Método funcional para el aprendizaje de los idiomas mayas como segundas lenguas. Guatemala: Fundación PLFM, 2006. 158 p.

244. Tqan qayool; vocabulario awakateko. Iximuleew Guatemala: K’ulbil Yol Twitz Paxil, 2001. 217 p.

232. Noj, Mario R., Juana Batzibal, and Jose F. Noj. 2001. Manual de interpretación del mapa lingüistico de Guatemala: unidos para construir la nación multicultural. Guatemala: Nojib'sa. 46 p.

245. Vásquez Gomez, Domingo, and Isaac Pablo Tohom Gutierrez, eds. 2001. Toponimias maya awacateca. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Comunidad Lingüistica Awacateca. 38 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

233. Qjer taq tzijonik. mayab' taq komon ch'ab' al rech paxil Kayala': tradición oral comunidades lingüísticas mayas de Guatemala. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2007. 107 p.

246. Vocabulario awakateko; tqan qayool; awakatekoespañol; español-awakateko. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2001. 215 p.

234. Vrooman, Michael D. 2000. The Linguistic Interdependence Hypothesis and the Language Development of Yucatec Maya-Spanish Bilingual Children. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts Amherst. 101 leaves.

247. Xtxoolb'iliil qayool; gramatica descriptiva awakateka. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas de Guatemala, 2001. 139 p. A basic grammar, with explanatory text in Spanish. Includes phonetics, morphology, and syntax.

Achi 235. Sis Iboy, María J. 2007. Ri utuxiik tziij pa achi: derivación de palabres en Achi. Antigua Guatemala: OKMA. 97 p.

Ch’ol 248. Gebhardt Dominguez, Augusto. 2001. El origen de la creación segun los ch’oles. Tlalocan 13:49-58. Authors relates a series of Ch’ol creation myths he first heard as a child.

236. Vásquez Gomez, Domingo, and Isaac P. Tohom Gutierrez, eds. 2001. Toponimias maya achi. Guatemala: Academía de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Comunidad Lingüística Achi. 95 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of the municipalities of San Jeronimo, Salama, San Miguel Chicaj, Cubulco, and Rabinal.

249. Storniolo, Judith A. 2008. A Comparative Study of Eastern Cholan. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 407 leaves. Chontal 250. Keller, Kathryn, and Placido L. Gerónimo. 2001. Textos chontales. Tlalocan 13:59-118. Texts written by Gerónimo, an elderly native Chontal speaker from the town of Tapotzingo. Tabasco Chontal is spoken mainly in the coastal area of Tabasco, in the central part of the state north of Villahermosa, and near Macupana.

237. Vocabulario achi; ucholaj ch'a'teem; achi-español; español-achi. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2000. 178 p. 238. Ucholaj ch'a'teem; Vocabulario achi. Iximuleew Guatemala: K’ulbil Yol Twitz Paxil, 2001. 179 p. 239. Yol Jeronimo, Victor. 2001. Actualización lexical idioma maya Achi; k'aak ub'ee ch'a'teem maya' achi. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG). 196 p. Spanish to Achi dictionary organized by topics (agriculture and ecology, mechanics, education, law, religion, and health).

Ch’orti’ 251. Hull, Kerry M. 2003. Verbal Art and Performance in Ch'orti' and Maya Hieroglyphic Writing. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 696 leaves. 252. López García, Julian. 2001. “Dar comida obligando a repartirla.” Un modelo de don Maya-Ch’orti’ en proceso de transformación. Revista de dialectología y tradiciones populares 56(2):75-98.

Akateko 240. Toponimas maya awakateka. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 38 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

253. Toponimias maya ch'orti'. Guatemala: Academia de lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2003. 114 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

241. Vocabulario akateko; xolilal q’ane akateko. Guatemala: Comunidad Lingüistica Akateca; Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2003. 135 p. Akateko to Spanish dictionary.

254. Vocabulario ch'orti'; ojronerob' ch'orti'; ch'orti'español; español-achi. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2001. 223 p. 19

Kaqchikel 266. García Matzar, Lolmay P. O. 2007. Rujotayixik tzij pa kaqchikel: derivación de palabras en kaqchikel. Guatemala: OKMA; Cholsamaj. 99 p.

Chuj 255. Maxwell, Judith M. 2001. Textos chujes de San Mateo Ixtatan. Guatemala: Fundación Yax Te'. 81 p. 256. Vásquez Gomez, Domingo, and Isaac Pablo Tohom Gutierrez, eds. 2001. Toponimias maya chuj. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Comunidad Lingüistica Chuj. 160 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of the municipalities of San Sebastian Coatan, San Mateo Ixtatan, and Nenton.

267. Guzman, Pantaleón de. 2001. Vocabulario kaqchikel; kaqchikel choltzij; compendio de nombres en lengua kaqchikel. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG); Editorial Cholsamaj. 244 p. Dictionary of some 6,000 Kaqchikel glosses, based on the 1704 colonial document of Guzman.

257. Yumal skuychaj ti' chuj: gramatica pedagogica Chuj. Guatemala: Comunidad Lingüistica Chuj, 2006. 251 p.

268. Heinze, Ivonne L. 2004. Kaqchikel and Spanish Language Contact: The Case of Bilingual Mayan Children. Doctoral dissertation, University of Kansas. 600 leaves.

Itzaj 258. Alb'al xonka' at t'an; gramatica descriptiva itza'. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas de Guatemala, 2001. 162 p. A basic grammar, with explanatory text in Spanish. Includes phonetics, morphology, and syntax.

269. Maxwell, Judith M., and Walter E. Little. 2006. Tijonik kaqchikel oxlajuj aj: curso de idioma y cultura maya kaqchikel. Antigua Guatemala: Editorial Junajpu. 155 p.

259. Toponimias maya itza'. Guatemala: Academia de lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 1999. 85 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

270. Patal Majzul, Filberto. 2007. Rusoltzij ri kaqchikel; diccionario bilingüe estandar kaqchikel. Antigua Guatemala: OKMA. 659 p. 271. Runuk'ulem pa rub'eyal rutz'ib'axik ri kaqchikel ch'ab'äl: gramatica normativa del idioma maya kaqchikel. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2006. 299 p.

Ixil 260. Ayres, Glenn, Benjamin N. Colby, Lore M. Colby, and Xhas Ko’v. 2001. El hombre que fue al inframundo porque se preocupó demasiado por la pobreza: texto ixil de Nebaj. Tlalocan 13:267-312.

272. Yool Gomez, Juan. 2001. Introducción al aprendizaje oral del idioma kaqchikel. Guatemala: Centro de Desarrollo y Ciencia Maya. 68 p.

Jakalteko 261. Delgado Rojas, Edna P. 2007. Stz'ib'nheb'anil ab'xub'al popti': gramaitica normativa popti'. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala; Cholsamaj 301 p.

K’iche’ 273. Ajpacaja Tum, Florentino P. 2001. K’ichee’ choltziij. Guatemala: Editorial Cholsamaj. 891 p. Monolingual dictionary of 27,000 entries in K’iche’ as spoken in Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan.

262. Silvestre Sanchez, José A. 2001. Actualización lexical idioma maya jakalteko (popt'i): ak'b'oj payat tzotiyul ab'xub'al popti'. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala. 177 p. Spanish to Popti' dictionary organized by topics (agriculture and ecology, mechanics, education, law, religion, and health).

274. Ajpacaja Tum, Florentino P. 2001. Tzonob'al tziij: discurso ceremonial k'ichee. Guatemala: Editorial Cholsamaj. 195 p. Spanish-K’iche’ volume of an indigenous religious ceremony for marriage, representing a blending of Mayan and Christian beliefs and traditions.

263. Stxolb'anil ab'xub'al popti'; gramatica descriptiva jakalteka (popti'). Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 295 p. A basic grammar, with explanatory text in Spanish. Includes phonetics, morphology, and syntax.

275. Anleo, Bartholomé de. 2002. Arte de lengua 4iché. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México 155 p. 276. Choi, Jinsook. 2003. Language Choice and Language Ideology in a Bilingual Maya Community: The Politics of Identity in Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 193 leaves. Author provides an ethnographic and linguistic study of language choice and language ideology in Momostenango, a bilingual (K'iche' Maya and Spanish) community in Guatemala.

264. Vásquez Gomez, Domingo, and Isaac Pablo Tohom Gutierrez, eds. 2001. Toponimias maya jakalteka. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Comunidad Lingüistica Jakalteka. 61 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place. Considers indigenous place names in Concepción Huista, Jacaltenango, San Antonio Huista, and Nenton.

277. Ik' q'anq'in, eqanel juna b' no'j. Guatemala: Litografia Nawal Wuj, 2001. 12 p. K’iche’

265. Vocabulario jakalteko (popti'); stzotib'al popti; popti'ab wes [español]; ab'xul'al wes [español]-popti'. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2001. 270 p.

278. Jones, Owen H. 2009. Colonial K'iche' In Comparison With Yucatec Maya: Language, Adaptation, and Intercultural Contact. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 324 leaves. 20

293. Hofling, Charles A. 2006. Juan Ceniza, a Mopan Maya story. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 22(1):22-42.

279. Lewis, M. Paul. 2001. K'iche': A Study in the Sociology of Language. SIL International Publications in Sociolinguistics, 6. Dallas: SIL International. 261 p.

294. Tojkinb'eeb; t'an mopan; Gramática descriptiva mopan. Iximuleew Guatemala: K’ulbil Yol Twitz Paxil. 317 p. A basic grammar, with explanatory text in Spanish. Includes phonetics, morphology, and syntax. 295. Vásquez Gomez, Domingo, and Isaac Pablo Tohom Gutierrez, eds. 2001. Toponimias maya mopan. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Comunidad Lingüistica Mopan. 45 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

280. López Ixcoy, Saqijix Candelaria and Nikte' María J. Sis Iboy. 2007. Utuxaniik kziij ri k'ichee' ch'ab'al: derivación de palabras en k'ichee'. Antigua Guatemala: OKMA. 102 p. 281. Sachse, Frauke. 2009. Reconstructing the anonymous Franciscan K'ichee' dictionary. Mexicon 31(1):10-18. 282. Suy Tum, Bonifacio, ed. 2001. Los Cinco tecomates; ri job' tzu. Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala; Fondo de Cultura Económica de Guatemala, 2001. 90 p. Six short narratives, arranged Spanish-K’iche’, based upon Maya oral history.

Popti see Jacalteko Poqomchi 296. No'jb'al huuj poqomchi'. Guatemala: Editorial Nojib'sa, 2001. 12 p.

283. Toponimias maya k’iche’ (Departamento de Totonicapan). Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2003. 685 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

297. Pop Cac, Cesar Valentin. 2001. Actualización lexical idioma maya poqomchi'; manaab; eh ak' q'orik poqomchi' q'orb'al. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG). 154 p. Spanish to Poqomchi dictionary organized by topics (agriculture and ecology, mechanics, education, law, religion, and health).

284. Toponimias maya k’iche’ (Departamentos de Solola, Retalhuleu, Suchitepequez y Quezaltenango). Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2003. 473 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

298. Sedat, Elizabeth R. V. de. 2001. Diccionario poqomchii’castellano; tusq’orik poqomchii’-kaxlan q’orik; exclusión social y estrategias para enfrentarla. Guatemala: Editorial Cholsamaj; Litografia Nawal Wuj. 881 p.

285. Vocabulario k'ich'e; k'iche choltzij: [k'iche-español; español-k'iche]. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2001. 272 p.

299. Vásquez Gomez, Domingo, and Isaac Pablo Tohom Gutierrez, eds. 2001. Rub'ihnaal Ruyuq'ul aj Poqomchi'; Toponimias maya poqomchi'. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Comunidad Lingüistica Poqomchi'. 181 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of the municipalities of Santa Cruz Verapaz, Tactic, Tamahu, Tucuru, San Cristobal Verapaz, San Antonio Purulha, and Chicaman.

Mam 286. Collins, Wesley M. 2005. Centeredness As a Cultural and Grammatical Theme in Maya-Mam. Doctoral dissertation, Ohio State University. 324 leaves. 287. Ortíz Domingo, Juan. 2001. Diccionario mam. Guatemala: Proyecto Lingüistico Francisco Marroquin; Editorial Cholsamaj. 513 p. New edition of 1986 version.

300. Vocabulario poqomchi'; Tusq'orik poqomchi'; poqomchi'-kaxlan q'orik; kaxlan q'orik-poqomchi'; vocabulario poqomchi’. Iximuleew Guatemala: K’ulbil Yol Twitz Paxil, 2001. 181 p.

288. Pérez Alonzo, Juventino de J. 2007. Pujb'il yol mam: diccionario bilingüe estandar mam. Guatemala: OKMA. 656 p. 289. Pérez Vail, Jose R., and Juventino de Jesús Pérez Alonzo, 2007. Xulil yol mam: derivación de palabras en Mam. Antigua Guatemala: OKMA. 81 p.

Poqomam 301. Benito Pérez, Waykan Jose G. 2007. Rutaxb'anik q'orik pan poqom: derivación de palabras poqomam. Guatemala: OKMA; Cholsamaj. 97 p.

290. Toponimias maya mam. Guatemala: Academia de lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2002. 614 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

302. Santos Nicolas, Jose F. 2001. Actualización lexical idioma maya poqomam; ak' q'oriik pam q'orb'al maya poqomam'. Guatemala: Academia de lenguas mayas de Guatemala (ALMG). 1187 p. Spanish to Poqomam dictionary organized by topics (agriculture and ecology, mechanics, education, law, religion, and health).

291. Wiebe, Adrienne D. 2002. Widening Paths: The Lives of Three Generations of Maya Mam Women. Doctoral dissertation, University of Alberta. 295 leaves.

Poqomchi’ 303. Isem, Romelia M. 2007. Rutoxl q'orik pan poqomchi'; derivación de palabras poqomchi'. Guatemala: OKMA; Cholsamaj. 111 p.

Mopan 292. Danziger, Eve. 2001. Relatively Speaking: Language, Thought, and Kinship Among the Mopan Maya. Oxford Studies in Anthropological Linguistics, 26. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. 125 p. 21

Q’anjob’al 304. Mateo Toledo, Eladio. 2008. The Family of Complex Predicates in Q'anjob'al (Maya); Their Syntax and Meaning. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 574 leaves.

318. Shoaps, Robin A. 2004. Morality in Grammar and Discourse: Stance-Taking and the Negotiation of Moral Personhood in Sakapultek (Mayan) Wedding Counsels. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara. 498 leaves.

305. Normas indígenas Maya Q’anjob’al: sobre el uso del agua, el bosque y la vida silvestre. Guatemala: Centro de Acción Legal-Ambiental y Social de Guatemala (CALAS), 2007. 306. Pascual, Adan F. 2007. Skawxub'al q'anej yul q'anjob'al; derivación de palabres en q'anjob'al. Guatemala: OKMA. 86 p.

319. Vásquez Aceytuno, Juan C., Ana L. Arcon Puzul, and Juan A. Solis Baltazar. 2007. Choltziij re tujaal tziij: diccionario bilingüe sakapulteko-español. Antigua Guatemala: OKMA. 573 p. 320. Vásquez Gomez, Domingo, and Isaac Pablo Tohom Gutierrez, eds. 2001. Toponimias maya sakapulteka. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Comunidad Lingüistica Sakapulteko. 41 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place. Includes Toponimias de la comunidad lingüistica k'iche' en idioma sakapulteco (pp. 29-41).

307. Toponimias maya q'anjob'al. Guatemala: Academia de lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 109 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place. Q’eqchi’ 308. Caz Cho, Sergio. 2007. Xtz'ilb'al rix li aatinak sa' q'eqchi': informe de variación dialecticla en q'eqchi'. Guatemala: OKMA.

321. Vocabulario sakapulteko; tujaal choltziij; [sakapultekoespañol; español-sakapulteko]. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2001. 207 p.

309. Domingo Pascual, Pascual M. 2008. Molob’aal Aatin Q’eqchi’; Xmolamil aatinob'aal q'eqchi'. Guatemala: Academia de las Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala; K’ulb’il Yol Twitz Paxil. 491 p.

Sipakapense 322. Smith, Emilie T. 2009. Guardians of the Blue-Green Plate, the Blue Green Bowl: What the World Can Learn From the Maya-Sipakapense of Guatemala. Th.M. thesis, Vancouver School of Theology (Canada). 213 leaves.

310. Grandia, Liza. 2006. Unsettling: Land Disposition and Enduring Inequality for the Q'eqchi' Maya in the Guatemalan and Belizean Frontier Colonization Process. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley. Department of Anthropology. 551 leaves.

323. Vocabulario sipakapense; qyolb'aal pqtinmit; sipakapense-español; español-sipakapense. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2001. 209 p. Tektiteko 324. Baltasar López, Rodolfo F. 2001. Actualización lexical idioma maya tekititeko; b'uch'uj yol maya'b'a'aj tzan token. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG). 188 p. Spanish to Tekititeko dictionary organized by topics (agriculture and ecology, mechanics, education, law, religion, and health).

311. Grandin, Greg. 2007. Panzos: la última masacre colonial; latinoamérica en la Guerra Fría. Guatemala: AVANCSO. 381 p. 312. Kockelman, Paul. 2003. The meanings of interjections in Q'eqchi' Maya. Current Anthropology 44(4):467-490. 313. Toponimias maya q’eqchi. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2003. 473 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

325. Baltazar Gutierrez, Ernesto. 2007. Xnaq'tzb'il yool b'a'aj: Gramatica pedagogica tektiteka. Guatemala: OKMA. 195 p. 326. Pérez Vail, Jose R. 2007. Xtxolil yool b'a'aj: gramatica tekiteka. Antigua Guatemala: OKMA. 505 p.

314. Vocabulario q'eqchi'; xtusulal aatin sa' q'eqchi'; [q'eqchi'-español; español-q'eqchi']. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2001. 369 p.

327. Simon Morales, Erico, and Ernesto Baltazar Gutierrez. 2007. Pujb'il yool b'a'aj; diccionario bilingue tektitekoespañol. Guatemala: OKMA; Cholsamaj. 651 p.

315. Zarger, Rebecca K. 2002. Children's Ethno-ecological Knowledge: Situated Learning and the Cultural Transmission of Subsistence Knowledge and Skills Among Q'eqchi' Maya. Doctoral dissertation, University of Georgia.

328. Vásquez Gomez, Domingo, and Isaac Pablo Tohom Gutierrez, eds. 2001. Toponimias maya tektiteka. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, Comunidad Lingüistica Tektiteka. 33 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

Sakapulteko 316. Isem, Romelia M. 2007. Rikemiik li tujaal tziij; gramatica sakapulteka. Guatemala: OKMA; Cholsamaj. 565 p.

329. Xtxolil titza' ntumela'te yol b'a'aj tektiteka; gramatica descriptiva tektiteka. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas de Guatemala, 2001. 133 p. A basic grammar, with explanatory text in Spanish. Includes phonetics, morphology, and syntax.

317. Rikemiik li tujaal tziij; gramatica descriptiva sakapulteka. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas de Guatemala, 2001. 140 p. A basic grammar, with explanatory text in Spanish. Includes phonetics, morphology, and syntax. 22

341. Haviland, John B. 2009. Mu xa xtak'av: “He Doesn't Answer.” Journal of Linguistic Anthro-pology 20(1):195-213.

Tojolab’al 330. Brody, Jill. 2001. Orientación de espacio y tiempo en la cultura tojolabal por medio de la conversación. Tlalocan 13:119-168. Author transcribes a conversation between two Tojolabal speakers in Comitan, Chiapas. She notes the manner in which each takes turns in the conversation, the ways in which they construct the sequence of their talk, change topics, and the ways in which they draw on shared cultural and social knowledge.

342. Laughlin, Robert M. 2007. Mol cholobil k’op ta sotz‘leb; El Gran Diccionario Tzotzil de San Lorenzo Zinacantan. Mexico, CONACULTA: Dirección General de Culturas Populares/Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social. 479 p. A large format Tzotzil-Spanish dictionary, with information on gender differences, word roots, phrases, affexes and compound words. Tzotzil is native Mayan language spoken in the Chamula and Zinacantan regions of Chiapas.

331. Chavarochette, Carine. 2005. Le pélerinage des indiens Tojolabal (Chiapas-Mexique) a San Mateo Ixtatan (Guatemala). Cahiers des Amériques Latines 44:23-39.

343. Torre López, Juan de la. 2001. Sbi balamil ti buy nakajtik li jchi'iltaktik ta sotz lebe; Toponimia de los poblados de Zinacantan. Mexico: Gobierno del Estado de Chiapas. 60 p.

332. Lenkersdorf, Carlos. 2001. Ergatividad o intersubjetividad en Tojolabal. Estudios de cultura maya 21:231-247. 333. Lenkersdorf, Carlos. 2002. Tojolabal para principiantes: lengua y cosmovisión mayas en Chiapas. 2 ed. Mexico: Plaza y Valdes. 377 p.

Tz’utujil 344. Toponimias maya tz’utujil. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2003. 218 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

Tzeltal 334. Guzman Velasco, Alonso. 2009. Jnoptik bats’il k’op; Aprendamos tseltal. Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas: Consejo Estatal para las Culturas y Artes de Chiapas: Centro Estatal de Lenguas, Arte y Literatura Indígenas. 135 p. Linguistic guide for learning Tzeltal; designated for young learners and adults.

345. Vocabulario tz'utujil; cholajtziij tz'utujil; [tz'utujilespañol; español-tz'utujil]. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG), 2001. 239 p. Uspanteko 346. Can Pixabaj, Telma A. 2007. Jkemiik yoloj li espanteko; gramatica uspanteko. Guatemala: OKMA; Cholsamaj. 487 p.

335. Hernández Guzman, Petul. 2001. Carnaval en Tenejapa. Tlalocan 13:241-266. Bilingual Tzeltal and Spanish text on the fiesta of carnaval in the highland community of Tenejapa, Mexico.

347. Jkemiik jyoolj aj tz'unun kaab'; gramatica descriptiva uspanteka. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas de Guatemala, 2001. 160 p. A basic grammar, with explanatory text in Spanish. Includes phonetics, morphology, and syntax.

336. Palomo Infante, María D. 2006. “Y lo demas se repartio en los hijos del pueblos”; las cofradías indígenas tzeltales de los Valles de Teopisca, Chiapas, y su actividad credicita, siglo XVIII. Estudios de cultura maya 27:141-170.

348. Toponimias uspantekas; jb’iijaq witz-taq’j laj rulew Tz’unun K’aab. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2003. 49 p. Investigation of place names includes physical, social, and ethnic characteristics of each place.

337. Polian, Gilles. 2006. Elements de grammaire du Tseltal: une langue maya du Mexique. Paris: L'Harmattan. 272 p. 338. Robinson, Stuart. 2002. Constituent order in Tenejapa Tzeltal. International Journal of American Linguistics 68(1):51-80.

349. Cholyolooj tz'unun kaab'; vocabulario uspanteko. Iximuleew Guatemala: K’ulbil Yol Twitz Paxil, 2001. 217 p. Yucateko 350. Barrera Vásquez, Alfredo. 2001. Diccionario maya: maya-español, español-maya. 4 ed. Mexico: Porrua. 1 v.

Tzotzil 339. Gorza, Piero. 2006. Habitar el tiempo en San Andres Larrainizar; paisajes indígenas de los altos de Chiapas. Tuxtla Gutierrez: Universidad Autónoma de México/Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas/Centro de Estudios Mayas (CEM)/El Colegio de Michoacán, 2006. 290p. On the impact of political and religious problems in the Tzotzil zone including studies of history and tradition, of the demographic context, of migrations, culture, arts, and of ethnicity and applied anthropology.

351. Bastarrachea Manzano, Juan R., and Jorge M. Canto Rosado. 2003. Diccionario maya popular: maya-español, español-maya. Merida: Instituto de Cultura de Yucatán 461 p. 353. Bohnemeyer, Jürgen. 2002. The Grammar of Time Reference in Yukatek Maya. Lincom Studies in Native American Linguistics, 44. München: Lincom. 490 p. Revised doctoral dissertation.

340. Gossen, Gary H., and Juan Mendez Tzotzek. 2001. Text and comment on the moral order: a testimony from the Tzotzil of Chamula, Chiapas. Tlalocan 13:199-240. Text reflects on the human condition, spirituality, and moral order, as they are understood by a Chamula Tzotzil named Xun Mendez Tzotzek.

354. Bolles, David, and Alejandra Bolles. 2001. A Grammar of the Yucatecan Mayan Language. rev. ed. Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos. 387 p. Includes a selection of historical and ethnographic texts in Yucatec Maya with English-language translation.

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366. Rivero Azcorra, Jesus. 2002. Método para aprender a leer, escribir y hablar el idioma maya. Merida: Serimpresos Myrna A. Ortiz Hernández. 83 p.

355. Briceño Chel, Fidencio. 2007. Los verbos del maya yucateco actual; Investigación, clasificación y sistemas conjugacionales. Mexico: Instituto Nacional de Lenguas Indígenas. 103 p. Compilation of all verbs used in the Mayan dialect of the Yucatan Peninsula. Classifies all conjugation patterns with Spanish translations.

367. Sobrino Gomez, Carlos M. 2007. El proceso fonoloóico de elisión de la segunda vocal en el maya yucateco. Estudios de cultura maya 30:197-224.

356. Ciudad Real, Antonio de. 2001. Calepino Maya de Motul: edición crítica y anotada por Rene Acuña. Mexico: Plaza y Valdes Editores. 602 p. The Calepino Maya de Motul is the most ancient, most complete, and most important Yucatec maya lexical document from the fifteenth- and sixteenthcenturies.

368. Vapnarsky, Valentina. 2008. Paralelismo, ciclicidad y creatividad en el arte verbal maya yucateco. Estudios de cultura maya 32:155-200. 369. Vrooman, Michael D. 2000. The Linguistic Interdependence Hypothesis and the Language Development of Yucatec Maya-Spanish Bilingual Children. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts at Amherst. 101 leaves.

357. Frazier, Melissa. 2009. The Production and Perception of Pitch and Glottalization in Yucatec Maya. Doctoral dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 319 leaves.

ETHNOGRAPHY 370. Eber, Christine E. 2001. Buscando una nueva vida: liberation through autonomy in San Pedro Chenalho, 1970-1998. Latin American Perspectives 28(2):45-72.

358. Granados Ontiveros, Juan G. 2007. Maya elemental; guia práctica para el aprendizaje del idioma maya. Chetumal Quintana Roo: Impresos Harley. 104 p. Beginner's guide to the Yucatec Mayan language; continued by: Juan G. Granados Ontiveros, Maya elemental; guia práctica para el aprendizaje del idioma Maya (Chetumal Quintana Roo: Imprenta Gráfica Moderna, 2008. 109 p.), and Juan G. Granados Ontiveros, Maya elemental; guia práctica para el aprendizaje del Maya. 2 ed. (Chetumal Quintana Roo: Impresos Harley, 2009. 111 p. + CD-ROM).

371. Gillespie, Susan D. 2008. Aspectos corporativos de la persona (personhood) y la encarnación (embodiment) entre los mayas del periodo Clásico. Estudios de cultura maya 31: 6590. 372. Harman, Robert C. 2001. Activities of contemporary Mayan elders. Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology 16(1):57-77.

359. Hofling, Charles A. 2006. A sketch of the history of the verbal complex in Yukatekan Mayan languages. International Journal of American Linguistics 72(3):367-396.

373. Juarez, A. M. 2001. Four generations of Maya marriages: what's love got to do with it? Frontiers: A Journal of Women's Studies 22(2):131-153. An examination of the impact of globalization, economics, and marriage patterns on Yucatec Maya women in Quintana Roo.

360. Kramer, Martin. 2001. Yucatec Maya vowel alternations: harmony as syntagmatic identity. Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft 20(2):175-217.

374. Lara Pinto, Gloria. 2002. Perfil de los pueblos indígenas y negros de Honduras. Tegucigalpa: Secretaria de Gobernación. 153 p.

361. Lois, Ximena, and Valentina Vapnarsky. 2003. Polyvalence of Root Classes in Yukatekan Mayan Languages. München: Lincom Europa. 236 p. Authors present a study of root classifications based on fieldwork at X Kopchen (Yucatec) and other villages in central Quintana Roo, and San Jose (Itza’).

375. McEwen, Rosemary. 2001. The Paradox of the 'Primitive': The Rhetorics of Development and Ethnography. Doctoral dissertation, Ohio State University. 351 leaves. A study of American Alternative Trade Organizations (ATOs) and Guatemalan Maya artisans.

363. Maas Colli, Hilaria. 2010. Curso de lengua maya para investigadores; nivel avanzado. Yucatan, México: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan: Unidad de Ciencias Sociales del CIR Dr. Hideyo Noguchi, Impresos Alamilla. 264 p. Course book on learning the Mayan language. Includes written activities, an extensive glossary, and a bibliography.

376. Nash, June C. 2001. Globalization and the cultivation of peripheral vision. Anthropology Today 17(4):15-22. 377. Reconociendo la pluriculturalidad. Coban: Centro Bartolomé de las Casas, 2002. 66 p. Concise introduction to the ethnography of the Maya.

363. Martinez Huchim, Ana P. 2008. Diccionario maya; español-maya, maya-español. 4 ed. Merida: Dante, 2008. 300 p.). Pocket language dictionary with more than 6,500 words; revised by Ana Patricia Martinez Huchim.

378. Reynolds, Jennifer F. 2002. Maya Children's Practices of the Imagination: (Dis)playing Childhood and Politics in Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angelers. 545 leaves.

364. Montgomery, John. 2004. Maya-English; English-Maya (Yucatec) Dictionary and Phrasebook. New York: Hippocrene Books. 204 p.

379. Ruz, Mario H. 2006. Mayas. Mexico: Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indígenas.

365. Reynolds, Jennifer F. 2008. Socializing puros pericos (little parrots): The negotiation of respect and responsibility in Antonero Mayan sibling and peer networks. Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 18(1):82-107.

380. Ruz, Mario H., ede. 2007. El Campeche Maya: atisbos etnograficos. Merida: UNAM. 393 p. On the ethnic identity, 24

en el movimiento maya de Guatemala (pp. 39-82); Debora Machon Lerman, Hilos de vida; senderos de la mujer tz'utujil en tiempos de globalización (pp. 165-210);

social life and customs of Mayan Indians. With chapters on religion, migration and public health. 381. Streetman, Murry. 2002. Globalization and the Mayan Community. B.A. thesis, University of Northern Colorado. 71, 77 leaves.

388. Camposeco, Arnoldo, and Julio A. Oxlaj. 2003. Identidad popti y kaqchiquel: la visión de la juventud. Guatemala: Instituto de Estudios Interetnicos de la Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. 142 p.

382. VanAusdal, Shawn. 2001. Development and discourse among the Maya of southern Belize. Development and Change 32(3):577-606.

389. Casaus Arzu, Marta E. 2001. Repensando la etnicidad en Guatemala: una nueva aproximación interdisciplinaria. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 6(2):234-250.

383. Velasquez Nimatuj, Irma A. 2000. Class, Race and Gender Inequities Among the Maya 'Middle Class' in Guatemala. M.A. thesis, University of Texas at Austin. 102 leaves. A study of indigenous business persons and entrepreneurs, with an emphasis on their activities in Quezaltenango; aspects of class and culture in business and factors related to gender; Spanish language translation: Irma Alicia Velasquez Nimatuj, La Pequeña burguesia indígena comercial de Guatemala (Guatemala: Asociación Para el Avance de la Ciencias Sociales en Guatemala (AVANCSO), 2002. 240 p.).

390. Castillo Cocom, Juan A. 2000. Vulnerable Identities: Maya Yucatec Identities in a Postmodern World. Doctoral dissertation, Florida International University. 121 leaves. 391. Dary, Claudia. 2003. Identidades étnicas y tierras comunales en Jalapa. Guatemala: Instituto de Estudios Interetnicos de la Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. 198 p. 392. DeHart de Galicia, Monica C. 2001. What Is “Ethnic” About Ethnic Development? Cultivating Community and Local Power in Totonicapan, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Stanford University. 245 leaves.

384. Wallace, Hilary. 2001. Among the Maya: the exotic Guatemalan highlands. Native Peoples 15(1):62-68. Author describes her travels among Native cultures in Guatemala. The destinations discussed include Antigua, Lake Atitlan, Quezaltenango or Xelaju, and Santo Tomas Chichicastenango.

393. Foxen, Patricia. 2002. K'iche' Maya in a Re-imagined World: Transnational Perspectives on Identity. Doctoral dissertation, McGill University (Canada). 400 leaves.

385. Watanabe, John M., and Edward F. Fischer, eds. 2004. Pluralizing Ethnography: Comparison and Representation in Maya Cultures, Histories, and Identities. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press. 370 p. Contents include: John M. Watanabe and Edward F. Fischer, Introduction: emergent anthropologies and pluricultural ethnography in two postcolonial nations (pp. 3-34); John M. Watanabe, Culture history in national context: ninteenth-century Maya under Mexican and Guatemalan rule (pp. 35-66); Victoria R. Bricker, Linguistic continuities and discontinuities in the Maya area (pp. 67-94); Christine A. Kray, The Summer Institute of Linguistics and the politics of Bible translation in Mexico: convergence, appropriation, and consequence (pp. 95-126); Gary H. Gossen, “Everything has begun to change”: appraisals of the Mexican state in Chiapas Maya discourse, 1980-2000 (pp. 127-162); June Nash, Beyond resistance and protest: the Maya quest for autonomy (pp. 163-198); Jan Rus, Rereading Tzotzil ethnography: recent scholarship from Chiapas, Mexico (pp. 199-230); Victor Montejo, Angering the ancestors: transationalism and economic transformation of Maya communities in western Guatemala (pp. 231-256); Edward F. Fischer, The Janus face of globalization: economic production and cultural reproduction in highland Guatemala (pp. 257-290); Richard G. Fox, Continuities, imputed and inferred (pp. 291-300).

394. Gauthier, Melissa. 2003. Les habits de l'identité Maya Yucatèque moderne. M.A. thesis, Université Laval (Canada). 150 leaves. 395. Hernández Castillo, Rosalva Aida. 2001. Histories and Stories from Chiapas: Border Identities in Southern Mexico. Austin: University of Texas Press. 320 p. See also Rosalva A. Hernández Castillo, La otra frontera: identidades multiples en el Chiapas poscolonial (Mexico: Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social, 2001. 321 p.). 396. Hernández Castillo, Rosalva Aida. 2001. La antropología aplicada al servicio del estado-nación: aculturación e indigenismo en la frontera sur de México. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 6(2):20-41. 397. Hervik, P. 2001. Narrations of shifting Maya identities. Bulletin of Latin American Research 20(3):342-359. 398. Hervik, Peter, and Hilary E. Kahn. 2006. Scholarly surrealism: The persistance of Mayanness. Critique of Anthropology 26(2):209-232. 399. Huff, Leah A. 2004. Being Maya: The (Re)Construction of Indigenous Cultural Identity in Guatemala. M.A. thesis, Queen's University at Kingston (Canada).125 leaves.

Ethnicity and Social Identity 386. Adams, Richard N., and Santiago Bastos 2003. Las relaciones étnicas en Guatemala, 1944-2000. Antigua Guatemala: CIRMA. 563 p.

400. Joyce, Rosemary A., Julia A. Hendon, and Jeanne Lopiparo. 2009. Being in Place: Intersections of Identity and Experience on the Honduran Landscape.In Archaeology of Meaningful Places. Brenda J. Bowser and María Nieves Zedeno, eds. pp. 52-72. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.

387. Alejos García, Jose. 2006. Dialogando alteridades: identidades y poder en Guatemala. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Contents include: Morna Macleod, De brechas a puentes: las reivindcaciones de identidad y cultura 25

Chiapas: sus puntos de referencia en contextos cambiantes (pp. 245-254); Armin Hinz, Generating identities: presence and representations of social actors in cultural performances of the Cruzoob-Maya in Quintana Roo (pp. 255-267).

401. Kray, Christine A. 2006. The sense of tranquility: bodily practice and ethnic classes in Yucatan. Ethnology 44(4):337356. 402. Lawrence, María C. 2001. A Nation In Search of Her Soul: Toward Building a National Belizean Identity Through Cultural Understanding. Ed.D. dissertation, Spalding University. 167 leaves.

408. Schackt, Jon, ed. 2002. De indígena a Maya: identidades indígenas en Guatemala y Chiapas. Estudios Interétnicos 10(16). Guatemala: Instituto de Estudios Interétnicos, Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala; Tromsø, Norway: Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de Tromsø. 128 p. Contents include: Jon Schackt, Los mayas: el origin del termino y la creación del pueblo (pp. 7-26); Angel Valdez, Las identidades étnicas y el estado-nación (pp. 27-45); Edgar Esquit, Relaciones interétnicas en la Guatemala liberal: Chimaltenango, 1871-1944 (pp. 46-74); Vibeke Unneberg, Identidades socials en Frontera Corozal, Chiapas (pp. 75-93); Bente Maehlum, En vinculo local: la identridad en Concepción Chiquirichapa (pp. 94-108); Jon Schackt, Rabin ajau: mayanidad por medio de la belleza (pp. 109-128).

403. Little-Siebold, Christa. 2001. Beyond the Indian-ladino dichotomy: contested identities in an eastern Guatemalan town. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 6(2):176-197. 404. Little-Siebold, Todd. 2001. Where have all the Spaniards gone: independent identities: ethnicities, class and the emergent national state. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 6(2):106-133. 405. Montes, Brian. 2009. Memories of War: Race, Class, and the Production of Post Caste War Maya Identity in East Central Quintana Roo. Doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 225 leaves.

409. Warren, Kay B. 2001. Introduction: Rethinking bi-polar constructions of ethnicity. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 6(2):90-105.

406. Nelson, Diane M. 2001. Stumped identities: body image, bodies politic, and the mujer maya as prosthetic. Cultural Anthropology 16(3):314-353.

Achi 410. Mosquera Saravia, María T. 2001. Conociendo la sabiduría achi: salud y enfermedad en Rabinal. Guatemala: Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Instituto de Estudios Interétnicos. 205 p. Includes three studies on medicine and health in the community of Rabinal, Baja Verapaz.

407. Sachse, Frauke, ed. 2006. Maya Ethnicity: The Construction of Ethnic Identity From Preclassic to Modern Times. Acta Americana, 19. Markt Schwaben: Verlag Anton Saurwein. 267 p. Contents include: Patricia A. McAnany, Habitus and hierarchy: the double helix of Preclassic Maya ethnicity (pp. 9-18); Jesper Nielsen, The coming of the torch: observations on Teotihuacan iconography in Early Classic Tikal (pp. 19-30); Robert J. Sharer, and Loa P. Traxler, The foundations of ethnic diversity in the southeastern Maya area (pp. 31-43); Estella Weiss-Krejci, Identifying ethnic affiliation in the Maya mortuary record (pp. 47-60); Johan Normark, Ethnicity and the shared quasi-objects: issues of becoming relating to two open-fronted structures at Nohcacab, Quintana Roo, Mexico (pp. 61-81); Pierre R. Colas, Personal names: a diatricitical marker of an ethnic boundary among the Classic Maya (pp. 85-98); Soren Wichmann, and Albert Davletshin, Writing with an accent: phonology as a marker of ethnic identity (pp. 99-106); Elizabeth Graham, An ethnicity to know (pp. 109-124); Geoffrey E. Braswell, A forest of trees: Postclassic K’iche’an identity and the anthropological problem of ethnicity (pp. 125-140); Elisabeth Wagner, Ranked spaces, ranked identities: local hierarchies, community boundaries and an emic notion of the Maya cultural sphere at Late Classic Copan (pp. 143-164); Jerald D. Ek, Domestic shrines, ancestor veneration, and the ritual production of group identity (pp. 165-181); Wolfgang Gabbert, Indians, Maya and Mayeros: ethnicity and social categorisation in Yucatan: a diachronic perspective (pp. 185198); Bodil Liljefors Persson, Con Maya uinice: Maya and the other: (re-)constructing Maya ethnic identity in Yucatec Maya (con-)texts (pp. 199-208); Allen J. Christenson, You are what you speak: Maya as the language of maize (pp. 209-216); Santago Bastos, Ser maya en el siglo XXI: el proceso de construcción y difusión de una identidad política (pp. 219232); Jon Schackt, Q'eqchi' ladinos and “White Indians”: cultural identities in northern Guatemala (pp. 233-244); Ulrich Kohler, Identidades étnicas de los tzotziles de los altos de

411. Van Akkeren, Ruud. 2003. Rabinal en la historia: memoria del diplomado cultural; chi raqan unimal tz’aq unimal k’oxtun. Guatemala: Museo Comunitario Rabinal Achi. 87 p. A history of the community of Rabinal, from ancient to modern times. Akateko 412. Toledo, María. 2002. Introducción a la monografía del municipio de Aguacatan; xe’txb’il stzib’lal qatnumil. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas mayas de Guatemala. 167 p. Monographic study of an indigenous community in the Department of Huehuetenango. Ch’ol 413. Imberton Deneke, Gracia M. 2002. La vergüenza: enfermedad y conflicto en una comunidad chol. Mexico: UNAM, Programa de Investigaciones Multidisciplinarias sobre Mesoamérica y el Sureste. 171 p. Study of shame in a Chol Maya community; based on author’s maestria thesis submitted to the Universidad Autónoma de Chiapas. Ch’orti’ 414. Hull, Kerry M. 2003. Verbal Art and Performance in Ch'orti' and Maya Hieroglyphic Writing. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 696 leaves. 415. López García, Julian. 2001. “Dar comida obligando a repartirla.” Un modelo de don maya-ch’orti’ en proceso de transformación. Revista de dialectología y tradiciones populares 56(2):75-98. Discussion of the importance of food giving among the Ch'orti' of eastern Guatemala. Food giving is a way of facilitating community cohesion, a purpose than can be seen in the daily gifts of food and especially in important 26

rituals such as the recubal. In a recubal, a father gives food to his godfather following an offering model which the author calls “ giving so as to cause to redistribute. “ The amount of the food is so large, and its kind so special, that the receiver finds himself compelled to redistribute the offering among a large number of villagers.

Chuj 425. Maxwell, Judith M. 2001. Textos chujes de San Mateo Ixtatan. Rancho Palos Verdes, CA: Fundación Yax Te'. 81 p. Collection of folktales in Chuj and Spanish on facing pages. 426. Piedrasanta Herrera, Ruth. 2006. Modernos y descentrados: una redefinición del espacio y del poder civico religioso en dos pueblos Chuj (Huehuetenango, Guatemala). Trace 50:77-95.

416. López García, Julian, and Brent E. Metz. 2002. Primero dios: etnografía y cambio social entre los mayas ch'orti's del oriente de Guatemala. Guatemala: Facultad Latinoaméricana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO). 280 p. Study of the Ch'orti' with an emphasis on daily life, subsistence economy, life cycle, family structure and relationships, political organization, and spiritual beliefs.

Ixil 427. Brett, Roddy. 2007. Una guerra sin batallas: del odio, la violencia y el miedo en el Ixcan y el Ixil, 1972-1983. Guatemala: F&G Editores. 2007 p.

417. Marineros, Leonel E. 2007. El consumo de anfibios y repiles entre los maya chorti de Copan. Yaxkin 23(2):183-194. 418. Mena Cabezas, Ignacio R. 2009. Los chortis de Honduras en la encrucijada. Tradición, identidad y globalización. Yaxkin 25(2):211-236.

428. Durocher, Bettina. 2002. Los dos derechos de la tierra: la cuestion agrarian en el pais ixil. Guatemala: FLACSO. 197 p. Examination of agrarian conflict within the Ixil community. Jakalteko 429. Camposeco Montejo, Arnoldo G. 2001. Diferenciación étnica y estratificación social en la comunidad popti': el caso de los municipios de Jacaltenango y San Antonio Huista. Guatemala: Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Instituto de Estudios Interétnicos. 178 p. “Trabajo de investigación de segunda año de doctorado en sociología de la Universidad Pontifica de Salamanca.”

419. Metz, Brent. 2001. Politics, population, and family planning in Guatemala: Ch'orti' Maya experiences. Human Organization 60(3):259-271. The Guatemalan population has increased from 3 million to over 11 million since 1950. A close look at the Guatemalan population boom, especially among Mayas, reveals several interrelated factors at play, including 1) a lifestyle based on manual labor and cooperation of kin, 2) inadequate indigenous contraceptive techniques, 3) poverty and marginality from public services, 4) ethnic distrust, 5) religion, 6) gender inequality, and, ultimately, 7) inadequate international and state assistance for family planning. Despite the myriad challenges to family planning in Guatemala, the physical and cultural accessibility to contraceptives can be enhanced by a holistic family planning program.

430. García Domingo, Santos A. 2001. Raices de esperanza; tzetet b'ay xhkawxi ko k'ul. Palos Verdes, CA: Yax'te Foundation. 75 p. Spanish-Popti' poetry. 431. Montejo, Victor D. 200l. Q'anil: Man of Lightning: A Legend of Jacaltenango, Guatemala. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 104 p. English translation of Victor D. Montejo, Q'anil, el hombre rayo, una leyenda de Jacaltenango; komam q'anil, ya'kuh winaj, yik'ti'al xalja (Palos Verdes, CA: Yax'te Foundation, 1999. 122 p.).

420. Metz, Brent E. 2006. Ch'orti'-Maya Survival in Eastern Guatemala: Indigeneity in Transition. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 421. Metz, Brent E., Cameron E. McNeil, and Kerry M. Hull, eds. 2009. Ch’orti’ Maya Area: Past and Present. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. 346 p.

432. Montejo, Victor D. 2001. The road to heaven: Jakaltek Maya beliefs, religion, and the ecology. In Indigenous Traditions and Ecology: The Interbeing of Cosmology and Community. John A. Grim, ed. pp. 175-195. Cambridge, MA: Center for the Study of World Religions, Harvard Divinity School; Harvard University Press.

422. Metz, Brent, Lorenzo Mariano, and Julian López García. 2010. The Violence After “La Violencia” in the Ch'orti' Region of Eastern Guatemala. Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 15(1):16-41.

433. Thompson, Charles D. 2001. Maya Identities and the Violence of Place: Borders Bleed. Aldershot, England; Burlington, VT: Ashgate. 191 p. Ethnic identity of Jacaltec Maya of northwestern Guatemala.

423. Palma-Ramos, Danilo A. 2001. Asi somos y asi vivimos: los Ch'orti'. Guatemala: Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas y Sociales de la Universidad Rafael Landivar. 176 p. Ethnography study of Ch'orti; based on a series of interviews conducted in Pacren, Quebrada, Tisipe, and Tunuco in the Department of Chiquimula along the Honduran border.

434. Tradición oral popti' (jakalteka). Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 153 p. A series of dydactic texts, featuring illustrated textual material and essays based on oral history and transcribed in indigenous language. 435. Ventura, Carol. 2003. The Jakaltek Maya blowgun in mythological and historical context. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(2):257-268. Surveys the history of the blowgun in Mesoamerica and documents the manufacture and use of the blowgun in Jacaltenango, Guatemala, where it is used to hunt birds.

424. Tradición oral ch'orti'; utwa'chir e ojroner ch'orti'. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 73 p. A series of dydactic texts, featuring illustrated textual material and essays based on oral history and transcribed in indigenous language.

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447. Little, Walter E. 2004. Mayas in the Marketplace: Tourism, Globalization, and Cultural Identity. Austin: University of Texas Press. 320 p. Author provides an ethnographic study of Maya handicraft vendors in the international marketplace. He explores how the tourist marketplace conflates global and local distinctions, how the marketplace becomes a border zone where national and international, developed and underdeveloped, and indigenous and non-indigenous come together, and how marketing to tourists changes social roles, gender relationships, and ethnic identity in the vendors' home communities.

Kaqchikel 436. Artis, Susan J. 2005. A Critical Hermeneutic Inquiry of Kaqchikel Identity and Maya Tradition In Guatemala: Refiguring Cultural Heritage Through Narrative Learning. Ed.D. dissertation, University of San Francisco. 179 leaves. 437. Carey, David. 2001. Our Elders Teach Us: MayaKaqchikel Historical Perspectives; Xkibe’ij kan qate’ qatata’. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. 392 p. 438. Esquit, Edgar. 2002. Otros poderes, nuevos desafios: relaciones interétnicas en Tecpan y su entorno departamental (1871-1935). Guatemala: Instituto de Estudios Interétnicos de la Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. 383 p. Historical study of ethnic relations in Tecpan, with an emphasis on local power in municipalities, organizational bases of social groups, property and land, forced labor, and modernization.

448. Little, Walter. 2004. Outside of social movements: dilemmas of indigenous handicrafts vendors in Guatemala. American Ethnologist 31(1):43-59. Author examines how Maya handicrafts vendors in Antigua, Guatemala, work in a tourism marketplace that brings together several ethnolinguistic groups and international visitors.

439. Esquit Choy, Alberto. 2007. Liderazgo Maya-Kaqchikel en Guatemala: Del preconflicto al postconflicto 1950-1985. Doctoral dissertation, Vanderbilt University. 252 leaves.

449. Mendez, Leopoldo, ed. 2001. Cuentos de las abuelas y abuelos mayas: libro de lectura maya. Guatemala: Editorial Saqb’e. 80 p. Eighteen illustrated folktales and legends related by Cakchiquel children from the ages of seven to sixteen.

440. Fischer, Edward F., and Carol Hendrickson. 2002. Tecpan Guatemala: A Modern Maya Town in Global and Local Context. Boulder: Westview Press. 192 p.

450. Morgan, Nancy I. M. 2002. The Practical and Sacred Aspects of Life on a Volcano in a Kaqchikel Maya Community. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 316 leaves. Author examines how residents of Santa María de Jesus conceptualize space through the daily processes of living.

441. Gutierrez, Rafael. 2002. Epigramas a Angelica; pach'un taq tzij ri Angelica. Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala; Fondo de Cultura Económica de Guatemala. 63 p. Spanish-Kaqchikel anthology of verse.

451. Ratner, Blake D., and Alberto Rivera Gutierrez. 2004. Reasserting community: the social challenge of waste water management in Panajachel, Guatemala. Human Organization 63(1):47-5.

442. Hamilton, Sarah. 2003. Non-traditional agricultural exports in highland Guatemala: understandings of risk and perceptions of culture. Latin American Research Review 38(3):82-110. Through a case study of small-scale Kaqchikel Maya farmers involved in non-traditional export agriculture in the central Guatemalan highlands, author examines the tensions between the mostly positive perceptions of farmers and the negative assessments of many who study non-traditional export agriculture production.

452. Rodas, Ana M. 2002. La monja; ixoq rusamajel ajaw. Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala; Fondo de Cultura Económica de Guatemala. 61 p. Spanish-Kaqchikel edition of four short stories by a noted contemporary Guatemalan author.

443. Kaqchi' wuj. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 12 p.

453. Scott, Ann M. 2009. Communicating With the Sacred Earthscape: An Ethnoarchaeological Investigation of Kaqchikel Maya Ceremonies in Highland Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 250 leaves.

444. Kramer, Cheri. 2008. Flights of fancy: the giant Mayan kites of Guatemala. Cultural Survival 32(1):13-14. 445. Little, Walter E. 2001. Transnational Market and Community: The Social Relations of Kaqchikel Maya Vendors (Guatemala). Doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 396 leaves. Focuses on the social lives and work of Kaqchikel Maya vendors of handicrafts (tipica) in San Antonio Aguas Calientes and Santa Catarina Palopo, Guatemala, to show how they are affected by and interact within a transnational tourism border zone in which Guatemalan state hegemony and national identity are weak and the meaning of Mayaness is constructed by international tourism agencies and tourists, the Guatemalan government at local and national levels, and Mayas themselves.

454. Smith, Timothy J. 2004. A Tale of Two Governments: Rural Maya Politics and Competing Democracies in Solola, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 347 leaves. K’iche’ 455. Ak'abal, Humberto. 2001. Ajkem tzij; tejedor de palabras. 4 ed. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. 527 p. Poetry in K'iche' and Spanish by a K’iche’ from Momostenango; other poetry works in Spanish and K'iche' by Ak'abal include: Aqajtzij palabramiel (Guatemala: Cholsamaj, 2001. 147 p.); Grito en la sombra (Guatemala: Artemis Edinter, 2001. 80 p.); Jaguar dormido; warinaq b'alam (Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala, 2002. 77 p.); Picoteando; tzopotza' (Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala, 2001. 73 p); Tejedor de palabras (4 ed. Guatemala: Ediotorial Cholsamaj, 2001. 527 p.).

446. Little, Walter E. 2003. Common origins: “different” identities in two Kaqchikel Maya towns. Journal of Anthropological Research 59(2):205-224. Albuquerque. 28

466. Janssens, Bert, ed. 2004. Ri Ch’ab’al ke ri Qati’qamaam: el rezo de nuestros antepasados en Rabinal. Rabinal: Komoon Ka’yeb’al Rab’inaal Achi. 191 p.

456. Arango, Luis A. 2001. Con barro del corazon; ruk' kach' ulew re ukux jun. 2 ed. Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala. 63 p. Poetry in Spanish and K'iche' by K’iche’ speakers from Totonicpan. Other poetry by Arango includes: A vuelo de pajaro; chi xik'anik tz'ikin (Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala; Fondo de Cultura Economica de Guatemala, 2002. 63 p.).

467. Kalny, Eva. 2001. Das Gesetz: Das wir im Herzen tragen; Kulturanthropologie von Menschenrechten und familienrechtlichen Normen in zwei Mayagemainden (Sacapulas, El Quiche, Guatemala). Frankfurt: Verlag für Interkulturelle Komminikation. 229 p. Publication of a doctoral submitted at the University of Vienna. Spanish language translation: La Ley que llevamos en el corazon: una aproximación antropológica a los derechos humanos y normas familiares en dos comunidades mayas (Sacapulas, Quiche)(Guatemala: Asociación para el Avance de la Ciencias Sociales en Guatemala (AVANCSO), 2003. 162 p.)

457. Barrientos de Arriaga, Claudia I. 2007. Participación ciudadana y construcción de ciudadania desde los consejos de desarrollo, el caso de Chichicastenango. Guatemala: FLASCO. 255 p. 458. DeHart de Galicia, Monica C. 2001. What Is 'Ethnic' About Ethnic Development? Cultivating Community and Local Power in Totonicapan, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Stanford University. 245 leaves.

468. León, Rodrigo de. 2008. Hacienda: aldea del municipio de Cunen. Guatemala: Sistema Completo de Comunicación.

459. Falla, Ricardo. 2001. Quiche Rebelde: Religious Conversion, Politics, and Ethnic Identity in Guatemala. Austin: University of Texas Press/Teresa Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies. 328 p. Author examines what happened when Acción Católica came into the municipio of San Antonio Ilotenango in western Guatemala, to convert its K’iche’ inhabitants. 460. Foxen, Patricia. 2010. Local Narratives of Distress and Resilience: Lessons in Psychosocial Well-Being among the K'iche' Maya in Postwar Guatemala. Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 15(1):66-89.

469. McAllister, Carlota P. 2003. Good People: Revolution, Community and Conciencia in a Maya-K'iche' Village in Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Johns Hopkins University. 401 leaves. During Guatemala's 36-year civil war, the Guatemalan army justified its genocidal violence against Maya Guatemalans on the grounds that Maya were the armed insurgency's natural constituency. Since the war, advocates for the Maya have made claims on their behalf by claiming Maya have community instead of class consciousness, and thus could not have willingly subscribed to the insurgency's revolutionary project.

461. Gallegos, Ola M. 2001. Texto de apoyo del idioma maya achi; ri utux re ri nuch'a teem chi. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala (ALMG); Editorial Cultura. 56 p.

470. Mendez de Penedo, Lucrecia. 2001. Maladron: infernal paraiso; maladron: ri jun q'aq q'apoj ulew. Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala; Fondo de Cultura Economica de Guatemala. 63 p. Six short stories in K’iche’.

462. Goldin, Lilana R. 2001. Maquila Age Maya: changing households and communities of the central highlands of Guatemala. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 6:30-58. This article examines the impact of urbanization on Mayan households and their communities. The author argues the rural peoples of the central highlands of Guatemala are struggling to access new forms of the economic market, creating social and cultural shifts at the local level, and maintains the indigenous people have been able to adapt to new situations and so far have preferred to seek work in factories rather than the agrarian sector.

471. Mosquera Saravia, M. Teresa, María A. Gaspar Salvador, and Isabel Sucuqui Mejia. 2001. Conciendo la sabiduria achi: salud y enfermedad en Rabinal. Guatemala: Instituto de Estudios Interetnicos. 205 p. Contents include: M. Teresa Mosquera, Datos generales del municipio de Rabinal, Baja Verapaz (pp. 23-35); Isabel Sucuqui, La singularidad de la cultura achi (pp. 36-60); M. Albina Gaspar, Como se enfrentaba/atendia la enfermedad? Prácticas y tratamientos en proceso de olvido (pp. 61-77); M. Albina Gaspar, Dicen que ya solo los abuelos lo practican (pp. 78-90); M. Teresa Mosquera, La salud y sus servicios en Rabinal (pp. 91-100); Isabel Sucuqui, La relación entre religiosidad y la medicina entre los achí (pp. 101-110); Isabel Sucuqui and M. Teresa Mosquera. Algunos terapeutas achí (pp. 111-134); Isabel Sucuqui, La clasificación de la enfermedad segun los guias espirituales achí (pp. 135-172); M. Teresa Mosquera, La atención de algunos padecimientos entre los achí (pp. 173-180); M. Albina Gaspar, Isabel Sucuqui, and M. Teresa Mosquera, Reflexiones finales (pp. 181-198).

463. Gonzalez, Otto R. 2001. Coctel de frutas; yuja'n uwach che'. Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala. 62 p. Poetry in Spanish and K'iche'. 464. Harvey, Tenibac S. 2003. K'iche' Expressions of Wellness and Illness in Disputed Fields of Care: A Comparative Analysis of Maya Intra-Cultural Therapeutic and Cross-Cultural Biomedical Care. Doctoral dissertation, University of Virginia. 271 leaves.

472. Navarrete Pellicer, Sergio. 2001. El bien y el mal: musica, alcohol y mujeres. Revista de musica latinoaméricana 22(1):63-82. Authors explores the relationship between music, women, and alcoholism in Rabinal, Department of Baja Verapaz, Guatemala.

465. Janssens, Bert, ed. 2003. Oj K’aslik: Estamos vivos; Recuperación de la memoria historica de Rabinal (1944-1996). Rabinal: Komoon Ka’yeb’al Rab’inaal Achi. 300 p.

473. Quiche Quiche, María del Carmen, and Luis G. Ramirez Porres. 2003. Normas indígenas sobre el uso del agua, el bosque y la vida silvestre: comunidades del area lingüistica k'i29

487. McGee, R. Jon. 2002. Watching Lacandon Maya Lives. Boston: Allyn and Bacon. 194 p. An interesting ethnography and critique of ethnographic writing. The book documents social, agricultural, technological, and religious changes that have occurred in a Lakandon Maya community, and a critique of those who invented a Utopian picture of a “traditional” Lakandon past that never really existed.

che. Guatemala: Centro de Acción Legal-Ambiental y Social de Guatemala (CALAS). 127 p. 474. Suazo, Fernando. 2002. La cultura maya ante la muerte: daño y duelo en la comunidad achí de Rabinal. Guatemala: Equipo de Estudios Comunitarios y Acción Psicosocial. 108 p. 476. Suy Tum, Bonifacio, ed. 2001. Rey de los reyes: kajawinel ajawinelab'. Guatemala: Universidad Rafael Landivar; Instituto de Lingüistica y Educación. 83 p. Short stories of creation, Spanish and K'iche', based on oral history.

488. Nations, James D. 2006. The Maya Tropical Forest. People, Parks, and Ancient Cities. Austin: University of Texas Press. 324 p.

477. Tallet, Laurent. 2001. Les trajectoires du pouvoir dans une communauté Maya K'iche du Guatemala: rapports de sens et rapports de force. Paris: L’Harmattan. 253 p. Study based in the K’iche’-speaking community of Totonicapan. 478. Tedlock, Barbara. 2002. El tiempo y los mayas del altiplano. Rancho Palos Verdes: Fundación Yax Te. 248 p. Important study of the religion of Momostenango; Spanish translation of Time and the Highland Maya (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1987).

489. Palka, Joel W. 2005. Unconquered Lacandon Maya: Ethnohistory and Archaeology of Indigenous Culture Change. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. 368 p. Author combines archival and ethnographic studies together with archaeological information from newly discovered sites to provide a complete examination of Lakandon cultural change.

Lakandon 479. Blom, Frans, and Gertrude Duby. 2006. La Selva lacandona. 2 ed. San Cristobal de Las Casas: CDI/Na Bolom. 2 v. “A 50 años de su publicación, la Asociación Cultural Na Bolom, fundada por Frans Blom (1893-1963) y Gertrude Duby (1901-1993), la Comisión para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indígenas colaboran para presentar una nueva edición del primer tomo”. Includes the following topics of discussion: “Tierra de los tzeltales”, “Conquistamos a los lacandones”, “La amenaza de Metzabok” and “Entramos en un risueño pueblo maya”.

491. Ross, Norbert. 2002. Cognitive aspects of intergenerational change: mental models, cultural change, and environmental behavor among the Lacandon Maya of southern Mexico. Human Organziation 61(2):125-138. Author examines generational split in social relations, household location, and economic behavior among the Lakandon Maya of Mensäbäk, Chiapas.

490. Ramirez, Elisa. 2002. Nuxi', trampeador de topos. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):17.

492. Ross, Norbert. 2002. Lacandon Maya intergenerational change and the erosion of folk-biological knowledge. In Ethnobiology and Biocultural Diversity. John Stepp, Felicitas Wyndham, and Ruth Zarger, eds. pp. 585-592. Athens: University of Georgia Press.

480. Boremanse, Didier. 2007. K'in Yah: el rito de adivinación en la religión maya lacandona. Mesoamérica 28(49):114135.

Mam 493. Crisostomo y Crisostomo, Luis Javier. 2001. Xjaw ex k'wal. Guatemala: Universidad Rafael Landivar, Instituto de Lingüistico y Educación. 29 p. Folktales in Mam.

481. Diemont, Stewart A. W. 2006. Ecosystem Management and Restoration as Practiced By the Indigenous Lacandon Maya of Chiapas, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, The Ohio State University. 144 leaves.

494. Hernández Castillo, Rosalva A. 2001. Between civil disobedience and silent rejection: differing responses by Mam peasants to the Zapatista rebellion. Latin American Perspectives 28(2):98-119.

482. Frederick, Jennie. 2004. Lacandon Maya bark cloth: hu’un. Hand Papermaking 19(2):23-30. Author describes her experiences documenting and collecting samples of Lakandon Maya bark cloth (hu’un) in Lacanha and Naha, Mexico.

495. Oakes, Maud. 2001. Las dos cruces de Todos Santos: la religiosidad de un pueblo maya. Guatemala: Editorial Cultura; Rancho Palos Verdes, CA: Fundación Yax Te'. 228 p. Translation into Spanish of Two Crosses of Todos Santos, a study of the Mam community of Todos Santos Cuchumatan.

483. Gollnick, Brian. 2008. Reinventing the Lacandon: Subaltern Representations in the Rain Forest of Chiapas. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 225 p. 484. Hopkins, Nicholas A. 2008. The Lacandon song of the jaguar. Tlalocan 15:111-116.

496. Ortiz Gomez, Francisco, and Luis G. Ramirez Porres. 2003. Normas indígenas sobre el uso del agua, el bosque y la vida silvestre: comunidades del area lingüistica mam. Guatemala: Centro de Acción Legal-Ambiental y Social de Guatemala (CALAS). 233 p. Coverage includes: Department of San Marcos: San Antonio Las Barrancas, municipio de Sibinal; Cunlaj, Tacana; Villa Hermosa, Chana, Tajumulco; San Rafael Sacatepequez, San Antonio Sacatepequez; Department of Huehuetenango: El Rancho, Todos Santos Cuchumatan; Tiwitz, Santiago Chimaltenango; El Papal, San Ildefonso Ixtahuacan; Department of Quezaltenango: El Rincón, San Mar-

485. Kashanipour, Rayn A. 2003. From Cannibals to Kings: History and Cultural Change Among Lacandon Maya Indians, 1542-2002. M.A. thesis, Southwest Texas State University. 193 leaves. 486. Levesque, Manon. 2005. Entre privilège et marginalisation: Politiques de la culture et développement du tourisme ethnique chez les Mayas Lacandons de Naha, Chiapas, Mexique. M.A. thesis, McGill University (Canada). 99 leaves. 30

507. Breneman, Janet M. 2004. Guatemalan Mennonite Women at Prayer: Religious Heritages and Social Circumstances Shape the Prayers of Ladina and Q'eqchi' Women. DMin thesis, Lancaster Theological Seminary. 279 leaves.

tin Sacatepequez; La Ventana, Cabrican; La Victoria, San Juan Ostuncalco. 497. Proechel, Sarah. 2005. Voices of Maya Midwives: Oral Histories of Practicing Traditional Midwives from the Mam Region of Guatemala. Morrisville: Lulu. 171 p. Author relates the oral histories of six traditional Maya midwives from the Mam region of western Guatemala.

508. Dickins de Giron, Margaret A. 2008. Balancing Inequalities and Opportunities: Globalization and Development in Q'eqchi' Maya Communities in Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Vanderbilt University. 238 leaves.

498. Wiebe, Adrienne. 2009. “Antes había justicia”: justicia municipal en una comunidad mam de Guatemala, 1921-1968. Mesoamerica 51(30):28-58.

509. Downey, Sean S. 2009. Resilient Networks and and the Historical Ecology of Q'eqchi' Maya Swidden Agriculture. Doctoral dissertation, University of Arizona. 240 leaves.

Mopan 499. McClusky, Laura J. 2001. “Here, Our Culture is Hard”: Stories of Domestic Violence from a Mayan Community in Belize. Austin: University of Texas Press. 310 p. Alcoholism in a Mopan community. 500. Tradición oral mopan; unu'kulil kuxtal mopan. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 69 p. A series of dydactic texts, featuring illustrated textual material and essays based on oral history and transcribed in indigenous language.

510. Fernández, Fabian G., Richard E. Terry, Takeshi Inomata, and Markus Eberl. 2002. An ethnoarchaeological study of chemical residues in the floors and soils of Q'eqchi' Maya houses at Las Pozas, Guatemala. Geoarchaeology 17(6):487-519. Report on an ethnoarchaeological study at the Q'eqchi' Maya village of Las Pozas, near the Classic Maya center of Aguateca, using phosphorous, exchangeable ion (calcium, potassium, magnesium, sodium), and trace element analysis of soils and earth floors to understand the relationship between soil chemical signatures and human activities.

Poqomchi' 501. Moran Ical, Carlos. 2006. Diagnóstico de la medicina maya poqomchi’ en San Cristobal Verapaz; Moloj-Wach No'jwal Aj Q'ij Rex We’ Consejo de Guias espirituales Rex We. 2 ed. Bogota: Editorial La Serpiente Emplumada Ltda. 89 p. Diagnostical investigation into Mayan Poqomchi' medicinal practices in San Cristobal Verapaz, Guatemala.

511. Flores, Carlos Y. 2001. Bajo la cruz: memoria y dimensión sobrenatural del gran sufrimiento entre los q’eqchi’ de Alta Verapaz. Colección Textos Ak’ Kutan, 21. Coban: Ak’ Kutan Centro Bartolome de las Casas. 70 p. Examination of the various ways in which the armed conflict in Guatemala affected the perceptions and identity of the Q’eqch’i of Alta Verapaz.

502. Tradición oral poqomchi'; majtir q'orik. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 78 p. A series of dydactic texts, featuring illustrated textual material and essays based on oral history and transcribed in indigenous language.

512. Franz, Stephen. 2004. Realizing the Dream: Sustainable Self-Empowerment Through Culturally Relevant Education (An Ethnographic Case Study of the K'ekchi' Maya of rural Belize). Doctoral dissertation, Indiana University. 203 leaves. 513. Grandia, Liza. 2006. Unsettling: Land Dispossession and Enduring Inequity for the Q'eqchi' Maya in the Guatemalan and Belizean Frontier Colonization Process. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley. 553 leaves.

Poqomam 503. Tradición oral poqomam. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 1999. 55 p. A series of dydactic texts, featuring illustrated textual material and essays based on oral history and transcribed in indigenous language.

514. Hatse, Inge, and Patrick DeCeuster. 2001. Cosmovisión y espiritualidad en la agricultura q’eqchi’: un aporte para la revaloración y el fortalecimiento de la agricultura tradicional q’eqchi’. Colección Textos Ak’ Kutan, 18. Coban: Ak’ Kutan Centro Bartolome de Las Casas. 120 p.

Q'anjob'al 504. Gonzalez, Gaspar P. 2001. The Dry Season: Q'anjob'al Maya Poems. R. McKenna Brown, trans. Cleveland: Cleveland State University Poetry Center; Yax'te Foundation. 95 p. Q'anjob'al-English poetry.

515. Hatse, Inge, and Patrick DeCeuster. 2001. Prácticas agrosilvestres q’eqchi’es; mas alla de maíz y frijol. Colección Textos Ak’ Kutan, 19. Coban: Centro Bartolomé de Las Casas. 218 p.

Q’eqchi’ 505. Adams, Abigail E. 2001. The transformation of the tzuultaq'a: Jorge Ubico, Protestants and other Verapaz Maya at the crossroads of community, state and transnational interests. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 6(2):198233.

516. Hoenes del Pinal, Eric. 2008. Ideologies of Language and Gesture Among Q'eqchi'-Maya Mainstream and Charismatic Catholics. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, San Diego. 382 leaves.

506. Braakhuis, H.E.M. 2005. Xbalanque’s canoe: the origin of poison in Q’eqchi’-Mayan hummingbird myth. Anthropos 100(1):173-191. Exploration of the origin of disease and intrusive magic in the context of Q’eqchi’-Mayan sun and moon mythology.

517. Kahn, Hilary E. 2001. Respecting relationships and Día de Guadalupe: Q'eqchi Mayan identities in Livingston, Guatemala. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 6(1):229. 31

530. Bayles, Brian. 2008. Metaphors to cure by: Tojolab'al Maya midwifery and cognition. Anthropology and Medicine 15(3):227-238.

518. Kahn, Hilary E. 2002. Morality in Motion and InSightful Ethnography: The Q'eqchi' Mayan People of Livingston, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Buffalo. 322 leaves.

531. Gomez Hernández, Antonio. 2002. El ch'ak ab'al: del baldio a la actualidad. San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas: Programa de Investigaciones Multidisciplinarias sobre Mesoamérica y el Sureste, UNAM; Instituto de Estudios Indígenas, UNACH. 201 p. Study of Tojolabal marriage customs in Las Margaritas, Chiapas.

519. Kahn, Hilary E. 2006. Seeing and Being Seen: The Q'eqchi' Maya of Livingston, Guatemala and Beyond. Austin: University of Texas. 241 p. 520. Kistler, Sarah A. 2007. The House in the Market: Kinship, Status, and Memory Among Q'eqchi' Market Women in San Juan Chamelco, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Florida State University. 423 leaves.

532. Lenkersdorf, Carlos. 2000. Leben ohne Objekte: Sprache und Weltbild der Tojolabales, ein Mayavolk in Chiapas. Frankfurt am Main: IKO; Verlag für Interkulturelle Kommunikation. 223 p.

521. Kockelman, Paul. 2002. Stance and Subjectivity Among the Q'eqchi' Maya: Minding Language and Measuring Labor Under Neoliberal Globalization. Doctoral dissertation, University of Chicago. 574 p.

533. Lenkersdorf, Carlos. 2001. El diario de un Tojolabal. Mexico: Editorial Plaza y Valdes. 513 p.

522. Kockelman, Paul. 2007. Inalienable possession and personhood in a Q'eqchi'-Mayan community. Language in Society 36(3):343-369.

534. Mattiace, Shannan L. 2001. Regional renegotiations of space: Tojolabal ethnic identity in Las Margaritas, Chiapas. Latin American Perspectives 28(2):73-97.

523. Kockelman, Paul. 2007. Number, unit, and utility in a Mayan community: the relation between use-value, laborpower, and personhood. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 13(2):401-417.

Tzeltal 535. Becquelin-Monod, Aurore, and Alain Breton. 2002. La Guerre rouge ou une politique maya du sacre; un carnaval tzeltal au Chiapas, Mexique. Paris: CNRS Editions. 392 p.

524. Siebers, Hans. 2004. Management of knowledge and social transformation: a case study from Guatemala. In Development and Local Knowledge: New Approaches to Issues in Natural Resources Management, Conservation, and Agriculture. Alan Bicker, Paul Sillitoe, and Johan Pottier, eds. pp. 31-50. London: Routledge. Author examines the management of various flows of information by the Q’eqchi’ of northern Guatemala, and implications for our comprehension of processes of social transformation and intervention policy.

536. Casagrande, David G. 2002. Ecology, Cognition, and Cultural Transmission of Tzeltal Maya Medicinal Plant Knowledge. Doctoral dissertation, University of Georgia. 298 leaves.

525. Warner, Faith R. 2001. Lives on the Threshold in the Place of Rocks and Hunger: The Impact of Displacement and Encampment on Q'eqchi' Women in Maya Tecun, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Syracuse University. 516 leaves.

538. Gonzalez Martinez, Joaquín R. 2008. La Historia vivida en las representaciones espaciales: la conformación del espacio tzeltal-tzotzil; ensayo de aproximación geoetnográfica. Veracruz: Instituto Veracruzano de la Cultura. 223 p.

526. Warner, Faith R. 2007. Social support and distress among Q'eqchi' refuge women in Maya Tecun, Mexico. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 21(2):193-217.

539. Lampman, Aaron M. 2007. General principles of ethnomycological classification among the Tzeltal Maya of Chiapas, Mexico. Journal of Ethnobiology 27(1):11-27.

Tektiteko 527. Tradición oral tektiteko. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 1999. 36 p. A series of dydactic texts, featuring illustrated textual material and essays based on oral history and transcribed in indigenous language.

540. Luber, George E. 2002. The Biocultural Epidemiology of “Second Hair” Illness in Two Mesoamerican Societies. Doctoral dissertation, University of Georgia. 190 leaves. Discussion of two Mesoamerican folk illnesses, the Tzeltal Maya cha'lam tzotz, and the Mixe mjts baajy, which represent variations of “second hair” illness found in several Mesoamerican cultures.

537. Castro, Sandra B. 2003. Maya Tseltal Women: Social Change in a Community Development and Empowerment Process. Master of International and Intercultural Management thesis, School for International Training. 76 leaves.

Tojol’abal 528. Bayles, Bryan P. 2001. The rayo and the ribbon: tradition and transformation among the Tojolabal Maya. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 17(1):22-47. 529. Bayles, Bryan P. 2002. ‘The Belly Wants Its Heat': Cultural Models of Health and Fertility Among Tojolab'al Maya Midwives. Doctoral dissertation, University of Missouri - Columbia. 312 leaves.

541. Rabchinskey, Ilan. 2008. Yo’tan k’op; Corazón de la palabra; Jun pasbil ta bast'il k'op ta kaxlan k'op; edición bilingüe Tseltal-Español. México: CONACULTA: INAH, FONCA/Trilece Ediciones/Instituto Nacional de Lenguas Indígenas, 2008. Sharp color, capturing the essence of the Tseltal indigenous Mayans and their culture, by acclaimed contemporary photographer, IIan Rabchinskey. With numerous of folkloric and ethnographic interest and analytical 32

commentaries by Regina Tattersfield. Texts in Spanish and Tzeltal.

ción en Ocosingo, Chiapas, 1930-1994. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico.

Tzotzil 542. Bandeita, Fabio P. de F., Jorge López Blanco, and Victor M. Toledo. 2002. Tzotzil Maya ethnoecology: landscape perception and management as a basis for coffee agroforest design. Journal of Ethnobiology 22(2):247-272. Authors investigate indigenous ecological knowledge and landscape categorization in the Tzotzil Maya community of Polho (San Pedro Chenalho).

553. León Pasquel, Lourdes de. 2005. La llegada del alma; lenguaje, infancia y socialización entre los mayas de Zinacantan. Mexico: Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social/CONACULTA: INAH. 396p. “El presente estudio se ubica en el cruce disciplinario de la lingüistica, la antropología, la psicología del desarrollo y la educación e investiga la socialización infantil y el desarrollo del lenguaje en Zinacantan.

543. Benz, Bruce, Hugo Perales, and Stephen Brush. 2007. Tzeltal and Tzotzil farmer knowledge and maize diversity in Chiapas, Mexico. Current Anthropology 48(2):289-300.

554. Morfeld, Mary E. P. 2000. San Juan Chamula: Reaffirmation and Redefinition of a Highland Indigenous Community. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Arlington. 163 leaves. 555. Moksnes, Heidi. 2003. Mayan Suffering, Mayan Rights: Faith and Citizenship Among Catholic Tzotziles in Highland Chiapas, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Göteborg University. 556. Monteforte Toledo, Mario. 2001. Isla de la navajas; ri utukel ulew re ri ch'ich'. Guatemala: Comunidad de Escritores de Guatemala; Fondo de Cultura Economica de Guatemala. 61 p. Republication in K’iche’ of two short stories by Montefort Toledo first issued in 1995.

544. Burguete Cal y Mayor, Araceli, Jaime Torres Burguete, and Francisco R. Alvarez Hernández. 2006. Aldama sk’oplal ya’yejal jteklum. Biblioteca Popular de Chiapas, 88. Tuxtla Gutierrez: Gobierno del Estado de Chiapas; Consejo Estatal para la Cultura y las Artes de Chiapas. 249 p. Examination of the politics, government administration, and demographics of Aldama, Chiapas; text in Spanish and Tzotzil. 545. Burguete Cal y Mayor, Araceli, and Francisco Regino Alvarez Hernández. 2006. Santiago el pinare; Sk’oplal ya’yejal jteklum; Edición bilingüe Español-Tzotzil. Tuxtla Gutierrez: Gobierno del Estado de Chiapas: Centro Estatal de Lenguas, Arte y Literatura Indígenas. 306 p. Monographic study of San Andres Duraznal, Chiapas.

557. Ruiz Ruiz, Lucas. 2006. El Jchi'iltik y la dominación Jkaxlan en Larrainzar, Chiapas. San Cristobal de las Casas: Gobierno del Estado de Chiapas. 245 p. 558. Schuettler, David J. 2007. Fireflies in the Night: Indigenous Metaphor in Zapatista Folktales. Doctoral dissertation, Union Institute and University. 346 leaves.

546. Garza Caligaris, Anna M. 2002. Genero, interlegalidad y conflicto en San Pedro Chenalho. San Cristobal de Las Casas, Chiapas: Instituto de Estudios Indígenas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico, Programa de Investigaciones Multidisciplinarias sobre Mesoamérica y Sureste; Tuxtla Gutierrez: UNACH, Instituto de Estudios Indígenas. 270 p. Study of the legal status, human rights, and customs of highland Tzotzil women in Chenalho, Chiapas.

559. Tavanti, Marco. 2003. Las Abejas: Pacifist Resistance and Syncretic Identities in a Globalizing Chiapas. New York: Routledge. 271 p. Publication of author's doctoral dissertation, Las Abejas: Constructing Syncretic Identities of Resistance in the Highlands of Chiapas, Mexico (Loyola University of Chicago, 2001. 297 leaves).

547. Gossen, Gary H., ed. 2002. Four Creations: An Epic Story of the Chiapas Maya. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 1134 p. Monumental collection of 74 Tzotzil folktales collected from six storytellers between 1965 and 1980.

560. Unmasking the Maya: The Story of Sna Jtz’ibajom. Washington, DC: Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, Department of Anthropology, 2003. Internet resource: http://www.mnh. si.edu/anthro/ maya/

548. Groark, Kevin P. 2005. Pathogenic Emotions: Sentiment, Sociality, and Sickness Among the Tzotzil Maya of San Juan Chamula, Chiapas, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 586 leaves.

561. Vogt, Evon Z. 2001. The Zinacantecos of Mexico: A Modern Maya Way of Life. 2 ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth/Thomson Learning. 157 p. Tz’utujil 562. Bizarro Ujpan, Ignacio. 2001. Joseño: Another Mayan Voice Speaks From Guatemala. James D. Sexton, trans. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 312 p. The fifth volume of collaboration between Ignacio Bizarro Ujpan, a Tz’utujil Maya, and James D. Sexton. Other volumes include: Son of Tecun Uman: A Maya Indian Tells His Life Story (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1981. 250 p.) Campesino: The Diary of a Guatemalan Indian (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1985. 448 p.); Ignacio: The Diary of a Maya Indian of Guatemala (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1992. 325 p.); Heart of Heaven, Heart of Earth and Other Mayan Folktales (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1999. 152 p.).

549. Groark, Kevin P. 2009. Discourses of the soul: the negotiation of personal agency in Tzotzil Maya dream narrative. American Ethnologist 36(4):705-721. 550. Hvostoff, Sophie. 2001. Le nouveau visage indien de San Cristobal de Las Casas: dynamiques d’intégration et redéfinition des frontieres ethniques. Trace 40:13-25. 551. Köhler, Ulrich. 2007. Los dioses de los cerros entre los tzotziles en su contexto interétnico. Estudios de cultura maya 30:139-152. 552. Legorreta Diaz, M. del Carmen. 2008. Desafios de la emancipación indígena: organización señorial y moderniza33

563. Christenson, Allen J. 2001. Art and Society in a Highland Maya Community: The Altarpiece of Santiago Atitlan. Austin: University of Texas Press. 284 p. Author reconstructs the central altarpiece of the Maya church in the Tz’utujilspeaking Santiago Atitlan. The colonial-era shrine collapsed after a series of earthquakes in the twentieth century. Christenson provides a detailed exegesis of how this complex work of art translates into material form the theology and cosmology of the traditional Tz’tujil Maya.

574. Barrera Vásquez, Alfredo. 2009. Lo ignoraba usted? Merida: Biblioteca Básica de Yucatan. 103 p. Collection of short articles on Mayan language, culture and history; originally published in 1942 in the Diario del Sureste.

564. Frühsorge, Lars. 2009. Zwischen Archäologie und Mündlicher Überlieferung: Die Malerei eines Tz'utujil-Maya als Quelle zum Geschichtsdenken in Santiago Atitlan. Indiana 26:135-148.

576. Brody, Micha. 2004. The Fixed Word, The Moving Tongue: Variation in Written Yucatec Maya and the Meandering Evolution Toward Unified Norms. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 360 leaves.

565. Loucky, James. 2001. The Tz'utujil Maya of Guatemala. In Endangered Peoples of Latin America: Struggles to Survive and Thrive. Susan C. Stonich, ed. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.

577. Burnett-Deas, Andrea. 2009. VOT of Ejectives, Implosives, and Plain Stops in Yukateko, Mopan, and Itzaj Maya. M.A. thesis, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 97 leaves.

566. Petrich, Perla. 2006. De la tracición y la modernidad: San Pedro, un pueblo maya del lago Atitlan de Guatemala. Trace 50:50-62.

578. Callahan, Robey K. 2005. Doubt, Shame, and the Maya Self. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 559 leaves.

567. Prechtel, Martin. 2001. The Disobedience of the Daughter of the Sun: Ecstacy and Time. Cambridge, MA: Yellow Moon Press. 151 p. Collection of Tz’utujil folktales.

579. Castellanos, María B. 2003. Gustos and Gender: Yucatec Maya Migration to the Mexican Riviera. Doctoral dissertation, University of Michigan. 316 leaves. Author addresses the migration experiences and subjectivity of indigenous internal migrants in Mexico, and proposes that Yucatec Maya men and women have increasingly turned towards symbols of global capitalism made accessible via wage labor, instead of the gendered division of agricultural labor, as a way to perform personhood and display their gustos: expressions of tastes that mark the boundaries of the self, and distinguish the self from a collective identity.

575. Bray, David B. 2001. The Mayans of central Quintana Roo. In Endangered Peoples of Latin America: Struggles to Survive and Thrive. Susan C. Stonich, ed. pp. 3-18. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.

568. Stanzione, Vincent J. 2003. Rituals of Sacrifice: Walking the Face of the Earth on the Sacred Path of the Sun: A Journey Through the Tz'utujil Maya World of Santiago Atitlan. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 330 p. Examination of Semana Santa (Holy Week) rituals in the Tz’utujil community of Santiago Atitlan. 569. Tradición oral tz'utujil. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 135 p. A series of dydactic texts, featuring illustrated textual material and essays based on oral history and transcribed in indigenous language.

580. Castañeda, Quetzil E. 2001. Topography of Maya culture, on the political and scriptural economy of the modernizing Maya. Estudios de cultura maya 20:249-265.

570. Vallejo Reyna, Alberto. 2001. Por los caminos de los antiguos nawales: ri laj mam y el nawalismo maya tz'utuhil de Santiago Atitlan, Guatemala. Guatemala: Fundación Centro de Documentación e Investigación Maya. 200 p. A study of Tz’utujil Maya in the region of Santiago Atitlan with a focus on Ri Laj Mam, a spiritual leader; includes discussion of relation between anthropology and religion, cofradias, Holy Week, and sacred geography.

581. Castañeda, Quetzil E. 2003. New and old social movements: measuring Piste, from the “Mouth of the Well” to the 107th municipio of Yucatan. Ethnohistory 50(4):611-642. 582. Castañeda, Quetzil E. 2004. Art-writing in the modern Maya art world of Chichen Itza: transcultural ethnography and experimental fieldwork. American Ethnologist 31(1):21-42. Author examines the modern Maya art world of Chichen Itza, Mexico, through the local political history and the technical and aesthetic development of the Piste Maya art tradition.

Yukateko 571. Armstrong-Fumero, Fernando. 2007. Before There Was Culture Here: Vernacular Discourse on Modernity in Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Stanford University. 386 leaves.

583. Castañeda, Quetzil E. 2004. “We are not indigenous!” An introduction to the Maya identity of Yucatan. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 9(1):36-63.

572. Armstrong-Fumero, Fernando. 2009. The historical substrate of vernacular multiculturalism in Yucatan, Mexico. American Ethnologist 36(2):300-316.

584. Faust, Betty B., Eugene N. Anderson, and John G. Frazier. 2004. Rights, Resources, Culture, and Conservation in Yucatan, Mexico. Westport, CT: Greenwood. 325 p. “A collection of papers inspired by the work of Mary Elmendorf, a pioneer in applied anthropology and community development. Dr. Elmendorf spent much of her career studying the roles of women in Maya communities, as well as problems of health.” Contents include: June Nash, Foreword: Living in a Mayan world (pp. vii-i); Perspectives evolving from and with Mary

573. Armstrong-Fumero, Fernando. 2009. Old jokes and new multiculturalisms: continuity and change in vernacular discourse on the Yucatec Maya language. American Anthropologist 111(3):360-372.

34

Mexico, 1860-1915. Doctoral dissertation, Yale University. 410 p.

Lindsay Elmendorf's work in Maya communities of Mexico's Yucatan peninsula (pp. xiii-xx); E. N. Anderson, Betty B. Faust, and John G. Frazier, Introduction: An environmental and cultural history of Maya communities in the Yucatan peninsula (pp. 1-29); Alicia Re Cruz, Working with peoples and places through action: a history of the participatory research of Mary Lindsay Elmendorf (pp. 31-37); Mary L. Elmendorf, The many worlds of Maya women (pp. 39-77); Joann M. Andrews, Shifts of strategies and focus of the conservation efforts of Pronatura on the Yucatan peninsula: a personal history (pp. 79-94); Jenny Ericson, Population and land use: an essential link for conservation in the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve (pp. 95-115); E. N. Anderson, Valuing the Maya forests (pp. 117-130); Grace Bascope, Economic, political, and environmental changes in a Yucatec Maya village (pp. 163-173); David W. Forrest, The landscape of Santa Rita Komchen: the role of metaphor in the ecological history of a Yucatecan rural estate (pp. 175-189); Ellen R. Kintz, and Amanda S. Ritchie, The transformation of “paradise”: deep, social, and political ecology among the Yucatec Maya of Coba, Quintana Roo, Mexico: a dialogical approach (pp. 191-204); Susannah Glusker, Women's human rights issues among the Maya (pp. 205-223); John G. Frazier, The “Yucatan Syndrome”: its relevance to biological conservation and anthropological activities (pp. 225-254); Mary L. Elmendorf, Conclusion: Reflections on rights, resources, and responsibilities in participatory research (pp. 255-275).

593. Goodman, Felicitas D. 2001. Maya Apocalypse: Seventeen Years With The Women of a Yucatan Village. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 544 p. An ethnographic record of fieldwork concerning Pentacostal congregations in the Yucatec village of Utzpak. 594. Gorza, Piero, Davide Dominici, and Claudia Avitabile, eds. 2009. Mundos zoque y maya: miradas italianas. Merida: UNAM. 315 p. Writings by Italians on Zoque and Mayan Indians, including “Tradición y innovación en un hospital rural de Yucatan” by Claudia Avitabile, “Mujeres y salud reproductiva en el municipio de Kaua (Yucatan)” by Patrizia Quattrocchi and “Notas sobre espacio-tiempo y las prácticas politicas de los mayas yucatecos durante el periodo colonial” by Marco Bellingeri. 595. Güemez Pïneda, Arturo. 2005. Mayas, gobierno y tierras frente de la acometida liberal en Yucatan, 1812-1847. Zamora: El Colegio de Michoacan/Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan. 364 p. Narrowly focused Yucatecan ethnic and political/historical study with much on the privatization of Maya lands and related topics. 596. Guzman Medina, María G. V. 2005. Una nueva mirada hacia los mayas de Yucatan; Identidad, cultura y poder. Merida: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan. 475p. An ethnohistorical exploration of the Yucatan Maya, with information on social stratification, cultural identity, religion, power structures and language, popular religiosity, religious festivals, and religious identity.

585. Gabbert, Wolfgang. 2001. Social categories, ethnicity, and the state in Yucatan, Mexico. Journal of Latin American Studies 33(3):459-484. 586. Gabbert, Wolfgang. 2004. Becoming Maya: Ethnicity and Social Inequality in Yucatan Since 1500. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 252 p.

597. Haase, Michael. 2008. Maya-festung am Karibischen Meer. Archäologie 5:12-17

587. Gabbert, Wolfgang. 2004. Of friends and foes: the Caste War and ethnicity in Yucatan. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 9(1):90-118.

598. Hesson, Michael W. 2006. Making the Time: The Cultural Constitution of Temporality in Betania, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 220 leaves.

588. Gabriel, Marianne. 2001. Rituale der Maya: Elemente und Struktur agrarischer Zeremonien und deren Bedeutung für die Mayabauern Ost-Yukatans. Acta Mesoamericana, 11. Markt Schwaben: Saurwein. 363 p. Originally submitted as a doctoral dissertation at Universität Tübingen, 2000.

599. Hostettler, Ueli. 2002. Labor regime and social justice: consequences of economic and social stratification among Maya peasants in central Quintana Roo, Mexico. Anthropos 97:107-116. Author explores consequences of socioeconomic stratification for milpa agriculture and for the organization of labor in a Lowland Maya peasant society. Both present-day and past situations are analyzed. He also discusses the concept of local social justice which serves as a framework of analysis of institutions that allocate goods and services and provide rules and norms for social interaction.

589. Gauthier, Melissa. 2003. Les habits de l'identité Maya Yucatèque moderne. M. A. thesis, Universite Laval. 150 leaves. 590. Gauvin-Racine, Joelle. 2007. Relations de pouvoir et gestion durable des ressources dans la Zone Maya du Quintana Roo, Mexique. Recherches Amérindennes au Quebec 36(23):95-106.

600. Hull, Cindy L. 2004. Katun: A Twenty-Year Journey With the Maya. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth/Thomson Learning. 190 p. Author provides a brief ethnographic study on the village of Yaxbe (pseudo.), in northwest Yucatan, about which she considers globalization, shifts in technology, economic and political realignments, population growth and revolutions in communication over a 20-year period.

591. Gerlach, Nancy, Jeffrey Gerlach, and Jeffrey M. Pilcher. 2004. Foods of the Maya: A Taste of the Yucatan. Aubuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 128 p. Includes 91 recipes from Yucatan with background to the region and its cuisine.

601. Hurtado Cen, Araceli, and Thelma Sierra Sosa. 2007. Procesos degenerativos articulares en la población prehispánica de Xcambo, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1):95-102.

592. Gill, Christopher J. 2001. The Intimate Life of the Family: Patriarchy and the Liberal Project in Yucatan, 35

611. Nadal, Marie-José. 2001. Que sont les mayas devenus? La construction de nouvelles identités au Yucatan. Recherches Amérindiennes au Quebec 31(1):49-60. The observation of two regions of Yucatan reveals that the globalization of the Mexican rural economy leads to an increase of intercultural situations in which the impoverished Maya must integrate to survive the ejido crisis.

602. Labrecque, Marie F. 2001. L'économie politique de la construction des genres chez les Mayas du nord du Yucatan au temps des maquiladoras: économie politique féministe, sous la direction de l'économie politique. Anthropologie et sociétés 25(1):99-115. Study of the political economy of gender construction among the Maya of northern Yucatan. 603. Lizama Quijano, Jesús. 2007. Estar en el mundo; procesos culturales, estrategias económicas y dinámicas identitarias entre los mayas yucatecos. Mexico: Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social/Miguel Angel Porrua. 212 p. Ethnohistorical and sociological study of Yucatan Mayans from cultural, economic and identity related facets. Includes the following chapters: “Yaxcaba: un municipio maya como cualquier otro”, “En torno a la cultura de los mayas”, “Entre la milpa y la obra” and “La dinámica identaria entre los mayas”

612. Ortega Palma, Albertina, Juan M. Sarricolea Torres, and Jorge Cervantes Martinez. 2008. Genero poder y violencia. El caso de una familia en una comunidad maya rural. Una interpretación desde la historia oral. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1):71-88. 613. Persson, Bodil L. 2000. The Legacy of the Jaguar Prophet: An Exploration of Yucatec Maya Religion and Historiography. Lund: Religionshistorika Avdelningen, Lunds Universitet.

604. Love, Bruce. 2004. Maya Shamanism Today: Connecting With the Cosmos in Rural Yucatan. Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos. 84 p. Author describes six principal types of ritual shamanic practice, include santiguar (simple cleansing), k’eex (payment to the underworld), waajil kool/janli kool (feast of the cornfield), ch’a chaak (bringing rain), and loj kaajtal (taking back the land).

614. Re Cruz, Alicia. 2006. Turismo y migración entre los mayas de Yucatan: las nuevas milpas de Chan Kom. Revista española de antropología américana 36(1):51-164. 615. Restall, Matthew. 2004. Maya ethnogenesis. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 9(1):64-89.

605. Mathews, Jennifer P., and Bethany A Morrison. 2006. Lifeways in the Northern Maya Lowlands: New Approaches to Archaeology in the Yucatan Peninsula. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 272 p. “This book is the first volume to focus entirely on the northern Maya lowlands, presenting a broad cross-section of current research projects in the region by both established and up-and-coming scholars. To address the heretofore unrecognized importance of the northern lowlands in Maya prehistory, the contributors cover key topics relevant to Maya studies: the environmental and historical significance of the region, the archaeology of both large and small sites, the development of agriculture, resource management, ancient politics, and long-distance interaction among sites.”

616. Rivero, Pedro. 2008. Un pueblo maya; apuntes monográficos del municipio de Tixkokob. México: Gobierno Federal, 2008. 141 p. Writings on the Tixkokob region of the Yucatan. Subjects include health, religion, flora and fauna, festivals and local activities. 617. Rodriguez, Timoteo, and Beatriz Reyes-Cortes, eds. 2007. Mayab Bejlae: Yucatan Today: Language, Education, Health, Migration, and Indigeneity. Papers, 96. University of California., Kroeber Anthropological Society. 95 p. Contents include: Timoteo Rodriguez, Contextualizing Mayab Bejlae; ethnos, transethnos, and Iknal (pp. 1-12); Juan Castillo Cocom, Maya scenarios: Indian stories in and out of contexts (pp. 13-35); Anna B. Riberio, Reflections on “Maya scenarios: Indian stories in and out of contexts” (pp. 36-38); Miguel Güemez Pineda, Indigenous language, culture, and human rights in Yucatan (pp. 39-54); Anne Whiteside, “Transnational” Yucatecans and language practices in San Francisco, California: results from a participatory research survey (pp. 55-79); Robin DeLugan, Commentary on “transnational” Yucatatecans and language practices in San Francisco, California: results from a participatory research survey (pp. 80-82); Alberto Pérez Rendon, Reflections on Mayab Bejlae (pp. 83-85); Beatriz Reyes-Cortes, Afterword: Cronicas de San Francisco: a memoir of Mayab Bejlae (pp. 86-91).

606. Medina, Andrés, and Angela Ochoa, eds. 2007. Etnografia de los Confines: Andanzas de Anne Chapman. Mexico: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Contents include: Alicia M. Barabas, Milenarismo y profecia en la etnogenesis de los macehualob de Quintana Roo, Mexico (pp. 163178); Yolotl Gonzalez Torres, Etnografia del maíz: variedades, tipos de suelo y rituales en treinta monografias (pp. 179220). 607. Medina Guzman, María G. V. 2006. Una nueva mirada hacia los Mayas de Yucatan: identidad, cultura y poder. Merida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan. 475 p. 608. Medina Un, Martha, and Teresa Quinones Vega. 2006. Peregrinando por los santuarios de la península de Yucatan. Estudios de cultura maya 27:165-180.

618. Rodriguez Balam, Enrique. 2010. Pan agrio, mana del cielo: etnografia de los pentecostales de Yucatan. Merida: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Yucatán. 182 p. Description and analysis of a Pentecostal community in the Yucatan; covers their economy, conversion practices, home life, world view, healing practices, language, view of the afterlife, and their absorption of Mayan elements, among other religious and everyday facets.

609. Meyers, Allan. 2009. Bullfights in Mayaland: how rural Yucatecans reinvented “Death in the afternoon”. Expedition 51(1):33-40. 610. Mijangos Noh, Juan C. 2006. Educación popular y desarrollo comunitario sustentable: una experiencia con los Mayas de Yucatan. Mexico: FLASCO. 201 p.

619. Rodriguez Cime, Edgar. 2008. Culturas juveniles en el mayab. Merida: El Autor. 168 p. Writings on international 36

64); Florine G. L. Asselbergs, The conquest in images: stories of Tlaxcalteca and Quauhquecholteca conquistadors (pp. 65101); Laura E. Matthew, Whose conquest? Nahua, Zapotec, and Mixteca allies in the conquest of Central America (p. 102126); Robinson A. Herrera, Concubines and wives: reinterpreting Native-intimate unions in sixteenth-century Guatemala (pp. 127-144); John F. Chuchiak, Forgotten allies: the origins and roles of native Mesoamerican auxiliaries and Indios conquistadores in the conquest of Yucatan, 1526-1550 (pp. 175226).

youth movements and their Mexican counterparts in the Yucatan Peninsula. With chapters on beatniks, hippies, hip hop and gangster rap, “rude boys” and ska, Rastafarianism, punk and the Mara Salvatrucha gang. 620. Sullivan, Paul R. 2004. Xuxub Must Die: The Lost Histories of a Murder on the Yucatan. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 260 p. Author examines the peasant uprising of planatation workers in Yucatan. 621. Teran Contreras, Silvia, and Christian H. Rasmussen, eds. 2007. Nohoch libro de la comisaria de Xocen: Documentos del Archivo de la Comisaria de 1930-1999. Merida, Yucatan: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan, 2007. 309 p. Selection of official documents covering everyday topics such as stolen animals, parties, problems with the priest, and broken promises that represent the life of people in Xocen.

632. Navarrete, Fedérico. 2008. Beheadings and massacres: Andean and Mesoamerican representations of the Spanish conquest. RES: Anthropology and Aesthetics 53-54:59-78. 633. Restall, Matthew, and Florine Asselberg. 2007. Invading Guatemala:Spanish, Nahua, and Maya Accounts of the Conquest Wars. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press. 132 p. 634. Restall, Matthew, Losa Sousa, and Kevin Terraciano, eds. 2005. Mesoamerican Voices: Native Language Writings from Colonial Mexico, Yucatan, and Guatemala. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. 265 p. A collection of indigenous-language texts from the colonial period, translated into English. The texts were written from the sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries by Nahuas from central Mexico, Mixtecs from Oaxaca, Maya from Yucatan, and other groups from Mexico and Guatemala. It is the first collection to present the translated writings of so many native groups and to address such a variety of topics, including conquest, government, land, household, society, gender, religion, writing, law, crime, and morality.

ETHNOHISTORY 622. Berdan, Frances F. 2009. Mesoamerican Ethnohistory. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2):211-215. 623. Delgado, Mariano. 2007. Bartolome de Las Casas y las culturas amerindias. Anthropos 102(1):91-97. 624. Galindo Trejo, Jesús, and Orlando Cesares Contreras. 2006. Alienación prehispánica de ciudades coloniales: el posible caso de Merida. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2):559-572. 625. García Bernal, Manuela C. 2006. Campeche y el comercio atlántico yucateco (1561-1625). Campeche: CONACULTA/INAH/Gobierno del Estado de Campeche/Instituto de Cultura de Campeche. 209 p. Includes the following chapters of discussion: “Yucatan y el comercio atlántico”, “El movimiento naval y el complejo portuario Campeche/Sisal” and “Las relaciones comerciales de Yucatan con ultramar”.

635. Rivera Dorado, Miguel. 2003. Razones para una nueva división cronológica de la historia antigua de los mayas. Revista española de antropología américana, volumén extraordinario, pp. 115-125. 636. Solis Robledo, Gabriela. 2005. Entre la tierra y el cielo; religión y sociedad en los pueblos mayas del Yucatan colonial. México: Centro de Investigaciones Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social. 385p. Discussion of the secularization of the Church in Yucatan, Christianity and idolatry, religious charity, and lay religious organizations.

626. García Valgañon, Rocio. 2008. La memoria de los ancianos mayas prehispánicos; historiografia desde una perspectiva de género (siglos XX y XXI). Estudios de cultura maya 32:89-110. 627. Guzman Böckler, Carlos, and Juan-Loup Herbert. 2002. Guatemala: una interpretación histórico-social. Guatemala: Editorial Cholsamaj. 209 p. Republication of a 1970 edition.

Highland Maya 637. Aubry, Andrés. 2004. El templo de San Nicolas de los Morenos: un espacio urbano para los negros de Ciudad Real. Mesoamérica 46:135-151. The renovation of a church in San Cristobal de Las Casas sheds light on the role of blacks. See also Paul Lokken, Genesis de una comunidad afro-indígena en Guatemala: la Villa de San Diego de la Gomera en el siglo XVII (Mesoamérica 29(50):37-65, 2008).

628. Josserand, J. Kathryn, and Nicholas A. Hopkins. 2007. Tila y su Cristo Negro: historia, peregrinación y devoción en Chiapas, Mexico. Mesoamérica 28(49):82-113. 629. Lovell, W. George. 2001. Not a city but a world: Seville and the Indies. Geographical Review 91(1-2):239-251.

638. Benavides Castillo, Antonio. 2004. Un libro sobre género entre los mayas prehispánicos. Investigadores de Mesoamérica 3:66-81.

630. MacLeod, Murdo J. 2008. Nuevas perspectivas sobre la historia colonial de Centroamérica entre 1520 y 1720. Mesoamérica 29(50):159-190.

639. Brewer, Stewart W. 2002. Spanish Imperialism and the Ch'orti' Maya, (1524-1700): Institutional Effects of the Spanish Colonial System on Spanish and Indian Communities in the Corregimiento of Chiquimula de la Sierra, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 303 leaves.

631. Matthew, Laura E., and Michel R. Oudijk, eds. 2007. Indian Conquistadors: Indigenous Allies in the Conquest of Mesoamérica. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 349 p. Contents include: Michel R. Oudijk, and Matthew Restall, Mesoamerican conquistadors in the sixteenth century (pp. 2837

640. Carey, David. 2008. “Hard working, orderly little women”: Mayan vendors and marketplace struggles in earlytwentieth-century Guatemala. Ethnohistory 55(4): 579-608.

652. Laughlin, Robert. 2001. Beware the great horned serpent: insurgencies in Chiapas 1812 and 1994. PARI Journal 2(3):20-27.

641. Carmack, Robert M. 2001. Evolución del reino k’iche’; Kiuk’ulumateajem le k’iche’ab. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. 540 p. Study of the pre-colonial K’iche’ of Utatlan, including historiography, ethnology and ecology, structure and divisions, political centralization, political geography, symbols, archaeological sites, architecture, and post-conquest changes.

653. Lee Whiting, Thomas A. 2001. El camino real de Chiapas a Guatemala: un enlace entre dos pueblos. Arqueología mexicana 9(50):50-55. 654. Lenkersdorf, Gudrun. 2001. Avisos a su Majestad, de la provincia de Chiapa, de fray Juan de los Reyes, guardian, Ciudad Real, a 14 de enero de 1579. Tlalocan 13:169. Author presents a memorial text by a sixteenth-century Franciscan describing changes intoduced into pueblos de indios, election of local indigenous officials, cofradias, construction of churches, and punishments inflicted on the indigenous population. The original manuscript is in Seville at the Archivo General de las Indias, Audiencia de Guatemala, legajo 56.

642. Carmack, Robert M. 2001. Historia social de los k’iche’s: un aporte al rescate de la cultura maya. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. 482 p. Scholarly study of K’iche’ culture from the precolonial period through the late twentieth-century. 643. Cuevas, Roberto. 2001. Hunapuh: la epopeya de un principe maya contra los conquistadores españoles. México: Planeta. 252 p.

655. Lenkersdorf, Gudrun. 2004. Remesal, historiador controvertido. Estudios de cultura maya 25:121-148.

644. De Vos, Jan. 2004. El indígena chiapaneco idealizado: tres aplicaciones del procedimiento lascasiano. Mesoamérica 46:212-226. Author reviews the idealization of the Chiapas Maya through the writings of B. Traven (Ret Marut), and the Zapatistas.

656. Lewis, Stephen E. 2004. La Guerra del posh, 1951-1954: un conflicto decisivo entre el Instituto Nacional Indigenista, el monopolio del alcohol, y el Gobierno del estado de Chiapas. Mesoamérica 46:1111-134. Author suggests that the clash between the Instituto Nacional Indigenista (INI) and the local alcohol monopoly within Chiapas set the precedent for future relations between INI, the state government, and the local indigenous population. See also Stephen E. Lewis, Ambivalent Revolution (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2005), in which author argues that the roots of the Zapatista Rebellion in Chiapas may be found in the 1920s and 1930s when Mexico’s Ministry of Public Education (SEP), struggled to introduce the reforms and institutions of the Mexican revolution in Chiapas.

645. Domingo López, Daniel. 2002. Historia del pueblo maya. Guatemala: Editorial Saqil Tzij. 124 p. Introductory history of the Maya of Guatemala written from an indigenous perspective. 646. Fenner, Justus. 2004. Fuentes para la investigación del siglo XIX en Chiapas. Mesoamérica 46:191-211. Survey of the local, state, national, and international resources available for the study of nineteenth century Chiapas. 647. Gallo Armosino, Antonio. 2001. Los mayas del siglo XVI. Guatemala: Universidad Rafael Landivar. 280 p. Historiographic anthology and portrait of Maya society during the sixteenth-century and its conquest and subordination by the Spanish.

657. Little, Walter E. 2008. A visual political economy of Maya representations in Guatemala, 1931-1944. Ethnohistory 55(4):633-664. 658. Lujan Muñoz, Jorge. 2001. El establecimiento del estanco del tabaco en el reino de Guatemala. Mesoamérica 41:99137.

648. Ganivet, Angel. 2001. La conquista del reino maya. Madrid: Jaguar. 223 p. 649. Garza Caligaris, Anna M. 2004. Comerciantes, matanceras y servientes: genero y legalidad en San Cristobal de Las Casas durante el porfiriato. Mesoamérica 46:27-56. Author examines master-servant relationships, and the legal practices surrounding them in Chiapas at the end of the nineteenth century.

659. MacLeod, Murdo J. 2003. Indian confraternity lands in colonial Guatemala, 1650-1730: some uses and trends. Ethnohistory 50(1):151-160. 660. Matthew, Laura E. 2004. Neither and Both: The Mexican Indian Conquistadors of Colonial Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 240 leaves.

650. Hill, Robert M. 2001. Los Kaqchikeles de la época colonial: adaptaciones de los mayas del altiplano al gobierno español, 1600-1700. South Woodstock: Plumsock Mesoamérican Studies; Cholsamaj. 223 p.

661. Palomo Infante, María D. 2004. Tiempos de secularización: iglesia y cofradías en Chiapas a partir de 1856. Mesoamérica 46:153-172. Author examines the impact of the Reform Laws and the anti-clerical climate after the 1850s on the Church and cofradias (indigenous brotherhoods).

651. Köhler, Ulrich, and Miguel López Comate. 2001. La reforma agraria de Lázaro Cardenás en los altos de Chiapas; un relato en Tzotzil de San Pedro Chenalho. Tlalocan 13:183198. The transcription of an oral account of the dismantling of haciendas in San Pedro Chenalho for the benefit of the local Tzotzil Maya.

662. Reeves, Rene. 2006. Ladinos with Ladinos, Indians with Indians: Land, Labor, and the Regional Ethnic Conflict in the Making of Guatemala. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 249 p. 38

18(1):1-20. Author suggests that the scribes responsible for translating the Biblical Genesis into Maya were interested in relating it to concepts that would be culturally meaningful.

663. Rus, Jan. 2004. Revoluciones contenidas: los indígenas y la lucha por los altos de Chiapas, 1910-1925. Mesoamérica 46:57-85. Author examines variability within struggles of highland Maya of Chiapas in early twentieth century.

675. Castillo Rocha, Carmen. 2001. Ser de Tixkokob. Temas antropológicos 23(2):287-313.

664. Sanchiz Ochoa, Pilar. 2004. Matrifocalidad en la periferia de San Cristobal de Las Casas: una via para el desarrollo e igualdad entre las mujeres indígenas chiapanecas. Mesoamérica 46:173-190. Examination of newly formed matrifocal family units on the periphery of San Cristobal de Las Casas caused by the 1994 Zapatista uprising.

676. Castro, Ines de. 2007. Cantones y comandantes: una visión diferente de la Guerra de Castas desde la region de los pacíficos del sur. Campeche: Universidad Autónoma de Campeche. 176 p. History of the Mayan wars and military action in the Yucatan Peninsula, 1847 - 1905.

665. Suñe Blanco, Beatriz. 2003. Documentación primaria y crónicas historicas: efectos de las circunstancias en la versión de los hechos. Revista española de antropología américana, volumén extraordinario, pp. 177-184. Historical analysis of the veracity of an mid-sixteenth century account by Antonio de Remesal of conflict between an indigenous caciques and Dominican friars.

677. Chavez Gomez, Jose M. A. 2003. En busca del maiz perdido: la sublevación itza de 1699. Mexicon 25(1):16-23. Analysis of the 1699 rebellion during which the Itza refused to accept Spanish hegemony because the katun 8 Ahau ruled the time. 678. Chuchiak, John F. 2000. The Indian Inquisition and the Extirpation of Idolatry: The Process of Punishment in the Provisorato de Indios of the Diocese of Yucatan, 1563-1812. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 589 leaves.

666. Toledo Tello, Sonia. 2004. Las fincas de Simojovel, Chiapas: relaciones de género en un mundo jerarquico, 19001975. Mesoamérica 46:186-109. Explores some of the forms of domination between men and women on fincas of Simojovel, Chiapas.

679. Chuchiak, John F. 2007. The sins of the fathers: Franciscan friars, parish priests, and the sexual conquest of the Yucatec Maya, 1545-180. Ethnohistory 54(1):69-128.

667. Washbrook, Sarah. 2004. Indígenas, exportación y enganche en el norte de Chiapas, 1876-1911. Mesoamérica 46:1-25.

680. Dornan, Jennifer L. 2004. “Even By Night We Only Become Aware They Are Killing Us”: Agency, Identity, and Intentionality at San Pedro, Belize (1857-1930). Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 237 leaves.

668. Yamase, Shinji. 2002. History and Legend of the Colonial Maya of Guatemala. Latin American Studies, 20. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press. 306 p. Revised publication of Shinji Yamase, History and Legend: An Exploration of Native Guatemalan Text (Doctoral dissertation, University of Essex, 2001).

681. Fallaw, Ben. 2008. Bartolomí García Correa and the politics of Maya identity in postrevolutionary Yucatan, 1911-1933. Ethnohistory 55(4):523-578. 682. Ferrer Muñoz, Manuel. 2001. Los comienzos de la educación universitaria en Yucatan. Temas antropológicos 23(2):267-285. Merida.

Lowland Maya 669. Acuña, Rene. 2001. Literatura maya, inédita y publicada, hasta 1578: testimonio del obispo fray Diego de Landa. Estudios de cultura maya 21:165-179.

683. Fialko, Vilma. 2003. Domingo Fajardo: vicario y defensor de indios en Petén, 1795-1828. Mayab 16:72-77.

670. Barjau, Luis, ed. 2006. Etnohistoria: visión alternative del tiempo. Mexico: CONACULTA. Contents include: Sergio Quezada, Los mayas y la Real Hacienda en Yucatan, siglos XVI-VIII (pp. 213-220); Lourdes Suarez Diaz, Trompetas de caracol marino en las fuentes escritas (pp. 61-76).

684. Gill, Christopher J. 2001. The Intimate Life of the Family: Patriarchy and the Liberal Project in Yucatan, Mexico, 1860-1915. Doctoral dissertation, Yale University. 410 leaves.

671. Bartolome, Miguel A. 2001. El derecho a la autonomia de los maasewalo'ob. Temas antropológicos 23(1):130-159.

685. Gonthier, Karine. 2001. Mouvement paysan maya de 1847 au Yucatan: regard historiographique sur les origines de la guerre des castes. M.A. thesis, Universite Laval (Canada). 155 leaves.

672. Bracamonte y Soza, Pedro. 2001. Conquista inconclusa de Yucatan; los mayas de La Montaña, 1560-1680. México: M. A. Porrua/CIESAS. 385 p. Historical investigation of the Maya groups in the La Montaña region of Campeche during the early colonial period; includes information on the ecclesiastical missions and their work.

686. Hanson, Craig A. 2008. The Late Mesoamerican Village. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 1706 leaves. 687. Howe, Kate. 2002. Accommodating the Faithful: San Bernardino de Sena and the Franciscan Program in SixteenthCentury Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, The Florida State University. 496 leaves.

673. Breuer, Kimberly H. 2004. Reshaping the Cosmos: Maya Society on the Yucatecan Frontier. Doctoral dissertation, Vanderbilt University. 350 leaves. 674. Bricker, Victoria R. 2002. The Mayan uinal and the Garden of Eden. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 39

701. Rugeley, Terry, ed. 2001. Maya Wars: Ethnographic Accounts from Nineteenth-Century Yucatan. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 224 p. A collection of documents devoted to nineteenth-century Yucatec Maya, including writings by priests, missionaries, Hispanic officials and military officers, and the Maya. It follows the Maya through the early national republic, the mid-century Caste War (1847-1901), the period of French imperialism (18641867), and the monoculture of the century’s final two decades.

688. Izquierdo y de la Cueva, Ana L. 2003. Tabasco: parteaguas del descubrimiento y conquista de Mexico. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):52-57. 689. Lentz, Mark W. 2009. Assassination in Yucatan: Crime and Society, 1792-1812. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 332 leaves. 690. Ligorred Perramon, Francesc. 2001. Mayas y coloniales; apuntes etnoliterarios para el Yucatan del siglo XVI. Merida: Maldonado. 153 p. Analysis of the poetic and ethnic function of Maya writing during the colonial period.

702. Ruz, Mario H. 2004. Los esclavos del Santísimo Sacramento: dos siglos de religiosidad campechana (1745-1914). Estudios de cultura maya 25:169-218.

691. Lincoln, Elena K. 2000. Yucatec Maya Marriage and Political Alliances. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 519 leaves.

703. Santiago Pacheco, Edgar A. 2001. Diferenciación social y estratificación etnica en el Yucatan colonial, su reflejo en la Orden Franciscana. Temas antropológicos 23(2):243-266.

692. Macias Zapata, Gabriel A. 2002. La península fracturada: conformación maritima, social y forestal del territorio federal de Quintana Roo. 1884-1902. México: Miguel Angel Porrua.

704. Solari, Amara L. 2007. Maya Spatial Biographies in Communal Memory and Cosmic Time: The Franciscan Evangelical Campaign of Itzmal, Yucatan. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara. 343 leaves.

693. Miranda Ojeda, Pedro. 2001. Las comisarias inquisitoriales de Yucatan. Temas antropológicos 23(1):36-80.

705. Sweeney, Lean. 2006. La supervivencia de los bandidos; los mayas icaiches y la politica fronteriza del sureste de la peninsula de Yucatan, 1847-1904. Merida: UNAM: Coordinación de Humanidades, Unidad Académica de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades. 214p. Topics considered include “La Dependencia Económica y Política del Gobierno Yucateco en el Apoyo de la Sociedad 'Barbara' del Sureste. Antecedentes e Inicios”, “Nuevo Contexto y Nuevos Actores Politicos: Los Bandidos Patrioticos” and “Los Icaiches y la Lucha por el Control Territorial, 1880-1904.”

694. Nichols, Christopher M. 2003. Solares in Tekax: the impact of the sugar industry on a nineteenth-century Yucatecan town. Ethnohistory 50(1):161-190. 695. Ochoa, Lorenzo, and Patricia Martel, eds. 2002. Lengua y cultura mayas. México: UNAM: Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas. 170 p. Seven studies on Mayan lineage, Maya colonial literature, Itzamcab, and other themes. 696. Ortiz Yam, Ines. 2001. Comunidad. Mulmenyah y patrimonio colectivo en Yucatan, siglo XVI. Temas antropológicos 23(2):213-232.

706. Tiesler Blos, Vera. 2001. La muerte del general Bernardino Cen, lider de la Guerra de castas. Asentamientos coloniales en la costa de Quintana Roo. Temas antropológicos 23(1):83-99.

697. Peniche Moreno, Paola. 2007. Ambitos del parentesco: la socidad maya en tiempos de la colonia. México: Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social/Miguel Angel Porrua, (Colección Peninsular, Serie Estudios, Antropología). Includes the following chapters: “Matrimonio indígena en el entorno colonial”, “Grupos residenciales de parentesco y localidad entre los mayas yucatecos de los siglos XVI y XVIII” and “Organización política, sucesión y parentesco” 375. Quezada, Sergio. 2001. Tributos, limosnas, y mantas en Yucatan, siglo XV. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(1):7378.

707. Vargas Pacheco, Ernesto. 2001. El viaje de Cortes a Las Hibueras. Arqueología mexicana 9(49):58-61. 708. Victoria Ojeda, Jorge. 2007. Piratas en Yucatan. Merida: Editorial Area Maya. 94 p. History of pirates in the Yucatan Peninsula. Includes illustrations of pirate boats, four portraits of notable pirates and several maps. Indigenous Documents 709. Palma-Ramos, Danilo. 2002. Literatura indígena antigua de Guatemala: la leyenda de Tecum. Guatemala: Universidad Rafael Landivar, Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas y Sociales. 92 p. Analysis of indigenous texts of Guatemala, with an emphasis on the legend of Tecum.

698. Ramirez Aznar, Luis. 2001. De piratas y corsarios; la pirateria en la península de Yucatan. Merida: Universidad de Yucatan. 225 p. A study of the history of pirates and piracy in the Yucatan peninsula. 699. Repetto Tio, Beatriz. 2001. Demografía de un pueblo colonial maya-yucateco: Maxcanu (1682-1782). Temas antropológicos 23(2):233-242.

710. Recinos, Adrian, ed. 2001. Crónicas indígenas de Guatemala. Guatemala: Academia de Geografía e Historia de Guatemala. 186 p. Republication of a 1957 compilation of sixteenth-century documents, or titulos, in which K’iche’ leaders were allowed to petition the Spanish crown for lost privileges.

700. Rocher Salas, Adriana. 2004. Entre el cordón de San Francisco y la corona de San Pedro; la administración parroquial en Yucatan. Estudios de cultura maya 25:149-168.

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Calepino de Motul 711. Lema, Rose. 2002. Los 'dialogos' del Calepino de Motul: exploraciones en la historiografía de la otredad. München: Lincom Europa. 231 p. Originally presented as the author's doctoral dissertation at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma, Mexico, 1998.

University. 548 p. Yucatec Mayan and English in parallel columns.

Calkini Chronicle 712. Okoshi Harada, Tsubasa, 2009. Codice de Calkini. Fuentes Para el Estudio de la Cultura Maya, 20. Mexico: UNAM: Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas. Introduction, transcription, translation and notes, as well as photographic plates of facsimiles.

722. Boone, Elizabeth H., ed. 2005. Painted Books and Indigenous Knowledge in Mesoamerica: Manuscript Studies in Honor of Mary Elizabeth Smith. Middle American Research Institute, Tulane University, Publication 69. 459 p. The volume, an homage to Mary Elizabeth Smith, contains twentyfive essays that focus on the art and intellectual culture of ancient Mesoamerica as that culture is revealed primarily in painted books or “codices” of the native tradition. The authors explore aspects of indigenous knowledge, such as religion and ritual, calendrical systems, rulership, and spatial and historical reckoning.

Codices 721. Batalla Rosado, Juan J. 2008. Los codices mesoaméricanos: métodos de estudio. Itineratios 8:43-66.

Canek Manuscript 713. Bracamonte y Sosa, Pedro, and Gabriela Solis Robleda. 2005. Rey Canek: Documentos sobre la sublevación maya de 1761. Mexico: UNAM, 302 p. Un “conjunto de documentos inéditos mas importantes que da cuenta de ese acontecimiento y de la conmoción que causó entre los grupos sociales del Yucatan de finales de la colonia.”

723. Fahsen, Federico, and Daniel Matu. 2007. Los Codices de Dresde, Paris y Grolier/Ri Mayatz'ib' k'o Dresde, Paris xuquje' ri Xk'ut pa Grolier. Guatemala: Publicaciones Liga Maya Guatemala. 193 p.

Cantares de Dzitbalche 714. Najera Coronado, Martha I. 2004. Hacia una nueva lectura de Los Cantares de Dzitbalche. Mayab 17:99-114. Analysis of religious expressions found in the 15 songs of the Cantares.

724. León-Portilla, Miguel. 2003. Codices: los antiguos libros del Nuevo Mundo. Mexico: Aguilar, Altea, Taurus, Alfaguara. 335 p. A general introduction, in Spanish, of the study of Mesoamerican codices.

715. Najera Coronado, Martha Ilia. 2007. Los Cantares de Dzitbalche en la tradición religiosa mesoaméricana. México: UNAM: Coordinación de Humanidades/Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas. 184 p. “Este libro presenta, desde la pespectiva de la historia comparada de las religiones, nuevos analisis, recontextualización, regrupación e interpretación de una de las mas bellas obras poeticas de los mayas, los cantares de Dzitbalche”.

725. Seler, Eduard. 2008. Las imagenes de animales en los manuscritos mexicanos y mayas. 2a ed. Mexico: Casa Juan Pablos, 350 p. Translation of original German edition: “Die Tierbilder en den mexikanischen und den maya Handschriften, en Gesammelte Abhandlungen zur Amerikanischen Sprach- und Altertumskunde,” 1909-1910. 726. Sotelo Santos, Laura E. 2001. Los dioses-dias parlantes: hacia un sistema de adivinación en los almanaques de los codices mayas. Estudios de cultura maya 21:147-163.

Chilam Balam 716. Hirons, Amy G. 2004. The Discourse of Translation in Culture Contact: The Story of Suhuy Teodora, An Analysis of European Literary Borrowings in the Books of Chilam Balam. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 189 leaves.

727. Vail, Gabrielle. 2002. Haab' rituals in the Maya codices and the structures of Maya almanacs; Rituales haab' en los codices mayas, y la estructura de almanaques mayas. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing, 52. Washington, DC: Center for Maya Research.

717. Tschohl, Peter. 2003. Zuhuy Th(?)eodora-doncella T(h)eodor; al-gariya Tudur; al-gariya Tawaddud; de un cuento mayance en los libros siglo XVII hasta las raices bizantinas y biblicas de un cuento en las 1001 Noches, Part 1. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 19(2):162-220.

728. Vail, Gabrielle. 2006. The Maya codices. Annual Review of Anthropology 35:497-519.

Chilam Balam of Chumayel 718. Davoust, Michel. 2002. Les migrations des Itzas et de Hunac Ceel dans le Chilam Balam de Chumayel et la géographie politique du nord Yucatan classique et postclassique (VIIIeme et XIIIeme siecle). Mayab 15:61-78.

Codex Chugüila 729. Benitez, Henry. 2004. Un manuscrito maya del periodo colonial: Codice Chugüila. Guatemala: Dirección General de Investigación de la Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. 30 p.

Chilam Balam of Ixil 719. Mayer, Karl H. 2002. Zodiac sign in the Book of Chilam Balam of Ixil. Mexicon 24(2):22.

Codex Dresden 730. Bricker, Harvey M., Anthony F. Aveni, and Victoria R. Bricker. 2001. Ancient Maya documents concerning the movements of Mars. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States 98(4):2107. A large part of the pre-Columbian Maya book known as the Dresden Codex is concerned with an exploration of relationships among celestial cycles and their relationship to other, nonastronomical cycles. As has long been known, pages 43b-45b of the Codex are

Chilam Balam of Kaua 720. Bricker, Victoria R., and Helga-Maria Miram. 2002. An Encounter of Two Worlds: The Book of Chilam Balam of Kaua. Middle American Research Institute, Publication, 68. New Orleans: Middle American Research Institute, Tulane 41

739. Codice de Madrid. Tz'ib' rech Madrid: Codex TroCortesianus. Mexico: Consejo Nacional de Educación Maya, 2007. 140 p.

concerned with the synodic cycle of Mars. New work reported here with another part of the Codex, a complex table on pages 69-74, reveals a concern on the part of the ancient Maya astronomers with the sidereal motion of Mars as well as with its synodic cycle. Two kinds of empiric sidereal intervals of Mars were used, a long one (702 days) that included a retrograde loop and a short one that did not. The use of these intervals, which is indicated by the documents in the Dresden Codex, permitted the tracking of Mars across the zodiac and the relating of its movements to the terrestrial seasons and to the 260-day sacred calendar. While Kepler solved the sidereal problem of Mars by proposing an elliptical heliocentric orbit, anonymous but equally ingenious Maya astronomers discovered a pair of time cycles that not only accurately described the planet's motion, but also related it to other cosmic and terrestrial concerns.

740. Graff, Don, and Gabrielle Vail. 2001. Censers and stars: issues in the dating of the Madrid Codex. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 17(1):58-95. 741. Paxton, Merideth. 2001. The Cosmos of the Yucatec Maya: Cycles and Steps from the Madrid Codex. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 242 p. 742. Paxton, Merideth. 2004. The uinal in the Books of Chilam Balam and interpretation of pages 76-75 of the Madrid Codex. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 20(2):113139. Author argues that the 18 footprints in the corners of the diagram of the Masya universe on pages 76-75 of the Madrid Codex represent the apparent motion of the Sun God as he defines the world directions during the solar cycle of the haab.

731. Davoust, Michel. 1997. Un nouveau commentaire du Codex de Dresde: Codex hiéroglyphique maya du XIVème siècle. Paris: CNRS. 336 p.

743. Sotelo Santos, Laura E. 2002. Los dioses del Codice Madrid; aproximación a las representaciones antropomorfas de un libro sagrado maya. Madrid: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico. 212 p.

732. Grofe, Michael J. 2007. The Serpent Series: Precession in the Maya Dresden Codex. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Davis. 356 leaves. 733. Kumatzim wuj jun; Codice de Dresde. Guatemala: Editorial Cholsamaj, 2001. 39-panel screenfold color facsimile (12x24 cm) printed on heavy coated stock in board portfolio; from the originals of the 1887 facsimile edition.

744. Vail, Gabrielle, and Anthony F. Aveni, eds. 2004. The Madrid Codex: New Approaches to Understanding an Ancient Maya Manuscript. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 426 p. Contents include: Gabrielle Vail, and Anthony Aveni, Research methodologies and new approaches to interpreting the Madrid Codex (pp. 1-32); Harvey M. Bricker, The paper patch on page 56 of the Madrid Codex (pp. 33-56); John F. Chuchiak, Papal bulls, extirpators, and the Madrid Codex: the content of probable provenience of the M.56 patch (pp. 57-88); Merideth Paxton, Tayasal origin of the Madrid Codex: further consideration of the theory (pp. 89-130); Gabrielle Vail, and Anthony Aveni, Maya calendrics and dates: interpreting the calendrical structure of Maya almanacs (pp. 131-146); Anthony Aveni, Intervallic structure and cognate almanacs in the Madrid and Dresden codices (pp. 147-170); Gabrielle Vail, and Victoria R. Bricker, Haab dates in the Madrid Codex (pp. 171-214); Gabrielle Vail, A reinterpretation of tzolk’in almanacs in the Madrid Codex (pp. 215-254); Bryan R. Just, In extensor almanacs in the Madrid Codex (pp. 255-276); Christine Hernández, and Victoria R. Bricker, The inauguration of planting in the Borgia and Madrid codices (pp. 277-320); Christine Hernández, “Yearbearer pages” and their connection to planting almanacs in the Borgia Codex (pp. 321-366); John M. D. Pohl, Screenfold manuscripts of highland Mexico and their possible influence on Codex Madrid: a summary (pp. 367-414).

734. Siarkiewicz, Elzbieta. 2001. The solar year and the Dresden codex. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 17(2):136-159. Codex Grolier 735. Baudez, Claude F. 2002. Venus and the Codex Grolier. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):98-102. Spanish translation: Venus y el Codice Grolier. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):7079, 2002. Author questions the authenticity of the Codex Grolier. 736. Milbrath, Susan. 2002. New questions concerning the authenticity of the Grolier Codex. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 18(1):50-83. Author suggests the Codex Grolier is a forgery because it falls outside the tenets of Postclassic Mesoamerican art styles, possesses numerous iconographic irregularities, and the fresh appearance of the paint suggests a recent origin. 737. Ruvalcaba, José L., Sandra Zetina, Helena Calzo del Castillo, Elsa Arroyo, Eumelia Hernández, Marie Van Der Meeren, and Laura Sotelo. 2008. The Grolier Codex: A Non Destructive Study of a Possible Maya Document Using Imaging and Ion Beam Techniques. In Materials issues in art and archaeology VIII. Pamela B. Vandiver, Blythe McCarthy, Robert H. Tykot, Jose Luis Ruvalcaba-Sil, and Francesco Casadio, eds. pp. 299-306 Symposia Proceedings, 1047. Warrendale, PA: Materials Research Society.

745. Vail, Gabrielle, and Anthony Aveni. 2008. El Codice Madrid; un viejo documento revela nuevos secretos. Arqueología 16(93):74-83. 746. Vail, Gabrielle, Victoria R. Bricker, Anthony F. Aveni, Harvey M. Bricker, John F. Chuchiak, Christine L. Hernández, Bryan R. Just, Martha J. Macri, and Merideth Paxton. 2003. New perspectives on the Madrid Codex. Current Anthropology 44:S105-S112. Report on two workshops held at Tulane University on June 22-24, 2001, and February 28-March 2, 2002, addressing the theme” Issues in the Provenience and Dating of the Madrid Codex.” The

Codex Madrid 738. Ciaramella, Mary A. 2002. The bee-keepers in the Madrid Codex; Los apicultores en el Codice de Madrid. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing, 52. Washington, DC: Center for Maya Research. 42

digital restoration endeavors and exhibitions. Texts in Spanish and English.

sessions examined claims by Coe and Kerr and others that the Codex Madrid is a post-conquest manuscript painted in the vicinity of Tayasal.

Memorial de Solola 755. Contreras R., J. Daniel, and Jorge Lujan Muñoz. 2004. El Memorial de Solola y los inicios de la colonización española en Guatemala. Guatemala: Academia de Geografía e Historia de Guatemala. 102 p.

Codex Paris 747. Love, Bruce. 208. Códice Paris. Arqueología 16(93):6673. Codex Prague 748. Böhm, Bohumil, and Vladimir Böhm. 2003. Preliminary report on the analysis of the Prague Codex deposited in the collections of Naprstek’s Museum in Prague. Annals of the Naprstek Museum 24:1-12. Authors argue that codex in Prague is “an original of exceptional significance” and not a fabrication as first suggested by Cestmir Loukotka in 1956.

756. Kiwujil kaqchikela. Guatemala: Comunidad Lingüistica Kaqchikel, 2001. 116 p. Version in Kaqchikel of the Memorial de Tecpan Atitlan/Annals of the Cakchiquels. 757. Lutz, Christopher H., and James Mondloch. 2002. Una elegia kaqchikel: evaluación del Memorial de Solola. Mesoamérica 44:151-173. Authors provide a review of the recently published Memorial de Solola, edición facsimilar del manuscrito original (Guatemala: Comisión Interuniversitaria de Conmemoración del Quinto Centenario del Descubrimiento de América, 1999). Christopher H. Lutz, Una perspectiva etnohistórica (pp. 151-160), and James Mondloch, Una perspectiva lingüística (pp. 161-173).

Herrera Manuscript 749. Gubler, Ruth. 2005. An Eighteenth-Century Herbal: Book of Very Reliable Remedies For Curing various Ailments With Well-Proven and beneficial Plants From This Province of Yucatan. Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos. 206 p. 750. Herrera, Juan P. de. 2001. Herrera Manuscript: Relación de las cosas y sus nombres de esta provincia del Yucal-Peten. Ruth Gubler and David Bolles, eds. Colección Américana, 2. Hannover: Verlag für Ethnologie. 284 p. Transcription of an early eighteenth-century manuscript found in the Biblioteca Crescencio Carrillo y Ancona in Merida. The original title reads: “Relasción de cosas e sus nonhes desta Provincia del yucal-petem; con una relasion de voces e modos de los yndios nathurales destas therras del mar osceano e un devotho Chatechismo para la ensenancas de yndios inpheles e varvaros en la sachrathisima religion de Nuestro Señor Gesus crusaichado e de su santissima madre la Virgen María.” The document concerns a catechism for the instruction of the Indians, a vocabulary attributed to Fr. Juan de Herrera, a small botanical section of medicinal plants and their uses, some historical material relating to the activities of Herrera and Diego de Landa, and ethnographic information on the Yucatec Maya.

758. Maxwell, Judith M., and Robert M. Hill, trans. 2006. Kaqchikel Chronicles: The Definitive Edition; With Translation and Exegesis. Austin: University of Texas Press. 800 p. First English language translation of the Annals of the Kaqchikels and of the Xpantzay Cartulary. These documents trace Kaqchikel history from their legendary departure from Tollan/Tula through their migrations, wars, the Spanish invasion, and the first century of Spanish colonial rule. 759. Smith, Timothy J. 2002. Skipping years and scribal errors: Kaqchikel Maya timekeeping in the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):65-76. Author adjusts Adrian Recinos's correlation of Kaqchikel Maya and Spanish dates in the Memorial de Tecpan Atitlan/Annals of the Cakchiquels and extends it from 1570 to 1603.

Lienzo de Quauhquecholan 751. Akkeren, Ruud van. 2002. Lugar del cangrejo o Caracol: la fundación de Rab'inal-Tequicistlan, Guatemala. Mesoamérica 44:54-81, 2002. Argues that part of the Lienzo de Quauhquecholan describes a military campaign into Verapaz and the Cuchumatanes by way of Rab'inal.

760. Weeks, John M., and Jane A. Hill. 2003. University of Pennsylvania digitizes Annals of the Cakchiquels. Mexicon 25(6):150. Notice of the digitization of the original transcript by Charles Etienne Brasseur de Bourbourg of the Annals of the Cakchiquels at http:// dewey.library. upenn. edu/sceti/co dex/public/ PageLevel/ index. cfm?WorkID = 839.

752. Akkeren, Ruud Van. 2007. La Visión indígena de la conquista. Guatemala: CIRMA. 147 p.

Paxbolon Papers 761. Sanz Gonzalez, Mariano. 2003. El preclitico a- en Los Papeles de Paxbolon. Revista española de antropología américana 33:121-132.

753. Asselbergs, Florine. 2002. La conquista de Guatemala: nuevas perspectivas del Lienzo de Quauhquecholan en Puebla, Mexico. Mesoamérica 44:1-53. Lienzo de Quauhquecholan provides a Mexican view of the conquest of Guatemala.

Popol Vuh 762. Akkeren, Ruud van. 2003. Authors of the Popol Wuj. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(2):237-256.

754. Quauhquechollan: el lienzo de la conquista; Exploraciones sobre la historia; A Chronicle of Conquest; Explorations on History. Guatemala: Universidad Francisco Marroquin/Banco G&T Continental, 2007. 89 p. Large-format exploration of the Conquest in Guatemala, through indigenous codices. With numerous color photo samples; analyzing characters and their symbolic meanings. Chronicles events in codices section by section, and includes of and information on

763. Chavez, Adrian I. 2001. Ensayos sobre el Pop Wuj: libro sagrado de los Mayas. Guatemala: Ministerio de Educación. 172 p. Collection of essays on the history and other aspects of the Popol Vuh; contents include: Adrian I. Chavez, El Pop Wuj del pueblo Ki-che (pp. 7-18); Rafael Rodriguez Diaz, Introducción al mundo mágico del Popol Vuh (pp. 19-68); Rafael Girard, Esoterismo del Popol-Vuh (pp. 69-90); Tatiana Goncharova, Acerca de la tipología de los motivos mitológi43

cos del Popol Vuh (pp. 91-120); Jose Maya Gavidia, Dios y cosmos (pp. 121-138); Nahum Megged, Perspectiva filosofico-terapeutica en el mito del Popol Vuh (pp. 139-172).

776. Pop u'j; k'ulb'il yol tu b'a'aj tektiteka. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 134 p. Popol Vuh in Tektiteka.

764. Christenson, Allen J. 2003. Popol Vuh: The Sacred Book of the Maya; The Great Classic of Central American Spirituality, Translated From the Original Maya Text. Winchester, U.K.; New York: O Books. 327 p.

777. Pop Wooh; Popol Vuh, le livre du temps; Histoire sacrée des Mayas quichés. Pierre DesRuisseaux and Daisy Amaya, trans. Bordeaux: Castor Astrla; Montreal: Triptyque. 249 p. 778. Popo wuj; poema mito-historico k'i-che'; traducción directa del manuscrito por Adrian I. Chavez. Quezaltenango: Centro de Estudios Mayas (TIMACH), 2001. 105 p.

765. Ch’ul vun yu’un maya k’iche’etik ta bats’I k’op; isjelubtasik ta bats’I k’op. 2009. Adrian Recinos, Mariano Sanchez Pérez, Marcelina Petrona Pérez Vázquez, and Alfonso Miguel Jasso Flores, trans. Tuxtla Gutierrez: Consejo Estatal Para las Culturas y las Artes de Chiapas. 346 p. Bilingual version of the sacred Mayan text, Popul Vuh. Includes pencil illustrations throughout. With the following sections: “La Creación del Mundo y los Intentos de Hacer a los Seres Humanos”, “Las Aventuras Mitológicas de los Dioses Gemelos Hunahpu e Ixbalanque”, “Origen del Pueblo K'iche” and “Organización del Pueblo K'iche”. Tzotzil-Español.

779. Pop Wuj. 2008. Adrian I. Chavez, trans. Acuarelas de Diego Rivera. Mexico: CONACULTA: INAH. 312 p. Bilingual, Spanish and K'iche' version of the sacred Mayan creation text, “Popul Vuh”; With watercolor paintings by internationally acclaimed Mexican muralist, Diego Rivera, (18861957). On margin of front cover: “Versión directa del K'iche' del Libro de los acontecimientos, o Libro del tiempo, tambien conocido como Popol Vuh”.

766. Guillen Villalobos, José. 2002. El Popol Wuj: gloria y esplendor de un pueblo: una interpretación del mito kiche. Guatemala: Litografia Comgráfica. 203 p. Analysis and interpretation of the Popol Vuh. 767. López, Carlos M. 2007. The Popol Vuh in Ayer MS 1515 is a holograph by Father Ximenez. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 23(2):112-141.

780. Popol Vuh; The Book of the Ancient Maya. Delia Goetz, and Sylvanus G. Morley, eds. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2003. Originally published: The Book of the People. Los Angeles: Printed for the Members of the Limited Editions Club at the Plantin Press, 1954. Translated by Delia Goetz and Sylvanus Griswold Morley from Adrian Recinos's translation from K’iche’ into Spanish; illustrated by Everett Gee Jackson.

768. Pohp huuj (re' wili I kihuuj cho tape qamaam, qatit): q'orb'al poqomchi. Guatemala: Academia de lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2000. 152 p. Popol Vuh in Poqomchi.

781. Popol wuj: pa k'iche' chi' ch'aba'al. Guatemala: Academia de lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2000. 157 p. Popol Vuh in K’iche’.

769. Pojp jun; morwa'r ojroner ch'orti'. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 141 p. Popol Vuh in Ch'orti'.

782. Popol wuj; kaqchikel cholchi'. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 140 p. Popol Vuh in Kaqchikel.

770. Poop juuj: lok' q'orb'al poqomam. Guatemala: Academia de lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 156 p. Popol Vuh in Poqomam.

783. Quiroa, Nestor I. 2002. The 'Popol Vuh' and the Dominican Friar Francisco Ximenez: The Maya-Quiche Narrative as a Product of Religious Extirpation in Colonial Highland Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 102 leaves.

771. Poop wuuj: tujaal tziij sakapulteko. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 177 p. Popol Vuh in Sacapultec.

784. Tedlock, Dennis. 2002. How to drink chocolate from a skull at a wedding banquet. Res: Anthropology and Aesthetics 42:166-179. “Part of a special issue presenting papers delivered at the conference “West by Nonwest,” celebrating the 50th anniversary of pre-Columbian art history, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, January 10-12, 2000. The authors of the Popol Vuh give clues to their identity when they show an interest in some particular topic, going into detail or making a sudden digression. The first time their hand is revealed is when they come to a scene in which the parents of One and Seven Hunahpu act as ajq'ijl, or “daykeepers,” performing a divination. However, it is in the matter of drinking from a calabash (it was customary to drink cacao from hollowed-out calabashes among peoples ranging all the way from central Mexico to Panama) that the anonymous authors of the Popol Vuh really give their identity away, and they speak like a master of ceremonies at weddings at which the reader becomes a guest. The writer discusses in more detail the drinking of chocolate from calabashes at weddings in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.”

772. Poopol wuuj; Popol vuh; K'ichee'-Español. Guatemala: Piedra Santa; Academia de las Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala. 254 p. “Introduccion, versión en español y vocabulario, Albertina Saravia E.; traducción al idioma k’ichee’ contemporaneo, Juan R. Guarchaj.” 773. Pop hum; skonhob'al ab'xub'al popti'. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 160 p. Popol Vuh in Popti. 774. Pop hu'um: smakb'enal sti' chonhab' chuj. Guatemala: Academia de lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2000. 193 p. Popol Vuh in Chuj. 775. Pop u'j; k'ulb'il yol mam. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. Popol Vuh in Mam.

44

Archivo General de Centroamérica; Museo Popol Vuh de la Universidad Francisco Marroquin. 3 v. Includes extracts of colonial documents held by the regional archives in Guatemala; v.1. Años 1567 a 1648; 2. Años 1543-1659; 3. Años 1538-1657.

785. Vela, Enrique. 2007. Popol Vuh; el libro sagrado de los mayas. Arqueología mexicana 15(88):42-50. 786. Villacorta C., J. Antonio, and Flavio Rodas N. 1927. Manuscrito de Chichicastenango (Popol Buj). Guatemala: Sanchez & de Guise. 416 p. Full-text with searching capability: http://libtext. library. wisc.edu/cgi-bin/IbrAmerTxt/ IbrAmerTxt-idx?type =header&byte =588799&q1= &q2=&q3=

797. Feldman, Lawrence H. 2004. A Dictionary of Poqom Maya in the Colonial Era. Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos. 274 p. Author presents a transcription of Moran’s “Bocabulario de solo los nombres de la lengua Pokoman” (1720) and the Pokom to Spanish portion of “Diccionario pocomchicastellano y pocomchi de San Cristobal Cahcoh” (n.d.).

787. Woodruff, John M. 2009. The “Most Futile and Vain” Work of Father Francisco Ximenez: Rethinking the Context of Popol Vuh. Doctoral dissertation, University of Alabama. 136 leaves.

798. Landa, Diego de. 2007. An Account of the Things of Yucatan; Written by the bishop of Yucatan, based on the oral traditions of the ancient Mayas. Mexico: Monclem Ediciones. 174 p. Originally “written between 1563 and 1572, by a Franciscan friar (1524-1579) who arrived Yucatan shortly after the Conquest, and obtained his information from Indians and conquistadores through direct interviews” (cover). Translation of: Relación de las cosas de Yucatan. Translation by David Castledine. Illustrations by Jose Narro and Eraclio Ramirez.

Rabinal Achi 788. Rabinal Achi. A Fifteenth-Century Maya Dynastic Drama. Alain Breton, trans. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 2007. 396 p. 789. Rabinal Achi: A Mayan Drama of War and Sacrifice. Dennis Tedlock, trans. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2003. 361 p. English language translation and interpretation of the Rabinal Achi, a dramatization of K’iche’ Maya history. The drama is concerned with a series of events that climaxed in the early fifteenth century. See also Dennis Tedlock, El ultimo trago de un prisionero de guerra (Arqueología mexicana 10(59):44-49, 2003). Drawing on the Rabinal Achi, the author argues that pulque, ki, was one of the alcoholic beverages of the lowland maya.

799. Maldonado de Matos, Manuel. 2004. Arte de la lengua szinca. Frauke Sachse, ed. Fuentes Mesoaméricanas, 5. Markt Schwaben: Verlag Anton Saurwein. 140 p. 800. Nueva Noticia del pais que los españoles encontraron en el año de 1521, llamado Yucatan. México: Imprenta Universitaria, 1940. 6 p. Full text with search capability: http://libtext.library.wisc.edu/cgibin/IbrAmerTxt/IbrAmerTxtidx? type=header &byte =5172 88 &q1=&q2=&q3=.

790. Van Akkeren, Ruud. 2000. Place of the Lord's Daughters: Rabinal: Its History, Its Dance Drama. Doctoral dissertation, Universite de Leiden.

801. Ortiz Yam, Ines, and Sergio Quezada, eds. 2009. Visita de Diego García de Palacio a Yucatán, 1583. Fuentes para el Estudio de la Cultura Maya, 19. México: UNAM: Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas, Centro de Estudios Mayas. 268 p. Includes the following sections: “Cuenta y Visita del Pueblo de Pencuyut”, “Cuentas y Visita de los Pueblos de Tizimin, Dzonotchuil, Teka y Tiscacauchen”, “Cuenta y Visita del Pueblo de Tzabcanul” and “Ordenanzas de Diego García de Palacio (Merida a 18 de enero de 1584)”.

Ritual of the Bacabs 791. Arzapalo Marin, Ramón. 2007. El Ritual de los Bacabes. 2 ed. Merida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan, 2007. 197 p. “Conjunto de 68 textos con plegarias, conjuros y recetas médicas que consta de 237 folios, El ritual de los Bacabes, traducido al español, es una interpretación clara y comprensible.” 792. Martel Diaz-Cortes, Patricia. 2004. La magia de la palabra en el Ritual de los bacabes. Arqueología mexicana 12(69):34-39.

802. Restall, Matthew, and John F. Chuchiak. 2002. A reevaluation of the authenticity of Fray Diego de Landa's Relación de las cosas de Yucatan. Ethnohistory 49(3):651669. Authors argue that Landa's Relación was not written by Landa but instead comprises an arbitrary collection by three or four compilers, probably made at different times after Landa's death.

Titulo Totonicapan 793. Carmack, Robert M., and James L. Mondloch, eds. 2007. Uwujil kulewal aj Chwi Miq'ina; El Titulo de Totonicapan. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. 237 p.

803. Vos, Jan de, and Claudia M. Baez, eds. 2005. Documentos relativos a la historia colonial de Chiapas en el Archivo General de Indias; Documentos microfilmados en el Centro de Estudios Mayas. México: UNAM: Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas, Centro de Estudios Mayas. 463 p. An extensive collection of documents relative to the Colonial History of Chiapas in the General Archives of the Indies.

Xiu Chronicles 794. Quezada, Sergio, and Tsubasa Okoshi Harada. 2001. Papeles de los Xiu de Yaxa, Yucatán. Fuentes Para el Estudio de la Cultura Maya, 15. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico; Plaza y Valdes. 181 p. Spanish Colonial Documents 795. Casas, Bartolomé de las. 2008. Brevísima relación de la destrucción de las Indias. Colección crónicas, 1. Guatemala: Tipografía Nacional. 89 p.

HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY 804. Alexander, Rani T. 2004. Yaxcaba and the Caste War of Yucatan: An Archaeological Perspective. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 207 p. Historical archaeological study of the transformation of agrarian

796. Falla, Juan J., ed. 1994-2001. Extractos de escrituras públicas: Archivo General de Centro América. Guatemala: 45

815. Kuwayama, George, and Anthony Pasinki. 2002. Chinese ceramics in the Audiencia of Guatemala. Oriental Art 48(4):25-35. Discusses discoveries of Chinese ceramics in Guatemala at the monasteries of San Francisco and Santo Domingo in Antigua Guatemala.

structure in the Yucatec community of Yaxcaba before, during, and after the Caste War. See also Rani T. Alexander, Architecture, haciendas, and economic change in Yaxcaba, Yucatan, Mexico (Ethnohistory 50(1):191-220). 805. Andrews, Anthony P., and Grant D. Jones. 2001. Asentamientos coloniales en la costa de Quintana Roo. Temas antropológicos 23(1):2-35.

816. Meyers, Allan D. 2004. The challenge and promise of hacienda archaeology in Yucatan. SAA Archaeological Record 4(1):20-28. 817. Meyers, Allan D., and David L. Carlson. 2002. Peonage, power relations, and the built environment at Hacienda Tabi, Yucatan, Mexico. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 6(4):225-252.

806. Annis, Verle L. 2001. La Arquitectura de La Antigua, Guatemala, 1543-1773. Guatemala: The Author. 472 p. Bilingual English-Spanish survey with photographs of interiors and exteriors, and numerous documents. 807. Burgos Villanueva, Rafael, and Anthony P. Andrews. 2001. El Real de Salinas: un puerto histórico de Campeche. Los Investigadores de la cultura maya 9(1):207-217. See also Florentino García Cruz, Salvamiento arqueológico en el templo de San Francisco de Campeche (Investigadores de Mesoamérica 3:36-51, 2003).

818. Morandi, Steven J. 2010. Xibun Maya: The Archaeology of an Early Spanish Colonial Frontier in Southeastern Yucatan. Doctoral dissertation, Boston University. 270 leaves. 819. Palka, Joel W. 2009. Historical archaeology of indigenous culture change in Mesoamerica. Journal of Archaeological Research 17(4):297-346.

808. Cuesta Avila, Rafael. 2001. De la tumba y la vivencia: reflexiones desde la antropología urbana sobre la Mérida yucateca del 2000. Avances de Investigación, 1. Merida: Universidad de Yucatan. 143 p. A study of the cemeteries of Merida.

820. Putz, Jürgen, Christian Heck, and Gabi Förster. 2009. Las Iglesias Coloniales en Yucatan. Meckenheim, Germany: Summanus. 2 v. A photographic survey of the architecture, symbols, and iconography of the Catholic Church in Valladolid, Yucatan; contents include: 1. Merida y el este de la Peninsula de Yucatan; 2. Valladolid y el este de la peninsula de Yucatan.

809. Finamore, Daniel. 2002. Pirates of the Barcadares: early mariners in Belize left archaeologists tantalizing traces of their lives but no buried treasure. Natural History 111(9):5863.

UNDERWATER ARCHAEOLOGY 821. Barba Meinecke, Helena. 2008. Arqueológia subacuática en la Costa de Campeche el caso del pecio “el Pesquero, Champoton” primeros acercamientos en torno a su investigación. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1):155-172.

810. García Targa, Juan. 2007. Arqueología colonial en el area maya: siglos XVI y XVII: Tecoh, Yucatan, Mexico: un modelo de estudio del sincretismo cultural. International Series, 1714. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 188 p.

822. Leshikar-Denton, Margaret E., and Pilar Luna Erreguerna, eds. Underwater and Maritime Archaeology in Latin America and the Caribbean. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press. Contents include: Arturo Gonzalez Gonzalez, and others, Evidence of early inhabitants in submerged caves in Yucatan, Mexico (pp. 127-142); Carmen Rojas Sandoval, and others, Mayan mortuary deposits in the cenotes of Yucatan and Quintana Roo, Mexico (pp. 143-153).

811. García Targa, Juan, and Jordi Gussinyer Alfonso. 2004. Los primeros templos cristianos en el area maya: Yucatan y Belice, 1545-1585. Estudios de cultura maya 25:95-120. 812. García Targa, Juan, and Patricia Fournier García, eds. 2009. Arqueológía Colonial Latinoaméricana: Modelos de Estudio. International Series, 1988. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. Contents include: Jordi Gussiyer Alfonso, Crisol de los pueblos de indios mesoaméricanos (pp. 87-98); Anthony P. Andrews, and Fernando Robles Castellanos, Arqueología histórica del noroeste de Yucatan (pp. 115132); Juan García Targa, and Nayeli Jimenez Cano, Asentamientos mayas rurales coloniales: modelos históricos del siglos XVI (pp. 149-162).

823. Rojas Sandoval, Carmen. 2007. Cementarios acuáticos mayas. Arqueología mexicana 14(83):58-63.

813. Gasco, Janine L. 2005. Spanish colonialism and processes of social change in Mesoamerica. In The Archaeology of Colonial Encounters: Comparative Perspectives. Gil J. Stein, ed. pp. 69-108. Santa Fe: School of American Research Press. Author examines the nature of Spanish colonialism in Mesoamerica through a consideration of events in the Soconusco region of southeastern Chiapas and adjacent Guatemala. 814. Gubler, Ruth. 2007. El informe contra idolorum cultores del obispado de Yucatan. Estudios de cultura maya 30: 107138. 46

2 CULTURAL HISTORY AND SOCIETY CULTURAL EVOLUTION AND DEVELOPMENT 824. Bishop, Ronald L., M. James Blackman, Antonio Benavides C., Socorro del Pilar Jimenez Alvarez, Robert L. Rands, and Erin L. Sears. 2008. Naturaleza material y evolución social en el norte y noroeste de las tierras bajas mayas. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1):13-30.

Joyce, and John S. Henderson, Los comienzos de la vida aldeana en Mesoamerica oriental (Yaxkin 20:19-46, 2001).

825. Braswell, Geoffrey E., ed. 2003. The Maya and Teotihuacan: Reinterpreting Early Classic Interaction. Austin: University of Texas Press. 444 p. Contents include: Geoffrey E. Braswell, Introduction: reinterpreting Early Classic interaction (pp. 1-44); Frederick J. Bove, and Sonia Medrano Busto, Teotihuacan, militarism, and Pacific Guatemala (pp. 45-80); Geoffrey E. Braswell, Dating Early Classic interaction between Kaminaljuyu and central Mexico (pp. 81-104); Geoffrey E. Braswell, Understanding Early Classic interaction between Kaminaljuyu and central Mexico (pp. 105-142); Robert J. Sharer, Founding events and Teotihuacan connections at Copan, Honduras (pp. 143-166); María Josefa Iglesias Ponce de León, Problematical deposits and the problem of interaction: the material culture of Tikal during the Early Classic period (pp. 167-198); Juan Pedro Laporte, Architectural aspects of interaction between Tikal and Teotihuacan during the Early Classic period (pp. 199216); James Borowicz, Images of power and the power of images: Early Classic iconographic programs of the carved monuments at Tikal (pp. 217-234); David M. Pendergast, Teotihuacan at Altun Ha: did it make a difference? (pp. 235248); Carmen Varella Torrecilla, and Geoffrey E. Braswell, Teotihuacan and Oxkintok: new perspectives from Yucatan (pp. 249-272); Karl A. Taube, Tetitla and the Maya presence at Teotihuacan (pp. 273-314); George L. Cowgill, Teotihuacan and Early Classic interaction: a perspective from outside the Maya region (pp. 315-336); and, Joyce Marcus, The Maya and Teotihuacan (pp. 337-356).

Preclassic Period 829. Clark. John E., Richard D. Hansen, and Tomas Pérez Suarez. 2000. La zona maya en el Preclásico. In Historia antigua de México. L. Manzanilla and L. López Luján, eds. v. 1, pp. 437-510. México: INAH.

Lithic 828. García-Barcena, Joaquín. 2007. Etapa lítica (30000-2000 a.C.). Arqueología mexicana 15(86):30-33.

830. García Moll, Roberto. 2007. Preclásico temprano y media (2500-400 a.C.). Arqueología mexicana 15(86):34-39. See also Mario A. Pérez Campa, Preclásico tardío (400 a.C.-200 d.C.) (Arqueología mexicana 15(86):40-43, 2007). 831. Peregrine, Peter N. 2001. Preclassic Maya. In Middle America. Peter N. Peregrine and Melvin Ember, eds. pp. 378380. Encyclopedia of Prehistory, 5. New York. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. Classic Period 832. Arnauld, Charlotte. 2007. Les Mayas classiques: Lettrés artisans de haut rang. Techniques et culture 46-47:221-334. 833. Cobos, Rafael. 2008. Concordancias y discrepancias en las interpretaciones arqueológicas, epigráficas e históricas de fines del Clásico en las Tierras Bajas Mayas del Norte. Mayab 20:161-166. 834. Cowgill, George L. 2001. Tiempo mesoamericano V: Clásico temprano (150/200-600 d.C.). Arqueología mexicana 8(47):20-27.

826. Iannone, Gyles. 2002. Annales history and the ancient Maya state: some observations on the “dynamic model”. American Anthropologist 104(1):68-79. Joyce Marcus has recently proposed a “dynamic model” for the ancient Maya state. In doing so she has emphasized the importance of spatiotemporal fluctuations between centralization and decentralization. Although this idea has obtained wideranging support, there has been little consideration of why these oscillations occurred. This article proposes that one of the key factors was the fundamental tension between the institutions of kinship and kingship. Viewed through the lens of Annales, or “French Structural” history, this appears to constitute a classic example of the contradictions between a long-term structure (kinship) and medium-term (kingship) cycle

835. Iglesias Ponce de León, María J. 2008. Actualizando la controversia: el Clásico temprano en Petén, Guatemala. Mayab 20:125-144. 836. López Luján, Leonardo. 2007. Clásico (150-600/650 d.C.). Arqueología mexicana 15(86):44-49. 837. Marcus, Joyce. 2001. Clásico Tardío (600-900 d.C.). Arqueología mexicana 8(48):20-29. 838. Mathews, Peter. 2001. Maya civilization. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 2, pp. 852-855. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio. 839. Nalda, Enrique. 2007. Epiclásico (650-900 d.C.). Arqueología mexicana 15(86):50-53.

Origins of Maya Civilization 827. Joyce, Rosemary A., and John S. Henderson. 2001. Beginnings of village life in eastern Mesoamerica. Latin American Antiquity 12(1):5-24. Spanish translation: Rosemary A.

840. Sharer, Robert J. 2001. Classic Maya. In Middle America. Peter N. Peregrine and Melvin Ember, eds. pp. 6947

Bilan de l’occupation au Postclassique recent dans le nord de la Peninsule du Yucatan (M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1, 2003).

81. Encyclopedia of Prehistory, 5. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. Postclassic Period 841. Annereau, Marie, 2008. Les unites de regroupement intermediaires dans la zone maya, au Postclassique Recent. Doctoral dissertation, Universite de Paris 1. See also Marie Annereau-Fulbert, Les unites de regroupement intermediaires dans les sites postclassiques des hautes terres Mayas: approche ethnoarcheologique (M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1, 2003).

848. Sabloff, Jeremy A. 2007. It depends on how we look at things: new perspectives on the Postclassic Period in the northern Maya lowlands. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 151(1):11-26. 849. Vail, Gabrielle, and Christine Hernandez, eds. 2010. Astronomers, Scribes, and Priests: Intellectual Interchange Between the Northern Maya Lowlands and Highland Mexico in the Late Postclassic Period. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks. 431 p. Contents include: Gabrielle Vail, and Christine Hernandez, Astronomers, Scribes, and Priests: An Introduction (pp. 1-15); Fernando Robles Castellanos, and Christine Hernandez, Interaction between Central and Eastern Mesoamerica before and during the Culhua Mexica Expansion (pp. 37-76); Marilyn A. Masson, and Carlos Peraza Lope, Evidence for Maya-Mexican Interaction in the Archaeological Record of Mayapan (pp. 77-114); Anthony F. Aveni, Cosmology and Cultural Landscape: The Late Postclassic Maya of North Yucatan (pp. 115-133); Karl Taube, At Dawn’s Edge: Tulum, Santa Rita, and Floral Symbolism in the International Style of Late Postclassic Mesoamerica (pp. 145-192); Martha J. Macri, Scribal Interaction in Postclassic Mesoamerica (pp. 193-216); Karen Dakin, Linguistic Evidence for Historical Contacts between Nahuas and Northern Lowland Mayan Speakers (pp. 217-240); Timothy W. Knowlton, Nahua Vocables in a Maya Song of the Fall of Chichen Itza: Music and Social Memory in the Construction of Yucatecan Ethnicities (pp. 241-261); Merideth Paxton, Solar-Based Cartographic Traditions of the Mexica and the Yucatec Maya (pp. 279-308); Victoria R. Bricker, A Comparison of Venus Instruments in the Borgia and Madrid Codices (pp. 309-332); Gabrielle Vail, and Christine Hernandez, A Case for Scribal Intercation: Evidence from the Madrid and Borgia Group Codices (pp. 333367); Anthony P. Andrews, Travelers in the Night: A Discussion of the Archaeological Visibility of Trade Enclaves, Ethnicity, and Ideology (pp. 369-382); Alfonso Lacadena, Highland Mexican and Maya Intellectual Exchange in the Late Postclassic: Some Thoughts on the Origin of Shared Elements and Methods of Interaction (pp. 383-405);

842. Attolini Lecón, Amalia, and Rosa Brambila Paz. 2007. Intercambio y fronteras en el Posclásico tardío en Mesoamerica. In Etnografía de los Confines: Andanzas de Anne Chapman. Andres Médina, and Angela Ochoa, eds. Pp. 113-136. México: Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia. 843. Cecil, Leslie G., and Timothy G. Pugh, eds. 2009. Maya Worldviews at Conquest. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 426 p. Contents include: Elizabeth Graham, Close encounters (pp. 17-38); William M. Ringle, “In Recalling Things Past, I Strengthen My Heart”: Accommodating the Past in Early Colonial Yucatan (pp. 39-60); Prudence M. Rice, Time, History, and Worldview (pp. 61-82); Gabrielle Vail, Cosmology and Creation in Late Postclassic Maya Literature and Art (pp. 83-110); Andrea Stone, Colonial Cave Art in the Northern Maya Lowlands: The Dark Side of the Maya Worldview after the Conquest (pp. 111-134); John F. Chuchiak, “De Descriptio Idolorum”: An Ethnohistorical Examination of the Production, Imagery, and Functions of Colonial Yucatec Maya Idols and Effigy Censers, 1540-1700 (pp. 135-158); Miguel Astor-Aguilera, Mesoamerican Communicating Objects: Mayan Worldviews Before, During, and After Spanish Contact (pp. 159-182); Susan Milbrath, and Carlos Peraza Lope, Clash of Worldviews in Late Mayapan (pp. 183-204); Shankari Patel, Religious Resistance and Persistence on Cozumel Island (pp. 205-218); Diane Z. Chase, and Arlen F. Chase, Changes in Maya Religious Worldview: Liminality and the Archaeological Record (pp. 219-238); Leslie G. Cecil, Kowoj worldview: a view from Tipu (pp. 239-260); Joel W. Palka, Agency and Worldviews of the Unconquered Lacandon Maya (pp. 261-278); Mark Howell, Music Syncretism in the Postclassic K’iche’ Warrior Dance and the Colonial Period Baile de los Moros y Cristianos (pp. 279-298); Robert S. Carlsen, Footpath of the Dawn, Footpath of the Sun: Maya Worldviews at Lake Atitlan (pp. 299-316); Timothy W. Pugh, Maya Sacred Landscapes at Contact (pp. 317-334).

Collapse of Maya Civilization 850. Aimers, James J. 2007. What Maya collapse? Terminal Classic variation in the Maya lowlands. Journal of Archaeological Research 15(4):329-377.

844. Fry, Robert. 2001. Postclassic Maya. In Middle America. Peter N. Peregrine and Melvin Ember, eds. pp. 353-360. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.

851. Andrews, Anthony P., E. Wyllys Andrews, V, and Fernando Robles Castellanos. 2003. The northern Maya collapse and its aftermath. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):151156.

845. García Martinez, Bernardo. 2007. Conquista (siglo XVI, a partir de 1519). Arqueología mexicana 15(86):64-68.

852. Culbert, T. Patrick. 2001. Población, subsistencia y colapso de la cultura maya. Arqueología mexicana 9(52):66-71.

846. Parsons, Jeffrey R. 2007. Posclásico temprano y medio (900-1350 d.C.). Arqueología mexicana 15(86):54-57.

853. Demarest, Arthur A., Prudence M. Rice, and Don S. Rice. 2004. The Terminal Classic in the Maya Lowlands: Collapse, Transition, and Transformation. Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado. 676 p. Contents include: Prudence M. Rice, Arthur A. Demarest, and Don S. Rice, The Terminal Classic and the “Classic Maya Collapse” in perspective (pp. 1-11); Diane Z. Chase, and Arlen F. Chase,

847. Solis, Felipe. 2001. Posclásico tardío (1200/1300-1521 d.C.). Arqueología mexicana 9(50):20-29. See also Barbara Arroyo, El posclásico tardío en los altos de Guatemala (Arqueología mexicana 9(50):38-43, 2001); Nicolas Prinseau, 48

856. Kerr, Richard A. 2001. A variable sun and the Maya collapse. Science 292(5520):129.

Hermeneutics, transitions, and transformations in Classic to Postclassic Maya society (pp. 12-27); Prudence M. Rice, and Donald Forsyth, Terminal Classic-Period lowland ceramics (pp. 28-59); Gair Tourtellot, and Jason J. Gonzalez, The last hurrah: continuity and transformation at Seibal (pp. 61-82); Matt O’Mansky, and Nicholas P. Dunning, Settlement and Late Classic political disintegration in the Petexbatun region, Guatemala (pp. 83-101); Arthur A. Demarest, After the maelstrom: collapse of the Classic Maya kingdoms and the Terminal Classic in western Petén (pp. 102-124); Prudence M. Rice, and Don S. Rice, Late Classic to Postclassic transformations in the Petén Lakes Region, Guatemala (pp. 125-139); Juan Antonio Valdes, and Federico Fahsen, Disaster in sight: the Terminal Classic at Tikal and Uaxactun (pp. 140-161); Geoffrey E. Braswell, Joel D. Gunn, María del Rosario Dominguez Carrasco, William J. Folan, Laraine A. Fletcher, Abel Morales López, and Michael D. Glascock, Defining the Terminal Classic at Calakmul, Campeche (pp. 162-194); Juan Pedro Laporte, Terminal Classic settlement and polity in the Mopan Valley, Petén, Guatemala (pp. 195230); David Webster, AnnCorinne Freter, and Rebecca Storey, Dating Copan Culture-History: Implications for the Terminal Classic and the collapse (pp. 231-259); William L. Fash, E. Wyllys Andrews, and T. Kam Manahan, Political decentralization, dynastic collapse, and the Early Postclassic in the urban center of Copan, Honduras (pp. 260-287); Norman Hammond, and Gair Tourtellot, Out with a whimper: La Milpa in the Terminal Classic (pp. 288-301); Wendy Ashmore, Jason Yaeger, and Cynthia Robin, Commoner sense: Late and Terminal Classic social strategies in the Xunantunich area (pp. 302-323); R.E.W. Adams, H. R. Robichaux, Fred Valdez Jr., Brett A. Houk, and Ruth Mathews, Transformations, periodicity, and urban development in the Three Rivers region (pp. 324-341); Arlen F. Chase, and Diane Z. Chase, Terminal Classic status-linked ceramics and the Maya “collapse”: de facto refuse at Caracol, Belize (pp. 342-366); Marilyn A. Masson, and Shirley Boteler Mock, Ceramics and settlement patterns at Terminal Classic Period lagoon sites in northeastern Belize (pp. 367-401); Christopher R. Andres, and K. Anne Pyburn, Out of sight: the Postclassic and early colonial periods at Chau Hiix, Belize (pp. 402-423); Kelli Carmean, Nicholas Dunning, and Jeff Karl Kowalski, High times in the Hill Country: a perspective from the Terminal Classic Puuc region (pp. 424-449); Charles Suhler, Traci Ardren, David Freidel, and Dave Johnstone, The rise and fall of Terminal Classic Yaxuna, Yucatan, Mexico (pp. 450-484); William M. Ringle, George J. Bey III, Tara Bond Freeman, Craig A. Hanson, Charles W. Houck, and J. Gregory Smith, The decline of the east: the Classic to Postclassic transition at Ek Balam, Yucatan (pp. 485-516); Rafael Cobos Palma, Chichen Itza: Settlement and hegemony during the Terminal Classic Period (pp. 517-544); Arthur A. Demarest, Prudence M. Rice, and Don S. Rice, The Terminal Classic in the Maya lowlands: assessing collapses, terminations, and transformations (pp. 545-572).

857. Lake sediment tells of Maya droughts. Science News 159:15, 2001. Sediment cores taken last year from the bottom of a lake on Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula indicate that a series of extended droughts coincided with major cultural upheavals among the Maya inhabitants of the area. The sediments taken from Lake Chichancanab record climate change in the northern Yucatan for the past 2,500 years. Between 500 BC and AD 1000, major dry spells occurred about every 200 years, including a decades-long drought that coincided with the collapse of so-called Classic Maya civilization in the ninth century. 858. Lucero, Lisa J. 2002. The collapse of the Classic Maya: a case for the role of water control. American Anthropologist 104(3):814-826. Author argues that climate change undermined the institution of rulership when sufficient water was not supplied by Maya rulers. Secondary and minor centers not heavily dependent on water control survived the drought and the collapse of regional centers. 859. Malakoff, David. 2005. Demystifying the Maya. American Archaeology 9(1):12-18. Recent research indicates that the causes of the Maya “collapse” are more complex than previously thought, that they occurred over an extended period of time, and that some cities never “collapsed.” 860. McAnany, Patricia A., and Tomas Gallareta Negrón. 2010. Bellicose rulers and climatological peril?: Retrofitting twenty-first century woes on eighth-century Maya society. In Questioning Collapse: Human Resilience, Ecological Vulnerability, and the Aftermath of Empire. Patricia A. McAnany and Norman Yoffee, eds. pp. 142-175. New York: Cambridge University Press 861. Nalda, Enrique. 2006. Clásico terminal y Posclásico en el area maya: colapso y reacomodos. Arqueología mexicana 13(76):30-39. 862. Schwartz, Glenn M., and John J. Nichols. 2006. After Collapse: The Regeneration of Complex Societies. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Diane Z. Chase and Arlen F. Chase, Framing the Maya collapse: continuity, discontinuity, method, and practice in the Classic to Postclassic southern Maya lowlands; Marilyn A. Masson, Timothy S. Hare, and Carlos Peraza Lope, Postclassic Maya society regenerated at Mayapan. 863. Treece, Tracy. 2000. The Downfall of Classic Maya Culture. Senior thesis, Colorado College. 38 leaves. 864. Webster, David L. 2002. The Fall of the Ancient Maya: Solving the Mystery of the Maya Collapse. London: Thames & Hudson. 368 p.

854. Gill, Richardson B., Paul A. Mayewski, Johan Nyberg, Gerald H. Haug, and Larry C. Peterson. 2007. Drought and the Maya collapse. Ancient Mesoamerica 18(2): 283-302.

ECONOMICS 865. Little, Walter E. 2001. Transnational Market and Community: The Social Relations of Kaqchikel Maya Vendors. Doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign. 395 leaves.

855. Grube, Nikolai. 2004. Ciudades perdidas mayas. Arqueología mexicana 12(67):32-37.

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872. Scarborough, Vernon L., and Fred Valdez Jr. 2009. An alternative order: The dualistic economics of the ancient Maya. Latin American Antiquity 20(1):207-227.

866. Little, Walter E. 2009. Maya daykeepers: New spiritual clients and the morality of making money. In Economics and Morality: Anthropological Approaches. Katherine E. Browne and B. Lynne Milgram, eds. pp. 77-100. Lanham: AltaMira Press.

873. Schüren, Ute. 2003. Rationalität oder Irrationalität bäuerlichen Wirtschaftens im Kontext staatlicher Politik? Haushaltsstrategien in mexikanischen Ejidos. Doctoral dissertation, Freie Universität Berlin, Fachbereich Politik- u. Sozialwissenschaft. Full text and English language abstract available online at http://www/diss.fu-berlin.de/ 2003/ 237/ indexe.html.

867. Masson, Marilyn A., and David A. Freidel, eds. 2002. Ancient Maya Political Economies. AltaMira Press. 432 p. Essays examine variation in systems of economic production and exchange and how these systems supported the power networks that integrated Maya society. Contents include: Marilyn A. Masson, Introduction (pp. 1-30); William L. Rathje, The nouveau elite potlatch: one scenario for the monumental rise of early civilizations (pp. 31-40); David A. Freidel, Kathryn Reese-Taylor, and David Mora-Marin, The origins of Maya civilization: the old shell game, commodity, treasure, and kingship (pp. 41-86); Kathryn Reese-Taylor, and Debra S. Walker, The passage of the Late Preclassic into the Early Classic (pp. 87-122); Patricia A. McAnany, Ben S. Thomas, Steven Morandi, Polly A. Peterson, and Eleanor Harrison, Praise the ajaw and pass the kakaw: Xibun Maya and the political economy of cacao (pp. 123-139); Georgia West, Ceramic exchange in the Late Classic and Postclassic Maya lowlands: a diachronic approach (pp. 140-196); Lauren A. Sullivan, Dynamics of regional integration in northwestern Belize (pp. 197-222); Antonia E. Foias, At the crossroads: the economic basis of political power in the Petexbatun region (pp. 223-248); Bruce H. Dahlin, and Traci Ardren, Modes of exchange and regional patterns: Chunchucmil, Yucatan (pp. 249-284); Geoffrey E. Braswell, Praise the gods and pass the obsidian? The organization of ancient economy in San Martin Jilotepeque, Guatemala (pp. 285-306); Anthony P. Andrews, and Shirley B. Mock, New perspectives on the prehispanic Maya salt trade (pp. 307-334); Marilyn A. Masson, Community economy and the mercantile transformation in Postclassic northeastern Belize (pp. 335-364); Craig A. Hanson, In praise of garbage: historical archaeology, households, and the Maya political economy (pp. 365-397); Elizabeth Graham, Perspectives on economy and theory (pp. 398-418).

874. Schuster, Angela M. H. 2009. Traders of the Maya. Archaeology 62(4):14-15. 875. Smyth, Michael P. 2008. Beyond economic imperialism: the Teotihuacan factor in northern Yucatan. Journal of Anthropological Research 64(3):395-410. 876. Thomas, Kedron. 2006. Maya entrepreneurs and the global textile trade. Anthropology News 47(8):13-14. 877. Velasco Toro, José, and Ana M. Salazar Vazquez. 2007. Comercio de larga distancia y articulación regional en Mesoamérica: la visión de Anne Chapman. In Etnografia de los Confines: Andanzas de Anne Chapman. Andrés Medina, and Angela Ochoa, eds. pp. 99-112. México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. 878. Wells, E. Christian. 2006. Recent trends in theorizing prehispanic Mesoamerican economies. Journal of Archaeological Research 14(4):265-312. 879. Wells, E. Christian, and Karla L. Davis-Salazar, eds. 2007. Mesoamerican Ritual Economy: Archaeological and Ethnological Perspectives. Boulder: University of Colorado Press. 336 p. Contents include: Christian E. Wells, and Karla L. Davis-Salazar, Mesoamerican ritual economy: materialization as ritual and economic process (pp. 1-28); Christian E. Wells, Faenas, ferias, and fiestas: ritual finance in ancient and modern Honduras (pp. 29-66); Brigette Kovacevich, Ritual, crafting, and agency at the Classic Maya kingdom of Cancuen (pp. 67-114); Karla L. Davis-Salazar, Ritual consumption and the origins of social inequality in Early Formative Copan, Honduras (pp. 197-200); John M. Watanabe, Ritual economy and the negotiation of autarky and interdependence in a ritual mode of production (pp. 302-322).

868. McAnany, Patricia A. 2010. Ancestral Maya Economies in Archaeological Perspective. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press 373 p. 869. Murray, Stephen O.. 2007. William Fielding Ogburn’s fostering of Sol Tax’s explorations of small-scale mercantile capitalism in highland Guatemala. Histories of Anthropology Annual 3:38-50.

880. Wells, E. Christian, and Patricia A. McAnany, eds. 2008. Dimensions of Ritual Economy. Research in Economic Anthropology, 27. Greenwich, CT: JAI. Contents include: Walter E. Little, Weaving ritual and the production of commorative cloth in highland Guatemala (pp. 121-148); Patricia A. McAnany, Shaping social difference: Political and ritual economy of Classic Maya royal courts (pp. 219-248);

870. Rice, Prudence M. 2008. On Classic Maya political economies. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 28(1):70-84. 871. Scarborough, Vernon L., and John E. Clark, eds. 2007. The Political Economy of Ancient Mesoamerica: Transformations During the Formative and Classic Periods. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 228 p. Contents include: Kimberly A. Berry, and Patricia A. McAnany, Reckoning with the wetlands and their role in ancient Maya society (pp. 149-162). Rhoda H. Halperin, The political economy of Mesoamerican states: an economic ethnographer’s view (pp. 175-184).

Markets 881. Dahlin, Bruce H., Christopher T. Jensen, Richard E. Terry, David R. Wright, and Timothy Beach. 2007. In search of an ancient Maya market. Latin American Antiquity 18(4):363-384.

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Binghamton, NY: Food Products Press. 659 p. “This is the second symposium that the University of California at Riverside has organized on the Maya.”

Maritime Commerce 882. Dewan, Leslie, and Dorothy Hosler. 2008. Ancient maritime trade on balsa rafts: an engineering analysis. Journal of Anthropological Research 64(1):19-40. See also Delfín Quezada Dominguez, Entre la tierra y el mar: la sociedad maya. La Habana: Fundación Fernando Ortíz, 2001. 215 p. Author argues for the importance of salt, fishing, maritime commerce, and maize cultivation in the processes of production and social relations of ancient Maya.

891. Johnston, Kevin J. 2003. The intensification of preindustrial cereal agriculture in the tropics: Boserup, cultivation lengthening, and the Classic Maya. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 22(2):126-161. Author proposes that prior to the Maya collapse some, but not all high-density southern lowland populations included cultivation lengthening in their intensification strategies.

Craft Production 883. Hirth, Kenneth G., ed. 2009. Housework: Craft Production and Domestic Economy in Ancient Mesoamerica. Malden: Wiley. Contents include: Randolph J. Widmer, Elite Household Multicrafting Specialization at 9N8, Patio H, Copan (pp. 174-204); Erick T. Rochette, Jade in Full: Prehispanic Domestic Production of Wealth Goods in the Middle Motagua Valley, Guatemala (pp. 205-224).

892. Litow, Paul A. 2000. Food Security and Household Livelihood Strategies in the Maya Biosphere Reserve: The Importance of Milpa in the Community of Uaxactun, Petén, Guatemala. M.S. thesis, University of Florida. 167 leaves. 893. López Saez, José A. 2006. Arqueobotánica en Mesoamerica: el maíz. Revista de arqueología 27(300):14-21.

884. Inomata, Takeshi. 2007. Knowledge and belief in artistic production in Classic Maya elites. In Rethinking Craft Specialization in Complex Societies: Archeological Analyses of the Social Meaning of Production. Zachary X. Hruby, R. K. Flad, and G. P. Bennett, eds. pp. 129-142. Archaeological Papers, 17. Washington, DC: American Anthropological Association.

894. Lucero, Lisa F. 2006. Agricultural intensification, water, and political power in the southern Maya lowlands. In Agricultural Strategies. Joyce Marcus, and Charles Stanish, eds. pp. 281-308. Cotsen Advanced Seminars, 2. Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA.

885. Little, Walter E. 2002. Selling strategies and social relations among mobile Maya handicrafts vendors. In Social Dimensions in the Economic Process. Norbert Dannhaeuser and Cynthia Werner, eds. pp. 61-95. Research in Economic Anthropology, 21. Amsterdam: JAI. Author discusses the vending practices and social relations of primarily female Kaqchikel Maya handicrafts vendors (ambulantes) within economic and political contexts of Antigua Guatemala.

895. Magzul, Lorenzo. 2004. The Environmental Sustainability of Non-Traditional Cash Crops in the Highlands of Guatemala: A Focus on a Maya-Kaqchikel Community. M.S. thesis, University of Victoria, Canada. 160 leaves. 896. Marcus, Joyce. 2006. The roles of ritual and technology in Mesoamerican water management. In Agricultural Strategies. Joyce Marcus, and Charles Stanish, eds. pp. 221254. Cotsen Advanced Seminars, 2. Los Angeles: Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA.

886. Manzanilla N., Linda. 2006. La producción artesanal en Mesoamérica. Arqueología mexicana.14(80):28-35.

897. Ponette-Gonzalez, Gisele A. 2007. A household analysis of Huastec Maya agriculture and land use at the height of the coffee crisis. Human Ecology 35(3):289-301.

887. Stockett, Miranda K. 2007. Performing power: identity, ritual, and materiality in a Late Classic Southeast Mesoamerican crafting community. Ancient Mesoamerica 18(1):91-106.

898. Scarborough, Vernon. 2009. The archaeology of sustainability. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2):197-203. See also Vernon L. Scarborough, and William R. Burnside, Complexity and sustainability: perspectives from the Ancient Maya and the Modern Balinese (American Antiquity 75(2):327-363, 2010).

Agriculture 888. Atran, Scott, Douglas Medin, Norbert Ross, Elizabeth Lynch, Valentina Vapnarsky, Edilberto Ucan Ek’, John Coley, Christopher Timura, and Michael Baran. 2002. Folk ecology, cultural epidemiology, and the spirits of the commons: a garden experiment in the Maya lowlands, 1991-2001. Current Anthropology 43(3):421-450. Authors use a variation of an experimental approach from biology to examine the influence of sociocultural factors from that of economic, demographic, and ecological factors in environmental management and maintenance. Study considers Q’eqchi’, Itza, and Ladino groups within the Maya Biosphere Reserve in northern Guatemala.

899. Shriar, Avrum J. 2001. The dynamics of agricultural intensification and resource conservation in the buffer zone of the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Petén, Guatemala. Human Ecology 29(1):27-48. Author discusses the influences on agricultural strategy among farmers in Petén, Guatemala, and more specifically, their adoption of more intensive practices. Analysis indicates that conservation and development organizations in Petén should place greater emphasis on the rural economy and on fostering the conditions that would stimulate more intensive, sustainable land use.

889. Benjamin, T. J., P. I. Montanez, J. J. M. Jimenez, and A. R. Gillespie. 2001. Carbon, water and nutrient flux in Maya homegardens in the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico. Agroforestry Systems 53(2):103-111.

900. Staller, John E. 2010. Maize Cobs and Cultures: History of Zea mays L. New York: Springer. 262 p.

890. Gómez-Pompa, Arturo. 2003. The Lowland Maya Area: Three Millennia at the Human-Wildland Interface.

901. Staller, John E., Robert H. Tykot, and Bruce F. Benz, eds. 2010. Histories of Maize in Mesoamerica: Multidisciplinary 51

908. Fedick, Scott L., María de L. Flores Delgadillo, Sergey Sedov, Elizabeth Solleiro Rebolledo, and Sergio Palacios Mayorga. 2008. Adaptation of Maya homegardens by ‘container gardening’ in limestone bedrock cavities. Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2):290-304. 909. Ford, Anabel, and Ronald Nigh. 2009. Origins of the Maya Forest Garden: Maya Resource Management. Journal of Ethnobiology 29(2):213-236.

Approaches. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press 280 p. Contents include: John E. Staller, Introduction to the Histories of Maize in Mesoamerica (pp. 7-13); Brown, Terence A., Differing approaches and perceptions in the study of New and Old World crops (pp. 14-19); Bruce Benz, Maize in the Americas (pp. 20-31); Michael Blake, Dating the initial spread of Zea mays (pp. 45-62); Bruce F. Benz, Li Cheng, Steven W. Leavitt, and Chris Eastoe, El Riego and early maize evolution (pp. 8594); Robert H. Tykot, (pp. 130-141); Fred J. Longstaffe, and Henry P. Schwartcz, Social direction in the isotopic anthropology of maize in the Maya region (pp. 142-158); Eugenia Brown Mansell, Robert H. Tykot, David A. Freidel, Bruce H. Dahlin, and Traci Ardren, Early to terminal Classic Maya diet in the northern lowlands of the Yucatan (Mexico) (pp. 159171); Brian Chisholm, and Michael Blake, Diet in prehistoric Soconusco (pp. 172-183); Henry P. Schwartcz, Stable Carbon Isotope Analysis and human diet in Mesoamerica: a synthesis (pp. 184-189); Brian Stross, Maize in word and image in southeastern Mesoamerica (pp. 201-222); Jane H. Hill, The historical linguistics of maize cultivation in Mesoamerica and North America (pp. 235-249); Cecil H. Brown, Glottochronology and the chronology of maize in the Americas (pp. 250266); Bruce F. Benz, and John E. Staller, The antiquity, biogeography and culture history of maize in Mesoamerica (pp. 267-276).

910. Murray, Sara J. 2001. Plants in the “Patxokon Na”: Tzotzil Maya Homegardens in the Highlands of Southeastern Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Wayne State University. 168 leaves. 911. Patterson, M. Lynn. 2000. Agroforestry in Belize: Maya Home Gardens in San Lucas. M. Sc. Thesis, University of Alberta (Canada). 201 leaves. 912. Ross, Nanci J. 2008. The Impact of Ancient Maya Forest Gardens on Modern Tree Species Composition in NW Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Connecticut. 115 leaves. Hunting 913. Doherty, Deirdre A. 2005. Hunting and the Implications for Mammals in Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Davis. 93 leaves.

902. Touchard, Anne. 2002. Les terrasses en zone maya: de l’archeologie a l’ethnographie, contribution a l’etude fonctionnelle. M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1. See also Anne Touchard, Les systèmes d’agriculture en terrasses dans l’aire centrale maya (M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1, 2001).

914. León, P, and S. Montiel. 2008. Wild meat use and traditional hunting practices in a rural Mayan community of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. Human Ecology 36:249-257. Food Ways 915. Alimentos y guisos de Yucatan. Merida: n.p. 40 p. Pamphlet on various Mayan-Yucatecan dishes specific to Euan, Yucatan. Includes a short glossary of Mayan words.

903. Tuxill, John. 2005. Agrarian Change and Crop Diversity in Mayan Milpas of Yucatan, Mexico: Implications For In Situ Conservation. Doctoral dissertation, Yale University. 397 leaves.

916. Arjona de Castro, Atalita, and Enrique Castro Arjona. 2008. K’oben; Vocablo maya; cocina; Los guisos que se sirvieron y se comen en las mesas yucatecas. 2 ed. México: Krear de México. 234 p. Recipes from the Yucatan Peninsula.

904. Wyatt, Andrew R. 2008. Pine as an element of houehold refuse in the fertilization of ancient Maya agricultural fields. Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2):243-258. 905. Wainwright, Joel D. 2003. Decolonizing Development: Colonialism, Mayanism, and Agriculture in Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Department of Geography, University of Minnesota. 413 leaves.

917. Atwood, Roger. 2009. Maya roots: did an ugly, waxy tuber feed a great civilization? Archaeology 62(4):18-66. 918. Bolivar Fernandez, Nidelvia, Cessia Chuc Uc, Cessia, Marvel Valencia Gutierrez, and Lorraine Williams-Beck. 2008. La alimentación de los mayas contemporaneos. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2):83-92.

Home Gardens 906. Benjamin, Tamara J. 2000. Maya Cultural Practices in Yucatecan Homegardens: An Ecophysiological Perspective. Doctoral dissertation, Purdue University. 163 leaves.

919. Fry, Joan. 2009. How to Cook a Tapir: A Memoir of Belize. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. 240 p.

907. Chartier, Alexandra. 2007. Les jardins domestiques chez les Mayas des basses terres a la periode classique. M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1. Universite de Paris 1. See also Celine Lamb, A la recherche du jardin “domestique” prehispanique des basses terres mayas. Methodes et problematiques (M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1, 2009).

920. Staller, John E., and Michael Carrasco, eds.. 2009. PreColumbian Foodways: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Food, Culture, and Markets in Ancient Mesoamerica. New York: Springer Science and Business Media. 691 p. Contents include: John E. Staller, and Michael Carrasco, Pre-Columbian Foodways in Mesoamerica (pp. 1-22); John E. Staller, Ethnohistoric Sources on Foodways, Feasts, and Festivals in Mesoamerica (pp. 23-70); Cecil H. Brown, Development of Agriculture in Prehistoric Mesoamerica: The Linguistic Evidence (pp. 71-108); Jeffrey R. Parsons, The pastoral niche in prehispanic Mesoamerica (pp. 109-136); Rosemary A. Joyce, and John S. Henderson, Forming Mesoamerican Taste: Cacao

907. Corzo Marquez, Amilcar, and Norman B. Schwartz. 2008. Traditional homegardens of Petén, Guatemala: resource management, food security, and conservation. Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2):305-317.

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923. Grünberg, Georg. 2003. Tierras y territorios indígenas en Guatemala. Dinámicas agrarias en Guatemala, 6. Guatemala: FLACSO, MINUGUA, CONTIERRA. 166 p.

Consumption in Formative Period Contexts (pp. 157-174); Eduardo Williams, Salt Production and Trade in Ancient Mesoamerica (pp. 175-190); Bruce H. Dahlin, Daniel Blair, Tim Beach, Matthew Moriarity, and Terry Richard, The Dirt on Food: Ancient Feasts and Markets Among the Lowland Maya (pp. 191-234); Kerry Hull, An Epigraphic Analysis of ClassicPeriod Maya Foodstuffs (pp. 235-256); Dmitri Beliaev, Albert Davletshin, and Alexandre Tokovinine, Sweet Cacao and Sour Atole: Mixed Drinks on Classic Maya Ceramic Vases (pp. 257-273); Cecil H. Brown, Prehistoric Chronology of the Common Bean in the New World: The Linguistic Evidence (pp. 273-292); Cameron L. McNeil, Death and Chocolate: The Significance of Cacao Offerings in Ancient Maya Tombs and Caches at Copan, Honduras (pp. 293-314); Judith S. Green, Feasting with foam: ceremonial drinks of cacao, maize, and pataxte cacao (pp. 315-344); David Cheetham, Corn, Colanders, and Cooking: Early Maize Processing in the Maya Lowlands and Its Implications (pp. 345-368); Linda Howie, Christine D. White, and Fred J. Longstaffe, Photographies and Biographies: The Role of Food in Ritual and Identity as Seen Through Life Histories of Selected Maya Pots and People (pp. 369-398); Carolyn R. Freiwald, Dietary Diversity in the Upper Belize River Valley: A Zooarchaeological and Isotopic Perspective (pp. 399-420); David J. Goldstein, and Jon B. Hageman, Power Plants: Paleobotanical Evidence of Rural Feasting in Late Classic Belize (pp. 421-440); E. N. Anderson, Food and Feasting in the Zona Maya of Quintana Roo (pp. 441-466); John Tuxill, Luis Arias Reyes, Luis Latournerie Moreno, Vidal Cob Uicab, and Devra I. Jarvis, All Maize Is Not Equal: Maize Variety Choices and Mayan Foodways in Rural Yucatan, Mexico (pp. 467-486); Amber O’Connor, Maya Foodways: A Reflection of Gender and Ideology (pp. 487-510); Carolyn E. Tate, The axolotl as food and symbol in the basin of Mexico, from, 1200 BC to today (pp. 511-534); Brian Stross, This World and Beyond: Food Practices and the Social Order in Mayan Religion (pp. 553-576); Allen J. Christenson, Maize Was Their Flesh: Ritual Feasting in the Maya Highlands (pp. 577-600); Michael D. Carrasco, From Field to Hearth: An Earthly Interpretation of Maya and Other Mesoamerican Creation Myths (pp. 601-634); David Freidel, and F. Kent Reilly, The Flesh of God: Cosmology, Food, and the Origins of Political Power in Ancient Southeastern Mesoamerica (pp. 635-680).

924. Quintal, Ella F., Juan R. Bastarrachea, Fidencio Briceño, Martha Medina, Beatriz Repetto, Lourdes Rejon, and Margarita Rosales. 2003. U lu’umil maya wiiniko’ob: la tierra de los mayas. In Dialogos con el territorio: simbolizaciones sobre el espacio en las culturas indígenas de Mexico. Alicia M. Barabas, ed. v. 1, pp. 275-359. México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Labor 925. Castilla Ramos, Beatriz, and Beatriz Torres Gongora. 2009. Del hogar a la fábrica: trabajadoras de las empresas transnacionales en Yucatan, México. Trace 55:31-52. 926. Goldin, Liliana R. 2009. Flexibles, cansados y desesperanzados: alta rotación entre los trabajadores de las maquilas rurales de Guatemala. Trace 55:53-62. 927. Goldin, Liliana R. 2009. Global Maya: Work and Ideology in Rural Guatemala. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 242 p. 928. Green, Linda. 2003. Notes on Mayan youth and rural industrialization in Guatemala: the ethnography of children’s and youth’s work in the age of capitalist restructuring. Critique of Anthropology 23(1):51-73. Author explores how fundamental restructuring of the world economy and the international division of labor in the last quarter of the twentieth century has impacted households in rural Guatemala and explores the experiences of Mayan youths as they are drawn into the world economy as wage workers in rural maquilas. 929. Thomas, Kedron. 2009. Structural adjustment, spatial imaginaries, and “piracy” in Guatemala’s apparel industry. Anthropology of Work Review 30(1):1-9 930. Turqui, Juliana E. 2006. Trabajadores indígenas en la ciudad de Guatemala y el Movimiento Maya. Guatemala: Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. 126 p.

921. Santiz Gomez, Genaro. 2005. Pox; Posh: un licor tradicional de Chiapas; A Traditional Liquor From Chiapas. México: Centro de Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social: Archivo Fotográfico Indígena. 77 p. An historical and cultural exploration of the traditional Mayan Pox liquor of Chiapas. Texts in English and Spanish.

Water Management 931. Crane, Janet. 2010. Water and the Maya. Americas 62(2):4-5. 932. Johnston, Kevin J. 2004. Lowland Maya water management practices: the household exploitation of rural wells. Geoarchaeology 19(3):265-292.

Land Tenure 922. Camacho Nassar, Carlos, Bettina Durocher, Juan Antonio Fernandez, and José Vinicio Letona. 2003. Tierra, identidad y conflicto en Guatemala. Dinámicas agrarias en Guatemala, 5. Guatemala: FLACSO, MINUGUA, CONTIERRA. 284 p. Contents include: Bettina Durocher, El contexto de los fenómenos agrarios en Guatemala (pp. 17-70); José Vinicio Letona Zuleta, Carlos Camacho Nassar, and Juan Antonio Fernandez Gamarro, Las tierras comunales xincas en Guatemala (pp. 71-142); Carlos Camacho Nassar, La lucha por la tierra en las aldeas de María Tecun (pp. 143-200); Carlos Camacho Nassar, Ilom, Sajsiban, Ixtupil y Sotzil: cuatro aldeas ixiles en lucha por la tierra (pp. 201-252).

933. Lucero, Lisa J. 2006. Water and Ritual: The Rise and Fall of Classic Maya Rulers. Austin: University of Texas Press. 253 p. 934. Lucero, Lisa J., and Barbara Fash, eds. 2006. Precolumbian Water Management. Ideology, Ritual, and Power. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 304 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Lisa J. Lucero, and Barbara W. Fash, Precolumbian water management: an introduction; Juan A. Valdes, Water management at Kaminaljuyu: the beginnings of power and ideology in the Guatemalan highlands; Nicholas P. Dunning, Timothy Beach, and Sheryl 53

and Javier Hirose López, Cacao in the Yukatek Maya healing ceremonies of Don Pedro Ucan Itza (pp. 408-428); Patricia A. McAnany, and Satoru Murata, From chocolate to ‘Maya gold’: Belizean cacao farmers through the ages (pp. 429-450).

Luzzadder-Beach, Environmental variability among bajos in the southern Maya lowlands and its implications for ancient Maya civilization and archaeology; Julie L. Kunen, Water management, ritual, and community in tropical complex societies; Lisa J. Lucero, The political and sacred power of water in classic Maya society; Barbara W. Fash and Karla L. Davis-Salazar, Copan water ritual and management: imagery and sacred place; Kirk D. French, David S. Stuart, and Alfonso Morales, Archaeological and epigraphic evidence for water management and ritual at Palenque; Clifford T. Brown, Water sources at Mayapan, Yucatan, Mexico; and Vernon Scarborough, An overview of Mesoamerican water systems.

940. Powis, Terry G., W. Jeffrey Hurst, María del Carmen Rodriguez, Ponciano Ortíz C., Michael Blake, David Cheetham, Michael D. Coe, and John G. Hodgson. 2008. The origins of cacao use in Mesoamerica. Mexicon 30(2):35-38. 941. Prufer, Keith M., and W. Jeffrey Hurst. 2007. Chocolate in the underworld space of death: cacao seeds from an Early Classic mortuary cave. Ethnohistory 54(2):373-302.

935. Weiss-Krejci, Estella, and Thomas Sabbas. 2002. The potential role of small depressions as water storage features in the central Maya lowlands. Latin American Antiquity 13(3):343-357. Excavation of 16 small depressions in northwestern Belize shows that these features are either natural sinkholes (dolines) or quarried cavities. Authors conclude that Classic Maya population could have relied on decentralized water sources and suggest that hypotheses of centralized water management in the central Maya lowlands should be critically reviewed.

942. Vail, Gabrielle. 2009. Cacao use in Yucatan among the pre-hispanic Maya. In: Chocolate: History, Culture, and Heritage. Louis Evan Grivetti and Howard-Yana Shapiro, eds. pp. 3-16. Hoboken: Wiley Publications. 943. Danien, Elin. 2003. Yom yom cacao! Expedition 45(2):46. 944. Emch, Michael. 2003. The human ecology of Mayan cacao farming in Belize. Human Ecology 31(1):111-131. Author describes the expansion of cacao farming among Mayan farmers in the Toledo District, Belize, during the 1980s and why the number of cacao farmers increased from 70 to 365 and beans sold to Hershey Foods Corporation increased from 1,100 to almost 32,000 pounds. During the 1980s, Hershey Foods Corporation provided an unlimited market for cacao beans, agricultural loans and technical assistance were provided by international development agencies, and Mayan farmers planted cacao to gain usufruct rights to reservation and national land. During the 1990s a British organic food company became the new market for cacao beans.

936. Winemiller, Terance L. 2003. Water Resource Management by the Ancient Maya of Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College. 551 leaves. Tree Crops Cacao 937. Coe, Sophie D., and Michael D. Coe. 2001. Qiaokeli: The True History of Chocolate. Taibei Shi: Lan jing chu pan you xian gong si. 312 p. Translation from English to Chinese of Sophie and Michael Coe’s The True History of Chocolate (New York: Thames and Hudson, 1996). 938. Gabriel, Marianne. 2007. El uso del alcohol, tabaco, cacao e incenso en las ceremonias agrarias de los mayas yucatecos contemporaneos. Estudios de cultura maya 29:155-184

945. Ogata, Nisao. 2002. Studies of Mesoamerican Tropical Trees: Trees of the Maya Region and a Case Study On the Ethnobotany and Phylogeography of Cacao (Theobroma cacao L.). Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 169 leaves.

939. McNeil, Cameron L., ed. 2006. Chocolate in Mesoamerica. A Cultural History of Cacao. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. 542 p. Contents include: Cameron L. McNeil, Introduction: The biology, antiquity, and modern uses of the chocolate tree (pp. 1-30); Nisao Ogata, Arturo Gomez-Pompa, and Karl Taube, The domestication and distribution of Theobroma cacao L. in the neotropics (pp. 69-89); Laura Caso Barrera, and Mario Aliphat F., The Itza Maya control over cacao: politics, commerce, and war in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (pp. 89-116); Terence Kaufman, and John Justeson, The history of the word for ‘cacao’ and related terms in ancient Meso-America (pp. 117-139); Simon Martin, Cacao in ancient Maya religion: first fruit from the maize tree and other tales from the underworld (pp. 154-183); David Stuart, The language of chocolate: references to cacao on Classic Maya drinking vessels (pp. 184-201); Dorie Reents-Budet, The social context of ‘kawkaw’ drinking among the ancient Maya (pp. 202-223); Cameron L. McNeil, Jeffrey W. Hurst, and Robert J. Sharer, The use and representation of cacao during the Classic period at Copan, Honduras (pp. 224-252); Cameron L. McNeil, Traditional cacao use in modern Mesoamerica (pp. 341-366); Timothy W. Pugh, Cacao, gender, and the northern Lacandon God House (pp. 367-383); Betty B. Faust,

946. Thiemer-Sachse, Ursula von. 2007. Vom kakaobier zur schokolade. Ethnographisch-Archäologische Zeitschrift 48(4):563-576. Chicle 947. Forero, Oscar A., and Michael A. Redclift. 2006. The role of the Mexican state in the development of chicle extraction in Yucatan, and the continuing importance of coyotaje. Journal of Latin American Studies 38(1):65-93. Coffee 948. Lyon, Sarah. 2005. Maya Coffee Farmers and the Fair Trade Commodity Chain. Doctoral dissertation, Emory University. 322 leaves. See also Alexandra G. Ponette, Living on the Margin: An Economic Analysis of Traditional Shade Coffee Cultivation by the Huastec Maya of Northeastern Mexico (M.A. thesis, University of Texas at Austin, 2002. 126 leaves).

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Vanilla 949. Lubinsky, Pesach. 2007. Historical and Evolutionary Origins of Cultivated Vanilla. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 139 leaves.

961. Berg, Ginna. 2008. Zapaturismo in San Cristobal de las Casas, Mexico: Marketplace Capitalism meets Revolutionary Tourism. M.A. thesis, University of Manitoba (Canada). 155 leaves.

Marijuana 950. Steinberg, Michael K. 2004. The marijuana milpa: agricultural adaptations in a post-subsistence Maya landscape in southern Belize. In Dangerous Harvest: Drug Plants and the Transformation of Indigenous Landscapes. Michael K. Steinberg, Joseph J. Hobbs, and Kent Mathewson, eds. New York: Oxford University Press.

962. Burtner, Jennifer C. 2004. Travel and Transgression in the Mundo Maya: Spaces of Home and Alterity in a Guatemalan Tourist Market. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 687 leaves. 963. Juarez, Ana M. 2002. Ecological degradation, global tourism, and inequality: Maya interpretations of the changing environment in Quintana Roo, Mexico. Human Organization 61(2):113-124. An examination of the process of ecological degradation and the rise of the tourist industry in Tulum.

Tobacco 951. Gatel, Thomas. 2004. Le tabac dans la civilisation maya ancienne. M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1.

964. Juarez, Ana M. 2002. Ongoing struggles: Mayas and immigrants in tourist era Tulum. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 7(1):34-67. An analysis of relations between local Maya and Yucatec and Mexican immigrants in Tulum, Quintana Roo. Conflict between Maya and immigrants have centered on cultural, marital, and religious practices and physical control of the central church and plaza, eventually resulting in the establishment of dual, competing town centers.

Apiculture 952. Cairns, Christine E. 2002. Effects of Invasive Africanized Honey Bees (Apis mellifera scutellata) on Native Stingless Bee Populations (Meliponinae) and Traditional Mayan Beekeeping in Central Quintana Roo, Mexico. M.S. thesis, Florida International University. 111 leaves. 953. Ojeda López, Ruth N. 2009. El Mayab apicola; asociación y competitividad. Merida: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan, Impresos Alamilla. 354 p. Socioeconomical aspects of Yucatecan honey, with extensive graphs, tables and statistics of evaluation.

965. Merino Panzio, Daniel, and Alberto Muñoz Villarreal. 2002. Panorama actual de la arqueología en Belice: el Tourism Development Project. Revista española de antropologia americana 32:13-68. A summary of archaeological research undertaken by the Tourism Development Project, including work at Caracol, Lamanai, Altun Ha, Xunantunich, Cahal Pech, El Pilar, Santa Rita, Cerros, Nimli Punit, and Lubaantun.

954. Porter-Bolland, Luciana. 2001. Landscape Ecology of Apiculture in the Maya Area of La Montaña, Campeche, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Florida. 184 leaves.

966. Re Cruz, Alicia. 2003. Milpa as an ideological weapon: tourism and Maya migration to Cancun. Ethnohistory 50(3):489-502.

DEVELOPMENT 955. Canto Ramirez, José L., and Marvel del C. Valencia Gutierrez. 2008. Cultura maya y migración: al otro lado del rio ... elementos para un desarrollo sustenable. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1):63-70.

967. Torres, Rebecca M. 2000. Linkages Between Tourism and Agriculture in Quintana Roo, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Davis. 680 leaves.

956. McEwen, Rosemary. 2001. The Paradox of the “Primitive”: The Rhetorics of Development and Ethnography Discourse (A Guatemalan Case). Doctoral dissertation, The Ohio State University. 351 leaves.

968. Walker, Cameron J. 2009. Heritage or Heresy: Archaeology and Culture on the Maya Riveria. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. 121 p.

957. Murphy, Julia E. 2003. Ethnography and Sustainable Development in the Calakmul Model Forest, Campeche, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, York University (Canada). 331 leaves.

969. Willett, Benjamin M. 2007. Ethnic Tourism and Indigenous Activism: Power and Social Change in Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Iowa. 286 leaves.

958. Wainwright, Joel D. 2003. Decolonizing Development: Colonialism, Mayanism, and Agriculture in Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Minnesota. 413 leaves.

970. Winterbauer, Nancy L. 2002. Psychosocial Stress and Gender-Role Ideology Among Yucatec Mayan Migrants to Cancun’s “Riviera Maya”. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Binghamton. 178 leaves.

Tourism 959. Adelson, Naomi. 2001. Return of the Maya. Business Mexico 10(12):74-79. See also Naomi Adelson, A rocky road for the “Ruta Maya” (Business Mexico 11(6):56-57, 2001).

971. Zucker, Eleanor A. 2002. Precarious Place: The Founding of a Tourism Workers’ Town in the Riviera Maya, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 323 leaves.

960. Alisau, Patricia. 2001. Riviera Maya. Business Mexico 11(8):48-51.

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a Globalized World. Doctoral dissertation, Rice University. 298 leaves.

EDUCATION 972. Chavajay, Pablo, and Barbara Rogoff. 2002. Schooling and traditional collaborative social organization of problem solving by Mayan mothers and children. Developmental Psychology 38:55-67. Traditional indigenous social organization in the Americas has been characterized as involving horizontal multiparty engagements, in contrast with schooling, which often relies on hierarchy and division of labor. This study examined whether the social organization of problem solving of Guatemalan Mayan indigenous mothers and children varied with the mothers’ extent of experience with school. The results suggest that Western formal schooling contributes to the reshaping of traditional collaborative social organization among indigenous Mayan people.

983. Merida Arellano, Verónica. 2003. Didáctica del idioma materno. Guatemala: Instituto de Lingüística y Educación de la Universidad Rafael Landivar. 122 p. 984. O’Sullivan, Michael W. 2001. From Santiago Atitlan to the Pan Maya Movement: National Educational Reform, Local Power and Social Change in Guatemala. EdD dissertation, Department of Curriculum, Teaching and Learning, University of Toronto (Canada). 392 leaves. 985. Puac Bixcul, Francisco. 2001. Manual del rincón de la matemática maya y universal. Quezaltenango: Cooperación Alemana Para el Desarrollo; Proyecto de Educación Maya Bilingüe Intercultural. 78 p.

973. Chesterfield, Ray A. 2002. Cross-cultural cognitive categorization of students by Guatemalan teachers. CrossCultural Research 36(2):103-122.

986. Recanoj Mendoza, Mario, and Francisco Recanoj Mendoza. 2002. Pedagogia maya: aprendiendo pegadito a mama y a la par de papa: un acercamiento a la pedagogia maya. Guatemala: Editorial Saqil Tzij. 141 p.

974. Colom, Alejandra. 2002. Undergraduates in the field: lessons learned as an anthropology student in Guatemala. Practicing Anthropology 24(4):22-24.

987. Reyes de Ramos, Ernestina. 2001. El bilingüísmo en el sistema educativo guatemalteco; resumen con fines didacticos. Guatemala: Instituto de Lingüistico y Educación de la Universidad Rafael Landivar. 94 p. 988. Robbins, Kristin L. 2006. Between Home and School: Guatemalan Maya Students and Cultural Gender Roles in South Florida. Doctoral dissertation, Florida Atlantic University. 228 leaves.

975. Crisostomo y Crisostomo, Luis J. 2001. Técnicas para el desarrollo de las artes de la lengua materna maya. Quezaltenango: Proyecto de Educación Maya Bilingüe Intercultural. 92 p. 976. Crisostomo y Crisostomo, Luis J. 2002. Educando en nuestros idiomas: taq’te’n chuusu’n le quayoo; fundamentos e ideas para un curriculum activo (metodologia de la educación bilingüe intercultural). Guatemala: Editorial Saqil Tzij. 129 p.

989. Salazar Tetzagüic, Manuel de Jesus. 2003. Culturas e interculturalidad en Guatemala. Guatemala: Instituto de Lingüistica y Educación de la Universidad Rafael Landivar. 92 p. Introductory study of bilingual education and multiculturalism in Guatemala.

977. Cuadernos de educación politica (liderazgo y organización): escenario civico politico nacional de unidad y fraternidad maya. Quezaltenango: Comisión Politica del Escenario Civico Político Nacional de Unidad y Fraternidad maya (EPUM), 2001. 29 p. Essay on the nature of leadership in Maya communities.

MEDICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 990. Adams, Walter R., and John P. Hawkins, eds. 2007. Health Care in Guatemala: Confronting Medical Pluralism in a Developing Country. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 268 p. Contents include: Walter R. Adams, and John P. Hawkins, The continuing distinction between traditional and Western medical beliefs and practices in Guatemala (pp. 326); Jason Harris, “Someone is making me sick”: conceptions of disease in Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan (pp. 27-43); Jolene Yukes, “No one wants to become a healer”: herbal medicine and ethnobotanical knowledge in Nahuala (pp. 44-68); Steven S. Rode, “If we do not eat milpa, we die”: the cultural basis of health in Nahuala (pp. 69-85); Michael D. Jones, The solution is prevention”: The national rural health care system in Nahuala (pp. 86-99); Jennifer Leyn, “The sickness was too strong”: medical choice in Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan (pp. 100-124); Evara E. Wilson, “Your destiny is to care for pregnant women”: midwives and childbirth in Nahuala (pp. 125-147); Deborah L. Lee, “Tortillas give us strength”: An assessment of eating in Ixtahuacan (pp. 148-165); Bronwyn M. Sinclair, “Wild greens every day, that is all we ate”: malnutrition and development in Nahuala (pp. 166-178); Jared T. Lee, “If my tooth hurts, I pull it out”: oral health in Antigua Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan (pp. 179-193); Emily R. Sullivan, Sadness in the highlands: A study of depression in Nueva Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan (pp. 194-214); John P. Hawkins,

978. Eiss, Paul K. 2004. Deconstructing Indians, reconstructing patria, indigenous education in Yucatan from the Porfiriato to the Mexican Revolution. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 9(1):119-150. 979. Fallaw, Ben. 2004. Rethinking Mayan resistance, changing relations between federal teachers and Mayan communities in eastern Yucatan, 1929-1935. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 9(1):151-178. 980. Hurtado Montejo, Aurelio D. 2001. Hablen cada uno según su idioma: idiomas mayas y su didáctica. Guatemala: Editorial Saqil Tzij. 125 p. 981. Lewis, Stephen E. 2001. A window into the recent past in Chiapas: federal education and indigenismo in the highlands, 1921-1940. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 6(1):5883. 982. Lima Soto, Ricardo E. 2004. Emergent GuatemalanMaya Discourses and Institutions of ‘Modernization’: The Impact of Education Upon the Representation of the Maya in 56

bonesetting. Medical Anthropology Quarterly 16(1):22-40. Authors explores how Kaqchikel bonesetters in San Juan Comalapa work in an environment hostile to their craft and explores the juxtaposition between Maya bonesetting and Guatemalan biomedicine.

and Walter R. Adams, Good medicine: steps toward a Mayaaccessible health care system (pp. 215-236). 991. Almanzana Velazquez, Horacio. 2007. Del conocimiento al reconocimiento: antropología, desarrollo y narrativa de los saberes indígenas desde el sistema médico maya en Quintana Roo. Dimensión Antropológica 14(41):107-136.

1004. Huber, Brad R., and Alan R. Sandstrom, eds. 2001. Mesoamerican Healers. Austin: University of Texas Press. 403 p. A survey of Mesoamerican healers and medical practices in Mexico and Guatemala. Contents include: Brad R. Huber, Introduction (pp. 1-18); Luz María Hernandez Saenz, and George M. Foster, Curers and their cures in colonial New Spain and Guatemala: the Spanish component (pp. 19-46); Carlos Viesca Treviño, Curanderismo in Mexico and Guatemala: its historical evolution from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century (pp. 47-65); Frank J. Lipp, A comparative analysis of southern Mexican and Guatemalan shamans (pp. 95-116); Sheila Cosminsky, Maya midwives of southern Mexico and Guatemala (pp. 179-210); Elena Hurtado, and Eugenia Saenz de Tejada, Relations between government health workers and traditional midwives in Guatemala (pp. 211-242); Benjamin D. Paul, and Clancy McMahon, Mesoamerican bonesetters (pp. 243-269); Alan R. Sandstrom, Mesoamerican healers and medical anthropology: summary and concluding remarks (pp. 307-329).

992. Balam Pereira, Gilberto. 2008. Herbolarios mayas. Merida: Maldonado Editores del Mayab. 54 p. On Mayan herbology, with Mayan and scientific names, uses and recipes. 993. Balam Pereira, Gilberto. 2008. Los Mayas de hoy: testimonios sociológicos. Merida: Maldonado Editores del Mayab. 120 p. Essays on contemporary Mayan health and other social issues, with chapters on acupuncture, curanderos, medical marijuana. 994. Bascope, Grace L. 2005. The Household Ecology of Disease Transmission: Childhood Illness in a Yucatan Maya Community. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Methodist University. 341 leaves. 995. Berry, Nicole S. 2008. Who’s judging the quality of care? Indigenous Maya and the problem of “not being attended.” Medical Anthropology 27(2):164-189.

1005. Jiménez V, Alejandra N.J. 2008. Sanaciones mayas para el Corazón y la sangre. Mexico: Instituto Latinoamericano para el Estudio, Formación e Investigación en Ontologia. 63 p. Explores the earliest advances in Mayan pre-hispanic ethnomedicine. With illustrations of images from Pre-Colonial times throughout.

996. Chavez Guzman, Mónica. 2006. El sol como fundamento curativo de las terapias mayas yucatecas en el periodo colonial. Estudios de cultura maya 27:121-140. 997. Crocker Sagastume, Rene. 2006. Poder local en salud en Guatemala: la experiencia de los pueblos de la Biosfera Maya. Guatemala: Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Editorial Universitaria. 278 p.

1006. Kunow, Marianna A. 2003. Maya Medicine: Traditional Healing in Yucatan. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 152 p. Study of traditional healers in Piste.

998. Cucina, Andrea, Pilar Zabala, Monica Rodriguez, and Vera Tiesler. 2006. Epidemias, condiciones de vida y salud en los sectores étnicos en la ciudad de Campeche durante la colonia temprana. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1):95104.

1007. Liendo Stuardo, Rodrigo, ed. 2008. El Territorio maya; Memoria de la Quinta Mesa Redonda de Palenque. México: INAH. 492p. Includes the following essays: “Población, salud y nutrición entre los mayas prehispánicos”, “La redefinición de la identidad maya yucateca en el periodo colonial” and “Etnicidad, linaje y poder entre los mayas peninsulares.”

999. Eder, Karin, and María Manuela García Pu. 2003. Modelo de la medicina indígena maya en Guatemala; investigación participativa en Sipacapa, San Marcos, San Martin Jilotepeque, Chimaltenango, and San Juan Ixcoy, Huehuetenango. 2 rev. ed. Guatemala: Asociación de Servicios Comunitarios de Salud. 123 p.

1008. McCrea, Heather L. 2002. Diseased Relations: Epidemics, Public Health, and State Formation in NineteenthCentury Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook. 290 leaves

1000. Eder, Karin, and Glendy Car. 2004. Modelo de la medicina indígena maya en Guatemala; expresiones del modelo en el grupo etnico q’eq’chi’. Guatemala: Asociación de Servicios Comunitarios de Salud. 89 p.

1009. McLorg, Penelope A. 2000. Aging and Glycemia in a Non-Westernized Context: Rural Maya Females in Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University. 273 leaves.

1001. Glantz, Namino, and Ben McMahan. 2007. Formative research and participatory GIS Mapping: Elder well-being in Chiapas, Mexico. Practicing Anthropology 29(4):6-14.

1010. Marquez Morfín, Lourdes, and Patricia Hernandez Espinoza, eds. 2006. Salud y Sociedad en el Mexico prehispánico y colonial. Mexico: CONACULTA. Contents include: Lourdes Marquez Morfín, and Patricia O. Hernandez Espinoza, Los mayas prehispánicos; balance de salud y nutrición en grupos del Clásico y el Posclásico (pp. 73-102); Patricia O. Hernandez Espinoza, and Lourdes Marquez Morfín, La población maya prehispánica: Una interpretación sobre su dinámica demográfica (pp. 103-128).

1002. Harvey, Tenibac S.2006. Humbling, frightening, and exalting: an experiential acquaintance with Maya healing. Anthropology and Humanism 31(1):1-10. 1003. Hinojosa, Servando Z. 2002. The Hands know: bodily engagement and medical impasse in highland Maya 57

1023. Dalle, Sarah P. 2006. Landscape Dynamics and Management of Wild Plant Resources in Shifting Cultivation Systems: A Case Study From a Forest Ejido in the Maya Zone of Quintana Roo, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, McGill University (Canada). 191 leaves.

1011. Mosquera, María T. de J. 2006. Lógicas y racionalidades: entre comadronas y terapuetas tradicionales. Guatemala: Instituto de Estudios Interétnicos, Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala; Serviprensa. 314 p. 1012. Nemoga Soto, Gabriel R. 2004. Inter- and Intra-Cultural Variation of Medicinal Plant Knowledge in the Tropical Forest of Calakmul, Mexico: Implications for Conservation, Protection and Resilience of Traditional Knowledge. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Davis. 118 leaves.

1024. Greene, William A. 2005. Extracting Tradition: Nature, Culture, and Power in the Ethnobotany of Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Davis. 297 leaves. 1025. Hopkins, Allison L. 2009. Medicinal Plant Remedy Knowledge and Social Networks in Tabi, Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Florida. 336 leaves.

1013. Ortega Palma, Albertina, and Jorge Cervantes Martinez. 2007. Condiciones de salud y nutrición en Jaina. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1):55-72.

1026. Kunow, Marianna A. 2004. Maya Medicine: Traditional Healing in Yucatan. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 160 p. The author examines the methods and natural elements used by curers in Piste, Mexico, a small town in the Yucatan Peninsula. She documents medicinal plant names and uses, and Yucatan ethnobotanical sources; and includes plant illustrations, a plant catalog, and glossary.

1014. Thornton, Rosie L. 2001. Rural Maya Women in Belize: An Assessment of Health and Educational Needs. M.A. thesis, Department of Education, St. Francis Xavier University, Canada. 134 leaves. A summary of results of a needs assessment to determine learning preference, current health status, and health care preferences of rural Maya mothers in five isolated villages in central and southern Belize.

1027. Lampman, Aaron M. 2004. Tzeltal Ethnomycology: Naming, Classification and Use of Mushrooms in the Highlands of Chiapas, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Georgia. 370 leaves.

1015. Wagner, William G. 2009. “Aqui No Paso Nada” Terror, Remembrance, and Healing in a Guatemalan “Green Zone”. Doctoral dissertation, University of New Mexico. 315 leaves.

1028. Michel, Joanna L. 2006. Medical Ethnobotany of the Q’eqchi Maya: Perceptions and Botanical Treatments Related to Women’s Health. Doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois at Chicago, Health Sciences Center. 245 leaves.

1016. Zavatone-Veth, Heidi M. 2004. Gender, Maya Identity, and the Multi-Level Politics of Forming Community Health Promoters in Highland Guatemala. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Connecticut. 504 leaves.

1029. Murray, Sara J. 2001. Plants in the ‘Patxokon Na’: Tzotzil Maya Homegardens in the Highlands of Southeastern Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Wayne State University. 168 leaves.

ETHNOBOTANY 1017. Atran, Scott, Ximena Lois, and Edilberto Ucan Ek. 2004. Plants of the Petén Itza’ Maya; Plantas de los maya itza’ del Petén. Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, 38. Ann Arbor: Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan. 248 p. and CD-ROM.

1030. Nigh, Ronald. 2002. Maya medicine in the biological gaze: bioprospecting research as herbal fetishism. Current Anthropology 43(3):451-478.

1018. Bourbonnais-Spear, Natalie. 2005. Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology of Q’eqchi’ Maya Medicinal Plants From Southern Belize Used For Ethnopsychiatric and Neurological Purposes. M.Sc., University of Ottawa (Canada). 137 leaves.

1031. Ortíz Mejia, Lorenzo. 2002. Plantas medicinales y guia de apoyo al docente; puntil tx’aka’n tan xtze’ ejnin ch’eyb’il ajchisunl. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala. 95 p. Text in Spanish and Awakateko.

1019. Breedlove, Dennis E., and Robert M. Laughlin. 2000. The Flowering of Man: A Tzotzil Botany of Zinacantan. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press. 336 p. An abridged edition of one of the most comprehensive studies of Mesoamerican ethnobotany.

1032. Schuster, Angela M. H. 2001. On the healer’s path; a journey through the Maya rain forest. Archaeology 54(4):3439. Belize’s Terra Nova Medicinal Reserve, established to protect and study what remains of Mayan traditional medicine, is described. Both this reserve and the Ixchel Tropical Research Foundation try to interest the scientific community in Mayan medicine’s potential.

1020. Bruck, Isaac S. 2002. Ethnobotany of the K’ekchi’ Maya of Southern Belize and a Search For Novel Pesticide Models. Doctoral dissertation, North Carolina State University. 210 leaves.

1033. Stepp, John R. 2002. Highland Maya Medical Ethnobotany in Ecological Perspective. Doctoral dissertation, University of Georgia.

1021. Casagrande, David G. 2002. Ecology, Cognition, and Cultural Transmission of Tzeltal Maya Medicinal Plant Knowledge. Doctoral dissertation, University of Georgia.

1034. Treyvaud Amiguet, Virginie. 2005. Ethnobotanical and Phytochemical Investigations of Central American Flora: Q’eqchi Ethnobotany and Phytochemistry of a New Pleodendron Species. Doctoral dissertation, University of Ottawa (Canada). 303 leaves.

1022. Casagrande, David G. 2004. Conceptions of primary forest in a Tzeltal Maya community: implications for conservation. Human Organization 63(2):189-202. 58

Mexico: a biocultural perspective on social status differentiation among the Classic Maya. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 122(1):1-10. Dental caries and antemortem tooth loss are investigated in a Classic Maya sample obtained from Calakmul, Dzibanche, and Kohunlich.

1035. Uriarte, María T. 2006. Flores en la pintura mural prehispánica. Arqueología mexicana 13(78): 36- 41. 1036. Valasco Lozano, Ana María L., and Debra Nagao. 2006. Mitologia y simbolismo de las flores. Arqueología mexicana 13(78):28-37.

1048. Cucina, Andrea, and Vera Tiesler Blos. 2004. Dental morphometry and biological affinity in pre-contact and contact Maya populations from the peninsula of Yucatan. Mexicon 26(1):14-19.

1037. Zarger, Rebecca K. 2002. Children’s Ethnoecological Knowledge: Situated Learning and the Cultural Transmission of Subsistence Knowledge and Skills Among Q’eqchi’ Maya. Doctoral dissertation, University of Georgia.

1049. Cucina, Andrea, and Vera Tiesler. 2008. Dinámicas poblacionales y migraciones durante el clásico y posclásico en Yucatan: la morfología dental. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2):165-178.

1038. Zarger, Rebecca K. 2002. Acquisition and transmission of subsistence knowledge by Q’eqchi’ Maya in Belize. In Ethnobiology and Biocultural Diversity. John Stepp, Felicitas Wyndham, and Ruth Zarger, eds. pp. 593-603. Athens: University of Georgia Press.

1050. Danforth, Marie E., Gabriel D. Wrobel, Carl W. Armstrong, and David Swanson. 2009. Juvenile age estimation using diaphyseal long bone lengths among ancient Maya populations. Latin American Antiquity 20(1):3-14.

1039. Zarger, Rebecca K., and John R. Stepp. 2004. Persistence of botanical knowledge among Tzeltal Maya children. Current Anthropology 45(3):413-418. Authors demonstrate, despite sociopolitical, economic, and environmental change, children’s ethnobotanical knowledge (i.e., the ability to name plants) has remained relatively constant in the Tzeltal Maya community of Mahosik’.

1051. Dolphin, A. E. 2001. A view from the coast of ancient Maya childhood health: Marco Gonzalez and San Pedro, Belize. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Supplement 32:60. Living on Ambergris Caye, off of the northeastern coast of Belize, the Postclassic Maya inhabitants of Marco Gonzalez and San Pedro hosted centers of maritime trade in Central America. Both sites had strong cultural ties to the inland ceremonial center of Lamanai, yet little is known of how coastal living may have affected the health of their occupants. Evidence of linear enamel hypoplastic (LEH) defect are used to evaluate whether juvenile health at these coastal sites was experienced differentially compared to other Maya centers located on the mainland. The LEH data suggests, despite sharing cultural norms with their mainland trading-partners, something unique to the coastal environment benefited childhood health on the Cayes. Possible factors (e.g. marine diet) influencing juvenile health along the coast are discussed in the hopes that regional variation and adaptation to coastal environments will be better understood for Maya groups just prior to Spanish contact.

Family Planning 1040. Starkey, Marian. 2009. Under the Mayan sun: Family planning in two Yucatan peninsula communities. Reporter 41(1):8-14 Midwifery 1041. Cosminsky, Sheila. 2001. Midwifery across the generations: a modernizing midwife in Guatemala. Medical Anthropology 20(4):345-378. 1042. Hinojosa, Servando Z. 2004. Authorizing tradition: vectors of contention in highland Maya midwifery. Social Science and Medicine 59(3):637-652. Author examines how Guatemalan health authorities have sought to change Kaqchikel Maya midwifery, refashioning its vocational framework and retooling it in accordance with Western medical principles.

1052. Duncan, William N. 2009. Cranial modification among the Maya: absence of evidence or evidence of absence? In Bioarchaeology and Identity in the Americas. Kelly J. Knudson and Christopher M. Stojanowski, eds. pp. 177-193. Gainesville: University of Florida Press.

PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 1043. Acevedo, Renaldo. 2002. Chel: historia, investigación arqueológica y análisis antropológico forense. Mayab 15:79101.

1053. Estudios de enfermedades de los mayas. Revista de arqueología 259:14, 2003.

1044. Arechiga Viramontes, Julieta, and Mercedes Mejia Sanchez. 2001. Sensibilidad gustativa a la feniltiocarbamida en poblaciones mayas. Estudios de cultura maya 21:15-24.

1054. Geller, Pamela L. 2003. Read my lips … ears, nose, head, and teeth. Expedition 45(2):12-14.

1045. Beyene, Yewoubdar, and Mary C. Martin. 2001. Menopausal experiences and bone density of Mayan women in Yucatan, Mexico. American Journal of Human Biology 13(4):505-511.

1055. Geller, Pamela L. 2004. Transforming Bodies, Transforming Identities: A Consideration of Pre-Columbian Maya Corporeal Beliefs and Practices. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 606 leaves.

1046. Aubry, B. Scott. 2009. Population Structure and Interregional Interaction in Prehispanic Mesoamerica: A Biodistance Study. Doctoral dissertation, Ohio State University. 586 leaves.

1056. Gurri, Francisco D., Gilberto Balam Pereira, and Emilio F. Moran. 2001. Well-being changes in response to 30 years of regional integration in Maya populations from Yucatan, Mexico. American Journal of Human Biology 13(5):590-602.

1047. Cucina, Andrea, and Vera Tiesler Blos. 2003. Dental caries and antemortem tooth loss in the northern Petén area, 59

1066. Price, T. Douglas, James H. Burton, Paul D. Fullager, Lori E. Wright, Jane E. Buikstra, and Vera Tiesler. 2008. Strontium isotopes and the study of human mobility in ancient Mesoamerica. Latin American Antiquity 19(2):167-180.

1057. Hodell, David A., Rhonda L. Quinn, Mark Brenner, and George Kamenov. 2003. Spatial variation of strontium isotopes (87Sr/86Sr) in the Maya region: a tool for tracking ancient human migration. Journal of Archaeological Science 3(5):585-601. Authors argue that variation in strontium isotope ratios provide a powerful tool for recognizing geographic “outliers” in ancient Maya burials and may test hypotheses concerning the origin of specific individuals, inferred population migration patterns, and possible external cultural influences in the Maya region.

1067. Rios Frutos, Luis. 2003. Sex determination accuracy of the minimum supero-inferior femoral neck diameter in a contemporary rural Guatemalan population. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 122:1213-126. One hundred and fourteen femora derived from a contemporary rural Guatemalan population were studied to test the ability of the minimum supero-inferior femoral neck diameter as a sex indicator.

1058. Ibarra-Rivera, Lisa, Sheyla Mirabel, Manuela A. Regueiro, and Rene J. Herrera. 2008. Delineating genetic relationships among the Maya. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 135(3):329-370.

1068. Rios Frutos, Luis, and Barry Bogin. 2004. Implicaciones sociales de los estudios de crecimiento infantile en Guatemala. Mayab 17:115-125. Results of growth studies conducted in Guatemala suggest that body size and shape, measured by stature and relative leg length, are sensitive to the economic, social, and political environment in which different groups of Guatemalan children live.

1059. Kramer, Karen L. 2004. Reconsidering the cost of childbearing: the timing of children’s helping behavior across the life cycle of Maya families. In Socioeconomic Aspects of Human Behavioral Ecology, Michael S. Alvard, ed. pp. 335353. Research in Economic Anthropology, 23. Amsterdam: Elsevier.

1069. Scherer, Andrew K. 204. Dental Analysis of Classic Period Population Variability in the Maya Area. Doctoral dissertation, Texas A&M University. 314 leaves.

1060. McDonald, Kirsten. 2001. Degenerative Joint Disease: What Can It Tell Us About the Early Historic Maya at Lamanai? (Belize). M.A. thesis, Trent University. 196 leaves. Author attempts to explore linkages between the presence of osteoarthritis and the activity patterns of the early historic period Maya at Lamanai in Belize. This study provides an understanding of the overall health of an ancient population, a record of a prominent pathology that still occurs today, a basis for comparison to other Maya populations, and adds to the understanding of the quality of life that existed during the early Historic era. Results support previous archaeological and osteological research that found greater stress and deterioration of the quality of life during this period.

1070. Scherer, Andrew K. 2007. Population structure of the Classic Period Maya. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 132(3):367-380. 1071. Scherer, Andrew K., Lori E. Wright, and Cassady J. Yoder. 2007. Bioarchaeological evidence for social and temporal differences in diet at Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Latin American Antiquity 18(1):85-140 1072. Spence, Michael W., and Christine D. White. 2009. Mesoamerican Bioarchaeology: Past and Future. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2):233-240

1061. Maggiano, Isabel S., Michael Shultz, Horst Kierdorf, Thelma Sierra Sosa, Corey M. Maggiano, and Vera Tiesler Blos. 2008. Cross-sectional analysis of long bones, occupational activities and long-distance trade of the Classic Maya from Xcambo-archaeological and osteological evidence. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 136(4):470-477.

1073. Tiesler Blos, Vera. 2001. Patrones ocupacionales y subsistencia en la sociedad maya de la costa peninsular: consideraciones bioculturales. Mayab 14:30-41. 1074. Tiesler, Vera, and Andrea Cucina. 2008. Joint agendas in Maya bioarchaeology: conducting collaborative research at the Autonomous University of Yucatan, Merida, Mexico. SAA Archaeological Record 8(2):15-17.

1062. Marquez Morfin, Lourdes, and Rebecca Storey. 2007. From early village to regional center in Mesoamerica: an investigation of lifestyles and health. In Ancient Health: Skeletal Indicators of Agricultural and Economic Intensification. Mark N. Cohen and Gillian M.M. CraneKramer, eds. pp. 80-91. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.

1075. Wright, Lori E. 2003. Estimating the length of incomplete long bones: forensic standards from Guatemala. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 120(3):233-251. 1076. Wright, Lori E. 2006. Diet, Health, and Status Among the Pasion Maya: A Reappraisal of the Collapse. Vanderbilt Institute of Mesoamerican Archaeology Series, 6. Nashville: Vanderbilt Press. 256 p.

1063. McLorg, Penelope A. 2005. Lack of age-related increases in average glycemia in non-Westernized sample of rural Yucatec Maya females. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 126:111-121. 1064. Miller, Mary. 2009. Extreme makeover: how painted bodies, flattened foreheads, and filed teeth made the Maya beautiful. Archaeology 62(1):36-42

1077. Wrobel, Gabriel D. 2004. Metric and Nonmetric Dental Variation Among the Ancient Maya of Northern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Indiana University. 335 leaves.

1065. Pérez Flores, Alejandro, and Vera Tiesler. 2008. Violencia en poblaciones mayas: una vision bioarqueológica. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2):179-194.

1078. Wrobel, Gabriel D., Marie E. Danforth, and Carl Armstrong. 2001. Estimating sex by discriminant function analysis of long bone measurements from the protohistoric 60

Maya site of Tipu, Belize. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Supplement 32:167.

were haplotype A, whereas 11 skeletons out of 16 dated from the Postclassic period were also haplotype A.

1079. Wrobel, Gabriel D., Marie E. Danforth, and Carl Armstrong. 2002. Estimating sex of Maya skeletons by discriminant function analysis of long-bone measurements from the protohistoric Maya site of Tipu, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2):255-263. Discriminant functions were developed using long-bone robusticity measurements of 82 individuals from the protohistoric site of Tipu, Belize.

1087. Mossberg, Andrew E. 2001. Mitochrondrial DNA and the Maya. Institute for Maya Studies Newsletter 30(11):1-2.. POLITICS 1088. Anderson, Eugene N. 2005. Political Ecology in a Yucatec Maya Community. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 1089. Balam Pereira, Gilberto. 2008. El Apocalipsis en Yucatan: corrupción. Merida: Editorial Nuestra América, 2008. 205 p. Contents includes: “El apocalipsis en los marcos nacional e internacional ultimo’s 5 meses de 1999, De los derechos humanos, Fin de siglo. año 2000, El apocalipsis de la corrupción galopa en Yucatean, Por el bien de todos. Los productores mayas pobres, ¿A que viene calderon a Yucatan? A entregar a Bush soberania para un plan Merida, Del historial de nuestro petroleo, Fox cachorro del imperialismo. Legisladores cachorros de fox, Padres y gobierno. Responsables de la integridad de los adolescente” and “El gay power en Yucatan.”

Body Modification 1080. Geller, Pamela L. 2006. Altering identities: body modifications and the pre-Columbian Maya. In Social Archaeology of Funerary Remains. Rebecca Gowland and Christopher Knusel, eds. pp. 91. Oxford, England: Oxbow Books. 1081. Mayer, Karl H. 2004. A Maya skull with dental decoration in Flores, Petén. Mexicon 26(6):114. 1082. Tiesler, Vera, and Arturo Romano Pacheco. 2008. El modelado del craneo en Mesoamérica: emblemática costumbre milenaria. Arqueología 16(94):18-25.

1090. Carlo, Bryan M. 2006. Political Decentralization in the Maya Lowlands: An Examination of the Origins of Multepal or Joint Governance. M.A., Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 335 leaves.

1083. Tiesler Blos, Vera. 2001. Decoraciones dentales entre los antiguos mayas. Mexico: Ediciones Euroamericanas/Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. 95 p. Study of the dental mutilations used as decorations by the Mayas.

1091. Castillo Cocom, Juan. 2005. “It was simply their word: Yucatec Maya PRInces in YucaPAN and the politics of respect. Critique of Anthropology 25(2):131-155. Thousand Oaks, CA.

1084. Tiesler Blos, Vera G., and R. L. Benitez Frausto. 2001. Head shaping and dental decoration: two biocultural attributes of cultural integration and social distinction among the ancient Maya. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Supplement 32:149. The presence, forms and techniques used in artificial cranial deformation and dental decoration were studied in 1,745 skeletons found in 102 mostly pre-Hispanic archaeological Mayan sites (from Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras) dating from Preclassic, Classic, Postclassic and colonial times.

1092. Chance, John K., and Barbara L. Stark. 2007. Estrategias empleadas en las provincias imperiales: perspectivas prehispánicas y coloniales en Mesoamérica. Revista española de antropología americana 37(2):203-233. 1093. Chase, Arlen F., Diane Z. Chase, and Michael E. Smith. 2009. States and Empires in Ancient Mesoamerica. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2):175-182.

Mitochondrial DNA 1085. Cucina, Andrea, Allan Ortega, and Vera Teisler. 2008. When the east meets the west; biological affinities between coastal populations in the Yucatan peninsula during the Postclassic period. Mexicon 30(2):39-43.

1094. Colas, Pierre R. 2003. K’inich and king: naming self and person among Classic Maya rulers. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(2):269-283. Author argues that Classic Maya kings legitimized their power by adopting the name of the sun deity, K’inich, identifying themselves with the celestial authority of a potent supernatural being.

1086. Gonzalez-Oliver, Angelica, Lourdes Marquez-Morfin, José C. Jimenez, and Alfonso Torre-Blanco. 2001. Founding Amerindian mitochondrial DNA lineages in ancient Maya from Xcaret, Quintana Roo. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 116(3):230-231. Ancient DNA from the bone remains of 25 individuals from the Late Classic-Postclassic Maya site of Xcaret, Quintana Roo, was recovered, and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) was amplified by using a polymerase chain reaction. The presence of the four founding Amerindian mtDNA lineages was investigated by restriction analysis and by direct sequencing in selected individuals. The mtDNA lineages A, B, and C were found in this population. Eighty-four percent of the individuals were lineage A, whereas lineages B and C were present at low frequencies, 4% and 8%, respectively. Lineage D was absent from our sample. One individual did not possess any of the four lineages. Six skeletons out of seven dated from the Late Classic period

1095. Colas, Pierre R. 2004. Sinn und Bedeutung klassischer Maya-Personennamen: Typologische Analyse von Anthroponymphrasen in den Hieroglypheninschriften der klassischen Maya-Kultur als Beitrag zur Allgemeinen Onomastik. Acta Americana, 15. Markt Schwaben: Verlag Anton Saurwein. 433 p. 1096. Cuddy, Thomas W. 2000. Socioeconomic Integration of the Classic Maya State: Political and Domestic Economies in a Residential Neighborhood. Doctoral dissertation, Columbia University. 362 leaves. 1097. Dill, Kathleen E. 2004. Mediated Pasts, Negotiated Futures: Human Rights and Social Reconstruction in a Maya 61

des the following chapters: “La vida de nuestro territorio”, “Tomar acuerdo sobre la tierra” and “El musico en la fiesta de la naturaleza”. Texts in Spanish, Ch’ol, Tzeltal and Tzotzil. Includes references and 2 CD versions of the text.

Community. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Davis. 299 leaves. 1098. Duarte, Ana R. 2008. Imaginando a los mayas de hoy: autorrepresentación y política. Estudios de cultura maya 32:39-62.

1105. Izquierdo y de la Cueva, Ana L. 2004. Unidad y fragmentación del poder entre los mayas. Estudios de cultura maya 25:57-76.

1099. Feinman, Gary M. 2001. Mesoamerican political complexity: the corporate-network dimension. In From Leaders to Ruler. Jonathan Haas, ed. pp. 151-176. New York: Kluwer Academic. The “corporate-network dimension” is discussed in a consideration of Classic Maya and Teotihuacan sociopolitical organization and rulership.

1106. Jackson, Sarah E. 2005. Deciphering Classic Maya Political Hierarchy: Epigraphic, Archeological, and Ethnohistoric Perspectives on the Courtly Elite. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 673 leaves.

1100. García Ramírez, Sergio. 2006. Indígenas en la jurisprudencia de la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos. Guatemala: Universidad Rafael Landívar, Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas 16 p.

1107. Krotz, Esteban, ed. 2001. Aproximaciones a la antropología jurídica de los mayas peninsulares. Merida: Universidad de Yucatan. 329 p. A collection of essays on indigenous rights, state legislation, and Mayan jurisprudence.

1101. Gauvin-Racine, Joelle. 2005. Les relations de pouvoir dans la gestion communautaire des ressources naturelles: Une anthropologie politique critique du développement durable dans la Zona Maya du Quintana Roo, au Mexique. M.A. thesis, Universite Laval (Canada). 171 leaves.

1108. López Rivera, Oscar A., ed. 2006. Acción colectiva y propuesta de los pueblos indígenas ante la pobreza. Debate y Propuestas Sobre la Pobreza, 3. Guatemala: FLASCO. 174 p. Contents include: Juan Tzoc, La identidad cultural, el desafio de la pobreza (pp. 21-40); José D. Tasejo Castillo, La cultura y organización como agentes de desarrollo; experiencias de tres comunidades en los municipios de Sayaxche, La Libertad, y Dolores, del departamento de Petén (pp. 41-58); Ernesto D. Tucux Coyoy, 2006. Agenda de desarrollo para las comunidades indígenas (pp. 105-118); Julio A. Valdez Rodas, Aqui nos quedamos! Usurpaciones y lucha por la tierra en el Parque Nacional Sierra del Lacandon, La Libertad, Petén (pp. 147156);

1102. Gonzalez Ponciano, Jorge R. 2006. Blancura, cosmopolitismo y representación en Guatemala. Estudios de cultura maya 27:125-147. 1103. Harada, Tsubasa O., Lorraine A. Williams-Beck, and Ana Luisa Izquierdo, eds. 2006. Nuevas perspectivas sobre la geografía política de los Mayas. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 338 p. Contents include: Tsubasa Okoshi Harada, Ana Luisa Izquierdo, and Lorraine A. Williams Beck, Introducción (pp. 1-28); Tsubasa Okoshi Harada, Los Canul y los Canche: una interpretación del “Codice de Calkini” (pp. 29-56); María Flores Hernández, and Manuel E. Pérez Rivas, Apuntes para el estudio de la organización sociopolítica de la costa oriental de Quintana Roo (pp. 81-126); Ernesto Vargas Pacheco, Caberca, unidad y esfera politica: dinámica de la provincia de Acalan (pp. 127-158); Ana L. Izquierdo, Las jurisdicciones en el Chontalpa del siglo XVI (pp. 159-182); Janine Gasco, The political geography of the province of Soconusco in the Late Postclassic and early colonial periods (pp. 183-208); Susan Kepecs, The political geography of Chikinchel, Yucatan, Mexico: historical and crosscultural approaches (pp. 209-232); Rani T. Alexander, La comunidad posclásica en Isla Cilvituk, Campeche: comprende una frontera interna? (pp. 233-268); Matthew Restall, Origin and myth: ethnicity, class, and chibal in Postclassic and colonial Yucatan (pp. 269-290); Lorraine A. Williams-Beck, Patrones de asentamiento y organización comunitaria previos a la formación de una jurisdición política: una evaluación arqueológica de Codice de Calkini (pp. 291-338).

1109. Lucero, Lisa J. 2003. The Politics of ritual: the emergence of Classic Maya rulers. Current Anthropology 44(4):523-558. 1110. Manoogian, Alexander M. 2007. Legal Pluralism in Guatemala: A Case Study of the Municipality of Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan. M.A. thesis, The American University. 154 leaves. 1111. Mentinis, Mihalis. 2006. Zapatistas. The Chiapas Revolt and What it Means for Radical Politics. Ann Arbor: Pluto Press. 201 p. 1112. Millar, Michael T. 2002. Discursive Spaces and the Representation of Experience: The Struggle for Social Justice in Post-War Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Michigan. 225 leaves 1113. Morales, Patricia, ed. 2001. Pueblos indígenas, derechos humanos e interdependencia global. México: Siglo XXI. 282 p.

1104. Los Hombres y las mujeres del maiz; democracia y derecho indígena para el mundo; ixim wiñikob x-ixikob; pyijikn ayel pyi joytyayel pañamil; te winiketike sok te antsetike ta ixime; ich’el ta muk’ ta komon sok yich’el ta muk’bats’il jntilejetik ta swenta sp’ejel balumilal; vinik antsetik ta ixim; ich’el ta muk’ komen xchi’uk yich’el ta muj’ bats’I jnablomeyik ta sventa sbejel balumil. México: Fundación Ford/CIESAS. 213 p. An ethnographic and literary exploration into Indigenous Rights and politics particular to the Mayan people. Inclu-

1114. Morales Santos, Francisco. 2001. Madre, nosotros tambien somos historia; nan, ri oj xuquje oj ajer tzij k’wi chi taq b’ix. Guatemala: Centro de Escritores de Guatemala. 65 p. Poetic testimony in Spanish and English of injustice directed at indigenous people in Guatemala. 1115. Morroquin Guerra, Otto. 2006. Administración de justicia en pueblos indígenas. Cuaderno de Estudio 66. Guatemala: Serviprensa. 20 p. 62

1116. Munson, Jessica L., and Martha J. Macri. 2009. Sociopolitical network interactions: a case study of the Classic Maya. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 28(4):424438.

1127. Sanchez, Carleen D. 2003. Topographies of Power: The Political Landscape of the Southeast Maya Region. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara. 272 leaves.

1117. Murphy, John T. 2000. Approaching Maya Polities From the Side: Models of Classic Maya Political Structure. M.A. thesis, University of Arizona. 74 leaves.

1128. Sanchez, Odilio J. 2008. Los caminos de la resistencia: Comunidad, política e historia Maya en Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 370 leaves.

1118. Ordoñez Cifuentes, José E. 2001. México/Guatemala: constitutionalidad de los derechos de los pueblos indígenas: analisis interdisciplinario. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 74 p.

1129. Smith, Timothy J. 2004. A Tale of Two Governments: Rural Maya Politics and Competing Democracies in Solola, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 347 leaves.

1119. Padilla, Guillermo A. 2005 Citizen Maya. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley. 297 leaves.

1130. Valverde Valdés, María del Carmen, ed. 2007. Resistencia en el mundo maya. Mexico: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.

1120. Page Pliego, Jaime T. 2002. Política sanitaria dirigida a los pueblos indígenas de México y Chiapas, 1857-1995. México: Universidad Autónoma de Mexico, Programa de Investigaciones Multidisciplinarias sobre Mesoamérica y el Sureste; Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas: Universidad Autónoma de Chiapas, Instituto de Estudios Indígenas; San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas: Instituto de Estudios Indígenas. 169 p.

1131. Williams-Beck, Lorraine A. 2001. Relaciones centropeninsulares durante el periodo Clásico tardío. Estudios de cultura maya 21:75-89. Caste War 1132. Reed, Nelson A. 2001. The Caste War of the Yucatan. rev. ed. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 428 p. 1133. Rosado Rosado, Georgina, and Landy Santana Rivas. 2008. María Uicab: reina, sacerdotisa y feja militar de los mayas rebeldes de Yucatan. Mesoamerica 29(50):112-139.

1121. Patch, Robert. 2002. Maya Revolt and Revolution in the Eighteenth Century. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. 248 p. Author examines a series of Maya insurrections at Verapaz (1735), Tecpán (1759), Santa Lucia Utatlán (1760-1763), Yucatan (1761), and Nébaj (1768).

1134. Santana Rivas, Landy. 2007. Género y poder entre los mayas rebeldes de Yucatán: Tulum y la dualidad a través del tiempo. Merida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán 178 p.

1122. Pérez Ruiz, Maya L. 2005. Todos somos zapatistas! Alianzas y ruptura entre el EZLN y las organizaciones indígenas de México. México: INAH. 788 p. Lengthy work on the conflicts endured by the Mexican indigenous at the end of the twentieth century. A study of the nature of the confrontations and negotiations maintained between the government, the members of the EZLN and the campesino and indigenous organizations of Chiapas between 1994 and 2001.

Globalization 1135. Ayora Diaz, Steffan I. 2007. Translocalidad y la antropología de los procesos globales: saber y poder en Chiapas y Yucatan. Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 12(1):134-163. 1136. Daltabuit Godas, Magali, Hector Cisneros Reyes, and Ernesto Valenzuela Valdivieso. 2006. Globalización y turismo en el sur of Quintana Roo. Estudios de cultura maya 27:99124.

1123. Popson, Colleen P. 2003. Maya goods in Teotihuacan tomb. Archaeology 56(1):16-17. A tomb found in the Pyramid of the Moon at Teotihuacan is adorned with jade beads, earspools, and figurines, possibly of Maya origin.

1137. Hull, Cindy L. 2006. From field to factory and beyond: New strategies for new realities in a Yucatecan village. In Globalization and Change in Fifteen Cultures: Born in One World, Living in Another. George Spindler, and Janice E. Stockard, eds. Pp. 172-198. Belmont, MA: Thomson/Wadsworth.

1124. Reynolds, Jennifer F. 2002. Maya Children’s Practices of the Imagination: (Dis)playing Childhood and Politics in Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 545 leaves. 1125. Rice, Prudence M. 2004. Maya Political Science: Time, Astronomy, and the Cosmos. Austin: University of Texas Press. 376 p. “ Rice draws on ethnohistoric, epigraphic, and archaeological data to develop a native Maya model in which the rotation of political seats of power conformed to calendar cycles of 256 years.”

1138. Kalny, Eva. 2006. Globalization and social movements: a perspective from Petén, Guatemala. Anthropology News 47(6):11-12. 1139. Nash, June C. 2001. Mayan Visions: The Quest for Autonomy in an Age of Globalization. New York: Routledge. 303 p. Author examines indigenous Maya social movements in the highlands of Chiapas and their challenge to the course of globalization.

1126. Rodriguez, Timoteo. 2003. Conjunctures in the Making of an Ancient Maya Archaeological Site: A Genealogy of Conflict. Senior Honors Thesis, University of California, Berkeley. 28 leaves.

63

Home Community. B.A. Honors thesis, Florida Atlantic University. 58 leaves.

1140. Ramirez Carrillo, Luis A. 2006. Impacto de la globalización en los mayas yucatecos. Estudios de cultura maya 27:730-97.

1150. Carr, David L. 2008. Migration to the Maya Biosphere Reserve, Guatemala: why place matters. Human Organization 67(1):37-48.

Kingship 1141. Alvarado, Rafael C. 2000. The Encompassment of the Jaguar: The Symbolic Structure of Classic Mayan Kingship and Sacrifice. Doctoral dissertation, University of Virginia. 268 leaves. See also Genevieve LeFort, La royaute sacree chez les Mayas de l’epoque classique (200-900 apr. J-C.) (Doctoral dissertation, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2000).

1151. Castillo, Manuel A., ed. 2001. Migraciones, frontera y sociedad. Guatemala: Centro de Estudios Urbanos y Regionales y la Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. 117 p. Collection of essays on patterns of migration involving Guatemala, Guatemalan refugees in Mexico, returning refugees, NGO intervention, and migration as an academic discipline.

1142. Ouellette, David A. 2008. Sacred Spaces, Myth, Ritual, and the Material Ideology of Kingship in the Preclassic Maya Lowlands. M.A., Northern Illinois University. 223 leaves.

1152. Falla, Ricardo. 2008. Migración transnacional retornada: juventud indígena de Zacualpa, Guatemala. Guatemala: AVANCSO; Editorial Universitaria de la Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. 346 p.

Migration 1143. Adler, Rachel H. 2004. Yucatecans in Dallas, Texas: Breaching the Border, Bridging the Distance. Boston: Pearson. 151 p.

1153. Fink, León. 2003. The Maya of Morganton: Work and Community in the Nuevo New South. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 272 p. The author uses interviews to provide insights into the immigrant world of a North Carolina poultry plant and to understand the twenty-first century meaning of globalization.

1144. Alexander, Rani T., and Sandra Andrade. 2007. Frontier migration and the built environment in southwestern Campeche. Estudios de cultura maya 30:175-196. 1145. Bever, Sandra W. 2002. A socioeconomic profile of Yucatec Maya families in migrating and non-migrating households. In Social Dimensions in the Economic Process. Norbert Dannhaeuser and Cynthia Werner, eds. pp. 187-218. Research in Economic Anthropology, 21. Amsterdam: JAI. Author argues that migration occurs among all household types and that households that are the most economically diversified are less likely to participate in the migration process.

1154. Foxen, Patricia. 2001. A la recherche d’identités au Guatemala après la guerre civile: perspectives transnationales. Recherches Amérindiennes au Quebec 31(1):61-70. Discusses the transmigrant experience of a Maya K’iche’ community spread between a highland village in El Quiche, Guatemala, and Hope, Massachusetts, an industrial New England city. Author analyzes the manner in which transnational K’iche’ negotiate conflicting memory processes and draw on their past in creative ways to create viable, flexible cross-border identities. This process is compared with the more formal and institutionalized discourse on ethnic identity currently unfolding in the political spaces of Guatemala’s peace process.

1146. Breuer, Kimberly H. 2004. Reshaping the Cosmos: Maya Society on the Yucatecan Frontier. Doctoral dissertation, Vanderbilt University. 350 leaves. 1147. Caceres Ruiz, Carlos. 2001. Migrantes guatemaltecos en México. Guatemala: Comisionado Presidencial Para la Modernización y Decentralización del Estado (COMODES). 148 p. Examination of Guatemalan migration to Mexico, with an emphasis on economic and political factors causing migration, an analysis of migration to Chiapas, women, children, and studies of undocumented contract labor in Mexico.

1155. Gonzalez Oropeza, Manuel. 2006. La colonización tardia: migraciones mayas en America del norte. Estudios de cultura maya 27:181-201 1156. Lugo Romera, Karen M., Sonia Menendez Castro, and Amikar Feria Flores. 2006. Lazos migratorios entre la peninsula de Yucatan y la Habana: supervivencia de una comunidad de descendientes maya-yucatecos en la Sierra del Grillo. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2):583-596.

1148. Camus, Manuela, ed. 2007. Comunidades en movimiento: la migración internacional en el norte de Huehuetenango. Antigua Guatemala: Incendes. 223 p. Contents include: Stefanie Kron, “El estillo solomero no tarda mucho”: negociando la frontera en la transmigración q’anjob’al (pp. 57-94); Ruth Piedrasanta Herrera, Apuntes sobre transmigración y remesas entre los chuj de Huehuetenango (pp. 95-112); María Mateo, and Manuela Camus, Una mujer q’anjob’al de Mama Maquin (pp. 119-150); Verónica Ruiz Lagier, Las nuevas formas en que los miguelenos viven la juventud; el caso de La Gloria, Chiapas (pp. 151-168); Silvia I. Palma, Carol Giron Soloranzo, Timothy J. Steigenga, De Jacaltenango a Jupiter: negociando el concepto de familia en el espacio transnacional y el tiempo (pp. 171-204); Mary E. Odem, Immigración transnacional y organización maya en el sur de Estados Unidos (pp. 205-223);

1157. Moran-Taylor, Michelle J. 2003. International Migration and Culture Change in Guatemala’s Maya Occidente and Ladino Oriente. Doctoral dissertation, Arizona State University. 422 leaves. 1158. Moran-Taylor, Michelle J. 2008. Guatemala’s Ladino and Maya migration landscapes: The tangible and intangible outcomes of migration. Human Organization 67(2):111-124. 1159. Rodman, Debra H. 2006. Gender, Migration, and Transnational Identities: Maya and Ladino Relations in Eastern Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Florida. 228 leaves.

1149. Canache, Anya. 2003. The Maya in Jupiter, Florida: Remittances and Immigrant Perceptions of Change in the 64

tiveness within the dominant Hispanic society. The author looks at individual Maya activists and local cultures, as well as changing national and international power relations, to understand how ethnic identities are constructed and expressed in the modern world.

1160. Rousseau, Cécile, María Morales, and Patricia Foxen. 2001. Going home: giving voice to memory strategies of young Mayan refugees who returned to Guatemala as a community. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 25(2):135-168. 1161. Ruz, Mario H., Juan García Targa, and Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, eds. 2009. Diasporas, migraciones y exilos en el mundo maya. Merida: UNAM; Madrid: Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas. 369 p. New writings on Mayan history and migration, including “Politicas de concentración y dispersión en el Yucatán colonial,”A cuestas con sus dioses: implicaciones religiosas de la migraciones mayas,” and “Religión, diaspora y migración: los ch’oles en Yucatán, los mames en Estados Unidos.”

1172. Holbrock, Mary Jo. 2004. ‘Que no olviden su cultura, y tambien el idioma’: A Case Study of Mayan Literacy Revival in the ‘Pan-Maya Culture and Language Revitalization Movement’ in Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 346 leaves. 1173. Ruston, Betti-Jo. 2000. The Pan-Maya Movement: The Promotion of Cultural Equality in Guatemala. M.A. thesis,University of Western Ontario (Canada). 103 leaves.

1162. Sierra Sosa, Ligia A. 2007. Mayas migrantes en Cancun, Quntana Roo. Mexico: Universidad de Quintana Roo.

1174. Thirakaroonwongse, Apha. 2001. The Pan-Maya Movement of Guatemala. M.A. thesis, University of California at San Diego. 138 leaves.

1163. Taylor, Clark. 2002. El retorno de los refugiados guatemaltecos: reconstruyendo el tejido social. Guatemala: Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO). 375 p. Spanish language translation of The Return of Guatemala’s Refugees (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1998).

Government Relations 1175. Castells-Talens, Antonio. 2004. The Negotiation of Indigenist Radio Policy in Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Florida. 256 leaves.

1164. Tennant, Christopher C. 2004. The Return to Los Loros: The Story of a New Guatemalan Community of Returned Refugees. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 354 leaves.

1176. Pitarch, Pedro, and Julian López García, eds. 2001. Los derechos humanos en tierras mayas: política, representaciones y moralidad. Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas, Publicación 5. Madrid: Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas. 395 p. Contents include: Rafael del Aguila, Los derechos humanos y algunos de sus problemas en el mundo de hoy (pp. 17-35); Robert M. Carmack, Perspectivas sobre la política de los derechos humanos en Guatemala (pp. 39-53); Rachel Sieder, and Jessica Witchell, Impulsando las demandas indígenas a traves de la ley: reflexiones sobre el proceso de paz en Guatemala (pp. 55-82); Xochitl Leyva, and Shannon Speed, Los derechos humanos en Chiapas: del ‘discurso globalizado’ a la ‘gramatica moral’ (pp. 83-101); David Stoll, Derechos humanos, conflictos de tierras y memorias de la violencia en el pais ixil del norte del Quiche (pp. 103-123); Pedro Pitarch, El laberinto de la traduccion: la Declaración Universal de los Derechos Humanos en tzeltal (pp. 127-160); Stener Ekern, Destruyen los derechos humanos el equilibrio natural de las cosas? (pp. 161-179); Julian López García, ‘Aqui es otro modo’: los ch’orti’ y la capacitación en derechos humanos (pp. 181-208); Marta Elena Casaus, La renegociación de las identidades etnicas a raiz de los acuerdos de paz en Guatemala (pp. 209-242); Amanda Pop Bol, Huerfanos en derechos: el caso de Rax Cucul (pp. 245-272): Christine Kovic, Para tener vida en abundancia: visiones de los derechos humanos en una comunidad católica indígena (pp. 273-290); Edward F. Fischer, Derechos humanos y relativismo cultural: la etica antropologica en el area maya (pp. 291-310); Brent E. Metz, Investigación y colaboración en el moviemiento maya-ch’orti’ (pp. 311-329); Mario Humberto Ruz, Propietarias, albaceas, herederas o despojadas: mujeres ejn la memoria mortual del mundo maya (pp. 341-370); Rodolfo Stavenhagen, Derechos humanos y derechos culturales en los pueblos indígenas (pp. 373-389).

1165. Villacorta O., Manuel R. 2007. Guatemaltecos en Estados Unidos: estrategia para una efectiva política migratoria. Guatemala: Asociación de Investigación y Estudios Sociales, 50 p. 1166. Whiteside, Anne. 2006. “We Are the Explorers”: Transnational Yucatec Maya-Speakers Negotiating Multilingual California. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley. 317 leaves. 1167. Winterbauer, Nancy L. 2002. Psychosocial Stress and Gender-Role Ideology Among Yucatec Mayan Migrants to Cancun’s ‘Riviera Maya’. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Binghamton. 178 leaves. Pan-Maya Movement 1168. Bastos, Santiago, and Manuela Camus. 2003. Entre el mecapal y el cielo: desarrollo del movimiento maya en Guatemala. Guatemala: FLACSO; Cholsamaj. 347 p. 1169. Borgstede, Greg, and Jason Yaeger. 2008. Notions of cultural continuity and disjunction in Maya social movements and Maya archaeology. In Archaeology and the Postcolonial Critique. Matthew Liebmann and Uzma Z. Rivzi eds. pp. 91108. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira Press. 1170. Cuma Chavez, Baldomero. 2008. Runataxik Qak’aslem: Reviviendo nuestra cultura. Guatemala: Editorial Junajpu. 124 p. 1171. Fischer, Edward F. 2001. Cultural Logics and Global Economies: Maya Identity in Thought and Practice. Austin: University of Texas Press. 320 p. An analysis of the local and global factors that have led Guatemala’s indigenous Maya peoples to assert and defend their cultural identity and distinc-

1177. Pitarch, Pedro, Shannon Speed, and Xochitl Leyva Solano, eds. 2008. Human Rights in the Maya Region: Global Politics, Cultural Contentions, and Moral Engagements. Durham: Duke University Press. 377 p. Contents include: Rodolfo Stavenhagen, Cultural rights and human rights: A 65

1186. Higgins, Nicholas P. 2004. Understanding the Chiapas Rebellion: Modernist Visions and the Invisible Indian. Austin: University of Texas Press. 294 p. The Zapatista revolt on New Year’s Day 1994 launched what may be the first “post” or “counter” modern revolution, one that challenges the very concept of the modern nation-state and its vision of a fully assimilated citizenry.This book offers a new way of understanding the Zapatista conflict as a counteraction to the forces of modernity and globalization that have rendered indigenous peoples virtually invisible throughout the world. Placing the conflict within a broad sociopolitical and historical context, the author traces the relations between Maya Indians and the Mexican state from the conquest to the present which reveals a centuries-long contest over the Maya people’s identity and place within Mexico.

social science perspective (pp. 27-50); Robert M. Carmack, Perspectives on the politics of human rights in Guatemala (pp. 51-66); Rachel Sieder, Legal glabalization and human rights: Constructing the rule of law in postconflict Guatemala? (pp. 67-90); Pedro Pitarch, The labyrinth of translation: A Tzeltal version of the universal declararion of human rights (pp. 91122); Stener Ekern, Are human rights destroying the natural balance of all things? The difficult encounter between international law and community law in Mayan Guatemala (pp. 123-144); Julian López García, “Here it’s different”: the Ch’orti’ and human rights training (pp. 145-170); Irma Otzoy, Indigenous law and gender dialogues (pp. 171-186); David Stoll, Human rights, land conflicts, and memory of the violence in the Ixil country of northern Quiche (pp. 187-206); Shannon Speed, and Xochitl Leyva Solano, Global discourses on the local terrain: human rights in Chiapas (pp. 207-232); Victoria Sanford, Breaking the reign of silence: Ethnography of a clandstine cemetery (pp. 233-256); Christine Kovic, Rights of the poor: Progressive Catholicism and indigenous resistance in Chiapas (pp. 257-278); Shannon Speed, and Alvaro Reyes, “Asumiendo nuestra propia defensa”: Resistance and the Red de Defensores Comunitarios in Chiapas (pp. 279-304); Richard A. Wilson, Making rights meaningful for Mayas: Reflections on culture, rights, and power (pp. 305-322).

1187. Kovic, Christine. 2005. Maya Voices for Human Rights: Displaced Catholics in Highland Chiapas. Austin: University of Texas Press. 256 p. Examination of new Maya communities formed by exiles forced from their original homes by Maya allied with the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). 1188. Marcos, Subcomandante Insurgente, and Juana Ponce de León. 2004. Our Word Is Our Weapon: Selected Writings of Subcomandante Marcos. New York: Seven Stories Press. 456 p. In one of the seized towns, a spokesperson emerged and began addressing a crowd. Enraptured, the townspeople listened. The masked guerrilla calling himself “Subcomandante Marcos” entered Mexico’s consciousness. Within three days news of the insurgency was on the front page of The New York Times, and the first translations of the group’s passionate communiques began circulating in English over the Internet.

1178. Speed, Shannon. 2008. Rights in Rebellion: Indigenous Struggle and Human Rights in Chiapas. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 244 p. 1179. Taracena Arriola, Arturo. 2006. La civilización maya y sus herederos, un debate negacionista en la historiografia moderna guatemalteca. Estudios de cultura maya 27:43-55. 1180. Walker, Cameron J. 2003. Heritage or Heresy: The Public Interpretation of Archaeology and Culture in the Maya Riviera. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 350 leaves.

1189. Questions and Swords: Folktales of the Zapatista Revolution As Told by Subcomandante Marcos. El Paso: Cinco Puntos Press, 2001. 112 p. 1190. Rus, Jan, Rosalva Aida Hernandez Castillo, and Shannon L. Mattiace. 2003. Mayan Lives, Mayan Utopias: The Indigenous Peoples of Chiapas and the Zapatista Rebellion. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Little. 306 p. Contents include: Jan Rus, Shannan L. Mattiace, and Rosalva Aida Hernandez Castillo, Introduction (pp. 1-26); Jan Rus, Mayan lives: continuity and change (pp. 217-32); Jan Rus and George A. Collier, A generation of crisis in the central highlands of Chiapas: the cases of Chamula and Zinacantan, 1974-2000 (pp. 33-61); Rosalva Aida Hernandez Castillo, Between civil disobediance and silent rejection: differing responses by Mam peasants to the Zapatista rebellion (pp. 63-83); José Alejos García, The Ch’ols reclaim Palenque, or the War of the Eternal Return (pp. 85-102); Jan Rus, Mayan lives: making new societies (pp. 103-108); Shannan L. Mattiace, Regional renegotiations of space: Tojolabal ethnic identity in Las Margaritas, Chiapas (pp. 109-133); Christine Eber, Buscando una nueva vida: liberation through autonomy in San Pedro Chenalho, 1970-1998 (pp. 135-159); Xochitl Leyva Solano, Regional, communal, and organizational transformations in Las Cañadas (pp. 161-184); Shannan L. Mattiace, Mayan utopias: rethinking the state (pp. 185-190); Araceli Burguete Cal y Mayor, The de facto autonomous process: new jurisdictions and parallel governments in rebellion (pp. 191218); Andres Aubry, Autonomy in the San Andres Accords:

Government Relations in Chiapas 1181. Baschet, Jerôme. 2001. Chiapas 2001, la paix manque: la marche de la dignité indigène et la reconnaissance frustrée des droits des peuples indigènes. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 87:3653-375. 1182. Earle, Duncan, and Jeanne Simonelli. 2005. Uprising of Hope: Sharing the Zapatista Journey to Alternative Development. Walnut Creek, CA: Rowman and Littlefield. 323 p. 1183. Fabregas Puig, Andrés. 2001. Chiapas, el futuro de una sociedad: acercamiento histórico al conflicto de un pueblo. Lleida, Spain. 1184. Hernandez, R. Aida. 2002. Indigenous law and identity politics in Mexico: indigenous men’s and women’s struggles for a multicultural nation. Political and Legal Anthropology Review 25(1):90-109. 1185. Hernandez Alarcon, Rosalinda, Andrea Carrillo Samayoa, Jacqueline Torres Urizar, Ana López Molina, and Ligia Z. Pelaez Aldana. 2008. Memorias rebeldes contra el olvido; paasantzila txumb’al ti’ sotzeb’al k’u’l. Guatemala: Magna Terra Editores. 122 p. 66

(pp. 495-532); Ana L. Robles, San Bartolo Aguas Calientes: el orgullo por una tradición moderna (pp. 533-568); Enrique Sincal, Matices ideológicos de lo etnico en Patzún (pp. 569600); Marcelo Zamora, Imaginando naciones desde San Miguel Totonicapan: la lucha por la definición del “maya permitido” en el discurso muticultural (pp. 601-634); v. 3: Waq’i Q’anil Demetrio Cojti, El proceso de mayanización y el papel de la educación escolar (analisis documental)(pp. 9-60); Claudia Dary, Etnicidad, cambio socioeconomico y lógicas sobre el discurso multicultural en Guatemala (pp. 61-100); Cecilia Garces, El discurso multicultural y la mayanizacion: la juventud y otras generaciones (pp. 101-140); Diana García, Patriarcado, neoliberalismo y mayanizacion: el desafio de la multiple emancipación de los sujetos (pp. 141-186); Ramon Gonzalez Ponciano, La mayanización y el futuro de las relaciones serviles y tutelares en Guatemala (pp. 187-222); Sergio Mendizabal, Dinámicas de mayanización en las políticas de transformación estructural de la sociedad guatemalteca (pp. 223-246); José Roberto Morales, Religión y espiritualidad maya (pp. 247-282); Karen Ponciano, Mayanización y experiencia religiosa: una lectura a partir de los aportes etnográficos sobre la espiritualidad maya (pp. 283-306).

expression and fulfillment of a new federal pact (pp. 219241); Gustavo Esteva, The meaning and scope of the struggle for autonomy (pp. 243-269). 1191. Speed, Shannon. 2001. Global Discourses on the Local Terrain: Grounding Human Rights in Chiapas, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Davis. 1192. Speed, Shannon, and Alvaro Reyes. 2002. In our own defense: rights and resistance in Chiapas. Political and Legal Anthropology Review 25(1):69-89. 1193. Viqueira, Juan P. 2002. Autobiografia de don Victorino Jimenez Sanchez, campesino zapatista (1899-1981). Trace 41:13-34. Government Relations in Guatemala 1194. Arriaza, Laura J. 2005. Making peace on indigenous terms: reconciliation in Guatemala. Cultural Survival Quarterly 29(1):31-33. 1195. Bastida Muñoz, Mindähi C. 2001. 500 años de resistencia: los pueblos indios de México en la actualidad; hacía la creación de un cuarto piso de gobierno. México: Universidad Autónoma de Estado de México. 207 p.

1197. Burrell, Jennifer. 2010. Local Narratives of Distress and Resilience: Lessons in Psychosocial Well-Being Among the K’iche’ Maya in Postwar Guatemala Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 15(1):90-115.

1196. Bastos, Santiago, and Aura Cumes, eds. 2007. Mayanización y vida cotidiana: la ideologia multicultural en la sociedad guatemalteca. Guatemala: FLACSO. 3 v. Contents include: v. 1; Santaigo Bastos, Construcción de la identidad maya como un proceso politico (pp. 53-80); Aura Cumes, Mayanización y el sueño de la emancipación indígena en Guatemala (pp. 81-210); Santiago Bastos, La ideología multicultural en la Guatemala del cambio de milenio (pp. 211-378); v. 2: Sariah Acevedo, La transición incompleta entre la homogeneidad y la multiculturalidad en el Estado de Guatemala: el Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes (pp. 9-44); Santiago Bastos, Violencia, memoria e identidad: el caso de Choatalum (San Martin Jilotepeque, Chimaltenango)(pp. 45-78); Roddy Brett, El caso de la Defensora de los Derechos de los Pueblos Indígenas de la Procuraduria de los Derechos Humanos (pp. 79116); Arnoldo Camposeco, ¿Mayanización? Educación bilingüe y fortalecimiento del idioma popti’ en Jacaltenango (pp. 117-150); Manuela Camus, Declasamiento y etnicidad: reacciones en la colonia Primero de Julio ante la movilidad indígena (pp. 151-186); Aura Cumes, Discurso intercultural e ideologias étnicas en la Escuela Pedro Molina (pp. 187-234); Edgar Esquit, Debates en torno a la identidad y el cambio social en Comalapa, una localidad del altiplano guatemalteco (pp. 235-272); David García, Territorio y espiritualidad: lugares sagrados q’eqchi’es en Chisec (pp. 273-306); Felipe Giron, Significados étnicos, sentidos locales: dinámicas socioeconomicas y discursos identitarios en Huite (pp. 307-346); Ricardo Grisales, and Carlos Benavides, Revitalización étnica en Santa María Visitación, un municipio tz’utujil (pp. 347-376); Christopher Jones, La política cultural maya en San Juan Sacatepequez (pp. 377-412); Ana López Molina, La Asociación de Sacerdotes Mayas de Guatemala (pp. 413-444); Brent Metz, De la cosmovisión a la herencia: la mayanización y las bases cambiantes de la etnia en el area ch’orti’ (pp. 445-468); Jorge Estuardo Molina, “¡En Estanzuela no hay indios!” Identidad ladina en un pueblo del oriente de Guatemala (pp. 469-494); Engelbert Tally, and José Chavajay, Multiplicidad y antagonismo en torno a la mayanización en San Pedro La Laguna

1198. Esquit, Edgar. 2003. Caminando hacia la utopia: la lucha política de las organizaciones mayas y el estado en Guatemala. Guatemala: Instituto de Estudios Interétnicos de la Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. 63 p. An analysis and description of the relationship between Maya organizations and the Guatemalan state at the end of the twentieth century. 1199. Experiencias de aplicación y administración de justicia indígena; ri qetamb’al che ri suk’b’anik. Guatemala: Defensoria Maya, 2001. 161 p. Analysis of oral testimonies on the principles, operation, and effectiveness of indigenous systems of justice in Guatemala, Mexico, and Panama 1200. Falla, Ricardo. 2006. Juventud de una comunidad maya, Ixcan, Guatemala. Guatemala: AVANSCO. 420 p. 1201. Forster, Cindy. 2001. The Time For Freedom: Campesino Workers in Guatemala’s October Revolution. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. 320 p. Using court records, labor and agrarian ministry archives, and oral histories, the author demonstrates how labor conflict on plantation zone in the coffee belt in the highlands near San Marcos and the United Fruit Company holdings near Tiquisate prepared the foundation for national reforms that are usually credited to national politicians. 1202. Garbers, Frank. 2002. Geschichte, Identität und Gemeinschaft im Rückkehrprozess guatemaltekischer Kriegsflüchtlinge. Interethnische Beziehungen und Kulturwandel, 46. Hamburg: Lit, 344 p. Monograph submitted as a doctoral dissertation at the University of Hamburg. 1203. Gómez Gómez, Jesús, ed. 2001. Uxe’al pixab’ re k’iche’ amaq’; fuentes y fundamentos del derecho de la nación maya k’iche’; uxe’al pixab’re k’iche’ amaq’. 67

K’iche’ village of Totonicapan, Guatemala (pp. 124-138); Monica DeHart, Fried chicken or pop? Redefining development and ethnicity in Totonicapan (pp. 139-150); Peter Benson, and Edward F. Fischer, Neoliberal violence: Social suffering in Guatemala’s postwar era (pp. 151-166); David Stoll, Harvest of convictions: Solidarity in Guatemalan scholarship, 1988-2008 (pp. 167-180); Robert M. Carmack, Conclusions of “Mayas in Postwar Guatemala: Harvest of Violence Revisited” (pp. 181-194).

Guatemala: Conferencia Nacional de Ministros de la Espiritualidad Maya. 192 p. Theoretical and historical study of political legitimacy and institutions of the K’iche’, including pre-colonial religion, the impact of the Spanish conquest, order and nature in philosophy, morality, ethics, political structure, and institutions. 1204. Gómez Gómez, Jesús, ed. 2003. Del monismo al pluralismo juridico en Guatemala: compendio sobre patuas de coordinación entre derecho maya y derecho estatal. Guatemala: Conferencia Nacional de Ministros de la Espiritualidad Maya. 260 p. A comparative study of the nature of systems of justice and judicial processes in traditional Mayan culture and in the modern Guatemalan state.

1210. Lofving, Staffan. 2002. An Unpredictable Past: Guerrillas, Mayas, and the Location of Oblivion in War-Torn Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Uppsala Universitet (Sweden). 340 leaves. 1211. Lovell, W. George. 2010. A Beauty That Hurts: Life and Death in Guatemala. Austin: University of Texas Press 206 p. Revised edition of W. George Lovell, A Beauty That Hurts: Life and Death in Guatemala (Austin: University of Texas Press, 201. 200 p.).

1205. González, Matilde, ed. 2002. Se cambio el tiempo: conflicto y poder en territorio k’iche’, 1880-1996. Guatemala: Asociación Para el Avance de las Ciencias Sociales en Guatemala (AVANCSO). 500 p. Historical study of the Quiche region of Guatemala, based upon traditional records and oral testimonies; includes land expropriations, local government, religion, forced military service, violence and the sexual exploitation of women. See also Juan Manuel Sisay, and Marcela Valdeavellano, eds., Se cambio el tiempo: historias de vida y tradición oral de San Bartolomé Jocotenango, Quiche (Guatemala: Asociación Para la Avance de las Ciencias Sociales en Guatemala (AVANCSO), 2002. 378 p.). Includes a compilation of oral interviews with indigenous people of San Bartolomé Jocotenango, El Quiche.

1212. Madsen, Mikael R. 2000. Towards Peace and Democracy in Guatemala: An Analysis of Changing Societal Patterns With an Emphasis on the Position of El Pueblo Maya. Oñati, Spain: Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law. 1213. Manz, Beatriz. 2009. The continuum of violence in post-war Guatemala, In An Anthropology of War: Views from the Frontline. Alisse Waterston, ed. pp. 151-164. New York: Berghahn Books.

1206. Gutierrez Chong, Natividad. 2003. The nation-state against the indigenous peoples: Acteal 1997 and Agua Fria 2002. Cambridge Anthropology 23(3):39-52.

1214. Manz, Beatriz, and Aryeh Neier. 2005. Paradise in Ashes: A Guatemalan Journey of Courage, Terror, and Hope. Berkeley: University of California Press. 330 p. “This is an ethnography of one village in the Guatemalan highlands in which a massacre took place in 1982 during the civil war. Annotation. Paradise in Ashes is a deeply engaged and moving account of the violence and repression that defined the murderous Guatemalan civil war of the 1980s.”

1207. Kirkland, Robert O. 2001. Observing Our Hermanos de Armas: U.S. Military Attaches in Guatemala, Cuba and Bolivia, 1950-1964. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pittsburgh. 277 leaves. 1208. Konefal, Betsy O. 2005. “May All Rise Up”: Highland Mobilization in Post-1954 Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pittsburgh. 282 leaves.

1215. Montejo, Victor D. 2005. Maya Intellectual Renaissance: Identity, Representation, and Leadership. Austin: University of Texas Press. 272 p. A collection of essays by Montejo on Maya identity, representation, and leadership.

1209. Little, Walter E., and Timothy J. Smith, eds. 2009. Mayas in Postwar Guatemala: Harvest of Violence Revisited. Walter E. Little and Timothy J. Smith, eds. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. 219 p. Contents include: Walter E. Little, Introduction: Revisiting “Harvest of Violence: in postwar Guatemala (pp. 1-15); Timothy J. Smith, Democracy is dissent: political confrontations and indigenous mobilization in Solola (pp. 16-29); Abagail E. Adams, Reviving our spirits: revelation, re-encuentro, and retroceso in post-peace accords Verapaz (pp. 30-41); J. Jailey Philpot-Munson, Peace under fire: understanding evangelical resistance to the peace process in a postwar Guatemalan town (pp. 42-53); Walter E. Little, Living and selling in the “new violence” of Guatemala (pp. 54-66); Liliana Goldin, and Brenda Rosenbaum, Everyday violence of exclusion: women in precarious neighborhoods of Guatemala City (pp. 67-83); Judith M. Maxwell, Bilingual bicultural education: best intentions across a cultural divide (pp. 84-95); Jennifer L. Burrell, Intergenerational conflict in the postwar era (pp. 96-109); José O. Barrera Nuñez, Desires and imagination: the economy of humanitarianism in Guatemala (pp. 110-123); Barbara Bocek, Everyday politics in a

1216. Morales Laynez, Benito. 2001. El acceso a la justicia en el propio idioma. Guatemala: Asociación Para el Avance de las Ciencias Sociales en Guatemala (AVANCSO). 129 p. Analysis of Guatemalan justice system in relation to national multiculturalism, with emphasis on language and the right to be afforded justice in one’s own language or through an interpreter. 1217. Moser, Caroline, and Cathy McIlwaine. 2001. La violencia en el contexto del posconflicto, según la percepción de comunidades urbanas pobres de Guatemala. Washington, DC: Banco Mundial. 171 p. Analysis of the various types of violence after armed conflict in Guatemala. 1218. Nelson, Diane M. 2004. Anthropologist discovers legendary two-faced Indian! Margins, the state, and duplicity in Postwar Guatemala. In Anthropology in the Margins of the State. Veena Das, and Deborah Poole, eds. p. 117-140. Santa 68

1227. Suiazo, Fernando. 2002. La cultura maya ante la muerte: daño y duelo en la comunidad achi de Rabinal. Guatemala: Equipo de Estudios Comunitarios y Acción Psicosocial. 108 p. Examination of how violence and death become part of a Maya community during the civil war, with an emphasis on the nature of genocidal repression, religious vision, psychological processes, and cultural adaptation.

Fe, NM: School of American Research; Oxford, England: James Currey. 1219. Nelson, Diane M. 2001. Indian giver or Nobel savage: duping, assumptions of identity, and other double entendres in Rigoberta Menchu Tum’s Stoll/en past. American Ethnologist 28(2):303-331. Author addresses the emotional debate over David Stoll’s claims that parts of Nobel Laureate Rigoberta Menchu Tum’s testimonial are untrue. Rather than arguing for or against either side, she negotiates the double entendre of Indian giver and the assumptions that structure the arguments that make up the debate. She tracks how such assumptions of identity involve a detour through gendered, ethnic, and transnational difference. Transactions such as gifting, joking, and stereotyping are ecstatic and pleasurable, and vacillate with threatening to suggest that the vacillation itself, the exchange, is essential to identification and that the empiricist promise of being nonduped is an error. 1220. Nelson, Diane M. 2009. Reckoning: The Ends of War in Guatemala. Durham: Duke University Press. 403 p.

1228. Tecun, Nicolas L. 2003. Ajawarem: las autoridades responsables de gobernarlos: un analisis comparative sobre la heterogeneidad de las autoridades en el contexto del sistema jurídico maya en Guatemala. Guatemala: Conferencia Nacional de Ministros de la Espiritualidad Maya. 147 p. 1229. Tixal Mul, Israel, Pascuala Morales Calel, Pascuala, and Miguel Angel Vicente Reynoso. 2001. Uxe’al pixab’ re k’iche’ amaq’; Fuentes y fundamentos del derecho de la nación maya k’iche’. Guatemala: Conferencia Nacional de Ministros de la Espiritualidad Maya, Oxlajuj Ajpop. 192 p. Fundamentals of K’iche’ Maya customary law in parallel K’iche’ and Spanish text.

1221. Our Culture is Our Resistance: Repression, Refuge, and Healing in Guatemala. New York: Powerhouse Books, 2004. 213 p. Photographs by Jonathan Moller and testimonies by survivors of Guatemala’s civil war.

1230. Una visión global del sistema jurídico maya. Guatemala: Defensoria Indígena Wajxaqib’noj/ PNUD Guatemala, 2003. 151 p.

1222. Popson, Colleen P. 2002. Unrest in the Mundo Maya. Archaeology 55(5):14. In June, 2002, tourists to Tikal emerged from a tour of the jungle city to discover that thousands of peaceful demonstrators, consisting of campesinos, previously paramilitaries of the Guatemalan civil defense patrol, had obstructed roads in Petén, including those to the Flores airport. Meanwhile, archaeologists and environmentalists working along the Usumacinta River in Mexico were worried by a report in Tabasco Hoy that the Mexican government was once more thinking about implementing a plan to construct hydroelectric dams along the river.

1231 Valle Escalante, Emilio del. 2008. Nacionalismos mayas y desafios postcoloniales en Guatemala: colonialidad, modernidad y políticas de la identidad cultural. Guatemala: FLASCO. 238 p. 1232 Vanthuyne, Karine. 2006. Construire la paix au Guatemala: analyse critique des modalités d’intervention mises en oeuvre par trois ONG guatameltèques. Anthropologica 48(1): 101-116. 1233 Vanthuyne, Karine. 2009. Becoming Maya? The Politics and Pragmatics of “Being Indigenous” in Postgenocide Guatemala. Political and Legal Anthropology Review 32(2):195217.

1223. Sandoval Giron, Anna B. 2007. Taking matters into one’s hands: lynching and violence in post-civil war Guatemala. Urban Anthropology 36(4):357-380.

1234. Velasquez Nimatuj, Irma A. 2008. Pueblos indígenas, estado y lucha por tierra en Guatemala: Estrategias de sobrevivencia y negociación ante la desigualidad globalizada. Guatemala: AVANCSO. 317 p.

1224. Sanford, Victoria. 2004. Buried Secrets: Truth and Human Rights in Guatemala. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. 313 p. 1225. Saunders, Rebecca. 2002. Tell the truth: the archaeology of human rights abuses in Guatemala and the former Yugoslavia. In Materiel Culture: The Archaeology of Twentieth-Century Conflict. John Schofield, William Gray Johnson, and Colleen M. Beck, eds. pp. 103-114. London: Routledge. Interesting essay on the involvement of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the United Nations in documenting human rights abuses and the exhumation of remains, and the exhumation of clandestine graves in San Sebastian Lemoa, El Quiche, Guatemala.

1235. Vera Vera, José R. 2009. K’u ik’tan: Praying With the Mayans. Jalisco: Akum. 59 p. Mayan adularions, prayers and rituals. 1236. Verification Report: The Indigenous Peoples of Guatemala: Overcoming Discrimination in the Framework of the Peace Agreements. Guatemala: United Nations Verification Mission in Guatemala (MINUGUA), 2001. 36 p. Spanish edition: Informe de verificacion: los pueblos indígenas de Guatemala: la superación de la discriminación en el marco de los acuerdos de paz. 1237. Wilkinson, Daniel. 2004. Silence on the Mountain: Stories of Terror, Betrayal, and Forgetting in Guatemala. Boston: Houghton-Mifflin. 373 p. Author traces the history of Guatemala’s thirty-six-year internal war, a conflict that claimed the lives of more than 200,000 people, the vast majority of whom died (or were “disappeared”) at the hands of the U.S.-backed military government. The story begins in 1993, when the au-

1226. Schirmer, Jennifer. 2002. Appropriating the indigenous, creating complicity: the Guatemalan military and the sanctioned Maya. In: The Politics of Ethnicity: Indigenous Peoples in Latin American States. David Maybury-Lewis, ed. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies. 69

of warfare at Yaxuna (pp. 109-123); F. Kent Reilly, and James F. Garber, The symbolic representation of warfare in Formative Period Mesoamerica (pp. 127-148); Diane Z. Chase, and Arlen F. Chase, Texts and contexts in Maya warfare: a brief consideration of epigraphy and archaeology at Caracol, Belize (pp. 171-188); David A. Freidel, Barbara MacLeod, and Charles K. Suhler, Early Classic Maya conquest in words and deeds (pp. 189-215); Shirley Boteler Mock, A macabre sense of humor: dramas of conflict and war in Mesoamerica (pp. 245-261); Payson D. Sheets, Warfare in ancient Mesoamerica: a summary view (pp. 287-302).

thor decides to investigate the arson of a coffee plantation’s manor house by a band of guerrillas. Myrna Mack Chang 1238. Caso Myrna Mack: un juicio al impulse criminal del estado. Guatemala: Fundación Myrna Mack, 2003. 290 p. Recent judgments in Guatemalan courts and the InterAmerican Court of Human Rights relating to the case of the assassination of anthropologist Myrna Mack Chang by Guatemnalan military personnel. 1239. Myrna Mack vs. estado de Guatemala: Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos; sentencia de 25 de noviembre de 2003. Guatemala: Fundación Myrna Mack, 2004. 204 p.

1245. Cervera Obregón, Marco. 2007. El macuahuitl: un arma del posclásico tardío en Mesoamerica. Arqueología mexicana 14(84):60-65.

Rigoberta Menchu Tum 1240. Arias, Arturo, and David Stoll. 2001. The Rigoberta Menchu Controversy. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. 418 p.

1246. Chacon, Richard J., and Ruben G. Mendoza, eds. 2007. Latin American Indigenous Warfare and Ritual Violence. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 293 p. Contents include: Matt O’Mansky, and Arthur A. Demarest, Status rivalry and warfare in the development and collapse of Classic Maya civilization (pp. 11-33); Donald McVicker, Images of violence in Mesoamerican mural art (pp. 73-90).

1241. Morales, Mario R., and Elisabeth Burgos-Debray. 2001. Stoll-Menchu: la invención de Guatemala. Guatemala: Consucultura. 214 p. Collection of essays on the debate over the alleged inconsistencies found in Rigoberta Menchu’s autobiography; contents include: Mario R. Morales, Introducción: el debate académico mas alla de la simple diatriba (pp. 1-18); Elisabeth Burgos, Memoria, transmisión e imagen del cuerpo (pp. 19-86); Emil Volek, Los entramados ideológicos del testimonio latinoamericano David Stoll, Rigoberta y el general (pp. 87-126); Edward F. Fischer, La verdad y sus consecuencias (pp. 127-144); Jennifer Schirmer, Decir la verdad (pp. 165-180); Mario R. Morales, Stoll y Menchu despues del esclarecimiento histórico (pp. 181-212).

1247. Cortes Rincón, Marisol. 2007. A Comparative Study of Fortification Developments Throughout the Maya Region and Implications of Warfare. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 433 leaves. 1248. Duncan, William N. 2005. The Bioarchaeology of Ritual Violence in Postclassic El Petén, Guatemala (AD 9501524). Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 360 leaves.

1242. Cohen, Tina. 2001. Reconsidering Rigoberta. Multicultural Review 19(2):22-25, 55-56.

1249. Hassig, Ross. 2007. La guerra en la antigua Mesoamérica. Arqueología mexicana 14(84):32-40.

1243. Menchu, Rigoberta. 2004. Girl From Chimel: Tales From a Mayan Village. Tadworth: Acorn Book Company. 90 p. Autobiographical stories translated from the Spanish.

1250. Hernandez, Alfonso A. 2001. Las guerras venusinas entre los mayas. Arqueología mexicana 8(47):36-41. 1251. Inomata, Takeshi, and Daniela Triadan. 2009. Culture and Practice of War in Maya Society. In Warfare in Cultural Context: Practice, Agency, and the Achaeology of Violence, Axel E. Nielsen and William H. Walker, eds. pp. 57-83. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

Warfare 1244. Brown, M. Kathryn, and Travis W. Stanton, eds. 2003. Ancient Mesoamerican Warfare. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press. 384 p. The understanding of warfare in ancient Mesoamerica has blossomed in recent years. In this volume, the authors use recent empirical studies to help us understand the patterns and nature of Mesoamerican warfare. Using evidence from ceramics, settlement pattern, epigraphy, ethnohistory, and ethnography, these projects define the martial nature of Mesoamerican societies and link it to ritual, political economy, and other cultural systems. Contributions pertaining to the Maya include: Travis W. Stanton, and M. Kathryn Brown, Studying warfare in ancient Mesoamerica (pp. 1-16); George J. Bey, The role of ceramics in the study of conflict in Maya archaeology (pp. 19-29); Charles W. Golden, The politics of warfare in the Usumacinta basin: La Pasadita and the realm of Bird Jaguar (pp. 31-48); Jonathan B. Pagliaro, James F. Garber, and Travis W. Stanton, Evaluating the archaeological signatures of Maya ritual and conflict (pp. 75-89); M. Kathryn Brown, and James F. Garber, Evidence of conflict during the Middle Formative in the Maya lowlands: a view from Blackman Eddy, Belize (pp. 91-108); James N. Ambrosino, Traci Ardren, and Travis W. Stanton, The history

1252. Normark, Johan. 2007. Lethal encounters: warfare and virtual ideologies in the Maya area. In Encounters/Materialities/ Confrontations: Archaeologies of Social Space and Interaction. P. Cornell. och F. Fahlander, eds., pp. 165-197. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge Scholars Press. 1253. O’Brien, Eugene T. 2003. Evidence for Classic and Postclassic Intrusions and Invasions into the Maya Area. M.A. thesis, University of Texas at San Antonio. 80 leaves. 1254. Palka, Joel. 2001. Ancient Maya defensive barricades, warfare, and site abandonment. Latin American Antiquity 11:427-430. See also Philippe Steve, Les fortifications mayas ou une classification en dehors du probleme de la fonction ? Essai sur une classification morphologique des plans de sites mayas fortifies (M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1, 2003), and Cyril Vinot, Les “fortifications” mayas du Preclassique au 70

1267. Liljefors Persson, Bodil. 2000. The Legacy of the Jaguar Prophet: An Exploration of Yucatec Maya Religion and Historiography. Doctoral dissertation, Lunds Universitet (Sweden). 320 leaves.

postclassique, dans les basses terres: le probleme de l’identification en contexte archeologique (M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1, 2010). 1255. Rivera, Victor M. 2005. From Ritual to Rampart: The Transformation of Classical Maya Warfare. M.A. thesis, California State University, Dominguez Hills. 124 leaves.

1268. Martinez Gonzalez, Roberto. 2007. El alma de Mesoamérica: unidad y diversidad en las concepciones animicas de la región. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 93(2):7-50.

1256. Sanchez Polo, José R. 2009. Weapons and Strategies of Warfare in Late Postclassic Petén, Guatemala: The Use of the Bow and Arrow. M.A. thesis, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 300 leaves.

1269. Martínez Gonzalez, Roberto. 2007. Las entidades animicas en el pensamiento maya. Estudios de cultura maya 30:153-174. 1270. Molesky-Poz, Jean. 2006. Contemporary Maya Spirituality. The Ancient Ways Are Not Lost. Austin: University of Texas Press. 201 p.

1257. Stuart, David. 2007. Los antiguos mayas en guerra. Arqueología mexicana 14(84):41-47. 1258. Tuerenhout, Dirk van. 2001. Maya warfare: sources and interpretations. In Itinéraires belges aux Amériques; Actes du premier colloque de la Société des Américanistes de Belgique (Bruxelles, Mars 2000). Peter Eeckhout and Jacques Malengreau, eds. pp. 129-152. Bruxelles: Institut de Sociologie de l’Université Libre de Bruxelles.

1271. Morales Damian, Manuel A. 2007. Unicil te uinicil tun: la naturaleza humana en el pensamiento maya. Estudios de cultura maya 29:83-102. 1272. Morales Sic, José R. 2007. Religión y política: El proceso de institucionalización de la espiritualidad en el movimiento maya guatemalteco. Guatemala: FLACSO. 148 p.

1259. Wilford, John Noble. 2002. Maya carvings tell of a war of two superpowers. The New York Times, Sept 19, p. A1.

1273. Negroe Sierra, Genny, and Francisco Fernandez Repetto, eds. 2000. Religión popular de la Reconstrucción histórica al analisis antropológico (aproximaciones casuisticas). Mérida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan. 398p. Nine essays on the sociology of popular religion in Yucatan and Campeche. Includes studies of the Jehovah’s Witnesses, apparitions of the Virgin among the Maya and popular classes, and the prophetic tradition of the “cruzoob.”

RELIGION 1260. Baqueiro López, Oswaldo. 2003. Magia, mitos y supersticiones entre los mayas. 2 ed. Mérida: Maldonado Editores. 73 p. Features sections on the Mayan pantheon, superstitions and ceremonies. 1261. Baudez, Claude-François. 2002. Une histoire de la religion des Mayas: Du panthéisme au pantheón. Paris: Albin Michel. 467 p. An excellent, French-language, overview of ancient Maya religion, cosmology, and ritual. See also Claude-François Baudez, Una historia de la religión de los antiguos mayas. México: UNAM, Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas, 2004. 427p.

1274. Nibak, Tonik, Petra Hernandez, and Manwela Kokoroch. 2007. Portable Mayan Altar; Pocket Books of Mayan Spells. Chiapas: Taller Lenateros, (Pocket Books of Mayan Spells), 2007. “This portable altar is made from cardboard which has been printed and folded to look like a small hut. It features 12 multi-colored candels, ceramic sculptures of a ram, goat, and pedestal, and three books including, ‘Hex to Kill a Man’, ‘Magic for a Long Life’, and ‘Mayan Love Charms’. The ceramic sculptures function as candel holders and an incense burner. The books are written in Tzotzil with an English translation. Each is bound in black handmade paper with gilt title to front board and gild volume number to spine. Each has marbled end pages, full gilt edges, and black ribbon book mark”.

1262. Brennwald, Silvia. 2001. Die Kirche und der MayaKatholizismus: die katholische Kirche und die indianischen Dorfgemeinschaften in Guatemala, 1750-1821 und 19451970. Beiträge zur Kolonial- und Überseegeschichte, 81. Stuttgart: Steiner. 287 p. Study of the history of the Catholic Church in Guatemala, based on a doctoral thesis at the University of Zürich, 1997. 1263. Flores Farfán, José A., ed. 2006-2007. Na’at le ba’ala’ paalen; Adivina esta cosa ninio; Adivinanzas mayas yucatecas. México: Artes de México/CIESAS. 48 p. Text in Spanish, English, Mayan, Tzotzil and French.

1275. Rivera Dorado, Miguel. 2008. Diez rasgos religiosos en el Mayab y en Egipto. Revista Española de Antropología Americana 38(2):7-16. See also Miguel Rivera Dorado, Mas rasgos religiosos de los mayas y los egipcios (Revista Española de Antropología Americana 39(2):7-16, 2009).

1264. Hacía el Respecto de los Derechos Religiosos del Pueblo Maya: Informe Sobre Libertad de Religión Maya. Guatemala: Oficina de Derechos Humanos del Arzobispado de Guatemala, 2006. 236 p. 1265. Hart, Thomas. 2008. The Ancient Spirituality of the Modern Maya. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 270 p.

1276. Rugeley, Terry. 2001. Of Wonders and Wise Men: Religion and Popular Cultures in Southeast Mexico. Austin: University of Texas Press. 384 p. 1277. Sánchez Can, Feliciano, ed. 2006-2007. Ja’asaj ool, kili’ch kuuchiloob yeetel yumtzil’ob; Espantos, lugares sagrados y dioses. Merida: Miatzil Maayaa. 3 v. “La primera parte de un serie de materiales recopilados en distintas comunidades...porque todos en su conjunto reflejan actitudes de las per-

1266. Hofmann, Manfred. 2001. Religion and Identität: Maya in Guatemala. Frankfurt am Main: IKO. 272 p. 71

sonas en su relación con “los otros” (intro),” “El segundo libro de materiales recopilados en distintas comunidades;” “(intro). Spanish and Mayan parallel texts.

1285. Kray, Christine A. 2007. A practice approach to ritual: Catholic enactment of community in Yucatan. Anthropos 102(2): 532-545.

1278. Stanton, Travis W., and David A. Freidel. 2003. Ideological lock-in and the dynamics of Formative religions in Mesoamerica. Mayab 16:5-14.

Caves 1286. Bernal Romero, Guillermo. 2008. Cuevas y pinturas rupestres mayas. Ti’ Ik’ Way-nal, “en el lugar del abismo negro”. Arqueología 16(93):35-40.

1279. Vail, Gabrielle, and Christine Hernandez. 2007. Fire drilling, bloodletting, and sacrifice: year bearer rituals in the Maya and Borgia Group codices. The Codex 16(1-2):9-23.

1287. Bower, Bruce. 2002. Openings to the underworld: the ancient Maya may have dug caves with spiritual abandon. Science News Online 161(20):314-317. http://www. sciencenews.org/ 20020518/ bob9. asp. Article highlights the work of James E. Brady, California State University, Los Angeles, who argues that Classic period Maya rulers oriented settlements around caves and heeded widespread beliefs about a sacred landscape. See also Angela M. H. Schuster, Divers discover Maya relics in caves that became rivers (The New York Times, May 21, 2002, p. D3 and F3).

1280. Valencia Rivera, Gogelio, and Genevieve Le Fort, eds. 2006. Sacred Books, Sacred Languages: Two Thousand Years of Ritual and Religious Maya Literature. Acta Mesoamericana, 18. Markt Schwaben: Verlag Anton Saurwein. 225 p. Contents include: Alexandre Tokovinine, Art of the Maya epitaph: the genre of posthumous biographies in the Late Classic Maya inscriptions (pp. 1-20); Dimitri Beliaev, and Albert Davletshin, Los sujetos novelísticos y las palabras obscenas: los mitos, los cuentos y los anecdotas en los textos mayas sobre la ceramica del periodo clásico (pp. 2144); Soren Wichmann, A new look at linguistic interaction in the lowlands as a background for the study of Maya codices (pp. 45-64); Gabrielle Vail, and Christine M. Hernandez, Fire drilling, bloodletting, and sacrifice: Yearbearer rituals in the Maya and Borgia group codices (pp. 65-80); Pierre R. Colas, The hunting scenes in the Madrid Codex: a planner for hunting rituals (pp. 81-92); Marianne Gabriel, “Sib-ten a waalak’ -o’ob...” (“regalanos tus hijos, tus criados ...”) Oraciones dirgidas al “protector de los animales” (Sip)(pp. 93-112); John F. Chuchiak, De extirpation Codicis Yucatacensis: The 1607 colonial confiscation of a Maya sacred book; new interpretations on the origins and provenience of the Madrid Codex (pp. 113-140); Michela E. Craveri, La voz de los antepasados en la poesia k’iche’ (pp. 141-158); Alfonso Lacadena, El origen prehispánico de las profecias katunicas mayas coloniales: antecedentes clásicos de las profecias de 12 Ajaw y 10 Ajaw (pp. 201-225).

1288. Brady, James, ed. 2005. In the Maw of the Earth Monster. Austin: University of Texas Press. 476 p. “As portals to the supernatural realm that creates and animates the universe, caves have always been held sacred by the peoples of Mesoamerica. From ancient times to the present, Mesoamericans have made pilgrimages to caves for ceremonies ranging from rituals of passage to petitions for rain and a plentiful harvest. So important were caves to the pre-Hispanic peoples that they are mentioned in Maya hieroglyphic writing and portrayed in the Central Mexican and Oaxacan pictorial codices. Many ancient settlements were located in proximity to caves. This volume gathers papers from twenty prominent Mesoamerican archaeologists, linguists, and ethnographers to present a stateof-the-art survey of ritual cave use in Mesoamerica from PreColumbian times to the present. Organized geographically, the book examines cave use in Central Mexico, Oaxaca, and the Maya region. Some reports present detailed site studies, while others offer new theoretical understandings of cave rituals. As a whole, the collection validates cave study as the cutting edge of scientific investigation of indigenous ritual and belief. It confirms that the indigenous religious system of Mesoamerica was and still is much more terrestrially focused that has been generally appreciated.” Contents pertaining to the Maya include: James E. Brady, and Keith M. Prufer, Introduction: a history of Mesoamerican cave interpretation (pp. 1-18); Evon Z. Vogt, and David Stuart, Some notes on ritual caves among the ancient and modern Maya (pp. 155-185); Keith M. Prufer, Shamans, caves and the roles of ritual specialists in Maya society (pp. 186-222); Jaime J. Awe, Cameron Griffith, and Sherry Gibbs, Cave stelae and megalithic monuments in western Belize (pp. 223-248); Andrea Stone, A cognitive approach to artifact distribution in caves of the Maya area (pp. 249-268); Holley Moyes, Cluster concentrations, boundary markers, and ritual pathways: a GIS analysis of artifact cluster patterns at Actun Tunichil Muknal, Belize (pp. 269-300); Abigail E. Adams, and James E. Brady, Ethnographic notes on Maya Q’eqchi’ cave rites: implications for archaeological interpretation (pp. 301-327); Jaroslaw T. Petryshyn, and Pierre R. Colas, A Lacandon religious ritual in the cave of the god Tsibana at the holy lake of Mensabok in the rainforest of Chiapas (pp. 328-341); Dominique Rissolo, Beneath the Yalahau: emerging patterns of ancient Maya ritual cave use from northern Quintana Roo, Mexico (pp. 342-372); Clifford T. Brown, Caves, karst, and settlement at Mayapan, Yucatan (pp. 373-402);

1281. Weinberg, Bill. 2003. Islamic sect targets Chiapas Indians. Native Americans: Hemispheric Journal of Indigenous Issues 20(1): 3-4. Ithaca, NY. 1282. Zapeta García, José A., ed. 2006. Ri Ajg’ij Rech Tinamit Xo’lumus; El Guia espiritual y social maya del pueblo momosteco. Guatemala: Conferencia Nacional de Ministros de la Espiritualidad Maya de Guatemala, Oxlajuj Ajpop. 127 p. Ancestor Veneration 1283. Le Guen, Olivier. 2003. Quand les morts reviennent … réflexion sur l’ancestralité chez les mayas des basses terres. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 89(2):171-205. Paris. Author attempts to demonstrate the veracity of “ancestor worship” among Yucatec and Lacandon lowland Maya using colonial and ethnographical information, with special emphiasis on All Soul’s Day (hanal pixan). Catholicism 1284. Early, John D. 2006. The Maya and Catholicism: An Encounter of Worldviews. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. 311 p.

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Keith M. Prufer, and James E. Brady, Concluding comments (pp. 403-412);

1302. Explicaciones del principio del fin del mundo maya. Revista de arqueología 258:10, 2003.

1289. Christenson, Allen J. 2001. In the mouth of the jaguar: caves and Maya cofradia worship in highland Guatemala. PARI Journal 2(2):1-9.

1303. Garza, Mercedes de la. 2002. Sacred forces of the Mayan universe. In Native Religions and Cultures of Central and South America: Anthropology of the Sacred. Lawrence E. Sullivan, ed. pp. 93-176. New York: Continuum. General overview to Classic period Maya religion, including Preclassical Manifestations of Principal Mayan Religious Symbols, Spatial-Temporal Cosmos (Cosmogony; Cosmology), The Gods (Hunab Ku; The Dragon; The Celestial Dragon: Itzamna, God D; Kukulcan; Kinich Ahau, God G; Chaac, God B; The Terrestrial Dragon: Itzam Cab Ain; Ah Puch, God A; Bolon Dz’Acab, God K; God of Maize, God E; Female Gods); Rites (Sacrifice; Human Sacrifice; Self-Sacrifice; Concept of Humanity and Sanctifying of the Ruler; Initiatory Rites and Shamanic Practices of the Rulers; ball game as Rite of Rulers; Priesthood; Common Rites; Fertility Rites; Rites of the Life Cycle), and Sacred Spaces,

1290. Gibbs, Sheryl A. 2000. An Interpretation of the Significance of Human Remains From the Caves of the Southern Maya Lowlands. M.A. thesis, Trent University (Canada). 186 leaves. 1291. Morehart, Christopher T. 2002. Ancient Maya Ritual Cave Utilization: A Paleoethnobotanical Perspective. M.S. thesis, The Florida State University. 402 leaves. 1292. Moyes, Holley, Jaime J. Awe, George A. Brook, and James W. Webster. 2009. The ancient Maya drought cult: Late Classic cave use in Belize. Latin American Antiquity 20(1):175-206.

1304. Gonzalez Martin, Juan de Dios. 2001. La cosmovisión indígena guatemalteca, ayer y hoy. Guatemala: Instituto de Investigaciones Económicas y Sociales de la Universidad Rafael Landivar. 254 p. 1305. McAnany, Patricia A. 2001. Cosmology and the institutionalization of hierarchy in the Maya region. In From Leaders to Ruler. Jonathan Haas, ed. pp. 125-148. New York: Kluwer Academic. Evaluates the concept of “shamanistic politics” in an examination of the rise of kingship in the Maya lowlands.

1293. Prufer, Keith M. 2002. Communities, Caves, and Ritual Specialists: A Study of Sacred Space in the Maya Mountains of Southern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 755 p. Investigation of how ritual was exercised in public and private spaces in caves and communities in the Maya Mountains of southern Belize during the Classic Period. 1294. Romney, Kristin M. 2005. Watery tombs: testimony coerced from shamans by Spanish priests may, ironically, be a key to understanding more about Maya spiritual life. Archaeology 58(4):42-49.

1306. Nielsen, Jesper, and Toke Sellner Reunert. 2009. Dante’s heritage: questioning the multi-layered model of the Mesoamerican universe. Antiquity 83(320):399-413.

1295. Saffa, Sarah. 2009. In the Womb of the Earth: Sex in the Maya Cave Setting. M.A. thesis, University of Kansas. 101 leaves.

1307. Valverde Valdes, M. del Carmen. 2001. La cruz en la geometria del cosmos maya. Estudios de cultura maya 21:135-145.

1296. Sheseña, Alejandro. 2006. Pinturas mayas en cuevas. San Cristobal de las Casas: Gobierno del Estado de Chiapas. 230 p.

Death 1308. Asensio Ramos, Pilar. 2007. Muerte de un viajante: el viaje del way sagrado venado muerto. Mayab 19:87-106.

1297. Tec Pool, Fatima del Rosario. 2007. Situación actual de algunas cuevas: El caso de tres comunidades en Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1):233-242.

1309. Ciudad Ruiz, Andrés, Mario Humberto Ruz, and María Josefa Iglesias Ponce de León, eds. 2002. Antropología de la eternidad; la muerte en la cultura maya. México: Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas/Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 551p. Several scholar contributions presented at the “VI Mesa Redonda de la SEEM,” held in Madrid, from October 28th to November 1st, 2002 at the Universidad de Santiago de Compostela.

Cosmology 1298. Bassie-Sweet, Karen. 2008. Maya Sacred Geography and the Creator Deities. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 359 p. 1299. Bonifaz Nuño, Ruben. 2005. Cosmogonia Antigua de Mexico. Mexico: UNAM: Coordinación de Difusión Cultural/ Coordinación de Humanidades. 98 p. A brief historical examination of ancient Mayan beliefs concerning the origins of the world and space. Includes a CD titled: “Big Bang.” 1300. Broda, Johanna. 2009. Simbolismo de los volcanes: los volcanes en la cosmovisin mesoamericana. Arqueología mexicana 16(95):40-49.

1310. Cobos, Rafael, ed. 2004. Culto funerario en la sociedad maya. Memoria de la Cuarta Mesa Redonda de Palenque. México: INAH. 626 p. Thirty studies on various aspects of Mayan archaeology and ethnohistory with a concentration on funerary cults. 1311. Colas, Pierre R., Genevieve LeFort, and Bodil Lilefors Persson, eds. 2006. Jaws of the Underworld: Life, Death, and Rebirth Among the Ancient Maya. Acta Mesoamericana, 16. Markt Schwaben: Verlag Anton Saurwien. 112 p. Contents include: John F. Chuchiak, Yaab uih yetel maya cimil: colonial plagues, famines, catastrophes and the impact on changing

1301. Coones, Julie D. 2007. Cardinal Directionality In Maya Burials. M.A., University of Houston. 243 leaves.

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1322. Bernatz, Michele M. 2006. The Concept of Divinity in Maya Art: Defining God L. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 579 leaves.

Yucatec Maya concepts of death and dying, 1570-1794 (pp. 320); Lilia Fernandez Souza, Death and memory in Chichen Itza (pp. 21-34); James L. Fitzsimmons, Classic Maya tomb re-entry (pp. 35-42); Kerry Hull, Journey from the ancient Maya tomb: ropes, roads, and the point of departure (pp. 4354); Elisabeth Wagner, White earth bundles; the symbolic sealing and burial of buildings among the ancient Maya (pp. 55-70); Estella Weiss-Krejci, The Maya corpse: body processing from Preclassic to Postclassic times in the Maya highlands and lowlands (pp. 71-88).

1323. Bezanilla, Clara. 2005. British Museum Pocket Dictionary of Aztec and Maya Gods and Goddesses. London: British Museum Press. 48 p. 1324. Biglin, Karen E. 2005. Supernatural Animals of the Ancient Maya: The Serpent and the Jaguar in Art and Mythology. M.A. thesis, California State University, Dominguez Hills. 113 leaves.

1312. Eberl, Markus. 2005. Muerte, entierro y ascensión: ritos funerarios entre los antiguos mayas. Merida: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan. 243p. “El tema central de la presente obra encierra la muerte, el luto y los ritos postumos entre los antiguos mayas, tal como se advierte en las inscripciones. [...] El eje fundamental de este trabajo es la vida de la antigua nobleza y especialmente de sus gobernantes.”

1325. Chicas Rendon, Otto, and Hector Gaitan Alfaro. 2001. Maximon: testimonios de fe. Guatemala. 67 p. Testimonies of indigenous followers of Maximon Santeria. 1326. Contel, José. 2009. Los dioses de la lluvia en Mesoamérica. Arqueología mexicana 16(96):20-25.

1313. Fitzsimmons, James L. 2002. Death and the Maya: Language and Archaeology in Classic Maya Mortuary Ceremonialism. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 629 leaves.

1327. Cruz Cortes, Noemi. 2005. Las Señoras de la luna. Centro de Estudios Mayas, Cuaderno 32. México: UNAM: Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas. 112 p.”Este es un estudio sobre dos deidades femininas conocidas bajo los nombres de Ixchel e Ixchebelyax, que hemos identificado como diosas lunares, de la medicina, el parto y el tejido, y por supuesto, como diosas madres.”

1314. Fitzsimmons, James L. 2009. Death and the Classic Maya Kings. Austin: University of Texas Press. 281 p. 1315. Geller, Pamela L. 2004. Transforming Bodies, Transforming Identities: A Consideration of Pre-Columbian Maya Corporeal Beliefs and Practices. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 606 leaves. See also Pamela Geller, Maya mortuary spaces as cosmological metaphors (In Space and Spatial Analysis in Archaeology. Elizabeth C. Robertson, Jeffrey D. Seibert, Deepika C. Fernandez, and Mark U. Zender, eds. pp. 37-48. Calgary: Universtiy of Calgary Press, 2006).

1328. García Barrios, Ana. 2007. El dios Chaahk en el nombre de los gobernantes mayas. Estudios de cultura maya 29:15-30. 1329. García Barrios, Ana. 2007. El dios Chaahk’ en el Preclásico Maya. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1):267278.

1316. Gerez, Diego. 2000. Typologie contrastee de cultes commemoratifs a ciel ouvert, maya et egyptien. M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1.

1330. García Barrios, Ana. 2009. El aspecto bélico de Chaahk, el dios de la lluvia, en el Periodo Clásico maya. Revista española de antropología americana 39(1):7-29.

1317. Pistik: lumosil ti b uta xich’o pasbel sk’inal ti animaetike; Romerillo, lugar de tradición donde se celebra el dia de muertos. Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas: Consejo Estatal para la Cultura y las Artes de Chiapas: Coordinación de Enseñanza y Fomento Artístico/Dos Espejos, 2003. 63p. Brief exploration of Day of the Dead customs and traditions among Mayan peoples in Chiapas, Mexico. Texts in Spanish and Tzotzil.

1331. Garza C., Mercedes de la. 2009. Chaac, la sacralidad del agua. Arqueología mexicana 16(96):35-39. 1332. MacKenzie, C. James. 2005. Maya Bodies and Minds: Religion and Modernity in a K’iche’ Town. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 685 leaves. 1333. MacKenzie, C. James. 2009. Judas off the noose: sacerdotes mayas, costumbristas, and the politics of purity in the tradition of San Simon in Guatemala. Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology 14(2):355-381.

1319. Pitcavage, Megan R. 2008. Companion Burials in the Kingdom of the Avocado: Indirect Evidence of Human Sacrifice in Late and Terminal Classic Maya Society. M.A. thesis, University of California, San Diego. 65 leaves.

1334. Pedrón-Colombani, Sylvie. 2008. Culto de Maximon en Guatemala: entre procesos de reivindicación indígena y de reapropriación mestiza. Trace 54:31-44.

1320. Schopf, Ellen. 2009. Leben und Tod in der Kunst der praeklassischen Indianer kulturen Mesoamerikas: ein Beitrag zur Entwicklung des Todesverstandnisses. Heidel-berger Akademie der Wissenschaften, 21. Heidelberg. 274 p.

1335. Pérez Suarez, Tomas. 2007. Dioses mayas. Arqueología mexicana 15(88):57-65.

Deities 1321. Baudez, Claude-François. 2007. Los dioses mayas; una aparición tardía. Arqueología mexicana 15(88):32-41.

1336. Prina, Holly R. J. 2003. Samsara: Ixbalanque Reborn. M.A., California State University, Dominguez Hills. 310 leaves.

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1344. Breneman, Janet M. 2004. Guatemalan Mennonite Women at Prayer: Religious Heritages and Social Circumstances Shape the Prayers of Ladina and Q’eqchi’ Women. DMin thesis, Lancaster Theological Seminary. 279 leaves.

1337. Quesada García, Octavio. 2009. La imagen de Chaac; naturalezas y signos durante el period clásico. México: UNAM: Coordinación de Humanidades. 137 p. New. Concise archaeological exploration, into the symbology prepresented in the the depiction of the Mayan Chaac god in hieroglyphics, sculpture and other illustrations from the Classic Period in Mayan Civilization. With color plates of works throughout.

1345. Chiappari, Christopher L. 2002. Toward a Maya theology of liberation: the reformulation of a “traditional” religion in the global context. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 41:47-68. Description of the cosmology of a particular version of Maya religion in highland Guatemala drawn from an ancient Maya tradition, especially the Popol Vuh. It incorporates other ideas and elements, including ideas such as inclusivity and freedom of membership. Thus while not directly influenced by liberation theology, it offers a potential alternative to it in its synthesis of the traditional and the modern.

1338. Ruz, Mario H. 2009. Ch’a Chaak; plegaria por la lluvia en el Mayab contemporaneo. Arqueología mexicana 16(96):73-76. 1339. Ruz, Mario H., ed. 2006. De la mano de lo sacro: santos y demonios en el mundo maya. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 366 p. A collection of ethnohistorical and religious studies into the depiction of saint and demon figures in the Mayan spiritual world, spanning from the Colonial Era until the present. Contents include: Mario H. Ruz, La familia divina: imaginario hagiográfico en el mundo maya (pp. 21-66); Pedro Pitarch, Conjecturas sobre la identidad de los santos tzeltales (pp. 67-90); Piero Gorza, Legítimos hombres, legítima tierra: dinámicas simbólicas contradictorias en el construcción de fronteras (pp. 91-100); Kazuyasu Ochiai, Visitas de santos en San Andrés Larrainzar (pp. 101-156); Sonia Toledo Tello, El santo patrón de Simojovel. Las disputas simbolicas entre la población indígena y “mestiza” (pp. 157-176); Marta Turok, El huipil de la Virgen de Magdalenas (pp. 177-188); Paola García, El papel de los santos en el mundo indígena guatemalteco contemporaneo (pp. 189-224); Perla Petrich, Los santos en la tradición oral de Atitlan (pp. 225256); Alain Breton, Una infinita necesidad de antepasados (pp. 257-264); Daniela Maldonado Cano, “Luego se supo que era san Diguito...” Una mirada a la religiosidad popular del sur de Yucatan (pp. 265-290); María del C. León Cazares, La presencia del demonio en las “Constituciones diocesanas” de fray Francisco Nuñez de la Vega (pp. 291-320); Asención Amador Naranjo, “Kisin,” el demonio yucateco (pp. 321-334); Enrique Rodriguez Balam, De diablos, demonios y huestas de maldad. Imagenes del diablo entre los pentecostales de una comunidad maya (pp. 335-348).

1346. Chojnacki, Ruth J. 2004. Indigenous Apostles: Maya Catholic Catechists Working the Word in Highland Chiapas. Doctoral dissertation, University of Chicago. 580 leaves. 1347. Dow, James W., and Alan R. Sandstrom, eds. 2001. Holy Saints and Fiery Preachers: The Anthropology of Protestantism in Mexico and Central America. Westport, CT: Praeger. 298 p. A collection of original articles on contemporary Protestant religions in Mexico and Central America reveal that Protestantism was in the rise in the last decades of the twentieth century because it was opposing political structures that were largely unworkable in a new age of economic expansion and population growth. Essays pertaining to the Maya include: Garrett Cook, The Maya Pentecost; Henri Gooren, Reconsidering Protestant Growth in Guatemala, 1900-1995; Abigail E. Adams, Making One Our Word: Protestant Q’eqchi’ Mayans in Highland Guatemala; David Scotchmer, Pastors, Preachers, or Prophets? Cultural Conflict and Continuity in Maya Protestant Leadership; and, Alan R. Sandstrom, Conclusion: Anthropological Perspectives on Protestant Conversion in Mesoamerica. 1348. Forand, Nancy A. 2001. Mayas in the Age of Apocalypse: Folk Evangelicals and Catholics in Quintana Roo. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 459 leaves. See also C. Mathews Samson, 2004. Reenchanting the World: Maya Identity and Protestantism in the Western Highlands of Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany, 2004. 275 leaves.

1340. Teran, Silvia, and Christian H. Rasmussen. 2008. Jinetes del cielo maya: dioses y diosas de la lluvia en Xocén. Merida: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán 388 p. Geophagy 1341. Müller-Schwarze, Nina. 2004. Geophagy in highland Guatemala. Human Mosaic 35(1):51-57.

1349. Forand, Nancy. 2002. The language ideologies of courtship ritual: Maya Pentacostals and folk Catholics. Journal of American Folklore 115(457-458):332-377.

Pilgrimage 1342. VanPool, Christine S. 2002. Flight of the shaman; Mayan ceramics that depict the shamanic journey to the supernatural world. Archaeology 55:41-45. Proof that some of the ceramics of the Casas Grandes region depict the shamanic journey and that Paquime, another name for the area, was the ceremonial center of the Mayan world is discussed. Pots with the same symbolism have been found as far away as New Mexico and show a large region of social and political interaction. Protestantism and Religious Conversion 1343. Beaucage, Pierre. 2007. Apres le règne de Jésus; apercus de l’imaginaire des autochtones pentacotistes de l’ouest du Guatemala. Anthropologica 49(1):95-112.

1350. Ruz, Mario H., and Carlos Garma Navarro, eds. 2005. Protestantismo en el mundo maya contemporaneo. Cuadernos, 30. México, UNAM: Centro de Estudios Mayas. 177 p. Seven essays on various aspects of contemporary Protestantism among the Maya of Chiapas, Yucatan, and Guatemala. Psychotropics 1351. Steinberg, Michael K. 2004. The marijuana milpa: agricultural adaptations in a post-subsistence Maya landscape in southern Belize. In Dangerous Harvest: Drug Plants and the

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les asociadas al maiz; and, Analisis de los cambios y las persistencias en los rituales agrícolas.

Transformatrion of Indigenous Landscapes. Michael K. Steinberg, Joseph J. Hobbs, and Kent Mathewson, eds. pp. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.

1362. Crawford, Michael. 2008. Comparing indigenous pilgrimages: devotion, identity, and resistance in Mesoamerica and North America. Anthropos 103(2): 483-506.

Religious Practitioners 1352. Cabello Reyes, Victor A. 2005. El sagrado patron; canamayte chamánico. Merida: Maldonado Editores del Mayab. 41 p. On Mayan art, symbolism and religion, with several illustrations.

1363. Diamond, Jared. 2001. Anatomy of a ritual. Natural History 110(6):16, 18-20. 1364. Eiss, Paul K. 2002. Hunting for the Virgin: meat, money, and memory in Tetiz, Yucatan. Cultural Anthropology 17(3):291-330. Arlington. Author offers a reanalysis of the story of the Virgin of Tetiz.

1353. Deuss, Krystyna. 2007. Shamans, Witches, and Maya Priests: Native Religion and Ritual in Highland Guatemala. London: Guatemalan Maya Centre. 334 p. Detailed analysis of traditional rite and rituals associated with prayersayers in Akatek (Chimban), Chuj (San Mateo Ixtatan, San Sebastian Coatan), Q’anjob’al (San Juan Ixcoy, Santa Eulalia, Soloma) communities in northwestern Guatemala.

1365. Gonlin, Nancy, and Jon C. Lohse, eds. 2007. Common Ritual and Ideology in Ancient Mesoamerica. Boulder: University of Colorado Press. 304 p. Contents include: Jon C. Lohse, Commoner ritual, commoner ideology: (sub-) alternate views of social complexity in prehispanic Mesoamerica (pp. 1-32); Nancy Gonlin, Ritual and ideology among Classic Maya rural commoners at Copan, Honduras (pp. 83-122); Arthur A. Joyce, and Errin T. Weller, Commoner rituals, resistance, and the Classic- to- Postclassic transition in ancient Mesoamerica (pp. 143-184); Mark W. Mehrer, Steps to a holistic household archaeology (pp. 281-294);

1354. Gössling, Andreas. 2001. Die Maya Priesterin: Roman. Frankfurt am Main: Eichborn. 519 p. 1355. Love, Bruce. 2004. Maya Shamanism Today: Connecting With the Cosmos in Rural Yucatan. Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos. 84 p. 1356. Mercier, Patricia. 2002. The Mayan Shaman: Travelling in Time. London: Robson. 304 p.

1366. Lara Figueroa, Celso A. 2002. Guatemala: ceremonias y fiestas populares. Barcelona: Bustamente Editores. 144 p. Magnificent photographs of various ritual ceremonies and festivals throughout the western highlands of Guatemala, including Wajxaqib’ B’at at Momostenango, sacred lake of Chicabal, dance dramas in Cubulco, Coban, Zunil, Rabinal, and Santa Cruz del Quiche, cofradias in Santo Tomas Chichicastenango, and Semana Santa in Rabinal, Sacapulas, Zunil, and Patzun, and All Saint’s Day in Sumpango and Todos Santos Cuchumatan.

1357. Zender, Marc U. 2004. A Study of Classic Maya Priesthood. Doctoral dissertation, University of Calgary (Canada). 621 leaves. Ritual 1358. Arceo Ortíz, Alvaro E. 2005. Cementerios de la ciudad de Campeche. Campeche: Gobierno del Estado de Campeche: Secretaría de Salud. 123 p. Discusses aspects of cemeteries and cemetery culture in Campeche, Mexico. With contemporary of grave sites, altars and hospitals, as well as early-20th century period of sites and churches. Includes a color photo of the Calakmul ruins and others of archaeological interest. Contains information on mortuary practices of the ancient Mayans, as well.

1367. Haines, Helen R., Philip W. Willnik, and David Maxwell. 2008. Stingray spine use and Maya bloodletting rituals: a cautionary tale. Latin American Antiquity 19(1): 83-98 1368. Loewe, Ronald. 2003. Yucatan’s dancing pig’s head (cuch): icon, carnival, and commodity. Journal of American Folklore 116(462):420-443. As a central feature of the annual fiesta, the Maya cuch ceremony and its various transformations have been a staple of ethnographic description for more than fifty years. Through this investiture ceremony, responsibility for organizing the fiesta is passed from one religious confraternity to another. Although descriptions of the cuch abound, the ethnography of performance remains fragmented. Ethnographies tend to privilege or essentialize particular performances and ignore variants that violate the ethnographer’s notion of authenticity. Indeed, the multiplicity of labels in Spanish and Maya used to describe the cuch and its transformations, cuch, k’ub pol, okostah pol, baile del cochino, etc., leaves the impression that different enactments or performances bear little or no relation to one another. In contrast, the present article demonstrates the dialogical relations between various transformations of the cuch, pious, satirical, and folkloric, as an aid to interpreting more heterodox performances. In particular, following Bakhtin, the author argues that the rich parody which permeates the k’ub pol, a transformation of the cuch performed on some former henequen plan-

1359. Brown, Linda A. 2002. The Structure of Ritual Practice: An Ethnoarchaeological Exploration of Activity Areas at Rural Community Shrines in the Maya Highlands. Doctoral dissertation, University of Colorado at Boulder. 455 leaves. See also Linda A. Brown, Dangerous places and wild spaces: creating meaning with materials and space at contemporary Maya shrines on El Duende mountain (Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 11(1):31-58, 2004), and Linda A. Brown, Planting the bones: hunting ceremonialism at contemporary and nineteenth-century shrines in the Guatemalan highlands (Latin American Antiquity 16(2):131-146, 2005). 1360. Calligeris, Catherine. 1999. Fonction et signification des depôts de fondation mayas, dans les basses terres, a la periode classique. Doctoral dissertation, Universite de Paris 1. 1361. Chuc Uc, Cessia E. 2008. Ts’ayatsil: el dón de reciprocidad entre los mayas contemporaneos. Campeche: Universidad Autónoma de Campeche. 173 p. Contents include: Historia y sociedad de Nunkini; Actividades agropecuarias de Nunkini (1920 - 2002); Cosmovisión, naturaleza y prácticas ritua76

tations, is invariably lost, or reduced to an innocent burlesque, if one fails to recognize its relationship to more sober, “Catholic” interpretations of the cuch.

1382. Petrich, Perla. 2007. Espacios sagrados entre los mayas del lago Atitlan (Guatemala). Estudios de cultura maya 29:141-154.

1369. Najera Coronado, Martha I. 2003. El sacrificio humano entre los mayas en la colonia. Arqueología mexicana 11(63):64-67.

Sacrifice 1383. Baudez, Claude-François. 2007. Sacrificio y culto fálico en Yucatan. Mayab 19:71-86.

1370. Najera Coronado, Marta I. 2008. El rito del “palo volador”: encuento de significados. Revista española de antropología americana 38(1):51-73. 1371. Nash, June. 2007. Consuming interests: water, rum, and Coca-Cola from ritual propitiation to corporate expropriation in highland Chiapas. Cultural Anthropology 22(4):621-639.

1384. Baudez, Claude-François. 2008. Le jaguar, sujet et objet du sacrifice maya. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 94(1):177-190. 1385. Najera C., Martha I. 2006. El don de la sangre en el equilibrio cosmico; el sacrificio y el autosacrificio sangriento entre los antiguos mayas. México: UNAM: Centro de Estudios Mayas. 279 p. Thorough coverage of blood sacrifice among the ancient Maya.

1372. Romey, Kristin M. 2004. Diving the Maya underworld: an adventure in the sacrificial sinkholes of the Yucatan jungle. Archaeology 57(3):16-23. Description of underwater exploration of cenotes (sinkholes) in Yucatan. See also Kristin M. Romey, Diving the Maya underworld. (Current World Archaeology 1:36-43, 2004. London).

1386. Tiesler, Vera, and Andrea Cucina. 2006. Procedures in human heart extraction and ritual meaning: a taphonomic assessment of anthropogenic marks in Classic Maya skeletons. Latin American Antiquity 17(4):493-510.

1373. Rut Sanchez, Alberto, Margarita de Orellana, Carolle Castelli, Rowena Galawirz, and Richard Moszka. 2006. Rituales del maiz; bilingual edition. México: Artes de México/CONACULTA. An historical survey of indigenous (Mayan) rituals utilizing corn.

1387. Tiesler, Vera, and Andrea Cucina. 2007. El sacrificio humano por extracción de corazón: una evaluación osteotafonomica de violencia ritual entre los mayas del clásico. Estudios de cultura maya 30:57-78.

1374. Stone, Janferie J. 2007. A Guatemalan Tale of Two Wives: Nawales (Shapeshifters) in a Time of Genocide. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Davis. 354 leaves.

1388. Tiesler, Vera, and Andrea Cucina, eds. 2007. New Perspectives on Human Sacrifice and Ritual Body Treatments in Ancient Maya Society. New York: Springer. 319 p. Contents include: Vera Tiesler, and Andrea Cucina, New perspectives on human sacrifice and postsacrificial body treatments in ancient Maya society: an introduction (pp. 1-13); Vera Tiesler, Funerary or nonfunerary? New references in identifying ancient Maya sacrificial and postsacrificial behaviors from human assemblages (pp. 14-44); Lisa J. Lucero, and Sherry A. Gibbs, The creation and sacrifice of witches in Classic Maya society (pp. 45-73); Eleanor Harrison-Buck, Patricia McAnany, and Rebecca Storey, Empowered and disempowered during the Late to Terminial Classic transition: Maya burial and termination rituals in the Sibun Valley, Belize (pp. 74-101); Cecilia Medina Martin, Mirna Sanchez Vargas, Posthumous body treatments and ritual meaning in the Classic Period northern Petén: a taphonomic approach (pp. 102-119); Gabrielle Vail, and Christine Hernandez, Human sacrifice in Late Postclassic Maya iconography and texts (pp. 120-164); Virginia Miller, Skeletons, skulls, and bones in the art of Chichen Itza (pp. 165-189); Guillermo de Anda Alanis, Sacrifice and ritual body mutilation in Postclassical Maya society: taphonomy of the human remains from Chichen Itza’s Cenote Sagrada (pp. 190-208); Araceli Hurtado Cen, Aleida Cetina Bastida, Vera Tiesler, and William J. Folan, Sacred spaces and human funerary and nonfunerary placements in Champoton, Campeche, during the Postclassic period (pp. 209-231); Stanley Serafin, and Carlos Peraza Lope, Human sacrificial rites among the Maya of Mayapan: a bioarchaeological perspective (pp. 232-250); Andrea Cucina, and Vera Tiesler, Nutrition, lifestyle, and social status of skeletal remains from nonfunerary and “problematical” contexts (pp. 251-262); T. Douglas Price, James H. Burton, Lori E. Wright, Christine D. White, and Fred Longstaffe, Victims of sacrifice: isotopic evidence for place of origin (pp. 263-292); Jane E. Buikstra, The bioarchaeology of Maya sacrifice (pp. 293-308).

1375. Stuart, David. 2003. La ideología del sacrificio entre los mayas. Arqueología mexicana 11(63):24-29. 1376. Varguez Eb, Jorge E. 2007. Ofrendas del Hanal Pixan. Merida: Maldonado Editores del Mayab. 76 p. On the Mayan Day of the Dead celebration. With and descriptions of customs and atlar offerings. 1377. Vesilind, Priit J. 2004. Watery graves of the Maya. National Geographic 204(4):82-101. Sacred Spaces 1378. Bazy, Damien. 2010. Relations entre espaces publics et espaces prives des sites mayas des basses terres mayas centrales et meridionales, du Preclassique au classique Terminal. Doctoral dissertation, Universite de Paris 1. 1379. Chavez Gómez, José M. 2006. La recreación del antiguo espacio político: un cuchcabal kejache y el na’al kejach chan en el siglo XVII. In Nuevas perspectivas sobre la geografia política de los mayas. Tsubasa Okosh Harada, Lorraine A. Williams-Beck, and Ana Luisa Izquierdo, eds. pp. 57-80. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 1380. García, David de Angel. 2007. Espacios y representaciones del mal entre los mayas yucatecos contemporaneos. Mayab 19:139-145. 1381. Guzman Uriostegui, Jesus. 2007. Entre el fogon y la milpa: el espacio entre los mayas de Xohuayan, Yucatan. Dimensión Antropológica 14(39):101-119.

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1399. Roberto, Pedro. 2001. La x’tabay de Ake. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 17(2):160-163.

Symbolism 1389. Aguilera, Miguel A. 2004. Unshrouding the Communicating Cross: The Iconology of a Maya Quadripartite Symbol. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 335 leaves. An analysis of how the Maya cross serves as a vehicle for political discourse that articulates between the past and present, and functions as an ethnic negotiation marker in response to the phenomenon of globalization. The newest iteration of the 1850 Caste War revitalization movement is taking place right now, during a national level reassessment of Mexican political culture and ethnic policies, in the wake of the post-Zapatista uprising in Chiapas, Mexico.

1400. Ross, Stephanie L. 2002. Ix Balam: Lady Jaguar: Tales of Maya Women. Master of Liberal Studies thesis, Rollins College. 130 leaves. 1401. Thompson, Susan C., Keith S. Thompson, and Lidia López de López. 2007. Mayan Folktales: Cuentos folkloricos mayas. Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited. 177 p. 1402. Tradición oral itza; Comidas y medicinas tradicionales. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, (ALMG), 2006. 67 p. Brief history examining oral traditions, relative to Mayan Itza’ food and medical remedies. Texts in Spanish and Itza.

1390. Meissner, Nathan. 2006. A semiotic approach to the Maya “postclassic international symbol set”. M.A. thesis, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 234 leaves. Syncretism 1391. Pieper, Jim. 2002. Guatemala’s Folk Saints: Maximon/San Simon, Rey Pascual, Judas, Lucifer, and Others. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 244 p. Heavily illustrated about “folk saints” and religious syncretism in the western highlands of Guatemala.

1403. Tradición Oral Itza’: Tradiciones y Narraciones. Guatemala: Serviprensa, 2007. 84 p.

1392. Popson, Colleen P. 2003. Gods of Yucatan: How the Maya adapted to the religion of their Spanish conquerors. Archaeology 56(1):64-68.

1405. Worley, Paul M. 2009. Telling and Being Told: Storytelling and Cultural Control in Contemporary Mexican and Yukatek Maya Texts. Doctoral dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 267 leaves.

1404. Velasquez García, Erik. 2006. The Maya flood myth and the decapitation of the cosmic caiman. PARI Journal 7(1):1-10.

FOLKLORE, MYTHOLOGY, AND LITERATURE Folklore 1393. Danien, Elin. 2005. Maya Folktales From the Alta Verapaz. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. 102 p. Republication of Q’eq’chi’ folktales originally collected by Mary Owen and Robert Burkitt and later published in the Museum Journal in 1915 and 1918.

Mythology 1406. Christensen, Allen J. 2009. “Who shall be our sustainer?” Sacred myth and the spoken word. Expedition 51(1):9-16. 1407. Evia Cervantes, Carlos. 2007. El Mito de la serpiente Tsukan. Merida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan: Facultad de Ciencias Antropológicas. 247 p. Analysis on the social and cultural aspects of Calcehtock, Yucatan. Focusing on religion, Mayan mythology, and the myth of the Tsukan serpent.

1394. Estrada Ochoa, Adriana C. 2006. Li tzuultaq’a ut li ch’ocho’: una visión de la tierra, el mundo y la identidad a traves de la tradición oral q’eqchi’ de Guatemala. Estudios de cultura maya 27:149-163.

1408. Frutos, David A. de. 2003. Hunahpu, Ixbalanque y Xut: analisis de la estructura de un mito tzeltal en el tiempo. Revista española de antropología americana 33:253-276. The sun still plays an important role in Mesoamerican cosmology to explain time, generations, and kinship.

1395. López Mendez, Roberto. 2008. Leyendas de virgenes y santos de Yucatan. Merida: Area Maya, 136 p. “Historias y leyendas sobre Virgenes, Cristos y Santos de lugares remotos de un Yucatan que encierra entre las grietas de sus lajas y las profundidades de sus grutas, secretos de visiones mágicas, de milagros y promesas de un pueblo que aguarda, vela y se regocija en su fe y sus tradiciones.”

1409. Garza, Mercedes de la. 2002. Mitos mayas del origen del cosmos. Arqueología mexicana 10(56):36-41. English language translation: Maya myths on the origin of the cosmos (Arqueología mexicana 10(56):82-84).

1396. Petrich, Perla, and Carlos Ochoa García, eds. 2001. Tzijonik; cuentos del lago. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. 275 p. Compilation of folktales and legends of K’iche’, Kaqchikel, and Tz’utujil Maya from towns along the shore of Lake Atitlan.

1410. Hernandez Albertos, Ignacio. 2005. Analisis mitológicos de los Mayas-Lacandones. Merida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan. 151p. Psychoanalytic study of Lacandon mythology. 1411. Juarez Cossio, Daniel. 2003. Moral-Reforma: en la senda de Xibalba. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):38-47.

1397. Preuss, Mary H. 2001. Supernatural powers of hunchbacks and water. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 17(2):164-170. McKeesport. See also Mary H. Preuss, Yucatec Maya Stories: From Chen-Ja’ to the Milpa (Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos, 2005. 216 p.).

1412. Knowlton, Timothy W 2004. Dialogism in the Languages of Colonial Maya Creation Myths. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 270 leaves.

1398. Preuss, Mary H. 2006. Village tales from Yucatan. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 22(2):153-199.

1413. Le Fort, Geneviève, Raphael Gardiol, Sebastian Matteo, and Christophe Helmke, eds. 2009. The Maya and their 78

1421. Bolles, David. 2003. Post Conquest Mayan Literature; Based on Pre-Columbian Sources. Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos. 347 p. “With reference to the works of Alfredo Barrera Vasquez and Ralph L. Roys.” Comparisons of various parallel versions of Maya colonial literature which has a basis in hieroglyphs or pre-Columbian oral literature.

Sacred Narratives: Text and Context in Maya Mythologies; Proceedings of the 12th European Maya Conference (Geneva, 2007). Acta Mesoamericana, 20. Markt Schwaben: Verlag Anton Saurwein. 206 p. Contents include: Alain Monnier, Comparar las mitologías (pp. 5-10); Philippe Borgeaud, and Raphael Gardiol, Myth or (and, along with) history (pp. 1116); Carlos Pallan Gayol, The many faces of “Chaahk: exploring the role of a complex and fluid entity within myth, religion and politics (pp. 17-40); Karl Taube, The Maya Maize God and the mythic origins of dance (pp. 41-54); Erik Velásquez García, Imagén, texto y contexto ceremonial del “Ritual de los Angeles”: viejos problemas y nuevas respuestas sobre la narrativa sagrada en los libros de Chilam Balam (pp. 55-74); Carl D. Callaway, The birth of the number twenty in the Dresden Codex (pp. 75-88); Gabrielle Vail, and Christine Hernandez, Cords and crocodilians: creation mythology in Late Postclassic Maya iconography and texts (pp. 89-110); Timothy Knowlton, Composition and artistry in a Classical Yucatecan Maya creation myth: prehispanic ritual narratives and their colonial transmission (pp. 111-122); Allen J. Christenson, “Who shall be our sustainer?”: sacred myth and the spoken word (pp. 123-130); Kerry Hull, The grand Ch’orti’ epic: the story of the “Kumix Angel” (pp. 131-140); H. Edwin Braakhuis, Jaguar Slayer and Stone Trap Man: a Tzotzil myth reconsidered (pp. 141-148); Fatima Tec Pool, Las cuevas, espacios mitícos entre los mayas de hoy (pp. 149156); Lars Fruhsorge, and Ulrich Wolfel, Salt, sites and “mythology”: cultural memory in San Mateo Ixtatan (Huehuetenango, Guatemala) from pre-Hispanic to modern times (pp. 157-176); Julie Nehammer Knub, Simone Thun, and Christophe Helmke, The divine rite of kings: an analysis of Classic Maya impersonation statements (pp. 177-196); Pierre R. Colas, Deities of transition: death gods among the Classic Maya (pp. 197-205).

1422. Chacon, Gloria E. 2006. Contemporary Maya Writers: Kabawil and the Making of a Millenarian Literary Tradition. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Santa Cruz. 207 p. 1423. De Vos, Jan. 2008. Textos encontrados: la rebelión zapatista en la voz de tres escritores chiapanecos. Mesoamérica 29(50):192-213. 1424. Lienhard, Martin. 2002. La noche de los mayas: representaciones de los indígenas mesoamericanos en el cine y la literatura, 1917-1943. Mesoamérica 44:82-117. Author attempts to clarify some of the contradictions inherent in the cinematic and literary characterization of indigenous nationalism in Mexico and Guatemala. 1425. Literatura indígena de América: segundo congreso. Guatemala: Asociación Cultural B’eyb’al, 2001. 195 p. 1426. López de la Rosa, Edmundo, and Patricia Martel. 2001. La escritura en uohh: una propuesta metodológica para el estudio de la escritura prehispánica maya-yucateca. México: Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas, UNAM. 187 p. 1427. Martel, Patricia, and María Isabel López Rosas. 2002. Mayan poetry in visual language and Yucatec colonial texts. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 18(2):141-162.

1414. León-Portilla, Miguel. 2002. Mitos de los origenes en Mesoamérica. Arqueología mexicana 10(56):20-27. English language translation: Myths of origin in Mesoamerica (Arqueología mexicana 10(56):79-80, 2002).

1428. Martin, Laura. 2007. Traditional Mayan rhetorical forms and symbols: from the Popol Vuh to El tiempo principa en Xibalba. Latin American Indian Literature Journal 23(1):22-42.

1415. Ramirez, Elisa. 2001. La creación del hombre. Arqueología mexicana 9(52):88-89.

1429. Menchu, Rigoberta. 2001. Li M’in, una niña de Chimel; una fabula verdadera en la tierra de los mayas. Buenos Aires: Editorial Sudamericana. 95 p. Indigenous legends and stories for juvenile readers by Guatemala’s 1992 Nobel Prize recipient.

1416. Ramirez, Elisa. 2001. Mitos indígenas: cuento de una madre que era bruja. Arqueología mexicana 8(47):88. 1417. Ramirez, Elisa. 2001. Mitos y cuentos indígenas: el k’ox. Arqueología mexicana 9(50):87. Discussion of Tzeltal and Tzotzil folklore theme.

1430. Montejo, Victor D. 2002. Mr. Puttison’s Adventrures Among the Maya. Palos Verdes, CA: Yax’te Foundation. 182 p. Satirical novel on the adventures of a North American traveler in a Maya community in the western highlands of Guatemala.

1418. Rivera Dorado, Miguel. 2003. Algunos simbolos en el mito del origen del mundo en Oxkintok. Revista española de antropologia americana 33:5-16. An analysis of a myth collected from Maxcanu, Yucatan, Mexico.

1431. Morales Bermudez, Jesus. 2001. Literatura indígena, tradición y modernidad. Arqueología mexicana 9(50):62-67.

Literature 1419. Azcorra Alejos, Gaspar J. 2009. Leyendas mayas y quiches. Merida: Talleres de Grupo Impresor Unicornio. 94 p. A collection of Mayan writings and poetry.

1432. Palacios, Rita M. 2009. Indigenousness and the Reconstruction of the Other in Guatemalan Indigenous Literature. Doctoral dissertation, University of Toronto (Canada). 241 leaves.

1420. Arias, Arturo. 2008. Kotz’ib: the emergence of a new Maya literature. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 24(1):7-28.

1433. Tedlock, Dennis. 2010. 2000 Years of Mayan Literature. Berkeley: University of California Press 465 p.

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Late Classic Maya commoner organization at Dos Hombres, Belize (pp. 117-146); Jason Yaeger, and Cynthia Robin, Heterogeneous hinterlands: the social and political organization of commoner settlements near Xunantunich, Belize (pp. 147174); Takeshi Inomata, The spatial mobility of non-elite populations in Classic Maya society and its political implications (pp. 175-196); Marilyn A. Masson, and Carlos Peraza Lope, Commoners in Postclassic Maya society: social versus economic class constructs (pp. 197-224); Nancy Gonlin, Methods for understanding Classic Maya commoners: structure function, energetics, and more (pp. 225-254); and Joyce Marcus, Maya commoners: the stereotype and the reality (pp. 255-284); Conclusion (pp. 285-287).

SOCIAL ORGANIZATION AND SOCIAL STRUCTURE 1434. Becker, Marshall J. 2004. Maya heterarchy as inferred from Classic Period plaza plans. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):107-125. 1435. Gillespie, Susan D. 2001. Personhood, agency, and mortuary ritual: a case study from the ancient Maya. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 20(1):73-112. Author argues for the need for renewed interest in the anthropological analysis of the person, a socially shaped construct-in order to better understand social relationships and recognize the collective aspects of agency. A case study from the Classic Maya civilization illustrates how emphasis on the individual, as represented in mortuary events, artistic depictions, and texts, has resulted in interpretive difficulties that can be avoided by viewing these data from the perspective of the social collectivity from which personhood was derived. For a critique of the social construction of the ancient Maya see Stephen D. Houston, and Patricia A. McAnany. 2003. Bodies and blood: critiquing social construction in Maya archaeology (Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 22(1):26-41, 2003).

1443. Watanabe, John M. 2004. Some models in a muddle: lineage and house in Classic Maya social organization. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):159-166. 1444. Weiss-Krejci, Estella. 2004. Mortuary representations of the noble house: a cross-cultural comparison between collective tombs of the ancient Maya and dynastic Europe. Journal of Social Archaeology 4(3):368-404. Thousand Oaks, CA.

1436. Fowler, William R., and Jon B. Hageman. 2004. New perspectives in ancient lowland Maya social organization. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):49-59.

1445. Weller, Errin T. 2002. Maya Commoner-Elite Ritual Interaction: Continuity or Disjuncture? M.A. thesis, University of Colorado. 186 leaves.

1437. Hage, Per. 2003. The ancient Maya kinship system. Journal of Anthropological Research 59(1):5-22. Author suggests Maya kinship system was based on bilateral crosscousin marriage with cross-cutting patrilineal descent and alternate generation moieties, similar to marriage patterns of the city-states in early Chinese civilization.

Settlement Patterns 1446. Arie, Jane C. 2001. Sun Kings and Hierophants: Geocosmic Orientation and the Classic Maya. M.A. thesis, New Mexico State University. 74 leaves. See also Jennifer P. Mathews, and James F. Garber, Models of cosmic order: physical expression of sacred space among the ancient Maya (Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):17-47, 2004).

1438. Hageman, Jon B. 204. Late Classic Maya Social Organization: A Perspective From Northwestern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 467 leaves.

1447. Ashmore, Wendy. 2009. Mesoamerican landscape archaeologies. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2): 183-187.

1439. Hendon, Julia A. 2003. Feasting at home: community and house solidarity among the Maya of southeastern Mesoamerica. In The Archaeology and Politics of Food and Feasting in Early States and Empires. Tamara L. Bray, ed. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.

1448. Aylesworth, Grant R. 2005. A Science of Networks Approach to Ancient Maya Sociopolitical Organization. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 340 leaves. 1449. Brown, Clifford T., and Walter R. T. Witschey. 2003. The fractual geometry of ancient Maya settlement. Journal of Archaeological Science 30(12): 1619-1632.

1440. Juarez, Ana M. 2001. Four generations of Maya marriages: What’s love got to do with it? Frontiers 22(2):131153.

1450. Fondebilla, Geraldine. 2010. L’organisation territoriale de la region du sud-est du Petén, Guatemala. M.A. thesis, Universite de Paris 1.

1441. Kintz, Ellen R. 2004. Considering the ties that bind: kinship, marriage, household, and territory among the Maya. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):139-147.

1451. Helmke, Christophe, and Jaime Awe. 2008. Organización territorial de los antiguos mayas de Belize central: confluencia de datos arqueológicos y epigráficos. Mayab 20: 6592.

1442. Lohse, Jon C., and Fred Valdez, eds. 2004. Ancient Maya Commoners. Austin: University of Texas Press. 320 p. Contents include: Jon C. Lohse, and Fred Valdez, Examining ancient Maya commoners anew (pp. 1-22); Evon Z. Vogt, Daily life in a highland Maya community: Zinacantan in midtwentieth century (pp. 23-48); Terry G. Powis, The role of pottery and food consumption among Late Preclassic Maya commoners at Lamanai, Belize (pp. 49-72); Barbara Arroyo, Of salt and water: ancient commoners on the Pacific Coast of Guatemala (pp. 73-96); Nicholas Dunning, Down on the farm: Classic Maya “homesteads” as “farmsteads” (pp. 97-116); Jon C. Lohse, Intra-site settlement signatures and implications for

1452. Iannone, Gyles, and Samuel V. Connell, eds. 2003. Perspectives on Ancient Maya Rural Complexity. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at University of California at Los Angeles, Monograph 49. Los Angeles. 153 p. Contents include: Gyles Iannone and Samuel V. Connell, Perspectives on ancient Maya rural complexity (pp. 1-6); Wendy Ashmore, Aspects of Maya settlement archaeology, 1999 (pp. 7-12); Gyles Iannone, Rural complexity in the Cahal Pech 80

Topoxte, Yalain, Yaxha, Zapote Corozal, Zapote; Mirador area: El Mirador, La Muralla, Naachtun, Nakbe, Tintal, and Wakna; Rio Holmul area: Dos Aguadas, El Carmen, El Pilar, El Tigre, Holmul, Jobal, Nakum, Naranjito, Naranjo, Pochitoca, Poza Maya, Sibal, Sufricaya, Yaloch; Rio Ixcan area: Chochkitam, Kinal, La Honradez, Las Ventanas, Manantial, Ramonal, Rio Azul, Xmacabatun, Xultun; Rio Mopan area: Aguacate, Buenos Aires, Chunhuitz, La Blanca, Tzikintzakan; Tikal area: Bejucal, Chalpate, Corosal, El Diablo, El Zotz, La Pita, Ramonalito, San Maximo, Temblor, Tikal, Uaxactun, Uolantun.

microregion (pp. 13-26); Samuel V. Connell, Making sense of variability among minor centers: the ancient Maya of Chaa Creek, Belize (pp. 27-41); Jason Yaeger, Small settlements in the Upper Belize River Valley: local complexity, household strategies of affiliation, and the changing organization (pp. 4358); James M. Conlon, and Allan F. Moore, Identifying urban and rural settlement components: an examination of Classic Period plazuela group function at the ancient Maya site of Baking Pot, Belize (pp. 59-70); Patricia A. McAnany, Kimberly A. Berry, and Ben S. Thomas, Wetlands, rivers, and caves: agricultural and ritual practice in two lowland Maya landscapes (pp. 71-81); Laura J. Levi, Space and the limits to community (pp. 83-93); Gair Tourtellot, Gloria Everson, and Norman Hammond, Suburban organization: minor centers at La Milpa, Belize (pp. 95-107); Arlen F. Chase, and Diane Z. Chase, Minor centers, complexity, and scale in lowland Maya settlement archaeology (pp. 108-118); Marilyn A. Masson, Laguna de On and Caye Coco: economic differentiation at two Postclassic island communities in northern Belize (pp. 119-130); Edward M. Schortman, and Patricia A. Urban, Coping with diversity (pp. 131-137).

1457. Robin, Cynthia. 2004. New directions in Classic Maya household archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Research 11(4):307-356. 1458 Robertson, Elizabeth C., Jeffrey D. Seibert, Deepika C. Fernandez, and Mark U. Zender, eds. 2006. In Space and Spatial Analysis in Archaeology. Calgary: University of Calgary Press. Contents include: Karen G. Holmberg, Travis Stanton, and Scott R. Hutson, Perceptions of landscapes in uncertain times: Chunchucmil, Yucatan, Mexico and the Volcan Baru, Panama (pp. 15-28); Jeffrey Seibert, The form, style and function of Structure 12A, Minanha, Belize (pp. 107-114); H. Stanley Loten, The machine in the ceremonial centre (pp. 115-122); Allan L. Maca, Body, boundaries, and “lived” urban space: A research model for the eighth-century city at Copan, Honduras (pp. 143-156); Martin Lominy, Architectural variability in the Maya Lowlands of the Late Classic period: A recent perspective on ancient Maya cultural diversity (pp. 177-188); Annegrete Hohmann-Vogrin, Spatial alignments in Maya architecture (pp. 199-204); Olivia Ng, and Paul R. Cackler, The life and times of a British logging road in Belize (pp. 293-300).

1453. Johnston, Kevin J. 2002. Protrusion, bioturbation, and settlement detection during surface survey: the lowland Maya case. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 9(1):1-67. Author proposes a scheme that classifies architectural remains in terms of their protrusion, building height, and visibility characteristics. 1454. Koontz, Rex, Kathryn Reese-Taylor, and Annabeth Headrick, eds. 2001. Landscape and Power in Ancient Mesoamerica. Boulder: Westview Press. 410 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: David Freidel, Forward: Landscape and power in ancient Mesoamerica (pp. xvii-xxi); Kathryn Reese-Taylor, and Rex Koontz, The cultural poetics of power and space in ancient Mesoamerica (pp. 1-27); Julia Guernsey Kappelman, Sacred geography at Izapa and the performance of rulership (pp. 81-111); Matthew G. Looper, Dance performances at Quirigua (pp. 113-135); Jeffrey A. Stomper, A model for Late Classic community structure at Copan, Honduras (pp. 197-129); Linnea Wren, Kalee Spencer, and Krysta Hochstetler, Political rhetoric and the unification of natural geography, cosmic space, and gender spheres (pp. 257-277); Cynthia Kristan-Graham, A sense of place at Chichen Itza (pp. 317-369).

1459. Sever, Thomas L., and Daniel E. Irwin. 2003. Landscape archaeology: remore-sensing investigation of the ancient Maya in the Petén rainforest of northern Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):113-122. 1460. Sifuentes, Jorge M. 2005. Geographical information Systems Data Implementation for Analyses of Settlement Patterns of an Early Agricultural Society. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara. 240 leaves.

1455. Kunen, Julie L.. 2004. Ancient Maya Life in the Far West Bajo: Social and Environmental Change in the Wetlands of Belize. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, 69. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 174 p. Publication of a doctoral dissertation: Study of an Ancient Maya Bajo Landscape in Northwestern Belize (University of Arizona, 2001. 356 leaves).

1461. Smith, Monica L., ed. 2003. The Social Construction of Ancient Cities. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press. 320 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Jason Yaeger, Untangling the ties that bind: the city, the countryside, and the nature of Maya urbanism at Xunantunich, Belize; Stephen D. Houston, and others, The moral community: Maya settlement transformation at Piedras Negras, Guatemala.

1456. Quintana, Oscar, Wolfgang W. Wurster, and Raul Noriega. 2001. Ciudades mayas del noreste del Petén, Guatemala: un estudio urbanístico comparativo. Materialien zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie, 59. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern. 194 p. Presents documentation in a comparable format on the most important archaeological sites in the northeastern Petén region of Guatemala, including: Los Lagos area: Cordoncillo Corozal, Corozal Torre, Holtun, Huech, Ixlu, Ixtinto, La Naya, Motul, Nixtunchich, Quemada Corozal, SacPetén, San Clemente, Tayasal,

1462. Staller, John E., ed. 2008. Pre-Columbian Landscapes of Creation and Origin. New York: Springer. 389 p. Contents include: John E. Staller, An introduction to Pre-Columbian landscapes of creation and origin (pp. 1-10); Carolyn E. Tate, Landscape and a visual narrative of creation and origin at the Olmec ceremonial center of La Venta (pp. 31-66); Duncan M. Earle, Maya caves across time and space: Reading-related landscapes in K’iche’an sources (pp. 67-94); Allen J. Christenson, Places of emergence: Sacred mountains and 81

imagery in lowland Maya settlement archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Science 35(10): 2770-2777.

cofradia ceremonies (pp. 95-122); Frauke Sachse, Over distant waters: Places of origin and creation in colonial K’iche’an sources (pp. 123-160); Brian Stross, Representation, memory, and power: Pre-Columbian landscapes of creation and origin (pp. 357-378).

1469. Wiseman, James, and Farouk El Batz, eds. 2007. Remote Sensing in Archaeology. New York: Springer. Contents include: William Saturno, Thomas L. Sever, Daniel E. Irwin, Burgess F. Howell, and Thomas G. Garrison, Putting us on the map: remote sensing investigation of the ancient Maya landscape (pp. 137-160); Francisco Estrada-Belli, and Magaly Koch, Remote sensing and GIS analysis of a Maya city and its landscape: Holmul, Guatemala (pp. 263-282);

Urbanism 1463. Marcus, Joyce, and Jeremy A. Sabloff, eds. 2008. The Ancient City: New Perspectives on Urbanism in the Old and New World. Santa Fe: School for Advanced Research Press. 405 p. Contents include: Joyce Marcus and Jeremy A. Sabloff, Introduction; K. Anne Pyburn, Pomp and circumstance before Belize: ancient Maya commerce and the New River conurbation (pp. 247-272); and Joyce Marcus, and Jeremy A. Sabloff, Cities and urbanism: central themes and future directions. See also Arthur A. Joyce, Theorizing Urbanism in Ancient Mesoamerica (Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2):189-196, 2009).

WOMEN 1470. Ardren, Traci, ed. 2002. Ancient Maya Women. Gender and Archaeology Series, 3. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press. 293 p. A collection of essays using archaeology, bioarchaeology, iconography, ethnohistory, epigraphy, and ethnography methodological strategies to examine ancient Maya women. Contents include: Traci Ardren, Women and gender in the ancient Maya world (pp. 1-11); Cynthia Robin, Gender and Maya farming: Chan Noohol, Belize (pp. 12-30); Linda Stephen Neff, Gender divisions of labor and lowland terrace agriculture (pp. 31-51); Marilyn Beaudry-Corbett, and Sharisse McCafferty, Spindle whorls: household specialization at Ceren (pp. 52-67); Traci Ardren, Death became her: images of female power from Yaxuna burials (pp. 68-88); Ellen E. Bell, Engendering a dynasty: a royal woman in the Margarita tomb, Copan (pp. 89-104); Maricela Ayala Falcon, Lady K’awil, Goddess O, and Maya warfare (pp. 105-113); J. Kathryn Josserand, Women in Classic Maya hieroglyphic texts (pp. 114-151); Ruth J. Krochock, Women in the hieroglyphic inscriptions of Chichen Itza (pp. 152-170); Matthew G. Looper, Women-men (and men-women): classic Maya rulers and the third gender (pp. 171-202); Gabrielle Vail, and Andrea Stone, Representations of women in Postclassic and colonial Maya literature and art (pp. 203-228); Wendy Ashmore, Encountering Maya women (pp. 229-245).

1464. Martinez López, José F. 2006. El Proceso de urbanización en Guatemala: Un enfoque demográfico, 1950-2002. Proceso de Urbanización en Guatemala, 1944-2002, 3. Guatemala: Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, Centro de Estudios Urbanos y Regionales. 197 p. 1465. Sanders, William T., Alba Guadelupe Mastache, and Robert H. Cobean, eds. 2003 . El urbanismo en Mesoamerica; Urbanism in Mesoamerica. México: Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia; University Park: Pennsylvania State University. 513 p. This is the first volume of an anticipated multi-volume series of the annual proceedings of an investigatory project on urbanism in Mesoamerica. Theoretical and descriptive contents pertaining to the ancient Maya in this volume include: George L. Cowgill, Some recent data and concepts about ancient urbanism (pp. 1-20); Jerome Monnet, From urbanism to urbanity: a dialogue between geography and archaeology about the city (pp. 21-43); Aidan Southall, The city in time and space (pp. 43-56); Kenneth Hirth, The altepetl and urban structure in prehispanic Mesoamerica (5785); David Webster, and Stephen Houston, Piedras Negras: the growth and decline of a Classic Maya court center (pp. 427-450); and Rafael Cobos, Ancient community form and social complexity at Chichen Itza, Yucatan (pp. 451-472).

1471. Ardren, Traci. 2008. Studies of gender in the prehispanic Americas. Journal of Archaeological Research 16(1):1-36. 1472. Barrios-Klee Ruiz, Walda, and Edda Gaviola Artigas. 2001. Mujeres mayas y cambio social. Colección Estudios de Genero, 1. Guatemala: Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales (FLACSO). 154 p. Study of conditions among Maya women in Chiapas and Guatemala; emphasis on daily life, awareness of feminist issues, and human rights.

Remote Sensing 1466. Aitken, Julie A. 2008. Exploring Maya Ruins in Belize, Central America Using Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR). M.Sc. thesis, University of Calgary (Canada). 174 leaves. 1467. Estrada-Belli, Francisco. 2003. The power of GIS and remote sensing: multi-scalar spatial analysis of settlement data in SE Pacific coastal Guatemala and the southern Maya lowlands. In The Reconstruction of Archaeological Landscapes Through Digital Technologies: Proceedings of the 1st Italy-United States Workshop, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. November 1-3, 2001. Maurizio Forte and P. Ryan Williams, eds. pp. 49-58. British Archaeological Reports, International Series, 1151. Oxford, England. Author uses two case studies to illustrate recent fruitful applications of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and remote sensing in archaeological analysis at the regional and community scale. 1468. Garrison, Thomas G., Stephen D. Houston, Charles Golden, Takeshi Inomata, Zachary Nelson, and Jessica Munson. 2008. Evaluating the use of IKONOS satellite

1473. Castellanos, María B. 2003. Gustos and Gender: Yucatec Maya Migration to the Mexican Riviera. Doctoral dissertation, University of Michigan. 316 leaves. 1474. Eber, Christine E., and Christina M. Kovic, eds. 2003. Women of Chiapas: Making History in Times of Struggle and Hope. New York: Routledge. 280 p. Contents include: Christine Kovic, and Christine Eber, Introduction (pp. 1-27); Christine Kovic, and Christine Eber, Overview: Poverty, discrimination, and violence: women’s experiences and responses (pp. 31-36); Graciela Freyermuth Enciso, Juana’s story (pp. 37-46); Shannon Speed, Actions speak louder than words: indigenous women and gendered resistance in the wake of Actela (pp. 47-65); The birth of Guadalupe (pp. 6769); Ruperta Bautista Vazquez, Indigenous children: We are not to blame (pp. 71-79); Patty Kelly, I made myself from 82

gender roles in the setting of the earth at Palenque (pp. 227279); Carolyn E. Tate, Holy Mother Earth and her flowery skirt: the role of the female earth surface in Maya political and ritual performance (pp. 281-318); F. Kent Reilly, Female and male: the ideology of balance and renewal in elite costuming among the Classic period Maya (pp. 319-328); Rosemary A, Joyce, Desiring women: Classic Maya sexualities (pp. 329344).

nothing: women and sex work in urban Chiapas (pp. 81-97); Heather Sinclair, Letter from a peace camp (pp. 99-102); Christine Kovic, and Christine Eber, Overview: Religious change and women’s empowerment (pp. 101-111); Christine Eber, Living their faith in troubled times: two Catholic women (pp. 113-129); Christine Kovic, Demanding their dignity as daughters of god: Catholic women and human rights (pp., 131-146); Today, the women (pp. 147-148); Pilar Gil Tebar, Irene: a Catholic woman in Oxchuc (pp. 149-154); Margarita Pérez Pérez, Prayer for Carly (pp. 155-160); Gabriela Patricia Robledo Hernandez, Protestantism and family dynamics in an indigenous community of highland Guatemala (pp. 161-170); Susanna Rostas, Women’s empowerment through religious change in Tenejapa (pp. 171187); Christine Kovic, and Christine Eber, Overview: Women organizing for social change (pp. 189-196); Ines Castro Apreza, Contemporary women’s movements in Chiapas (pp. 197-206); Yolanda Castro Apreza, J’pas Joloviletik-Jolom Mayaetik-K’inal Antzetik: An organizational experience of indigenous and mestiza women (pp. 207-220); Diana Damian Palencia, Learning everything I can about freedom: testimony of a social worker and popular educator (pp. 221-228); Flor de Margarita Pérez Pérez, Song for International Women’s Day, March 8, 1997 (pp. 229-230); Melissa M. Forbis, Hacia la autonomia: Zapatista women developing a new world (pp. 231-252).

1481. Hernandez Castillo, Rosalva Aida. 2001. The Other Word: Women and Violence in Chiapas Before and After Acteal. Copenhagen: International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs (IWGIA). 151 p. Study of human rights violations and women in the community of Chenalho. 1482. Joyce, Rosemary A. 2001. Negotiating sex and gender in Classic Maya society. In Gender in Pre-Hispanic America. Cecilia F. Klein, ed. pp. 109-143. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks. 1483. Joyce, Rosemary A. 2002, Beauty, sexuality, body ornamentation, and gender in ancient Meso-America. In Pursuit of Gender: Worldwide Archaeological Approaches. Sarah M. Nelson, and Myriam Rosen-Ayalon, eds. pp.81-92 Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press. 1484. Joyce, Rosemary A. 2006. Gender and Mesoamerican archaeology. In Handbook of Gender in Archaeology. Sarah M. Nelson, ed. pp. 785-812. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira.

1475. Estrada, Alicia I. 2006. Textual Transversals: Activisms and Decolonization in Guatemalan Mayan and Ladina Women’s Texts of the Civil War and Postwar Periods. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Santa Cruz. 310 leaves.

1485. Klima, Carrie S. 2002. We are Strong Women: A Focused Ethnography of the Reproductive Lives of Women in Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Connecticut. 164 leaves.

1476. Fritzler, Marlene J. 2005. Late Classic Maya Warrior Queens: Profiling a New Gender Role. M.A. thesis, University of Calgary (Canada). 148 leaves.

1486. MacNabb, Valerie A. 2003. Guatemalan Women and the Struggle for Political Transition. Doctoral dissertation, University of Toronto. 324 leaves.

1477. Freidel, David, and Linda Schele. 2001. Maya royal women: a lesson in Precolumbian history. In Gender in CrossCultural Perspective. 3 ed. Caroline Brettell and Carolyn F. Sargent, eds. pp. 89-93. Upper Saddle River: Prentice Hall.

1487. Maraesa, Aminata. 2009. “I No ‘Fraid For That”: Pregnancy, Risk, and Development in Southern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, New York University. 537 leaves.

1478. Garza, Mercedes de la. 2003. El matrimonio, ambito vital de la mujer maya. Arqueología mexicana 10(60):30-37.

1488. Marcos, Silvia. 2006. Taken from the Lips: Gender and Eros in Mesoamerican Religions. Religion in the Americas, 5. Boston: Brill. 146 p.

1479 Greene, Alison C. 2002. Huipiles to Spandex: Styling Modernity and Refashioning Gender in the Global Economy of Yucatan. Doctoral dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 321 leaves.

1489. Martinez Salazar, Egla J. 2005. The Everyday Praxis of Guatemalan Maya Women: Confronting Marginalization, Racism and Contested Citizenship. Doctoral dissertation, York University (Canada). 497 leaves.

1480. Gustafson, Lowell S., and Amelia Trevelyan. 2002. Ancient Maya Gender Identity and Relations. Westport, CT: Bergin and Garvey. 353 p. Contents include: Amelia M. Trevelyan and Lowell S. Gustafson, Introduction (pp. 1-9); Marvin Cohodas, Multiplicity and discourse in Maya gender relations (pp. 11-53); Lowell S. Gustafson, Shared gender relations: early Mesoamerica and the Maya (pp. 55-74); Julia A. Hendon, Household and state in pre-Hispanic Maya society: gender, identity, and practice (pp. 75-92); Amelia M. Trevelyan, and Heather W. Forbes, The gendered architecture of Uxmal (pp. 93-140); Lowell S. Gustafson, Mother/father kings (pp. 141-168); Karen Bassie-Sweet, Corn deities and the male/female principle (pp. 169-190); Beatriz Barba de Piña Chan, The Popol Vuh and the decline of Maya women’s status (pp. 191-226); María Elena Bernal-García, A divine couple’s

1490. Maynard, Ashley E., and Patricia M. Greenfield. 2008. Women’s schooling and other ecocultural shifts: a longitudinal study of historical change among Zinacantec Maya. Mind, Culture, and Activity (15(2):165-175. 1491. Meskell, Lynn, and Rosemary A. Joyce. 2003. Embodied Lives: Figuring Ancient Maya and Egyptian Experience. New York: Routledge. 184 p. Authors compare the perception and symbolic use of the human body in ancient Maya and Egyptian cultures. 1492. Michel, Joanna L. 2006. Medical Ethnobotany of the Q’eqchi Maya: Perceptions and BotanicalTreatment Related 83

the Chiapas experience. In Foundations of First Peoples’ Sovereignty: History, Education, and Culture. Ulrike Wiethaus, ed. pp. 197-224. New York: Peter Lang.

to Women’s Health. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University, Department of Anthropology. 243 leaves. 1493. Navarrete Pellicer, Sergio. 2001. El bién y el mal: musica, alcohol y mujeres. Revista de musica latinoamericana 22(1):63-82. Examines the relationship between music, alcoholism, and women in the K’iche’ Maya community of Rabinal, Baja Verapaz.

1502. Smith, Stephanie Jo. 2002. Engendering the Revolution: Women and State Formation in Yucatan, Mexico, 1872-1930. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook. 365 leaves. 1503. Soriano Hernandez, Silvia. 2006. Mujeres y guerra en Guatemala y Chiapas. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 289 p.

1494. Okotz, Xun, and Xpetra Ernandes. 2005. Incantations by Mayan Women; Father-Mothers of the Book. 2 ed. San Cristobal de Las Casas: Talleres Leñateros. 295 p. Incantations by Mayan Women, published in Tzotzil and English by Taller Leñateros.

1504. Supanich, Colleen. 2009. You’re Too Late”: Prenatal Health Seeking Behaviors of Guatemalan Mayan Women in Palm Beach County. M.A. thesis, Florida Atlantic University. 175 leaves.

1495. Robin, Cynthia. 2006. Gender, farming, and long-term change: Maya historical and archaeological perspectives. Current Anthropology 47(3): 409-434.

1505. Switzer, Michelle B. 2005. Women, Widows, and War: Struggle and Survival in San Juan Comalapa, Guatemala. M.A. thesis, Queen’s University at Kingston (Canada). 145 leaves.

1496. Robin, Cynthia, and Elizabeth M. Brumfiel, eds. 2008. Gender, Households, and Societies: Unraveling the Threads of the Past and the Present. Archaeological Papers, 18. Arlington, VA: American Anthropological Association. Contents include: Christopher T. Morehart, and Christophe G. B. Helmke, Situating power and locating knowledge: a paleoethnobotanical perspective on Late Classic Maya gender and social relations. (pp. 60-75); Ana S. Tejeda, Rethinking polity formation: a gendered perspective on Formative Period household development in the Pacific Coast region of Guatemala (pp. 87-101).

1506. Tumilowicz, Alison T. 2006. Gender Constraints and Constructs and Paternal Migration to the United States: Influences on Child Health and Growth In Indigenous Guatemalan households. Doctoral dissertation, Cornell University. 257 leaves. 1507. Villatoro Gómez, Liliana. 2008. Mujeres indígenas en la radio comunitaria: presencia, participación y propuestas para reducir la exclusión. Guatemala: FLACSO. 65 p.

1497. Ruscheinsky, Lynn M. 2003. The Social Reproduction of Gender Identity Through the Production and Reception of Lowland Maya Figurines. Doctoral dissertation, University of British Columbia (Canada). 411 leaves.

1508. Walker, Gayle, and Kiki Suarez. 2008. Interviews with Women of Chiapas: Every Woman is a World. Austin: University of Texas.

1498. Sagan, Catherine F. 2002. Personal Testimonies of Fourteen Indigenous Guatemalan women. Doctoral dissertation, California Institute of Integral Studies. 376 leaves.

1509. White, Crystal D. 2001. The Dynamic Movement: Maya Women and the Chiapas Zapatistas. M.A. thesis, Washington State University. 124 leaves.

1499. Sanchez Gonzalez, María C. 2007. Gender and Natural Resources: Maya Women and the Mexican Agrarian Reform. Doctoral dissertation, The Catholic University of America. 271 leaves.

1510. Wiebe, Adrienne D. 2002. Widening Paths: The Lives of Three Generations of Maya-Mam Women. Doctoral dissertation, University of Alberta (Canada). 295 leaves. 1511. Williams, Joan W. 2000. Mayan Women: Survival, Transformation, and Hope; Living Through Times of Violence and Reparation. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 226 leaves.

1500. Sanchiz Ochoa, Pilar. 2003. Matrifocalidad y marginación en la periferia de San Cristobal de las Casas (Chiapas, México). Revista española de antropología americana, volumen extraordinario, pp. 197-206. Examination of survival strategies and the formation of matrifocal households on the periphery of San Cristóbal de las Casas caused by the 1994 Zapatista uprising.

1512. Zavatone-Veth, Heidi M. 2004. Gender, Maya Identity, and the Multi-Level Politics of Forming Community Health Promoters in Highland Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Connecticut. 504 leaves.

1501. Simonelli, Jeanne, Josefa Hernandez Pérez, and La Fomma. 2008. Pathway to autonomy: women’s testimony of

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3 MATERIAL CULTURE ART 1513. Aguirre, Moises. 2004. Aportes para el análisis estetico del arte maya. Estudios de cultura maya 25:77-94.

Art Market 1526. Keller, Nancy L., and Karen O. Bruhns. 2010. Faking Ancient Mesoamerica. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press. 256 p.

1514. Anderson, Marilyn. 2001. Artes y artesanias mayas de Guatemala. Palos Verdes, CA: Yax'te Foundation. 64 p.

1527. Lefranc, Céline. 2003. De la haute époque aux Mayas. Connaissance des Arts 604:101. An eclectic collection of items is to be sold at Sotheby's France on April 16, 2003. The 70 pieces of furniture and objects in the sale are a tribute to the eclectic tastes of the collector, who moved from collecting European art to African art and subsequently to the preColumbian art of Mexico. The items on sale include a preColumbian divinity in the form of a snake from the protoMaya era.

1515. Diáz Bolio, José. 2007. Origen del arte maya. 3 ed. Merida: Area Maya, 2007. 195 p. On Mayan art and symbolism, with many black and white and illustrations. 1516. Gillespie, Susan D. 2007. Different ways of seeing: modes of social consciousness in Mesoamerican twodimensional art works. Baessler-Archiv 55: 103-142.

1528. Luke, Christina. 2008. The antiquities trade, museums, legislation, and borders: Central America as a case study. Athena Review 4(3): 46-54.

1517. Hammond, Norman. 2006. Early symbolic expression in the Maya lowlands. Mexicon 28(2):25-28. 1518. Hofstetter, Phillip. 2009. Maya Yucatán: An Artist’s Journey. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 143 p.

Museums and Museum Collections 1529. Brannen, Laura M. 2007. Latin American Nationalist Narratives in Transition: Museums of Mexico, Guatemala, and Costa Rica. M.A. thesis, Emory University. 155 leaves.

1519. Koontz, Rex. 2009. Visual culture studies in Mesoamerica. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2):217-220.

1530. Burnet, Albert. 2002. Guatemala, le pays de l'oiseau quetzal. Archéologia 394:12-13. Brief announcement of Guatemala, Land des Quetzal, von den Maya zur spanischen Welt, in Vienna at the Museum für Völkerkunde, October 9 through January 13.

1520. Lucero, Lisa J. 2008. Memorializing place among Classic Maya commoners. In Memory Work: Archaeologies of Material Practice. Barbara J Mills and William H. Walker, eds. pp. 187-206. Santa Fe: School for Advanced Research Press.

1531. Danien, Elin. 2002. Guide to the Mesoamerican Gallery at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. 96 p. Useful guide emphasizes the unique aspects of the collection, including eight carved limestone monuments from University Museum excavations at Piedras Negras, Guatemala (19311939) and Caracol, Belize (1951-1953). Also included are important pieces from the Guatemala highlands; figurines and carvings collected in the early nineteenth century; as well as carved alabaster vases from the Ulua Valley in Honduras.

1521. Miller, Mary E. 2001. The Art of Mesoamerica from Olmec to Aztec. 3 ed. New York: Thames and Hudson. 240 p. 1522. Miller, Mary E. 2006. The Art of Mesoamerica from Olmec to Aztec. New York: Thames and Hudson. 256 p. 1523. Quilter, Jeffrey, and Mary Miller, eds. 2006. A PreColumbian World. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. 395 p. Contents include: Simon Martin, On pre-Columbian narrative: representations across the world-image divide (pp. 55-106); Polly Schaafsma, and Karl A. Taube, Bringing the rain: an ideology of rain making in the Pueblo Southwest and Mesoamerica (pp. 231286);

1532. Delgado Kú, Pedro. 2001. Le crépuscule des Mayas. Amiens: Musée de Picardie. 64 p. Catalogue of Postclassic Maya exhibition. See also Christine Frérot, The twilight of the Mayas and Mexica Metropoli, aspects of contemporary art: Musée de Picardie, Amiens, France (Art Nexus 42:32-34, 2001-2002) and Damien Sausset, A la redécouverte des Mayas (L’Oeil 527:107, 2001). The exhibitions "El crepusculo de los Mayas" (The Twilight of the Mayas) and "Metropolis Mexica, aspectos del arte contemporaneo de Mexico" (Mexica Metropoli, aspects of Mexican contemporary art) took place at the Musee de Picardie in Amiens, France, June 16 to October 21, 2001. The first show examined Mexican cultural heritage through 88 artworks lent by museums in the Yucatan peninsula, while the latter presented contemporary Mexican culture through works by 15

1524. Rivera Dorado, Miguel. 2001. Algunas consideraciones sobre el arte maya. Revista española de antropología americana 31:11-30. 1525. Vázquez de Agredos Pascual, María L. 2006. La composición pictórica de la tapa de boveda: el arte miniado de la arquitectura maya. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 445-452.

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Francisco; New York: Thames & Hudson. 304 p. "Published on the occasion of the exhibition, Courtly Art of the Ancient Maya; National Gallery of Art, Washington, 4 April-25 July 2004; Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California Palace of the Legion of Honor, 4 September 2004-2 January 2005.” Contents include: Michael D. Coe, Gods of the scribes and artists (pp. 239-241); María Teresa Uriarte, Dressed lords and ladies (pp. 242-243); Beatriz de la Fuente, The multiple languages of a single relief (pp. 244-246); Merle Greene Robertson, The techniques of the Palenque sculptors (pp. 247-249); Diana Magaloni, Technique, color, and art at Bonampak (pp. 250-252); Martha Cuevas García, The cult of patron and ancestor gods in censers at Palenque (pp. 253-255); Roberto López Bravo, State and domestic cult in Palenque censer stands (pp. 256-258); Alfonso Morales, and Julia C. Miller, The discoveries in Temple 19, Palenque (pp. 259-260); David Stuart, History, mythology, and royal legitimization at Palenque’s Temple 19 (pp. 261-263); Arnoldo González Cruz, and Guillermo Bernal Romero, The throne panel of Temple 21 at Palenque (pp. 264-267); Roberto García Moll, Shield Jaguar and Structure 23 at Yaxchilan (pp. 268-270); Stephen D. Houston, The acropolis of Piedras Negras: portrait of a court system (pp. 271-276); Hector L. Escobedo, Tales from the crypt: the burial place of Ruler 4, Piedras Negras (pp. 277-279); see also Kathleen Berrin, Courtly art of the ancient Maya (Tribal 9(3):78-87, 2004), Robert K. Liu, Courtly art of the ancient Maya (Ornament 28(1):32-33, 2004), Stanley Meisler, Of majesty and mayhem (Smithsonian 35(4):49-52, 54, 56-57, 2004), and Colleen Popson, Art of the Maya uppercrust (Archaeology 57(4):56, 2004).

Mexican artists. Although the view offered of Mexican culture was somewhat limited in the case of the first show and eclectic in the second, it was a valuable one. 1533. El País del Quetzal: Guatemala maya e hispana: Centro Cultural de la Villa de Madrid, 17 de mayo-21 de julio de 2002. Madrid: Sociedad Estatal Para la Acción Cultural Exterior, 2002. 519 p. Exposition catalog; contents include: Guillermo Cespedes del Castillo, Guatemala: del universo maya al mundo hispanico (pp. 21-43); Felix Jimenez Villalba, El descubrimiento y estudio de la civilización maya: cronistas, viajeros y científicos (pp. 45-54); Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, Estructura politica y organización territorial maya (pp. 55-64); Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, Urbanismo en las ciudades prehispánicas de Guatemala (pp. 65-76); Alfonso Lacadena García-Gallo, La escritura en Guatemala: jeroglíficos y alfabeto como vehiculos de una tradición cultural (pp. 77-87); Fernando Moscoso Möller, Setenta años del Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología de Guatemala (pp. 89-93); Gustavo Palma Murga, La sociedad colonial guatemalteca en sus textos y sus imagenes: la voz, la pluma y la memoria (pp. 95-104); Luisa Elena Alcala, Arte e identidad en Guatemala colonial (pp. 105-121); Antonio Bonet Correa, Ciudad y arquitectura en Guatemala, siglos XVI, XVII y XVIII (pp. 123-137); M. Concepción García Saiz, La escultura en Guatemala (pp. 139-151); Cristina Esteras Martin, La plateria guatemalteca, una trayectoria de excelencia (pp. 153-162); Luis Lujan Muñoz, Las artes populares en Guatemala colonial (pp. 163-174). 1534. García Targa, Joan, ed. 2001. Collecio precolombina Perez-Rosales. Sitges, Spain: Consorci del Patrimoni de Sitges. 95, 24 p. Exhibition catalog in Catalan, Spanish, and English. Contents include: Jordi Gussinyer Alfonso, Introduccio (p. 7); Joan García Targa, La cultura maia: aspectes generals (pp. 9-14); Carmen Varela Torrecilla, La ceramica maia: aspectes cronologics, formals, funcionals, decoratius i tecnics (pp. 15-17); Joan García Targa, Catalogacio (pp. 19-93).

1541. Osypinski, Piotr. 2006. Kolekcja predmiotow obsydianowych z Ameryki Srodkowej Muzeum Archeologicznego w Poznaniu [Collection of obsidian objects from Central America in the Poznan Archaeological Museum]. Fontes Archaeologici Posnanienses 42:39-72. 1542. Schultz, Randy. 2003. Maya Museum shapes modernity. Americas 55(5):3. Description of the newly World Bank funded Copan Children's Museum.

1535. González Rodríguez, Blanca M. 2004. Museo Regional de Antropología de Yucatan Palacio Canton, Merida. Arqueología mexicana 12(71):76-79.

1543. Silverman, Helaine, ed. 2006. Archaeological Site Museums in Latin America. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. 301 p.

1536. Joyce, Rosemary A. 2001. Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 2, pp. 669-671. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio.

1544. Tesoros de la Honduras prehispánica. Tegucigalpa: Instituto Hondureño de Antropología e Historia; Secretaria de Cultura, Arte y Deportes, 2001. 34 p. Exhibition catalog with ceramic and lithic objects from various parts of Honduras.

1537. Joyce, Rosemary A. 2001. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 10061010. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio.

1545. Turrent, Lourdes. 2001. Arqueología y museos: un origen compartido. Arqueología mexicana 8(47):82-85. 1546. Vackimes, Sophia C. 2001. Indians in formaldehydenation of progress: the Museo Nacional of Mexico and the construction of national identity. Museum Anthropology 25(1):20-30.

1538. Le Bot, Yvon, ed. 2002. Indiens; Chiapas, Mexico, California: Un monde fait de tous les mondes; Une exposition présentée au parc de la Villette, du 22 mai au 17 novembre 2002. Montpellier: Indigene. 118 p.

Community Engagement 1547. Davis-Salazar, Karla L., E. Christian Wells, and José E. Moreno-Cortes. 2008. Balancing archaeological responsibilities and community commitments: A case from Honduras. Journal of Field Archaeology 32(2):196-206.

1539. Mayer, Karl H. 2004. The Museo El Principe Maya in Coban, Alta Verapaz. Mexicon 26(6):117-119. 1540. Miller, Mary, and Simon Martin. 2004. Courtly Art of the Ancient Maya. San Francisco: Fine Arts Museums of San 86

1559. Basly, Aurore. 2005. L’iconographie de Tlaloc dans les basses terres mayas. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

1548. Rodríguez, Timoteo. 2006. Conjunctures in the making of an ancient Maya archaeological site. In Observing Archaeology: Ethnographies of Archaeological Practice. Matt Edgeworth, ed. Lanham, MD: Altamira Press.

1560. Baudez, Claude F. 2004. En las fauces del monstruo. Arqueología mexicana 12(71):58-67. Analysis of the monster motif in Mayan iconography.

1549. Walker, Cameron J. 2003. Heritage or Heresy: The Public Interpretation of Archaeology and Culture in the Maya Riviera. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 350 leaves.

1561. Benavides C., Antonio. 2007. Impresiones de manos humanas en algunos edificios mayas. Estudios de cultura maya 30:37-56.

Petroglyphs 1550. Costa, Philippe. 2010. Historiographie de l’art rupestre au Salvador. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

1562. Bernal Romero, Guillermo, and Erik Velasquez García. 2004. Manos y pies en la iconografia y la escritura de los antiguos mayas. Arqueología mexicana 12(71):28-33.

1551. Gress Carrasco, Rocio. 2006. Pintura rupestre ¿antecedente de la pintura mural prehispánica en México? Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica en México 12(24-25):76-79.

1563. Borowicz, James J. 2003. Images of Power and the Power of Images: Iconography of Stelae as an Indicator of Socio-Political Events in the Early Classic Maya Lowlands. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Buffalo. 729 leaves.

1552. Künne, Martin. 2008. Rock art research in eastern Mesoamerica and lower Central America, 2000-2004. In Rock Art Studies: News of the World. Paul Bahn, Natalie Franklin, and Martthias Strecker, eds. pp. 256-273. Oxford, England: Oxbow Books. See also Joseph T. O’Connor, Alberto Tesucun, and José Martínez Ramirez. 2010. Mayan graffiti; arte rupestre (American Indian Rock Art 36:159-170, 2010).

1574. Carrasco, Michael D. 2005. The Mask Flange Iconographic Complex: The Art, Ritual, and History of a Maya Sacred Image. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 522 leaves. 1575. Fuente, Beatriz de la. 2002. The first scholars of preHispanic iconography. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):91-92. Spanish translation: Los primeros estudiosos de la iconografía prehispánica. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):36-39, 2002. Reviews the contributions of Herbert J. Spinden (1879-1967), Alfonso Caso (1896-1975), Miguel Covarrubias (1904-1957), Tatiana Proskouriakoff (1909-1985), George Kubler (19121996), and Heinrich Berlin-Neubart (1915-1987).

1553. Perrot-Minnot, Sebastien. 2007. Un análisis de las pinturas rupestres de Ayarza, departamento de Santa Rosa, Guatemala. Utz'ib 4(3):15-27 Iconography 1554. Aguilera, Miguel A. 2004. Unshrouding the Communicating Cross: The Iconology of a Maya Quadripartite Symbol. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 316 leaves. See also Virginia A. Guess, and Robert Guess, Spirit of Chiapas: The Expressive Art of the Roof Cross Tradition; Featuring the Frans Blom Collection at Na Bolom (Santa Fe, NM: Museum of New Mexico Press, 2004. 206 p.). Authors examine the cross in the New World, the Frans Blom Iron Roof Cross Collection, and the barrios of San Cristobal de las Casas.

1576. García Cruz, Florentino. 2008. Caña del timon, un elemento naútico con iconografia. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1):173-200. 1577. Gillespie, Susan D. 2008. Embodied persons and heroic kings in Late Classic Maya imagery. In Past Bodies: BodyCentered Research in Archaeology. Dušan Boric and John Robb, eds. pp. 125-134. Oxford, England: Oxbow Books.

1555. Akers, Danielle C. 2008. Purposeful Ambiguity in The Presentation of Captives to a Maya Ruler at the Kimbell Art Museum. M.A. thesis, Texas Christian University. 63 leaves.

1578. Hermann Lejarazu, Manuel A. 2007. Símbolos de poder: un análisis comparativo entre la iconografía del Clásico maya y los codices mixtecos. Estudios de cultura maya 30:79106.

1556. Amrhein, Laura M. 2001. An Iconographic and Historic Analysis of Terminal Classic Maya Phallic Imagery. Doctoral dissertation, Virginia Commonwealth University. 299 leaves.

1579. Houston, Stephen D. 2001. Decorous bodies and disordered passions: representations of emotion among the Classic Maya. World Archaeology 33(2):206-219. Argues that Classic period Maya represented emotion through the human body in stylized ways that reflected their categories of “affect or the subjective state attributed to one person to another through empathy. The inclination to display overt affect increased dramatically by the seventh century AD, and was facilitated by the representational conventions of time.”

1557. Bacon, Wendy J. 2007. The Dwarf Motif in Classic Maya Monumental Iconography: A Spatial Analysis. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 581 leaves. See also Wendy J. Bacon, Dwarves, lords and kingdoms in Classic Maya monumental iconography: a survey of polity interaction and the achondroplastic motif (The Codex 12(1-3):12-46, 2003-2004); Pascal Faracci, Les nains sur les monuments sculptes mayas de la periode classique: approche iconographique (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2002).

1580. Kearsley, Graeme R. 2002. Pacal's Portal to Paradise at Palenque: The Iconography of India at Palenque and Copan. London: Yelsraek Publishing. 176 p. An archaeological study of Indian influence detected in intricately carved stonework at Palenque and Copan.

1558. Balutet, Nicolas. 2009. La importancia de los enanos en el mundo maya precolombino. Indiana 26:81-103. 87

1581. Klein, Cecilia F. 2002. Iconography and Mesoamerican art. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):88-91. Spanish translation: La iconografia y el arte mesoamericana (Arqueología mexicana 10(55):28-35, 2002).

PHOTOGRAPHY 1592. Asi es nuestra vida: mujeres tomando fotografias de mujeres; jewa’ ri qak’asleem: ixoqiib kakisaaj kexwaach chike kachixoquiib’. Guatemala: Litografia Nawal Wuj, 2003. 44 p. Photographs taken by indigenous women of other women of Rabinal and Baja Verapaz.

1582. Klein, Cecelia F., Eulogio Guzman, Elisa C. Mandell, and Maya Stanfield-Mazzi. 2002. The role of shamanism in Mesoamerican art: a reassessment. Current Anthropology 43(3):383-420. Increasing numbers of scholars are relying on the concept of shamanism to interpret pre-Columbian artworks without examining its origins and questioning its viability. This essay explores the historical roots of this field's romance with the shaman and offers an explanation of its appeal.

1593. Grandin, Greg. 2004. Can the subaltern be seen? Photography and the affects of nationalism. Hispanic American Historical Review 84(1):83-111. Examination of photographic works by Tomas Zanotti of K’iche’ Maya in the Quezaltenango region. 1594. Zonas arqueológicas de Yucatán: Rescate fotográfico de finales del siglo XIX. Mérida: Dante, 2005. 59 p. Black and white photographs of archaeological sites in the Yucatan peninsula, Mexico.

1583. Maiquez, Anna M. A. 2007. The Iconography of Power: A Study of Portrayals of Classic Maya Rulers. M.A., California State University, Domin- guez Hills. 131 leaves.

PRESERVATION OF CULTURAL PATRIMONY 1595. Arroyave, Ana L. 2007. Papel del estado guatemalteco y de la población en la conservación del patrimonio cultural de Guatemala. Utz'ib 4(2):18-25. Other statements on the state of cultural preservation initiatives in the Maya región include Oscar A. Quintana Samayoa, La composición arquitectonica y la conservación de las edificaciónes monumentales mayas del noreste de Peten (Doctoral dissertation, Universidad Politecnica de Valencia, 2008), Alexis Schwarz, Le patrimoine archeologique en droit national et en droit international: le cas des Mayas, en Mesoamerique (Doctoral dissertation, Université de Paris 1, 2006), and Alexis Schwarz, La question ethnique dans le patrimoine archeologique: le cas des Mayas (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2000).

1584. Palka, Joel W. 2002. Left/right symbolism and the body in ancient Maya iconography and culture. Latin American Antiquity 13(4):419-443. 1585. Patrois, Julie. 2008. Etude iconographique des sculptures du nord de la péninsule du Yucatán a l'époque classique. International Series, 1779. Paris Monographs in American Archaeology, 20. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 321 p. Based on Julie Patrois, Etude iconographique des sculptures du nord de la péninsule du Yucatán a l’époque classique (Doctoral dissertation, Université de Paris 1, 2005). See also Philippe Nondedeo, and Julie Patrois, Iconografia del poder en la region Rio Bec: representaciónes y primeras interpretaciónes (Cuadernos del Centro de Estudios Mayas 35:159-205, 2007).

1596. Bravo A., Humberto, Rogelio Soto A., Ricardo Torres J., and Pablo Sanchez A. 2001. Surface recession due to acid rain on the Maya monuments: Tulum, Mexico. PARI Journal 2(1):14-16.

1586. Rivera Dorado, Miguel. 2002. La ceiba y la luz: el estilo artístico y el paisaje de los mayas de Yucatan. Revista española de antropología americana 32:69-85. Author examines the relation between a singular Classic period art style and the environment of the Yucatan peninsula.

1597. Breglia, Lisa C. 2003. Docile Descendants and Illegitimate Heirs: Privatization of Cultural Patrimony in Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Rice University. 425 leaves. Archaeological ruins in Mexico, although juridically mandated as national property, are, in practice, sites of multiple, coexisting claims on ownership, custodianship, and inheritance.

1587. Stone, Andrea J. 2002. Spirals, ropes, and feathers: the iconography of rubber balls in Mesoamerican art. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):21-39. Author examines the iconographic manifestations of rubber-ball offerings in Mesoamerican art and sheds new light on the symbolism of rubber balls in ballgame scenes.

1598. Canada returns Mayan artifacts. Mexicon 23(5):111, 2001.

1588. Storniolo, Judith A. 2009. Out of the past and into the night: ancient mythical dwarfs in modern Yucatan. Expedition 51(1):17-24.

1599. Castaneda, Quetzil E. 2009. The 'past' as transcultural space: using ethnographic installation in the study of archaeology. Public Archaeology: Archaeological Ethnographies 8(2-3):262-282.

1589. Taube, Karl A. 2004. Flower Mountain: concepts of life, beauty, and paradise among the Classic Maya. RES 45:69-98. Cambridge, MA.

1600. Gilgan, Elizabeth. 2001. Looting and the market for Maya objects: a Belizean perspective. In Trade in Illicit Antiquities: The Destruction of the World's Archaeological Heritage. Neil Brodie, Jennifer Doole, and Colin Renfrew, eds. pp. 73-87. Cambridge, England: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.

1590. Thiemer-Sachse, Ursula. 2008. Schall und Rauch: Zum Semagramm der Volute in Mesoamerika. EthnographishArchäologische Zeitschrift 49:165-182. 1591. Velásquez García, Erik. 2004. El pie de serpiente de K’awil. Arqueología mexicana 12(71):36-39.

1601. Lizama Aranda, Lilia, and José I. Herrerra. 2008. Cambio y re-socialización del patrimonio cultural del norte de Quintana Roo, México. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1):31-46. 88

1602. Parks, Shoshaunna. 2009. Archaeological Ethics and the Struggle for Community Legitimacy in the Maya Archaeoscape. Doctoral dissertation, Boston University. 293 leaves.

ARCHITECTURE 1609. Ashmore, Wendy A., and Jeremy A. Sabloff. 2002. Spatial orders in Maya civic plans. Latin American Antiquity 13(2):201-215. Using evidence from Copan, Xunantunich, Sayil, Seibal, and Tikal, authors argue that the position and arrangement of ancient Maya buildings and arenas express statements about cosmology and political order; see also Michael E. Smith, Can we read cosmology in ancient Maya city plans? Comment on Ashmore and Sabloff (Latin American Antiquity 14:221-228, 2003), Ivan Šprajc, More on Mesoamerican cosmology and city plans (Latin American Antiquity 16(2):209-216, 2005); Michael E. Smith, Did the Maya build architectural cosmograms? (Latin American Antiquity 16(2):217-224, 2005).

1603. Parks, Shoshaunna, Patricia A. McAnany, and Satoru Murata. 2006. The conservation of Maya cultural heritage: searching for solutions in a troubled region. Journal of Field Archaeology 31(4):425-432. 1604. Puebla-Panama Plan and the Usumacinta dams. Mexicon 24(4), 2002. Summary status report on a proposal to construct five hydroelectric dams along the upper Usumacinta River from the Guatemala border to the state of Tabasco. Proposed construction would impact a number of significant archaeological sites, including Piedras Negras and Yaxchilan.

1610. Baeza Braga, Herve, ed. 2008. Mayan World Rebuilt. Merida: Dante.

1605. Quintana, Oscar, Hugo Galindo, and Raul Noriega. 2002. Daños por sismo en sitios mayas de las tierras bajas del Peten, Guatemala. Mexicon 24(3):42-44. Discussion of earthquake damage at Nakum, Yaxha, Topoxte, La Blanca, and Tzikintzakan.

1611. Carrasco, Michael D., and Kerry Hull. 2002. The cosmogonic symbolism of the corbeled vault in Maya architecture. Mexicon 24(2):26-32. Analysis of capstone texts and imagery provides a architectonic intrepretation of creation symbolism.

1606. Rodríguez Rivera, Jesús R. 2009. Los sistemas de información geográficos como herramienta para la administación del patriminio (Sitios de interés arqueológico). Yaxkin 25(1):319-337.

1612. Cash, Cristin L. 2005. Locating the Place and Meaning of the Talud-Tablero Architectural Style in the Early Classic Maya Built Environment. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 366 leaves.

1607. Sheseña Hernandez, Alejandro, Sophia Pincemin Deliberos, and Carlos Uriel del Carpio Penagos eds. 2008. Estudios del Patrimonio Cultural de Chiapas. Tuxtla Gutierrez: UNICACH. Contents include: Thomas A. Lee Whiting, and Ayax Moreno, Esculturas mayas del sitio de Cucalhuitz, municipio de El Bosque-San Juan de La Libertad, Chiapas (pp. 23-36); Mauricio Rosas Y Kifuri, Pasajes paralelos en los codices Dresde y Madrid (pp. 37-56); Sophia Pincemin Deliberos, Mirades diferentes o el arte de ver en los murales de Bonampak, Chiapas (pp. 57-84); Alejandro Tovalin Ahumada, and Victor M. Ortiz Villareal, Avances en la historia constructiva de la acropolis de Bonampak o ¿que hubo antes de Chaan Muan II? (pp. 85-108); Ana M. Parrilla Albuerne, and Adan Pacheco Benitez, Zona arqueológica de Izapa: Grupo F, en el Ojo de Huracan (pp. 109-122); Edwin L. Barnhart, Modelos de patrón de asentamiento y organización social para Palenque (pp. 123-156); Victor M. Esponada Jimeno, Los Pueblos prehispánicos, coloniales y poscoloniales de El Soconusco (pp. 159-172); Alejandro Sheseña Hernandez, Don Juan: una divinidad de raices prehispánicas entre los actuales ch'oles de Chiapas (pp. 173-208); Jaime Torres Burguette, and Cecilia Alba Villalobos, El Carnaval de Chenalho (pp. 209-224); Rocio N. Martínez Gonzales, Ak'ot bin ta k'in tajimol, complejidad ritual y memoria en Chenalho (pp. 225-248); Walter F. Morris, Textil de piedra: breve comparación de los datos expuestos en una fotografia de maya actuales y una escultura maya clásica (pp. 273-278); Alla Kolpakova, El símbolo del rombo en los bordados de los mayas de Chiapas (pp. 279294); Robert M. Laughlin, Las flores y sus fragancias entre los mayas tzotziles (pp. 295-300).

1613. Castillo Sosa, Enrique. 2002. Integrateways: Binational Research Maya Centers. Master of Architecture, Tulane University. 40 leaves. Study of binational Maya research centers at Izamal, Yucatan, Mexico, and New Orleans, Louisiana. 1614. Fash, William L., and Leonardo López Lujan, eds. 2009. Art of Urbanism: How Mesoamerican Kingdoms Represented Themselves in Architecture and Imagery. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection 480 p. Contents include: William A. Saturno, Centering the Kingdom, Centering the King: Maya Creation and Legitimization at San Bartolo (pp. 111-134); Barbara W. Fash, Watery Places and Urban Foundations Depicted in Maya Art and Architecture (pp. 230-259); William M. Ringle, and George J. Bey, The face of the Itzas (pp. 329-383). 1615. García Targa, Juan. 2006. Arquitectura colonial temprana en el area maya: registro material y documentación escrita. Estudios de cultura maya 27:101-120. 1616. Laborde-Debat, Aurelie. 2005. Les ensembles architecturaux dans les basses terres mayas de la fin de la periode classique au debut du postclassique. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1. See also Aurelie Laborde-Debat, Les edifices politiques mayas (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2004). 1617. Martos López, Luis A. 2007. Elementos mayas en la arquitectura y el culto del siglo XVI. Arqueología mexicana 15(88):51-56.

1608. Schönleber Riusech, Ivonne, and Alberto Villa Kamel, eds. 2006. Investigación, docencia y patrimonio: memorias de las jornadas de arqueología. México: CONACULTA. Contents include: Javier López Camacho, Prospección arqueológica en el sur de Quintana Roo (pp. 57-76).

1618. Miller, Mary E. 2002. The representation of Maya architecture. In The Built Surface. Christy Anderson and Karen K. Yale, eds. pp. 99-108. Aldershot: Ashgate. 89

Golden, The transformation of abandoned architecture at Piedras Negras (pp. 65-90); Lauren A. Sullivan, Jon B. Hageman, Bret A. Houk, Paul Hughbanks, and Fred Valdez, Structure abandonment and landscape transformation: examples from the Three Rivers region (pp. 91-112); Olivia C. Navarro Farr, David A. Freidel, and Ana L. Arroyave Prera, Manipulating memory in the wake of dynastic decline at El Peru-Waka': Termination deposits at abondened Structure M13-1 (pp. 113-146); M. Kathryn Brown, and James F. Garber, Brown, Establishing and reusing sacred place: a diachronic perspective from Blackman Eddy, Belize (pp. 147-170); T. Kam Manahan, Anatomy of a post-collapse society: Identity and interaction in Early Postclassic Copan. (pp. 171-192); Aline Magnoni, Scott R. Hutson, and Travis W. Stanton, Landscape transformations and changing perceptions at Chunchucmil, Yucatan (pp. 193-222); Antonio C. Benavides, Edzna: a lived place through time (pp. 223256); Marcello A. Canuto, and Anthony P. Andrews, Memories, meanings, and historical awareness: postabandonment behaviors among the lowland Maya (pp. 257274);

1619. Mosher, Matthew. 2005. Building Identities: SocioPolitical Implications of Ancient Maya Site Plans. M.A. thesis, Trent University (Canada). 175 leaves. 1621. Peniche May, Nancy. 2010. The Architecture of Power and Sociopolitical Complexity in Northwestern Yucatan During the Preclassic Period. M.A. thesis, University of California, San Diego. 104 leaves. 1622. Plank, Shannon E. 2003. Monumental Maya Dwellings in the Hieroglyphic and Archaeological Records: A Cognitive-Anthropological Approach to Classic Maya architecture. Doctoral dissertation, Boston University. 627 leaves. “This investigation assembles hieroglyphic, archaeological, architectural, and ethnographic data to study a group of Classic Maya buildings defined by the indigenous category otoot (dwelling); Classic Maya architectural terms are hieroglyphically rendered in dedicatory texts carved and painted on stone door lintels, door jambs, columns, wall panels, stair steps, and balustrades. The study shows that, while otoots are associated with diverse human and supernatural owners, architectural configurations, and roles in their respective cities, they express shared and deep notions of the nature of inhabited space, and suggest that Maya dwelling is better described as an existential condition than a building plan.”

1630. Stierlin, Henri, and Anne Stierlin. 2001. The Maya: Palaces and Pyramids of the Rainforest. Köln; London: Taschen. 237 p.

1625. Rivera Dorado, Miguel. 2001. La ciudad maya: un escenario sagrado. Madrid: Editorial Complutense. 347 p.

1631. Uriate, María T., Claudia Brittenham, Annick Daneels, Jesus Galindo Trejo, Rebecca González Lauck, Veronica Hernández Diáz, Mary Ellen Miller, Gustavo A. Ramírez Castilla, Antonio Toca Fernández, Erik Velásquez García, and Ilan Vit Suzan. 2009. La arquitectura precolombina en Mesoamérica. México, Milan: Jaca Book. 333 p. Large format exploration of Pre-Colombian architecture throughout Mesoamerica. Features numerous high-resolution color of complexes, and includes archaeological terminology relative to the texts in Maya and Nahua hieroglyphics, illustrations, maps and plans, appended. French language edition: Architecture pré-colombienne en Mésoamérique (Paris: Hazan, 2009. 335 p.).

1626. Runggaldier, Astrid. 2009. Memory and Materiality in Monumental Architecture: Construction and Reuse of a Late Preclassic Maya Palace at San Bartolo, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Boston University. 639 leaves.

1632. Wernecke, Daniel C. 2005. A Stone Canvas: Interpreting Maya Building Materials and Construction Technology. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 242 leaves.

1627. Shaw, Justine M., and Dave Johnstone. 2006. El papel de la arquitectura postmonumental en el norte de Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1):267-278.

1633. Wright, Ann C. 2005. Signs of Life: Cultural Memory and Experience as Performed By Un-Animated Objects in the Ancient Maya Ceremonial arena. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 449 leaves.

1623. Proskouriakoff, Tatiana. 2002. An Album of Maya Architecture. New York: Dover Publications; Newton Abbot: David & Charles. 144 p. Unabridged republication of the edition published by the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Washington, DC, in 1946. 1624. Rigatti, Alice. 2010. Le talud-tablero a Teotihuacan et dans la zone maya au classique (250-900 apr. J.C.). M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2010.

1628. Sondereguer, Cesar. 2006. Arquitectura precolumbina: catalogo de tipos de urbanismos, de obras y constructivos. Buenos Aires: Corregidor. 273 p.

Ballcourts 1634. Aguilar, Manuel. 2002-2003. The ballgame as a portal to the Underworld. PARI Journal 3(2-3)4-9. See also for statements about the symbolism of the prehispanic ball game, Nicolas Balutet, Semillas para un himno. El simbolismo del juego de pelota en el area maya (Exegesis: Revista de la Universidad de Puerto Rico en Humacao 43:37-43, 2002), Daniel Grana Behrens, El juego de pelota maya (In Maya’ amaq’: Mundo maya. pp. 203-228. Guatemala: Cholsamaj, 2001), Christopher Martínez, Apreciación sobre el juego de pelota en la mitología del Popol Vuh y su ubicación geografica (In INAH: una historia. Julio Cesar Olive Negrete and Bolfy Cottom, eds. v. 2, pp. 933-942. México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 2003); Julie E Jeakle, Social Inte-

1629. Stanton, Travis W., and Aline Magnini, eds. 2008. Ruins of the Past: The Use and Perception of Abandoned Structures in the Maya Lowlands. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 364 p. Contents include: Travis W. Stanton, and Aline Magnoni, Places of remembrance: The use and perception of abandoned structures in the Maya lowlands (pp. 1-24); Richard D. Hansen, Wayne K. Howell, and Stanley P. Guenter, Forgotten structures, haunted houses, and occupied hearts: ancient perspectives and contemporary interpretations of abandoned sites and buildings in the Mirador Basin, Guatemala (pp. 25-64); Mark B. Child, and Charles W. 90

gration and the Maya: The Multifunctionality of Mesoamerican Ball Courts (M.A. thesis, New Mexico State University. 97 leaves, 2002); Justyna Olko, Mesoamerican ballgame and associated ritual behaviors: a reappraisal and new insights (Ethnología Polona 22:45-66, 2001); José Mucia Batz, Chajchaay, pelota de cadera; el juego maya que maravilla al mundo (Guatemala: Serviprensa. 74 p., 2004), an analysis of the ballgame by a Kaqchikel scholar.

2009. Veiled Brightness: A History of Ancient Maya Color. Austin: University of Texas Press 148 p.

1635. Barrois, Ramzy R. 2006. Les sculptures associées aux jeux de balle dans l’aire mesoamericaine. Doctoral dissertation, Université de Paris 1. See also Ramzy R. Hassan, Les sculptures associées au jeu de balle dans les Hautes Terres Mayas (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2000).

1643. Hutson, Scott R., Travis W. Stanton, Aline Magnoni, Richard Terry, and Jason Craner. 2007. Beyond the buildings: Formation processes of ancient Maya houselots and methods for the study of non-architectural space. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 26(3):442-473.

1636. Coe, Michael D. 2003. Another look at the Maya ballgame. In Il sacro e il paesaggio nell’America indígena. D. Domenici, C. Orsini and S. Venturoli, eds. pp. 197-204. Bologna: CLUEB. See also John G. Fox, Students of the game: ulama (Smithsonian 37 (1):110-117, 2006).

1644. Ochoa-Winemiller, Virginia J. 2004. Places to Live: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Modern Maya Houses in Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College. 332 leaves.

1637. Taladoire, Eric. 2000. El juego de pelota mesoamericano: origen y desarollo. Arqueología Mexicana 8(43):20-27. See also Eric Taladoire, Could we speak of the Super Bowl at Flushing Meadows? La Pelota Mixteca and the palangana ballcourts: a prehispanic ballgame and its possible architectural context (Ancient Mesoamerica 14: 319-342, 2003), and Eric Taladoire, Las maquetas de juego de pelota: bi- and tridimensionnal representations of ball courts in Mesoamerica (In Colecciones Latinoamericanas: Essays in Honour of Ted J.J. Leyenaar. pp. 125-150. Dorus Kop Jansen and Edward K. de Bock eds. pp. 125-150. Leiden: Tetl, 2003).

1645. Stanton, Travis W., M. Kathryn Brown, and Jonathon B. Pagliaro. 2008. Garbage of the gods? Squatters, refuse disposal, and termination rituals among the ancient Maya. Latin American Antiquity 19(3): 227-248.

Dwellings 1642. Hutson, Scott R., and Travis W. Stanton. 2007. Cultural logic and practical reason: the structure of discard in ancient Maya houselots. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 17(2):123-144.

1646. Trachman, Clarissa M. 2007. Excavated Households Excavated Lives: Social Reproduction, Identity, and Everyday Life for the Ancient Maya in Northwestern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 543 leaves. 1647. Wauchope, Robert. 2006. Modern Maya Houses: A Study of Their Archaeological Significance. Mansfield Centre, CT: Martino. P. Republication of Carnegie Institution of Washington, Publication 597, 1938.

1638. Whittington, E. Michael, ed. 2001. The Sport of Life and Death: The Mesoamerican Ballgame. New York: Thames and Hudson. 288 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Laura F. Nadal, Rubber and rubber balls in Mesoamerica (pp. 20-31); María T. Uriarte, Unity in duality: the practice and symbols of the Mesoamerican ballgame (pp. 40-49); John F. Scott, Dressed to kill: stone regalia of the Mesoamerican ballgame (pp. 50-63); Jane S. Day, Performing on the court (pp. 64-77); Mary E. Miller, The Maya ballgame: rebirth in the court of life and death (pp. 78-87); Eric Taladoire, The architectural background of the pre-Hispanic ballgame: an evolutionary perspective (pp. 96-115); E. Michael Whittington, Everything old is new again: the enduring legacy of the ancient games (pp. 130-135). See also Christophe Helmke, Harri Kettunen, and Ramzy Barrois. The Classic Maya Ballgame: a Reader (Geneva: European Maya Conference, 2007).

E-Complex 1648. Galard, Frederique. 1999. Definition de la nature des complexes E en zone maya. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1. See also Laurence Vallade, Les pyramides a masques au sein des complexes astronomiques de Type E: valeur et symbolique (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2005). Energetics 1649. Adams, Richard E. W., and Jane Jackson Adams. 2003. Volumetric and stylistic reassessment of Classic Maya sites in the Peten, Rio Bec, Chenes, and Puuc hills. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):139-150. Iron Pyrite 1650. Blainey, Marc G. 2007. Surfaces and Beyond: The Political, Ideological, and Economic Significance of Ancient Maya Iron-Ore Mirrors. M.A., Trent University (Canada). 261 leaves. See also Zachary Nelson, Barry Scheetz, and Guillermo Mata Amado. Composite mirrors of the ancient Maya: ostentatious production and Precolumbian fraud (PARI Journal 9(4):1-7, 2009).

Caches 1639. Bozarth, Steven R., and Thomas H. Guderjan. 2004. Biosilicate analysis of residue in Maya dedicatory cache vessels from Blue Creek, Belize. Journal of Archaeological Science 31(2):205-215. 1640. McParland, Lisa D. 2003. An Analysis of Caching Practices in the Eastern Maya Lowlands. M.A. thesis, Trent University. 239 leaves.

Lime 1651. Hansen, Eric F. 2000. Ancient Maya Burnt-Lime Technology: Cultural Implications of Technological Styles. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 435 leaves.

Color 1641. Houston, Stephen, Claudia Brittenham, Cassandra Mesick, Alexandre Tokovinine, and Christina Warinner. 91

See also María L. Vázquez de Agredos Pascual, Desde el estudio tecnico de las pinturas al conocimiento de algunos aspects relacionados con la historia social y económica de los murales mayas de la peninsula de Yucatan (Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 9(19): 43-50, 2003).

1652. Mathews, Ruth A. S. 2002. Geology, Environment, and Lime Production Variation in the Maya Lowlands. M.A. thesis, University of Texas at San Antonio. 154 leaves. 1653. Russell, Bradley W., and Bruce H. Dahlin. 2007. Traditional burnt-lime production at Mayapan, Mexico. Journal of Field Archaeology 32(4):407-424.

Palaces 1666. Christie, Jessica J. 2003. Maya Palaces and Elite Residences: An Interdisciplinary Approach. Austin: University of Texas Press. 392 p. Contents include: Jessica J. Christie, Introduction (pp. 1-12); Thomas H. Guderjan, Robert J. Lichtenstein, C. Colleen Hanratty, Elite residences at Blue Creek, Belize (pp. 13-45); Loa Traxler, At court in Copan: palace groups of the Early Classic (pp. 46-68); E. Wyllys Andrews, Jodi Johnson, William F. Doonan, Gloria E. Everson, Kathryn E. Sampeck, and Harold E. Starratt, A multipurpose structure in the Late Classic palace at Copan (pp. 69-97); Peter D. Harrison, Palaces of the royal court at Tikal (pp. 98-119); Arthur Demarest, Kim Morgan, Claudia Wolley, and Hector Escobedo, The political acquisition of sacred geography: the Murcielagos Complex at Dos Pilas (pp. 120-153); Takeshi Inomata, and Daniela Triadan, Where did elites live? Identifying elite residences at Aguateca, Guatemala (pp. 154-183); Rodrigo Liendo Stuardo, Access patterns in Maya royal precincts (pp. 184-203); Jeff Karl Kowalski, Evidence for the functions and meanings of some northern Maya palaces (pp. 204-252); James N. Ambrosino, The function of a Maya palace at Yaxuna: a contextual approach (pp. 253-273); Edward B. Kurjack, Palace and society in the northern Maya lowlands (pp. 274-290); Jessica J. Christie, The tripartite layout of rooms in Maya elite residences: symbolic centering, ritual mediating, and historical governing (pp. 291-314); Jessica J. Christie, Conclusions (pp. 315-336).

1654. Schreiner, Thomas P. 2002. Traditional Maya Lime Production: Environmental and Cultural Implications of a Native American Technology. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley. 254 p. Author evaluates a proposition that exceptionally high rates of consumption of lime for architecture in the Late Preclassic Period (350 BC-AD 150) in the Mirador Basin, northern Guatemala, required fuel allocation for lime burning that could not be sustained by the surrounding resource base. 1655. Wernecke, D. Clark. 2008. A burning question: Maya lime technology and the Maya forest. Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2): 200-210. Murals 1656. Aguirre Tanus, Mariana, and María Cordeiro Baqueiro. 2007. Pinturas murales del Clásico Temprano en el reino de Ka'an. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1):167-178. 1657. Desprat, Alice. 2006. Las pinturas decorativas del Clásico Temprano y su conservación; los artistas del reino de Kaan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 241-254. 1658. Escalante Gonzalbo, Pablo, and Saeko Yanagisawa. 2008. Tulum, Quintana Roo, y Santa Rita Corozal, Belice; pintura mural. Arqueología 16(93): 60-65. 1659. Hurst, Heather. 2009. Murals and the Ancient Maya Artist: A Study of Art Production in the Guatemalan Lowlands. Doctoral dissertation, Yale University. 417 leaves.

1667. Delvendahl, Kai. 2010. Las Sedes del poder; Evidencia arqueológica e iconográfica de los conjuntos palaciegos mayas del Clásico Tardío. Mérida: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán. 772 p. Detailed archaeological and iconographic investigation into Classic period lowland Maya “palace groups.”

1660. Magaloni Kerpel, Diana. 2008. Los colores de la selva: procedimientos, materiales y colores en la pintura mural maya. Arqueología 16(93):46-50.

1668. Inomata, Takeshi, and Stephen D. Houston, eds. 20002001. Royal Courts of the Ancient Maya. Boulder: Westview Press. 2 v. Contents include: v. 1, Theory, Comparison, and Synthesis; Stephen D. Houston, Obituary: Floyd Lounsbury (pp. xv-xix); Takeshi Inomata, and Stephen D. Houston, Opening the royal Maya court (pp. 3-23); Takeshi Inomata, King’s people: Classic Maya courtiers in a comparative perspective (pp. 27-53); Stephen D. Houston, and David Stuart, Peopling the Classic Maya court (pp. 54-83); Patricia A. McAnany, and Shannon Park, Perspectives on actors, gender roles, and architecture at Classic Maya courts and households (pp. 84-129); David Webster, Spatial dimensions of Maya courtly life: problems and issues (pp. 130-167); Simon Martin, Court and realm: architectural signatures in the Classic Maya southern lowlands (pp. 168-194); Dorie ReentsBudet, Classic Maya concepts of a royal court: an analysis of renderings on pictorial ceramics (pp. 195-233); Susan T. Evans, Aztec noble courts: men, women, and children of the palace (pp. 237-273); Michael D. Coe, Concluding remarks (pp. 274-277); v. 2, Data and Case Studies; John E. Clark and Richard D. Hansen, The architecture of early kingship: comparative perspectives on the origins of the Maya royal

1661. Ovarelez, Sonia. 2003. Aportación de la colorimetria al estudio de las recetas antiguas de fabricación de los azules mayas. Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 9(19): 35-42. 1662. Pool Ojeda, José. 2006. Proyecto La Batalla, variantes pictóricas, a partir de un fragmento de pintura mural maya prehispánica. Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 12(24-25): 12-17. 1663. Staines Cicero, Leticia. 2003. Nota sobre una tapa de boveda pintada en el Museo de Arqueología Maya; reducto de San Miguel, Campeche. Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 9(19):51-53. 1664. Staines C., Leticia. 2008. Las tapas de boveda pintadas en el area maya. Arqueología 16(93): 41-45. 1665. Vázquez de Agredos Pascual, María L. 2006. Recursos materiales y tecnicas pictóricas en los murales de las Tierras Bajas Mayas. Doctoral dissertation, Universidad de Valencia. 92

1677. Ortiz Diáz, Edith. 2006. Caminos y rutas de intercambio prehispánico. Arqueología mexicana 14(81):37-42.

court (pp. 1-45); Loa P. Traxler, The royal court of Early Classic Copan (pp. 46-73); Peter D. Harrison, Thrones and throne structures in the Central Acropolis of Tikal as an expression of the royal court (pp. 74-101); Arlen F. Chase, and Diane Z. Chase, The royal court of Caracol, Belize: its palaces and people (pp. 102-137); Juan Antonio Valdes, Palaces and thrones tied to the destiny of the royal courts in the Maya lowlands (pp. 138-164); Joseph W. Ball, and Jennifer T. Taschek, The Buenavista-Cahal Pech royal court: multi-palace court mobility and usage in a petty lowland Maya kingdom (pp. 165-200); Mary Miller, Life at court: the view from Bonampak (pp. 201-222); William J. Folan, Joel D. Gunn, and María Rosario Dominguez Carrasco, Triadic temples, central plazas, and dynastic palaces: a diachronic analysis of the royal court complex, Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico (pp. 223-265); William M. Ringle, and George J. Bey, Post-Classic and terminal Classic courts of the northern Maya lowlands (pp. 266-307); Geoffrey E. Braswell, Post-Classic Maya courts of the Guatemalan highlands: archaeological and ethnohistorical approaches (pp. 308-334); Matthew Restall, The people of the patio: ethnohistorical evidence of Yucatec Maya royal courts (pp. 336-390).

1678. Shaw, Justine M. 2001. Maya sacbeob: form and function. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):261-272. A review of available data on lowland Maya sacbeob (raised roadways) to create a tripartite system of road classification (local intrasite, core-outlier intrasite, and intersite). 1679. Shaw, Justine M. 2008. White Roads of the Yucatan: Changing Social Landscapes of the Yucatec Maya. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 226 p. Shrines 1680. Brown, Linda A., and Kitty F. Emery. 2008. Negotiations with the animate forest: hunting shrines in the Guatemalan highlands. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 15(4): 300-337. 1681. Lorenzen, Karl J. 2003. Miniature Masonry Shrines of the Yucatan Peninsula: Ancestor Deification in Late Postclassic Maya Ritual and Religion. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 373 leaves.

Range Structures 1669. Seibert, Jeffrey D. 2007. Classic Maya Range Structures and Socio-Political Organisation. Doctoral dissertation, University of Calgary (Canada). 379 leaves.

1682. Woodfill, Brent K. S. 2007. Shrines of the PasionVerapaz Region, Guatemala: Ritual and exchange along an ancient trade route. Doctoral dissertation, Vanderbilt University. 742 leaves.

Roads 1670. Bolles, David, and William J. Folan. 2001. An analysis of roads listed in colonial dictionaries and their relevance to pre-Hispanic linear features in the Yucatan peninsula. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):299-314. An evaluation of the use of colonial dictionaries prepared by Franciscans in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries as a source of information on Maya roadways.

Stela 1683. Jordan, Keith. 2008. Stone Trees Transplanted? Central Mexican Stelae of the Epiclassic and Early Postclassic and the Question of Maya "Influence". Doctoral dissertation, City University of New York. 537 leaves. Sweatbaths 1684. Child, Mark B. 2006. The Archaeology of Religious Movements: The Maya Sweatbath Cult of Piedras Negras. Doctoral dissertation, Yale University. 633 leaves.

1671. Fournier, Patricia. 2006. Arqueología de los caminos prehispánicos y coloniales. Arqueología mexicana 14(81):2631.

1685. Child, Mark B. 2006. The symbolic space of the ancient Maya sweatbath. In Space and Spatial Analysis in Archaeology. Elizabeth C. Robertson, Jeffrey D. Seibert, Deepika C. Fernandez, and Mark U. Zender, eds. pp. 157-168. Calgary: Universtiy of Calgary Press.

1672. Fowler, William R. 2001. Introduction: Recent research on Maya causeways. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):259. 1673. García Martínez, Bernardo. 2001. Los caminos prehispánicos y la estrategia de la conquista. Arqueología mexicana 9(49):44-47.

1686. De Vriese, Joke. 2006. The temazcal and the concept of secularization: a discursive analysis. In The Social and Linguistic Heritage of Native Peoples in the Americas: The Struggle to Maintain Cultural Particularity. Laura N.K. Van Broekhove, ed. pp. 221-256. Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press.

1674. Keller, Angela H. 2001. Roads to understanding: a semantic analysis of the Maya word for road and ancient Maya causeways. The Codex 9(3):8-31. 1675. Keller Angela H. 2009. A Road by any other name: trails, paths, and roads in Maya language and thought. In Landscapes of Movement: Trails, Paths, and Roads in Anthropological Perspective. James E. Snead, Clark L. Erickson, and J. Andrew Darling, eds. pp. 133-157 Penn Museum International Research Conferences, 1. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.

1687. Lillo Macina, Vincenza. 2008. El Temazcalli mexicano: su significación simbólica su uso psicoterapeutico pasado y presente. Madrid: Plaza y Valdes. 270 p. Temple Pyramids 1688. Lucero, Lisa J. 2006. Los antiguos templos mayas como arenas de poder. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 371-380. See also Lisa J. Lucero, Classic Maya temples, politics, and the voice of the people (Latin American Antiquity 18(4):407-428, 2007).

1676. Maldonado Cárdenas, Ruben. 2006. Los caminos prehispánicos de Yucatan. Arqueología mexicana 14(81): 43-47. 93

1689. Vallade, Laurence. 2003. Les Masques des pyramides mayas. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

Maya Blue 1700. Arnold, Dean E. 2005. Maya Blue and palygorskite: a second possible pre-Columbian source. Ancient Mesoamerica 16(1):51-62.

BONE 1690. Emery, Kitty F. 2008. Techniques of ancient Maya bone working: evidence from a Classic Maya deposit. Latin American Antiquity 19(2): 204-221.

1701. Arnold, Dean E., Hector Neff, Michael D. Glascock, and Robert J. Speakman. 2007. Sourcing the palygorskite used in Maya blue: A pilot study comparing the results of INAA and LA-ICP-MS. Latin American Antiquity 18(1): 44-58.

1691. Emery, Kitty F. 2009. Perspectives on ancient Maya bone crafting from a Classic Period bone-artifact manufacturing assemblage. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 28(4):458-470.

1702. Brown, J. P. 2008. The first direct evidence for the production of Maya Blue: rediscocery of a technology. Antiquity 82(315):151-164.

1692. Houston, Stephen, David Stuart, and Karl Taube. 2006. The Memory of Bones: Body, Being, and Experience Among the Classic Maya. Austin: University of Texas Press. 352 p. Authors use iconography, hieroglyphic, and archaeological evidence to argue that the Classic Maya developed a coherent approach to the human body that may be recovered and understood still today.

1703. Domenech, A., M. T. Domenech-Carbo, and M. L. Vázquez de Agredos Pascual. 2009. Correlation between spectral, SEM/EDX and electrochemical properties of Maya Blue: a chemometric study. Archaeometry 51(6):1015-1034 1704. Dutton, Gail. 2001. Forever blue. Popular Science 259(5):33-34. Issues are presented concerning the development of Maya blue paint by the Mayan people. The retention of color by the Maya blue pigment despite exposure to wind and rain is discussed. Scientific methods of production are considered.

1693. O’Neil, Megan. 2002. Bone into body, manatee into man. Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin 2002:92-97. Carved from the dense rib bone of a Caribbean manatee, an Early Classic Maya figurine of a standing man is an example of exceptional technical skill in ancient American bone carving and the sculpting of human form. In an artistic gesture to the ancient past, the face is rendered with articulated facial features that recall ancient Olmec figurines and masks of centuries earlier.

1705. García Moreno, R., F. Mathis, F., V. Mazel, M. Dubus, T. Calligaro, and D. Strivay. 2008. Discovery and characterization of an unknown blue-green Maya pigment: veszelyte. Archaeometry 50(4): 658-667. 1706. Leon, Marco, Mauro Bacci Casadio, and Marcello Picollo. 2004. Identification of the pre-columbian pigment Maya blue on works of art by noninvasive UV-VIS and raman spectroscopic techniques. Journal of the American Institute for Conservation 43(1):39-54.

1694. Robison, Mary L. 2006. The House of the Jaguar: The Engaged Anthropology of Gertrude Blom at Museo Na Bolom. Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts, Department of Anthropology. 246 leaves. 1695. Trejo Mojica, Juana A. 2008. Los restos oseos humanos como objectos ideológicos del periodo Clásico maya. Dimension antropológica 15(42): 7-32.

1707. Polette, Lori Ann. 2002. Maya blue: application of XAS and HRTEM to materials science in art and archaeology. Microchemical Journal 71(2-3):167-174.

PAINTING 1696. Fuente, Beatriz de la. 2002. Presentación de los tomos III y IV Estudios del volumen II La pintura mural prehispánica en México; area maya. Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 8(16):18-28.

1708. Polette, Lori Ann. 2002. Maya Blue: An Ancient Organic/Inorganic Complex Pigment. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at El Paso. 213 leaves. 1709. Sanchez del Rio, M., P. Martinetto, C. Reyes-Valerio, E. Dooryhee, and M. Suarez. 2006. Synthesis and acid resistance of Maya blue pigment. Archaeometry 48 (1):115-130.

1697. Ródríguez Cabrera, Dionisio. 2002. Investigación en el Archivo Técnico de la Coordinación Nacional de Arqueología de INAH. Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 8(16):39-43.

1710. Sanchez del Rio, M., M. Suarez, and E. García-Romero. 2009. The occurence of palygorskite in the Yucatan peninsula: ethno-historic and archaeological contexts. Archaeometry 51(2):214-230.

1698. Staines Cicero, Leticia. 2002. Presentación de los tomos III y IV Estudios del volumen II La pintura mural prehispánica en México; area maya: mas alla de los Estudios. Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 8(16):11-17.

SCULPTURE 1711. Amaroli, Paul E., and Karen Olsen Bruhns. 2002. "Jaguar face" sculptures found in El Salvador. Mexicon 24(5):91. A line of seven, apparently Late Preclassic, sculptures was found during construction of a school in Canton Tapalshucut, near Izalco in western El Salvador.

1699. Uriarte, María T. 2002. Presentación de los tomos III y IV Estudios del volumen II La pintura mural prehispánica en México; area maya. Boletín Informativo; La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 8(16):5-10.

1712. Bachand, Holly, Rosemary A. Joyce, and Julia A. Hendon. 2003. Bodies moving in space: ancient Mesoamerican human sculpture and embodiment. Cambridge Archaeological 94

1721. Rice, Prudence M. 2009. Late Classic Maya pottery production: review and synthesis. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 16(2):117-156.

Journal 13(2):238-247. The experiential effects of Mesoamerican practices of ornamenting space with images of the human body are considered. At Late Classic Maya Copan, lifesize human sculptures were incorporated into residences, intimate settings in which body knowledge was produced and body practices were institutionalized.

Pottery Analysis 1722. Culbert, T. Patrick, and Robert L. Rands. 2007. Multiple classifications: an alternative approach to the investigation of Maya ceramics. Latin American Antiquity 18(2):181-190.

1713. Fash, Barbara W. 2004. Cast aside: revisiting the plaster cast collections from Mesoamerica. Visual Resources 20(1):317. An exhibit at Harvard University's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology entitled Distinguished Casts: Curating Lost Monuments at the Peabody Museum (on display Fall 2001-Spring 2005), highlights the significance and diversity of its unique Mesoamerican collection of casts of carved Maya monuments. Many of these reproductions preserve elements of the original monuments that have since been destroyed, looted, or irreparably damaged by erosion or vandals.

1723. Gunn, Christopher M. 2002. Compositional Perspectives on the Exchange of Muna Slate Wares in the Late and Terminal Classic Northern Maya Lowlands. M.S. thesis, University of Kentucky. 98 leaves. 1724. Masson, Marilyn A. 2001. Changing patterns of ceramic stylistic diversity in the pre-Hispanic Maya lowlands. Acta Archaeologica 72(2):159-188..

1714. McInnis Thompson, Lauri, and Fred Valdez. 2008. Potbelly sculpture: an inventory and analysis. Ancient Mesoamerica 19(1):13-28.

1725. Peraza Lope, Carlos, and Wilberth Cruz Alvarado. 2006. La ceramica de sitios arqueológicos del centro-sur de Yucatán. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 531-542.

1715. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. Fragment of a stone relief in Guatemala City. Mexicon 24(1):4. Report on a Cotzumalhuapa-style sculpture from a private collection in Guatemala City.

1726. Powis, T. G., F. Valdez, T. R. Hester, W. J. Hurst, and S. M. Tarka. 2002. Spouted vessels and cacao use among the Preclassic Maya. Latin American Antiquity 13(1):85-106. Authors provide a contextual and functional analysis of Preclassic spouted vessels found in the Maya lowlands and highlands.

1716. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. Provenanced pedestal sculpture in the Museo Popol Vuh. Mexicon 23(2):26.

1727. Tunesi, Raphael. 2008. Some thoughts about a vase and an old god. PARI Journal 9(2): 18-23.

1717. Mayer, Karl H. 2002. An unprovenanced Maya stone phallus. Mexicon 24(2):23. Description of an unprovenanced stone penis found in the storerooms of the Department of Archaeology of the Belizean government in Belmopan. See also Karl H. Mayer, An unprovenanced stone sphere with Maya glyphs (Mexicon 23(5):112-114, 2001).

Pottery Chronology 1728. Mouton, Suzanne. 2005. Redefinition chronologique de la phase Mamom, dans les basses terres mayas.M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

1718. Mayer, Karl H. 2002. Replicas of Maya stelae from the Peten. Mexicon 24(3):46-47. Report on a project of the Guatemalan Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes and the Dirección General del Patrimonio Cultural y Natural to create replicas of endangered carved limestone monuments. From 1998 to 2001 the following 33 carved stone sculptures were recreated in life-sized glass fiber facsimiles: Seibal, Stelae 1, 2, 5-11, 13, 14, 17-20; Aguateca, Stelae 1, 2, 14, 16, and 19; Arroyo de Piedras, Stelae 1 and 5; Dos Pilas, four stelae, three hieroglyphic staircases, one altar, and one low-relief panel; and at El Duende, two stelae. See also Samanta Casareto, Les steles des Basses Terres Mayas au Classique Ancien (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2000).

1729. Neff, Hector, Jeffrey Blomster, Michael D. Glascock, Ronald L. Bishop, M. James Blackman, Michael D. Coe, George L. Cowgill, Richard A. Diehl, Stephen Houston, Arthur A. Joyce, Carl P. Lipo, Barbara L. Stark, and Marcus Winter. 2006. Methodological issues in the provenance investigation of Early Formative Mesoamerican ceramics. Latin American Antiquity 17(1):54-76. See also, Hector Neff, Jeffrey Blomster, Michael D. Glascock, Ronald L. Bishop, M. James Blackman, Michael D. Coe, George L. Cowgill, Ann Cyphers, Richard A. Diehl, Stephen Houston, Arthur A. Joyce, Carl P. Lipo, and Marcus Winter. 2006. Smokescreens in the provenance investigation of Early Formative Mesoamerican ceramics (Latin American Antiquity 17(1):104118).

1719. Roose, Ninon. 2006. Le complexe Jougs-HachesPalmes en Mesoamerique. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

1730. Sharer, Robert J. 2007. Early Formative pottery trade and the evolution of Mesoamerican culture. Antiquity 81(311):201-203.

POTTERY 1720. Bonnafoux, Patrice. 2008. Iconographie de la ceramique du Classique Ancien dans les basses terres mayas. Doctoral dissertation, Université de Paris 1. See also Patrice Bonnafioux, Iconographie de la ceramique maya du Classique Ancien. Methodologie (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2002), and Laura Caso Barrera, and Mario Aliphat F., Los vasos como símbolos de poder entre los itzaes (In Símbolos de Poder en Mesoamérica. Guilhem Olivier, ed. pp. 67-84. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2008).

1731. Sharer, Robert J., Andrew K. Balkansky, James H. Burton, Gary M. Feinman, Kent V. Flannery, David C. Grove, Joyce Marcus, Robert G. Moyle, T. Douglas Price, Elsa M. Redmond, Robert G. Reynolds, Prudence M. Rice, Charles S. Spencer, and James Stoltman. 2006. On the logic of archaeological inference: early 2006. Formative pottery and 95

sexual regeneration of the deer bones). The ensuing idea of antagonistic sexual exchanges between the hunter and the game informs Mayan deer dances and Q’eqchi’ Mayan Hummingbird myth. Vase scenes from the Classic Period of the Mayas demonstrate the antiquity of the above concepts.

the evolution of Mesoamerican societies. Latin American Antiquity 17(1):90-103. 1732. Werness, Maline D. 2003. Pabellon Molded-Carved Ceramics: A Consideration in Light of the Terminal Classic Collapse of Classic Maya Civilization. M.A. thesis, University of Texas at Austin. 315 leaves.

1742. Danien, Elin C. 2009. Painted metaphors: pottery and politics of the ancient Maya. Expedition 51(1):41-56.

Pottery Technology 1733. Cecil, L. G. 2004. Inductively coupled plasma emission spectroscopy and Postclassic Peten slipped pottery: an examination of pottery wares, social identity and trade. Archaeometry 46(3):385-404.

1743. García Barrios, Ana. 2006. Confrontation scenes on codex-style pottery: an iconographic review. Latin American Indian Literatures Journal 22(2):129-152. 1744. Jackson, Sarah E. 2009. Imagining Courtly Communities: An Exploration of Classic Maya Experiences of Status and Identity through Painted Ceramic Vessels. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(1):71-85

1734. Cecil, L. G. 2001. The Technological Styles of Late Postclassic Slipped Pottery Groups in the Peten Lakes Region, El Peten, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University.

1745. Loughmiller-Newman, Jennifer A. 2008. Cannons of Maya painting: a spatial analysis of Classic Period polychromes. Ancient Mesoamerica 19(1): 29-42.

1735. Connell, Samuel V. 2002. Getting closer to the source: using ethnoarchaeology to find ancient pottery making in the Naco Valley, Honduras. Latin American Antiquity 13(4):401417.

1746. Mayer, Karl H. 2003. Ancient Maya vessel representing an enema scene. Mexicon 25(4):97-98.

1736. Dominguez Carrasco, María del Rosario, María I. García López, Manuel E. Espinosa Pesqueira, and Ivan Sprajc. 2007. Análisis quimico-cultural de la cerámica del sureste de Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1):293-302.

1747. Reents-Baudet, Dorie, and Ronald Bishop. 2003. What can we learn from a Maya vase? Archaeology 56(21):26-29. Classic period Maya vases are rich depositories of Classic period culture and royalty and provide important views of palace life.

1737. Ford, Anabel, and Lisa J. Lucero. 2001. The malevolent demons of ceramic production: where have all the failures gone? Estudios de cultura maya 21:57-74.

1748. Velásquez García, Erik. 2008. El Vaso de Princeton; un ejemplo del estilo códice. Arqueología 16(93): 51-59. See also Erik Velásquez García, Reflections on the Codex Style and the Princeton Vessel. PARI Journal 10(1):1-16, 2009.

1738. Little, Nicole C. 2005. Pots and Politics: Chemical Characterization of Early and Late Classic Pottery From Northwest Belize. M.A. thesis, University of Missouri, Columbia. 102 leaves.

1749. Ventura, Carol. 2003. A Maya ceramics tradition survives in the Yucatan. Ceramics Monthly 51(10):64-65. Yucatan-based potter Rodrigo Martin and his sister, Patricia, recreate traditional Mayan ceramics with motifs selected from books featuring pre-Columbian pottery.

1739. Neff, Hector. 2002. Analysis of Mesoamerican Plumbate pottery surfaces by laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). Journal of Archaeological Science 30(1):21-35. LA-ICP-MS is used to characterize the slipped surfaces on specimens of Plumbate pottery, a Mesoamerican tradeware.

Censers 1750. Ball, Joseph W., and Jennifer T. Taschek. 2007. Sometimes a "stove" is "just a stove": a context-based reconsideration of three-prong "incense burner" from the western Belize Valley. Latin American Antiquity 18(4):451470.

1740. Pool, Christopher A., and George J. Bey, eds. 2007. Pottery Economics in Mesoamerica. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. Contents include: Christopher A. Pool, and George J. Bey, Conceptual issues in Mesoamerican pottery economics (pp. 1-38); Michael Deal, An ethnoarchaeological perspective on local ceramic production and distribution in the Maya highlands (pp. 39-58); Dean E. Arnold, Jean H. Wilson, and Alvaro L. Nieves, Why was the potter's wheel rejected? Social change and technological change in Ticul, Yucatan, Mexico (pp. 59-85).

1751. Bayles, Bryan. 2001. Scaling the world trees: ethnobotanical insights into Maya spiked vessels. Journal of Latin American Lore 21(1):55-78. 1752. Nuñez-Regueiro, Paz. 2003. Les encensoirs des basses terres Mayas meriodionales au Classique Recent et Terminal (600-900 apr.J.C.). Typologie et distribution regionale. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1. See also Sarah Kurnick, Crossing boundaries: Maya censers from the Guatemala highlands (Expedition 51(1):25-32, 2009) for a discussion of censer fragments collected by Robert Burkitt in the western highlands of Guatemala.

Polychrome Pottery 1741. Braakhuis, H. E. M. 2001. The way of all flesh: sexual implications of the Mayan hunt. Anthropos 96(2):391-409. The Mesoamerican deer hunt serves as a metaphor for war. Author argues that it equally represents alliance. The quarry is viewed by the hunter as a wife and by the hunter's wife as a male partner. The Owner of the Game corresponds to a fatherin-law for whom the hunter performs bridal service (e.g., the 96

and Laurent-Jacques Costa, eds. pp. 241-248 International Series, 1939. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. See also Chloe Andrieu, Organisation de la production, de la distribution et fonctions des industries lithiques mayas classiques (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 10, Nanterre, 2009).

Figurines 1753. Gallegos Gomora, Judith M., Ricardo Armijo Torres, and Claudio Charosky. 2008. Figurillas y representaciones de enanos en el mundo prehispánico maya. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 233-254. 1754. Halperin, Christina T., Katherine A. Faust, Rhonda Taube, and Aurore Giguet. 2009. Mesoamerican Figurines: Small-Scale Indices of Large-Scale Social Phenomena. Gainesville: University of Press of Florida. Essays from the annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and the first annual Braunstein Symposium at Marjorie Barrack Museum, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Contents include: Katherine A. Faust, and Christina T. Halperin, Rethinking figurines; Rosemary Joyce, Honduran figurines and whistles in social context: production, use, and meaning in the Ulúa Valley; Katherine A. Faust, The beautiful, the bad, and the ugly: aesthetics and morality in Maya figurines; Christina T. Halperin, Figurines as bearers of and burdens in Late Classic Maya state; Rosemary A. Joyce, Making a world of their own: Mesoamerican figurines and Mesoamerican figurine analysis. See also, Julien Sion, Les figurines mayas dans les basses terres nord-occidentales au Classique Recent/Terminal. Une synthese des connaissances (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2008).

1762. Aoyama, Kazuo, and Juan P. Laporte. 2009. Análisis de lítica menor elaborada con obsidiana en el sureste y centrooeste de Petén, Guatemala. Utz'ib 4(6):11-40. 1763. García-Barcena, Joaquín. 2001. Tecnología lítica. Arqueología mexicana 9(52):42-45. 1764. Hirth, Kenneth G., ed. 2003. Mesoamerican Lithic Technology: Experimentation and Interpretation. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. 350 p. Proceedings of Conference on Ancient Mesoamerican Obsidian Blade Production, held in 2000 at Pennsylvania State University. Contents pertaining to the ancient Maya include: Kenneth G. Hirth, Experimentation and interpretation in Mesoamerican lithic technology (pp. 5-9); Payson Sheets, The behavioral model in Maya core-blade technology: a historical view (pp. 10-14); John E. Clark, A review of twentieth-century Mesoamerican obnsidian studies (pp. 15-54); Jacques Pelegrin, Blade-making techniques from the Old World: insights and applications to Mesoamerican obsidian lithic technology (pp. 55-71); Gene L. Titmus, and John E. Clark, Mexica blade making with wooden tools: recent experimental insights (pp. 72-97); J. Jeffrey Flenniken, and Kenneth G. Hirth, Handheld prismatic blade manufacture in Mesoamerica (pp. 98-107); Rissa M. Trachman, and Gene L. Titmus, Pecked and scored initiations: Early Classic core-blade production in the Central Maya lowlands (pp. 108-119); Peter Kelterborn, Measurable flintknapping (pp. 120-131); Gene L. Titmus, and James C. Woods, The Maya eccentric: evidence for the use of the indirect percussion technique in Mesoamerica from preliminary experiments concerning their manufacture (pp. 132-146); Kenneth G. Hirth, Gene L. Titmus, J. Jeffrey Flenniken, and Jacques Tixier, Alternative technologies for producing Mesoamerican-style pressure flaking patterns on obsidian bifaces (pp. 147-152); Dan Healan, From the quarry pit to the trash pit: comparative coreblade technology at Tula, Hidalgo, and the Ucareo obsidian source region (pp. 153-169); Kenneth G. Hirth, The Kaminaljuyu production sequence for obsidian prismatic blades: technological characteristics and research questions (pp. 170-181); Bradford Andrews, Measuring prehistoric craftsman skill: contemplating its application to Mesoamerican core-blade research (pp. 208-219); John E. Clark, Craftsmanship and craft specialization (pp. 220-233); Kenneth G. Hirth, Peter Kelterborn, Jacques Pelegrin, and Bradford Andrews, Experiementation and interpretation in Mesoamerican lithic technology: a look to the future (pp. 234238); John E. Clark, Appendix A: Bibliography of quarry studies (pp. 239-240); John E. Clark, Appendix B: Publication history of major journals (pp. 241-252); John E. Clark, Appendix C: Bibliography of dissertations and theses (pp. 253-262); John E. Clark, Appendix D: Combined bibliography of journal samples, dissertations, and theses (pp. 263-270); John E. Clark, Appendix E: Bibliography of replication and ethnographic studies (pp. 271-272).

1755. Hendon, Julia A. 2003. In the house: Maya nobility and their figurine-whistles. Expedition 45(3):28-33. Author describes and attempts to contextualize anthropomorphic figurines found in residential areas at Copan. 1756. Joyce, Rosemary. 2008. When the flesh is solid but the person is hollow inside: formal variation in hand-modelled figurines from Formative Mesoamerica. In Past Bodies: BodyCentered Research in Archaeology. Dušan Boric and John Robb, eds. pp. 37-46. Oxford, England: Oxbow Books. 1757. Ruscheinsky, Lynn M. 2003. The Social Reproduction of Gender Identity Through the Production and Reception of Lowland Maya Figurines. Doctoral dissertation, Department of Art History, University of British Columbia. 411 leaves. Author argues that figurines not only communicated the social values of their producers but may also have been instrumental in actively constructing the world of the individual through gender performance. Specialized Studies 1758. Gómez, Erika. 2006. Algunas características de la iconografía de la cerámica Tiquisate moldeada. Utz'ib 4(1): 1732. 1759. Mayer, Karl H. 2005. An unprovenanced Maya vase with Tlaloc imagery. Mexicon 27(2-3):22-23. Supports 1760. Aimers, James J. 2004. The origins and significance of the scroll or slipper support in Maya ceramics. Mexicon 26(2):36-42. LITHICS 1761. Andrieu, Chloe. 2009. Irreplaceable? or just not indispensable... substitution and complementarity in lithic raw material management in the Maya lowland. In Non-Flint Raw Material Use in Prehistory. Farina Sternke, Lotte Eigeland 97

1775. Taube, Karl A. 2005. The symbolism of jade in Classic Maya religion. Ancient Mesoamerica 16(1):23-50.

1765. Meadows, Richard K. 2001. Crafting K'awil: A Comparative Analysis of Maya Symbolic Flaked Stone Assemblages from Three Sites in Northern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 674 leaves. Author provides a material culture analysis of three archaeological assemblages of symbolic flaked stone artifacts recovered from the Maya sites of Altun Ha, Colha, and Lamanai, Belize.

1776. Whitelegg, Isobel. 2002. Source of Olmec jade identified. Minerva: The International Review of Ancient Art and Archaeology 13(5):5. The source of Olmec jade, found in deposits from Costa Rica to Mexico, in eastern Guatemala is exposed by a hurricane.

1766. Simmons, Scott E. 2002. Late Postclassic-Spanish colonial period stone tool technology in the southern Maya lowland area: the view from Lamanai and Tipu, Belize. Lithic Technology 27(1):47-72. Tulsa. Analysis of chipped stone tools from Lamanai and Tipu indicates that small side-notched chert, chalcedony and obsidian arrowpoints are the predominant tool form found in late-terminal Postclassic and early Spanish colonial period deposits.

Marble 1777. Luke, Christina. 2002. Ulua Style Marble Vases (Honduras). Doctoral dissertation, Cornell University. 467 leaves. 1778. Luke, Christina. 2008. Carving luxury: Late Classic white stone vase traditions in Mesoamerica. In New Approaches to Old Stone: Recent Studies of Ground Stone Artifacts. Yorke M. Rowan and Jennie R. Ebling, eds. pp. 298-319. London: Equinox.

Chert 1767. Speal, C. Scott. 2009. The economic geography of chert lithic production in the southern Maya lowlands: A comparative examination of early stage reduction debris. Latin American Antiquity 20(1):91-119.

1779. Luke, Christiana, and Robert H. Tykot. 2007. Celebrating place through luxury craft production: Travesia and Ulua style marble vases. Ancient Mesoamerica 18(2): 315-328.

Obsidian 1768. Moholy-Nagy, Hattula. 2003. Source attribution and the utilization of obsidian in the Maya area. American Antiquity 14(3):301-310.

SHELL 1780. Hohmann, Bobbi M. 2002. Preclassic Maya Shell Ornament Production in the Belize Valley, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of New Mexico. 254 leaves.

1769. Nuñez Regueiro, Paz. 2005. Etude des excentriques mayas dans les basses terres a la periode classique (250-950 apr. J.C.). Materiel lithique et iconographique. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

1781. McVicker, Donald, and Joel W. Palka. 2001. A Maya carved shell plaque from Tula, Hidalgo, Mexico: comparative study. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):175-197. Description of a carved Maya shell plaque found at Tula in the 1880s; authors suggest that plaques may have been elite Maya gifts establishing royal alliances with non-local polities.

1770. Saunders, Nicholas J. 2001. A dark light: reflections on obsidian in Mesoamerica. World Archaeology 33(2):220-236. See also Alejandro Pastrana, La obsidiana en Mesoamérica (Arqueología mexicana 14(80): 49-54, 2006).

1782. Velázquez Castro, Adrían, and Lynneth S. Lowe, eds. 2007. Los Moluscos arqueológicos: una visión del mundo maya. Cuaderno 34. México, UNAM: Instituto de Investigaciones Filologicas, Centro de Estudios Mayas. 202 p. Includes the following studies: "Registro arqueológico del caracol de agua dulce Pachychilus en el estado de Chiapas, México", "Técnicas de manufactura de las aplicaciones circulares de Kohunlich, Quintana Roo" and "Restauración y estudio de un pendiente zoomorfo de concha recuperado en Oxkintok, Yucatan."

Jade 1771. Broad, William J. 2002. Hurricane exposes ancient jade mines in Guatemala. Mexicon 24(3):42. See also Boris Aguilar, Yacimientos del jade en el valle del Motagua (Arqueología guatemalteca 1(1):18-21, 2003). 1772. Gendron, François, David C. Smith, and Aicha Gendron-Badou. 2002. Discovery of jadeite-jade in Guatemala confirmed by non-destructive raman microscopy. Journal of Archaeological Science 29(8):837-8751. Description of jadeite-jade nodule found south of the Motagua River Valley presents a new petrological kind of jade different from river cobbles found north of the Motagua River.

ABRASIVES 1783. Langenscheidt, Adolphus. 2006. Los abrasivos en Mesoamérica. Arqueología mexicana 14(80): 55-60.

1773. Healy, Paul F., and Jaime J. Awe. 2001. Middle Preclassic jade spoon from Belize. Mexicon 23(3):61-64.

RESINS 1784. Laporte, Juan P. 2008. Humo, humareda, humazon: análisis regional de los fragmentos de incensario de una amplia zona de Petén. Utz'ib 4(4): 11-36.

1774. Seitz, R., G. E. Harlow, V. B. Sisson, and K. A. Taube. 2001. Olmec blue and Formative jade sources: new discoveries in Guatemala. Antiquity 75(290):687-688. Discussion of jadeite sources in the Sierra de las Minas south of the Motagua River closely resemble the translucent and colorful Olmec blue-green jade found in Preclassic horizons in Mexico.

1785. Lowe, Lynneth S. 2004. Los ornamentos de ambar en el area maya: arqueología y etnohistoria. Estudios de cultura maya 25:47-56. 1786. Stacey, R. J., C. R. Cartwright, and C. McEwan. 2006. Chemical characterization of ancient Mesoamerican 'copal' resins: preliminary results. Archaeometry 48(2):323-340. 98

71); Walter F. Morris, and Carol Karasik, Chiapas textiles: the art of ancient dreams (pp. 73-91); Julia Montoya, Maya textile motifs: mirrors of a worldview (pp. 93-127); Cecilia Vicuña, Ubixic del desir, "its being said": a reading of a reading of the Popol Vuh (pp. 129-137); Robert S. Carlsen, Subversive threads: an interpretation of Maya weaving and culture (pp. 139-156); Irma Alicia Velasquez Nimatuj, Ways of exclusion: Maya dress and racism in contemporary Guatemala (pp. 157167). See also Maya textiles: mirrors of a vision of the world (Tribal 8(2):11, 2003). A preview of "With Their Hands, With Their Eyes, Mayan Textiles, Mirrors of a Vision of the World," an exhibition at the Musée d'Ethnographie d'Anvers in Antwerp, Belgium, through October 26, 2003. This show is dedicated to the textiles and costumes of the Maya of Guatemala and Chiapas, Mexico. Created between the late 19th century and the present, the exhibits demonstrate the continuity and kinship that exists between the art and culture of the ancient Maya and textile production of their descendants.

TEXTILES 1787. Abdelnur, Heather J. 2005. A History of Highland Guatemalan Textiles: Lost Opportunities and Colonial Legacies, 1760-1820. Doctoral dissertation, Texas Christian University. 267 leaves. 1788. Alfaro, Laura. 2009. Practicing Resistance: Textiles, Tourist Markets and Gender Relations Among Maya women. M.A. thesis, University of Regina (Canada). 95 leaves. 1789. Dwyer, Deborah. 2005. The rainbow textiles of the Guatemalan highlands. Piecework 13(2):52-55. Over 150 patterns of weaving and embroidery have been identified in indigenous handwoven garments. Heavy embroidery, imaginative designs, and vibrant colors are their distinguishing traits. 1790. Greene, Alison C. 2002. Huipiles to Spandex: Styling Modernity and Refashioning Gender in the Global Economy of Yucatan. Doctoral dissertation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 321 leaves.

1796. Holsbeke, Mireille, and Julia Montoya. 2007. Ruwa kemtzij’ Tejidos mayas; Kemon taq tzij na' oj; El rostro de palabras y los pensamientos tejidos-Chiapas y Guatemala, Siglos XIX-XX. Guatemala: Ethnografish Museum/Musea Antwerpen/CHOL SAMAJ. 157 p. Handsomely-presented panoramic study, of textile production in Chiapas and Guatemala, during the 19th and 20th centuries. With 100s of of garments throughout and of ethnographic interest.

1791. Greenfield, Patricia M. 2004. Weaving Generations Together: Evolving Creativity Among the Mayas of Chiapas. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press. 224 p. Examination of Tzotzil weaving and women from Zinacantan. Explores Tzotzil Maya weaving and embroidery in the Chiapas highlands of southern Mexico over a period of about 60 years; shows how the deeply rooted traditions of textile production and weaving apprenticeship within Maya communities have been both maintained and transformed. See also Patricia M. Greenfield, Weaving generations together: evolving creativity in the Maya of Chiapas (Cultural Survival Quarterly 29(1):48-49, 2005).

1797. Le Fort, Geneviève. 2001. Costume et royauté sacrée chez les mayas de la periode classique: le costume en treillis. Civilisations 50(1-2):115-127, 219, 225, 229. 1798. Looper, Matthew G. 2003. Traditional attire in San Miguelito, Quezaltenango, Guatemala. Textile Museum Journal 40-41:83-97.

1792. Hernández Alvarez, Hector, and Nancy Peniche May. 2008. Malacates arqueológicos de la peninsula de Yucatán: una propuesta de análisis. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 195-214.

1799. López Bruni, Ricky. 2006. Guatemala: tejida en el cielo. Guatemala. 204 p. 1800. Ludwig, Sheryl. 2007. Making Fast the Thread: Cultural Maintenance and Transmission of Maya Women Who Weave on Backstrap Looms. Doctoral dissertation, University of Colorado at Boulder. 364 leaves.

1793. Hendon, Julia A. 2006. Textile production as craft in Mesoamerica: time, labor and knowledge. Journal of Social Archaeology 6(3):354-378. 1794. Holsbeke, Mireille, and Geneviève LeFort. 2001. Costume et royauté sacrée chez les Mayas de la période classique: le costume “en treillis.” In Itinéraires belges aux Amériques; Actes du primier colloque de la Societe des Americanistes de Belgique (Bruxelles, Mars 2000). Peter Eeckhout and Jacques Malengreau, eds. pp. 115-127. Bruxelles: Institut de Sociologie de l’Université Libre de Bruxelles.

1801. Mejia de Rodas, Idalma. 2003. Cuyuscate: Brown Cotton in the Textile Tradition of Guatemala. Guatemala: Museo Ixchel del Traje Indígena. 99 p.

1795. Holsbeke, Mireille, and Julia Montoya, eds. 2003. With Their Hands and Their Eyes: Maya Textiles: Mirrors of a Worldview. Antwerp: Etnografisch Museum Antwerpen. 176 p. Catalog of an exhibition in the Antwerp Ethnographic Museum, from June to October 26, 2003. Available in English and Dutch language editions. Contents include: Mireille Holsbeke, and Julia Montoya, Introduction: Costume is a language (pp. 9-10); Mireille Holsbeke, Textile as text: Maya traditional dress and the message it conveys (pp. 17-45); Rosario Miralbes de Polanco, and Barbara Knoke de Arathoon, Survival strategies: the diversity of Maya dress in Guatemala (pp. 47-

1803. Mulhearn, Ruth. 2002. Weaving as a Form of Identity Among the Indigenous Women of Guatemala. M.A. thesis, California State University, Stanislaus. 131 leaves.

1802. Miralbes de Polanco, Rosario. 2003. Magia y misterio del jaspe. Guatemala: Museo Ixchel de Traje Indígena. 32 p. Examination of a popular knot, weaving, and design used in indigenous Guatemalan weaving.

1804. Rodríguez, Rebecca. 2002. Young Maya Women Weavers in Cooperatives: Staying Single in Chiapas. M.A. thesis, New Mexico State University. 106 leaves. 1805. Rodríguez, L. C., M. A. Mendez, and H. M. Niemeyer. 2001. Direction of dispersion of cochineal (Dactylopius coccus costa) within the Americas. Antiquity 75:73-77. A phylo99

genetic analysis of the genus Dactylopius suggests that the origin of the source of this natural dye was in South America and introduced into the Americas by sea routes. 1806. Ventura, Carol. 2003. Maya Hair Sashes Backstrap Woven in Jacaltenango, Guatemala; Cintas mayas tejhidas con el telar de cintura en Jacaltenango, Guatemala. 2 ed. Cookeville, TN: Department of Music and Art, Tennessee Technological University. 176 p. Revision of Mayan Hair Sashes Backstrap Woven in Jacaltenango, Guatemala (Ranchos Palos Verdes, CA: Yax Te' Press, 1996) and A Study of Hair Sashes Backstrap Woven in Jacaltenango, Guatemala (Doctoral dissertation, University of Georgia, Athens, 1989). WOOD 1807. Anaya H., Armando, Peter Mathews, and Stanley Guenter. 2003. Hallazgo de una caja de madera con inscripciones en Tabasco. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):4-5. 1808. May, S. W. 2005. Masterworks In Wood: A Contextual Study of Spanish Colonial Baroque Sacred Sculpture of Antigua, Guatemala. M.A. thesis, California State University, Dominguez Hills. 106 leaves. 1809. Morehart, Christopher T., David L. Lentz, and Keith M. Prufer. 2005. Wood of the gods: the ritual use of pine (Pinus spp.) by the ancient lowland Maya. Latin American Antiquity 16(3):255-274. 1810. Scott, Mary K. 2008. Rethinking the 'Art' In Artesania: Contemporary Woodcarving in the Puuc Region of Yucatan, Mexico. M.A. thesis, Northern Illinois University. 371 leaves. Masks 1811. Brown, Joel E. 2008. Masks of Guatemalan Traditional Dances. Longboat Key, FL: Joel E. Brown. 651 p. 1812. Brown, Joel E. 2009. Guatemalan Masks: A Portfolio. Longboat Key, FL: Joel E. Brown. 107 p. 1813. Pieper, Jim. 2006. Guatemala's Masks and Drama. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 283 p. 1814. Stewart, Tamara. 2008. Maya marketplace discovered in the Yucatan. American Archaeology 12(1):7.

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4 INTELLECTUAL LIFE einer um 208 Jahre verschobenen Mayachronologie. Norderstedt: Books on Demand GmbH. 264 p.

1815. Guoron Ajquijay, Pedro. 2001. Ciencia y tecnología maya. Guatemala: Editorial Saqil Tzij. 113 p. Introductory study on Maya science, with emphasis on mathematics, agriculture, medicine, architecture, law, politics, psychology, and calendrics.

1825. King, Timothy D. 2005. The Constellation System of the Ancient Maya. Doctoral dissertation, Stanford University. 189 leaves.

ASTRONOMY 1816. Aldana, Gerardo V. 2001. Oracular Science: Uncertainty in the History of Maya Astronomy, 500-1600. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 443 leaves. Author offers an historical contextualization of a series of astronomical practices beginning in the Early Classic period and ending during the early colonial period. Considered are how the kings of Tikal, Palenque, and Copán used astronomy for political and religious purposes, as well as the blending of Teotihuacáno and Maya cultures at Tikal, the evidence for the Maya star wars, demonstrate an astronumerology developed under the direction of Palenque royalty, and the contrast between public and private science in Late Classic Copán.

1826. Love, Bruce. 2002. Maya scorpion constellation may not be Scorpius. Mexicon 24(3):45-46. Author argues that the constellation in the skies of eastern Yucatan known by the modern Maya as Sina'an Eék', or Scorpion Constellation, is not the constellation commonly referred to as Scorpius in the sign of Scorpio of the zodiac. 1827. Pasztory, Emilia, ed. 2007. Archaeoastronomy in Archaeology and Ethnography. International Series, 1647. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. Contents include: Stanislaw Iwaniszewski, Glyph E and D in the Lunar Series from Quirigua, Guatemala, and Copan, Honduras (pp. 149160).

1817. Aldana, Gerardo V. 2003. K’uk’ulkan at Mayapán: Venus and Postclassic Maya statecraft. Journal for the History of Astronomy 34:33-51.

1828. Peck, Douglas T. 2001. Development of celestial navigation by the ancient Maya. Journal of Navigation 54(1):145149.

1818. Aldana, Gerardo. 2008-2008. Glyph G and the Yohualteuctin: recovering the Mesoamerican practice of time keeping and nightly astrology. Archaeoastronomy: The Journal of Astronomy in Culture 21:59-75.

1829. Romano, G. 2001. The moon in the Classic Maya world. Earth, Moon, and Planets 85-86(1-3):557-560.

1819. Aveni, Anthony F. 2001. Skywatchers. rev. ed. Austin: University of Texas Press. 411 p. A synthesis of ancient American astronomy considers Mesoamerican time and calendrical systems, religion, astrology, and scientific astronomy; revised edition of Skywatchers of Ancient Mexico (1980).

1830. Ruggles, Clive, and Gary Urton, eds. 2007. Skywatching in the Ancient World: New Perspectives in Cultural Astronomy. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. Contents include: Harvey M. Bricker, and Victoria R. Bricker, When was the Dresden Codex Venus table efficacious? (pp. 95-120); Dennis Tedlock, and Barbara Tedlock, Moon Woman meets the stars: a new reading of the lunar almanacs in the Dresden Codex (pp. 121-156).

1820. Aveni, Anthony F. 2003. Seeking the sidereal: observable planetary stations and the ancient Maya record. Journal for the History of Astronomy 34:145-161.

CALENDAR 1831. Barrios, Carlos. 2004. El libro de destino; ch’umilal wuj; astrología maya. Guatemala: Cholsamaj. 328 p.

1821. Aviña Cerecer, Gustavo. 2001. La fuerza del rayo dentro del proceso cósmico de los mayas en Mesoamérica y el México contemporáneo. Estudios de cultura maya 21:195215.

1832. Bestard Vásquez, Joaquín. 2003. El Mundo mágico de los mayas. Mérida: Maldonado Editores del Mayas. 178 p. On Mayan-Yucatecan culture, include religion, customs, symbols, etc. organized into 20 chapters in relation to the Mayan Calendar,

1822. Beck, William E., Maya Cclipses: Modern Astronomical Data, the Triple Tritos and the Double-Tzolkin. M.A., University of Central Florida. 111 leaves.

1833. Brauer, Teutomar. 2007. A new approach for systemizing the dates in the Maya lunar series. Mexicon 24(4):99-102.

1823. Bricker, Victoria R., and Harvey M. Bricker. 20012002. The astronomical significance of 9.11.0.0.0 at Palenque and Copán. PARI Journal 2(4)-3(1):24-27.

1834. Calendario Maya. Mexico: Fundación Centro Cultural y Asistencia Maya, 2001. 40 p.

1824. Fuls, Andreas. 2007. Astronomische Datierung der klassischen Mayakultur (500 - 1100 n. Chr.): Implikationen 101

general guide to the history, structure and use of the Maya calendar.

1835. Calleman, Carl J. 2001. Solving the Greatest Mystery of Our Times: The Mayan Calendar. Coral Springs, FL: Garev Publishing International. 260 p.

1852. Weeks, John M., Frauke Sachse, and Christian M. Prager. 2009. Maya Daykeeping: Three Calendars From Highland Guatemala. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 221 p. Transcription and English language translation of three divinatory calendars (1685, 1722, 1854) from the western highlands of Guatemala; includes: Robert Burkitt, Notes on Highland Maya Calendars (pp. 162-175).

1836. Clark, John E., and Arlene Colman. 2008. Time reckoning and memorials in Mesoamerica. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 18(1):93-99. 1837. Edgerton, Samuel Y. 2001. Converting the Maya calendar. Institute for Maya Studies Newsletter 30(10):3. 1838. Edgerton, Samuel Y. 2001. The Maya calendar round. Institute for Maya Studies Newsletter 30(11):3.

MATHEMATICS 1853. Cauty, André. 2002. Action/interactions à l’oeuvre dans la cogenèse maya des nombres, des numérations et du comput. Faits de Langues 20:95-126, 258.

1839. Fuls, Andreas. 2007. The calculation of the lunar series on Classic Maya monuments. Ancient Mesoamerica 18(2):273-282.

1854. Cauty, André. 2002. Le type protracif des numérations de l’aire maya. Faits de Langues 20: 85-93, 257-258.

1840. Guoron Ajquijay, Pedro. 2003. Choltun: ochenta años calendario en cinco mil doscientos años de historia maya. Guatemala: Editorial Popol Wuj. 286 p. A list of the days of the Mayan calendar from 1934 to 2012, including the dates in Mayan orthography.

1855. Cauty, André, Jean-Michel Hoppan, and Eric Trelut. 2001. Numération et action: le cas des numérations mayas: sens action. Journal des Anthropologues 85-86:115-155. Comparative study of the development and usage of Maya numerations.

1841. Iwaniszewski, Stanislaw. 2001. Ideas sobre el tiempo en la sociedad maya. Arqueología mexicana 8(47):52-55.

1856. Diáz Diáz, Ruy. 2002. Consideraciones sobre la arithmética maya. Tegucigalpa: Alin Editora. 62 p.

1842. Iwaniszewski, Stanislaw. 2001. Los ciclos en el desarrollo sociocultural en Mesoamérica: estudios de caso en las tierras bajas maya. Estudios de cultura maya 21:91-102.

1857. Mucía Batz, José. 2001. Ajlab matemática vigesimal maya. Patzún, Chimaltenango, Guatemala: Editorial Saqb'e. 157 p. Symbolism of numbers; with Nik, filosofía de los numeros mayas; un aporte al rescate de la cultura maya; Jun raqan: la cosmovisón y los números mayas, el principio del movimiento; Ajil: matemática vigesimal maya.

1843. Jiménez Camposeco, Trinidad M. 2003. Heb’ ya’ q’inale; calendario maya popti’: la vida en el calendario. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala. 534 p. The Maya calendar from 1927 through 2021.

1858. Noj, Mario R. 2001. Matemática maya: guía para el aprendizaje de la escritura de los números mayas de 0 a 1000. Guatemala: Nojib’sa. 52 p.

1844. Lamb, Weldon W. 2002. The Maya Month Names. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 471 leaves. An analysis of hieroglyphic and ethnographic Maya month names.

1859. Ospina de la Roche, Arturo. 2001. El legado maya: los aportes de un pueblo sorprendente a las matemáticas y la astronomía. Bogotá, Colombia: Editorial Planeta Colombiana. 176 p.

1845. Noj, Mario R. 2001. Manual de interpretación del calendario maya; versión infantil. Guatemala: Nojb’sa. 52 p. 1846. Paz, Marco de, and Marcos de Paz. 2001. Calendario maya; el camino infinito del tiempo. 4 ed. Guatemala: Edición Gran Jaguar. 86 p.

HIEROGLYPHIC WRITING Introductions to Maya Writing 1860. Ayala Falcón, Maricela. 2001. Métodos para estudiar la escritura Maya. Arqueología mexicana 8(48):54-57.

1847. Rice, Prudence M. 2007. Maya Calendar Origins: Monuments, Myth History, and the Materialization of Time. Austin: University of Texas Press. 268 p.

1861. Coe, Michael D. 2003. Maya moji kaidoku. Osaka: Sogensha. 445 p. Translation of Coe’s Breaking the Maya Code from English to Japanese by Mari Takai, Sawako Tokue, and Yoshio Masuda.

1848. Rice, Prudence M. 2008. Time, power, and the Maya. Latin American Antiquity 19(3):275-298.

1862. Coe, Michael D. and Mark van Stone. 2001. Reading the Maya Glyphs. London; New York: Thames and Hudson. 176 p. Excellent introductory treatment of the decipherment of Maya hiereoglyphic script.

1849. Rose, Lynn E. 2001. The Maya Venus numbers. Estudios de cultura maya 21:113-133. 1850. Stray, Geoff. 2007. The Mayan and Other Ancient Calendars. New York: Walker. 58 p.

1863. Herring, Adam. 2005. Art and Writing in the Maya Cities, AD 600-800: A Poetics of Line. New York: Cambridge University Press. 362 p. Author examines an important aspect of the visual cultures of the ancient Maya in southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, and Honduras. During a critical period of

1851. Usemos nuestro calendario maya. Guatemala: Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala, 2001. 66 p. A 102

cultural evolution, artistic production changed significantly, as calligraphy became an increasingly important formal element in Maya aesthetics and was used extensively in monumental building, sculptural programs and small-scale utilitarian objects.

Catalogs 1875. Macri, Martha J., and Matthew G. Looper. 2003. The New Catalog of Maya Hieroglyphs: Volume One. The Classic Period Inscriptions. Civilization of the American Indian Series, 247. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 375 p. Comprehensive guidebook to all known hieroglyphic symbols of the Classic Maya script.

1864. López de la Rosa, Edmundo, and Patricia Martel. 2001. La escritura en uooh: una propuesta metodológica para el estudio de la escritura prehispánica maya-yucateca. México, D.F.: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Antropológicas. 187 p.

1876. Montgomery, John. 2002. Dictionary of Maya Hieroglyphs. New York: Hippocrene Books. 425 p. Includes over 1,200 glyphs or glyph compounds with phonetic spellings, Maya equivalents, parts of speech, and meaning. Indexes are cross-referenced by language (Maya, English, Spanish), subject, grammatical function, visual elements, and T-numbers.

1865. Martin, Simon. 2008. Hieroglyphics, history and politics: deciphering the ancient Maya. Current World Archaeology 30: 28-39. 1866. Mathews, Peter. 2001. Maya epigraphy. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 2, pp. 855-858. Santa Barbara: ABC-Clio.

1868. Montgomery, John. 2004. Deciphering Maya hieroglyphs. American Archaeology 8(2):18-22. Albuquerque.

Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic Inscriptions 1877. Stuart, David, and Ian Graham. 2003. Piedras Negras. Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic Inscriptions 9(1). Cambridge, MA: Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University. The first of a projected five volumes on the monuments of Piedras Negras, Guatemala. The Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic Inscriptions is an ambitious project to publish all known Maya inscriptions with excellent photography and line drawings. Volumes published to date include: 1. Introduction; 2(1-3). Naranjo, Chunhuitz, Xunantunich, Ixkún, Ucanal, Ixtutz; 3(1-3). Yaxchilan; 4(1-3). Itzimte, Pixoy, Tzum, Uxmal, Xcalumkin; 5(1-3). Xultún, La Honradez, Uaxactún; 6(1-3), 9(2). Toniná; 7(1). Seibal; 8(1). Coba; 9(1). Piedras Negras.

1869. Stuart, David. 2007. A Brief Introduction to Maya Writing. Austin: University Texas. 158 p. A source book for the 31st Maya Meetings in Austin, Texas.

Specialized Studies 1878. Ayala Falcon, Maricela. 2004. Escritura maya. Arqueología mexicana 12(70):36-39.

1870. Tanaka, Yuki. 2008. A Comparative Study of Maya Hieroglyphic Writing and Japanese Orthography in the Quirigua Hieroglyphic Corpus. M.A. thesis, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 185 leaves.

1879. Beliaev, Dmitri, and Albert Davlevtshin. 2002-2003. Possible medio-passive suffix –K’-A(J) in the Maya script. PARI Journal 3(2-3):12.

1867. Montgomery, John. 2001. How to Read Maya Hieroglyphs. New York: Hippocrene Books. 360 p. "This comprehensive introductory course teaches the structure and use of the now almost fully recovered script, and serves as a reference to its features and symbols. More than 350 glyphic illustrations appear, along with color photographs of hieroglyphs in their original context."

1880. Berlin-Neubart, Heinrich. 2008. El texto del sarcófago y su relación con otros textos palencanos. Estudios de cultura maya 31: 195-214.

1871. Tokovinine, Alexandre A. 2008. The Power of Place: Political Landscape and Identity in Classic Maya Inscriptions, Imagery, and Architecture. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 397 leaves.

1881. Bernal Romero, Guillermo. 2001. Glifos y representaciones mayas del mundo subterráneo. Arqueología mexicana 8(48):42-47.

1872. Tremblay, Adrienne M. 2007. Building the Sacred: A Study of Proper Names of Monuments and Structures in Classic Maya Inscriptions. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 623 leaves.

1882. Bricker, Victoria R. 2007. Literary continuities across the transformation from Maya hieroglyphic to alphabet writing. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 151(1): 27-42.

1873. Wanyerka, Phillip J. 2009. Classic Maya Political Organization: Epigraphic Evidence of Hierarchical Organization in the Southern Maya Mountains Region of Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 825 leaves.

1883. Chase, Arlen F., Diane Z. Chase, and Rafael Cobos. 2008. Jeroglíficos y arqueología maya: ¿colusión o colisión? Mayab 20: 5-22. 1884. Chinchilla Mazariegos, Oswaldo. 2006. A Reading for the "Earth-Star" Verb in Ancient Maya Writing. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing, 56. Bernardsville, NC: Center for Maya Research. 25 p.

Bibliography 1874. Houston, Stephen D., and Zachary Nelson. 2001. A Thematic Bibliography of Ancient Maya Writing. Provo, UT: Research Press; Institute for the Study and Preservation of Ancient Religious Texts, Brigham Young University. 250 p. Unannotated bibliography arranged by Discovery, Nature of Maya Writing, Principles of Decipherment, Time, History, Supernaturals, Objects, Sites, Mayan languages and people.

1885. Eberl, Markus, and Victoria R. Bricker. 2004. Unwinding the Rubber Ball: The Glyphic Expression Nahb’ as a Numeral Classifier For “Handspan.” Research Reports on 103

1899. Kinsman, Hutch. 2009. Grammar in the script: CVC and non CVC/derived transitive verb constructions. The Codex 17(1-2):45-57.

Ancient Maya Writing, 55. Bernardsville, NC: Center for Maya Research. 1886. Grana-Behrens, Daniel. 2006. Emblem glyphs and political organization in northwestern Yucatan in the Classic period (A.D. 300-1000). Ancient Mesoamerica 17(1):105-124.

1900. Kinsman, Hutch. 2009. Grammar in the script: literary and visula devices in grammatical construction. The Codex 17 (3):35-51.

1887. Grube, Nikolai. 2002. The creation of Maya history. Discovery 16(1):45-49. See also Nikolai Grube, and Maria Gaida, Die Maya: Schrift und Kunst. (Berlin: SMB-DuMont, 2006. 239 p.).

1901. Kinsman, Hutch. 2010. Nouns and Statives. The Codex 18(1-2): 25-35. 1902. Kinsman, Hutch. 2007. Grammar in the script. Morphemes: CVC's, affixes, and clitics. The Codex 16(1-2): 29-38.

1888. Grube, Nikolai, and Simon Martin. 2001. The coming of kings: writing and dynastic kingship in the Maya area between the Late Preclassic and the Early Classic. In The Proceedings of the Maya Hieroglyphic Workshop, March 1011, 2001, University of Texas at Austin. Phil Wanyerka, ed. pp. 1-92. Austin: Department of Art, University of Texas at Austin.

1903. Knowlton, Timothy. 2001. Diphrastic kennings in Mayan hieroglyphic literature. Mexicon 24(1):9-14. Author demonstrates that diphrastic kennings are a poetic device in Classic Maya texts. 1904. Lacadena García-Gallo, Alfonso. 2002. Nuevas evidencias para la lectura de T158. Mayab 15:41-47.

1889. Grube, Nikolai, Simon Martin, and Marc Zender. 2002. Palenque and its neighbors. In The Proceedings of the Maya Hieroglyphic Workshop, March 9-10, 2002, University of Texas at Austin. Phil Wanyerka, ed. pp. 1-119. Austin: Department of Art, University of Texas at Austin.

1905. Lacadena García-Gallo,Alfonso. 2008. El título lakam: evidencia epigráfica sobre la organización tributary y militar interna de los reinos mayas del Clásico. Mayab 20: 23-44.

1890. Harris, John F. 2007. The glyph column: Lakamtuun. The Codex 16(1-2): 39-59.

1906. Le Fort, Geneviève. 2003. A Classical Maya vase: and what do the glyphs have to say? Mexicon 25(4):90-92.

1891. Harris, John. 2006. Maya rulers/shamans in Maya inscriptions. The Codex 14(3):34-43. 1892. Houston, Stephen D. 2003. Last writing: script obsolescence in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Mesoamerica. Comparative Studies in Society and History 45(3):430-479.

1907. Macri, Martha J., and Matthew G. Looper. 2003. Nahua in ancient Mesoamerica: evidence from Maya inscriptions. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(2):285-297. Authors examine Nahua words found in Maya codices and monumental texts, and suggest Mexican influence may have come by way of Nahuaspeakers settled in the Gulf region.

1893. Hruby, Zachary X. 2002. Evidence for linguistic conservatism in the hieroglyphic script of the central Petén. Mayab 15:49-59.

1908. Martin, Simon. 2001. Una ventana al pasado: cómo las inscripciones mayas esclarecen la historia, la arqueología y el arte. Arqueología mexicana 8(48):38-41.

1894. Hull, Kerry, Michael D. Carrasco, and Robert Wald. 2009. The first-person singular independent pronoun in Classic Ch'olan. Mexicon 31(2):36-43.

1909. Martin, Simon, and Nikolai Grube. 2002. Crónica de los reyes y reinas mayas: la primera historia de las dinastías mayas. Mexico: Editorial Planeta Mexicana. 240 p. Spanish translation of Chronicle of the Maya Kings and Queens (London, 2000); see also Maya Uralkodók; Krónikája az ösi maja királyságok feltárása. Móra Könyvkiado, 2010. 240 p. Hungarian translation of Chronicle of the Maya Kings and Queens (London, 2000).

1895. Johnson, Scott A. J. 2010. Glyph F of the Supplementary Series: TI' HU'N, Mouth of the Book. PARI Journal 10(3):11-19. 1896. Johnston, Kevin J. 2001. Broken fingers: Classic Maya scribe capture and polity consolidation. Antiquity 75(288):373-381. This paper examines the operation of integrative strategies as exemplified by a distinctive and previously undocumented form of competitive display practiced by the southern lowland Classic Maya: the capture in battle, public disfigurement and execution of scribes in the service of enemy royalty. Maya scribe capture illustrates how in weakly centralized polities, competitive display serves as a fission-dampening integrative mechanism.

1910. Mora-Marin, David F. 2003. The origin of Mayan syllabograms and orthographic conventions. Written Langauge and Literacy 6(2):193-238. 1911. Mora-Marin, David F. 2004. The Grammar, Orthography, Content, and Social Context of Late Preclassic Mayan Portable Texts. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 754 leaves.

1897. Kinsman, Hutch. 2006-2007. Numeral classifiers. The Codex 15(1-2):8-20.

1912. Mora-Marin, David F. 2010. A review of recent work on the decipherment of Epi-Olmec hieroglyphic writing. Mexicon 32(1-2):31-37.

1898. Kinsman, Hutch. 2008. Grammar in the script: passives, mediopassives, and antipassives. The Codex 16(3): 28-37.

1913. Skidmore, Joel. 2001. Recent findings in Maya history. PARI Journal 2(1):13. 104

1927. Wichmann, Søren. 2004. The Linguistics of Maya Writing. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. 452 p. Contents include: Søren Wichmann, The linguistic epigraphy of Maya writing: recent advances and questions for future research (pp. 1-12); Zachary X. Hruby, and Mark B. Child, Chontal linguistic influence in ancient Maya writing: intransitive positional verbal affixation (pp. 13-26); Robert F. Wald, The languages of the Dresden Codex: legacy of the Classic Maya (pp. 27-60); Nikolai Grube, The orthographic distinction between velar and glottal spirants in Maya hieroglyphic writing (pp. 61-82); Stephen Houston, David Stuart, and John Robertson, Disharmony in Maya hieroglyphic writing: linguistic change and continuity in Classic society (pp. 83-99); Alfonso Lacadena, and Søren Wichmann, On the representation of the glottal stop in Maya writing (pp. 100-164); Alfonso Lacadena, Passive voice in Classic Mayan texts: CV-h-C-aj and -n-aj constructions (pp. 165-194); Marc Zender, On the morphology of intimate possession in Mayan languages and Classic Mayan glyphic nouns (pp. 195-210); Robert F. Wald, Telling time in ClassicCh'olan and Acalan-Chontal narrative: the linguistic basis of some temporal discourse patterns in Maya hieroglyphic and Acalan-Chontal texts (pp. 211-258); John Robertson, Stephen Houston and David Stuart, Tense and aspect in Maya hieroglyphic script (pp. 259-290); Barbara MacLeod, A world in a grain of sand: transitive perfect verbs in the Classic Maya script (pp. 291-326); Søren Wichmann, The grammar of the half-period glyph (pp. 327-338); David F. Mora-Marín, The preferred argument structure of Classic lowland Mayan texts (pp. 339-364); Mareike Sattler, Ch'olti: an analysis of the Arte de la lengua Ch'olti by Fray Francisco Morán (pp. 365-406).

1914. Stuart, David. 2001. Lectura y escritura en la corte Maya. Arqueología mexicana 8(48):48-53. 1915. Zender, Marc. 2006. Teasing the turtle from its shell: AHK and MAHK in Maya writing. PARI Journal 6(3):1-14. Phoneticism 1916. Davoust, Michel. 2002. L’écriture maya comme système hiéroglyphique logo-syllabique. Faits de Langues 20:127-144, 258-259. 1917. Houston, Stephen D., John Robertson, and David Stuart. 2001. More on the language of Classic Maya inscriptions. Current Anthropology 42(4):558-559. Refutation of criticism by Nikolai Grube (Current Anthropology 41:837) of an earlier essay (Current Anthropology 41:321-356) on the language of Classic Maya inscriptions. 1918. Houston, Stephen, John Robertson, and David Stuart. 2001. Quality and Quantity in Glyphic Nouns and Adjectives; Calidad y Cantidad en Sustantivos y Adjetivos Glíficos. Reports on Ancient Maya Writing, 47. Washington, DC: Center for Maya Research Research. 1919. Hruby, Zachary X., and John S. Robertson. 2001. Evidence for Language Change in Ancient Maya Writing: A Case Study of the Verb tzutz; Pruebas del cambio de lenguaje en la escritura maya antigua: Un estudio de caso del verbo tzutz. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing, 50. Washington, DC: Center for Maya Research. 1920. Mora-Marín, David F. 2008. Full phonetic complementation, semantic classifiers, and semantic determinatives in ancient Mayan hieroglyphic writing. Ancient Mesoamerica 19(2): 195-214.

Decipherments 1928. Calvin, Inga E. 2004. Maya Hieroglyphics Study Guide. Crystal River, FL: Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc. 57 p. Illustrated WWW-based guide with sections devoted to Calendrics, Verbs, Nouns, Titles, Emblems Glyphs and Deities, and Pottery Texts, as well as Royal Maya Dynasties of the Classic Period, including Calakmul, Caracol, Copán, Dos Pilas, Naranjo, Palenque, Piedras Negras, Quiriguá, Tikal, Toniná, Yaxchilan. http://www.famsi.org/mayawriting/calvin/index.html.

1921. Sanz González, Mariano. 2001. Breve análisis del clítico ch'orti' -ix; una aportación al debate epigráfico sobre tiempo-aspecto en las inscripciones mayas clásicos. Mayab 14:67-70. 1922. Sanz González, Mariano. 2001. Tiempo y aspecto en las inscripciones mayas clásicos a través de textos coloniales y etnográficos. Diploma de Estudios Advanzados, Universidad Complutense de Madrid.

1929. Grube, Nikolai. 2001. Los nombres de los gobernantes mayas. Arqueología mexicana 9(50):72-77.

1923. Sanz González, Mariano. 2007. Apuntes y reflexiones sobre la catagoría de tiempo en las inscripciones mayas. Mayab 19: 123-138.

1930. Harris, John F. 2001. Inscribed Maya monuments in the Mesoamerican Gallery of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology: VI. Caracol Altar 13. The Codex 9(1-2):45-58.

1924. Sheseña, Alejandro. 2007. ¿Glifo maya para "Siete Cuevas"? Indiana 24:361-400.

1931. Harris, John F. 2001. Inscribed Maya monuments in the Mesoamerican Gallery of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology: VII. Caracol Stela 17 and Altar 10. The Codex 9(3):41-54.

1925. Wichmann, Søren. 2002. Hieroglyphic Evidence for the Historical Configuration of Eastern Ch’olan; Pruebas jeroglíficas para la configuración histórica del Ch’olan oriental. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing, 51. Washington, DC: Center for Maya Research. 35 p.

1932. Harris, John F. 2001. The saga of Nuun Ujol Chaak, Tikal's 25th ruler and father of Ruler A. The Codex 10(12):50-67.

1926. Wichmann, Søren. 2002. Questioning the grid: a new distinction among the syllabic signs of the Mayan writing system. Mexicon 24(5):98-106. Author presents a distributional analysis of vowel-only signs in the Maya script.

1933. Harris, John F. 2003. Inscribed Maya objects in the Mesoamerican Gallery of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology: VIII. Jadeite 105

Linda Schele, Lords of Palenque: the glyphic evidence (pp. 368-393); Peter Mathews, Notes on the inscriptions on the back of Dos Pilas Stela 8 (pp. 394-416); Paul Schellhas, Representation of deities of the Maya manuscripts (pp. 419424); Heinrich Berlin, The Palenque triad (pp. 425-432); Michael D. Coe, Supernatural patrons of Maya scribes and artists (pp. 433-448); Stephen Houston, and David S. Stuart, The Way glyph: evidence for co-essences among the Classic Maya (pp. 449-462); Eduard Seler, Antiquities of Guatemala (pp. 465-469); Peter Mathews, The glyphs from the ear ornaments from tomb A-1/1 (pp. 470-473); David Stuart, Hieroglyphs on Maya vessels (pp. 474-485); Nikolai Grube, Die Errichtung von Stelen: Entzifferung einer Verbhieroglyphe auf monumenten der klassischen Mayakultur (pp. 486-504).

jaguar head from Piedras Negras Burial 5. The Codex 11(12):26-42. 1934. Houston, Stephen, Oswaldo C. Mazariegos, and David Stuart, eds. 2001. The Decipherment of Ancient Maya Writing. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 551 p. Contents include: Peter Martyr d'Anghiera, De Orbe Novo Decades, fourth decade (pp. 25-26); Tomás López Medel, Meditación sobre las Indias (pp. 27-28); Diego de Landa, Relación de las cosas de Yucatán (pp. 29-34); Gaspar A. Chi, Relaciones geográficas de Yucatán (pp. 35-38); Pedro Sánchez de Aguilar, Informe contra idolorum cultures del obispado de Yucatán (pp. 39-40); Andrés de Avendaño y Loyola, Relación de las dos entradas que hize a la conversion de los gentiles Itzáex y Cehaches (pp. 41-42); Isagoge histórico-apologética de las Indias Occidentales y especial de la Provincia de San Vincente de Chiapa y Guatemala de la Orden de Predicadores (pp. 43-44); Constantine S. Rafinesque-Schmaltz, First letter to Mr. Champollion, on the graphic systems of America, and the glyphs of Otolum or Palenque, in Central America (pp. 45-47); Constantine S. Rafinesque-Schmaltz, Second letter to Mr. Champollion, on the graphic systems of America, and the glyphs of Otolum or Palenque, in Central America (pp. 4853); James H. McCulloh, Researches, philosophical and antiquarian, concerning the aboriginal history of America (pp. 54-59); Charles E. Brasseur de Bourbourg, Lettre à M. Léon de Rosny (pp. 60-67); Charles Rau, The Palenque tablet in the United States National Museum (pp. 68-76); Léon L. Prunol de Rosny, Essai sur le d'échiffrement de l'écriture hiératique de L'Amérique Centrale (pp. 77-88); Daniel G. Brinton, A primer of Maya hieroglyphics (pp. 89-94); Philipp J. J. Valentini, The Landa alphabet: A Spanish fabrication (pp. 97112); Cyrus Thomas, Key to the Maya hieroglyphics (pp. 113117); Eduard Seler, Does there really exist a phonetic key to the Maya hieroglyphic writing? (pp. 118-123); Cyrus Thomas, Is the Maya hieroglyphic writing phonetic? (pp. 124-126); J. Eric S. Thompson, The fish as a Maya symbol for counting and further discussion of directional glyphs (pp. 127-143); Yuri V. Knorozov, New data on the Maya written language (pp. 144-152); Hermann Beyer, The analysis of the Maya hieroglyphics (pp. 156-167); Paul Hermann Beyer, Studies on the inscriptions of Chichén Itzá (pp. 168-172); Schellhas, Die Entzifferung der Mayahieroglyphen: ein unlösbares Problem? (pp. 173-179); J. Eric S. Thompson, The rise and fall of Maya civilization (pp. 180-188); Floyd G. Lounsbury, Glyphic substitutions: homophonic and synonymic (pp. 189-193); David Stuart, Ten phonetic syllables (pp. 194-206); Juan Pío Pérez, Antigua cronología yucateca (pp. 210-223); Ernst Förstemann, The inscriptions on the cross of Palenque (pp. 224-233); Joseph T. Goodman, Maya dates (pp. 234-238); Sylvanus G. Morley, Archaeology (pp. 239-240); John E. Teeple, Maya inscriptions: VI. The lunar calendar and its relation to Maya history (pp. 241-254); Heinrich Berlin, Vericuetos mayas(pp. 255-266); Charles P. Bowditch, Notes on the report of Teobert Maler in Memoirs of the Peabody Museum, vol. II, no, 1 (pp. 270-272); Herbert J. Spinden, Portraiture in Central American art (pp. 273-281); Jean Genet, Revue des Études Mayas-Quichés (pp. 282-298); Heinrich Berlin, El glifo 'emblema en las inscripciones mayas, and Glifos nominales en el sarcófago de Palenque: un ensayo (pp. 299-311); Tatiana Proskouriakoff, Historical implications of a pattern of dates at Piedras Negras, Guatemala and portraits of women in Maya art (pp. 312-357); David H. Kelley, Kakupacal and the Itzas (pp. 358-367); Peter Mathews, and

1935. Jackson, Sarah, and David Stuart. 2001. The Aj K’uhun title: deciphering a Classic Maya term of rank. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):217-228. Discussion of the meaning and significance of the God C title, Ajk’uhulhun, found in numerous hieroglyphic texts and referring to junior members of the royal court. 1936. Stuart, David. 2001. A Reading of the Completion Hand as tzutz; una lectura del signo de mano-terminación como tzutz. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing, 49. Washington, DC: Center for Maya Research. 1937. Stuart, George E. 2001. An Inscribed Shell Drinking Vessel From the Maya Lowlands; Un recipiente para beber, de concha, con inscripciones, proveniente de las tierras bajas mayas. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing, 48. Washington, DC: Center for Maya Research. 1938. Stuart, George E. 2001. Historia y resultados del desciframiento de la escritura jeoglífica maya. Arqueología mexicana 8(48):32-37. 1939. Unprovenanced stone sphere with Maya glyphs. Méxicon 23(5):112-114, 2001. Maya Hieroglyphic Workshop 1940. Grube, Nikolai, Simon Martin, Terrence Kaufman, and John S. Justeson. 2001. The Proceedings of the Maya Hieroglyphic Workshop: March 10-11, 2001, University of Texas at Austin: The Coming of Kings. Austin: University of Texas. 224 p. Proceedings of the Maya Hieroglyphic Weekend (March 10-11, 2001) at the University of Texas at Austin; Contents include: Part 1. Nikolai Grube and Simon Martin, The coming of kings: writing and dynastic kingship in the Maya area between the Late Preclassic and the Early Classic (pp. 1-92), and pt. 2, Terrence Kaufman and John Justeson, Epi-Olmec hieroglyphic writing and texts (pp. 93218). Electronic Resources 1941. Glyph Dwellers. Edited by Matthew G. Looper and Martha J. Macri, Glyph Dwellers is an occasional publication of the Maya Hieroglyphic Database Project of the University of California, Davis. Its purpose is to make available recent discoveries about ancient Maya culture, history, iconography, and Mayan historical linguistics. Reports, available at http://cougar.ucdavis.edu/ nas/Maya/glyph dwellers.html, include: 1. Matthew G. Looper, A Venus god as patron of 106

(http://www.wayeb.org/indexresources.htm) available unpublished or early documents that are of general interest for Maya research. The latest addition is an unpublished document by Karl Sapper who is writing on several villages in Yucatan. Other additions to the website (http://www.wayeb.org/ indexresources.htm) are two PDF documents (Spanish and English versions) containing the workshop book prepared for the European Maya Conference at Madrid in 2003. A third section (http://www. wayeb. org/ indexresources.htm) makes available docu-ments relating to the colonial history of the Maya area, including the relaciónes of Diego de Landa on northern Yucatan and Martín Alonso Tovilla on the Manché area.

Quiriguá (1997); 2. Martha J. Macri, A new Cholan complement clause at Palenque (1998); 3. Martha J. Macri, T683a and T683b: two words for “twenty” (1998); 4. Matthew G. Looper, A note on the carved bone from Copán Temple 11 (1998); 5. Matthew G. Looper, T540 as WINIK (1998); 6. Martha J. Macri, and Matthew G. Looper, A new interpretation of the ball compound (2000); 7. Matthew G. Looper, The quatrefoil T510cd as “cave” (2000); 8. Martha J. Macri, T855: a numeral classifier (1998); 9. Gabrielle Vail, Phonological variation in the Maya codices (2000); 10. Martha J. Macri, The jog sign as the day muluk (2000);11. Martha J. Macri, T536 Xo, from Nahuatl xochitl “flower” (2000); 12. Martha J. Macri, Mutal, a possible Mixe-Zoque toponym (2000); 13. Martha J. Macri, Another example of T757 as the day muluk (2001); 14. Matthew G. Looper, The inscription on Dumbarton Oaks jade B-157.MAJ (2001); 15. Matthew G. Looper, The 3-11-pih title in Classic Maya inscriptions (2002); 16. Matthew G. Looper, The “Manikin” glyph compound (T86:700) as a reference to headdresses (2003); 17. Matthew G. Looper, The meaning of the Maya flapstaff dance (2003).18. Matthew G. Looper, A “macaw face headband” dance on Site R Lintel 5 (2004).

PERFORMANCE ARTS Dance 1943. García Barrios, Ana, and Rogelio Valencia Rivera. 2007. El uso político del baile en el Clásico maya: el baile de K'awiil. Revista española de antropología americana 37(2): 22-38. 1944. Pinkus Rendón, Manuel Jesús. 2005. De la herencia a la enajenación: danzas y bailes “tradicionales” de Yucatán. México, UNAM: Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas, Coordinación Humanidades, (Cuadernos del Centro de Estudios Mayas, 33). 122 p. An ethnohistorical and cultural exploration of traditional dance in the Yucatan peninsula. Examined topics are placed under the following categories: "La Perspectiva Teórica. Folklorización e Identidad Étnica", "Manifestaciones Dancísticas en el Mundo Maya Prehispánico y en el Yucatán Colonial" and "Bailes Tradicionales y Folklóricos Contemporáneos"

1942. Wayeb Notes. Wayeb Notes, an online publication of the European Association of Mayanists; Asociación Europea de Mayistas, and “is intended to provide scholars with a platform for rapid and uncomplicated dissemination of research results from all subdisciplines of Maya studies.” Notes, available at http://www.wayeb.org/notes.htm, include:1. Sven Gronemeyer, Beobachtungen zur possessiven Morphologier von Glyphe F (2003); 2. Christain M. Prager, Zahlklassifikatoren in Hieroglyphen-Inschriften der Klassischen Maya-Kultur: Beobachtungen zu T87 (2003); 3. Agnes Cougnaud, Hal Green, Bea Koch, and Al Meador, The Dos Caobas stelae (2003); 4. Christian M. Prager, The month name wayeb’: a substitution pattern (2003); 5. Elisabeth Wagner, The female title prefix (2003); 6. Elisabeth Wagner, A parentage statement for Butz’ Chan (2003); 7. Pierre Robert Colas, Philip Reeder, and James Webster, Vessel with a Primary Standard Sequence in archaeological context in a cave of the Northern Vaca Plateau, Belize (2003); 8. Berthold Riese, Abkürzungen für Maya-Ruinenorte mit Inscriften (2004); 9. Harri Kettunen and Bon V. Davis, Snakes, centipedes, snakepedes, and centiserpents: conflation of liminal species in Maya iconography and ethnozoology (2004); 10. Elisabeth Wagner, Some thoughts on the composition of Murals 1 and 3 of Structure 1, La Sufricaya, El Petén, Guatemala (2004); 11. Luís Lopes and Albert Davletshin, The glyph for antler in the Mayan script (2004); 12. Erik Boot, Classic Maya plates identified with a rare vessel type spelled as ya-ja ji-b’I and ya-ja-la ji[b’i] (2004);13. Erik Boot, T299 split as the logographic sign for PA’ (2004);14. Sven Gronemeyer, A preliminary ruling sequence at Cobá, Quintana Roo (2004);15. David F. MoraMarín, A new sign with phonetic /no/ reading? (2004);16. Harri Kettunen, An old euphemism in new clothes: observations on a possible death difrasismo in Maya hieroglyphic writing (2005).

1945. Taube, Rhonda B. 2009. Dancing in the Altiplano: K'iche' Maya Culture in Motion in Contemporary Highland Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, San Diego. 275 leaves. Dance Drama 1946. Howell, Mark H. 2004. An Ethnoarchaeomusicological Investigation of Highland Guatemalan Maya Dance-Plays. Doctoral dissertation, City University of New York. 294 leaves. 1947. Hutcheson, Matthew F. M. 2004. Cultural Memory and the Dance-Dramas of Guatemala: History, Performance, and Identity Among the Achí Maya of Rabinal. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Buffalo. 523 leaves. “This study addresses the traditional dance-dramas of the highland Maya as a key expressive practice in the private formation and public articulation of Mayan identity, exploring the role these intercultural Spanish/Indigenous theater works have played in the reproduction and transformation of Mayan culture over time.” 1948. Looper, Matthew G. 2009. To Be Like Gods: Dance in Ancient Maya Civilizations. Austin: University of Texas Press. 276 p.

In “Wayeb Resources” (http://www.wayeb.org/index resources.htm) Wayeb is presenting PDF formatted documents including published as well as unpublished material. In the newly added section "Resources on Maya Research"

1949. Mace, Carroll E. 2008. Negritos de Rabinal y el juego del tun. Guatemala: Academia de Geografía e Historia de Guatemala 352 p.

107

1950. Pérez Suárez, Tomás. 2003. El pochó: una danza de carnaval en Tenosique, Tabasco. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):62-67.

the problem of spectacle among the classic Maya (pp.135158); Takeshi Inomata, Politics and theatricality in Maya society (pp. 187-222).

Dance of the Conquest 1951. Krystal, Matthew B. 2001. Resistance of Meaning: Masking in 'The Dance of the Conquest' of Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 407 leaves.

1961. Jansen, Maarten, and Gabina A. Perez Jimenez. 2007. Encounter with the Plumed Serpent: Drama and Power in the Heart of Mesoamerica. Boulder: University of Colorado Press. 395 p.

1952. Thompson, Charles D. 2001. Masked identities: Dance of the Conquest and layered histories of the Maya. Journal of Latin American Lore 21(1):79-107.

1962. Laughlin, Robert M. 2008. Monkey Business Theatre. Austin: University of Texas Press. 315 p. 1963. Underiner, Tamara L. 2004. Contemporary Theatre in Mayan Mexico: Death-Defying Acts. Austin: University of Texas Press. 228 p. Mayan theatre is a flourishing cultural institution in southern Mexico. Part of a larger movement to define Mayan self-identity and reclaim a Mayan cultural heritage, theatre in Mayan languages has both reflected on and contributed to a growing awareness of Mayans as contemporary cultural and political players in Mexico and on the world's stage.

Dance of the Deer 1953. Doctolero, Jaime. 2002. La danza del venado: acercamiento al mundo q'eqchi'. Guatemala: Centro Bartolomé de Las Casas. 58 p. Study of an indigenous communal dance and its adaptation to Roman Catholic beliefs and practices. 1954. Janssens, Bert, and Ruud van Akkeren. 2003. El baile del venado de Rabinal; xajooj keej. Rabinal, Baja Verapaz, Guatemala: Museo Comunitario Rabinal Chi. 209 p. Study of the ceremonial Deer Dance, including origins of the dance, historical perspectives, and accompanying texts. Music 1955. Enriquez, Lucero. 2008. La música en la Nueva España. Arqueología 16(94): 52-59. 1956. Gómez G., Luis A. 2008. Los instrumentos musicales prehispánicos; clasificación general y significado. Arqueología 16(94): 38-46. 1957. Navarrete Pellicer, Sergio. 2005. Maya Achí Marimba Music in Guatemala. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. 320 p. The music of the marimba serves not only as a form of entertainment but also as a form of communication, a vehicle for memory, and an articulation of cultural identity. Theater 1958. Barrera Vásquez, Alfredo, Leopoldo Peniche Vallado, and Alejandro Cerver Andrade. 2009. El teatro en Yucatán. Mérida: Secretaria de Education del Gobierno del Estado de Yucatán; Biblioteca Básica de Yucatán. 129 p. Ofrece una mirada más allá del publico y el escenario desde sus inicios en la cultura Maya, pasando por el origen y desarrollo del teatro regional, hasta su situación a finales de los anos setenta del siglo xx. Todo esto a través de los ensayos de Alfredo Barrera Vasquez, El teatro y la danza entre los antiguos mayas; Alejandro Cervera Andrade, El teatro regional en Yucatán y Leopoldo Peniche Vallado, Historia del teatro y de la literatura dramática. 1959. Inomata, Takeshi. 2006. Plazas, performers, and spectators: political theatres of the Classic Maya. Current Anthropology 47(5): 805-842. 1960. Inomata, Takeshi, and Lawrence A. Coben. 2006. Archaeology of Performance: Theaters of Power, Community, and Politics. Lanham, MD: Altamira Press. 339 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Takeshi Inomata and Lawrence S. Coben, An invitation to the archaeological theater (pp. 11-43); Stephen D. Houston, Impersonation, dance, and 108

5 NEW DIRECTIONS nated a series of investigations focusing on the study of human societies through time in the Guatemalan highlands. Between 1973 and 1977, the research focused on the region of San Andrés Sajcabajá in the department of Quiché, a project initially under the direction of archaeologist Henri Lehmann. The Chichoy River Basin Project was a rescue effort in the area flooded by the construction of the Chichoy hydroelectric plant. Contents include: Alain Breton, Introduction (pp. 3-5); Alain Breton, Introducción (pp. 7-9); Richard G. Cooke, and Luis Alberto Sanchez H., Alain Ichon in Panama (1967-1970): a reappraisal of the Tonosi Research Project in the light of new research (pp. 13-26); Juan Antonio Valdés, El rescate del pasado histórico de Kaminaljuyú: los avances de la ciencia moderna (pp. 27-35); Marie-Charlotte Arnauld, El fín de un mundo? La Lagunita (El Quiché)(pp. 37-47); Marion Popenoe de Hatch, La cerámica del altiplano noroccidental de Guatemala: La Lagunita y la tradición cerámica Solano: algunas consideraciones (pp. 49-63); Claudia Wolley, Reconocimiento arqueológico en la región norte de Huehuetenango, El Quiché y Alta Verapaz, entre los ríos Ixcán y Chixoy (pp. 65-73); Stephen Rostain, A propos de meules et de molettes (El Chagüite, Guatemala)(pp. 75-81); René Viel, Copán, les hautes terres et la côte pacifique (pp. 83-89); Concepción Ajmac Cuxil, La Universidad de San Carlos y la Misión FrancoGuatemalteca: una cooperación fructuosa (pp. 93-96); Zoila Rodríguez Girón, Con temor, nostalgia … y gratitude (pp. 97100); Anaite Galeotti, Un primer viernes inolvidable (pp. 101108); Jean Piel, Sajcabaja, trente ans après (pp. 109-111); Ruud W. van Akkeren, Kawinal or “Forty Place”: stop on an ancient trade route (pp. 115-137); Robert M. Carmack, Conflicting interpretations of prehispanic K’iche’-Mayan history (pp. 139-149); Michel Bertrand, Identités et configurations sociale à Guatemala à la fín du XVIIIe siècle (pp. 151-164); Marie-France Fauvet-Berthelot, Résonances … à propos de tissage (pp. 165-168); María Victoria Ajmac Cuxil, Tradiciones y cambios en el traje de Tecpan-Guatemala (pp. 169-171); Yvon Le Bot, Guatemala 1978-1984, una guerra de masacres (pp. 173-180); Denise Douzant Rosenfeld, Requiem pour les Mayas de Río Negro (pp. 181-192); Jacques Galinier, “Entre pères et mères …” Alain Ichon en pays totonaque (pp. 193200).

1964. Ardren, Traci. 2004. The current state of Maya studies: everything old is new again. Ethnohistory 51(2):415-420. Review article. 1965. Arroyo, Bárbara. 2008. La arqueología en Centroamérica: su situación actual y perspectivas. Utz'ib 4(5):1-3. 1966. Demarest, Arthur A. 2009. Maya archaeology for the twenty-first century: the progress, the perils, and the promise. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2):253-263. 1967. Golden, Charles. 2004. Three visions of the Maya, three visions of Mayanists: Maudslay, Proskouriakoff, and Schele. Ethnohistory 51(2):429-433. Review article. 1968. Hostettler, Ueli. 2004. Rethinking Maya identity in Yucatan, 1500-1940. Journal of Latin American Anthropology 9(1):187-198. Review article. 1969. Hostettler, Ueli. 2004. Ethnographic perspectives in Maya studies: trends about writing about Mayas in Guatemala, Mexico, and Belize. Ethnohistory 51(2):435-444. Review article. 1970. McAnany, Patricia A. 2004. From naked-eye astronomy to races of maize: cultural entanglements in pre-Columbian civilizations. Ethnohistory 51(2):421-428. Review article. 1971. Robin, Cynthia. 2001. Peopling the past: new perspectives on the ancient Maya. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States 98:18-21. The new direction in Maya archaeology is toward achieving a greater understanding of people and their roles and their relations in the past. To answer emerging humanistic questions about ancient people’s lives Mayanists are increasingly making use of new and existing scientific methods from archaeology and other disciplines. Maya archaeology is bridging the divide between the humanities and sciences to answer questions about ancient people previously considered beyond the realm of archaeological knowledge. 1972. Sheets, Payson. 2009. Contributions of geoarchaeology to Mesoamerican studies. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(2):205209.

1974. Awe, Jaime, John Morris, and Sherilyne Jones, eds. 2004. Archaeological Investigations in the Eastern Maya Lowlands: Papers of the 2003 Belize Archaeology Symposium. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology, 1. Belmopan: National Institute of Culture and History, Institute of Archaeology. 370 p. Contents include: John Morris, Jaime Awe, and Sherilyne Jones, Introduction and synthesis of the 2003 Belizean Archaeology Symposium (pp. 1-10); James Garber, M. Kathryn Brown, Jaime J. Awe, and Christopher J. Hartman, The terminal Early Formative Kanocha Phase (1100-900 BC) at Blackman Eddy (pp. 13-26); Lisa J. LeCount, Looking for a needle in a haystack: the Early Classic period at Actuncan, Cayo District (pp. 27-36); Cynthia

New Directions 1973. Arnauld, Marie-Charlotte, Alain Breton, Marie-France Fauvet-Berthelot, and Juan Antonio Valdés. 2003. Miscelaneas … en honor a Alain Ichon. México: Centro Francés de Estudios Mexicanos y Centroaméricanos; Guatemala: Asociación Tikal. 200 p. Born in 1922, Alain Ichon studied law and anthropology at the University of Paris and since 1961 focused his attention on Mesoamerica, carrying out important archaeological and ethnographic research in Mexico and Panama. Between 1973 and 1990, Ichon directed and coordi109

eds. 2001. Antropología e historia mexicanas: homenaje al maestro Fernando Camara Barbachano. México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. 678 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Luis Barjau Martínez, Tzeltales de la posguerra y de la guerra (pp. 53-62); Luis Fernando Alvarez Aguilar, María del Rosario Domínguez Carrasco, William J. Folan, Abel Morales López, Sophia Pincemin Deliberos, Ernesto Segovia Tamay, Aida Amine Casanova Rosado, and Lynda Florey Folan, Calakmul, Campeche: un acercamiento a la reconstrucción arquitectónica de la Gran Plaza y sus alrededores: 1982-1994 (pp. 183-202); Mercedes de la Garza, El mito cosmogónico en los Libros del Chilam Balam y su pervivencia en los mayas de hoy (pp. 233240); Stella María González Cicero, Estructura religiosa implantada por los franciscanos en Yucatán (siglo XVI) y su impacto en los mayas de la península (pp. 255-263); Francisco Fernandez Repetto and Genny Negroe Sierra, Peregrinaciones y santiarios en Yucatán; una propuesta para su exploración (pp. 457-464); Alejandro Guzman C., Mercados para las artesanias de Yucatán (pp. 465-474).

Robin, William D. Middleton, Santiago Juarez, and Mary K. Morrison, Surveying an agrarian community: the 2002 season at the Chan site (pp. 37-48); Carolyn Audet, and Jaime J. Awe, What’s cooking at Baking Pot: a report of the 2001 to 2003 seasons (pp. 49-60); Anabel Ford, Maya subsistence, settlement patterns and the influence of obsidian in the political economy around El Pilar, Belize (pp. 61-82); Lisa J. Lucero, Exploring Classic Maya politics: Yalbac, central Belize (pp. 83-92); Andrew Kinkella, The pools at Cara Blanca: archaeology in the Valley of Peace above and below the water (pp. 93-102); Jason Yaeger, Minette C. Church, Richard M. Leventhal, and Jennifer Dornan, Maya Caste War immigrants to colonial British Honduras: the San Pedro Maya Project, 2002-2003 (pp. 103-114); Arlen F. Chase, and Diane Z. Chase, Exploring ancient economic relationships at Caracol, Belize (pp. 115-128); John Morris, Mountain Cow sites: survey, excavations and interpretations (pp. 129-154); Gyles Iannone, Sonja Schwake, Jeffrey Seibert, Jennifer Birch, Joelle Chartrand, Adam Menzies, Alicia OrrLombardo, Meahan Peuramaki-Brown, Simone Philpot, Ryan Primrose, Michael Roots, Bárbara Slim, Henry Schwarcz, and Elizabeth Webb, The 2002 research season at Minanha, Belize (pp. 155-164); Jeffrey Seibert, A functional analysis of Structure 12A, Minanha, Belize (pp. 165-172); Richard E. W. Dams, Vernon Scarborough, Laura Levi, Stanley Walling, Nicholas Dunning, Brandon Lewis, Leslie Shaw, Lauren Sullivan, Fred Valdez, and Kathryn Reese-Taylor, Programme for Belize Archaeological Project: a history of archaeological research (pp. 175-184); Lauren A. Sullivan, and Fred Valdez, NW Belize: a regional perspective on culture history (pp. 185196); Hubert R. Robichaux, Archaeological research at the Punta de Cacao ruins in northwestern Belize: community analysis using the multi-nuclei model of geography (pp. 197210); Jon C. Lohse, Timothy Beach, Laura Kosakowsky, and Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach, Regional views on the Late Classic from the Blue Creek area of northwestern Belize (pp. 211222); Elizabeth A. Graham, Lamanai reloaded: alive and well in the Early Postclassic (pp. 223-242); Diane Z. Chase, and Arlen F. Chase, Santa Rita Corozal: twenty years later (pp. 243-256); Marilyn A. Masson, Maxine H. Oland, and Josalyn M. Ferguson, Late Maya settlement at Progresso Lagoon: Terminal Classic through colonial periods (pp. 257-266); Robert M. Rosenswig, The Late Archaic occupation of northwestern Belize: new archaeological excavation data (pp. 267-278); Palma Buttles, The importance of Colha in Belize Archaeology (pp. 281-294); Patricia A. McAnany, Eleanor Harrison, Polly A. Perterson, Steven Morandi, Satoru Murata, Ben S. Thomas, Sandra L. López Varela, Daniel Finamore, and David G. Buck, The deep history of the Sibun River valley (pp. 295-310); Ben S. Thomas, Visualizing the political landscape of the Sibun River (pp. 311-322); Jeffrey Stomper, Wendy Brown, and Elizabeth Pope, Recent research at Mayflower, Stann Creek District, Belize (pp. 323-332); Geoffrey Braswell, Christian M. Prager, Cassandra R. Bill, and Sonja Schwake, Recent archaeological and epigraphic research at Pusilha, Belize: report of the 2001 and 2002 field seasons (pp. 333-346); Heather McKillop, Aline Magnoni, Rachel Watson, Shannon Ascher, Terrance Winemiller, and Bryan Tucker, The coral foundations of coastal Maya architecture (pp. 347-358); Shirley Boetler Mock, Maya traders on the north-central Belize coast (pp. 359-370).

1976. Breton, Alain, Aurore Monod Becquelin, and Mario Humberto Ruz, eds. 2003. Espacios mayas: usos, representaciones, creencias. México: Centro de Estudio Mayas, IIFL, UNAM: Centro Francés de Estudios Mexicanos y Centroaméricanos. 685 p. Published proceedings of the symposium, Les Espaces Mayas: Représentations, Utilizations, Croyances, December 6-8, 2000, at the Maison de l’Archéologie et de l’Ethnologie en Nanterre, France. Contents include: Jean-Paul Metailié, Jean-Michel Carozza, Didier Galop, and Marie-Charlotte Arnauld, lagos, bajos y paleo-paisajes en el Petén noroccidental: el inicio de una investigación geográfica y arqueológica (La Joyanca)(pp. 23-48); Nicholas P. Dunning, Birth and death of waters: environmental change, adaptation, and symbolism in the southern Maya lowlands (pp. 49-76); Vernon L. Scarborough, Ballcourts and reservoirs: the social construction of a tropical karst landscape (pp. 77-92); Norman G. Hammond, and Gair Tourtellot, Viewsheds and watersheds: topography and cosmology in the planning of the Classic Maya cityscape of La Milpa, Belize (pp. 93-110); Carmen Varela Torrecilla, and Juan Luis Bonor Villarejo, Cronología y función de las cavernas en el area maya: espacio ritual o profane? (pp. 111-142); James E. Brady, La importancia de las cuevas artificiales para el entendimiento de los espacios sagrados en Mesoamérica (pp. 143-160); William F. Hanks, “Reducción” and the remaking of the social landscape in colonial Yucatan (pp. 161-180); Rodolfo Lobato, “Por las veredas de los antiguos”: las nuevas comunidades mayas de la Selva Lacandona y el control del espacio (pp. 181-198); Philippe Descola, El paisaje maya y su historia: comentario (pp. 199-208); Virginia E. Miller, Human imagery in the architectural sculpture of the northern Maya lowlands (pp. 209-234); Fabienne de Pierrebourg, La vivienda maya, entorno natural y mundo natural; un enfoque ethnoarqueológico (pp. 235-260); Colette Grinevald Craig, El mundo Jakalteko visto a través de los clasificadores nominales (pp. 261-286); Anath Ariel de Vidas, Luces del pasado, lugares del presente; la repartición de los espacios entre los teenek de Veracruz (pp. 287-302); Juliette Roullet, Espacio ordenado, espacio dilatado: metamorfosis del dia a la noche (pp. 303-326); Aurore Monod Becquelin, and Alain Breton, Cual espacio para los kabinal de Bachajon? (pp. 327-362); Valentina Vapnarsky, Recorridos instauradeores: configuración y apropiación del espacio y del tiempo entre los mayas yucatecos (pp. 363-382); John B. Ha-

1975. Barba de Piña Chan, Beatriz, Luis Barjau Martínez, Catalina Rodríguez Lazcano, and Luis Berruecos Villalobos, 110

Smith, Integración social, espacial y económica en las antiguas ciudades del subcontinente indios (pp. 503-522).

viland, Dangerous places in Zinacantec prayer (pp. 383-428); Scott Atran, A garden experiment in the Maya lowlands (pp. 429-452); Cesar Itier, Las categories del paisaje maya vistas desde los Andes; comentarios (pp. 453-462); Claude F. Baudez, Las aguas terrestres entre los antiguos mayas: representaciones y rituales (pp. 463-488); Robert M. Laughlin, The golden bough (pp. 489-498); Lourdes de León Pasquel, Ta xtal xa xch’ulel: “Ya viene el ‘alma’”: el miedo en la socialización infantile zinacanteca (pp. 499-532); Michel Boccara, Vivir es hacer; volverse “viantepasado” o el dominio del espacio transicional (pp. 533-576); Perla Petrich, Topología nocturna en los pueblos mayas de Atitlan (pp. 577-602); Pedro Pitarch Ramón, Dos puntos de vista, una sola persona: el espacio en una montaña de almas (pp. 603-618); Mario Humberto Ruz, Pasajes de muerte, paisajes de eternidad (pp. 619-658); Johanna Broda, Los habitantes del paisaje; comentarios (pp. 659-672); Gerard Toffin, Modelos arquitectónicos y orden especial; observaciones sobre los espacios mayas y la antropología del espacio; comentario final (pp. 673-685).

1978. Ciudad Ruiz, Andrés, Mario Humberto Ruz Sosa, María Josefa Iglesias Ponce de León, eds. 2003. Antropología de la eternidad: la muerte en la cultura maya. Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas, Publicación 7. Madrid: Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas. 551 p. Contents include: Rosemary A. Joyce, Las raices de la tradición funeraria maya en prácticas mesoaméricanas del periodo Formativo (pp. 13-34); Rafael Cobos, Prácticas funerarias en las Tierras Bajas mayas del norte (pp. 35-48); Juan Pedro Laporte Molina, La tradición funeraria prehispánica en la región de Petén, Guatemala: una visión desde Tikal y otras ciudades (pp. 49-76); Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, La tradición funeraria de las tierras altas de Guatemala durante la etapa prehispánica (pp. 77-112); Stephen D. Houston, Hector L. Escobedo, Andrew Scherer, Mark Child, and James L. Fitzsimmons, Classic Maya death at Piedras Negras, Guatemala (pp. 113-143); Robert J. Sharer, and Loa P. Traxler, Las tumbas reales mas tempranas de Copán: muerte y renacimiento en un reino maya Clásico (pp. 145-159); Julia A. Hendon, El papel de los enterramientos en la construcción y negociación de la identidad social en los mayas prehispánicos (pp. 161-174); Lori E. Wright, La muerte y el status económico: investigando el simbolismo mortuario y el acceso a los recursos alimentaciones entre los mayas (pp. 175-193); Takeshi Inomata, and Daniela Triadan, El espectaculo de la muerte en las tierras bajas mayas (pp. 195-207); María Josefa Iglesias Ponce de León, Contenedores de cuerpos, cenizas y almas: el uso de urnas funerarias en la cultura maya (pp. 209-254); Diane Z. Chase, and Arlen F. Chase, Secular, sagrado y “revisitado”: la profanación, alteración y reconsagración de los antiguos entierros mayas (pp. 255-277); Norman Hammond, and Suzanne Young, Rango social y prácticas funerarias mayas: la evidencia de dieta y ritual durante el Preclásico en Cuello (pp. 279-297); James L. Fitzsimmons, and William L. Fash, Susaj b’aak: muerte y ceremonia mortuoria en la Plaza Mayor de Copán (pp. 299-315); Martha Cuevas García, Ritos funerarios de los dioses-incensarios de Palenque (pp. 317-336); Vera Tiesler Blos, and Andrea Cucina, Sacrificio, tratamiento y ofrenda del cuerpo humano entre los mayas del Clásico: una mirada bioarqueológica (pp. 337-354); Estella Weiss-Krejci, Victims of human sacrifice in multiple tombs of the ancient Maya: a critical review (pp. 355-381); Virginia E. Miller, Representaciones de sacrificio en Chichén Itzá (pp. 383-404); Karl A. Taube, Maws of heaven and hell: the symbolism of the centipede and serpent in Classic Maya religión (pp. 405442); María de Carmen Valverde Valdés, La muerte y la guerra: las rebeliones indígenas en el area maya en el siglo XIX (pp. 443-455); Daniela Maldonado Cano, En el umbral: tanatopraxis contemporanea (pp. 457-472); Perla Petrich, La muerte a través de la tradición oral maya actual (pp. 473-499); Julian López García, Presencia y significado de la muerte en la cultura maya ch’orti’ (pp. 501-517); Pedro Pitarch Ramón, El lenguaje de la muerte (en un texto medico Tzeltal)(pp. 519529); Mario Humberto Ruz Sosa, “Cada uno con su costumbra”: olvido y memoria en los cultos funerarios contemporaneous (pp. 531-548).

1977. Ciudad Ruiz, Andrés, María Josefa Iglesias Ponce de León, and María del Carmen Martínez Martínez. 2001. Reconstruyendo la ciudad maya: el urbanismo en las sociedades antiguas. Pub-licaciones de la S.E.E.M., 6. Madrid: Sociedad Española de Estudios Mayas. 524 p. Contents include: Andrés Ciudad Ruiz and María Josefa Iglesias Ponce de León, Un mundo ordenado: la ciudad maya y el urbanismo en las sociedades antiguas (pp. 11-40); David Webster and William Sanders, La antigua ciudad Mesoaméricana: teoría y concepto (pp. 43-64); Stephen Houston, Hector Escobedo, Mark Child, Charles Golden, and Rene Muñoz, Crónica de una muerte anunciada: los años finales de Piedras Negras (pp. 65-93); Arlen F. Chase and Diane Z. Chase, El paisaje urbano maya: la integración de los espacios construidos y la estructura social en Caracol, Belize (pp. 95-122); Rosemary Joyce, Planificación urbana y escala social: reflexiones sobre datos de comunidades clásicas en Honduras (pp. 123-136); Juan Pedro Laporte, Dispersión y estructura de las ciudades del sureste de Petén, Guatemala (pp. 137-161); Urbano Espinosa, El modelo romano de la ciudad en la construcción políticadel imperio romano (pp. 163-180); John E. Clark, Ciudades tempranas olmecas (pp. 183-210); Dominique Michelet and Pierre Becquelin, De Río Bec a Dzibilchaltun: interrogaciones acerca de la ciudad maya clásica desde la perspectiva del Yucatán central y septentrional (pp. 211-251); Rafael Cobos, El centro de Yucatán: de area periférica a la integración de la comunidad urbana en Chichén Itzá (pp. 253-276); Marcus Winter, Palacios, templos y 1300 años de vida urbana en Monte Alban (pp. 277-301); Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, Los palacios residenciales del Clásico temprano en las ciudades del sur de las tierras bajas mayas (pp. 305-340); Takeshi Inomata, The Classic Maya palace as a political theater (pp. 341-361); Marie Charlotte Arnauld, La “casa grande”: evolución de la arquitectura del poder del Clásico al Postclásico (pp. 363401); José Miguel García Campillo, Santuarios urbanos: casas para los antepasados en Chichén Itzá (pp. 403-423); Marshall J. Becker, Houselots at Tikal Guatemala: it’s what’s out back that counts (pp. 427-460); Linda Manzanilla, Agrupamientos sociales y gobierno en Teotihuacan, centro de México (pp. 461-482); Julio Valdeón Baruque, Gremios y oficios en la estructura urbana de la ciudad medieval (pp. 483-490); José Luis de Rojas, El abastecimiento de Tenochtitlan: un modelo probablemente poco modélico (pp. 491-501); Monica L.

1979. Finamore, Daniel, and Stephen D. Houston, eds. 2010. Fiery Pool: The Maya and the Mythic Sea. Salem, MA: Peabody Essex Museum. 328 p. Contents include: Mary E. Miller, and Megan O’Neill, The worlds of the ancient Maya and the worlds they made (pp. 24-37); Heather McKillop, Drowned 111

and death (pp. 59-76); Søren Wichmann, The names of some major Classic Maya gods (pp. 77-86); Alfonso Lacadena, On the reading of two glyphic appellatives of the rain god (pp. 87-100); Markus Eberl, and Daniel Graña Behrens, Proper names and throne names: on the naming practice of Classic Maya (pp. 101-120); Dmitri Beliaev, Wayaab’ title in Maya hieroglyphic inscriptions: on the problem of religious specialization in Classic Maya society (pp. 121-130); Kerry Hull, and Michael David Carrasco, MAK-”portal” rituals uncovered: an approach to interpreting symbolic architecture and the creation of sacred space among the Maya (pp. 131-142); Vera Tiesler, Maya mortuary treatments of the elite: an osateophonomic perspective (pp. 143-156); Marianne Gabriel, Element, action sequences and structure: a typology of agrarian ceremonies (pp. 157-164); John F. Chuchiak, The images speak: the survival and production of hieroglyphic codices and their use in post-conquest Maya religión (1580-1720)(pp. 165-183); Ajb’ee Odilio Jiménez Sanchez, The politics of Maya religión in contemporary Guatemala (pp. 184-194).

landscapes (pp. 38-40); David Stuart, The wide waters of Palenque (pp. 41-43); Stephen D. Houston, Living waters and wondrous beasts (pp. 66-79); Bárbara W. Fash, Symbols of water management at Copán, Honduras (pp. 80-82); Marc Zender, The music of shells (pp. 83-85); Daniel Finamore, Navigating the Maya world (pp. 144-159); Simon Martin, The Dark Lord of Maya trade (pp. 160-162); Rafael Cobos, The Maya ports: Isla Cerritos and Uaymil (pp. 163-165); Karl A. Taube, Where Where Earth and Sky Meet: The Sea and Sky in Ancient and Contemporary Maya Cosmology (pp. 202-219); James E. Brady, Offerings to the rain gods: the archaeology of Maya caves (pp. 220-222); Luis A. Matos López, Objects cast into cenotes (pp. 223-225); Daniel Finamore, Coda: the sea and art (pp. 290-297) . 1980. Golden, Charles W., and Greg Borgstede, eds. 2004. Continuities and Changes in Maya Archaeology: Perspectives at the Millennium. New York: Routledge. 324 p. Contents include: Charles W. Golden and Greg Borgstede, Continuities and changes in Maya archaeology: an introduction (pp. 3-12); Jeremy A. Sabloff, Looking backward and looking forward: how Maya studies of yesterday shape today (pp. 13-20); Robert J. Sharer, and Charles W. Golden, Kingship and polity: conceptualizing the Maya body politic (pp. 23-50); Marcello A. Canuto, and William L. Fash, The blind spot: where the elite and non-elite meet (pp. 51-75); Don S. Rice, and Prudence M. Rice, History in the future: histórical data and investigations in lowland Maya studies (pp. 77-95); Wendy Ashmore, Ancient Maya landscapes (pp. 97-111); Stephen D. Houston, and Alfonso Lacadena García-Gallo, Maya epigraphy at the millennium: personal notes (pp. 115-123); Nicholas P. Dunning, and Timothy Beach, Noxious or nuturing nature? Maya civilization in environmental context (pp. 125-141); Antonia E. Foias, The past and future of Maya ceramic studies (pp. 143-175); Geoffrey E. Braswell, Lithic analysis in the Maya area (pp. 177-199); Lori E. Wright, Osteological investigations of ancient Maya lives (pp. 201-215); Kitty F. Emery, Maya zooarchaeology: in pursuit of social variability and environmental heterogeneity (pp. 217-241); Daniela Traidan, and Takeshi Inomata, What did they do and where? Activity areas and residue analyses in Maya archaeology (pp. 243-255); Jason Yaeger, and Greg Borgstede, Professional archaeology and the modern Maya: a histórical sketch (pp. 259-285); K. Anne Pyburn, We have never been post-modern: Maya archaeology in the ethnographic present (pp. 287-293); Matilde Ivic de Monterroso, The sacred place in the development of archaeology in Guatemala: an analysis (pp. 295-307); T. Patrick Culbert, Continuities and changes in Maya archaeology: an overview (pp. 311-320).

1982. González Torres, Yolotl. 2001. Animales y plantas en la cosmovisión mesoamericana. México, DF: Plaza y Valdés Editores; CONACULTA-INAH; Sociedad Mexicana para el Estudio de las Religiónes, 322 p. Contents include: Doris Heyden, El cuerpo del Dios: el maíz; Ana María Velasco Lozano, Los cuerpos divinos: la utilización del amaranto en el ritual mexica; Henryk Karol Kocyba, Consideraciones críticas en torno al significado religioso de la ceiba entre los mayas; Mercedes de la Garza, Uso ritual de las plantas psicoactivas entre los nahuas y los mayas; Yolotl González Torres, Lo animal en la cosmovisión mexica o mesoaméricana; Yolotl González Torres, El jaguar; Mercedes de la Garza, La serpiente en la religión maya; Lourdes Suarez Diez, Los moluscos en el Tonalamatl de Aubin; Alfonso Arellano Hernandez, Llego el caiman: los dragones en el mundo maya; Carmen Aguilera, El simbolismo del quetzal en Mesoamérica; Guiliano Tescari, El venado en la cosmologia sagrada de los huicholes; Gabriel Espinosa Pineda, La fauna de Ehecatl; MarieOdile Marion, Representación simbólica de la selva maya y de sus huespedes. 1983. Grube, Nikolai, Eva Eggebrecht, and Matthias Seidel, eds. 2001. Maya: Divine Kings of the Rain Forest. Cologne: Könemann. 480 p. Contents include: Nikolai Grube, Prologue (pp. 11-17); Nikolai Grube, Volcanoes and jungle: a richly varied habitat (pp. 20-31); Nikolai Grube, Cacao, the beverage of the gods (pp. 32-33); Norman Hammond, The origins of Maya civilization: the beginnings of village life (pp. 34-47); Nikolai Grube, Obsidian, the metal of the Maya (pp. 48-49); Richard D. Hansen, The first cities: the beginnings of urbanization and state formation in the Maya lowlands (pp. 50-65); Elisabeth Wagner, Jade, the green gold of the Maya (pp. 6669); Peter D. Harrison, Maya agriculture (pp. 70-79); Marta Grube, Tortillas and tamales: the food of the maize people and their gods (pp. 80-83); Federico Fahsen, From chiefdoms to statehood in the highlands of Guatemala (pp. 86-95); Nikolai Grube, The insignia of power (pp. 96-97); Simon Martin, The power in the west, the Maya and Teotihuacan (pp. 98-111); Nikolai Grube, Hieroglyphs, the gateway to history (pp. 114127); Nikolai Grube, Bark paper books (pp. 128-129); Alexander W. Voss, Astronomy and mathematics (pp. 130-143); Nikolai Grube, Solar eclipses, fearing the end of the world (pp. 144-145); Nikolai Grube, and Simon Martin, The dynastic history of the Maya (pp. 148-171); Stefanie Teufel, Marriage

1981. Graña Behrens, Daniel, Nikolai Grube, Christian M. Prager, Frauke Sachse, Stefanie Teufel, and Elisabeth Wagner, eds. 2004. Continuity and Change: Maya Religious Practices in Temporal Perspective; 5th European Maya Conference, University of Bonn, December 2000. Acta Americana, 14. Markt Schwaben: Verlag Anton Saurwein. 222 p. Contents include: Frauke Sachse, Interpreting Maya religión: methodological remarks on understanding continuity and change in Maya religious practices (pp. 1-24); Berthold Risese, MayaReligión: Ziele und Wege ihrer Erforschung (pp. 25-32); Thomas H. Guderjan, Recreating the cosmos: Early Classic dedicatory caches at Blue Creek (pp. 33-40); Werner Nahm, Links between ritual and astronomical cycles in Maya culture (pp. 41-58); Nikolai Grube, Akan, the god of drinking, disease 112

Yucatán. 318 p. Contents include: Alfredo Barrera Rubio, Avances y perspectivas de la arqueología yucateca (pp. 1747); James N. Ambrosio, Traci Ardren, and Kam Manaham, Fortificaciones defensivas de Yaxuna, Yucatán (pp. 49-66); Ruben Maldonado, La exploración y restauración de la Subestructura 44 de Dzibilchaltun (pp. 67-75); Virginia E. Miller, La escultura en el area norte maya durante el Clásico terminal: del reino al multepal (pp. 77-94); Merideth Paxton, Iconografía solar en el esquema de Venus del Codice de Dresde (pp. 95-120); Michel Davoust and Jean-Michel Hoppan, Ciclos de venus, eclipses, estaciones eclipticas y fechas sobre monumentos mayas del periodo Clásico (pp. 121-172); Patricia Martel, Del lenguaje verbal y no verbal en textos curativos maya-yucatecos (pp. 173-183); Mercedes de la Garza, El mito cosmogónico en los Libros de Chilam Balam y su pervivencia en los mayas de hoy (pp. 185-193); Mary H. Preuss, Los wayoob y los hechiceros de los cuentos mayas yucatecos (pp. 195-211); Tsubasa Okoshi Harada, Mito, historia y legitimación del poder entre los mayas posclásicos de Yucatán (pp. 213-238); Ruth Gubler, La medicina tradicional en Yucatán a través de los siglos (pp. 229-247); Edward B. Kurjack, Elena K. Lincoln, and Beatriz E. Reppeto, La comunidad maya del pasado (pp. 249-260); Wolfgang Gabbert, Integración o colonialismo interno? Cultura y disigualidad en Yucatán (pp. 261-284); Ute Schüren, La revolución tardía: reforma agraria y cambio politico en Campeche (1910-1940)(pp. 285-318).

diplomacy, women at the royal court (pp. 172-173); Simon Martin, Under a deadly star: warfare among the Classic Maya (pp. 174-185); Pierre R. Colas, and Alexander Voss, A game of life and death: the Maya ball game (pp. 186-191); Annegrete Hohmann-Vogrin, Unity in space and time: the Maya architecture (pp. 194-215); Michael Vallo, The history of a Maya settlement: research results from the excavations at Xkipche (pp. 216-217); Peter D. Harrison, Maya architecture at Tikal, Guatemala (pp. 218-231); Markus Eberl, Processions, pilgrims and load-carriers: the ceremonial roads (pp. 232-233); Mary Miller, Understanding the murals of Bonampak (pp. 234-243); Nikolai Grube, Grave robbers in the jungle (pp. 244-245); Dorie Reents-Budet, The art of Classic vase painting (pp. 246-259); Karl Taube, The Classic Maya gods (pp. 262-277); Christian Prager, Court dwarfs: the companions of rulers and envoys of the underworld (pp. 278-279); Elisabeth Wagner, Maya creation myths and cosmology (pp. 280-293); Nikolai Grube, Intoxication and ecstasy (pp. 294-295); James E. Brady, Uncovering the dark secrets of the Maya: the archaeology of Maya caves (pp. 296-307); Christian Prager, Jaina, the island necropolis (pp. 308-309); Markus Eberl, Death and conceptions of the soul (pp. 310-317); Nicholas P. Dunning, Long twilight or new dawn? Transformations of Maya civilization in the Puuc region (pp. 322-337); Elisabeth Wagner, … An then it was sculpted, the precious stone: the Maya stonemasons and sculptors (pp. 338-339); Marilyn Masson, The dynamics of maturing statehood in Postclassic Maya civilization (pp. 340-353); Stefanie Teufel, The art of weaving (pp. 354-355); Frauke Sachse, The martial dynamics: the Postclassic in the Maya highlands (pp. 356-369); Christian Prager, The Spanish conquest of Yucatan and Guatemala in the 16th and 17th centuries (pp. 372-381); Temis VayhingerScheer, Kanek’: the last king of the Itzáj Maya (pp. 382-383); Antje Gunsenheimer, Between conformity and rebellion: the Maya society in the colonial period (1546-1811)(pp. 384-393); Eva Eggebrecht, The search for evidence: the scientific discovery of the Maya (pp. 396-411); Markus Eberl, Maya cities, lost, excavated, and conserved (pp. 412-413); Nikolai Grube, Maya today: from indios deprived of rights to the Indian awakening (pp. 416-425); Glossary (pp. 428-439); Christian Prager, and Nikolai Grube, Overview of histórical sites (pp. 442449); Elisabeth Wagner, Selected collections and museums (pp. 450-455). Also includes a series of four charts identifying the ruling dynasties of Copán, Palenque, Tikal, and Yaxchilan (pp. 456-459) and a timeline, with illustrations, from the Early Preclassic period through modern national states (pp. 460465); Spanish language translation: Los Mayas: una civilización milenaria (Köln: Könemann, 2001. 480 p.); German language translation: Maya: Gottkönige im Regenwald (Köln: Könemann, 2001. 480 p.). See also Arne Eggebrecht, Nikolai Grube, and Eva Eggebrecht, eds., Maya' Amaq; Mundo maya (Guatemala: Editorial Cholsamaj, 2001. 654 p). Spanish language translation of the catalog of the exhibition Die Welt der Maya (Roemer- und Pelizaus-Museum, Hildesheim, Germany, 1992). Includes contributions by Herbert Wilhemy, Juan Antonio Valdés, Robert J. Sharer, Nicholas P. Dunning, Wolfgang W. Wurster, Oscar Quintana, Stephen D. Houston and David Stuart, David Freidel, Ted Leyenaar, Linda Schele, Nikolai Grube, T. Patrick Culbert, Diane Z. Chase and Arlen F Chase, and Carolyn Tate.

1985. Hendon, Julia A., and Rosemary A. Joyce, eds. 2004. Mesoamerican Archaeology: Theory and Practice. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. 352 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Rosemary A. Joyce, Mesoamerica: a working model for archaeology (pp. 1-42); John E. Clark, Mesoamerica goes public: early ceremonial centers, leaders, and communities (pp. 43-72); Richard G. Lesure, Shared art styles and long-distance contact in early Mesoamerica (pp. 73-96); Cynthia Robin, Social diversity and everyday life within Classic Maya settlements (pp. 148-168); Wendy Ashmore, Classic Maya landscape and settlement (pp. 169-191); Julia A. Hendon, Postclassic and colonial period sources on Maya society and history (pp. 296-322). 1986. Hostettler, Ueli, and Matthew Restall. 2001. Maya Survivalism. Acta Mesoamericana, 12. Markt Schwaben: A. Saurwein. 325 p. Contents include: Jon Schackt, The emerging Maya: a case of ethnogenesis (pp. 3-14); Matthew B. Restall, The Janus face of Maya identity in Post-Conquest Yucatan (pp. 15-24); Wolfgang Gabbert, On the term Maya (pp. 25-36); Diane Z. Chase, and Arlen F. Chase, Underlying structure in Maya persistence: an archaeological perspective (pp. 37-50); Geoffrey E. Braswell, Ethnogenesis, social structure, and survival: the Nahuazation of K’iche’an culture, 1450-1550 (pp. 51-58); Tsubasa Okoshi Harada, Gaspar Antonio Chi Xiu: el que ‘perpetuo” la imagen de los Xiu (pp. 5972); Constance Cortez, Ave/Eva and Ixchel: agency and colonial Maya women (pp. 73-86); Lorraine A. Williams-Beck, Canpech Province continuity and change (pp. 87-100); Murdo J. MacLeod, From the Mediterranean to the indigenous people of colonial Guatemala: the evolution of the cofradia (pp. 101112); María D. Palomo Infante, Las instituciones en los procesos de resistencia y adaptación de los pueblos maya: la cofradia indígena colonial entre los tzotziles y tzeltales de Chiapas (pp. 113-134); John F. Chuchiak, Pre-Conquest Ah Kinob in a colonial world: the extirpation of idolatry and the survival of

1984. Gubler, Ruth, ed. 2001. Yucatán a través de los siglos; Memorias del 49 Congreso Internacional de Americanistas, Quito, Ecuador, 1997. Mérida: Universidad Autónoma de 113

Palo Gordo, Guatemala, y el estilo artístico Cotzumalguapa (pp. 147-178); Frederick J. Bove, The archaeology of Late Preclassic settlements on the Guatemala Pacific coast (pp. 179-216); Hector Neff, Sources of raw material used in Plumbate pottery (pp. 217-231); Liwy Grazioso Sierra, El nuevo rostro del personaje en la Estela 25 de Izapa, Chiapas (pp. 233-247); Eugenia J. Robinson, Pat M. Farrell, Kitty F. Emery, Dorothy E. Friedel, and Geoffrey E. Braswell, Preclassic settlements and geomorphology in the highlands of Guatemala: excavations at Urias, Valley of Antigua (pp. 251276); Marion Popenoe de Hatch, New perspectives on Kaminaljuyú, Guatemala: regional interaction during the Preclassic and Classic periods (pp. 277-296); Erick M. Ponciano, La arqueología de Guatemala, con enfasis en Kaminaljuyú y la contribución de Edwin Shook a su desarrollo: una apreciación personal (pp. 297-309); Jonathan Kaplan, From under the volcanoes: some aspects of the ideology of rulership at late Preclassic Kaminaljuyú (pp. 311357); Federico Fahsen O., Who are the prisoners in Kaminaljuyú monuments? (pp. 359-374); Francisco de León and Juan Antonio Valdés, Excavaciones en Piedra Parada: mas información sobre el Preclásico medio del altiplano central de Guatemala (pp. 375-395); Rafael Cobos, Edwin M. Shook y su contribución a la arqueología de las tierras bajas mayas del norte (pp. 399-414); Gaspar Muñoz Cosme and Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Espacios urbanos y arquitectura en Oxkintok (pp. 415-432); David L. Webster, Groundhogs and kings: issues of divine rulership among the Classic Maya (pp. 433-458); Robert J. Sharer, Early dynastic origins in the southeastern Maya lowlands (pp. 459-476); Richard E. W. Adams, and Jane Jackson Adams, Early Classic ideology as reflected at Río Azul, Guatemala (pp. 477-488); Juan Pedro Laporte, Poptun en la arqueología de las tierras bajas centrales: una actualización (pp. 489-518); Stephen D. Houston, and Hector L. Escobedo, Grande es bello: Piedras Negras y el urbanismo de las tierras bajas mayas (pp. 519536); William J. Folan, Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico: the sociopolitical organization of the city, its regional state and physiographic basin (pp. 537-563); Anabel Ford, Another view of the Gran Peten: distilled conversations with Ed Shook (pp. 565-568).

Maya priesthood in colonial Yucatan, 1563-1697 (pp. 135160); Don E. Dumond, and William J. Folan, All the king’s men: picking up the pieces of the Maya past (pp. 161-166); Ines de Castro, The Pacificos del Sur: power, segmentation, and individual response during the Caste War of Yucatan (pp. 167-174); Valentina Vapnarsky, Estrategias discursivas y constitución de la memoria colectiva entre los mayas macehuales de Quintana Roo (pp. 175-190); Ulrich Köhler, The Chamula Revolt of 1869: new insight from oral and written sources (pp. 191-202); Edward F. Fischer, Late capitalism and Maya resurgence in Guatemala (pp. 203-216); Denise F. Brown, Life in the fast lane: change over three generations in a Yucatec Maya town (pp. 217-224); María F. Labrecque, The political economy of gender construction among the Maya of Northern Yucatan in the era of Maquiladoras (pp. 225-238); Ueli Hostettler, Milpa, land and identity: a central Quintana Roo Mayan community in a histórical perspective (pp. 239-262); Ute Schüren, Milpa in crisis? Changing agricultural practices among rural producers in Campeche (pp. 263-280); Matthew G. Looper, Design interpretation in Mam textile histories (pp. 281-294); Bárbara Pfeiler, Cambio y futuro del maya yucateco: el caso de los clasificadores nominales (pp. 295-300); José Alejos García, Ethnopolitics of Itzá Maya identity in Guatemala (pp. 301-310); Navidad Gutierrez, Pasado e identidad histórica de los mayas contemporaneo (pp. 311-320). 1987. Inomata, Takeshi, and Ronald W. Webb, eds. 2003. The Archaeology of Settlement Abandonment in Middle America. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. 247 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Takeshi Inomata, and Ronald W. Webb, Archaeological studies of abandonment in Middle America (pp. 1-10); Takeshi Inomata, War, destruction, and abandonment: the fall of the Classic Maya center of Aguateca, Guatemala (pp. 43-60); Brian R. McKee, and Payson Sheets, Volcanic activity and abandonment processes: Ceren and the Zapotitan Valley of El Salvador (pp. 61-74); Joel W. Palka, Social status and differential processes of abandonment at the Classic Maya center of Dos Pilas, Peten, Guatemala (pp. 121133); Charles Suhler, and David Freidel, The tale end of two cities: Tikal, Yaxuna, and abandonment contexts in the lowland Maya archaeological record (pp. 135-147); James J. Aimers, Abandonment and nonabandonment at Baking Pot, Belize (pp. 149-160); William T. Sanders, Collapse and abandonment in Middle America (pp. 193-202).

1989. Ochiai, Kazuyasu, ed. 2006. El Mundo maya: miradas japonesas. Merida: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 250 p. A collection by Japanese scholars of ethnohistórical and anthropological studies on Mayan Civilization; contents include: Takeshi Inomata, Actuaciones teatrales y poder en las cortes reales de los mayas del Clásico (pp. 1532); Yoshiho Yasugi, El enfoque de agente en los idiomas mayas (pp. 63-84); Tsubasa Okoshi, Kax (monte) y luum (tierra): la transformación de los espacios mayas en el siglo XVI (pp. 85-104); Shigeto Yoshida, Las enfermedades del cuerpo maya y sus sintomas “fisiológicos” a través de un análisis del maya yucateca colonial (pp. 105-136); Joji Hatsutani, El ciclo anual de vida de los mayas de Quintana Roo: una investigación de campo en el archivo (pp. 137-156); Junji Koizumi, Etnicidad y estado nacional en Huehuetenango, Guatemala: el resultado de las elecciones y el problema del nacionalismo comunal (pp. 157-178); Motoi Suzuki, ¿Como apreciar las organizaciones mayas en Yucatán? Un dilema para la antropología del desarrollo (pp. 211-226); Kazuyasu Ochiai, El ser y el tiempo entre los mayas: “Un trompo no se cae mientras siga girando” (pp. 227-250);

1988. Love, Michael, Marion Popenoe de Hatch, and Hector L. Escobedo, eds. 2002. Incidents of Archaeology in Central America and Yucatan: Essays in Honor of Edwin M. Shook. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. 595 p. Contents include: Michael Love, Marion Popenoe de Hatch, and Hector L. Escobedo, Edwin M. Shook: A tribute (pp. 1-8); Arthur A. Demarest, Theoretical speculations on the rise of complex society on the south coast of Guatemala (pp. 11-34); Bárbara Arroyo, Hector Neff, and James Feathers, The Early Formative sequence of Pacific coastal Guatemala (pp. 35-50); Michael Love, Ceramic chronology of Preclassic period western Pacific Guatemala and its relationship to other regions (pp. 51-73); Marilyn Beaudry-Corbett, The Tiquisate Archaeological Zone: a case of delayed societal complexity (pp. 75-102); Francisco Estrada Belli, Putting Santa Rosa on the map: New insights on the cultural development of the Pacific coast of southeastern Guatemala (pp. 103-128); Laura J. Kosakowsky, The ceramics of the southeastern Pacific coast of Guatemala (pp. 129-145); Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, 114

pelman, Carved in stone: the cosmological narratives of Late Preclassic Izapan-style monuments from the Pacific slope (pp. 66-82); Susan Milbrath, The planet of kings: Jupiter in Maya cosmology (pp. 118-142); Kathryn Reese-Taylor, Ritual circuits as key elements in Maya civic center designs (pp. 143165); Marc Zender, The toponyms of El Cayo, Piedras Negras, and La Mar (pp. 166-184); Matthew G. Looper, Quirigua Zoomorph P: a water throne and mountain of creation (pp. 185-200); Constance Cortez, New dance, old Xius: the Xiu family tree and Maya cultural continuity after European contact (pp. 201-215); Nikolai Grube, and Federico Fahsen, The Workshops on Maya History and Writing in Guatemala and Mexico (pp. 216-237); Elin C. Danien, The Schele icon and Maya mania: the growth of public interest in Maya epigraphy (pp. 238-246); Andrea Stone, Appendix 1: Bibliography of Linda Schele’s publications (pp. 245-259); Appendix 2: Schele-ana: Memories of Linda Schele: Duncan Earle, The living Maya, the Mukta Antz Chingon, and me: a tale of life and death (pp. 261-264); Gillett Griffin, This will blow your mind (pp. 264-266); Elizabeth P. Benson, The Rabbit Woman (pp. 266-268); David Kelley, Working with Linda (pp. 268270); David Freidel, Writing on through with Linda (pp. 270272); Merle Greene Robertson, Spider Eyes (pp. 272-276); Michael D. Coe, The age of Schele (pp. 276-279); Dorie Reents-Budet, Remembrances of Linda Schele at the University of Texas at Austin (pp. 279-282); Mary Ellen Miller, Remembering the Blood of Kings (pp. 282-287); David Schele, Linda Scholastica (pp. 287-289).

1990. Ochoa. Lorenzo, ed. 2001. Tabasco prehispánico. Villahermosa, México: Gobierno del Estado de Tabasco. 159 p. Contents include: Alfred H. Siemens, El escenario geográfico (pp. 13-26); Olaf Jaime Riveron, El escenario se transforma: del mar al arroyo, del mangle a la ceiba; de los pequeñas comunidades agricolas al alba de la civilización (pp. 27-46); Olaf Jaime Riveron, Entre saurios y felinos; nuevos invitados llegan a las tierras bajas (pp. 47-74); Lorenzo Ochoa, El abandono de las tierras inundables (pp. 75-140); Lorenzo Ochoa, Las fronteras de un antiguo territorio se redibujan (pp. 141-155). Includes color photographs of La Venta, Pomona, Reforma, El Tortuguero, and Comalcalco. 1991. Pendergast, David M., and Anthony P. Andrews, eds. 2006. Reconstructing the Past: Studies in Mesoamerican and Central American Prehistory. International Series, 1529. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 158 p. Contents include: Merle G. Robertson, Palenque painting practices and the iconographic content of color in the Late Classic (pp. 33-44); Norman Hammond, Architectural transformation in the late Middle Formative at Cuello, Belize (pp. 45-58); David M. Pendergast, Patterns of offering composition and placement at Lamanai, Belize (pp. 59-70); Ian Graham, Fear and loathing in nineteenth-century Copán (pp. 71-76); H. Stanley Loten, A distinctive Maya architectural format: the Lamanai temple (pp. 89-106); Elizabeth Graham, Due south: learning from the urban experience in the humid tropics (pp. 151-158); 1992. Smith, Michael E., and Frances F. Berdan, eds. 2003. The Postclassic Mesoamerican World. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. 382 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Michael E. Smith, and Frances F. Berdan, Postclassic Mesoamerica (pp. 3-13); Michael E. Smith, and Frances F. Berdan, Spatial structure of the Mesoamerican world system (pp. 21-31); Michael E. Smith, Small polities in Postclassic Mesoamerica (pp. 35-39); Susan Kepecs, and Marilyn Masson, Political organization in Yucatan and Belize (pp. 40-44); Geoffrey E. Braswell, Highland Maya polities (pp. 45-49); Janine Gasco, The polities of Xoconochco (pp. 50-54); Frances F. Berdan, Marilyn A. Masson, Janine Gasco, and Michael E. Smith, An international economy (pp. 96-108); Janine Gasco, and Frances F. Berdan, International trade centers (pp. 109-116); Michael E. Smith, Key commodities (pp. 117-125); Susan Kepecs, Salt sources and production (pp. 126-130); Geoffrey E. Braswell, Obsidian exchange spheres (pp. 131-158); Dorothy Hosler, Metal production (pp. 159171); Michael E. Smith, Information networks in Postclassic Mesoamerica (pp. 181-185); Marilyn A. Masson, The Late Postclassic symbol set in the Maya area (pp. 194-200); Elizabeth H. Boone, A web of understanding: pictorial codices and the shared intellectual culture of Late Postclassic Mesoamerica (pp. 207-221); Susan M. Kepecs, Chikinchel (pp. 259-268); Marilyn A. Masson, Economic patterns in northern Belize (pp. 269-281); Janine Gasco, Soconusco (pp. 282-296); Geoffrey E. Braswell, K’iche’an origins, symbolic emulation, and ethnogenesis in the Maya highlands, AD 1450-1524 (pp. 297-303).

1994. Weeks, John M., ed. 2001. The Past and Present Maya: Essays in Honor of Robert M. Carmack. Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos. 231 p. Contents include: Biographical sketch; Bibliography of Robert Carmack; John W. Fox, Solar metaphors in K’iche’ political organization and history (pp. 1-9); John M. Weeks, Ancestor veneration in protohistoric K’iche’ society (pp. 11-27); Susan Norris, Ethnohistory, archaeology, and the K’iche’ Maya: an interdisciplinary approach to political economy (pp. 29-45); W. George Lovell, and Christopher H. Lutz, Pedro de Alvarado and the conquest of Guatemala, 1522-1524 (pp. 47-61); Janine Gasco, Mixe and Maya: a comparative demographic history of the native populations of Soconusco and Suchitepequez (pp. 63-72); Thomas R. Jamison, Social organization and architectural context: a comparison of Nim Li Punit and Xnaheb (pp. 73-87); Marilyn Masson, Segmentary political cycles and elite migration myths in the Postclassic archaeology of northern Belize (pp. 89-103); Garrett Cook, Charter myths and status groups in Momostenango, Guatemala (pp. 107-123); Liliana R. Goldin, The see-saw of production: socioeconomic mobility in petty capitalist workshops of highland Guatemala (pp. 125-140); Brent Metz, The politics of Guatemalan “overpopulation” through the Ch’orti’ case (pp. 141-154); Pedro Petarch, Souls as memory in Cancuc, Chiapas (pp. 155-167); Alicia Re Cruz, Disruption of people’s health and social order: la canicula among the Yucatec Maya (pp. 169-177); Quetzil E. Castañeda, Territorializing town and country: a political biography of Yucatec Maya settlement (pp. 179-206).

1993. Stone, Andrea, ed. 2002. Heart of Creation: The Mesoamerican World and the Legacy of Linda Schele. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. 340 p. Contents pertaining to the Maya include: Andrea Stone, Introduction (pp. 1-12); Anthony Aveni, Reaching for the stars: Linda Schele’s contributions to Maya astronomy (pp. 13-20); Linda Schele, Creation and the Ritual of the bacabs (pp. 21-33); Julia Guernsey Kap-

SIMPOSIO DE INVESTIGACIONES ARQUEOLÓGICOS EN GUATEMALA 1995. Laporte, Juan Pedro, Hector Escobedo, and Bárbara Arroyo, eds. 2002. Decimo quinto (XV) Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala. Guatemala: Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología; Instituto de 115

reino clásico de Cancuen: evidencia de produccion, especialización e intercambio (pp. 365-382); Tomas Barrientos, Rudy Larios, Arthur Demarest, Luis Fernando Luin, El palacio real de Cancuen: análisis preliminar de sus características y planes de investigación (pp. 383-400); David García, Arthur A. Demarest, Tomas Barrientos, El Proyecto Arqueológico Cancuen: un plan piloto para la interacción entre arqueología y desarrollo social (pp. 401-411); Bárbara Arroyo, Hector Neff, Deboral Pearsall, John Jones, and Dorothy Freidel, Últimos resultados del proyecto sobre el medio ambiente antiguo en la costa del Pacifico (pp. 415423); Claudia Wolley, Compendio de petrograbados y monumentos con depresiones de Abaj Takalik (pp. 425-435); Marion Popenoe de Hatch, Evidencia de un observatorio astronomico en Abaj Takalik (pp. 437-458); Christa Schieber de Lavarreda, La ofrenda de Abaj Takalik (pp. 459-473); Ernesto Arredondo, Patrón funerario en el sitio arqueológico Ujuxte (pp. 475-482); Rene Ugarte, Sitio arqueológico Quetzal Suquite: un sitio mutilado por el desarrollo Puerto Quetzal, San Jose, Escuintla (pp. 483-491); Oswaldo Chinchilla, Investigaciones por medio de radar de penetración al suelo (GPR) en la zona nuclear de Cotzumalguapa, Escuintla (pp. 493-512); Esther Miron, Análisis de lípidos: un estudio de arqueología experimental de residuos de maíz en céramica de Santa Apolonia, Chimaltenango (pp. 515-522); Tomas E. Lacayo, Factores de alteración in situ: conservación preventiva de material arqueológico (pp. 523-527); Hector Neff, Nuevos hallazgos relacionados con la producción de la vajilla Plomiza (pp. 529-542); María de Rosario Domiguez, Manuel E. Espinosa Pesqueira, Ventura Rodríguez Lugo, and William J. Folan, Resultado de los análisis por MEB-BV y DRX de céramica arqueológica de Calakmul, Campeche (pp. 543-554); Matilde Ivic de Monterroso, Resultados de los análisis de las figurillas de Piedras Negras (pp. 555-568); Erin L. Sears, and Ronald L. Bishop, Variabilidad en la composición de las pastas en el area de Cancuen, Guatemala: figurillas y pastas finas (pp. 569-580); Juan Pedro Laporte, and Lilian A. Corzo, La secuencia preclásica del sureste de Petén: tipos, cifras, localidades, y el desarrollo del asentamiento (pp. 581-614); A. Rene Muñoz, Un modelo de desarrollo para la céramica policroma del clásico tardío de Piedras Negras (pp. 615-621); Cassandra R. Bill, Michael G. Callaghan, and Arthur A. Demarest, Interpretaciones iniciales de la céramica de Cancuen y el alto Pasión (pp. 623-634); Marco Antonio Monroy, Estudio preliminar de la céramica en una estructura elitista de Aguateca del clásico tardío (pp. 635642); Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, and Marilyn Beaudry-Corbett, Hornos de céramica en Centroamérica: descubrimiento y contexto (pp. 643-662); Mary Jane Acuña, Damaris Menendez, Edwin Román, and Boris Beltran, Evidencia del desarrollo doméstico en el Grupo D de La Vega de Coban, cuenca medio del Río Motagua, Teculutan, Zacapa (pp. 665671); Luis A. Romero, La Reforma: un sitio del clásico temprano en la cuenca media del Río Motagua (pp. 673-677); Guillermo Mata Amado, Exploraciones subacuaticas en los lagos de Guatemala (pp. 679-694); Edgar Carpio Rezzio, and Alfredo Román, Primeros avances del Proyecto Mejicanos, Amatitlan (pp. 695-708); Sebastien Perrot-Minnot, Las esculturas prehispánicas de la región de Antigua Guatemala (pp. 709-722); Eugenia Robinson, Gene Ware, Mary Gallagher, and Marlen Garnica, Imagenes multiespectrales de la Casa de las Golondrinas (pintura sobre rocas)(pp. 723-734); Carmen E. Ramos, Paulino I. Morales, and Zoila Rodríguez Girón, Contribuciones para la historia del municipio de Santa

Antropología e Historia; Asociación Tikal. 2 v. Contents include: Ruud van Akkeren, El lugar en donde salio el primer sol para los K’iche: Jakawits, su nueva ubicación (pp. 3-14); Rene Johnston, Arqueología histórica de dos pueblos perdidos en el area de Cotzumaguapa, Escuintla (pp. 15-31); T. Kam Manahan, La fase Ejar de Copán, Honduras, y el fín de la dinastia clásica maya (pp. 33-40); Christopher Begley, El clásico tardío y el postclásico temprano en el oriente de Honduras (pp. 41-52); Boris A. Aguilar, Las excavaciones de los salones abiertos en el sitio de Yalain, al noroeste del lago Macanche, Flores, Petén (pp. 53-63); Juan Pedro Laporte, and Hector E. Mejía, Tras la huella del Mopan: arquitectura del clásico terminal y del postclásico en el sureste de Petén (pp. 65-95); Federica Sodi Miranda, and David Aceves Romero, Chichén Itzá: sus migraciones y contactos externos con otras areas culturales (pp. 97-105); Rafael Cobos, Mayapan y el periodo postclásico en las tierras bajas mayas del norte (pp. 107-113); Marie-Charlotte Arnauld, Erick Ponciano, Melanie Forne, Martin Rangel, and Nadine Tiesnerat, Historia y arquitectura de La Joyanca, una ciudad del noroccidente de Petén (pp. 117-133); Erick Ponciano A., et al., Resultados de la tercera temporada de campo 2001 del Proyecto Petén noroccidente-La Joyanca, La Libertad, Petén (pp. 135-149); Hector L. Escobedo, and Stephen D. Houston, Arqueología e historia en Piedras Negras, Guatemala: síntesis de las temporadas de campo de 1997-2000 (pp. 151-160); J. Jacob Parnell, Fabian G. Fernandez, and Richard E. Terry, Investigaciones químicas del suelo en Piedras Negras, Guatemala: aplicaciones en arqueología (pp. 161-169); Paulino I. Morales, and Carmen E. Ramos, Prospección Arqueológica en El Kinel, La Libertad, Petén (pp. 171-183); Takeshi Inomata, La vida cotidiana y políticade la elite maya clásica: los resultados del análisis de laboratorio del Proyecto Arqueológico Aguateca (pp. 185-188); Fabian G. Fernandez, Richard E. Terry, Takeshi Inomata, Markus Eberl, Un estudio etnoarqueológico de residuos quimicos en los pisos y suelos de viviendas maya-q’eqchi’ en Las Pozas, Guatemala (pp. 189-202); Eric F. Hansen, and Carlos Rodríguez Navarro, Los comienzos de la tecnología de la cal en el Mundo Maya: innovación y continuidad desde el Preclásico medio al Clásico tardío en Nakbé, Petén, Guatemala (pp. 203-206); Gene L. Titmus, and James C. Woods, Un estudio arqueológico y experimental de las canteras antiguas de Nakbé, Petén, Guatemala (pp. 207-221); Gustavo A. Martínez, Disyuntiva: Tikal como patrimonio mundial de la humanidad o como patrimonio nacional de los guatemaltecos (pp. 223-227); Juan Pedro Laporte, Exploración y restauración en el Templo de Las Calaveras, Mundo Perdido, Tikal (Estructura 5D-87)(pp. 229-248); Raul Noriega, and Oscar Quintana, Programa de restauracion: proyecto protección de sitios arqueológicos en Petén (pp. 249-259); Oscar Quintana, Resultados de la tercera fase del Proyecto Triángulo Cultural Yaxha-Nakum-Naranjo: octubre 1997-junio 2001 (pp. 261-269); Bernard Hermes, and Antonio Contreras, Investigación arqueológica y trabajos de conservación realizados por el Proyecto Triángulo en el sitio Poza Maya (pp. 271-311); Hector E. Mejía, Ucanal: aproximación a su espacio politico territorial (pp. 313-331); Jorge E. Chocón, Resultados del estudio de patrón de asentamiento prehispánico en San Francisco, Petén (pp. 333346); Arthur A. Demarest, and Tomas Barrientos, Redescubrimiento el suroeste de Petén: exploraciones y proyectos de desarrollo en una región “perdida” del mundo maya (pp. 349-364); Brigitte Kovacevich, Tomas Barrientos, Michael Callaghan, and Karen Pereira, La economía en el 116

Análisis del papel del lugar sagrado en el desarrollo de la arqueología de Guatemala (pp. 1-10); David García, Vinculos espirituales y religión alrededor de Cancuen (pp. 11-16); Arthur A. Demarest, and David García, Perspectivas postmodernas acerca de arqueología, derechos indígenas y desarrollo humano: hacía un nuevo modelo de la arqueología en Guatemala (pp. 17-26); Takeshi Inomata, Arqueología y derechos indígenas: el caso de Aguateca, Petén (pp. 27-30); Bárbara Arroyo, Los costeños y el desarraigo de una identidad: los aportes arqueológicos (pp. 31-36); Marion Woynar, Arqueología y problemática social: hacía un manejo de los recursos arqueológicos con mayor colaboración de las comunidades (pp. 37-48); Marie Charlotte Arnauld, Véronique Breuil-Martínez, and Salvador López, El pasado para el futuro: experimentos en La Joyanca, La Libertad, Petén (pp. 49-56); Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, and Gaspar Muñoz Cosme, Patrimonio arqueológico y turismo (pp. 57-64); Christina Luke-Roosevelt, La protección del acervo cultural de Guatemala y la venta de antigüedades precolombinas (pp. 65-78); Jesus Adanez Pavon, María Josefa Iglesias, and Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, Arqueología post-procesual y arqueología maya: una exploración de sus relaciones (pp. 7988); Brent Woodfill, Nicholas Miller, Margaret Tarpley, and Amalia Kenward, Sacrificandose por su ideología: vida, cosmología y supervivencia (pp. 89-96); Susan Maguire, Christian Praeger, Cassandra Bill, Jennifer Braswell, and Geoffrey E. Braswell, Investigaciones recientes en Pusilha, Belice (pp. 97-108); Jorge E. Chocón, Machaquila, un sitio olvidado por la arqueología (pp. 109-122); Tomas Barrientos, Rudy Larios Villalta, and Luis Fernando Luin, Investigación y conservación en el patio sur del palacio de Cancuen (pp. 123134); Sarah E. Jackson and Erin Sears, Papel y función de las elites cortesanas en Cancuen, Petén (pp. 135-142); Brigette Kovacevich, Ronald Bishop, and Hector Neff, Sistemas económicos y de producción maya: nuevos datos y retos en Cancuen (pp. 143-158); Arthur A. Demarest, and Federico Fahsen, Nuevos datos e interpretaciones de los reinos occidentales del Clásico Tardío: hacía una visión sintética de la historia Pasión/Usumacinta (pp. 159-174); Erick M. Ponciano, Takeshi Inomata, and Oscar Santos, Investigaciones arqueológicas en la Estructura L8-8 de la plaza principal de Aguateca, Sayaxche, Petén (pp. 175-185); Markus Eberl, Excavaciones en el area de la barranca escondida de Aguateca (pp. 185-196); Véronique Breuil-Martínez, Ernesto Arrendondo, Marie-Charlotte Arnauld, Fernando Alvarez, Melanie Forné, Laura Gamez, Marco Antonio Leal, Eva Lemonnier, Salvador López, Dominique Michelet, Enrique Monterroso, Erick Ponciano, Martin Rangel, and Tristan Saint-Dizier, El Proyecto Petén Noroccidente: La Joyanca en su cuarta temporada de campo: 2000 años entre Lagunas y Sibales (pp. 197-212); Eva Lemonnier, Estructuras y espacios exteriores de un pequeño grupo doméstico de La Joyanca, noroeste de Petén: una propuesta metodológica (pp. 213-232); Véronique Breuil-Martínez, Ervin Salvador López, and Erick M. Ponciano, Grandes grupos residenciales (GGR) y su patrón de asentamiento en La Joyanca y su meseta, noroccidente de Petén (pp. 233-250); Kevin R. Schwarz, La transformación clásica-postclásica en patrónes de asentamiento rurales: las investigaciones de la isla Quexil, Oriental, Petén (pp. 251264); Francisco Estrada Belli, Anatomia de Holmul: la ciudad y su territorio (pp. 265-274); John Tomasic, and Francisco Estrada Belli, Nuevos datos sobre el Clásico temprano en el area de Holmul: el caso de La Sufricaya (pp. 275-280); Hector E. Mejía, Distribución y función de los monumentos de

María de Jesus, Departamento de Sacatepequez (pp. 735-752); Arturo Matas Oria, Los sitios prehispánicos de Parramos, Departamento de Chimaltenango (pp. 753-760); José E. Benitez, Nuevas aportaciones arqueológicas para el area de Parramos (pp. 761-770); Linda A. Brown, and Luis Alberto Romero, Lugares sagrados para ritos de caceria (pp. 771-778); Luis E. Rosada, and Osmundo V. Villatoro, La trompeta maya, busqueda y encuentro (pp. 783-790); Matthias Stöckli, Objetos sonoros de Piedras Negras (pp. 791-796); F. Marcelo Zamora, La industria de la pirita en el sitio clásico tardío de Aguateca (pp. 797-811); Luis Rios Frutos, Biología humana, antropología forense y arqueología: problemas metodologicos en osteologia juvenil (pp. 815-826); Mercedes Salado Puerto, and Luis Rios Frutos, La importancia de la osteopatología en la identificación de restos oseos humanos (pp. 827-836); José S. Suasnavar, Renaldo Acevedo, Ronaldo Sanchez, Leónel Paiz, Entre botas y lazos: inestigaciones en antiguos destacamentos militares en Guatemala (pp. 837-853); Véronique Gervais, and Raquel Macario Calgua, El uso de la piedra de moler, hoy, en Guatemala (pp. 855-861); Vera Tiesler Blos, Thelma Sierra Sosa, and Samuel Tejeda Vega, Nutrición y condiciones de vida en la costa norte de la península durante el clásico: una visión desde Xcambo, Yucatán (pp. 863-873); María Josefa Iglesias, Eduardo Arroyo, Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, Sara Alvarez, Eva Fernandez, and Jesus Adanez, Los análisis de AND de enterramientos de Tikal: la arqueología entre la esperanza y la desesperación (pp. 875-885); Carlos Rolando Torres, Aportes al dualismo maya (pp. 889-890); Julio A. Roldan, La coronación iconográfica de Yun Kaax (pp. 891-897); Federico Fahsen, and Sarah E. Jackson, Nuevos datos e interpretaciones sobre la dinastia de Cancuen en el periodo clásico (pp. 899-908); Brent Woodfill, Matt O’Mansky, and Jon Spenard, Asentamiento y sitios sagrados en la región de Cancuen (pp. 909-921); Sarah E. Jackson, Las elites de la corte: una visión desde Piedras Negras, Guatemala (pp. 923-926); Hector L. Escobedo, and Zachary X. Hruby, El contexto y producción del escondite O-13-57 de Piedras Negras, Guatemala (pp. 927-935); Rene Ugarte, Una propuesta metodológica para la clasificación de artefactos líticos de la industria pulida (pp. 939-949); Antonio Prado, De herramientas a instrumentos (pp. 951-957); Edgar Carpio Rezzio, Nueva información sobre la obsidiana de Abaj Takalik (pp. 959-962); José Crasborn, Los artefactos de obsidiana de El Castillo, Santa Lucia Cotzumalguapa: resultados preliminares (pp. 963-971); Manuel E. Espinosa Pesqueira, María del Rosario Domínguez, Ventura Rodríguez Lugo, and William J. Folan, Análisis micro-estructural de muestras geologicas y arqueológicas de pedernal de la región de Calakmul, Campeche (pp. 973-986); Zachary Nelson, and Zachary X. Hruby, La distribución y análisis preliminar de artefactos liticos en una residencia de Piedras Negras, Guatemala (pp. 987-996); Rene Viel, and Jay Hall, El paisaje natural y cultural del valle de Copán (pp. 9991005); Shione Shibata, Nobuyuki Ito, Hiroshi Minami, Toshio Nakamura, and Etsuko Niu, Resultados de las investigaciones arqueológicas en las trincheras 4N y M1 en el area de Casa Blanca, Chalchuapa (pp. 1007-1019). 1996. Laporte, Juan Pedro, Bárbara Arroyo, Hector L. Escobedo, and Hector E. Mejía, eds. 2003. XVI Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala, 2002. Guatemala: Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes; Instituto de Antropología e Historia; Asociación Tikal. 2 v. Contents include: Matilde Ivic de Monterroso, and Marcelo Zamora, 117

comprehensión sobre el periodo protoclásico en las tierras bajas mayas (pp. 599-614); David Cheetham, Donald W. Forsyth, and John E. Clark, La céramica pre-Mamom de la cuenca del Río Belice y del centro de Petén: las correspondencias y sus implicaciones (pp. 615-634); Jeanette Castellanos, Cassandra R. Bill, Michael G. Callaghan, and Ronald L. Bishop, Cancuen, enclave de intercambio entre las tierras bajas y altas de Guatemala: la evidencia céramica (pp. 635-648); Melanie Forné, Un estudio cronológico en el noroeste de Petén: la céramica de La Joyanca (pp. 649-664); Donald W. Forsyth, La céramica del clásico tardío de la cuenca Mirador (pp. 665-680); James L. Fitzsimmons, Reyes difuntos y costumbres funerarios: epigrafía y arqueología de la muerte en la sociedad maya clásica (pp. 681-686); Federico Fahsen, Jeanette Castellanos, Jorge Mario Ortiz, and Luis Fernando Luin, La escalinata 2 de Dos Pilas, Petén: los nuevos escalones (pp. 687-700); Nikolai Grube, Monumentos jeroglíficos de Holmul, Petén (pp. 701-710); Federico Fahsen, Arthur A. Demarest, and Luis Fernando Luin, Sesenta años de historia en la escalinata jeroglífica de Cancuen (pp. 711-722); John Robertson, Stephen Houston, and John E. Clark, El problema del Wasteko: una perspectiva lingüistica y arqueológica (pp. 723736); Tomas E. Lacayo, Conservación preventiva del arte rupestre en las cuevas de Naj Tunich, Poptun, Petén (arte parietal, pinturas y petroglifos)(pp. 737-738); Ramzy R. Barrois, Las esculturas asociados al juego de pelota en las tierras altas y la costa del Pacífico (pp. 739-752); Luisa F. Escobar, La realeza femenina del area del Río Usumacinta para el Clásico Tardío (pp. 753-762); Dorie Reents-Budet, El descubrimiento de la historia social en artefactos: la teoria y la practica de la disciplina de la historia del arte en la arqueología maya (pp. 763-774); Karla J. Cardona, Función de sitios del postclásico tardío en Soconusco, México (pp. 775-786); Oswaldo Chinchilla, and Edgar Carpio Rezzio, El taller de obsidiana de El Baul, zona nuclear de Cotzumalguapa: informé preliminar (pp. 787-796); Christa Schieber de Lavarreda, Una nueva ofrenda en Abaj Takalik: el Entierro 1 (pp. 797-806); Marion Popenoe de Hatch, El regreso del felino en Abaj Takalik (pp. 807-818); Rosemary A. Joyce, and John S. Henderson, Investigaciones recientes de la arqueología del periodo formativo en Honduras: nuevos datos sobre el intercambio y producción de céramica pan-Mesoaméricana (o “Estilo Olmeca”)(pp. 819832); Hector Neff, Bárbara Arroyo, John G. Jones, and Deborah M. Pearsall, Donde estan los asentamientos arcaicos en la costa sur de Guatemala? (pp. 833-846); Guillermo Mata Amado, Espejos de pirita y pizarra de Amatitlan (pp. 847856); Horacio E. Martínez, La cuenca media del Río Chixoy: dos decadas despues (pp. 857-867); Hector E. Mejía, and Carolina Diaz-Samayoa, Desarrollo y arqueología: la hidroelectrica matanzas y el sitio arqueológico El Salto, Baja Verapaz, Guatemala (pp. 867-880); Henry Benitez, Sociedad cacical-lacustre: Samabaj, lago de Atitlán (pp. 889-892); Gregory Borgstede, and Luis A. Romero, Patrónes de asentamiento y variación en las tierras altas occidentales de Guatemala (pp. 897-914); Miguel Méndez Gutierrez, Apectos de las exploraciones de rescate arqueológico en el centro histórico de Popayan, Guatemala (pp. 915-922); Noboyuki Ito, Shione Shibata, and Hiroshi Minami, Los resultados de ls investigaciones arqueológicas en la trinchera 4N del area de Casa Blanca, Chalchuapa, durante las temporadas III y IV (2001-2002)(pp. 923-928); Paul Amaroli, Un nuevo hallazgo de escultura de Xipe Totec en El Salvador (pp. 929-934); E. Christian Wells, La arqueología y las lecturas químicas de las actividades rituales en el plaza monumental del sitio El

Ucanal, Petén (pp. 281-294); Raul E. Noriega, and Oscar Quintana, La acropolis sur de Nakum: su arquitectura y distribución preliminar (pp. 295-303); Bernard Hermes, and Zoila Calderón, La secuencia de ocupación prehispánica en Nakum: una visión preliminar (pp. 303-318); William A. Saturno, Proyecto Arqueológico Regional San Bartolo: resultados de la primera temporada de campo 2002 (pp. 319324); Monica Urquizu, and Heather Hurst, Las pinturas murales de San Bartolo: una ventana al arte y cosmovisión del hombre prehispánico (pp. 325-334); Juan Pedro Laporte, Exploración y restauración en los espacios abiertos de Mundo Perdido, Tikal (las plazas este, oeste, norte y sur)(pp. 335348); Claudia Wolley, and Julio A. Roldan, Rasgos arqueológicos principales dentro de los tuneles con acceso abierto de Tikal (pp. 335-348); Juan Pedro Laporte, and Carlos H. Herman, Trabajos no divulgados del Proyecto Nacional Tikal, parte 3: nueva información sobre la exploración de la zona norte (Estructura 3D-43)(pp. 359-378); Oscar Quintana, Las ciudades mayas del noreste de Petén: potencial plataforma para impulsar un desarrollo regional (pp. 379-388); David Freidel, and Hector L. Escobedo, Un diseño de investigación para El Perú-Waka: una capital maya clásica en el occidente de Petén (pp. 389-410); Gabriela Santos, Alvaro Jacobo, Raul Archila, Erick Duque, Juan Carlos Gatica, Jorge Luis Romero, Sergio García, Douglas Quiñonez, Myrna Diaz, and Heidy Quezada, Aplicación de técnicas geofísicas en prospección arqueológica de casos forenses (pp. 411-418); Luis Rios Frutos, Determinación métrica del sexo en esqueletos rurales indígenas guatemaltecos (pp. 419-426); Mercedes Salado Puerto, Azar o estrategia? Formas de muerte en el periodo del conflicto armado en Guatemala (pp. 427446); José Samuel Suasnavar, Renaldo Acevedo, and Leónel E. Paiz, Impunidad, busqueda de justicia, y las implicaciones sociales en el resultado de la arqueología aplicada (pp. 447452); María Josefa Iglesias, Eduardo Arroyo, Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, Sara Alvarez, Eva Fernandez, and Jesus Adañez, Estudio de secuencias de DNA mitocondrial en una muestra maya de la ciudad de Tikal, Guatemala (pp. 453-466); Carrie Ann Berryman, Luis Rios Frutos, and Alejandro Seijas, Prácticas y patrónes funerarios en Cancuen: un análisis preliminar (pp. 467-474); Andrea Cucina, Vera Tiesler Blos, and Telma Sierra Sosa, Marcadores epi-genéticos dentales y patrónes de organización social: aplicaciones al estudio de la estructura poblacional y familiar del asentamiento clásico de Xcambo, Yucatán (pp. 475-485); Thomas P. Schreiner, Aspectos rituales de la producción de cal en Mesoamérica: evidencias y perspectivas de las tierras bajas mayas (pp. 487494); Judith Valle, and Edgar Suyuc Ley, Análisis de los materiales de pedernal de La Florida, cuenca Mirador, Petén (pp. 495-508); Zachary Nelson, El papel de los machacadores en la economía doméstica maya (pp. 509-512); Zachary X. Hruby, Re-evaluación de las categorias utilitarias y ceremoniales de artefactos mayas de piedra pulida (pp. 513518); Kazuo Aoyama, La producción artesanal de la elite en la sociedad clásica maya: evidencia de la lítica de los grupos domésticos en Aguateca, Guatemala (pp. 519-532); Holly Sullivan Bachand, Sellos cilíndricos y estampaderas del periodo Formativo en Mesoamérica (pp. 533-544); Juan Pedro Laporte, and Monica Urquizu, Los incensarios en el sureste de Petén: clasificación y cronología (pp. 545-578); Juan Pablo Rodas, Clasificación de céramica: una variante (pp. 579-584); Juan Luis Velasquez, Beatriz Balcarcel, and Richard D. Hansen, Una revisión al protoclásico de la cuenca Mirador (pp. 585-598); Bruce R. Bachand, Ampliando nuestra 118

145); Bárbara Arroyo, and Luisa Escobar, El Archivo Edwin M. Shook: una riqueza documental a conserva (pp. 147-150); Matthias Stöckli, Conversaciones musicales en el espacio doméstico: interpretaciones de datos provenientes de Aguateca, Petén, Guatemala (pp. 151-154); Lester H. Godinez, Aproximación al studio de las expresiones sonoras pre-occidentales de Mesoamérica, reflexiones y criterios arqueo-fonológicos (pp. 155-167); José E. Benitez, El Altar 1 de Cakhay (pp. 171-177); Eugenia Robinson, Marlen Garnica, Dorothy Freidel, Geoffrey Braswell, and Soraya Carr, Nuevos hallazgos en la Casa de las Golondrinas, un sitio con arte rupestre en las tierras altas centrales de Guatemala (pp. 179186); Guillermo Mata Amado, Características propias de las piezas de céramica provenientes de los diferentes depósitos subacuaticos del Lago de Amatitlan (pp. 187-200); José Crasborn, Elizabeth Marroquín, Alexander Urizar, Edgar Hernández, and Camilo Luin, La agonía del Cerro de los Muertos: Kaminaljuyú hacía el siglo XXI (pp. 201-216); Kitty F. Emery, Animales del inframundo maya: reconstruyendo los rituales de las élites a través de los restos animals de la Cueva de los Quetzales, Guatemala (pp. 219-238); Jorge E. Chocón, Pueblito, un asentamiento principal sobre el Río Poxte, Dolores, Petén (pp. 239-247); Rodrigo Liendo Stuardo, Centro y periferia: dinámica de asentamientos en el reino de Baak (pp. 249-256); Charles Golden, Marcelo Zamora, A. Rene Muñoz, Andrew Scherer, Edwin Román Ramírez, and F. N. Scatena, Noticias de la frontera: nuevas Investigaciones en el Parque Nacional Sierra del Lacandon (pp. 257-265); David Freidel, and Hector L. Escobedo, Resultados de las Investigaciones de campo en El Perú-Waka’: primera temporada, 2003 (pp. 267-280); Hector E. Mejía, Reconocimiento arqueológico en La Libertad, Petén (pp. 281297); Annick Daneels, Un estudio de formación de territorios políticos centralizados y segmentarios (pp. 301-311); Yamile Lita López, El Proyecto Arqueología del Valle de Maltrata, Veracruz (pp. 313-323); Roberto Lunagómez Reyes, Arqueología de superficie en el sur de Veracruz: los periodos clásico tardío y terminal (pp. 325-337); Juan Pablo Rodas, Sistematizando la clasificación de la céramica: una propuesta (pp. 341-344); Michael G. Callaghan, Cassandra R. Bill, Jeanette Castellanos, and Ronald L. Bishop, Gris Fino Chablekal: distribución y análisis socio-económico preliminario en Cancuen (pp. 345-362); Fabienne de Pierrebourg, Secuencia céramica preliminar de Balamku, Campeche, México (pp. 363-379); Dominique Rissolo, and Fabio Esteban Amador, Evaluación céramica preliminar de investigaciones recientes en el noreste de la península de Yucatán, México: reconsiderando el Preclásico medio en las tierras bajas mayas del norte (pp. 381-389); María del Rosario Domínguez, Manuel E. Espinosa, William J. Folan, and Ventura Rodríguez Lugo, Propuestas de producción y especialización céramica en el estado regional de Calakmul, Campeche (pp. 391-402); Luis Manuel Gamboa, and Nadia Veronica Velez, Estratigrafía, céramica y cronología, Pozas de Ventura, Campeche (pp. 403-413); Matilde Ivic de Monterroso, Las figurillas de La Blanca, San Marcos (pp. 417-427); Christa Schieber de Lavarreda, and Jeremias Claudio Perez, Una pagina mas en la historia de Tak’alik Ab’aj (pp. 429-436); Marion Popenoe de Hatch, Un paso mas en entender los inicios de Abaj Takalik (pp. 437-447); Juan Antonio Valdés, Jonathan Kaplan, Oscar Gutierrez, Juan Pablo Herrera, and Federico Paredes Umaña, Chocolá: un centro intermedio entre la Boca Costa y el altiplano de Guatemala durante el preclásico tardío (pp. 449-460); Michael

Coyote, Santa Bárbara, Honduras (pp. 935-946); Karla DavisSalazar, Las lagunas de Copán: implicaciones sociales del manejo del agua en el centro urbano (pp. 947-964); Charles W. Golden, A. Rene Múñoz, Hector L. Escobedo, Stephen Houston, and Amy Kovak, Fronteras politicas y sitios secundarios en la cuenca media del Usumacinta (pp. 965974); Javier López Camacho, and Kenichiro Tsukamoto, Levantamiento topográfico en el Resbalon, Quintana Roo, México (pp. 975-986); Fabio Esteban Amador, and Jeffrey B. Glover, Investigaciones recientes en la región Yalahau: resultados preliminares y evaluación de la metodología del reconocimiento regional (pp. 987-996); Ernesto Vargas Pacheco, and Angelica Delgado Salgado, La estructura 1 (o de los Mascarones), El Tigre, Campeche: reconstrucción hipotética (pp. 997-1008); Rocio González de la Mata, Los chultunes de Chichén Itzá (pp. 1009-1022); Antonio Inurreta Diaz, and Rafael Cobos, El intercambio maritimo durante el clásico terminal: Uaymil en la costa occidental de Yucatán (pp. 1023-1030); Lila Fernandez Souza, Rafael Cobos, and Marisa Vásquez de Agredos, Análisis de una estructura de tipo Palacio en Siho, Yucatán (pp. 1031-1036). 1997. Laporte, Juan Pedro, Bárbara Arroyo, Hector L. Escobedo, and Hector E. Mejía, eds. 2004. XVII Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala, 2003. Guatemala: Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes; Instituto de Antropología e Historia; Asociación Tikal. 2 v. Contents include: Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, Arqueología area en la costa sur de Guatemala (pp. 3-5); Zachary Nelson, De la cartografía al calculo de población de Piedras Negras, Guatemala (pp. 7-15); Jeffrey B. Glover, Kathryn Sorensen, and Scott L. Fedick, Hacía la formación de un nueva mapa arqueológica del area maya: técnicas y resultados de los reconocimiento y registro (pp. 17-23); Bárbara Arroyo, Metodologías no tradicionales para la identificación y análisis de sitios en la costa del Pacifico de Guatemala (pp. 25-32); Eva Lemonnier, and Dominique Michelet, Reconocimiento y levantamiento topográfico del centro y de los espacios residenciales de La Joyanca, Petén noroccidente: dos acercamientos y sus resultados preliminares (pp. 33-46); Fernando Robles Castellanos, and Anthony P. Andrews, Proyecto Costa Maya: reconocimiento arqueológico de la esquina noroeste de la península de Yucatán (pp. 47-66); Rafael Cobos, Entre la costa y el interior: reconocimiento de una región del occidente de Yucatán (pp. 67-72); Francisco Estrada-Belli, Judith Valle, Chris Hewitson, Marc Wolf, Jeremy Bauer, Molly Morgan, Juan Carlos Perez, James Doyle, Edy Barrios, Angel Chavez, and Niña Neivens, Teledetección, patrón de asentamiento e historia en Holmul, Petén (pp. 73-83); Thomas G. Garrison, William A. Saturno, Thomas L. Sever, and Daniel E. Irwin, Hacía la formación del nuevo mapa de la cuenca Ixcán río (pp. 85-92); Juan Pedro Laporte, Hector E. Mejía, Jesus Adanez, Jorge E. Chocón, Lilian A. Corzo, Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, and María Josefa Iglesias, Aplicación del sistema de información geográfico (SIG) a la interpretación del asentamiento del sureste de Petén: primeros resultados (pp. 93-113); Luis Rios Frutos, Estimación de la estatura en restos oseos: problemas metodológicos (pp. 117-123); J. Mario Del Cid, and Arthur A. Demarest, Desarrollo eco-turístico del sitio arqueológico Cancuen: un modelo para la conservación del patrimonio y el desarrollo participativo (pp. 127-136); Luis Raul Pantoja, and Juan Carlos Manzanilla, Propuesta para la conservación y registro del patrimonio arqueológico de México (pp. 137119

Britanica, 1855-1936 (pp. 735-744); Zoila Rodríguez Girón, Las Investigaciones arqueológicas en Santo Domingo, la Antigua Guatemala (pp. 745-752); Karen Pereira, Doris Valenzuela, and Jenny Guerra, Enterrar = olvidar? Arqueología histórica en el cuadrante Los Cerritos del cementerio general de Guatemala (pp. 753-760); Gaspar Muñoz Cosme, and Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Análisis comparativa de los diferentes sistemas constructivos en el area maya (pp. 763-774); Sarah E. Jackson, Un entendimiento de la jerarquía de los mayas a través de las elites cortesanas: algunas reflexiones basadas en datos jeroglíficos y arqueológicos (pp. 775-788); Simonetta Morselli Barbieri, Propuesta para un método de estudio iconográfico aplicado al tocado de los gobernantes de Tikal (pp. 789-801); Dorie Reents-Budet, Ronald L. Bishop, Ellen Bell, T. Patrick Culbert, Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Hector Neff, and Robert Sharer, Tikal y sus tumbas reales del clásico temprano: nuevos datos químicos de las vasijas de céramica (pp. 803818); John Tomasic, and Federico Fahsen, Exploraciones y excavaciones preliminares en Tres Islas, Petén (pp. 819-832); Hector E. Mejía, and José Miguel García Campillo, Dos nuevos monuments de Itzimte, Petén (pp. 833-850); Thomas G. Garrison, and David S. Stuart, Un análisis preliminario de las inscripciones que se relacionan con Xultun, Petén, Guatemala (pp. 851-862); Francisco Estrada-Belli, and Jennifer Foley, Arqueología e historia de enlaces geopolíticos: el clásico temprano en La Sufricaya (pp. 863-870); Karl Taube, William A. Saturno, and David S. Stuart, Identificación mitológica de los personajes en el muro norte de la Piramide de las Pinturas Sub-1, San Bartolo, Petén (pp. 871-880); Federica Sodi Miranda, and David Aceves Romero, El juego de pelota de Chichén Itzá: una ceremonia de fertilidad para la tierra y su relación con el Popol Vuh (pp. 881-888); Stephen Houston, David S. Stuart, and Karl Taube, El honor y la deshonra entre los mayas clásicos (pp. 889-894); Brigette Kovacevich, Duncan Cook, and Timothy Beach, Areas de actividad doméstica en Cancuen: perspectives basadas en datos líticos y geo-químicos (pp. 897-912); Kazuo Aoyama, La producción artesanal y subsistencia de la costa del Pacifico durante el Formativo temprano: el análisis de las micro-huellas de uso sobre la lítica de obsidiana del Complejo San Jerónimo, Escuintla, Guatemala (pp. 913-923); Nancy Peniche May, and Lilia Fernández Souza, En la busqueda de actores sociales: los aretefactos líticos de Siho, Yucatán (pp. 925-934); Gustavo Nieto Ugalde, Distribución de la lítica en Pozas de Ventura y Salto Grande, Campeche, México (pp. 935-945); Fred W. Nelson, El intercambio de obsidiana en las tierras bajas mayas (pp. 947-957); Nobuhiko Karmijo, Nobuyuki Ito, Shione Shibata, and Hiroshi Minami, Piedra y mano de moler en Casablanca, Chalchuapa (pp. 959-975); A. Natasha Tabares, Michael W. Love, Michael D. Glascock, Hector Neff, and Jeff Speakman, Variación y distribución de las fuentes de navajas prismáticas de obsidiana en El Ujuxte, Guatemala (pp. 977-987); Aline Magnoni, Scott Hutson, Eugenia Mansell, and Travis Stanton, La vida doméstica durante el periodo clásico en Chunchucmil, Yucatán (pp. 9911006); Francisco Perez Ruiz, Perspectivas y desarrollo de plano de Chichén Itzá, desde el siglo XVI hasta el presente (pp. 1007-1013); Gabriel Euan Canul, La Estructura 5C2 del Conjunto de la Serie Inicial, Chichén Itzá, Yucatán: La columnata del yugo (pp. 1015-1024); José F. Osorio, El Conjunto de los Falos en Chichén Itzá: el reflejo de una vida palaciega (pp. 1025-1033); Luis Manuel Gamboa, El Proyecto de investigación arqueológica en Candelaria, Campeche: sitio

Love, Etnicidad, identidad y poder: interacción entre los mayas y sus vecinos en el altiplano y costa del Pacifico de Guatemala en el Preclásico (pp. 461-470); Arthur A. Demarest, and Tomas Barrientos, Los proyectos de arqueología y de desarrollo comunitario en Cancuen: metas, resultados y desafios en 2003 (pp. 473-487); Lucia Moran Giracca, Evidencia de actividad ceremonial en el Grupo L6 de Cancuen (pp. 489-500); Arthur A. Demarest, Matt O’Mansky, Nicholas Dunning, and Timothy Beach, Catastrofismo, procesos ecológicos o crisis política?: Hacía una major metodólogia para la interpretación del colapso de la civilización maya clásica (pp. 501-522); Antonia E. Foias, Proyecto Eco-Arqueológico Motul de San Jose: perspectives teoricas en las dinámicas del estado clásico maya (pp. 523538); Laura Lucia Gamez, El sector ritual del grupo residencial Guacamaya, La Joyanca (pp. 539-549); Didier Galop, Jean-Michel Carozza, José Antonio López Saez, Boris Vannière, Gilles Bossuet, Mario Veliz Perez, and Jean-Paul Metailie, Historia del medio ambiente en la larga duración y ocupación del espacio en la región de La Joyanca, noroeste de Petén, Guatemala: primeros resultados (pp. 551-563); Erick M. Ponciano, Las plazas principales de Aguateca y La Joyanca, Petén: una perspectiva comparativa (pp. 565-571); Oscar Quintana, Saqueo y destrucción en Naranjo, Petén, Guatemala (pp. 573-579); Raul Noriega, and Oscar Quintana, Naranjo, su arquitectura y distribución especial (pp. 581-585); Laura Lucia Gamez, El Complejo de la Pirámide de la Escalinata Jeroglífica de Naranjo (pp. 587-594); Vilma Fialko, Investigaciones arqueológicas en la acropolis triadica B-5 de Naranjo (pp. 595-606); Bernard Hermes, and Carmen Ramos, Investigación arqueológica en la calzada Blom, Yaxhá, Petén (pp. 607-619); Astrid Runggaldier, Investigaciones preliminares en el Conjunto Palaciego “Tigrillo”, San Bartolo (pp. 621-628); Monica Urquizu, and William A. Saturno, Proyecto Arqueológico Regional San Bartolo: Resultados de la segunda temporada de campo 2003 (pp. 629-635); Juan Pedro Laporte, Exploración y restauración en las estructuras de la plaza sur de Mundo Perdido, Tikal (Grupo 6D-11)(pp. 637-657); Horacio Martínez, David Webster, Jay Silverstein, Timothy Murtha, Kirk Straight, Irinna Montepeque, Reconocimiento en la periferia de Tikal: los terraplenes norte, oeste y este, nuevas exploraciones y perspectivas (pp. 659664); Harriet F. Beaubien, Laminados de textile y engobe: el redescubrimiento de una tecnología artesanal de la antigua Mesoamérica (pp. 665-673); Markus Eberl, Exploraciones iniciales en el sitio Nacimiento, Petexbatun (pp. 675-683); Erick M. Ponciano, Takeshi Inomata, Otto Román, Oscar Santos, Oswaldo Chinchilla, and Véronique Breuil-Martínez, Una estructura ceremonial sin concluir del clásico tardío, en la plaza principal de Aguateca (pp. 685-692); Takeshi Inomata, and Daniela Triadan, Los resultados finales del Proyecto Arqueológico Aguateca: un resumen de Investigaciones 19962003 (pp. 693-700); William R. Fowler, Francisco EstradaBelli, Conrad Hamilton, Jennifer R. Bales, Matthew D. Reynolds, and Kenneth L. Kvamme, Ciudad Vieja, El Salvador: teledetección y patrón de asentamiento de una ciudad de la época de la conquista (pp. 703-716); Rosa María Chan, La historia de Ixpayac en la tradición oral de los habitantes de la aldea San Juan de Dios, municipio de San Francisco, Petén (pp. 717-726); Matthew Rockmore, Investigaciones en las misiónes coloniales de Petén (pp. 727733); Jason Yaeger, Minette C. Church, Richard M. Leventhal, and Jennifer Dornan, Etnias coloniales: la incorporación de los mayas de San Pedro en Honduras 120

las Casa de Consejo (pp. 207-212); Los parques centrales municipales como areas de convergencia socila, economica y religiosa: investigaciones arqueo-lógicas en Quetzaltenango, San Marcos, Nébaj y Tacana (pp. 219-224); Ryan Mongelluzzo, and Edgar Mendoza, Arqueología industrial en Guatemala: Chocolá (1891-1942) (pp. 249-260); Marlon Escamilla, Monica Valentini, and Javier García, Cano, El Salvador: reconocimiento del patrimonio cultural subacuático (pp. 261-272); Sergio Garza, Este es el primer templo del mundo (pp. 273278); Rocío González de la Mata, Agua, agricultura y mitos: el caso de tres rejolladas de Chichén Itzá (pp. 279-290); Tomas Barrientos, Arthur A. Demarest, and Silvia Alvarado, Horacio Martínez, Marc Wolf, and Luis Fernando Luin, Hidraúlica, ecología, ideología e poder: nueva evidencia y teorias en el sur de Petén (pp. 291-302); Oscar Quintana, and Raul Noriega, Tikal y sus vecinos: Complejidad cultural en el Triángulo Uaxha-Nakum-Naranjo (pp. 303-308); Gaspar Muñoz Cosme, Estructura urbana y arquitectura en La Blanca, Petén (pp. 309-316); Judith Valle, Espacio y función del Palacio, Grupo III-B, Holmul, Petén (pp. 317-324); Vilma Fialko, El palacio mayor de la realeza de Naranjo, Petén (pp. 325332); Jason Yaeger, La historia política de Xunantunich, Belice, vista desde el palacio (pp. 333-344); Stephen Houston, Hector L. Escobedo, and Zachary Nelson, Una pirámide de primera: investigaciones en la Estructura K-5 y sus alrededores, Piedras Negras, Petén (pp. 345-352); Ramón Carrasco Vargas, and Marines Colón González, Proyecto arqueológico Calakmul: una revaloración de la conservación en la arqueología (pp. 353-358); Amalia Enriquez O., and Omar Rodríguez C., Los espacios abiertos de la antigua ciudad maya de Calakmul: Forma y función (pp. 359-366); Benito J. Venegas, Distribución espacial, complejidad constructiva y cronología: elementos para la comprehensión urbana de Palenque (pp. 367-376); Rodrigo Liendo Stuardo, and Roberto López Bravo, Organización políticay funciones sociales vistas a través de los patios para el juego de pelota del señorio de Palenque (pp. 377-386); Kirk D. Straight, and Damien B. Marken, Los depositos de terminación del Templo XIX, Palenque, Chiapas (pp. 387-396); Ricardo Armijo Torres, and Socorro Jiménez Alvarez, Ofrendas y ceremonias a la fertilidad durante el Clásico en Comalcalco, Tabasco (pp. 397-402); José Osorio León, La presencia del Clásico Tardío en Chichén Itzá (600800/830 DC) (pp. 403-410); Frederica Sodi Miranda, and David Aceves Romero, Chichén Itzá, Tula y su impacto en la gran Tenochtitlan, a través de la complejidad cultural en el arte y sus implicaciones en la sociedad (pp. 411-422); Marina Sender Contell, Teresa Gil Piqueras, Paz Cortes Alcocer, and Juan Serra Lluch, El levantamiento topográfico y arquitectónico como fase preliminar a las intervenciones arqueológicas y de restauración sobre el patrimonio Maya (pp. 423-434); Juan L. Velasquez, La transición céramica del Preclásico Tardío al Clásico Temprano: una visión desde La TrinidadKaminaljuyú (pp. 435-446); Donald Forsyth, El desarrollo cultural de la Cuenca Mirador a través de la céramica (pp. 447-456); Melanie Forné, Céramica en La Joyanca: Conclusiones de cinco años de investigación (pp. 457-474); Fabio E. Amador, Sociedades sabaneras: estudio cerámico de la región Yalahua en el nororiente de Quintana Roo (pp. 475-482); Socorro Jiménez Alvarez, Rafael Cobos, Harjoo Chung, and Roberto Belmar Casso, El despertar de la complejidad sociocultural visto desde el estudio tecnológico de la céramica: explicando las transformaciones sociopoliticas en el occidente de Yucatán (pp. 483-492); Luis A. Romero, La céramica Navarrete: Una tradición prehispánica dentro de la céramica co-

Pozas de Ventura (pp. 1035-1042); Nadia Veronica Velez, Caracterización arquitectónica del sitio Pozas de Ventura, Campeche, México (pp. 1043-1051); Guadalupe Santillan Sanchez, Intercambio commercial de moluscos” sitios Pozas de Ventura y Salto Grande, Campeche, México (pp. 10531060); Estella Weiss-Krejci, Investigación de las depresiones pequeñas en el area de La Milpa, Belice (pp. 1061-1074); Alvaro Luis Jacobo, Alma N. Vasquez, and Sharon W. Solis, Prospección química en excavaciones forenses en el Departmento de Quiché (pp. 1077-1083); Marvin Roe, and Karen Steelman, El “Diablo Rojo” de Amatitlan: aplicación de una técnica no destructiva de cronología por radiocarbono (pp. 1085-1096); Oswaldo Gómez, El problema de la disintegración de la roca caliza de Tikal (pp. 1097-1102); María Elena Molina, and Estuardo Secaira, Una metodologia integrada para la planificación de la conservación de la biodiversidad y los recursos culturales tangibles: su aplicación en el plan maestro de Parque Nacional Tikal (pp. 1103-1107). 1998. Laporte, Juan P., Bárbara Arroyo, and Hector E. Mejía, eds. 2005. Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala (19 session, 2005). Guatemala: Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología. Contents include: David Cheetham, and John E. Clark, Investigaciones recientes en Canton Corralito: un posible enclave en la costa del Pacifico de Chiapas, México (pp. 3-8); John E. Clark, and Mary E. Pye, Los origenes de privilegio en el Soconusco, 1650 aC: dos decades de investigación (pp. 9-20); Christa Schieber de Laverreda, La cultura de Tak’alik Ab’aj y los Olmecas (pp. 21-32); Marion Popenoe de Hatch, Los Olmeca y los Maya en Tak’alik Ab’aj(pp. 33-40); José Crasborn, and Elizabeth Marroquín, Los patrónes constructivos de Tak’alik Ab’aj (pp. 41-50); Michael Love, Julia Guernsey, Sheryl Carcuz, and Molly Morgan, El Monumento 3 de La Blanca, San Marcos: una nueva escultura del Preclásico Medio (pp. 51-62); Mary E. Pye, and John E. Clark, Los Olmecas son Mixe-Zoques: contribuciones de Gareth W. Lowe a la arqueología del Formativo (pp. 63-74); Jonathan Kaplan, and Rene Ugarte, Recientes investigaciones en Chocolá, en la boca costa de Guatemala, y sus implicaciones: la hidraúlica, el cacao y los desarrollos seminales de la civilización maya (pp. 75-84); Federico Paredes Umaña, En busca de las esculturas de Chocola (pp. 85-94); Juan P. Herrera, Carlos R. Chiriboga, Audrey Janell Al-Ali, Resultados preliminares del refinamiento del mapa del sitio arqueológico Chocolá (pp. 95-102); Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, Elisa Mencos, Jorge Carcamo, José V. Genovez, Paisaje y asentamientos en Cotzumalguapa (pp. 103-118); Margarita V. Cossich, and Oswaldo Chinchilla Mazariegos, El signo “Estrella” en el arte y la escritura de Cotzumalguapa (pp. 119-130); Lynneth S. Lowe, Los Zoques del occidente de Chiapas durante el periodo Clásico (pp. 131-136); Hector Neff, Frederick J. Bove, José V. Genovez, El clima y la naturaleza de la ocupación del Posclásico en la costa sur de Guatemala (pp. 137-144); Eugenia Robinson, Marlen Garnica, Geoffrey Braswell, En el final del Preclásico: Kaminaljuyú y su periferia oeste (pp. 145-156); Carlos Alvarado Galindo, and Matilde Ivic de Monterroso, Informé de los resultados finales del Proyecto Kaminaljuyú (pp. 157-170); Dorie Reents-Budet, Ronald L. Bishop, Juan A. Valdés, and James Blackman, La céramica de Kaminaljuyú: nuevos datos químicos (pp. 171176); Guillermo Mata Armado, Silbatos prehispánicos de la costa sur del Departamento de Santa Rosa, Guatemala (pp. 177-188); Ruud Van Akkeren, El chinamit y la plaza del Postclásico: la arqueología y la etnohistoria en busca del papel de 121

cuen: Resultados e interpretaciones del Proyecto Cancuen, 2004-2005 (pp. 757-768); Adriana Sanchez López, and José Agustin Anaya, Dzibilnocac y Tabasqueño: Arqueología de la región Chenes (pp. 769-782); Evangelia Tsesmeli, Objectivos y resultados del proyecto de cartografia y la base de datos en El Perú-Waka’, Petén (pp. 783-794); Rosaura Vasquez, Andrew K. Scherer, Charles W. Golden, Stephen D. Houston, Fabiola Quiroa, Juan Carlos Melendez, and Ana Lucia Arroyave, En el reino de Pajaro Jaguar: Reconocimiento arqueológico en el area sur de la Sierra del Lacandon, Petén (pp. 795804); Kimberly Machovec-Smith, Ana Lucia Arroyave, Andrew K. Scherer, A. Rene Muñoz, and Margaret Kipling, Investigación y conservación de la Estructura D3-1 en Tecolote, Petén (pp. 805-812); Mario Aliphat F., and Laura Caso barrera, Arqueología y etnohistoria: circuitos de intercambio en el Río Usumacinta y sus afluentes (pp. 813-825); Bruce R. Bachand, Otto Román, José Francisco Castañeda, and José María Anavisca, Punta de Chimino: el crecimiento y transformación de un centro ceremonial del Preclásico en el lago Petexbatun (pp. 827-837); Markus Eberl, Daniela Triadan, Takeshi Inomata, Fiona Finke, Katja Stengert, Pablo Rodas, and Omar Schwendener, Comunidades en tiempos difíciles: nacimiento y Dos Ceibas al inicio del clásico tardío (pp. 839-845); Jeff Buechler, Reconomiento arqueológico entre Aguateca y Tamarandito, Petén (pp. 847-858); Erick M. Ponciano, Daniela Triadan, and Takeshi Inomata, Estructuras de poder del clásico tardío en la región de Petexbatun (pp. 859-865); Richard D. Hansen, Edgar Suyuc, Adriana Linares, Carlos Morales Aguilar, Beatriz Balcarcel, Francisco López, Antonieta Cajas, Abel Morales López, Enrique Monterroso Tun, Enrique Monterroso Rosado, Carolina Castellanos, Lilian de Zea, Adelzo Pozuelos, David Wahl, and Thomas Schreiner, Investigaciones en la zona cultural Miradopr, Petén (pp. 867-876); Juan Pedro Laporte, Trabajos no divulgados del Proyecto Nacioonal Tikal, Parte 4: Rescate en El Zotz, San Jose, Petén (pp. 877-894); Bernard Hermes, Wieslaw Koszul, and Zoila Calderon, Los mayas y la cultura Teotihuacana: descrubrimientos en Nakum, Petén (pp. 895-910: Bernard Hermes, Jarolslaw Zralka, and Zoila Calderon, La periferia de Nakum, Petén: datos recientes sobre la complejidad urbana de un asentamiento (pp. 911-928); Paulino I. Morales, amnd Erwin Francine Valiente, Secuencia de construcción y presentación del Edificio 218 en la acropolis este de Yaxha (pp. 929-936); Monica Pellecer Alecio, El Grupo Jabali: un complejo arquitectónico de patrón tríadico en San Bartolo, Petén (pp. 937-948); Andrés Ciudad Ruiz, and Jesus Adanez, Excavaciones en las plazas E y G de Machaquila, Petén (pp. 949-961); Brent Woodfill, Federico Fahsen, and Mizra Monterroso, Nuevos descubrimientos y evidencia de intercambio a larga distancia en Altra Verapaz, Guatemala (pp. 963-975); Javier López Camacho, Consideraciones sobre ciertos elentos arqueológicos y su organización en algunos sitios del sur de Quintana Roo (pp. 977-984); Peter J. Schmidt, Excavación y restauración del Templo de los Buhos en Chichén Itzá, Yucatán (985-992); Jeffrey B. Glover, and Dominique Rissolo, El puerto maya Vista Alegre: un estudio preliminar del comercio maya antiguo en la costa norte de Quintana Roo (pp. 993-1002); Kevin Johnston, La intensificación de la agricultura maya clásica (pp. 1003-1013).

lonial de Antigua Guatemala (pp. 493-502); David A. Freidel, and Hector Escobedo, En la encrucijada de los conquistadores: La tercera representación masculina en Tabasco, México (pp. 503-510); Kazuo Aoyama, Los artefactos líticos del Templo L8-8, un escondite de dedicación al Templo L8-5, y artefactos de obsidiana del Clásico terminal en el plaza principal de Aguateca, Petén (pp. 511-524); Zachary X. Hruby, Resultados finales del análisis de artefactos liticos de Piedras Negras, Petén (pp. 525-534); Andrew K. Scherer, Las relaciones biologicas durante la epoca Clásica Maya (pp. 535-544); Luis Rios Frutos, María Josefa Iglesias, and Barry Bogin, Todos invitados: propuestra para una base de datos sobre la estatura en las muestra arqueológicas en Guatemala (pp. 545-558); Damien Bazy, Hallazgos con motivos olmecoides descubiertos en las tierras bajas mayas: un análisis preliminar de la distributción espacial y temporal (pp. 559-570); William A. Saturno, Karl Taube, David S.Stuart, Boris Beltran, and Edwin Román, Nuevos hallazgos arquitectonicos y pictoricos en la Piramide Las Pinturas, San Bartolo, Petén (pp. 571-578); Zachary X. Hruby, Francisco Estrada Belli, Alexandre Tokovinine, Jennifer Foley, Heather Hurst, Gene Ware, David S. Stuart, and Nikolai Grube, Nuevos hallazgos de epigrafia y assentamiento en La Surfricaya, Holmul: La temporada 2005 (pp. 579-588); Alfonso Lacadena, María Josefa Iglesias, La recreación del espacio mitico de la Montaña de las Flores en un palacio de Machaquila, Petén (pp. 589-600); Octavio Quetzalcoatl Esparza, La Estela 2 de Pol Box: Estudio de un monumento del sur de Quintana Roo (pp. 601-610); Matthew Looper, La iconografia del cranio de pecari de Copán en su ritual (pp. 611-618); Pilar A. Ramos, and Ana M. Martin, El arbol Pax, la caza del venado y del avatar del Dios D (pp. 619626); Ivo Vanessa V. Lozano, La imagen como fuente de cultura: un estudio iconografico de la Estela H de Copán (pp. 627-638); Francisco Estrada Belli, Jeremy Bauer, Michael Callaghan, Nina Neivens, Anatolin Velasquez, and José Calvo, Las epocas tempranas en el area de Holmul, Petén (pp. 639648); Monica Urquizu, and William Saturno, Resultados prliminares de la cuarta temporada de campo del Proyecto Arqueológico San Bartolo (pp. 649-658); Debra S. Walker, Kathryn Reese-Taylor, and Peter Mathews, Despues de la caida: una redefinición del clásico temprano maya (pp. 659672); Liwy Grazioso, Fred Valdez, Norma García, Karen Pereira, and Carmen Ramos, Río Azul vuelto a visitar: nuevas investigaciones de los origenes preclásicos (pp. 673-682); Richard D. Hansen, Beatriz Balcarcel, Edgar Suyuc, Hector Mejía, Enrique Hernandez, Gendry Valle, Stanley P. Guenter, and Shannon Novak, Investigaciones arqueológicas en el sitio Tintal, Petén (pp. 683-694); David Webster, Timothy Murtha, Kirk Straight, Horacio Martínez, Richard Terry, Rich L. Burnett, Ryan V. Sweetwood, Walter Alvarado, Irinna Montepeque, and Jay Silverstein, Nuevos trabajos e interpretaciones de los terraplenes de Tikal: segunda temporada de campo (pp. 695-704); L. Romero, Miguel E. Acosta, Benito R. Burgos, and Tirso J. Morales, Nuevas intervenciones arqueológicas en el Parque Nacional Tikal, 2005 (pp. 705-708); Oswaldo Gómez, El Proyecto Plaza de los Siete Templos de Tikal: nuevas intervenciones (pp. 709-724); Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Investigaciones arqueológicas en La Blanca, Petén: Temporada 2004 (pp. 725-736); Arthur A. Demarest, Tomas Barrientos, and Federico Fahsen, El apogeo y el colapso del temporada en El Perú-Waka’ (pp. 737-746); Reiko Ishihara, and Jenny Guerra, Exploraciones en la grieta principal de Aguateca, Petén (pp. 747-756); Miriam J. Gallegos, and Armando Gómez, Actividades y atavios del hombre maya: La reinado de Can-

1999. Laporte, Juan P., Bárbara Arroyo, and Hector E. Mejía, eds. 2006. Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala (20 session, 2006). Guatemala: Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología. 1259 p. Contents include: Greg Borgstede, and Luis Alberto Romero, Relaciones entre las 122

sombra de un gigante: epigrafia y asentamiento de El Zotz, Petén (pp. 333-348); Richard D. Hanson, Edgar Suyuc Ley, Abel Morales, Carlos Morales, Thomas Schreiner, Enrique Hernandez, and Douglas Maurico, La Cuenca Mirador: avances de la investigación y conversación del Estado Kan en los periodos Preclásico y Clásico (pp. 349-362); Joel Palka, Rebecca Deeb, Alejandro Gillot, Nam Kim, and Monica de León, Un recorrido arqueológico por sitios mayas postclásicos e históricos en la Laguna Mendoza, Parque Nacional Sierra del Lacandon, Petén (pp. 363-378); Erick M. Ponciano, Takeshi Inomata, Daniela Triaden, Estela Pinto, Jessica Munson, and Omar Schwendener, Revistando Ceibal: cambios sociales durante el Preclásico y Clásico (pp. 379-390); Markus Eberl, and Marco A. Monroy, Refinando la secuencia céramica del Clásico Tardío en la región Petexbatun (pp. 391-402); Monica Urquizu, and William Saturno, Resultados de la quinta temporada de campo 2006 del Proyecto Arqueológico San Bartolo, Petén (pp. 403-412); Oswaldo Gómez, Proyecto Plaza de los Siete Templos de Tikal: los edificios del sur de la plaza (pp. 413-428); Jorge E. Chocón, and Juan P. Laporte, Hombres en las ruinas: la acropolis central de Pueblito, Petén (pp. 429462); Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Juan A. Valdés, and Gaspar Muñoz Cosme, Hombres en las ruinas: la acropolis central de Pueblito, Petén (pp. 429-462); Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Juan A. Valdés, and Gaspar Muñoz Cosme, El Clásico Terminal y el abandono de los palacios de La Blanca, Petén (pp. 463-476); Peter J. Schmidt, and Rocio González de la Mata, La Galeria de los Monos, Estructura 5C6 de Chichén Itzá (pp. 477-488); Jaroslaw Zralka, Bernard Hermes, and Zoila Calderon, El Clásico Terminal en Nakum: El momento de mayor auge constructivo y aumento poblacional de un sitio Maya del noreste de Petén (pp. 513-538); Telma Tobar, and Breitner González, La acropolis de Nakum: un análisis espacial y volumétrico (pp. 539-548); Gaspar Muñoz Cosme, and Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Tipología palaciega de la acropolis de La Blanca, Petén (pp. 544-549); Carlos H. Herman, Los estadios constructivos en la Plaza A del Grupo 3D--IV o Zona Norte de Tikal, Petén (pp. 549-554); María Josefa Ponce de León Iglesias, Alfonso Lacadena, and Jesus Adanez, Excavaciones en Machaquila, Petén: temporada de campo 2005 (pp. 555582); Olivia Navarro Farr, and Ana L. Arroyave, Un final macabro: La terminación ritual de la Estructura M13-1 de El Perú-Waka’ (pp. 583-594); Erick M. Ponciano, and Alba E. Pinto, Rito de terminación en la Plaza Principal de Aguateca: epilogo de su occupación en el siglo IX (pp. 595-610); Tomas Barrientos, and Arthur A. Demarest, Cancuen: puerta del mundo maya clásico (pp. 611-626); Michelle E. Rich, Varina Matute, and Jennifer Piehl, Conducta ritual en la montaña sagrada: el complejo Mirador en El Perú-Waka’ (pp. 629-638); Roxzanda K. Ortiz, and Elisa Mencos, Las fases de ocupación del Grupo Las Plumas, San Bartolo, Petén, a través de su secuencia constructiva y su céramica (pp. 639-650); Wieslaw Koszkul, Jaroslaw Zralka, Vinico García, and Bernard Hermes, Proyecto Arqueológico Nakum: resultados de la temporada 2006 (pp. 651-672); Jonathan Kaplan, Nuevos descubrimientos en Chocolá: Resultados despues de tres temporadas (pp. 673-686); Oswaldo Chinchilla, Carl Lipo, Hector Neff, Erika Gómez, Beatriz Cosenza, Erick Reyes, Ileana Bradford, Kristin N. Safi, and Bret Plaskey, Nuevas invetigaciones geofisicas y arqueológicas en Cotzumalguapa (pp. 687-698); José Heriberto Erquicia, Los Gavilanes: un sitio del postclásico temprano en la zona arqueológica de Chalchuapa, El Salvador (pp. 699-708); Noboyuki Ito, and Shione Shibata, Las investigaciones arqueológicas en la Estructura B1-1, Tazumal, 2005-

tierras altas occidentales de Guatemala y las tierras bajas en el clásico terminal (pp. 3-12); Geoffrey E. Braswell, and Michael D. Glascock, El intercambio de la obsidiana y el desarrollo de las economías del tipo mercado en la región maya (pp. 1325); , Arthur Demarest, Brent Woodfill, Tomas Barrientos, Mirza Monterroso, Juan C. Melendez, La ruta altiplano-tierras bajas del occidente, y el surgimiento y caida de la civilización Maya del Clásico (pp. 27-44); Laura Caso Barrera, and Mario Aliphat, Relaciones de Verapaz y las tierras bajas mayas centrales en el siglo XVII (pp. 45-56); David Freidel, Hector Escobedo, David Lee, Stanley Guenter, and Juan C. Melendez, El Perú-Waka’ y la ruta terrestre de la dinastia Kan hacía el altiplano (pp. 57-74); Lilian A. Corzo, El Museo Regional del Sureste de Petén, Dolores, Petén (pp. 75-98); Claudia Monzon, Jenny Guerra, and Andrea Terron, Proyecto Nuestra Herencia Cultural: primera fase (pp. 99-102); David R. García, and Karen Pereira, ¿A quien la pertenece el pasado?: La disyuntiva del patrimonio cultural en Guatemala (pp. 103-110); Cesar Casteñeda, and Richard D. Hansen, Estudios botanicos en la Cuenca Mirador: desarrollo de vegetación y su significado cultural (pp. 111-120); Erick M. Ponciano, Planificación para la conservación de areas protegidas, nuevas metodologias: el caso de Sayaxche, Petén (pp. 121-136); Omar Quintana, Resultados de la Cuarta Fase del Proyecto Triángulo Cultural Yaxha-Nakum-Naranjo, julio 2001-diciembre 2005 (pp. 137146); Jorge E. Chocón, Carlina Castellanos, Enrique Monterroso T., and Enrique Monterroso R., Conservación de estuco en el sitio arqueológico El Mirador (pp. 147-158); Roxanne Davilla, Los primeros pasos de arqueología Maya: exploradores y viajeros en el siglo XIX (pp. 159-166); José Crasborn Chavarria, and Miguel Orrego Corzo, La elaboración de replicas: un instrumento de conservación y protección al patrimonio cultural (pp. 167-180); Karla J. Cardona, and Aline Magnoni, Manejo de sitios arqueológicos en el area Maya: El caso del Parque Arqueológico Kaminaljuyú, Guatemala, y el de Chunchucmil, Yucatán (pp. 181-192); Fabienne de Pierrebourg, Espacios y areas de actividad de Ixkun: un acercamiento a su desarrollo y función (pp. 193-212); Mara A. Reyes, El asentamiento en la perifera de Ixkun: un aceramiento a su desarrollo y función (pp. 213-228); Laura L. Gamez, Salvamento arqueológico en el area central de Petén: nuevos resutados sobre la conformación y evolución del asentamiento prehispánico en la ilsa de Flores (pp. 229-240); Hector E. Mejía, Gendry Valle, Francisco Castañeda, and Enrique Hernandez, Sobreviviendo a la selva: patrón de asentamiento en la cuenca Mirador (pp. 241-264); Mizra Monterroso, Investigaciones en el norte de Alta Verapaz: el sitio arquelogico La Lima (pp. 265-278); Charles Golden, Andrew Scherer, Rosaura Vasquez, Ana L. Arroyave, Juan C. Melendez, Griselda Perez, Fabiola Quiroa, and Betsy Marzahn-Ramos, La frontera actual, la frontera antigua: Resultados de la temporada de campo 2006 del Proyecto Regional Arqueológico Sierra del Lacandon (pp. 279-292); James L. Fitzsimmons, Laura Gamez, and Melanie Forne, Epigrafia y arqueología de Hix Witz: Investigaciones en Zapote Bobal, La Libertad, Petén (pp. 293306); David Webster, Timothy Murtha, Horacio Martínez, Kirk Straight, Jay Silverstein, Alvaro Soto, Richard Terry, Rick Burnett, and Irinna Montepeque, Los terraplenes de Tikal: Perspectivas despues de tres temporades de campo (pp. 307-318); Vilma Fialko, Adriana Segura, Cyril Giorgi, Rafael Cambranes, El asentamiento en la periferia residencial de la zona suroeste de Naranjo, Petén (pp. 319-332); Stephen Houston, Hector Escobedo, Zachary Nelson, Juan C. Melendez, Fabiola Quiroa, Ana L. Arroyave, Rafael Cambranes, A la 123

1021-1030); María Ruiz Aguilar, El material de molienda de los artefactos liticos de Holmul, Cival y La Sufricaya (pp. 1031-1048); Guillermo Mata Amado, Incognitas sobre anillos de metal en la Mesoamérica prehispánica (pp. 1049-1060); Ana S. Tejeda, Intercambio interregional y el poder político en la costa del Pacifico de Guatemala durante el preclásico medio (pp. 1061-1072); Christina T. Halperin, and Gerson Martínez, Localizando evidencia de basureros y producción céramica por medio de reconocimiento geofisico en Motul de San Jose, Petén (pp. 1073-1084); Michael Callaghan, La cerámica de la región de Holmul, Petén: análisis preliminar (pp. 1085-1100); Patricia Rivera, Céramica de San Bartolo, Petén: resultados preliminares (pp. 1101-1116); Ana Lucia Arroyave, Griselda Perez Robles, Joel López, and Evan K. Eppich, Presencia de cerámica gris y naranja fino en El PerúWaka’, Petén (pp. 1117-1126); Matthew D. Moriarity, and Antonia E. Foias, El juego de poder en el centro de Petén: evidencia céramica sobre festajos asociados al juego de pelota en la Trinidad de Nosotros (pp. 1127-1140); Dorie ReentsBudet, Antonia Foias, Ronald L. Bishop, James Blackman, and Stanley Guenter, Interacciones politicas y el sitio Ik’ (Motul de San Jose): datos de la céramica (pp. 1141-1160); Ulises Chavez, De Mayas Chontal, españoles y pantanos: la secuencia céramica de San Román, Tabasco (pp. 1161-1180); Erin Kennedy Thornton, and Kitty F. Emery, Uso e intercambio prehispánico de recursos de fauna en la entidad política de Motul, Petén (pp. 1181-1192); Yvonne Putzeys, and Sheila Flores, Excavaciones arqueológicas en la Iglesia de la Santisima Trinidad de Chiquimula de la Sierra: el rescate del nombre y el prestigo de una iglesia olvidada (pp. 1195-1206); Marlen Garnica, Ermita de Santa Lucia, Antigua Guatemala: resultado de la investigación documental y arqueológica (pp. 1207-1214); Ana Betzabe Cruz, Estudio históricoarqueológico del antiguo templo parroquial de Nuestra Señora de los Remedios, Antigua Guatemala (pp. 1215-1228; Zoila Rodríguez Girón, Damaris Menendez, and Octavio Axpuac, Las Capillas de Morenos y Naturales del Templo de Santa Domingo en Santiago de Guatemala (pp. 1229-1238); Luis A. Romero, La cerámica de importación de Santo Domingo, Antigua Guatemala (pp. 1239-1247); Octavio Axpuac, Alejandro de León, and carlos Ramos, La cerámica Villalpando del exconvento de Santo Domingo, Antigua Guatemala: una tradición colonial viva en el altiplano (pp. 1249-1259).

2006 (pp. 709-722); Akira Ichikawa, and Shione Shibata, Primera temporada del rescate arqueológico en el sitio La Cuchilla, al sur del area de casa Blanca, Chalchuapa, El Salvador (pp. 723-735); Marcello A. Canuto, Ellen E. Bell, and Cassandra R. Bill, Desde el limite del reino de Copán: Modelando la intergración sociopolíticade los Mayas del Clásico (pp. 737-752); Gerardo Gutierrez, and Mary E. Pye, Conexiones iconográficas entre Guatemala y Guerrero: entendiendo el funcionamiento de la ruta de comunicación a lo largo de la planice costera del Oceano Pacifico (pp. 753-768); Marion Popenoe de Hatch, Las relaciones entre Tak’alik Ab’aj, Chocolá, Semetabaj y Kaminaljuyú: la evidencia céramica (pp. 769-778); Rony Piedrasanta, and Miguel A. Morales, Reconocimiento arqueológico en el sitio Barranca de Galvez, San Marcos (pp. 779-788); Raquel Macario, Yvonne Putzeys, Marie Fulbert, Edgar Telon, Edgar Ortega, Jorge Caceres, Juan M. Palomo, Sandra Carrillo, Luis I. Perez, Manuel Colón, Rafael Cambranes, and Karla Cardona, Proyecto Etnoarqueológico Q’um’arkaaj, Quiché, Guatemala, 2003-2006 (pp. 789-800); Carlos Navarrete, El complejo escencio en Chinkultic, Chiapas (pp. 801-812); Eddy A. Joaquin, Una ofrenda para la muerte futura: hallazgos arqueológico en el Palabor, San Juan Comalapa, Chimaltenango (pp. 813-822); Judith Valle, Rescate arqueológico en el Monticulo de la Culebra y el Acueducto de Pinula: dos monumentos en agonia (pp. 823-834); Carlos Morales Aguilar, Bárbara Arroyo, and Karen Pereira, El sitio Naranjo, departemento de Guatemala, y su distribución espacial (pp. 835-842); Hector Neff, Bárbara Arroyo, Ileana Bradford, Karen Pereira, Margarita Cossich, Carl Lipo, Kristen N. Safi, and Bret Plaskey, Geofisica y los monumentos de Naranjo (pp. 843-848); Karen Pereira, Bárbara Arroyo, and Margarita Cossich, Las estelas lisas de Naranjo, Guatemala (pp. 849860); Bárbara Arroyo, Karen Pereira, margarita Cossich, Lorena Paiz, Edgar Arevalo, Monica de León, Carlos Alvarado, and Fabiola Quiroa, Proyecto Rescate naranjo: nuevos datos del Preclásico en el valle de Guatemala (pp. 861-874); Antonio Prado Cobos, Similitudes intercontinentales en los principios de la historia (pp. 877-890); Pilar Asensio Ramos, El venado, el pecari e Itzamnaaj (pp. 891-900); Heajoo Chung, El Calendario maya: identificación de las constelaciones en las paginas 45 a 50 dle Codice de Dresden (pp. 901-912); Juan A. Valdés, and Federico Fahsen, La figura humana en el arte maya del Preclásico (pp. 933-944); Sergio Garza, Genero, conplementariedad y separación en rituales mayas en Santa Eulalia, Huehuetenango (pp. 945-950); Jenny Guerra, and Reiko Ishihara, Ventanas sagradas: un estudio etnoarqueológico de las creencias y rituales relacionados con las cuevas en Chocolá, Suchitepequez (pp. 951-958); Eugenia Robinson, Marlen Garnica, Ruth A. Armitage, and Marvin W. Rowe, Los fechamientos del arte rupestre y la arqueología en la Casa de las Golondrinas, San Migule Dueñas, Sacatepequez (pp. 959-972); Sergio Garza, James E. Brady, and Emilio Merino, Un aperspectiva etnoarqueológica sobre la utilización del espacio en cuevas en Santa Eulalia, Huehuetenango (pp. 973978); Edgar Carpio Rezzio, and Hector E. Mejía, Las puntas de proyectil de Cotzumalguapa: análisis tecnologico (pp. 991996); Brigitte Kovacevich, Margarita Cossich, Paola Duarte, and Fred Nelson, La obsidian de Cancuen: produccion, distribución y resultados de difracción de rayos X (pp. 997-1010); Kazuo Aoyama, Algunas observaciones socioeconómicas y políticas del clásico maya sobre los artefactos líticos de Aguateca, Petén (pp. 1011-1020); Zachary X. Hruby, Helios J. Hernandez, and Brian Clark, Análisis preliminar de los artefactos liticos de Holmul, Cival y La Sufricaya, Petén (pp.

2000. Laporte, Juan P., Bárbara Arroyo, and Hector E. Mejía, eds. 2007. Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala (21 session, 2007). Guatemala: Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología. 1117 p. Contents include: Yvonne Putzeys, Jorge Caceres, Edgar Telon, and Sergio Cuyan, Año 2006 y la arqueología en Q’um’arkaj: Proyecto etnoarqueológico Q’um’arkj y rescate en tramo carretero Santa Cruz del Quiché-La Estancia (pp. 1-12); Eddy A. Joaquin, Algunos datos acerca del patrón de asentamiento en una comunidad Ixil del Altiplano Noroccidental de Guatemala (pp. 13-24); Eugenia Robinson, Marlen Garnica, and Juan P. Herrera, Pacaño, un sitio ritual en las Tierras Altas de Guatemala (pp. 2534); Edwin Román, Situación sociopolitica-economica de la cuenca media del Río Motagua, durante la epoca prehispánica (pp. 35-46); Erick T. Rochette, and Monica Pellecer, ¿A quien esta asociado?: La producción artesanal doméstica de bienes de estatus en la cuenca media del Río Motagua (pp. 47-56); Karen Pereira, and Bárbara Arroyo, ¿Y donde estan asociado?: Patrón de asentamiento en la periferia de Naranjo, Guatemala (pp. 57-64); Lorena Paiz Aragon, Retorno hacía Naranjo, De124

González, and Telma Tobar, La acropolis interior de Nakum (pp. 349-356); Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Gaspar Muñoz Cosme, Juan A. Valdés, María L. Vázquez de Agredos, and Ricardo Torres Manzo, La Blanca, Petén: nuevas aportaciones a la investigación arqueológica de la acropolis y la plaza norte (pp. 357-371); Edgar Suyuc Ley, Paulino I. Morales, Francisco López, and Anaite Ordoñez, Investigaciones en el Complejo Arquitectonico Danta, El Mirador, Petén (pp. 373-385); Oswaldo Gómez, El Proyecto Plaza de los Siete Templos de Tikal: excavación de los templos al este de la plaza (pp. 387398); James Borowicz, Sobre las cresterías y los mascarones de esquina en la Estructure 91 de la plaza de los Siete Templos en Tikal (pp. 399-408); Jaroslaw Zralka, Wieslaw Koszkul, Bernard Hermes, and Gustavo Martínez, Nuevos hallazgos de Nakum: la segunda temporada del Proyecto Arqueológico Nakum (pp. 409-431); David A. Freidel, and Hector L. Escobedo, Los señores del Reino del Ciempies: comentarios sobre la cuarta temporada de campo en El Perú (pp. 431-448); Emma Martínez, and Francisco Arevalo, Reconociendo la cuenca del Paraiso: realidad de los sitios arqueológicos inundados en la presa hidroeléctrica Cerron Grande (pp. 449-456); Lorraine Williams-Beck, Sistemas de organización territorial cuuchcabal, batabil, cuuchteel: variaciones entre la planicie costera y tierra adentro en el area noroeste de la península de Yucatán (pp. 457-474); Luis Pantoja Diaz, María José Gómez, Cecilia Medina Martin, and Felipe Ceron Cetina, Un acercamiento al sistema de asentamiento en Soblonke, un sitio arqueológico de la región de Yucatán, México (pp. 475-482); Martha Cuevas García, Paiaje paLeóntológico en palenque (pp. 483-490); Gaspar Muñoz Cosme, and Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, La ordenación urbana de La Blanca, Petén (pp. 491497); Juan P. Laporte, and Jorge E. Chocón, Sera un palacio? No! Sera una acropolis? No! Un conjunto de función desconcertainte en el centro de Pueblito, Petén (pp. 499-514); Arthur Demarest, Tomas Barrientos, Melanie Forne, Marc Wolf, and Ronald Bishop, La nueva historia de la puerta a las tierras bajas: descubrimientos recientes sobre la interaccion, arqueología y epigrafía de Cancuen (pp. 515-532); Olivia Farr, Keith Eppich, and Ana Lucia Arroyave, Ceremonias, conducta y sentido: una exploración de los rituales de terminación y dedicación en las estructuras M13-1 y N14-2 de el Perú-Waka (pp. 533-542); Hector E. Mejía, Desarrollo y estructura de las ciudades al sur de El Mirador, Petén (pp. 543-563).

partamento de Guatemala, en el clásico tardío (pp. 65-72); Bárbara Arroyo, Lecciones de Naranjo, Guatemala: El rescate y la investigación (pp. 73-78); Adriana Linares Palma, and Bárbara Arroyo, Las figurillas de Naranjo, Guatemala: Análisis en contextos sagrados del Preclásico (pp. 79-90); Margarita Cossich Vielman, Resultados del análisis de obsidiana de Naranjo, Guatemala (pp. 91-102); Carlos Alvarado Galindo, Taltic: Una puerta al valle de Guatemala (pp. 103-116); Monica de León, La céramica Rojo sobre Ante del Preclásico Medio en el sitio Naranjo, Guatemala (pp. 117-128); Carlos Morales Aguilar, Richard D. Hansen, Abel Morales López, and Wayne K. Howell, Nuevas perspectivas en los modelos de asentamiento Maya durante el Preclásico de las Tierras Bajas: Los sitios de Nakbé y El Mirador, Petén (pp. 129-140); Edy Barrios, and Claudia Quintanilla, Tres Islas: Un pequeño centro de comercio de las Tierras Bajas en el Río Pasión, Sayaxche, Petén (pp. 141-154); Vilma Fialko, la periferia este de Tikal en el periodo preclásico dentro del contexto de la cuenca del Río Holmul (pp. 155-164); Laura L. Gamez, Análisis comparativo de areas residenciales de los sitios arqueológicos La Joyanca y Zapote Bobal, La Libertad, Petén (pp. 165-178); Arthur A. Demarest, Brent Woodfill, Marc Wolf, Tomas Barrientos, Ronald Bishop, Mirza Monterroso, Edy Barrios, Claudia Quintanilla, and Matilde Ivic Monterroso, De la selva a la sierra: Investigaciones a lo largo de las rutas ribereñas y terrestres del Occcidente (pp. 179-194); Yvonne Putzeys, Cindy Flores, and Edgar Telon, Primer reconocimiento arqueológico en al sierra Chinaja, Chisec, Alta Verapaz (pp. 195212); Veronica Vázquez López, Entre Río Bec y Calakmul: Algunas reflexiones sobre patrón de asentamiento y organización sociopolítica(pp. 213-226); Breitner González, and Telma Tobar, Apoyo grafico y virtual para la mejor comprension de los sitios arqueológicos del parque nacional Yaxha, Nakum, Naranjo (pp. 283-292); Zachary X. Hruby, Griselda Perez, Alejandro Guillot, and Melanie Kingsley, El Proyecto Costa del Caribe: Resultados preliminares de la primera temporada (pp. 227-234); Eva Lemonnier, and Charlotte Arnauld, Sistemas Clásicos de asentamientos jeraquizados en La Joyanca, Guatemala y Río Bec, México (pp. 235-252); Heather Hurst, Jessica Craig, William Saturno, Francisco Estrada-Belli, Boris Beltran, and Edwin Román, Tesoro o basura: Un estudio sobre la terminación de murales de San Bartolo, Cival y La Sufricaya, Petén (pp. 253-262); Julio Sanchez-Montufar, Criterios de conservación de edificios en Nakum y Yaxha (pp. 263-274); Raul Noriega, Breitner González, and Edwin F. Valiente, Processo y resultados de las intervenciones de conservación en Nakum y el Edificio 218 de Yaxha (pp. 275-282);Breitner González, and Telma Tobar, Apoyo grafico y virtual para la maejor comprehension de los sitios arqueológicos del Parque Nacional Yaxha, Nakum, Naranjo (pp. 283-292); Javier Martínez Burgos, Urbanismo y arquitectura en Petén, Guatemala: Elementos para su análisis e interpretacon (pp. 293-298); Tirso Morales, Benito Burgos, Miguel Acosta, Sergio Pinelo, Marco Tulio Castellanos, Leopoldo González, Francisco Castañeda, Edy Barrios, Rudy Larios, nd Cruz Jau, Trabajos realizados por la unidad de arqueología del Parque Nacional Tikal, 2006-2007 (pp. 299-310); Omar Rodríguez Campero, Características de la composición urbana de los sitios de Calakmul, Balamku y Nadzca’an (pp. 311-324); Noboyuki Ito, and Shione Shibata, Las investigaciones arqueológicas en Tazumal, Chalchuapa, 2006-2007 (pp. 325-336); Richard Hansen, and Beatriz Balcarcel, El Complejo Tigre y la acropolis central de El Mirador durante el Preclásico medio y tardío (pp. 337-348); Zoila Calderon, Bernard Hermes. Breitner

2001. Laporte, Juan P., Bárbara Arroyo, and Hector E. Mejía, eds. 2009. Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala (22 session, 2008). Guatemala: Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología. 1394 p. Contents include: Yvonne Putzeys, Eddy Joaquin, Sheila Flores Media, and Julio Ajin, Excavaciones en el antiguo mercado de San Pedro Sacatepequez, Guatemala: resultadaos preliminares (pp. 1-12); Juan C. Ramírez, El sistema hidraulico en Santiago, capital del reino de Guatemala, 1543-1773: un estudio históricoarqueológico (pp. 13-30); Victor Sandoval, Restauración del presbiterio de Santa Cruz Verapaz (pp. 31-38); Bertila Bailey Vargas, and Sheila Flores Media, Nuevas excavaciones en elo exconvento de Santo Domingo de Guzman, Antigua Guatemala: un visitazo reciente a nuestra historia (pp. 39-46); Ana Betzabe Cruz, Historia y arqueología del antiguo convento de Santa Teresa de Antigua Guatemala (pp. 47-56); Marlen Garnica, Zoila Rodríguez Girón, and Jorge E. Caceres, Investigaciones arqueológicas en el Real palacio de la Ciudad de Santiago, Antigua Guatemala (pp. 57-66); Claudia Wolley, Prospección arqueológica puntual en la Antigua Ermita de Nuestra 125

stream scholarship. A New Age interpretation of this transition posits that during this time Earth and its inhabitants may undergo a positive physical or spiritual transformation, and that 2012 may mark the beginning of a new era. Others suggest that the 2012 date marks the end of the world or a similar catastrophe. Scenarios posited for the end of the world include the Earth’s collisión with a passing planet or black hole, or the arrival of the next solar maximum. Scholars from various disciplines have dismissed the idea that a catastrophe will happen in 2012, stating that predictions of impending doom are not found in any of the existing Maya accounts. Most astronomers and other scientists have rejected the apocalyptic forecasts on the grounds that the anticipated events are precluded by astronomical observations or are unsubstantiated by the predictions that have been generated from these findings. In 2006, Daniel Pinchbeck popularized New Age concepts about this date in his book 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl, linking it to beliefs about crop circles, alien abduction, and personal revelations based on the use of enthogens and mediumship.

Señora de los Dolores del Llano, Antigua Guatemala (pp. 6776); Jorge E. Chocón, and Lilian A. Corzo, Echandole lodo a la historia: intervención en la Iglesia de Nuestra Señora de los Dolores, Petén (pp. 77-96); Zoila Rodríguez Girón, La Etmita del Soldado, San Juan Chamelco, Alta Verapaz (pp. 97-112); Julio Sanchez Montufar, A mayor y mejor conservacion, menor restauracion: criterios de conservación integral aplicados al patrimonio cultural y natural de Guatemala (pp. 113-126); José H. Esquicia, Resultados de la primera fase del proyecto de reconocimiento y registro de sitios arqueológicos históricos de El Salvador (PAHES-UTEC)(pp. 127-144); Claudia Vela González, Evaluación de la enseñanza de la arqueología en centros educativos guatemaltecos (pp. 145-158); Omar Schwendener, La arqueoestereografia: un ensayo teorico metodologico (pp. 159-166); Ana B. Cosenza, and Erick Reyes Andrade, Caracterización del suelo y modelado de estructuras en mapas de resistividad en sitios arqueológicos (pp. 167178); Ricardo Perello, Gaspar Muñoz Cosme, and Marina Sender Contell, La observación de las ruinas Mayas y su análisis patologicio como indicadores de su comportamiento estructural y constructivo (pp. 179-188); Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, María L. Vasquez de Agredos, Patricia Horcajada Campos, and Marco A. Valladares, Patrimonio arqueológico y conservacion: los talleres de sensibilización y las actividades educativas en patrimonio cultural (pp. 189-198); Anabella Coronado-Ruiz, La narrativa histórica de los sitios Mayas restaurados: implicaciones sociales de la arqueología y la conservación arquitectónica (pp. 199-206); Rosa María Chan, Análisis de la situación del patrimonio cultural en la reserva de la Biosfera Maya, Petén (pp. 207-216); Claudia Monzon, and Jenny Guerra Ruiz, Tras la reja del Museo (pp. 217-222); Laura Beovide, Transformaciones productivas y dinamica costera: mas alla del concepto de cazadores-recolectores prehispánicos (pp. 223-236); Mario M. Aliphat, Huertos y cacaotales mayas: un análisis agroecosistemico (pp. 2237-244); Laura Caso Barrera, Huertos Q’eqchi: comprobación actual de un agroecosistema de cultivo prehispánico (pp. 245-254); Horacio Martínez, la metamorfosis de una comunidad Achi: el caso de Río Negro-Pacux (pp. 255-266); Daniel Juarez Cossio, El proyecto Yaxchilan y las alternativas de conservación en la decada de 1970 (pp. 267-276); Thomas Roby, Hector Eliud Guerra, and José R. Mimbreño, Haciendo el caso de la conservación in situ de la Escalinata Jeroglifica en Copán: evaluación y monitoreo interdisciplinario de las condicuiones en un cierto plaza como base para planemiento de la intervención (pp. 277-286);

2003. Andrews, Synthia, and Colin Andrews. 2008. The Complete Idiot's Guide to 2012. New York: Alpha Books. 326 p. 2004. Aveni, Anthony F. 2009. The End of Time: The Maya Mystery of 2012. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 190 p. “The Internet, bookshelves, and movie theaters are full of prophecies, theories, and predictions that December 21, 2012, marks the end of the world. Award-winning astronomer and Mayan researcher Aveni explores these theories, explains their origins, and measures them objectively against evidence unearthed by Maya archaeologists, iconographers, and epigraphers. 2005. Barrios, Carlos. 2009. The Book of Destiny: Unlocking the Secrets of the Ancient Mayans and the Prophecy of 2012. New York: HarperOne. 356 p. “According to the Mayan Elders, at the moment of birth every human being is given a destiny. Our life challenge is to develop ourselves and our skills in order to fulfill this destiny, thus fueling our individual contribution to the planet. At the heart of this book is the sacred Mayan calendar, a tool that allows the reader to discover this destiny, along with one’s special Mayan symbol, origin, as well as the protection spirits that accompany them through life.” 2006. Braden, Gregg. 2007. The Mystery of 2012: Predictions, Prophecies, and Possibilities. Boulder: Sounds True; Enfield: Publishers Group UK. 417 p. “Collects essays by authors who use spiritual, economic, ecological, and scientific approaches to examine the year 2012 when, according to a prediction from an ancient Mayan calendar, the end of an era will occur on Earth.”

Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicos en Guatemala (Electronic Format) 2002. Laporte, Juan Pedro, and Hector E. Mejía. 2003. Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala: 1987 Simposio I; 1988 Simposio II; 1989 Simposio III. Guatemala: Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, Asociación Tikal. CD-ROM. The Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología and the Asociación Tikal have begun to provide some of their publications in electronic format. For example,

2007. Braden, Gregg. 2009. Fractual Time: The Secret of 2012 and a New World Age. Carlsbad, CA: Hay House. 253 p. “Braden merges the modern discoveries of nature’s patterns (fractals) with the ancient view of a cyclic universe. The result is a powerful model of time, “fractal time,” and a realistic window into what to expect for the mysterious year 2012.”

2012 PHENOMENON The 2012 phenomenon comprises a range of beliefs that cataclysmic events will occur on December 21, 2012, which is said to be the end-date of a 5,125-year-long cycle in the Mayan Long Count calendar. Various astronomical alignments and numerological formulae related to this date have been proposed, although none have been accepted by main-

2008. Caruson, David. 2008. 2013 Oracle: Ancient Keys to the 2012 Awakening. San Francisco: Council Oak Books 126

Broadway Books. 269 p. “In his celebrated previous book, Apocalypse 2012, author Joseph appraised the likelihood of planet-wide catastrophe in 2012 by presenting scientific evidence of looming chaos and even mass extinction. Here, he answers the most pressing question to arise from the investigation: What can we do to mitigate the coming cataclysm? Joseph presents the latest findings about the threats to our life on earth--including an all-out collapse of power grids and satellite systems resulting from solar flares expected to climax with unprecedented ferocity in 2012.”

2009. Danelek, J. Allan. 2009. 2012: Extinction or Utopia: Doomsday Prophecies Explored. Woodbury, MN: Llewellyn. 197 p. “Is 2012 the end of the world as we know it? From 2012 to global warming to worldwide pandemics, doomsday scenarios play an increasingly large role in our lives. Do any of these apocalyptic scenarios pose a real, urgent risk? Why does our modern culture continue to embrace these bleak beliefs, and how are they affecting our world?” 2010. Heley, Mark. 2009. The Everything Guide to 2012: All You Need to Know About the Theories, Beliefs, and History Surrounding the Ancient Mayan Prophecies. Avon, MA: Adams Media. 289 p. “Here’s your one-stop guide to all the theories and debates surrounding the end of the current Mayan calendar cycle with the winter solstice of 2012.”

2016. Pinchbeck, Daniel. 2009. 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl. New York: Jeremy Tarcher/Penguin. 408 p. “In tracing the meaning of the end of the Mayan calendar in 2012 and the imminent transition from one world to another prophesied by the Hopi Indians, Pinchbeck synthesizes indigenous cosmology, alien abduction, shamanic revivalism, crop circles, psychedelic visions, the current ecological crisis, and the JudeoChristian Apocalypse into a new vision for our time.”

2011. Hitchcock, Mark. 2009. 2012: the Bible, and the End of the World. Eugene, OR: Harvest House. 184 p. “Examines the evidence that points to a December 21, 2012 destruction of the earth as described by the ancient Mayans, and points out what the Bible says about the coming apocalypse.”

2017. Pinchbeck, Daniel, and Ken Jordan. 2009. Toward 2012: Perspectives on the Next Age. New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin. 351 p. “An informed, challenging, and engaging collection of essays on the new choices in lifestyles and community as we begin the countdown toward the year 2012. This anthology of pieces published on the website Reality Sandwich draws together some of today’s most celebrated visionaries, thinkers, and pioneers in the field of evolving consciousness, exploring topics from shamanism to urban homesteading, the legacy of Carlos Castaneda to Mayan predictions for the year 2012, and new paths in direct political action and human sexuality.”

2012. Jenkins, John M. 2009. The 2012 Story: The Myths, Fallacies, and Truth Behind the Most Intriguing Date in History. Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin. 482 p. “From one of the pioneering authors who introduced the 2012 countdown to the world’s spiritual community comes an epic exploration of the origins of this portentous date. Jenkins examines the date’s roots in Mayan cosmology, modern astronomy, and ancient prophecy.” 2013. Jones, Marie D. 2013. The End of Days or a New Beginning? Envisioning the World After the Events of 2012. Franklin lakes, NJ: New Page Books. 286 p.

2018. Las profecias mayas; Maya Prophecies. Merida: Dante, 2008. 2nd ed. 72 p. Mayan prophecies, with commentary and interpretations by José Arguelles, Walter Quinones, Adrian G. Gilbert and Maurice Cotterell.

2014. Joseph, Lawrence E. 2007. Apocalypse 2012: A Scientific Investigation Into Civilization’s End. New York: Morgan Road Books. 261 p. “Taking the Maya prophecies about 2012 as a starting point, Joseph examines a broad range of catastrophes that could strike Earth in the near future, ranging from solar flares to interstellar energy clouds to super volcanoes to religious fanatics igniting Armageddon.” 2015. Joseph, Lawrence E. 2010. Aftermath: A Guide to Preparing For and Surviving Apocalyse 2012. New York:

127

6 REGIONAL AND SITE REPORTS 2030. Eberl, Markus, and Takeski Inomata. 2001. Maya royal headband (sak hunal) from Aguateca. Mexicon 23(6):134-135. Report on the discovery of the headband of the Maya ruler during the excavation of Structure M8-4.

Abaj Takalik 2019. Reed, Jim. 2002. Further explorations at Abaj Takalik. Institute of Maya Studies Newsletter 31(5):1-4. 2020. Schieber de Lavarreda, Christa, and Miguel Orrego Carzo. 2001. Abaj Takalik. Guatemala: Fundación G&T Continental. 82 p. Treatment of the history, excavations, monuments, reconstruction, and religious importance of the site of Abaj Takalik.

2031. Emery, Kitty F. 2006. Definiendo el aprovechamiento de la fauna por la elite: evidencia en Aguateca y otros sitios de Petexbatún, Guatemala. Utz’ib 4(1): 1-16. 2032. Inomata, Takeshi. 2001. The power and ideology of artistic creation: elite craft specialists in Classic Maya society. Current Anthropology 42(3):321-349. Excavations at the rapidly abandoned center of Aguateca, Guatemala provide clear archaeological evidence of craft production by elites. These data present a unique test case for refining the archaeological theory of craft specialization. For the Classic Maya, the manufacture of art objects was an act of creation loaded with symbolic meaning. Skilled crafting, along with the privileged knowledge encoded in the products, formed an important part of the high culture that served to distinguish the elite from the rest of society. The cultural and symbolic capital resulting from artistic creation also had critical meaning and consequences for competition among elites. Such a system of craft specialization needs to be understood in its social and cultural contexts, with particular emphasis on the power relations and ideologies surrounding production.

2021 Tarpy, Cliff. 2004. Unearthing a king from the dawn of the Maya: place of the standing stones. National Geographic 205(5):66-79. Description of the excavation of a royal burial beneath Structure 7, one of more than 90 ceremonial plazas and buildings constructed between 800 BC and AD 900. Acanmul 2022. Staines Cicero, Leticia. 2002. Una pintura del dios K’awil en Acanmul, Campeche. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 8(16):35-38. Actun Tunichil Muknal 2023. Moyes, Holley. 2001. The Cave as a Cosmogram: The Use of GIS in an Intrasite Spatial Analysis of the Main Chamber of Actun Tunichil Muknal, A Maya Ceremonial Cave in Western Belize. M.A. thesis, Florida Atlantic University. 209 leaves.

2033. Inomata, Takeshi. 2003. Aguateca: new revelations of the Maya elite. National Geographic 203(5):110-119. German language translation: Takeshi Inomata, Aguateca: Das Ende einer Maya-Dynastie (National Geographic Deutschland 2003 (5):162-171, 2003).

Actuncan 2024. McGovern, James O. 2004. Monumental Ceremonial Architecture and Political Autonomy at the Ancient Maya City of Actuncan, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 223 leaves.

2034. Inomata, Takeshi. 2003. War, destruction, and abandonment: the fall of the Classic Maya center of Aguateca, Guatemala. In The Archaeology of Settlement Abandonment. T. Inomata, and R. Webb, eds. pp. 43-60. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.

Aguacate 2025. Mayer, Karl H. 2002. Stela 1 from Aguacate, Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 24(3):44-45. Report on the discovery of a previously unknown stela at Aguacate.

2035. Inomata, Takeshi. 2007. Settlements and Fortifications of Aguateca: Archaeological Maps of a Petexbatún Center. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press.

Aguateca 2026. Aoyama, Kazuo. 2007. Elite artists and craft producers in Classic Maya society: lithic evidence from Aguateca, Guatemala. Latin American Antiquity 18(1):3-26.

2036. Inomata, Takeshi. 2008. Warfare and the Fall of a Fortified Center: Archaeological Investigations at Aguateca. Publication, 3. Nashville: Vanderbilt Institute of Mesoamerican Archaeology. 331 p.

2027. Aoyama, Kazuo. 2008. Preclassic and Classic Maya obsidian exchange, artistic and craft production, and weapons in the Aguateca region and Seibal, Guatemala. Mexicon 30(4):78-86.

2037. Inomata, Takeshi, Erick Ponciano, Oswaldo Chinchilla, Otto Román, Véronique Breuil-Martínez, and Oscar Santos. 2003. An unfinished temple at the Classic Maya centre of Aguateca, Guatemala. Antiquity 78(302):798-811. Structure L8-8 was still in the process of construction when it was abandoned at the beginning of the ninth century AD, revealing information on Maya construction methods and processes.

2028. Aoyama, Kazuo. 2009. Elite Craft Producers, Artists, and Warriors at Aguateca: Lithic Analysis. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. 210 p. 2029. Eberl, Markus. 2003. Looting at Aguateca continues. Mexicon 25(4):96-97. 128

chemical signatures of ancient and modern Maya activities at Aguateca, Guatemala. Journal of Archaeological Science 31(9):1237-1250.

2038. Inomata, Takeshi, Daniela Triadan, Erick Ponciano, Richard Terry, and Harriet F. Beaubien. 2001. In the Palace of the Fallen King: the royal residential complex at the Classic Maya center of Aguateca, Guatemala. Journal of Field Archaeology 28(3-4):287-306. The Aguateca Archaeological Project extensively excavated two structures (M7-22 and M732) in the Palace Group of the Late Classic Maya (600-830 AD) center of Aguateca, Guatemala. Multiple lines of evidence, including site layout, architectural features, soil chemistry, objects stored in a sealed room, and abandonment processes, suggest that these were the buildings where the ruler and his family lived and worked. The use of space in these structures shows some similarities to those of the rapidly abandoned elite residences at Aguateca and of palace-type buildings at other Maya centers. The occupants of this royal complex retained a certain level of visibility, indicating the importance of the ruler’s body as the focus of theatrical display. After the royal family evacuated the center, an invading enemy ritually destroyed these buildings, attesting the symbolic importance of the royal residences. The center was almost completely abandoned after this incursion.

2044. Triadan, Daniela. 2007. Warrior, nobles, commoners and beasts: figurines from elite buildings at Aguateca, Guatemala. Latin American Antiquity 18(3):269-294. Ah Kin Chen 2045. Burgos Villanueva, Rafael, Miguel Covarrubias Reyna, Sara Dzul Gongora, and Yoly Palomo Carrillo. 2008. Investigaciones arqueológicas en la región costera y al interior de la provincia historica de Ah Kin Chel, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 47-62. Ake 2046. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. A Maya inscription from Ake, Yucatan. Mexicon 23(1):6. Altun Ha 2047. Andrés, Christopher R. 2005. Building negotiation: Architecture and sociopolitical transformation at Chau Hiix, Lamanai, and Altun Ha, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Indiana University. 310 leaves.

2039. Inomata, Takeshi, Daniela Triadan, Erick Ponciano, Estela Pinto, Richard E. Terry, and Markus Eberl. 2002. Domestic and political lives of Classic Maya elites: the excavation of rapidly abandoned structures at Aguateca, Guatemala. Latin American Antiquity 13(3):305-330. Burned buildings and rich floor assemblages suggest that each excavated elite residence was occupied by a relatively small group, which constituted an important economic and social unit. These residences were also loci where processes of the operation of the polity and court unfolded through political gatherings, artistic production, and displays of power.

2048. White, Christine D., David M. Pendergast, Fred J. Longstaffe, and Kimberley R. Law. 2001. Social complexity and food systems at Altun Ha, Belize: the isotopic evidence. Latin American Antiquity 12(4):371-393. 2049. White, Christine D., Fred J. Longstaffe, and Kimberley R. Law. 2001. Revisiting the Teotihuacan connection at Altun Ha: oxygen-isotope analysis of Tomb F-8/1. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(1):65-72.

2040. Inomata, Takeshi, and Daniela Triadan, eds. 2010. Burned Palaces and Elite Residences of Aguateca: Excavations and Ceramics. Monographs of the Aguateca Archaeological Project, 1. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. Contents include: Takeshi Inomata, and Erick Ponciano, The Palace Group (pp. 23-52); Takeshi Inomata, Daniela Triadan, and Erick Ponciano, The Elite Residential Area (pp. 53-137); Takeshi Inomata, and Markus Eberle, The Barranca Escondida (pp. 138-148); Takeshi Inomata, Test Pits in Other Locations (pp. 149-155); Takeshi Inomata, Introduction to the Ceramic Study at Aguateca (pp. 157-162); Takeshi Inomata, The Temporal and Spatial Distributions of Ceramics (pp. 163-179); Takeshi Inomata, Daniela Triadan, and Estela Pinto, Complete, Reconstructible, and Partial Vessels (pp. 180-360); Takeshi Inomata, Daniela Triadan, and Estela Pinto, Complete and Reconstructible Drums (pp. 362-368); Takeshi Inomata, Formation Processes of the Ceramic Assemblages (pp. 369-372).

Ambergris Cay 2050. Guderjan, Thomas H. 2004. Elite burial rites from the site of Chac Balam on Ambergris Caye, Belize. Mexicon 26(5):98-102. On the basis of artifacts from Burial 14 author argues that coastal and inland polities were closely integrated. 2051. Guderjan, Thomas H., and Lorraine A. Williams-Beck. 2001. Another dimension of trade and interaction on Ambergris Cay, Belize. Mexicon 23(5):124-125. Authors argue that northern Ambergris Cay sites were actively linking coastal and riverine trade systems between the Early Classic and Terminal Classic periods. 2052. Stemp, William J. 2001. Chipped Stone Tool Use in the Maya Coastal Economics of Marco González and San Pedro, Ambergris Caye, Belize. British Archaeological Reports, International Series, 935. Oxford: BAR Publishing. 307 p.

2041. Ishihara, Reiko. 2007. Bridging the chasm between religion and politics: Archaeological investigations of the grietas at the Late Classic Maya site of Aguateca, Petén, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 452 leaves.

Antigua Guatemala 2053. Rodríguez Girón, Zoila. 2007. Investigaciones arqueológicas en el Convento de Santo Domingo, Antigua Guatemala. U tz’ib 1(7-8).

2042. Ishihara, Reiko. 2008. Rising clouds, blowing winds: Late Classic Maya rain rituals in the main chasm, Aguateca, Guatemala. World Archaeology 40(2): 169-189.

Arroyo de Piedra 2054. Escobedo Ayala, Hector L. 2006. History and Dynastic Politics in a Classic Maya Court: Investigations at Arroyo de

2043. Terry, Richard E., Fabian G. Fernández, J. Jacob Parnell, and Takeshi Inomata. 2004. The story in the floors: 129

Piedra, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Vanderbilt University, 428 leaves.

2066. Campaña Valenzuela, Luz Evelia. 2002. Hallazgo en Becán, Campeche. Arqueología mexicana 9(53):16.

Bajo Hill Site 2055. Kunen, Julie C. 2004. Ancient Maya Life in the Far West Bajo: Social and Environmental Change in the Wetlands of Belize. University of Arizona Anthropological Papers, 69. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 174 p.

2067. Campaña Valenzuela, Luz Evelia, and Sylviane Boucher. 2002. Nuevas imagenes en Becán, Campeche. Arqueología mexicana 10(56):64-69. Belize River 2068. Aimers, James J. 2002. Cultural Change on a Temporal and Spatial Frontier: Ceramics of the Terminal Classic to Postclassic Transition in the Upper Belize River Valley. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 541 leaves.

Baking Pot 2056. Colas, Pierre R., Christophe G. B. Helmke, Jaime J. Awe, and Terry G. Powis. 2002. Epigraphic and ceramic analyses of two Early Classic Maya vessels from Baking Pot, Belize. Mexicon 24(2):33-39. Contextual, ceramic, and epigraphic analyses are combined to provide a firm dating for two previously unpublished ceramic vessels recovered at Baking Pot in the Belize Valley.

2069. Ball, Joseph W., and Jennifer T. Taschek. 2003. Reconsidering the Belize Valley Preclassic: a case for multiethnic interactions in the development of a regional culture tradition. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(2):179-217. Authors present the first comprehensive and complete typevariety typologies for the Middle through Late Preclassic ceramic complexes of the upper Belize River Valley.

2057. Piehl, Jennifer C. 2006. Performing Identity in an Ancient Maya City: The Archaeology of Houses, Health and Social Differentiation at the Site of Baking Pot, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 1092 leaves.

2070. Ferries, Laura C. 2002. Site Formation and Occupation History of the Medicinal Trail House Mound Group at the Program for Belize Archaeological Project, Belize. M.A. thesis, University of Cincinnati. 84 leaves.

Balam Na 2058. Garza, Sergio, James E. Brady, and Christian Christensen. 2001. Balam Na Cave 4: implications for understanding Preclassic cave mortuary practices. California Anthropologist 28(1):15-21.

2071. Garber, James F., ed. 2004. The Ancient Maya of the Belize Valley: Half a Century of Archaeological Research. Gainseville: University Press of Florida. 512 p. Volume reviews the past half century of archaeological research in the Belize Valley. Contents include: Arlen F. Chase and James F. Garber, The archaeology of the Belize Valley in historical perspective (pp. 1-14), Gordon R. Willey, Retrospective (pp. 15-24); James F. Garber, Jaime J. Awe, M. Kathryn Brown, and Christopher J. Hartman, Middle Formative prehistory of the Central Belize valley: an examination of architecture, material culture, and sociopolitical change at Blackman Eddy (pp. 25-47); James F. Garber, M. Kathryn Brown, W. David Driver, David M. Glassman, Christopher J. Hartman, F. Kent Reilly III, and Lauren A. Sullivan, Archaeological investigations at Blackman Eddy (pp. 48-69); James M. Conlon, and Terry G. Powis, Major center identifiers at a plazuela group near the ancient Maya site of Baking Pot (pp. 70-85); Lisa J. Lucero, Scott L. Fedick, Andrew Kinkella, and Sean M. Graebner, Ancient Maya settlement in the Valley of Peace area (pp. 86-102); Paul F. Healy, David Cheetham, Terry G. Powis, and Jaime J. Awe, Cahal Pech, Belize: the Middle Formative Period (pp. 103-124); David Cheetham, The role of “Terminus Groups” in lowland Maya site planning: an example from Cahal Pech (pp. 125-148); Joseph W. Ball, and Jennifer T. Taschek, Buenavista del Cayo: a short outline of occupational and cultural history at an Upper Belize Valley regal-ritual center (pp. 149-167); Richard M. Leventhal and Wendy Ashmore, Xunantunich in a Belize Valley context (pp. 168-179); Virginia M. Fields, The royal charter at Xunantunich (pp. 180-190); Jennifer T. Taschek, and Joseph W. Ball, Buenavista del Cayo, Cahal Pech, and Xunantunich: three centers, three histories, one central place (pp. 191-206); Paul F. Healy, Bobbi Hohmann, and Terry G. Powis, The ancient Maya center of Pacbitun (pp. 207-227); Paul F. Healy, Jaime J. Awe, and Hermann Helmuth, Defining royal Maya burials: a case from Pacbitun (pp. 228-237); Anabel Ford, Integration among communities, centers, and regions: the case from El Pilar (pp. 238-256); Heather

Balamkú 2059. García Cruz, Florentino. 2007. La iconografía del panel No. 5 de la Estructura 1-A sub o templo de los estucos de Balamkú, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1): 119-136. Balancan 2060. Prager, Christian. 2001. An inscribed fragment in the Museo Dr. José Gómez Panaco at Balancan. Mexicon 23(1):56. Balché 2061. Merk, Stephan. 2003. Unreported buildings at the Maya ruins of Balché, Campeche, Mexico. Mexicon 25(5):117-188. Barcohaltun de las dos Cruces 2062. Merk, Stephen. 2010. Barcohaltun de los dos Cruces: the “lost” Maler site of Xbalche? Mexicon 32(1-2):5-7. Barton Creek Cave 2063. Morehart, Christopher T., Jaime J. Awe, Michael J. Mirro, Vanessa A. Owen, and Christopher G. Helmke. 2004. Ancient textile remains from Barton Creek cave, Cayo District, Belize. Mexicon 26(3):50-56. 2064. Owen, Vanessa A. 2002. An Investigation of Classic Maya Cave Mortuary Practices at Barton Creek Cave, Belize. M.A. thesis, Colorado State University. 152 leaves. Barton Ramie 2065. Weller, Errin T. 2009. Changing Perspectives on Community Identity and Function: A Remote Sensing and Artifactual Re-Analysis of Barton Ramie, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Colorado at Boulder. 608 leaves. Becán 130

International Series, 2018. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 88 p.

McKillop, The Classic Maya trading port of Moho Cay (pp. 257-272); Gyles Iannone, Problems in the definition and interpretation of “minor centers” in Maya archaeology with reference to the Upper Belize River Valley (pp. 273-286); W. David Driver, and James F. Garber, The emergence of minor centers in the zones between seats of power (pp. 287-304); James Aimers, The terminal Classic to Postclassic transition in the Belize River valley (pp. 305-319); Arlen F. Chase, Polities, politics, and social dynamics: “contextualizing” the archaeology of the Belize Valley and Caracol (pp. 320-334); Diane Z. Chase, Diverse voices: toward an understanding of Belize Valley archaeology (pp. 335-348).

Blackman Eddy 2078. Brown, M. Kathryn. 2003. Emerging Complexity in the Maya Lowlands: A View From Blackman Eddy, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Methodist University. 203 leaves. 2079. Cochran, Jennifer L. 2009. A Diachronic Perspective of Marine Shell Use From Structure B1 at Blackman Eddy, Belize. M.A. thesis, University of Texas at Arlington. 116 leaves.

2072. Hageman, Jon B. 2004. The lineage model and archaeological data in Late Classic northwestern Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):61-62.

Blue Creek 2080. Barrett, Jason W. 2004. Constructing Hierarchy Through Entitlement: Inequality in Lithic Resource Access Among the Ancient Maya of Blue Creek, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Texas A&M University, 2004, 433 leaves.

2073. Hohmann, Bobbi M. 2002. Preclassic Maya Shell Ornament Production in the Belize Valley, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of New Mexico. 254 leaves.

2081. Barrett, Jason W., and Thomas H. Guderjan. 2006. A river docking feature at Blue Creek, Belize. Latin American Antiquity 17(2):227-239.

2074. Lucero, Lisa J. 2001. Social Integration in the Ancient Maya Hinterlands: Ceramic Variability in the Belize River Area. Anthropological Research Paper, 53. Tempe: Arizona State University. 88 p.

2082. Driver, William D. 2007. The Construction of Intrapolity Sociopolitical Identity Through Architecture at the Ancient Maya Site of Blue Creek, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 774 leaves.

2075. Scarborough, Vernon L., Fred Valdez, and Nicholas Dunning. 2003. Heterarchy, Political Economy, and the Ancient Maya: The Three Rivers Region of the East-Central Yucatan Peninsula. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 172 p. Contents include: Vernon L. Scarborough, and Fred Valdez, The engineered environment and political economy of the Three Rivers region (pp. 3-13); Nicholas Dunning, John G. Jones, Timothy Beach, and Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach, Physiography, habitats, and landscapes of the Three Rivers region (pp. 14-36); Lauren A. Sullivan, and Kerry L. Sagebiel, Changing political alliances in the Three Rivers region (pp. 25-36); Gair Tourtellot, Francisco Estrada Belli, John J. Rose, and Norman Hammond, Late Classic Maya heterarchy, hierarchy, and landscape at La Milpa, Belize (pp. 37-51); Brett A. Houk, The ties that bind: site planning in the Three Rivers region (pp. 52-63); Eleanor M. King and Leslie C. Shaw, A heterarchical approach to site variability: the Maax Na Archaeological Project (pp. 64-76); Thomas H. Guderjan, Jeffrey Baker, and Robert J. Lichtenstein, Environmental and cultural diversity at Blue Creek (pp. 77-91); Julie L. Kunen, and Paul Hughbanks, Bajo communities as resource specialists: a heterarchical approach to Maya socioeconomic organization (pp. 92-108); Jon B. Hageman, and Jon C. Lohse, Heterarchy, corporate groups, and Late Classic resource management in northwestern Belize (pp. 109-121); Brandon S. Lewis, Environmental heterogeneity and occupational specialization: an examination of lithic tool production in the Three Rivers region of the northeastern Petén (pp. 122-135); Carole L. Crumley, Alternative forms of social order (pp. 136-146).

2083. Driver, W. David. 2002. An Early Classic Colonnaded Building at the Maya Site of Blue Creek, Belize. Latin American Antiquity 13(1):63-84. Examination of colonnaded buildings from a site-planning perspective indicates that columns may have been used to create buildings that were conducive to movement, and for the viewing of public activities. 2084. Driver, W. David, and Phil Wanyerka. 2001. Creation symbolism in the architecture and ritual at Structure 3, Blue Creek, Belize. Mexicon 24(1):6-8. 2085. Guderjan, Thomas H. 2004. Public architecture, ritual, and temporal dynamics at the Maya center of Blue Creek, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(2):235-250. See also Sarah C. Clayton, W. David Driver, and Laura J. Kosakowsky, Rubbish or ritual? Contextualizing a Terminal Classic problematical deposit at Blue Creek, Belize: A response to “Public architecture, ritual, and temporal dynamics at the Maya center of Blue Creek, Belize” by Thomas H. Guderjan (Ancient Mesoamerica 16(1):119-130, 2005). 2086. Guderjan, Thomas H. 2005. Lessons learned from a volunteer based research project in Central America. SAA Archaeological Record 5(1):33-35. Frank discussion of the use of volunteers in archaeological investigations at Blue Creek, Belize.

2076. Sunahara, Kay S. 2003. Ancient Maya Ceramic Economy in the Belize River Valley Region: Petrographic Analyses. Doctoral dissertation, McMaster University. 176 leaves.

2087. Guderjan, Thomas H. 2006. E-groups, pseudo E-groups, and the development of the Classic Maya identity in the eastern Petén. Ancient Mesoamerica 17(1):97-104. 2088. Guderjan, Thomas H. 2007. The Nature of an Ancient Maya City: Resources, Interaction, and Power at Blue Creek, Belize. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. 165 p.

2077. Sunahara, Kay S. 2009. Ancient Maya Ceramic Economy in the Belize River Valley Region: Petrographic Analyses. 131

direction, artists Heather Hurst and Leonard Ashby faithfully reconstructed the murals at half their original size. It took two years to complete the work, which measure 29’ x 8’. Exact replication of the colors, intricate designs and hieroglyphics of the paintings was imperative; even the timeworn chips and flaws of the originals are included in the facsimile. See also Yale Professor presents Mexican Government with records of ancient Maya art. M2 Presswire, May 16, 2002. http://www. presswire.net.

2089. Guderjan, Thomas H., and C. Colleen Hanratty. 2007. The Maya Blue Creek Project. Minerva 18(4): 42-48. 2090. Guderjan, Thomas H., Timothy Beach, Steve Bozarth, Colleen Hanratty, Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach, and Timothy Preston. 2010. New Information about the Demise of a Maya City: Fieldwork at Blue Creek, Belize, 2006 and 2007. Mexicon 32(1-2):15-22. 2091. Morse, McKenzie L. 2009. Pollen from Laguna Verde, Blue Creek, Belize: Implications for paleoecology, paleoethnobotany, agriculture, and human settlement. Doctoral dissertation, Texas A&M University. 455 leaves.

2099. Tovalin Ahumada, Alejandro, Victor Ortiz Villarreal, Adolfo Velazquez de León Collins, and Alejandra Badillo Sánchez. 2006. Tres decoraciones de estuco modelado asociados a diferentes eventos arquitectónicos en Bonampak. Mexicon 28(1):8-15.

Bolonchen 2092. Stephens, John L. 2007. Bolonchen, Campeche. Arqueología mexicana 14(83):44-45.

2100. Velázquez-Cabrera, Roberto. 2002. Análisis virtual de trompetas de Bonampak. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 8(17):42-45.

Bonampak 2093. Biró, Peter. 2007. Las piedras labradas 2, 4 y 5 de Bonampak y los reyes de Xukalnah en el siglo VII. Estudios de cultura maya 29:31-62.

2101. Ware, G., Stephen D. Houston, Mary Miller, Karl Taube, and Beatriz de la Fuente. 2002. Infrared imaging of precolumbian murals at Bonampak, Chiapas, Mexico. Antiquity 76(292):325-326.

2094. Houston, Stephen D. 2002. Cantantes y danzantes de Bonampak. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):54-55.

Bolonk’in 2102. Sheseña, Alejandro, and Thomas A. Lee Whiting. 2004. Yugo incrustado con glifos mayas procedente de los alrededores de Chilon, Chiapas. Mexicon 26(6):127-132. Authors describe three stone yokes from the site of Bolonk’in, near Chilon, Chiapas. One of the yokes has inlaid glyphs which pertain to the relationship between Toniná and other centers in the region.

2095. Miller, Mary E. 2001. Lo último en los murales de Bonampak: una nueva mirada. Arqueología mexicana 9(51):1214. 2096. Miller, Mary E. 2002. Reconstructing the murals of Bonampak. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):93-95. Spanish translation: Reconstrucción de los murales de Bonampak. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):44-54, 2002.

Buenavista del Cayo 2103. Helmke, Christophe, Joseph W. Ball, Patricia T. Mitchell, and Jennifer T. Taschek. 2008. Burial BVC88-1/2 at Buenavista del Cayo, Belize: Resting place of the last king of Puluul? Mexicon 30(2): 43-49.

2097. Miller, Mary E. 2002. The Willfulness of art: the case of Bonampak. Res: Anthropology and Aesthetics 42:8-23. “Part of a special issue presenting papers delivered at the conference “West by Nonwest,” celebrating the 50th anniversary of pre-Colombian art history, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, January 10-12, 2000. The Bonampak paintings are some of the most extraordinary works of the first millennium. To understand these paintings today, one must try to engage with them at every point of entry: They must be recontextualized in eighth-century Mayan civilization; they must be decontextualized and grasped from the 21st century; and most of all, they must be observed exceptionally carefully, traveling outward from the work, rather than skating along its surface. Several factors explain why the Bonampak paintings constitute a willful body of art and are resistant to fragmented readings: the size of the human figures, allowing for the viewer to see them within their architectural framework; that architectural framework, which is essential to understanding the paintings; and the emotion revealed in the paintings. The unique features of the Bonampak paintings may particularly lend themselves to painted rather than carved imagery, and they may well provide clues to the structure of an eighth-century book, revealed here as a work in which visuality supersedes textuality.”

Cacaxtla 2104. Brittenham, Claudia L. 2008. The Cacaxtla Painting Tradition: Art and Identity in Epiclassic Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Yale University. 568 leaves. 2105. Davenport, Sharon L. 2000. The Maya Influence in the Cacaxtla Murals. M.A. thesis, California State University, Domínguez Hills. 65 leaves. 2106. Serra Puche, Mari Carmen, and Manuel de la Torre. 2002. Guía de viajeros por Tlaxcala: Cacaxtla y Xochitecatl. Arqueología mexicana 10(56):70-77, 2002. English language translation: Traveller’s guide to Cacaxtla and Xochitecatl (Arqueología mexicana 10(56):89-93). Cahal Pech 2107. Lamanai carved bone tube stolen from Cahal Pech Visitor Center, Belize. PARI Journal 2(4)-3(1):4, 2001-2002. Calakmul 2108. Acuña, Helga G. 2008. Rain Harvesting in the Rainforest: The Ancient Maya Agricultural Landscape of Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico. International Series, 1879. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 141 p.

2098. Reconstruction of historical Maya murals exhibited at Yale. M2 Presswire, January 4, 2001. Recently completed reproductions of the ancient Maya murals of Bonampak are exhibited at Yale’s Saybrook College. Under Mary Miller’s 132

2122. García Barrios, Ana, and Ramón Carrasco. 2006. Nuevos hallazgos de cerámica estilo códice en Calakmul. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 125-136.

2109. Anaya Hernández, Armando, and Stanley P. Guenter. 2008. Calakmul y en reino de Kan: su historia y desarrollo a través de las inscripciones. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 215-232.

2123. García Moreno, Renata. 2001. Les coiffures funéraires de Calakmul, Campeche, Mexique. Leur étude technologique et symbolique (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2001) and Renata García Moreno, Análisis de dos tocados de elite localizados en el complejo funerario adjudicado al gobernante” Guerra de Jaguar” en Calakmul, Campeche, México (Journal de la Société des Américanistes 89(2):207-220, 2003).

2110. Boucher, Sylviane, and Lucía Quiñones. 2007. Entre mercados, ferias y festines: los murales de la Estructura Sub 1-4 de Chiik Nahb, Calakmul. Mayab 19:27-50. 2111. Campo Sanz, Sofía Martínez del. 2004. Arte funerario maya de Calakmul, Campeche. Arqueología mexicana 12(69):12.

2124. Gunn, Joel D., William J. Folan, John W. Day, and Betty B. Faust. 2008. Las condiciones de ocupación urbana sustentable en el interior de la península de Yucatán. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 289.

2112. Campo Lanz, Sofía Martínez del. 2004. Mascara funeraria de Calakmul, Campeche. Arqueología mexicana 12(67):10. 2113. Carrasco Vargas, Ramón, and Verónica A. Vázquez López. 2007. Nuevas evidencias del Clásico Temprano en el registro arqueológico del reino de Ka’an. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1): 155-166.

2125. Harris, John. 2010. Calakmul and other sites Related to the Kaan dynasty in Quintana Roo and southern Campeche. The Codex 18(1-2):40-66. 2126. Martin, Simon, and David Stuart, eds. 2009. Snake Kingdom: History and Politics at Calakmul and Related Royal Courts; Sourcebook for the 2009 Maya Meetings and Symposium. Austin: University of Texas at Austin. 89 p.

2114. Cordero Baqueiro, María. 2008. El tocado de Yuknoom Yich’ak K’ak, k’uhul ahaw del reino de Kaan. Arqueología 16(94):78-85. 2115. Domínguez, Marilyn. 2004. Murales con temas acuáticos en Calakmul. Arqueología mexicana 12(71):14.

2127. Martínez Davila, Alma. 2008. Figurillas preclásicas en la ciudad de Calakmul. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 9-22.

2116. Domínguez Carrasco, María del Rosario. 2008. Análisis químico y sociopolítico de producción cerámica prehispánica en la región de Calakmul, Campeche. Campeche: Universidad Autónoma de Campeche. 328 p.

2128. Pallan, Carlos, and Erik Velásquez García. 2006. La estela 52 de Calakmul y el reinado de Yuhknoo’m Too’k’kawiil. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 341358.

2117. Enríquez Ortiz, Amalia. 2006. La Antigua ciudad maya de Calakmul; más de 1200 años de historia a través de sus sistemas constructivos. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1):47-56. 2118. Folan, William J., and Silverio Gallegos Osuna. 2001. Algunas observaciones sobre el uso del suelo en el sitio arqueológico de Calakmul. Estudios de cultura maya 21:103111.

2129. Prager, Christian M. 2004. A Classic Maya ceramic vessel from the Calakmul region in the Museum zu Allerheiligen, Schaffhausen, Switzerland. Human Mosaic 35(1):31-40. 2130. Price, T. Douglas, R. Burton, and Vera Teisler. 2006. Evidencia isotópica sobre el sitio de Calakmul, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 87-94.

2119. Folan, William J., Jacinto May Hau, Joyce Marcus, W. Frank Miller, and Raymundo González Heredia. 2001. Los caminos de Calakmul, Campeche. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):293-298. Discussion of linear features located during investigations at Calakmul, one of the largest regional centers in the Maya area.

2131. Reyes Ayala, Claudia. 2006. Análisis estilístico del friso de la estructura XX de Calakmul. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 359-370. 2132. Rodríguez Campero, Omar. 2007. La permanencia de las montañas: cambios morfológicos en los edificios de Calakmul. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1): 179-190.

2120. Folan, William J., Abel Morales L., Raymundo González H., María del Rosario Domínguez C., Hubert Robichaux, Armando Anaya H., Candace Pruett, and Joel D. Gunn. 2008. El Corazón del Petén del Norte: Calakmul, Campeche, México y su estado regional. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 305-330.

2133. Schneider, Renata. 2008. Fardo funerario de la Tumba 1 de Calakmul; Conservación, Restauración y Montaje. México: INAH. 100 p. 2134 Segovia Liga, Argelia. 2006. La Estela 1 de Calakmul, breve acercamiento a la imagen. Estudios de cultura maya 27:67-82.

2121. Gallegos Gomora, Mirian J. 2001. Las costumbres funerarias mayas durante el 300-900 d.n.e. en las capitals regionales: una interpretación a partir de los entierros de Calakmul, Campeche. Campeche: Universidad Autónoma de Campeche. 180 p. Originally presented as a thesis presented to the Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia.

2135. Tunesi, Raphael. 2007. A new monument mentioning Wamaaw K’awiil of Calakmul. PARI Journal 8(2):13-19.

133

2136. Vázquez L., Verónica A. 2006. Pintura mural y arquitectura como medios de transmisión ideológica en el Clásico temprano: la acrópolis Chik Naab de la antigua Calakmul. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 105-114.

L’evolution des sites mayas du Sud de l’Etat du Campeche (Mexique) sur la base de deux reconnaissances archéologiques complementaires. Doctoral dissertation, Universite Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne (France), 2001.

2137. Zapata, Renee L. . 2003. Calakmul: antología. Campeche: Consejo Nacional Para la Cultura y las Artes; Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Centro INAH Campeche; Gobierno del Estado de Campeche, Instituto de Cultura de Campeche; Universidad Autónoma de Campeche. 213 p.

2145. Peniche May, Nancy, Claudia Gongora Aguilar, and Armando Inurreta Diaz. 2006. Las industrias líticas talladas en la costa norte de Campeche: una perspectiva regional. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 147-154.

Campeche 2138. Carvajal Correa, Marco A.J.L. 2008. Antropología aplicada e indigenismo en Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 47-62.

2146. Šprac, Ivan. 2005. Maya sites and monuments in SE Campeche, Mexico. Journal of Field Archaeology 29(34):385-407. See also Antonio Benávides Castillo, Relevancia precolombina del suroeste de Campeche (Investigadores de Mesoamerica 2:40-53, 2002).

2139. Covarrubias Reyna, Miguel. 2001. Reconocimiento arqueológico en la región oriental del estado de Campeche. Temas antropológicos 23(2):201-202.

2147. Šprajc, Ivan. 2006. Nuevos descubrimientos arqueológicos en el sur del Estado de Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 155-168.

2140. Flores Esquivel, Atasta, and Ivan Šprajc. 2008. Reconocimiento arqueológico en el sur de Campeche: nuevos hallazgos y contribuciones para una visión regional. Estudios de cultura maya 32: 17-38.

2148. Vargas, Ernesto, and Antonio Benávides, eds. 2007. Patrimonio arqueológico maya en Campeche: novedades, afectaciones y soluciones. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 236 p.

2141. Forsyth, Donald W. 2008. El preclásico superior en la costa y tierra adentro del suroeste de Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 211-218.

Cancuén 2149. Cook, Duncan E., Brigitte Kovacevich, Timothy Beach, and Ronald Bishop. 2006. Deciphering the inorganic chemical record of ancient human activity using ICP-MS: a reconnaissance study of Late Classic soil floors at Cancuén, Guatemala. Journal of Archaeological Science 33(5):628-640.

2142. García López, María I. 2008. Desarrollo cultural del área sureste del estado de Campeche: la cerámica como marcador temporal. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 289304.

2150. García, David R. 2002. Cancuén, Guatemala: sacred, scientific and sustainable: practicing anthropology in Latin America. Practicing Anthropology 24(4):25-30.

2143. Martos López, Luis A. 2007. Mayas, Southeastern México; Campeche. México: CONACULTA: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia/Grupo Azabache, 2007. 64 p. Exploration of various sites in Campeche, Mexico, with numerous lively color and illustrations. This volume covers the following sites: Edzná, Jaina, Acanmul, Santa Rosa Xtampak, El Tigre, Chicanna and Calakmul, among other locations.

2151. Guatemalan sites yield Maya insights. Science News 165(21):334, 2004. Brief summary of excavations at Cival, Waka, and Cancuén. 2152. Kettunen, Harri. 2005. Maya exhibition in Helsinki features new finds from Cancuén palace. Mexicon 27(2-3):24-25.

2144. Nondédéo, Philippe. 2003. L’evolution des sites mayas du sud de l’etat du Campeche, Mexique. Paris Monographs in American Archaeology, 12. British Archaeological Reports, International Series, 1171. Oxford, England. 293 p. “This volume concentrates on major research projects undertaken at key sites such as Calakmul, Becán, Balamkú, and Nadzca’an, during which considerable advances were made in specific areas of research including analysis of the complexities of architectural styles and the iconography of the region during Mayan times. The sum of the information and results obtained adds a wider perspective on the southern Yucatan peninsular of the time as a whole. This large-scale work is presented in three sections. Section one concentrates on natural factors such as climate, soils, and vegetation, detailed summaries of large-scale excavation projects by season to 1998 (including seasons at “La Tulane”, Xpuhil, Becán, Chicanna, Hormiguero, Calakmul, Río Bec, etc.), and methodology. Section two provides a gazetteer of smaller sites by zonal regions. Section three deals with the major zone of Kaynikte-Manos Rojas, including analyses of occupation, architecture and ceramics. Section four covers the evolution and chronology of sites in the south of Yucatan.” Publication of Philippe, Nondédéo,

2153. Kovacevich, Brigitte, Hector Neff, and Ronald L. Bishop. 2005. Laser Ablation-ICP-MS chemical characterization of jade from a jade workshop at Cancuén, Guatemala. In Laser Ablation-ICP-MS in Archaeological Research. Robert J. Speakman and Hector Neff, eds. pp. 3856. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 2154. New important archaeological finding at Cancuén, Guatemala. Mexicon 26(2):24, 2004. 2155. Stewart, Tamara. 2004. Ancient Maya altar recovered. American Archaeology 7(4):10. Cancun 2156. Romero Blanco, Karina. 2002. Cancun Archaeological Museum. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):100-101. Spanish translation: Museo Arqueológico de Cancun. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):5-51, 2002.

134

Cara Blanca 2157. Kinkella, Andrew J. 2009. Draw of the sacred water: An archaeological survey of the ancient Maya settlement at the Cara Blanca Pools, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 386 leaves.

Caucel 2168. Hernández Hernández, Concepcion. 2001. Trabajo de salvamento arqueológico en Caucel, capital de la provincia de Chakan, en el s. XVI. Investigadores de la cultura maya 9(2):295-319.

Caracol 2158. Bawaya, Michael. 2004. Archaeotourism: increasing tourism and knowledge of the Maya are the goals of a major project at a site in Belize. American Archaeology 7(4):12-19. Author providees an overview of recent archaeological work at the site by Jaime Awe, and Arlen and Diane Chase.

Caves Branch Rock Shelter 2169. Glassman, D. M., J. A. K. Harris, and J. L. Bonor. 2001. Paleopathology of the prehistoric Maya from Caves Branch Rock Shelter, Belize. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, Annual, 70. From 1994 to 1995, excavations were conducted within the Caves Branch region of Belize. The Caves Branch Rock Shelter represents an ossuary estimated to include the remains of over 150 prehistoric Maya. Most remains were commingled as the result of burial practice and the prolonged continued use of the site for ossuary activities. Few indications of trauma-related death were noted, suggesting that the burials represented individuals who had died of illness or other natural causes. Demographic information on age, sex, and stature was collected when possible. The data indicated the presence of both sexes and individuals of age varying from infancy to old age. All recovered bones from the Caves Branch Rock Shelter were examined for anomalies and conditions of paleopathology. Frequency statistics were calculated for the incidence of healed trauma, infectious disease, and metabolic disturbances. The frequency of pathological conditions of the dentition such as hypoplasias, abscesses, calculus deposition and dental attrition were also calculated.

2159. Chase, Arlen F., and Diane Z. Chase. 2001. Ancient Maya causeways and site organization at Caracol, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):273-281. Authors suggest the primary role of the intrasite causeway system of approximately 75 km of roads at Caracol was to facilitate administrative control, as well as intrasite communication and transport. 2160. Chase, Arlen F.; Diane Z. Chase, Elayne Zorn, and Wendy Teeter. 2008. Textiles and the Maya archaeological record: gender, power, and status in Classic Period Caracol, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 19(1):127-142. 2161. Chase, Diane Z., and Arlen F. Chase. 2004. Archaeological perspectives on Classic Maya social organization from Caracol, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):127-138. 2162. Chase, Diane Z., and Arlen F. Chase. 2008. ¿Que no nos cuentan los jeroglíficos?: arqueología e historia en Caracol, Belice. Mayab 20: 93-108.

Caye Coco 2170. Delu, Antonina M., Bradley W. Russell, and Marilyn A. Masson, eds. 2002. Belize Postclassic Project 2001: Investigations at Caye Coco and the Shore Settlements of Progresso Lagoon; Report to the Department of Archaeology, Belmopan, Belize. Institute of Mesoamerican Studies, Occasional Publication, 7. Albany: Department of Anthropology, State University of New York at Albany. 222 p. Contents include: Marilyn A. Masson, Overview of the Belize Postclassic Project 2001 Season (pp. 1-6); Robert M. Rosenswig, Two Archaic sites in the Freshwater Creek drainage, northern Belize: 2001 excavations at Caye Coco and the Fred Smith site (pp. 76-32); Josalyn M. Ferguson, Initial investigations of the terminal Classic Strath Bogue site (PR 10), Corozal District, Belize (pp. 33-64); Maxine H. Oland, Continued investigations of colonial Maya-Spanish interaction on the shores of Progresso Lagoon (pp. 65-106); Bradley W. Russell, A preliminary report on ceramic sourcing and replication studies at Progresso Lagoon (pp. 107-114); Antonina M. Delu, The ground stone tools from Caye Coco (pp. 115-124); Marilyn A. Masson, Type: Variety analysis of terminal Classic and Early Postclassic Caye Coco pottery from the 2000 season (pp. 125-152); Margaret L. Briggs, The osteological traits of Strath Bogue burials PR10-01 and PR1003 (pp. 153-156); Robert M. Rosenswig, Appendix 1: Archaic tools from the Fred Smith site and Caye Coco (pp. 157-180); Appendix 2: Lot log, 2000-2001 (pp. 181-186); Edith Tam, Peter Vamosy, and Devon Wichelt, Appendix 3: Artifact illustrations from the 2001 season (pp. 187-210); Appendix 4: Inventory of 2001 Strath Bogue artifacts by provenience (pp. 211-222).

2163. Hoffman, Kathryn. 2001. A family that digs together: the Chases have made exciting discoveries in the ancient Maya city of Caracol. Time for Kids 6(26). Account of Adrian, Aubrey, and Elyse Chase, the three children of Arlen and Diane Chase, as their parents conduct archaeological investigations in Belize. http://www.timeforkids.com/TFK/magazines /story/0,6277,107993,00.html. 2164. Johnson, Lucas R. M. 2008. Tools of a local economy: Standardization and function among small chert tools from Caracol, Belize. M.A. thesis, University of Central Florida. 166 leaves. 2165. Murtha, Timothy M. 2002. Land and labor: Classic Maya terraced agriculture at Caracol, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Pennsylvania State University. 425 leaves. 2166. Teeter, Wendy G. 2001. Maya Animal Utilization in a Growing City: Vertebrate Exploitation at Caracol, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California at Los Angeles. 452 leaves. 2167. Webb, Elizabeth A., Henry P. Schwarcz, and Paul F. Healy. 2004. Detection of ancient maize in lowland Maya soils using stable carbon isotopes: evidence from Caracol, Belize. Journal of Archaeological Science 31(8):1039-1052.

2171. Ferguson, Josalyn M., and Maxine H. Oland, and Marilyn A. Masson, eds. 2003. Belize Postclassic Project 135

1: Lithic debitage from Caye Coco 2000 (pp. 181-184); Maxine H. Oland, Appendix 2: Lithic tools from Laguna de On (pp. 185-192); Lot log 2000 (pp. 193-202); Daniel Bailey, Artifact illustrations from the 2000 season (pp. 203-221).

2002: Investigation of the Shore Settlements of Progresso Lagoon, and San Estevan; Report to the Department of Archaeology, Belmopan, Belize. Institute of Mesoamerican Studies, Occasional Publication, 9. Albany: Department of Anthropology, State University of New York at Albany. 181 p. Contents include: Maxine Oland, Josalyn M. Ferguson, and Marilyn Masson, Overview of the Belize Postclassic Project 2002 season (pp. 1-6); Maxine H. Oland, Continued colonial Maya excavations at the Avila site (PR9), Progresso Lagoon shore, Belize 2002 season (pp. 7-45); Josalyn M. Ferguson, Continued investigations (2202) of the terminal Classic Strath Bogue site (PR10), Corozal District, Belize (pp. 46-99); Robert M. Rosenswig, Looking for Archaic deposits at the San Estevan site, northern Belize (pp. 100-121); Marilyn A. Masson, and Robert M. Rosenswig, Settlement reconnaissance around Progresso Lagoon (pp. 122-125); Christopher Morehart, Paleoethnobotany at Avila (pp. 126151); Margaret L. Briggs, Osteological and mortuary data from four Strath Bogue (PR10) burials (pp. 152-156); Appendix 1: Lot log for Avila, PR9, 2002 (pp. 157-162); Heather Greenfield, Appendix 2: Shell analysis from colonial shore investigations, 2002 (pp. 163-165); Reagan Kronrad, Appendix 3: Faunal analysis from colonial shore investigations, 2001 (pp. 166-168); Appendix 4: 2002 Lot logs for Stath Bogue (PR10)(pp. 169-179); Appendix 5: 2002 Strath Bogue artifact concentration/collection log (pp. 180181).

2173. Rosenswig, Robert M., and Marilyn M. Masson. 2002. Transformation of the Terminal Classic to Postclassic architectural landscape at Caye Coco, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2): 213-235. Authors analyze the distribution of Late Postclassic (AD 1250-1500) architecture and associated artifacts at Caye Coco, Belize. Ceren 2174. Brown, Linda A., and Payson D. Sheets. 2001. Material correlates of village ceremony: two ritual structures at the Ceren site, El Salvador. In Fleeting Identities: Perishable Material Culture in Archaeological Research. Penelope B. Drooker, ed. pp. 114-134. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, Occasional Paper, 28. Carbondale. 2175. Lewin, Jen S. 2002. An Interactive Guide to Ancient Ceren: Before the Volcano Erupted. Austin: University of Texas Press. Computer File: CD-ROM; 4 3/4 in. “This CDROM (PC and Mac-compatible) presents an ancient village in the southern Maya periphery, buried by the Loma Caldera volcanic eruption C. AD 6000. It was developed by faculty (Drs. Mark Gross and Payson Sheets) and students at the University of Colorado, Boulder. It includes six slide shows consisting of an introduction, geology, architecture, religious buildings, special buildings, and agriculture of the village. The buildings with their artifacts are presented as threedimensional computer models.”

2172. Rosenswig, Robert M., and Marilyn A. Masson, eds. 2001. Belize Postclassic Project 2000: Investigations at Caye Coco and the Shore Settlements of Progresso Lagoon; Report to the Department of Archaeology, Belmopan, Belize. Institute of Mesoamerican Studies, Occasional Publication, 6. Albany: Department of Anthropology, State University of New York at Albany. 221 p. Contents include: Marilyn A. Masson, Overview of the Belize Postclassic Project 2000 season (pp. 1-4); Dawn Mooney Digrius, and Marilyn A. Masson, Further investigations at Structure 1 (Subop 6), Caye Coco (pp. 5-26); Bradley W. Russell, Excavations at Structure 8 (Subop 36), Caye Coco, Belize (pp. 27-40); Josalyn M. Ferguson and Sheila Sastry, Excavations at Structure 13 (Subop 35), Caye Coco, Belize (pp. 41-44), Aaron M. Goldman, Subop 15: continued investigations on the north side of Structure 5, Caye Coco (pp. 45-52); Aaron M. Goldman, Subop 18d and 18e: continued excavation of a Postclassic midden on the north side of Caye Coco (pp. 53-56); Brian J. O’Hare, Subop 30: continued excavations of Cemetery 2 on the northeast side of Caye Coco (pp. 57-66); Aaron M. Goldman, Subop 34: continued excavations of Cemetery 1 on the northwest shore of Caye Coco (pp. 67-74); Sheila Sastry, Excavations at Structure 19 (Subop 39), Caye Coco (pp. 75-86); Robert M. Rosenswig, Preceramic evidence from northern Belize and Caye Coco (pp. 87-96); Josalyn M. Ferguson, Investigation of the Erlington and Chuk Groups, Progresso Lagoon shore (PR9), Orange Walk District, Belize (pp. 97-128); Maxine H. Oland, Investigation of the Avilia Group, Progresso Lagoon shore (PR9), Orange Walk District, Belize (pp. 129-142); Joe A. McGreevy, Flake analysis of early and late facet Late Postclassic from Caye Coco (pp. 143-152); Robert M. Rosenswig, Burying the dead at Caye Coco: summary of mortuary remains from the 1998, 1999, and 2000 seasons (pp. 153-176); Dawn Mooney Digrius and John G. Jones, Archaeobotanical investigations at Caye Coco, Belize: a preliminary report (pp. 177-180); Maxine H. Oland, Appendix

2176. Parnell, J. Jacob, Richard E. Terry, and Payson Sheets. 2002. Soil chemical analysis of ancient activities in Ceren, El Salvador: A case study of a rapidly abandoned site. Latin American Antiquity 13(3):331-342. Author report elevated concentrations of phosphorus associated with food preparation, consumption, and disposal; heavy metals were associated with the interior of the structure where pigments and painted gourds were found. 2177. Sheets, Payson, ed. 2002. Before the Volcano Erupted: The Ancient Ceren Village in Central America. Austin: University of Texas Press. 226 p. Contents include: Payson Sheets, Introduction (pp. 1-8); C. Dan Miller, Volcanology, stratigraphy, and effects on structures (pp. 11-23); Lawrence B. Conyers and Hartmut Spetzler, Geophysical exploration at Ceren (pp. 24-32); David L. Lentz and Carlos R. RamirezSosa, Ceren plant resources: abundance and diversity (pp. 3342); Marilyn Beaudry-Corbett, Scott E. Simmons, and David B. Tucker, Ancient home and garden: the view from Household 1 at Ceren (pp. 45-57); Brian R. McKee, Household 2 at Ceren: the remains of an agrarian and craftoriented corporate group (pp. 58-71); Inga Calvin, Structure 16: the kitchen of Household 3 (pp. 72-73); Andrea I. Gerstle and Payson Sheets, Structure 4: A storehouse-workshop for Household 4 (pp. 74-80); Andrea I. Gerstle, The civic complex (pp. 83-88); Brian R. McKee, Structure 9: A Precolumbian sweat bath at Ceren (pp. 89-96); Linda A. Brown and Andrea I. Gerstle, Structure 10: feasting and village festivals (pp. 97-104); Scott E. Simmons and Payson Sheets, Divination at Ceren: the evidence from Structure 12 136

za, Transición al posclásico y efecto en la salud, nutrición y condiciones de vida de algunos pobladores de Chac Mool (pp. 113-160); Luis F. Nuñez, Rituales funerarios de Chac Mool, Quintana Roo (pp. 161-190); Dimitris Giannisis, Patrónes de actividad y organización social en la población costera maya de Chac Mool: estudio basado en los marcadores de estres musculoesquelético (pp. 191-216); Lourdes Marquez Morfín, Practicas culturales: modificación intencional de craneo y mutilación dentaria (pp. 217-231).

(pp. 104-113); Marilyn Beaudry-Corbett and Ronald L. Bishop, Ceramics and their use at Ceren (pp. 117-138); Payson Sheets, The chipped stone artifacts of Ceren (pp. 139144); Payson Sheets, Groundstone artifacts in the Ceren village (pp. 145-150); Linda A. Brown, Household and community animal use at Ceren (pp. 151-158); Harriet F. Beaubien and Marilyn Beaudry-Corbett, Artifacts made from plant remains (pp. 159-168); Harriet F. Beaubien, The conservation program at Ceren (pp. 169-177); Payson Sheets and Scott E. Simmons, Household production and specialization at Ceren (pp. 178-183); Payson Sheets and Michelle Woodward, Cultivating biodiversity: milpas, gardens, and the Classic Period landscape (pp. 184-191); Carlos Benjamin Lara M. and Sarah B. Barber, Continuity and change in the contemporary community of Joya de Ceren (pp. 192-196); Payson Sheets, Summary and conclusions (pp. 197205). See also Jen S. Lewin, Mark A. Ehrhardt, Mark D. Gross, and Payson Sheets, An Interactive Guide to Ancient Ceren: Before the Volcano Erupted (Austin: University of Texas Press). A CD-ROM with six slide presentations consisting of an introduction, geology, architecture, religious buildings, special buildings, and agriculture of Ceren. The buildings and their artifacts are presented as three-dimensional computer models.

Chacula 2183. Seler, Eduard. 2003. The Ancient Settlements of Chacula in the Nentón District of the Department of Huehuetenango, Republic of Guatemala. John M. Weeks, ed. Lancaster, CA: Labyrinthos. 245 p. Translation into English of Eduard Seler’s 1901 publication Die alten Ansiedlungen von Chacula im Distrikte Nenton des Departements Huehuetenango der Republik Guatemala. Chagüite 2184. Ichon, Alain, and Rita Grignon. 2000. El Chagüite (Jalapa): El Périodo Formativo en el Oriente de Guatemala. International Series, 887. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 143 p. Chakil 2185. Covarrubias, Miguel, and Rafael Burgos. 2004. Las ruinas mayas de Chakil, Yucatan. Méxicon 26(4):72-75.

2178. Sheets, Payson. 2003. Uncommonly good food among commoners: growing and consuming food in ancient Ceren. Expedition 45(2):17-21.

Chalchuapa 2186. Ohi, Kuniaki, ed. 2000. Chalchuapa: Memoria final de las investigaciones interdisciplinarias de El Salvador. Kyoto: Universidad de Estudios Extranjeros de Kyoto. 408 p. Contents include: Kuniaki Ohi, Introducción general (pp. 2-8); Kuniaki Ohi, Introduccion: El sitio arqueológico Chalchuapa y las investigaciones arqueológicas (pp. 10-15); Kuniaki Ohi, Desarrollo de las investigaciones arqueológicas en el area de Casa Blanca (pp. 16-43); Kuniaki Ohi, Arquitectura prehispánica del area de Casa Blanca (pp. 46-58); Kuniaki Ohi, Los entierros del area de Casa Blanca (pp. 60-73); Zaid Lagunas Rodriguez, Los restos oseos procedentes del area de Casa Blanca del sitio arqueológico Chalchuapa (pp. 76-90); Yasushi Tanaka, Asako Itami, Adam O’Neill, and Reiko Yabe, Geophysical survey and verification by excavation at Casa Blanca in Chalchuapa, El Salvador (pp. 92-96); Satoshi Suzuki, Diseño gráfico de los edificios prehispanicos ubicados en el area de Casa Blanca por medio de computadora (pp. 97-98); Kuniaki Ohi, Artefactos líticos del area de Casa Blanca (pp. 100-121); Kuniaki Ohi, Los artefactos líticos en Mesoamerica (pp. 122-123); Roberto Gallardo M., Cinco puntas de proyectil de obsidiana verde encontradas en la Finca Arizona, Santa Ana, El Salvador (p. 124); Kuniaki Ohi, Horquetas de madera como base de metates (p. 125); Kuniaki Ohi, Figurillas del area de Casa Blanca (pp. 128-182); Kuniaki Ohi, Miscelanea del area de Casa Blanca: ornamentos, sellos, ocarinas, pipas, cascabel de cobre, etc. (pp. 184-192); Nobuyuki Ito, Las esculturas en Casa Blanca, Chalchuapa (pp. 194-196); Hiroshi Minami, Shione Shibata, and Nobuyuki Ito, La cerámica encontrada en el area de la rampa (pp. 198-213); Kuniaki Ohi, Cronología tentativa del area de Casa Blanca (pp. 216-223); Kuniaki Ohi, Excavación y conservación de las estructuras arquitectónicas del area de Casa Blanca (pp. 226-237); Ismael Giron, and Kuniaki Ohi, Estudio analítico por la tecnica tradicional del material de repello y adobe prehispanicos (pp. 240243); Masahiro Toyoda, Yasushi Tanaka, and Kuniaki Ohi,

Cerro de Cheyo 2179. Eberl, Markus. 2007. Community Heterogeneity and Integration: The Maya Sites of Nacimiento, Dos Ceibas, and Cerro de Cheyo (El Petén, Guatemala) During the Late Classic. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 713 leaves. Chaa Creek 2180. Connell, Samuel V. 2000. Were they well connected? An exploration of ancient Maya regional integration from the middle-level perspective of Chaa Creek, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 694 leaves. Chac II 2181. Smyth, Michael P. 2006. Architecture, caching, and foreign contacts at Chac (II), Yucatan, Mexico. Latin American Antiquity 17(2):123-150. See also Michael P. Smyth, and Daniel Rogart, A Teotihuacan presence at Chac II, Yucatan, Mexico (Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):1-15, 2004). Chac Mool 2182. Marquez Morfín, Lourdes, Patricia Hernández Espinoza, and Ernesto González Licón, eds. 2006. La Población maya costera de Chac Mool: análisis biocultural y dinámica demografica en el Clásico terminal y Posclásico. México: CONACULTA. 231 p. Contents include: Enrique Terrones González, El asentamiento prehispanico de Chac Mool, Quintana Roo (pp. 15-26); Ernesto González Licón, and Rafael Cobos, El entorno socio-politico de Chac Mool, Quintana Roo, durante el Clásico Terminal y Posclásico (pp. 27-46); Ernesto González Licón, Análisis de la desigualdad social de los habitantes de Chac Mool a través del tiempo (pp. 47-80); Patricia O. Hernández Espinoza, and Lourdes Marquez Morfín, Fecundidad y sobrevivencia: perfil paleodemográfico de la población maya prehispánica de Chac Mool, Quintana Roo (pp. 81-112); Lourdes Marquez Morfín, and Patricia O. Hernández Espino137

203 p. Contents include: Brett A. Houck, An introduction to the 1998 and 1999 seasons (pp. 1-14); Richard K. Meadows, Archaeological excavations at Group H: investigating craft production and domestic architecture at Chan Chich, Belize (pp. 15-40); Owen Ford, and Amy E. Rush, 1998 excavations at the Western Groups (pp. 41-48); Hubert R. Robichaux, Jennifer Jellen, Alexandra Miller, and Jennifer Vander Galien, Preliminary report on the 1998 excavations on the Upper Plaza (pp. 49-56); Hubert R. Robichaux, Looking down on the public: the 1999 excavations on the Upper Plaza (pp. 57-70); Ellie Harrison, Structure C-6: excavation of an elite compound (pp. 71-94); Jennifer R. Jellen, Preliminary assessment of looted structures in the Upper Plaza (pp. 95100); Brett A. Houk, Excavations at the Temple of the Jaguar Skull (pp. 101-104); David A. McDow, Analysis of stone tools from Chan Chich (pp. 105-118); Rigden Glaab, and Fred Valdez, Ground stone artifacts from Chan Chich (pp. 119126); Fred Valdez, and Brett A. Houk, The Chan Chich ceramic complexes (pp. 127-140); Brett A. Houk, Life, the universe, and everything: re-evaluating problematic Deposit 2 from Dos Hombres, Belize (pp. 141-150); Brett A. Houk, Chan Chich in context (pp. 151-168).

Analysis and evaluation of Casa Blanca remains treated with strengthening chemical solutions (TOT)(pp. 246-250); Luis Lujan Muñoz, Importancia artistica de la iglesia de Santiago Apostol, Chalchuapa (pp. 252-259); Blanca A. Malo de Ohi, Documentos del archivo parroquial de la iglesia de Santiago Apostol de Chalchuapa (pp. 262-265); Tadayoshi Murakami, Viviendas y solares de una familia pipil (pp. 268-278); Kimiko Tsuruga, Apuntes sobre la lengua pipil de El Salvador, presente y pasado (pp. 280-287); Documento pipil del siglo XVII: Ordenanzas de Fray Payo de Ribera para la cofradia de Vera Cruz de Santa Ana en 1666 (titulo provisional), cofradia de Santa Veracruz, catedral de Santa Ana (pp. 288-294); Mieko Sakurai, Breve informe acerca de la semana santa en Chalchuapa, Departamento de Santa Ana, El Salvador (pp. 296315); Hideo Kojima, las plantas utiles en el area de Casa Blanca, Chalchuapa (pp. 318-332); Hideo Kojima, Cerámica teñida de negro de un pueblo lenca (pp. 334-337); Hideo Kojima, Jicaras teñidas con la tecnica de batik: un reportaje sobre los últimos teñidores de jicaras en El Salvador (pp. 340-346); Hideo Kojima, Ultimos teñidores de purpura de caracol en El Salvador (pp. 348-356); Kuniaki Ohi, Blanca A. Malo de Ohi, and Mayumi Oka, Introduccion: Acerca de las migraciones y los cambios culturales en Mesoamerica (pp. 358-360); Blanca A. Malo de Ohi, and Mayumi Oka, Estudios historicas sobre las migraciones en Mesoamerica (pp. 362-382); Kuniaki Ohi, Los chichimecas destructores de los Tollanes y la migración Pipil (pp. 384-395).

Chan Noohol 2194. Robin, Cynthia. 2002. Outside of houses: the practices of everyday life at Chan Noohol, Belize. Journal of Social Archaeology 2(2):245-268. Author examines the social construction and experience of everyday life in Late Classic period farmsteads at Chan Noohol.

Champoton 2187. Ek, Jerald D. 2008. Patrónes demográficos y transformaciones económicas en Champoton, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 135-154.

Channa Sur 2195. Mayer, Karl H. 2003. The Maya ruins of Channa Sur, Campeche. Mexicon 25(4):94-95.

2188. Gómez, M. J., C. Morales L., V. Tiesler B, and W. J. Folan. 2003. Ritual y mutilación postuma del cuerpo humano durante el posclásico: nuevas evidencias de Champoton, Campeche. Mexicon 25(6):146-147.

Chau Hiix 2196. Andrés, Christopher R. 2005. Building negotiation: Architecture and sociopolitical transformation at Chau Hiix, Lamanai, and Altun Ha, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Indiana University. 310 leaves.

2189. Gómez Cobá, María J., and William J. Folan Higgins. 2007. Manipulación ritual del cuerpo humano en Champoton durante el Posclásico: La evidencia tafonómica. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1): 45-54.

2197. Andrés, Christopher R. 2009. Architecture and sociopolitical transformation at Chau Hiix, Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 34(1):1-24.

2190. Gotz, Christopher M. 2006. Patrónes de aprovechamiento de fauna vertebrada marina y terrestre por los antiguos habitantes de Champoton, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 431-444.

2198. Cuddy, Thomas. 2000. Socioeconomic Integration of the Classic Maya State; Political and Domestic Economies in a Residential Neighborhood. Doctoral dissertation, Columbia University. 362 leaves. This study researches the foundations and development of sociopolitical complexity through an examination of household economic patterns at the site of Chau Hiix, Belize.

Chan 2191. Blackmore, Chelsea. 2008. Challenging “Commoner”: An Examination of Status and Identity at the Ancient Maya Village of Chan, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 311 leaves.

2199. Goldsmith, Andrew S. 2006. The houselots of Chau Hiix: A spatial approach to the study of non-elite domestic variability at a small Maya city. Doctoral dissertation, University of Calgary (Canada). 479 leaves.

2192. Meierhoff, James, Mark Golitko, and Jim Morris. 2010. Sourcing of Obsidian from the Ancient Maya Farming Community of Chan, Belize Using Portable-XRF. SAS Bulletin 33(2):5-8.

2200. Metcalfe, Jessica Z., Christine D. White, Fred J. Longstaffe, Gabriel Wrobel, Della Collins Cook, and Anne K. Pyburn. 2009. Isotopic evidence for diet at Chau Hiix, Belize: testing regional models of hierarchy and heterarchy. Latin American Antiquity 20(1):15-36.

Chan Chich 2193. Houk, Brett A., ed. 2000. The 1998 and 1999 Seasons of the Chan Chich Archaeological Project. Papers of the Chan Chich Archaeological; Project, 4. Austin: Mesoamerican Archaeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas. 138

2213. Cobos, Rafael. 2005. Jaguars y pumas de Tula y Chichén Itzá: semejanzas y diferencias. Arqueología mexicana 12(72):34-39.

2201. Pyburn, K. Anne. 2003. The hydrology of Chau Hiix. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):123-129. 2202 Sweely, Tracy L. 2005. Detecting “invisible” dwellings in the Maya area using electromagnetic induction: significant findings of a pilot study at Chau Hiix, Belize. Latin American Antiquity 16(2):193-208.

2214. Cobos, Rafael. 2007. El Cenote sagrado de Chichén Itzá, Yucatan. Arqueología mexicana 14(83):50-53. 2215. Cobos, Rafael, and Terance L. Winemiller. 2001. The late and terminal Classic-period causeway systems of Chichén Itzá, Yucatan, Mexico. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):283-291. Examination of the causeway system at Chichén Itzá during the late and terminal Classic period when the internal structure of the site changed from a socially homogenous community organized by a loose and decentralized government to a centrally governed hierarchically organized community.

2203. Wille, Sarah J. 2007. Sociopolitics and communitybuilding: The entanglement of pre-Hispanic Maya culture, objects, and place at Chau Hiix, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Indiana University. 494 leaves. 2204. Wrobel, G. 2007. Issues related to determining burial chronology by flouride analysis of bone from the Maya archaeological site of Chau Hiix, Belize. Archaeometry 49(4):699-712.

2216. Coggins, Clemency C. 2002. Toltec. Res: Anthropology and Aesthetics 42:35-85.

Chechem Ha 2205. Moyes, Holley. 2006. The sacred landscape as a political resource: A case study of ancient Maya cave use at Chechem Ha Cave, Belize, Central America. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Buffalo. 768 leaves.

2217. Fernández Souza, Lilia. 2001. Representaciones de Venus en Chichén Itzá. Temas antropológicos 23(2):181-200. Merida. 2218. García Moll, Roberto, and Rafael Cobos. 2009. Chichén Itzá; Patrimonio de la Humanidad. México: CONACULTA: INAH/Grupo Azabache. 247 p. Large-format exploration of the Pre-Colombian Mayan archaeological complex Chichén Itzá, located in the Nothern center of the Yucatan Peninsula. Features numerous sharp color photo plates of archaeological constructions, ceramics/crafts, weapons and codices. With detailed sections on its geographical facets; the history of the city; epigraphy; and relation to man, as a whole.

Chiapa de Corzo 2206. Thompson, Lauri M. 2005 A Comparative Analysis of Burial Patterning: The Preclassic Maya Sites of Chiapa de Corzo, Kaminaljuyú, Tikal, and Colhá. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 752 leaves. Chicanna 2207. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. La pintura mural del Edificio II de Chicanna. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 7(14):38-41.

2219. Gómez Cárdenas, Luis. 2007. Chichén Itzá: A Pictorial Guide; Panoramic Book; A View of the Mayan World. México: Editorial Fotográfica Marina Kukulcan. 24 p. Guide to the Mayan temples and ancient structures of Chichén Itzá, Mexico.

Chichén Itzá 2208. Anda Alanis, Guillermo de. 2007. Los huesos del Cenote Sagrado. Chichén Itzá, Yucatan. Arqueología mexicana 14(83):54-57.

2220. GRaúlich, Michel. 2002. Los reyes de Tollan. Revista española de antropología americana 32:87-114. Authors examines the mythology of the Feathered Serpent, Quetzalcoatl, and the relationship between Tula and Chichén Itzá.

2209. Balutet, Nicolas. 2003. Le jeu de balle dans la péninsule du Yucatán (Mexique): quelques remarques sur les panneaux du terrain 2D1 de Chichén Itzá. Le Détour: Revue des Sciences Humaines 2:105-113. See also, Nicolas Balutet, Jeu dangereux à Chichén Itzá (Ulysse 82:46-48, 2002).

2221. Hernández, Guillermo A. 2005. Chichén Itzá. M.M. thesis, Baylor University. 84 leaves.

2210. Cano, Olga. 2002. Chichén Itzá, Yucatan. Arqueología mexicana 9(53):80-87. Illustrated description of Chichén Itzá for travelers includes discussion of individual structures. See also Chichén Itzá: Tourist Guide (4 ed. Merida: Editorial Dante, 2009. 48 p.).

2222. Homenaje a Chichén Itzá; nueva maravilla del mundo. Merida: Dante, 2008. 47 p. Color photographs of Chichén Itzá, with a map of the site. 2223. Kelley, David H. 2009. Dates from the Well of Time, Chichén Itzá, Yucatan, Mexico. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing, 58. Barnardsville, NC: Center for Maya Research.

2211. Chichén Itzá; Astronomical Light and Shadow Phenomena of the Great Pyramid. México: Ediciones Alducin. 29 p. Detailed guide to the site of Chichén Itzá; original title: Chichén Itzá: La Ciudad de los Brujos del Agua.

2224. Kowalski, Jeff Karl, and Cynthia Kristan-Graham, eds. 2007. Twin Tollans: Chichén Itzá, Tula, and the Epiclassic to Early Postclassic Mesoamerican World. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. 640 p. Contents include: Cynthia Kristan-Graham, and Jeff Karl Kowalski, Chichén Itzá, Tula, and Tollan: Changing perspectives on a recurring problem in Mesoamerican archaeology and art history (pp. 13-84); Susan D. Gillespie, Toltecs, Tula

2212. Chichén Itzá: The Mysteries of the Plumed Serpent. Italy: University Image, 2006. 63 p. Guidebook to Mayan temples and structures of Chichén Itzá; Spanish edition: Chichén Itzá: Los misterios de la serpiente emplumada (Pisa, Italy: Universal Image, 2006. 63 p.).

139

2232. Schmidt, Peter J. 2006. Nuevos hallazgos en Chichén Itzá. Arqueología mexicana 13(76):48-57.

and Chichén Itzá: The development of an archaeological myth (pp. 85-128); Susan Kepecs, Chichén Itzá, Tula and the Epiclassic/Early Postclassic Mesoamerican world system (pp. 129-150); Peter J. Schmidt, Birds, ceramics, and cacao: New excavations at Chichén Itzá, Yucatan (pp. 151-204); Nikolai Grube, and Ruth J. Krochok, Reading between the lines: hieroglyphic texts from Chichén Itzá and its neighbors (pp. 205250); Jeff Karl Kowalski, What’s “Toltec” at Uxmal and Chichén Itzá? Merging Maya and Mesoamerican worldviews and world systems in Terminal Classic to Early Postclassic Yucatan (pp. 251-314); Rafael Cobos, Multepal or centralized kingship? New evidence on governmental organization at Chichén Itzá (pp. 315-344); David Freidel, War and statecraft in the northern Maya lowlands: Yaxuna and Chichén Itzá (pp. 345-376); Dan M. Healan, New perspectives onTula’s obsidian industry and its relationship to Chichén Itzá (pp. 429448); Geoffrey G. McCafferty, So what else is new? A Cholula-centric perspective on lowland/highland interaction during the Classic/Postclassic transition (pp. 449-480); Cynthia Kristan-Graham, Structuring identity at Tula: the design and symbolism of colonnaded halls and sunken spaces (pp. 531-578); Michael E. Smith, Tula and Chichén Itzá: Are we asking the right questions? (pp. 579-618); Mary Miller, Tula and Chichén Itzá: a historical afterward (pp. 619-640).

2233. Schmidt, Peter J. 2007. Los toltecas de Chichén Itzá, Yucatan. Arqueología mexicana 14(85): 64-68. 2234. Schmidt, Peter, David Stuart, and Bruce Love. 2008. Inscriptions and iconography of Castillo Viejo, Chichén Itzá. PARI Journal 9(2): 1-17. 2235. Smith, James G. 2000. The Chichén Itzá - Ek Balam transect project: An intersite perspective on the political organization of the ancient Maya. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pittsburgh. 600 leaves. 2236. Stanton, Travis W., and Tomás Gallareta Negrón. 2001. Warfare, ceramic economy, and the Itzá: a reconsideration of the Itzá polity in ancient Yucatan. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):229-245. Models of polity organization in the northern Maya lowlands are evaluated in light of stratigraphic evidence from Yaxuna and Uxmal in order to understand the nature of the polity at Chichén Itzá. 2237. Zapata Alonzo, Gualberto. 2002. Nueva guía descriptive de Chichén Itzá: facil, complete, actualizada. Merida: G. Zapata Alonzo, 2002. 84 p. On the history and Mayan antiquities in Chichén Itzá Site (Yucatan). Content includes: “Descripción del grupo norte; El Castillo o templo de Kukulcan, El templo de los Guerreros Otra importante Columnata, El baño de vapor, El Tzompantli, Descripción del grupo central; La casa o Chichan Chob, El caracol u observatorio, El templo de los Retablos, La casa de las monjas, Grupo Sur; El templo de la fecha, Casa de los simbolos falicos, Castillo del Chichen Viejo.”

2225. Lerner, Jesse. 2008. Chichén Itzá: ruinas en construccion. Dimension antropologica 15(42): 165-188. 2226. Lois, Ximena, and Valentina Vapnarsky, eds. 2010. Itza: Memorias mayas. 2 ed. Merida: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México: Centro Penínsular en Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales. 189 p. Large formated book on the culture of Chichén Itzá, Yucatan. Includes a handsome collection of full color plates printed on semi-glossy stock with poetry and other writings translated in Engllsh, Spanish and Mayan.

Chinkultic 2238. Grube, Nikolai. 2002. Stela fragment from Chinkultic, Chiapas. Mexicon 24(4):66.

2227. Manahan, T. Kam, Alejandra A. Olvera, and Traci Ardren. 2008. Apuntando hacía un modelo regional de desarrollo de Chichén Itzá: historia de una plataforma Sotuta en Xuenkal, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 93-104.

2239. Navarrete, Carlos. 2001. Descubrimientos en Chinkultic, Chiapas. Arqueología mexicana 9(50):15.

2228. Piña Chan, Román. 2000. Chichén Itzá: La ciudad de las brujos del agua. México: Fondo de Cultura Económica. 158p. Detailed guide by an outstanding authority.

Chiquibul 2240. Laporte, Juan Pedro, Hector E. Mejía, and Jorge E. Chocón. 2003. La cuenca del rio Chiquibul en Petén, Guatemala: su asentamiento prehispanico. Mexicon 25(3):78-87. Seven political entities have been defined for the Late Classic period in the Chiquibul River basin, a major affluent of the Mopan system along the frontier of Belize and Guatemala.

2229. Prem, Hanns J., Peter J. Schmidt, and José Osorio León. 2004. Die Stadt der Krieger: Selbstdarstellung in Chichén Itzá, Yucatan, México. Antike Welt 35(1):27-35. Authors report on recent excavations at the site of Chichén Itzá, and describe a number of newly excavated buildings in the south of the city, including a two-story palace. See also Erik Boot, Continuity and Change in Text and Image at Chichén Itzá, Yucatan, Mexico: A Study of the Inscriptions, Iconography, and Architecture at a Late Classic to Early Postclassic Maya Site (Leiden: CNWS, Leiden University, 2005. 582 p.).

Chocoha 2241. Guderjan, Thomas H., William Bedford, and Tim Preston. 2002. Relocating Chocoha. Mexicon 24(5):88-89. Authors locate the site of Chocoha, first reported by the French explorer, Maurice de Périgny in 1908.

2230. Ringle, William M. 2004. On the political organization of Chichén Itzá. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(2):167-218.

Chocola 2242. Bawaya, Michael. 2004. The beginning of Maya civilization? American Archaeology 8(3):31-39. Progress report on Jonathan Kaplan’s Chocola Archaeological Project. Though archaeologists have largely ignored it, there are indications that the piedmont region in southern Guatemala played a seminal role in the Maya’s development. An

2231. Ringle, William M. 2009. The Art of War: Imagery of the Upper Temple of the Jaguars, Chichén Itzá. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(1):15-44.

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2254. Hutson, Scott R., and Bruce H. Dahlin. 2008. Desenredando una paradoja: asentamiento y economía a través de pozos de prueba en Chunchucmil, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 105-120.

investigation of Chocola, one of the region’s major sites, could determine just how influential it was. 2243. Kaplan, Jonathan. 2008. HydRaúlics, cacao, and complex developments at Preclassic Chocola, Guatemala: evidence and implications. Latin American Antiquity 19(4): 399413.

2255. Magnoni, Aline. 2008. From city to village: Landscape and household transformations at Classic Period Chunchucmil, Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 762 leaves.

2244. Kaplan, Jonathan, and Juan Antonio Valdés. 2004. Chocola, an apparent regional capital in the southern Maya Preclassic: preliminary findings from the Proyecto Arqueológico Chocola (PACH). Mexicon 26(4):77-86.

2256. Woynar, Marion. 2003. Le système de voirie du site maya de Chunchucmil, dans les basses terres du nord. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

2245. Kraemer, Anne E. 2008. Unearthing collaboration: Community and multivocal archaeology in highland Guatemala. M.A. thesis, University of Kansas. 236 leaves.

Chundsinab 2257. Benávides C., Antonio, and Stephan Merk. 2007. Tras las huellas de Maler en Chundsinab, Dzancab y YaxcheXlabpak. Mexicon 29(5):124-130.

Chunchimai 2246. Hohmann, Hasso. 2001. Documentation of a Maya building in Chunchimai. Mexicon 23(6):136-138. Architectural reconstruction of a single Late Classic building located 15 km south of the ruins of Chunhuaymil near the CampecheYucatan border. See also Hasso Hohmann, Documentación de un edificio maya en Chunchimai (Investigadores de Mesoamerica 3:74-81, 2003).

Cihuatan 2258. Bruhns, Karen O. 2004. Test excavations in the burned palace of Cihuatan, El Salvador. Mexicon 26(4):72. 2259. Bruhns, Karen O., and Paul E. Amaroli. 2004. Second Xipe statue found in El Salvador. Mexicon 26(2):24.

2247. Merk, Stephan. 2004. The ruins of Chunchimai: a Maler-Group relocated. Mexicon 26(1):5-6.

Cival 2260. Amazing Maya find. Geographical 76(8):11, 2004. Description of the discovery of two huge mask-like statues at a 2,000-year-old Maya site in the ancient city of Cival, first mapped by explorer Ian Graham in 1984, and the subject of extensive excavations led by Francisco Estrada-Belli.

Chunchucmil 2248. Ardren, Traci. 2002. Conversations about the production of archaeological knowledge and community museums at Chunchucmil and Kochol, Yucatan, Mexico. World Archaeology 34(2):379-400. Describes the involvement of the Pakbeh Regional Economy Program, centered at the ancient Maya site of Chunchucmil, in collaborative development of a “living museum” where members of local communities and archaeologists mutually recreate an ancient Maya household on the archaeological site.

2261. Early Mayans surprisingly advanced. Science 304:955, 2004. Francisco Estrada-Belli of Vanderbilt University has uncovered striking new evidence from Cival that ancient Mayan civilization was already highly developed by about 300 B.C.E., centuries before the “classical” era that peaked 1000 years ago.

2249. Ardren, Tracy, and Scott Hutson. 2001-2002. Ancient Maya religious practices at Chunchucmil and Yaxuna: using evidence from epigraphy and excavation. PARI Journal 2(4)3(1):5-11.

2262. Estrada-Belli, Francisco. 2006. Lightening sky, rain, and the Maize God: The ideology of Preclassic Maya rulers at Cival, Petén, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica 17(1): 57-78. 2263. Guatemalan sites yield Maya insights. Science News 165(21):334, 2004. Brief summary of excavations at Cival, Waka, and Cancuén.

2250. Dahlin, Bruce H. 2003. Chunchucmil: a complex economy in NW Yucatan. Mexicon 25(5):129-138. 2251. Hutson, Scott. 2010. Dwelling, Identity, and the Maya: Relational Archaeology at Chunchucmil. Lanham: AltaMira Press 239 p. Publication of Scott R. Hutson, Dwelling and Subjectification at the Ancient Urban center of Chunchucmil, Yucatan, Mexico (Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley. 550 leaves, 2004).

Cobá 2264. Con Uribe, María J., and Alejandro Martínez Muriel. 2002. Cobá: amid roads and lakes. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):92-94. Spanish translation: Cobá: entre caminos y lagos. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):34-41, 2002. See also María J. Con Uribe, José M. Ochoa R., and Guillermo Bernal R. 2004. Lapida jeroglífica en un juego der pelota de Cobá, Quintana Roo (Arqueología mexicana 12(70):10, 2004), and María J. Con Uribe, El juego de pelota en Cobá, Quintana Roo (Arqueología 23:27-50, 2000).

2252. Hutson, Scott R., Aline Magnoni, and Travis W. Stanton. 2004. House rules? The practice of social organization in Classic-period Chunchucmil, Yucatan, Mexico. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):63-74.

2265. Folan, William J., Armando Anaya Hernández, Ellen R. Kintz, Laraine A. Fletcher, Raymundo González Heredia, Jacinto May Hau, and Nicolas Caamal Canche. 2009. Cobá, Quintana Roo, Mexico: a recent analysis of the social, eco-

2253. Hutson, Scott R., David R. Hixson, Aline Magnoni, Daniel Mazeau, and Bruce Dahlin. 2008. Site and community at Chunchucmil and ancient Maya urban centers. Journal of Field Archaeology 33(1):19-40. 141

also Jason W. Barrett, and Andrew K. Scherer, Stones, bones, and crowded plazas: evidence for Terminal Classic Maya warfare at Colhá, Belize (Ancient Mesoamerica 16(1):101-118, 2005).

nomic and political organization of a major Maya urban center. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(1):59-70 2266. Giorgi, Cyril. 2002. Le système de voirie de Cobá, Quintana Roo. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1; see also Cyril Giorgi, Révolution urbaine et politique chez les Mayas des basses terres de la période classique: un cas pratique: le site de Cobá, Quintana Roo (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1).

Comalcalco 2274. Armijo Torres, Ricardo. 2003. Comalcalco: la antigua ciudad maya de ladrillos. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):3037. 2275. Gallegos Gomora, Miriam J. 2003. Mujeres y hombres de barro; figurillas de Comalcalco. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):48-51.

Cochuah 2267. Johnstone, Dave. 2008. Cambios en el asentamiento interno dentro de la región de Cochuah de las tierras bajas nortenas. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 39-46.

Copán 2276. Agurcia F., Ricardo. 2007. Copán: Reino del Sol; Kingdom of the Sun. Copán: Asociación Copán. 100 p.

2268. Shaw, Justine M. 2008. Explicando el tiempo de la construcción de calzadas en la región de Cochuah: los sacbeob como un fenómeno del clásico terminal. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 23-38.

2277. Ahlfeldt, Jennifer F. 2004. On Reconstructing and Performing Ancient Maya Architecture: Structure 22, Copán, Honduras (AD 715). Doctoral dissertation, Columbia University. 596 leaves.

Colhá 2269. Buttles, Palma J. 2002. Material and meaning: A contextual examination of select portable material culture from Colhá, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 435 leaves.

2278. Aldana, Gerardo V. 2001. Las piedras del Sol y el sacrificio de Venus: la astronomia y la politica en Copán durante el Clásico tardío. Yaxkin 19:15-21.

2270. King, Eleanor M. 2000. The organization of Late Classic lithic production at the prehistoric Maya site of Colhá, Belize: A study in complexity and heterarchy. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 483 leaves.

2279. Aldana, Gerardo V. 2002. Solar stelae and a Venus window: science and royal responsibility in Late Classic Copán. Archaeoastronomy 27:29-50.

2271. Masson, Marilyn A. 2001. Economic organization of late and terminal Classic Period Maya stone tool craft specialist workshops at Colhá, Belize. Lithic Technology 26(1):29-49.

2280. Andrews, E. Wyllys, V, and William L. Fash. 2005. Copán: The History of an Ancient Maya Kingdom. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press. 492 p. Contents include: William L. Fash, and Ricardo Agurcia Fasquelle, Contributions and controversies in the archaeology and history of Copán (pp. 3-32); David Webster, Political ecology, political economy, and the culture history of resource management at Copán (pp. 33-72); William L. Fash, Toward a social history of the Copán Valley (pp. 73-102); Bárbara W. Fash, Iconographic evidence for water management and social organization at Copán (pp. 103-138); Robert J. Sharer, David W. Sedat, Loa P. Traxler, Julia C. Miller, and Ellen E. Bell, Early Classic royal power in Copán: the origins and development of the Acropolis (ca. AD 250-600)(pp. 139-200); Ricardo Agurcia Fasquelle, and Bárbara W. Fash, The evolution of Structure 10L-16, heart of the Copán acropolis (pp. 201-238); E. Wyllys Andrews, and Cassandra R. Bill, A Late Classic royal residence at Copán (pp. 239-314); Rebecca Storey, Health and lifestyle (before and after death) among the Copán elite (pp. 315-344); Linda Schele, and Matthew G. Looper, Seats of power at Copán (pp. 345-372); David Stuart, A foreign past: the writing and representation of history on a royal ancestral shrine at Copán (pp. 373-394); E. Wyllys Andrews, and William L. Fash, Issues in Copán archaeology (pp. 395426).

2272. Thompson, Lauri M. 2005 A comparative analysis of burial patterning: The Preclassic Maya sites of Chiapa de Corzo, Kaminaljuyú, Tikal, and Colhá. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 752 leaves. 2273. White, Christine D., Mary E. D. Pohl, Henry P. Schwarcz, and Fred J. Longstaffe. 2001. Isotopic evidence for Maya patterns of deer and dog use at Preclassic Colhá. Journal of Archaeological Science 28(1):89-107. Authors propose that one criterion for domestication should be dependence on humans for food. Stable carbon-and nitrogen-isotope compositions of bone collagen have been analyzed for 24 dogs and 16 deer found in well-dated contexts from the prehistoric Maya lithic manufacturing community of Colhá, Belize. The majority of both dogs and deer come from middens, but three dogs come from cache contexts in buildings. The diets of midden dogs demonstrate a significant increase in the amount of C4 (maize-based) foods and become more herbivorous over time. Because the midden dogs were probably dependent scavengers, this phenomenon might reflect the dynamics of human dietary change as the population at Colhá expanded towards the end of the Preclassic period. An increase in the homogeneity of dog diets might also be indicative of either more restrictive human control over the animals or a reduction in the variability of resources used by humans. Alternatively, because the structure associated with the midden in which the dogs were found became more ceremonial. In Late Preclassic times, the dogs from this period could be reflecting a general increase in purposeful feeding for ceremonial purposes. See

2281. Aoyama, Kazuo. 2001. Classic Maya State, urbanism, and exchange: chipped stone evidence of the Copán Valley and its hinterland. American Anthropologist 103(2):346-361. An analysis of 91,916 pieces of chipped stone artifacts from the Copán Valley and its hinterland in Honduras is used to understand the nature and role of exchange in the development of a Classic Maya state-level society. The results 142

The rural settlement of Copán: changes through the Early Classic (pp. 27-48); Loa P. Traxler, Redesigning Copán: early architecture of the polity center (pp. 49-60); William L. Fash, Bárbara W. Fash, and Karla L. Davis-Salazar, Setting the stage: origins of the Hieroglyphic Stairway plaza on the great period ending (pp. 61-80); David W. Sedat, and Fernando López, Initial stages in the formation of the Copán acropolis (pp. 81-96); Ricardo Agurcia Fasquelle, Rosalila, temple of the sun-king (pp. 97-108); Christine W. Carrelli, Measures of power: the energetics of royal construction at Early Classic Copán (pp. 109-124); Ellen E. Bell, Robert J. Sharer, Loa P. Traxler, David W. Sedat, Christine W. Carrelli, and Lynn A. Grant, Tombs and burials in the Early Classic acropolis at Copán (pp. 125-152); Dorie Reents, Ellen E. Bell, Loa P. Traxler, and Ronald L. Bishop, Early Classic ceramic offerings at Copán: a comparison of the Hunal, Margarita, and Sub-Jaguar tombs (pp. 153-184); Jane E. Buikstra, T. Douglas Price, Lori E. Wright, and James A. Burton, Tombs from the Copán acropolis: a life history approach (pp. 185-206); David Stuart, Beginnings of the Copán dynasty: a review of the hieroglyphic and historical evidence (pp. 207-241); Bárbara W. Fash, Early Classic sculptural development at Copán (pp. 241-256); Karl Taube, Structure 10L-16 and its Early Classic antecedents: fire and the evocation and resurrection of K’inich Yax K’uk’ Mo’ (pp. 257-288); Robert J. Sharer, External interaction at Early Classic Copán (pp. 289-308); Edward M. Schortman, and Patricia A. Urban, Marching out of step: Early Classic Copán and its Honduran neighbors (pp. 309326); Juan Antonio Valdés, and Lori E. Wright, The Early Classic and its antecedents at Kaminaljuyú: a complex society, with complex problems (pp. 327-346); Joyce Marcus, Primary and secondary state formation in southern Mesoamerica (pp. 347-364).

of this study suggest that intraregional exchange was more crucial for state development than was long-distance exchange. The management of procurement and exchange of utilitarian commodities, such as Ixtepeque obsidian blade cores, along with other factors, played a significant role in the development of the Copán state. In contrast to other major Maya lowland states, the Copán state directly obtained obsidian blade cores from nearby sources, distributed them to local leaders at Copán, and exported them to local rulers in neighboring regions. In this sense, the Classic Copán state maintained a centralized and integrated political and economic organization based on far more than kinship, ideology, and ritual. Spanish translation: Kazuo Aoyama, Estado, urbanismo e intercambiuo: evidencia de la lítica menor del valle de Copán y regions vecinas (Los Investigadores de la cultura maya 10:110-127, 2002). 2282. Aoyama, Kazuo. 2001. Ritos de plebeyos mayas en la Cueva Gordon no. 3 de Copán (Honduras) durante el périodo Clásico: análisis de las microhuellas de uso sobre la lítica menor de obsidiana. Mayab 14:5-16. 2283. Aoyama, Kazuo. 2005. Classic Maya lithic production at Copán, Honduras. Mexicon 27(2-3):30-37. 2284. Arqueológos reconstruyen el rostro del fundador de Copán. Revista de arqueología 260:13, 2003. 2285. Becerra, Longino. 2001. Copán: tierra de hombres, mujeres y dioses. Tegucigalpa: Baktun Editorial. 313 p. General guide to the ruins at Copán written in Spanish for a popular audience. 2286. Bell, Ellen E. 2007. Early Classic Ritual Deposits Within the Copán Acropolis: The Material Foundations of Political Power at a Classic Period Maya Center. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 679 leaves.

2288. Canuto, Marcello A. 2002. A Tale of Two Communities: Social and Political Transformation in the Hinterlands of the Maya Polity of Copán. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 845 leaves.

2287. Bell, Ellen E., Marcello A. Canuto, and Robert J. Sharer, eds. 2003. Understanding Early Classic Copán. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. 456 p. “This volume, the first to focus on the Early Classic context (ad 400–650) of the Maya city of Copán, combines and synthesizes many different research methods and disciplines, interpreting data that contradict, enhance, and supplement previous work. Its methods are conjunctive, including and integrating research in archaeological survey and excavations with studies in art, hieroglyphics, history, forensic/biological anthropology, and chemical analyses of teeth, bones, and other materials. The book is not just multidisciplinary but interdisciplinary, linking, for example, the architecture of monuments with epigraphy, language concepts, and human events. Until recently, scholars speculated whether K’inich Yax K’uk’ Mo’ was an actual or fictitious founding father to the Copán dynasty. This work presents new information on him and his accomplishments, showing how we almost certainly now have his skeleton with its parry fractures from the battlefield and/or ball court. Abundant descriptions of this and other burials are provided.” Contents include: Marcello A. Canuto, Ellen E. Bell, and Robert J. Sharer, Understanding Early Classic Copán: A Classic Maya center and its investigation (pp. 1-14); Jay Hall, and Rene Viel, The Early Classic Copán landscape: a view from the Preclassic (pp. 15-26); Marcello A. Canuto,

2289. Canuto, Marcello A., James P. Charton, and Ellen E. Bell. 2010. Let no space go to waste: comparing the uses of space between two Late Classic centers in the El Paraíso valley, Copán, Honduras. Journal of Archaeological Science 37(1):30-41. 2290. Carlson, John B. 2007-2008. The Margarita structure panels [at Copán] and the Maya cosmogonic couplet of ancestral emergence: redux and reemergence. Archaeoastronomy: Journal of Astronomy in Culture 21:7680. 2291. Cheek, Charles D. 2003. Maya community buildings: two Late Classic popol nahs at Copán, Honduras. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):131-138. 2292. Collins, Lisa M. 2002. The Zooarchaeology of the Copán Valley: Social Status and the Search for a Maya Slave Class. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 516 leaves. 2293. Copán hosts conference on Maya. Travel Weekly 60(67):10, 2001. From July 12 to 14, 2001, some 350 scholars, archaeologists, press and laymen gathered in the town of Copán as part of the First International Congress of Copán, to hear speakers who focused on topics ranging from 143

2305. Longyear, John M. 2006. Copán Ceramics: A Study of Southeastern Maya Pottery. Mansfield Centre, CT: Martino. P. Republication of Carnegie Institution of Washington, Publication 597, 1952.

Maya concepts of astronomy to the positive and negative effects of tourism on present-day descendants of the Maya. 2294. Davis-Salazar, Karla L. 2001. Late Classic Maya Water Management at Copán, Honduras. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 295 leaves. The author argues that water management at the Classic period site of Copán, both in its physical and organizational forms, is a cultural construction only partially conditioned by the environmental substrate and is historically contingent on local social, political, and economic practices. As such, power acquired through control over water derives from the social and ideological meanings attached to water as well as from the economic value placed upon it.

2306. Maca, Allan L. 2002. Spatio-Temporal Boundaries in Classic Maya Settlement Systems: Copán’s Urban Foothills and the Excavations at Group 9J-5. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 600 leaves. 2307. Magee, Catherine, Harriet Beaubien, William L. Fash, and Bárbara Fash. 2001. The cooperative efforts in the excavation of a royal Maya tomb. In Human Remains: Conservation, Retrieval and Analysis; Proceedings of a Conference Held in Williamsburg, VA, November 7-11, 1999. Emily Williams, ed. pp. 39-43. International Series, 934. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports; BAR Publishing.

2295. Davis-Salazar, Karla L. 2003. Late Classic Maya water management and community organization at Copán, Honduras. American Antiquity 14(3):275-299.

2308. Manahan, T. Kam. 2003. The Collapse of Complex Society and its Aftermath: A Case Study From the Classic Maya Site of Copán, Honduras. Doctoral dissertation, Vanderbilt University. 419 leaves. This dissertation examines the nature of the complex society of Classic Maya civilization at the site of Copán, Honduras by studying the aftermath of its collapse. New data and interpretations of both the collapse of Copán and the nature of the post collapse society that reoccupied the ruins of this Maya kingdom are presented.

2296. Fash, William L. 2001. Scribes, Warriors and Kings: The City of Copán and the Ancient Maya. rev. ed. London; New York: Thames and Hudson. 192 p. 2297. Fash, William L. 2002. Religion and human agency in ancient Maya history: tales from the Hieroglyphic Stairway. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 12(1):5-19. Originally presented as the twelfth McDonald Lecture, the author examines the creation of enduring symbols in a Classic Maya kingdom.

2309. Manahan, T. Kam. 2004. The way things fall apart: social organization and the Classic Maya collapse of Copán. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):93-106.

2298. Fash, William L., Harriet F. Beaubien, Catherine E. Magee, Bárbara W. Fash, and Richard V. Williamson. 2001. Trappings of kingship among the Classic Maya: ritual and identity in a royal tomb from Copán. In Fleeting Identities: Perishable Material Culture in Archaeological Research. Penelope B. Drooker, ed. pp. 152-169. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, Occasional Paper, 28. Carbondale.

2310. Manahan, T. Kam, and Marcello A. Canuto. 2009. Bracketing the Copán Dynasty: Late Preclassic and Early Postclassic Settlements at Copán, Honduras. Latin American Antiquity 20(4):553-580. 2311. Matheson, Carney D., Jay Hall, and Rene Viel. 2009. Drawing First Blood from Maya Ceramics at Copán, Honduras. In Archaeological Science Under a Microscope: Studies in Residue and Ancient DNA Analysis in Honour of Thomas H. Loy. Michael Haslam, Gail Robertson, Alison Crowther, Sue Nugent, and Luke Kirkwood, eds. pp. 190-197 Terra Australis, 30. Canberra: ANU E Press.

2299. Fash, William L., and Bárbara Fash. 2004. La ciudad de Copán, Honduras: arte y escritura mayas. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):64-69. 2300. Freter, AnnCorinne. 2004. Multiscalar model of rural households and communities in Late Classic Copán Maya society. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(1):75-92.

2312. Mayer, Christopher C. 2007. The interpretive power of setting: Appropriate levels of restoration and development at Copán Archaeological Park, Honduras; a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Doctoral dissertation, Colorado State University. 184 leaves.

2301. Goodall, R. A., J. Hall, H.G.M. Edwards, R. J. Sharer, R. Viel, and P. M. Fredericks. 2007. Raman microprobe analysis of stucco samples from the buildings of Maya Classic Copán. Journal of Archaeological Science 34(4): 666-673. 2302. Goodall, R. A., J. Hall, J., R. Viel, and P. M. Fredericks. 2009. A spectroscopic investigation of pigment and ceramic samples from Copán, Honduras. Archaeometry 51(1):95-109.

2313. McNeil, Cameron L. 2006. Maya Interactions with the Natural World: Landscape Transformation and Ritual Plant Use at Copán, Honduras. Doctoral dissertation, City University of New York, The Graduate Center. 452 leaves.

2303. Gonlin, Nancy. 2001. Lo que las mujeres y los hombres hacen: investigaciones recientes sobre los hogares antiguos en Copán, Honduras. Yaxkin 19:23-39.

2314. McNeil, Cameron L. 2010. Death and Chocolate: The Significance of Cacao Offerings in Ancient Maya Tombs and Caches at Copán, Honduras. In Food and Feasting in PreColumbian Mesoamerica: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Foodways Past and Present. John E. Staller and Michael Carrasco, eds. pp. 293-314. New York: Springer.

2304. Lasky Marcovich, Linda. 2001. Yax K’u’uk’Mo’ y el Panel Margarita. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 7(14):26-32.

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2327. Saturno, William A. 2000. In the Shadow of the Acropolis: Rio Amarillo and Its Role in the Copán Polity. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 205 leaves.

2315. McNeil, Cameron L. 2010. The Environmental Record of Human Populations and Migrations in the Copán Valley, Honduras. In The Ch’orti’ Maya Area: Past and Present. Brent E. Metz, Cameron L. McNeil, and Kerry Hull, eds. pp. 47-60. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.

2328. Sharer, Robert L. 2008. Copán: Tunneling through the myths. Current World Archaeology 30:18-26.

2316. McNeil, Cameron L., David A. Burney, and Linda P. Burney. 2010. Evidence Disputing Deforestation as the Cause for the Collapse of the Ancient Maya Polity of Copán, Honduras. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107(3):1017-1022.

2329. Sobel, Rachel K. 2002. A royal legend gets real; Mayan king probably existed. U.S. News & World Report, April 29, p. 62. At the Maya conference, Ellen Bell, a doctoral candidate with the University of Pennsylvania’s Robert Sharer, said that in the depths of Copán’s acropolis, the team found not only what looks to be the founder’s tomb but also quite possibly the remains of his wife. A piece of jewelry bears his oft-referred-to title, Wi-Te. And a chemical analysis of the bones indicated that their owner grew up elsewhere and later settled in Copán, just as the texts said.

2317. Miller, Julia Carolyn. 2008. Excavation and interpretation in the northeastern acropolis, Copán, Honduras. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 631 leaves. 2318. Mortensen, Lena M. 2001. Las dinámicas locales de un patrimonio global: arqueoturismo en Copán, Honduras. Mesoamerica 22(42):104-134. See also Lena Mortensen, The local meanings of international heritage at Copán, Honduras (SAA Archaeological Record 5(2):28-30, 44, 2005).

2330. Sobel, Rachel K. 2002. A tale from the crypt; new discoveries about ancient Mayans. U.S. News & World Report, April 29, p. 62. At the University of Pennsylvania’s Maya Weekend, an annual celebration of Mayan scholarship and culture, doctoral candidate Marc Zender of the University of Calgary announced that his team had discovered a minibiography of a priest, inscribed on sting-ray spines and conch shells bundled with his remains in a funeral urn. According to glyph analysis, the priest, named Aj Pakal Tahn, first appeared as a ritual leader in AD 765, perhaps to mollify the deities during a severe drought and famine. For a dozen years, he conducted an annual rite of homage to the corn or rain god, perched on a step before the crowds, holding an incense bag. He remained in office long after the disaster had presumably abated. In other ceremonies, at the spring equinox, he pierced his ear lobe, tongue, or penis with a shark’s tooth, shedding blood in honor of the gods. The last year of his service was recorded as AD 777. He probably died shortly afterward, at an age somewhere above 40.

2319. Mortensen, Lena M. 2006. Constructiong Heritage at Copán, Honduras: An Ethnography of the Archaeology Industry. Doctoral dissertation, Indiana University. 397 leaves. 2320. Newsome, Elizabeth A. 2001. Trees of Paradise and Pillars of the World: The Serial Stela Cycle of “18-RabbitGod K King of Copán. Austin: University of Texas Press. 272 p. 2321. Nielsen, Jesper. 2006. The Queens mirrors: interpreting the iconography of two Teotihuacan style mirrors from the Early Classic Margarita tomb at Copán. PARI Journal 6(4):18. 2322. Nystrom, K. C., J. E. Buikstra, and E. M. Braunstein. 2005. Radiographic evaluation of two Early Classic elites from Copán, Honduras. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 15:196-207. Chichester, England.

2331. Starratt, Harold E. 2001. Excavations in El Cementerio, Group 10L-2, Copán, Honduras. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 440 leaves.

2323. Pérez de Lara, Jorge. 2004. Copán, Honduras. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):82-87.

2332. Storey, Rebecca. 2007. An elusive paleodemography? A comparison of two methods for estimating the adult age distribution of deaths at Late Classic Copán, Honduras. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 132(1):40-47.

2324. Price, T. Douglas, James H. Burton, Robert J. Sharer, Jane E. Buikstra, Lori E. Wright, Loa P. Traxler, and Katherine A. Miller. 2010. Kings and commoners at Copán: isotopic evidence for origins and movement in the Classic Maya period. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 29(1):15-32.

2333 Traxler, Loa P. 2004. Evolution and Social Meaning of Patio and Courtyard Group Architecture of the Early Classic Acropolis, Copán, Honduras. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 530 leaves.

2325. Ramos Gómez, Jorge H. 2006. The Iconography of Temple 16: Yax Pasaj and the Evocation of a “Foreign” Identity at Copán. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 511 leaves.

2334. Wagner, Elisabeth. 2002. A glyphic head from Copán. Mexicon 24(6): 118-119.

2326. Rhoads, Megan L. 2002. Population Dynamics at the Southern Periphery of the Ancient Maya World: Kinship at Copán. Doctoral dissertation, University of New Mexico. 289 leaves. An investigation of the biological relationships within the Copán pocket during the Late Classic Period (AD 700900) indicates a genetically homogeneous population although there may have been a culturally distinct ethnic group.

2335. Wagner, Elisabeth. 2004. A fragmentary head from Copán. Mexicon 26(1):2. 2336. Zorich, Zach. 2009. The man under the Jaguar Mountain: a new royal Maya tomb emerges from the tunnels beneath Copán’s acropolis. Archaeology 62(5):38-42.

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Corriental 2337. Sulak, Jack. 2001. Unpublished Maya graffitti at Corriental, Campeche, Mexico. Mexicon 23(4):79-80.

2349. Kosakowsky, Laura J. 2003. Shaping ceramic research at the Maya site of Cuello, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):61-66.

Cozumel 2338. Batun Alpuche, Adolfo I. 2009. Agrarian Production and Intensification at a Postclassic Maya Community, Buena Vista, Cozumel, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Florida. 361 leaves.

Cueva de las Pinturas 2350. Miller, Ann E., James E. Brady, Allan Cobb, and Marvin W. Rowe. 2002. Results of radiocarbon analysis of rock painting from the Cueva de las Pinturas, Guatemala. Mexicon 24(4):79-81.

2339. Ramirez Ramirez, Demetrio, and María Antonieta Azcarate Soto. 2002. Recent works in Cozumel. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):96-97. Spanish translation: Investigaciones recientes en Cozumel. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):46-49, 2002.

Cumpich 2351. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. An unprovenanced Maya glyphic panel from Cumpich, Campeche. Mexicon 23(5):112. Cumtum 2352. González de la Mata, Rocio, and Francisco Pérez Ruiz. 2006. Vida mas allá de Cumtum: el sacbé numero 3. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2):419-430.

2340. Sabloff, Jeremy A. 2002. La isla de Cozumel. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):42-45, 2002. 2341. Vivas Valdés, Velio. 2008. Travesía por la historia de Cozumel: Breve monografia histórica. Cancun, Quintana Roo: Editorial Veras/Honorable Ayuntamiento de Cozumel, 191 p. Historical panorama of the island of Cozumel. With chapters on its prehistoric era, Mayan rule, the conquest, the colonial era, political consolidation, government administration and the development of the tourism industry.

Dolores 2353. Chocón, Jorge E. 2001. Patrón de asentamien to en el municipio de Dolores, Petén: nuevos sitios en el cuenca alta del Rio San Juan. Atlas Arqueológico de Guatemala, Report 15:73-98. See also Karl H. Mayer, An unprovenanced Maya stela in Dolores, Petén (Mexicon 23(2):27-28, 2001). Dos Ceibas 2354. Eberl, Markus. 2007. Community heterogeneity and integration: The Maya sites of Nacimiento, Dos Ceibas, and Cerro de Cheyo (El Petén, Guatemala) during the Late Classic. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 713 leaves.

Cuchumatanes Mountains 2342. Borgstede, Gregory J. 2004. Ethnicity and Archaeology in the Western Maya Highlands, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 429 leaves. An important study of a little known region of the prehispanic Maya world.

Dos Hombres 2355. Lohse, Jonathan C. 2001. The Social Organization of a Late Classic Maya Community: Dos Hombres, Northwestern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 465 leaves. Author examines how an ancient community was organized around fixed, local resources such as arable land, water, and stone during the Late Classic period (ca. AD 600850). Technological means and social strategies for exploiting natural resources varied according to both environmental and demographic factors, providing for broad organizational diversity in the producer segment of society.

2343. Borgstede, Gregory J. 2005. Exploring the western highlands of Guatemala: new perspectives on the ancient Maya. Expedition 47(1):10-17. Cuello 2344. Hammond, Norman. 2008. En mi fín esta mi principio, en mi principio esta mi fín: investigaciones del preclásico maya en Cuello, Belize, 1975-2002. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 63-82. 2345. Hammond, Norman. 2008. Ciudades mayas preclásicas, raices y evolución: el Preclásico Medio en Cuello, Belize. Estudios de cultura maya 31:149-162.

2356. Trachman, Riisa M. 2002. Early Classic obsidian coreblade production: an example from the site of Dos Hombres, Belize. In Pathways to Prismatic Blades: A Study in Mesoamerican Obsidian Core-Blade Technology. Kenneth Hirth and Bradford Andrews, eds. pp. 105-120. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, Monograph 45. Los Angeles: University of California, Los Angeles. Author examines production debris from an Early Classic tomb in the B-4 Group at Dos Hombres.

2346. Hammond, Norman, and Jeremy R. Bauer. 2001. A Preclassic Maya sweatbath at Cuello, Belize. Antiquity 75(290):683-684. Description of a sweatbath, or steam house, found at Cuello. 2347. Hammond, Norman, Jeremy R. Bauer, and Jody Morris. 2002. Squaring off: Late middle Preclassic architectural innovation at Cuello, Belize. Antiquity 76(292):327-328.

Dos Pilas 2357. Decipherment of the Dos Pilas staircase. Mexicon 24(5):87-88, 2002. One of the longest Maya hieroglyphic texts known records the triumphs and defeats of a city caught in the middle of protracted warfare between the city-states of Tikal and Calakmul.

2348. Hammond, Norman, Julie Mather Saul, and Frank P. Saul. 2002. Ancestral faces: a Preclassic Maya skull-mask from Cuello, Belize. Antiquity 76:951-952. Authors report evidence from the Middle Preclassic period at Cuello suggesting that the working of human and other bone may be centuries older.

2358. Harris, John. 2003-2004. The Dos Pilas wars as documented in Maya hieroglyphic inscriptions. The Codex 12(13):47-59. 146

2372. Mayer, Karl H. 2004. The Hieroglyphic Stairway 1 at Edzná, Campeche, Mexico. Graz: Verlag Anton Saurwein. 44 p. “The first and complete documentation of the Late Classic Hieroglyphic Stairway 1 at Edzná.”

2359. Houston, Stephen D. 2004. Dos Pilas, Guatemala. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):70-73. Dzancab 2360. Benávides C., Antonio, and Stephan Merk. 2007. Tras las huellas de Maler en Chundsinab, Dzancab y YaxcheXlabpak. Mexicon 29(5):124-130.

2373. Parrilla Albuerne, Ana M. 2001. Un edificio de éstilo Floreciente Modificado en Edzná: el Templo de los Moscos. Mayab 14:43-56.

Dzibanché 2361. Nalda, Enrique, and Sandra Balanzario. 2006. Kohunlich y Dzibanché: los últimos años de investigación. Arqueología mexicana 13(76):42-47.

2374. Staines Cicero, Leticia. 2001. Las pinturas del Edificio de los Cinco Pisos en Edzná, Campeche. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 7(14):42-46. 2375. Suárez Aguilar, Vicente, ed. 2001. Exploraciones arqueológicas en Edzná, Campeche. Campeche: Universidad Autónoma de Campeche. 224 p. Contents include: Florentino García Cruz, La gradería de la Estructura 424 (pp. 11-32); Heber Ojeda Mas, La plataforma de los cuchillos y su anexo (pp. 33-54); Vicente Suárez Aguilar, Exploraciones arqueológicas en la pequeña acrópolis (pp. 55-76); Rubén Espadas López, Excavaciones arqueológicas en el juego de pelota (pp. 77-94); Luis Millet Camara, Etzná, Campeche: el juego de pelota (pp. 95-112); Florentino García Cruz, Arquitectura Petén en Edzná, Campeche: temporada de campo 1987 (pp. 113-126); Luis Millet Camara, Miscelanea campecheana (pp. 127-136); Luis Millet Camara, Edzná, Campeche: una revaloración de su historia (pp. 137-142); Vicente Suárez Aguilar, and Heber Ojeda Mas, Reflexiones torno a Etzná, Campeche (pp. 143-162); Luis Millet Camara, Etzná: su ignorado postclásico (pp. 163-176); Sylviane Boucher, Cerámica Proyecto Edzná, Campeche (pp. 177-192); Sylviane Boucher, La cerámica Itzá y foranea de los complejos VI y XI de Edzná, Campeche (pp. 193-214); Florentino García Cruz, Aspecto social y político del Proyecto Arqueológico Etzná (pp. 215-224). See also Antonio Benávides Castillo, La región de Edzná en el virreinato (Investigadores de Mesoamerica 4:48-65, 2004. Campeche).

Dzibilchaltún 2362. Casares Contreras, Orlando J. 2001. The astronomical orientation of Structure 38: the presence of astrocalendric alignments in Dzibilchaltún. PARI Journal 2(3):6-9. See also Orlando J. Casares Contreras, Una revisión arqueoastronómica a la Estructura 1-sub de Dzibilchaltún (Temas Antropológicos 23(1):5-19, 2001). 2363. Coyoc Ramirez, María A., and Alejandro J. Uriarte Torres. 2004. Contextos arquitectónicos y funerarios asociados a los sacbeob 2 y 5 de Dzibilchaltún, Yucatan. Investigadores de Mesoamerica 3:96-106. 2364. Gongora Salas, Angel G. 2001. El desarrollo de los estucos modelados en Dzibilchaltún, Yucatan, México. Mexicon 23(4):102-106. 2365. Maldonado Cárdenas, Rubén. 2007. El cenote Xlacah, Dzibilchaltún, Yucatan. Arqueología mexicana 14(83):46-49. 2366. Paz Rivera, Dalia M., Susana Echeverria Castillo, and Rubén Cárdenas. 2007. La limite sur de Dzibilchaltún y su relación con Sitio 51 “Temozon Norte.” Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1): 255-266. Ecab 2367. Andrews, Anthony P., Antonio Benávides C., and Grant D. Jones. 2006. Ecab: a remote encomienda of early colonial Yucatan, In Reconstructing the Past: Studies in Mesoamerican and Central American Prehistory. David M. Pendergast and Anthony P. Andrews, eds. pp. 5-32. International Series, 1529. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports.

Ek Balam 2376. Bond-Freeman, Tara. 2007. The Maya Preclassic ceramic sequence at the site of Ek Balam, Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Methodist University. 342 leaves. 2377. De France, Susan D., and Craig A. Hanson. 2008. Labor, population movement, and food in sixteenth-century Ek Balam, Yucatan. Latin American Antiquity 19(3):299-316.

Eckixil 2368. Schwarz, Kevin R. 2009. Eckixil: understanding the Classic to Postclassic survival and transformation of a Petén Maya village. Latin American Antiquity 20(3):413-441.

2378. García Ayala, César. 2006. Un depósito de almacenamiento subterraneo en el area extramuros de Ek Balam, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 453-460. 2379. Houck, Charles W. 2004. The Rural Survey of Ek Balam, Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 748 leaves.

Edzná 2369. Benávides Castillo, Antonio. 2007. El edificio de los mas de cinco pisos en Edzná, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1):207-218.

2380 Lacadena García-Gallo, Alfonso. 2006. Los jeroglíficos de Ek’ Balam. Arqueología mexicana 13(76): 64-69.

2370. Espinosa Villatoro, Miguel S. 2007. Una camera solar en Edzná, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1): 191-206.

2381. Smith, J. Gregory. 2001. Preliminary report of the Chichén Itzá-Ek Balam Transect Project. Mexicon 23(2):3035.

2371. Espinosa Villatoro, Miguel S. 2008. El axis de Edzná: una orientación relacionada con el cultivo del maíz. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 255-274. 147

spectroscopy from the Late Classic (AD 700-900) site of El Coyote in northwestern Honduras.

2382. Vargas de la Peña, Leticia, and Victor R. Castillo Borgés. 2001. Hallazgos recientes en Ek’ Balam. Mexicon 23(3):55-56.

El Mirador 2392. Hansen, Richard D. 2004. El Mirador, Guatemala: el apogeo del Preclásico en el area maya. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):28-33. See also Oscar Quintana, Depredación y el programa de rescate (Arqueología guatemalteca 1(1):42-47, 2003), and Edgar Suyuc, and Richard Hansen, Significado de la cuenca Mirador (Arqueología guatemalteca 1(1):33-41, 2003).

2383. Vargas de la Peña, Leticia, and Victor R. Castillo Borgés. 2006. Hallazgos recientes en Ek’ Balam. Arqueología mexicana 13(76):56-63. 2384. Vargas de la Peña, Leticia, Victor R. Castillo Borgés, and Alfonso Lacadena García-Gallo. 2001. Mural glífico del Cuarto 22 de la acrópolis de Ek’ Balam. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 7(14):47-50.

2393. Reed, Mike. 2010. Back Trails of the Mirador Basin. The Codex 18(1-2):3-11.

2385. Vargas de la Peña, Leticia, Victor Castillo Borgés, and Lacadena García-Gallo. 2007. El Mural de Cuarto 22 de la acrópolis de Ek’ Balam, Yucatan, México: ritual y profecia en el Clásico Tardío maya. Mayab 19: 107-122.

El Naranjal 2394. Pecheco Benítez, Adan, and Ana M. Parrilla Albuerne. 2004. El Naranjal, Quintana Roo (México): un sitio megalítico en las tierras bajas del norte. Mayab 17:5-19.

Ek Xux 2386. Kindon, Andrew W. 2002. Classic Maya Sociopolitical Organization and Settlement Patterns in the Maya Mountains of Southern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California at Los Angeles. 402 leaves. Includes analysis at the sites of Ek Xux and Mukelbal Tzul sites in the Maya Mountains of southern Belize.

El Pajaral 2395. López, Ervin S., and Tristan Saint Diezer. 2003. Sitio arqueológico El Pajaral. Arqueología guate- malteca 1(1):1417. El Paraíso (Guatemala) 2396. Ciudad Ruiz, Andrés, and M. Josefa Iglesias Ponce de León. 2003. La cerámica arqueológicas vista por un artista: ilustraciones de Antonio Tejeda sobre los materiales de la Finca El Paraíso (Quezaltenango, Guatemala). Revista española de antropología américana, volumen extraordinario, pp. 161-176.

El Baúl 2387. Kovacevich, Brigitte. Molly Morgan, Hector Neff, and Oswaldo Chinchilla. 2010. The Use of Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) on Obsidian Microdebitage: Case Studies from Chiquiuitan and El Baúl, Guatemala. SAS Bulletin 33(1):2-6. El Cafetal 2388. Barnes, Edwin B. 2008. The Dual Center Concept in the Southeast Maya Periphery: Evidence From the El Cafetal Monumental Core, El Paraíso Valley, Honduras. M.A. thesis, University of California, San Diego. 56 leaves.

El Paraíso (Honduras) 2397. Bell, Ellen E., Marcello A. Canuto, and Jorge Ramos. 2001. El Paraíso: punto embocadero de la periferia sudeste maya. Yaxkin 19:41-75. 2398. Canuto, Marcello A., and Ellen E. Bell. 2008. The ties that bind: administrative strategies in the El Paraíso Valley, Department of Copán, Honduras. Mexicon 30(1):10-20.

El Cajon 2389. Loker, William M. 2003. Dam impacts in a time of globalization: using multiple methods to document social and environmental change in rural Honduras. Current Anthropology 44(supplement):S113-S121. Report documents the environmental changes caused by the construction of a major hydroelectric dam, its effects on local people, and subsequent social and economic changes, especially in agricultural land use.

2399. Schwerin, Jennifer von. 2010. The problem of the “Copán style” and political identity: the architectural sculpture of El Paraíso, Honduras, in a regional context. Mexicon 32(3):56-66. Author argues that Copán’s dynasts used public architectural compaigns to mark and control their kingdom in the religion.

El Coyote 2390. McFarlane, William John. 2005. Power strategies in a changing world: Archaeological investigations of Early Postclassic remains at El Coyote, Santa Bárbara, Honduras. Doctoral dissertation , State University of New York at Buffalo. 770 leaves.

El Perú-Waka 2400. Eppich, Keith. 2007. Death and veneration at El PerúWaka’: Structure M14-15 as ancestor shrine. PARI Journal 8(1):1-16. 2401. Eppich, Keith. 2009. Feast and sacrifice at El PerúWaka: the N14-2 deposit as dedication. PARI Journal 10(2):119.

2391. Wells, E. Christian, and Patricia A. Urban. 2002. An ethnoarchaeological perspective on the material and chemical residues of communal feasting at El Coyote, northwest Honduras. In Materials Issues in Art and Archaeology VI. Pamela B. Vandiver, Martha Goodway, and Jennifer L. Mass, eds. pp. 193-198. Wartendale, PA: Materials Research Society. Authors examine artifact distributions and chemical analysis of anthropogenic sediments by ICP-AES

2402. Freidel, David, Michelle Rich, and F. Kent Reilly, 2010. Resurrecting the Maize king: Figurines from a Maya tomb bring a royal funeral to life. Archaeology 63(5):42-45. 2403. Guenter, Stanley P. 2007. On the emblem glyph of El Perú. PARI Journal 8(2): 20-23. 148

2418. Vargas Pacheco, Ernesto. 2001. Los Mascarones 1, 2 y 3 de El Tigre, Campeche. Mayab 14:57-66.

2404. Guatemalan sites yield Maya insights. Science News 165(21):334, 2004. Brief summary of excavations at Cival, Waka, and Cancuén.

2419. Vargas Pacheco, Ernesto. 2008. Viejos y nuevos hallazgos de mascarones en la Estructura 2 de El Tigre Campeche: nuestros antepasados. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 233-254.

2405. Meléndez, Juan Carlos. 2007. El complejo de juego de pelota del El Perú. U tz’ib 4(3): 1-14. 2406. Navarro Farr, Olivia C. 2009. Ritual, Process, and Continuity in the Late to Terminal Classic Transition: Investigations at Structure M13-1 in the Ancient Maya Site of El PerúWaka’, Petén, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Methodist University. 665 leaves.

El Ujuxté 2420. Tabares, A. Natasha. 2002. Obsidian Prismatic Blades at Ujuxté, Pacific Coastal Guatemala. M.A. thesis, California State University, Northridge.

2407. Witze, Alexandra. 2004. Royal Maya tomb discovered in Guatemala. American Archaeology 8(2):7.

2421. Tabares, A. Natasha, Michael W. Love, Robert J. Speakman, Hector Neff, and Michael D. Glascock. 2005. Straight from the source: obsidian prismatic blades at El Ujuxté, Guatemala. In Laser Ablation-ICP-MS in Archaeological Research. Robert J. Speakman and Hectror Neff, eds. pp. 16-26. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.

El Petén 2408 Fahsen, Federico. 2003. Las guerras del sudoeste del Petén. Arqueología guatemalteca 1(1):29-32. Guatemala. Military victories of kings are frequent theme in monumental art of Dos Pilas, Piedras Negras, Yaxchilán, and other sites in the southwest Petén.

El Zacatal 2422. Šprajc, Ivan, and Atasta Flores Esquivel. 2010. El Zacatal Stela 1. Mexicon 32(1-2);2-5.

2409. Quintana, Oscar. 2003. La riqueza cultural al noreste del Petén. Arqueología guatemalteca 1(1):22-24.

Flores 2423. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. Postclassic sculpture from Flores. Mexicon 24(1):3-4.

El Pilar 2410. Ford, Anabel. 2008. Dominant plants of the Maya forest and gardens of El Pilar: implications for paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Journal of Ethnobiology 28(2):179-199.

Gloria-Sacul 2424. Laporte, Juan Pedro. 2001. La Gloria-Sacul, Petén: un sitio Preclásico en las Montañas Mayas de Guatemala. Mayab 14:17-29.

2411. Kamp, Kathryn A., John C. Whittaker, Rafael Guerra, Kimberly McLean, Peter Brands, and José V. Guerra. 2006. A ritual spindle whorl deposit from the Late Classic Maya site of El Pilar, Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 31(4):411-424.

Guijarral 2425. Hughbanks, Paul J. 2006. Landscape Management at Guijarral, Northwestern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University, Department of Anthropology. 365 leaves.

2412. Wernecke, D. C. 2001. El Pilar: A Maya Rainforest Refuge Return of Flag #97. Explorers Journal 78(4):22-25. 2413. Whittaker, John C., Kathryn A. Kamp, Anabel Ford, Rafael Guerra, Peter Brands, José Guerra, Kim McLean, Alex Woods, Melissa Badillo, Jennifer Thornton, Zerifeh Eiley. 2009. Lithic industry in a Maya center: an axe workshop at El Pilar, Belize. Latin American Antiquity 20(1):134-156.

Holmul 2426. Callaghan, Michael G. 2008. Technologies of power: Ritual economy and ceramic production in the Terminal Preclassic period Holmul Region, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Vanderbilt University. 883 leaves.

El Portal 2414. Perrot-Minnot, Sébastien. 2005. Investigaciones arqueológicas en el Sitio de El Portal, Antigua Guatemala. Mexicon 27(2-3):40-44.

2427. Estrada Belli, Francisco. 2001. Maya kingship at Holmul, Guatemala. Antiquity 75(290):685-686. Author argues that Holmul may have been the seat of a Classic Maya kingdom, possibly from the Late Preclassic period. The earliest occupation is early in the Middle Preclassic, pre-800 BC.

2415. Mejía, Hector E., José Miguel García Campillo, and Juan Pedro Laporte. 2005. La Estela 6 de Itzimté, Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 27(2-3):37-40.

2428. Estrada Belli, Francisco. 2002. Anatomía de una ciudad Maya: Holmul: resultados de nuevas investigaciones arqueológicas en 2000 y 2001. Mexicon 24(5):107-112. Author presents a summary of the results of the first two seasons of systematic archaeological research at the site of Holmul, Guatemala.

El Pozito 2416. Eppich, Evan K. 2000. Ceramics and Interaction at El Pozito, Belize: A Type-Variety-Based Perspective. M.A. thesis, San Diego State University. 242 leaves. El Salto Este 2417. Escobedo Mejía, Héctor E. 2006. Investigaciones arqueológicas en el sitio El Salto Este, Salamá, Baja Verapaz. Guatemala: Asociación Tikal. 83 p.

2429. Estrada-Belli, Francisco. 2003. La pintura mural de La Sufricaya. Boletín Informativo: La Pintura Mural Prehispánica en México 9(18):38-42. Description of murals found at La Sufricaya, located 1.2 km west of the principal plaza at Holmul.

El Tigre 149

Archaeologies: Journal Congress 3(1): 39-58.

2430. Estrada Belli, Francisco. 2006. Las épocas tempranas en el area de Holmul, Petén. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 307-316.

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2442. Nance, C. Roger, Stephen L. Whittington, and Bárbara E. Borg, eds. 2003. Archaeology and Ethnohistory of Iximché. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. 432 p. Authors reconstruct the history of Iximché based on analyses of ceramics and human skeletal remains, on George Guillemin’s original excavation notes, drawings and photographs, and on the ethnohistorical literature. Contents include: C. Roger Nance, Stephen L. Whittington, and Bárbara E. Borg, Introduction (pp. 1-16); Bárbara E. Borg, Iximché and the Cakchiquels, ca. 1450-1540: an ethnohistorical sketch (pp. 17-38); C. Roger Nance, Cakchiquel ethnohistory, an archaeological perspective (pp. 39-52); C. Roger Nance, Iximché and details of the excavations (pp. 53-97); C. Roger Nance, Ceramic variables and attributes (pp. 99-115); C. Roger Nance, Typological descriptions and extra-site relationships (pp. 117-180); C. Roger Nance, Ceramic type distributions (pp. 181-190); C. Roger Nance, Ceramic attribute analysis (pp. 191-204); Stephen L. Whittington, Descriptions of human remains and burial structures (pp. 205-240); Stephen L. Whittington, Analysis of human skeletal material excavated by Guillemin (pp. 241-304); C. Roger Nance, Settlement plan and architecture (pp. 305-320); C. Roger Nance, Stephen L. Whittington, and Bárbara E. Bode, Conclusion (pp. 321-335).

2431. Estrada-Belli, Francisco, Alexandre Tokovinine, Jennifer M. Foley, Heather Hurst, Gene A. Ware, David Stuart, and Nikolai Grube. 2009. A Maya palace at Holmul, Petén, Guatemala and the Teotihuacan “entrada”“ Evidence from Murals 7 and 9. Latin American Antiquity 20(1):228-529. 2432. Kosakowsky, Laura J. 2001. The ceramic sequence from Holmul, Guatemala: preliminary results from the year 2000 season. Mexicon 23(4):85-91. Holotunich 2433. Ng, Olivia. 2007. View From the Periphery: A Hermenuetic Approach to the Archaeology of Holotunich (18651930), British Honduras. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 437 leaves. Hultún 2434. Merk, Stephan. 2003. The ruins of Hultún, Yucatan. Mexicon 25(4):92-93. See also Vilma Fialko, El arte escultórico y pictórico de la Acrópolis Triadica del sitio arqueológico Hultún (Arqueología guatemalteca 1(1):4-13, 2003). Huntichumul 2435. Ringle, William, George J. Bey, and Tomás Gallereta Negrón. 2009. New Monument from Huntichmul, Yucatan, Mexico. Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing 57. Barnardsville, NC: Center for Maya Research.

2443. Whittington, Stephen L. 2001. Analysis of curated human skeletal remains from highland Guatemala. In Human Remains: Conservation, Retrieval and Analysis; Proceedings of a Conference Held in Williamsburg, VA, November 7-11, 1999. Emily Williams, ed. pp. 135-141. International Series, 934. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports; BAR Publishing.

Hunto Chac 2436. Prem, Hanns J., and Nicholas P. Dunning. 2004. Investigations at Hunto Chac, Yucatan. Mexicon 26(2):26-36.

Ixtutz 2444. Zender, Mark. 2001-2002. A note on the inscription on Ixtutz Stela 4. PARI Journal 2(4)-3(1)17-22, 27.

Ichmul 2437. Normark, Johan. 2006. The Roads In-Between: Causeways and Polyagentive Networks at Ichmul and Yo’okop, Cochuah Region, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Göteborg University. 342 p.

Izamal 2445. Quinones Cetina, Lucía. 2006. Del Preclásico medio al Clásico temprano: una propuesta de fechamiento para el area nuclear de Izamal, Yucatan. Estudios de cultura maya 27:51-66.

Islas de los Cerros 2438. Ensor, Bradley E. 2003. Islas de los Cerros: a coastal site complex near Comalcalco, Tabasco, Guatemala. Mexicon 25(4):106-111. Results of a preliminary investigation at Islas de Los Cerros suggest that the insular population of the lagoon was contemporary with its administrative center of El Bellote and with Comalcalco.

Jaguar Hill 2446. Fitzsimmons, James L., Laura Gámez, and Mélanie Forné. 2009. Monuments, caches, and the lords of Jaguar Hill: creating the sacred from the mundane. Mexicon 31(2):43-49. Jaina 2447. Benávides C., Antonio. 2002. Labores de campo en Jaina, Campeche, durante 2001. Mexicon 24(4):69-71. See also Helena Barba Meinecke, Una vista al Proyecto Arqueológico Jaina en Campeche (Investigadores de Mesoamérica 3:52-73, 2003), and Carmen Cook de Leonard, Problemas arqueológico-geográficos de la isla de Jaina, Campeche, México (Investigadores de Mesoamérica 3:82-97, 2003).

2439. Ensor, Bradley E., Concepción Herrera Escobar, Keiko Teranishi Castillo, Gabriel Tun Ayora, and Socorro Jiménez. 2006. Proyecto Arqueológico Islas de los Cerros. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 211-226. Itzán 2440. Johnston, Kevin J. 2006. Preclassic Maya occupation of the Itzán escarpment, lower Rio de la Pasión, Petén, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica 17(2):177-202. Iximché 2441. Frühsorge, Lars. 2007. Archaeological heritage in Guatemala: Indigenous perspectives on the ruins of Iximché.

2448. Benávides C., Antonio, and Nikolai Grube. 2002. Dos monolitos tempranos de Jaina, Campeche, México. Mexicon 150

project reported here, GPR had not been utilized for archaeological purposes in Guatemala. By locating many hitherto unsuspected architectural features, by pinpointing loci for excavation of ritual caches and large middens, and by rapidly augmenting a conventional sampling survey in a largely Preclassic southern district of the great Maya site of Kaminaljuyú, GPR obtained important results for the better understanding of the economic, ceremonial, and residential functions of the city and proved geologically to be well-suited for use in the volcanic southern Guatemalan highlands. Further, given the drastic ongoing salvage crises confronting archaeologists in the study of Kaminaljuyú and other sites, it demonstrated its great value when rapid but comprehensive survey is required because of the imminent threat of destruction of archaeological sites and material.

24(5):95-97. Two early stone monuments from Jaina suggest links to Guatemala during the Late Preclassic. 2449. Piña Chan, Román. 2001. Breve estudio sobre la funeraria de Jaina, Campeche. 2 ed. Campeche: Gobierno del Estado de Campeche. 51 p. Study of human burials at Jaina, first published in 1948. 2450. Thebaúlt, Audrey. 2003. Comparíson iconographique des figurines de terre cuite de Jaina, Campeche et de Nopiloa, Veracruz central. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1. See also Antonio Benávides C., Figurillas de Jaina (México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 2009. 12 p.); see also Whistle figurine of a bear or a dog, Jaina burial island (Tribal 9(3):110, 2004).

Kaminaljuyú (electronic format) 2461. Laporte, Juan Pedro, and Hector E. Mejía. 2003. Kaminaljuyú en el Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas en Guatemala. Guatemala: Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología, Asociación Tikal. “La version digital del presente volumen, fue realizada a través de Adobe Acrobat V.5.0. para su lectura y/o impresion es necésario tener instalado la aplicación Adobe Reader, la cual es un programa de distribución gratuita que lo puede encontrar en el sitio www.adobe.com. Para optimizar el acceso a los diferentes directorios del volumen, se recomienda navegar a través de los Bookmarks enlaces.”

Jalapa 2451. Martínez Donado, Christopher. 2008. Descripción de algunos sitios del departamento de Jalapa (altos orientales). U tz’ib 4(4): 1-10. Jonuta 2452. Gallegos Gomora, Miriam J. 2007. Representando al mundo a la vera del Usumacinta, Jonuta. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1): 27-44. Kajtún 2453. Nondédéo, Philippe, and Alfonso Lacadena. 2004. Kajtún: un nuevo sitio con monumentos esculpidos en la región Río Bec. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 90(1):183-201.

K’axob 2462. Henderson, Hope. 2003. The organization of staple crop production at K’axob, Belize. Latin American Antiquity 14(4):469-496. Study examines variability in size, staple crop production, and wealth among households in the community of K’axob, Belize.

Kakoch 2454. Merk, Stephan. 2001. The Maya ruins of Kakoch and Xkakatz, Yucatan, Mexico. Mexicon 24(1):4-5. Report on two archaeological sites located west of the town in Tekax, Yucatan.

2463. López Varela, Sandra, Annelou van Gijn, and Loe Jacobs. 2002. De-mystifying pottery production in the Maya lowlands: detection of traces of use-wear on pottery sherds through microscopic analysis and experimental replication. Journal of Archaeological Science 29(10):1133-1147. Microscopic analysis of archaeological and fabricated pottery tools define and reproduce wear traces from use activities.

Kaminaljuyú 2455. Anderson, J. Heath, and Kenneth G. Hirth. 2009. Obsidian blade production for craft consumption at Kaminaljuyú. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(1):163-172. 2456. Crasborn Chavarria, José. 2006. Kaminaljuyú: destrucción, investigación y estado actual. U tz’ib 3(10): 1-40.

2464. López Varela, Sandra, Patricia A. McAnany, and Kimberly A. Berry. 2001. Ceramics technology at Late Classic K’axob, Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 28(1-2):177191. A suite of pit features and associated artifacts at a Late Classic period platform at K’axob provides information on the technology of ancient Maya pottery fabrication and firing.

2457. Houston, Stephen D., Zachary Nelson, Carlos Chiriboga, and Ellen Spenseley. 2003. The acropolis of Kaminaljuyú, Guatemala: recovering a “lost excavation.” Mayab 16:49-64. 2458. Mora-Marin, David F. 2005. Kaminaljuyú Stela 10: script classification and linguistic affiliation. Ancient Mesoamerica 16(1):63-87.

2465. McAnany, Patricia A. 2004. Appropriative economies: labor obligations and luxury goods in ancient Maya societies. In Archaeological Perspectives on Political Economies. Gary M. Feinman and Linda M. Nicholas, eds. pp. 145-165. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.

2459. Thompson, Lauri M. 2005 A Comparative Analysis of Burial Patterning: The Preclassic Maya Sites of Chiapa de Corzo, Kaminaljuyú, Tikal, and Colhá. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 752 leaves.

2466. McAnany, Patricia A., ed. 2004. K’axob: Ritual, Work, and Family in an Ancient Maya Village. Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Monumenta Archaeologica, 22. Los Angeles. 467 p. and CD-ROM. Report on fieldwork conducted from 1990 to 1993 at Preclassic site of K’axob in northern Belize. Contents include: Patricia A. McAnany, Situating K’axob within Formative Period lowland

2460. Valdés, Juan A., and Jonathan Kaplan. 2001. Groundpenetrating radar at the Maya site of Kaminaljuyú, Guatemala. Journal of Field Archaeology 27(3):329-342. Increasingly, for both general survey and finer reconnaissance, archaeologists are employing ground-penetrating radar (GPR). Yet, until the 151

tina Vidal Lorenzo, La arqueología (pp. 11-26); Gaspar Muñoz Cosmé, Proporción y arquitectura (pp. 27-36); Miguel Rivera Dorado, El tenue resplandor del Postclásico petenero (pp. 37-44); Gaspar Muñoz Cosmé, Andrea Peiro Vitoria, and Zacarias Herguido Alamar, El levantamiento arquitectónico del ala Sur de la Acrópolis (pp. 45-64); Gaspar Muñoz Cosmé, La acrópolis (pp. 71-78); Begoña Carrascosa Moliner, and Montserrat Lastras Pérez, Tratamientos de restauración y restauración del cuarto de los grafítos (pp. 79-88); Miriam E. Salas Pol, and E. Juber Orozco Edelman, La cerámica (pp. 89102); Ricardo Torres Marzo, Objetos de la cultura material (pp. 103-114); Juan A. Valdés Gómez, and Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Los restos oseos (pp. 115-122); Elena Grau Almero, Estudio arqueobotánico (pp. 123-128); Teresa Domenech Carbo, and Luisa Vázquez de Agredos, Pigmentos, aglutinantes y estucos. Composición químico-analítica (pp. 129-148); Oscar Quintana Samayoa, El Proyecto La Blanca y el Plan Ruta Guayacan (pp. 149-160).

Maya archaeology (pp. 1-10); Patricia A. McAnany, Landscapes of K’axob in deep and current time (pp. 11-18); Patricia A. McAnany, Domiciled and construction histories (pp. 23-64); Eleanor Harrison-Buck, Nourishing the animus of lived space through ritual caching (pp. 65-86); Victoria L. Bobo, Soaked and steamed sustenance: evidence from sherdlined pits (pp. 87-104); Rebecca Storey, Ancestors: bioarchaeology of the human remains of K’axob (pp. 109-138); Mary Lee Bartlett, The potter’s choice of clays and crafting technologies (pp. 143-168); Sandra L. López Varela, Ceramic history of K’axob: the early years (pp. 169-192); Kimberly A. Berry, Sandra L. López Varela, Mary Lee Bartlett, Tamarra Martz, and Patricia A. McAnany, Pottery vessels of K’axob (pp. 193-262); Patricia A. McAnany, and Polly A. Peterson, Tools of the trade: acquisition, use, and recycling of chipped stone (pp. 279-306); Patricia A. McAnany, Obsidian blades and source areas (pp. 307-316); Patricia A. McAnany, and Justin P. Ebersole, Ground and polished stone tools (pp. 317330); Ilean Isel Isaza Aizpurua, The art of shell working and the social uses of shell ornaments (pp. 335-352); Mary Lee Bartlett, Ornaments of bone and semiprecious stone (pp. 353366); Annabeth Headrick, The quadripartite motif and the centralization of power (pp. 367-378); Marilyn A. Masson, Contribution of fishing and hunting to subsistence and symbolic expression (pp. 382-398); Ryan Harrigan, Mollusca of K’axob: for supper and soul (pp. 399-414); Patricia A. McAnany, Denouement (415-420).

2474. Vidal Lorenzo, Cristina, and Gaspar Muñoz Cosmé, eds. 2007. La Blanca y su entorno: cuadernos de arquitectura y arqueología maya. Valéncia: Universidad Politécnica de Valéncia. 201 p. Contents include: Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, and Juan A. Valdés Gómez, La huella arqueológica del abandono de los palacios de La Blanca (pp. 11-20); Gaspar Muñoz Cosmé, El Palacio de Oriente (pp. 21-28); Begona Carrascosa Moliner, and Montserrat Lastras Pérez, Conservación in situ: Revestimientos interiores de los edificios 6J1 y 6J2 (pp. 2938); Gaspar Muñoz Cosmé, Carlos A. Valcarcel García, and Diego Montesinos Gimenez, Levantamiento arquitectónico de La Blanca (pp. 39-62); Miriam E. Salas Pol, and Juber Orozco Edelman, El estudio de la cerámica (pp. 63-84); Ricardo Torres Marzo, Los objetos (pp. 85-96); Begoña Carrascosa Moliner, and Montserrat Lastras Pérez, Conservación y extracción de restos oseos (pp. 97-104); Teresa Domenech Carbo, Luisa Vázquez de Agredos, and Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Los pintores de La Blanca y su entorno. Hacía un proyecto regional (pp. 105-120); Mario R. Rodriguez Lara, La vegetación del sitio arqueológico La Blanca. Una primera aproximación para el manejo embiental del sitio (pp. 121-136); Luisa Vázquez de Agredos, and Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, Actividades de difusion y sensibilizacion: los cursos de formación como iniciativa (pp. 137-144); Prudence M. Rice, and Don S. Rice, The Terminal Classic to Early Postclassic Transition in the Central Petén Lakes Region (pp. 145-160); Miguel Rivera Dorado, Arquitectura y escenografia en la cultura maya antigua (pp. 161-172); Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, and Juan A. Valdés Gómez, Observaciones sobre el colapso y el périodo clásico terminal (pp. 173-180); Oswaldo Gómez Barillas, La Ofrenda P7TT-03 de la Plaza de los Siete Templos de Tikal (pp. 181-190).

Kinal 2467. Mayer, Karl H. 2002. Maya murals and graffiti at Kinal, Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 24(5):89-90. Kohunlich 2468. Nalda, Enrique, and Sandra Balanzario. 2006. Kohunlich y Dzibanché: los últimos años de investigación. Arqueología Mexicana 13(76):42-47. 2469. Velásquez García, Erik. 2002. Nuevo glífo maya en Kohunlich, Quintana Roo. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):16. See also Enrique Nalda, Kohunlich: empazamiento y desarrollo histórico (México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH)/Plaze y Vales, 2004. 185 p.). 2470. Nalda, Enrique. 2004. Kohunlich; emplazamiento y desarrollo historical. México: INAH (Colección Científica, 463). Summary by a leading authority with much on the mapping of the site. Accompanied by a portfolio of 17 folding plans of the Quintana Roo site Kuluba 2471. Gutierrez Barrera Rubio, Alfredo. 2008. Kuluba, un enclave Itzá. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 137152.

La Caldera 2475. Kunen, Julie L., Mary Jo Galindo, and Erin Chase. 2002. Pits and bones: identifying Maya ritual behavior in the archaeological record. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2):197-211. Description of the investigation of a pit excavated into bedrock beneath a residential structure at the Maya site of La Caldera, in northwestern Belize.

La Blanca (Pacific Coast) 2472. Love, Michael, and Julia Guernsey. 2007. Monument 3 from La Blanca, Guatemala: a Middle Preclassic earthen sculpture and its ritual associations. Antiquity 81(314):920932. La Blanca (Petén) 2473. Muñoz Cosmé, Gaspar, and Cristina Vidal Lorenzo, eds. 2006. La Blanca: arquitectura y clasicismo. Valéncia: Universitat Politécnica de Valéncia 166 p. Contents include: Cris-

La Corona 2476. Harris, John F. 2006-2007. Connections between Site Q and La Corona from Site Q texts. The Codex 15(1-2):26-47. 152

La Joyanca 2477. Arnauld, M.-Charlotte. 2002. Arquitectura política y residencial en La Joyanca, noroccidente del Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 24(3):55-62. Report on 1999 excavations at La Joyanca, a Classic period settlement in northwestern Petén, Guatemala. Author differentiates two social groups: the ruler and his family, and the subroyal nobles and their families.

2483. Hammond, Norman, and Gair Tourtellot. 2003. La Milpa. Current World Archaeology 1(1): 36-43. General summary of fieldwork conducted at La Milpa, a Classic period site in northwestern Belize; see also www.bu.edu/lamilpa/ which includes a map of the entire project, the first Maya site map to be published in full on the web.

2478. Forné, Mélanie. 2006. La Cronología cerámica de La Joyanca, noroeste del Petén, Guatemala. International Series, 1572. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 351 p. See also Mélanie Forné, Eléments pour une étude chronocéramique du site Maya de La Joyanca, nord-ouest Petén, Guatemala (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2000), and La chronologie céramique de La Joyanca, nord-ouest du Petén, Guatemala (Doctoral dissertation, Université de Paris 1, 2005).

2484. Houk, Brett A., and Jon B. Hageman. 2007. Lost and found: (re)-placing Say Ka in the La Milpa suburban settlement pattern. Mexicon 24(6):152-156. 2485. Rose, John J. 20000. A study of Late Classic Maya population growth at La Milpa, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pittsburgh. 277 leaves. 2486. Tourtellot, Gair, Marc Wolf, Scott Smith, Kristen Gardella, and Norman Hammond. 2002. Exploring heaven on earth: testing the cosmological model at La Milpa, Belize. Antiquity 76(293):633-634. The La Milpa cosmogram includes: Plaza A cosmogram has two temple-palace pairs set at right angles; the Petén layout of the site core has the public temple plaza at the north and the private royal residence to the south. The site cosmogram has outlying minor centers in the cardinal directions at a regular 3.5 km distance, and on hilltops intervisible with the Plaza A temples. See also Unearthing Maya mysteries (National Geographic 199(4):xxi, 2001).

2479. Gámez, Laura. 2003. Una estructura ritual de la ocupación temprana del Grupo Guacamaya de La Joyanca, asociada con monumentos. Tesis, Licenciatura, Escuela de Historia, Universidad de San Carlos. 2480. Lemonnier, Éva. 2009. Structure de l’habitat du site maya classique de la Joyanca (Petén nord-ouest, Guatemala) dans son environment local. Paris Monographs in American Archaeology, 23; International Series, 2016. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. 243 p. Publication of Eva Lemonnier, La structure de l’habitat du site maya classique de La Joyanca (Petén Nord-Ouest, Guatemala) dans son environnement local (Doctoral dissertation, Université de Paris 1, 2006).

La Muertita 2487. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. The Maya ruins of La Muertita, Campeche. Mexicon 23(4):82-84.

La Milpa 2481. Everson, Gloria E. 2003. Terminal Classic Maya Settlement Patterns at La Milpa, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 444 leaves. Terminal Classic settlement pattern research was carried out in the east transect of the ancient Maya site of La Milpa, Belize. The results of testing the four models indicate that the landscape surrounding La Milpa, Belize, was culturally modified to create an earthly representation of the Maya cosmos. The minor center of La Milpa East stands atop a high hill directly east of the site core. The large public plaza of the minor center is angled to allow an unimpeded view of the site core from the small pyramid located on the eastern side. Other minor centers have been found on hills in each of the three other cardinal directions, while hills in the intervening, non-cardinal directions hosted no architectural groups of similar size. The locations of the four minor centers in relation to La Milpa Centre create a grid similar to the Maya world tree where the four unique directions unify in a single central point. Elements of cosmology were incorporated into the site plans for many other Maya sites.

La Pasadita 2488. Harris, John. 2009. Tiloom: The supersajal of La Pasadita. The Codex 17(1-2):57-71. La Sufricaya 2489. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. Stela 1 from La Sufricaya, Petén. Mexicon 23(1):4-5. La Venta 2490. Linares Villanueva, Eliseo. 2002. Cerámica arqueológica del Rio La Venta, Chiapas. Pueblos y fronteras 4:93-124. Lacanhá 2491. Tovalin Ahumada, Alejandro, Victor M. Ortiz, and Fernanda Corrales García. 2006. Sitio arqueológico Lacanhá, Mpio. de Ocosingo, Chiapas; primeros resultados de campo. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 279-296. Lagartera 2492. Villamil, Laura P. 2009. Ancient Maya Cityscapes: Insights from Lagartera and Margarita, Quintana Roo, Mexico. International Series, 1955. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports; BAR Publishing. 206 p.

2482. Hammond, Norman. 2001. A new Maya stela from La Milpa, Belize. Antiquity 75(288):267-268. Stela 20 was uncovered in March 2000, after carved fragments had been reported eroding out of a looters’ spoil heap in front of Structure 1. The spoil came from a deep trench and tunnel driven east into the heart of the Late Classic pyramid c. 1979, in search of tombs within; the looters had penetrated a tworoomed vaulted building (Structure 199) butted on to the west front of the pyramid, and behind that several prior phases of temple construction.

Lagartero 2493. Rivero-Torres, S., T. Calligaro, D. Tenorio, and M. Jiménez-Reyes. 2008. Characterization of archaeological obsidians from Lagartero, Chiapas, Mexico by PIXE. Journal of Archaeological Science 35(12): 3168-3171. 153

Christopher M. Stojanowski, eds. pp. 155-176. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.

Laguna de On Island 2494. Rosenswig, Robert M., and Marilyn A. Masson. 2001. Seven new Preceramic sites documented in northern Belize. Mexicon 23(6):138-140. Report on aceramic deposits at Laguna de On Island, Caye Coco, Doubloon Bank Lagoon, Fred Smith site, Strath Bogue, Test Program Subop. 7, and Patt Work Site in northern Belize.

2506. Wiewall, Darcy L. 2009. Identifying the Impact of the Spanish Colonial Regime on Maya Household Production at Lamanai, Belize During the Terminal Postclassic to Early Colonial Transition. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 560 leaves.

Laguna Las Pozas 2495. Johnston, Kevin J., Andrew J. Breckenridge, and Bárbara C. Hansen. 2001. Paleoecological evidence of an early Postclassic occupation in the southwestern Maya lowlands: Laguna Las Pozas, Guatemala. Latin American Antiquity 12(2):149-166.

Lamay 2507. Mayer, Karl H. 2004. The Maya ruins of Lamay, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Mexicon 26(6):114-116. Las Pacayas 2508. Emery, Kitty F. 2002. Animals from the Maya underworld: reconstructing elite Maya ritual at the Cueva de los Quetzales, Guatemala. In Behaviour Behind Bones: The Zooarchaeology of Ritual, Religion, Status and Identity. Sharyn Jones O’Day, Wim Van Neer, and Anton Ervynck, eds. pp. 101-113. Oxford, England: Oxbow Books. Analysis of a well-preserved zooarchaeological assemblage from Cueva de los Quetzales at the Classic Maya site of Las Pacayas, located east of the Petexbatún region.

Laguna Pucteal 2496. Quintana, Oscar. 2004. Programa de rescate en la región noreste del Petén, Guatemala: nuevos registros en los alrededores de la Laguna Pucteal. Mexicon 26(5):102-106. Brief descriptions of El Susto, El Susto Mirador, Raton Pucteal, and Las Cubetitas, sites discovered during a salvage program near Laguna Pucteal in northeastern Petén. Lamanai 2497. Aimers, James. 2007. Anti-apocalypse: the Postclassic period at Lamanai, Belize. Archaeology International 2007:45-48.

Los Cerritos 2509. Kennett, Douglas J., Bárbara Voorhies, and Sarah B. McClure. 2002. Los Cerritos: an early fishing-farming community on the Pacific coast of Mexico. Antiquity 76(293):631-632. Excavations at Los Cerritos, an earthen mound site on the Pacific Coast of Mexico, provide evidence for a sedentary fishing-farming community dating to the Early Formative (Preclassic; 3500-2800 BP) period.

2498. Aimers, Jim. 2007. Collapse of the Maya: investigations at Lamanai, Belize. Current World Archaeology 22(10):12-23. 2499. Andrés, Christopher R. 2005. Building Negotiation: Architecture and Sociopolitical Transformation at Chau Hiix, Lamanai, and Altun Ha, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Indiana University. 310 leaves.

Los Horcones 2510. García-Des Lauriers, Claudia. 2007. Proyecto Arqueológico Los Horcones: Investigating the Teotihuacan Presence on the Pacific Coast of Chiapas, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 298 leaves.

2500. Dormon, Thomas M. 2007. Degenerative Joint Disease in the Ancient Maya Population of Lamanai, Belize. M.A., Trent University (Canada). 201 leaves.

Los Naranjos 2511. Dixon, Boyd, Ron Webb, and George Hasemann. 2001. Arqueología y ecoturismo en el sitio de Los Naranjos, Honduras. Yaxkin 20:55-76.

2501. McDonald, Kirsten. 2001. Degenerative Joint Disease: What Can It Tell Us About the Early Historic Maya at Lamanai? M.A. thesis, Trent University (Canada). 196 leaves. 2502. Powis, Terry G. 2002. An Integrative Approach to the Analysis of the Late Preclassic Ceramics at Lamanai, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 602 leaves.

2512. Nielsen, Jesper, and James E. Brady. 2006. The couple in the cave: origin iconography on a ceramic vessel from Los Naranjos, Honduras. Ancient Mesoamerica 17(2):203-218. Louisville 2513. Runggaldier, Astrid. 2004. Classic Maya Polychrome Stucco Sculptures From Louisville, Belize. International Series, 1264. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 96 p. Originally submitted as an M.A. thesis at Boston University, author summarizes excavations at Louisville, a Maya site in the Corozal District of northern Belize.

2503. Simmons, Scott E., David M. Pendergast, and Elizabeth Graham. 2009. The context and significance of copper artifacts in Postclassic and Early Historic Lamanai, Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 34(1):57-76. 2504. Song, Rhan-Ju. 2004. Reconstructing Infant Diet and Weaning Behavior of Ancient Maya From Lamanai, Belize Using Laser Ablation-Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). Doctoral dissertation, University of Massachusetts Amherst. 404 leaves.

Machaquila 2514. Iglesias Ponce de León, M. Josefa, and Alfonso Lacadena García-Gallo. 2003. Nuevos hallazgos glíficos en la Estructura 4 de Machaquila, Petén, Guatemala. Mayab 16:65-71.

2505. White, Christine D., Fred J. Longstaffe, David M. Pendergast, and Jay Maxwell. 2009. Cultural embodiment and the enigmatic identity of the lovers from Lamanai. In Bioarchaeology and Identity in the Americas. Kelly J. Knudson and

2515. Just, Bryan R. 2006. The Visual Discourse of NinthCentury Stelae at Machaquila and Seibal. Doctoral disserta154

2529. Cobos, Rafael, and Carlos Peraza Lope. 2006. Mayapán y sus conchas arqueológicas: implicaciones para reconstruir antiguas rutas de abastecimiento peninsular durante el Posclásico. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2):543-552.

tion, Tulane University, Department of Anthropology. 561 leaves. 2516. Ciudad Ruiz, Andrés, and Alfonso Lacadena GarcíaGallo. 2008. Procesos históricos de reorientación durante el Clásico terminal en Machaquila. Mayab 20: 145-160.

2530. Escamilla Ojeda, Bárbara, Carlos Peraza Lope, and Pedro Delgado Ku. 2006. Intervenciones arqueológicas en tres estructuras de la plaza sur de Mayapán, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1):185-198.

Macoba 2517. Mayer, Karl H. 2002. Una tapa de boveda pintada en Macoba, Campeche. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 8(17):39-41.

2531. Galindo Trejo, Jesús. 2007. Un análisis arqueoastronomico del edificio circular Q152 de Mayapán. Estudios de cultura maya 29:63-82.

2518. Mayer, Karl H. 2004. An unpublished Maya structure at Macoba, Campeche. Mexicon 26(1):3-5.

2532. Gregory, Katherine W. 2006. Analysis of Chert Artifacts from Residential Households at Mayapán, Yucatan, Mexico. M.A. thesis, Florida Atlantic University. 453 p.

Manantial 2519. Mayer, Karl H. 2002. The Maya ruins of Manantial, Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 24(6): 119-120.

2533. Masson, Marilyn A., Timothy S. Hare, and Carlos Peraza Lope. 2006. Postclassic Maya society regenerated at Mayapán. In After Collapse: The Regeneration of Complex Societies, Glenn M. Schwartz, and John J. Nichols, eds. pp. 188-207. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.

Manos Rojas A 2520. Mayer, Karl H. 2003. Pintura mural en Manos Rojas A, Campeche. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 9(19):54-58. 2521. Sulak, Jack. 2003. Structure I, at Manos Rojas A, Campeche. Mexicon 25(6):147-149.

2534. Masson, Marilyn A., and Carlos Peraza Lópe. 2007. Kukulkan/Quetzalcoatl, death god, and creation mythology of burial shaft temples at Mayapán. Mexicon 29(3):77-85.

Marco González 2522. Stemp, W. 2000. An Analysis of Stone Tool Use in the Maya Coastal Economies of Marco González and San Pedro, Ambergris Caye, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, McGill University (Canada). 552 leaves.

2535. Milbrath, Susan. 2005. Last great capital of the Maya. Archaeology 58(2):26-29. An interesting summary of research archaeological research at Mayapán by the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia de México.

2523. Stemp, James W., and Elizabeth Graham. 2006. Ancient Maya procurement and use of chipped chert and chalcedony tools at Marco González, Ambergris Caye, Belize. Lithic Technology 31(1): 27-55.

2536. Milbrath, Susan, and Carlos Peraza Lope. 2003. Mayapán’s scribe: a link with Classic Maya artists. Mexicon 25(5):120-123. 2537. Milbrath, Susan, and Carlos Peraza Lope. 2003. Revisiting Mayapán: Mexico’s last capital. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):1-46.

2524. Williams, Jocelyn S., Christine D. White, and Fred J. Longstaffe. 2009. Maya marine subsitence: isotopic evidence from Marco González and San Pedro, Belize. Latin American Antiquity 20(1):37-56.

2538. Milbrath, Susan, and Carlos Peraza Lope. 2009. Survival and revival of terminal Classic traditions at Postclassic Mayapán. Latin American Antiquity 20(4):581-606.

Maya Mountains 2525. Kindon, Andrew W. 2002. Classic Maya Sociopolitical Organization and Settlement Patterns in the Maya Mountains of Southern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 402 leaves.

2539. Paris, Elizabeth H. 2008. Metallurgy, Mayapán, and the Postclassic Mesoamerican world system. Ancient Mesoamerica 19(1):43-66.

2526. Prufer, Keith M. 2002. Communities, Caves, and Ritual Specialists: A Study of Sacred Space in the Maya Mountains of Southern Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 755 leaves.

2540. Peraza Lope, Carlos, and Wilberth Cruz Alvarado. 2006. La cerámica de sitios arqueológicos del centro-sur de Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 531-542. 2541. Peraza Lope, Carlos, Pedro Delgado Ku, Bárbara Escamilla Ojeda, and Wilberth Cruz Avarado. 2008. Trabajos de conservación arquitectónica en la Estructura Q 141 de Mayapán, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 121-136.

2527. Prufer, Keith M., and Peter S. Dunham. 2009. A shaman’s burial from an Early Classic cave in the Maya Mountains of Belize, Central America. World Archaeology 41(2):295-320.

2542. Milbrath, Susan, Carlos Peraza Lope, and Miguel Delgado Ku. 2010. Religious imagery in Mayapán’s murals. PARI Journal 10(3):1-10

Mayapán 2528. Aveni, Anthony F., Susan Milbrath, and Carlos Peraza Lope. 2004. Chichén Itzá’s legacy in the astronomically oriented architecture of Mayapán. RES 45:123-143. 155

2554. Menzies, Adam C. J. 2003. A Technological and Functional Analysis of the Obsidian Assemblage From Minanha, Cayo District, Belize. M.A. thesis, Trent University. 236 leaves.

2543. Pugh, Timothy W. 2001. Flood reptiles, serpent temples, and the quadripartite universe: the imago mundi of late Postclassic Mayapán. Ancient Mesoamerica 12(2):247-258. Examination of five serpent temples in the Ch’en Mul group of Mayapán suggests that each building was linked to a specific elite official.

2555. Paauw, Derek Andrew M. 2007. Archaeological investigations in group L at the ancient Maya Centre of Minanha, Belize. M.A., Trent University (Canada). 272 leaves.

2544. Pugh, Timothy W. 2002. A cluster and spatial analysis of ceremonial architecture at Late Postclassic Mayapán. Journal of Archaeological Science 30(8):941-953. Author uses cluster and spatial analyses of ceremonial buildings called “oratorios” to identify four major types of oratorios, two within the central ceremonial group and two inside the residential groups.

2556. Pollock, Adam J. 2007. Investigating the socioeconomic and socio-political organization of intensive agricultural production at the ancient Maya community of Minanha, Belize. M.A., Trent University (Canada). 257 leaves.

2545. Russell, Bradley W. 2008. Postclassic Maya Settlement on the Rural-Urban Fringe of Mayapán, Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 1138 leaves.

2557. Primrose, James R. 2003. The Ancient Maya Water Management System at Minanha, West Central Belize. M.A. thesis, Trent University. 132 leaves.

2546. Sagebiel, Kerry L. 2005. Shifting Allegiances at La Milpa, Belize: A Typological, Chronological, and Formal Analysis of the Ceramics. Doctoral dissertation, University of Arizona. 819 leaves.

2558. Schwake, Sonja A. 2008. The social implications of ritual behavior in the Maya lowlands: A perspective from Minanha, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, San Diego. 406 leaves.

2547. Sánchez Fortoul, Carmen G. 2009. Ceramics of Mayapán: A Petrographic Study. M.A. thesis, Florida Atlantic University. 192 leaves.

2559. Slim, Bárbara. 2005. Letting the margins speak: Exploring the lower strata of ancient Maya royal courts at Minanha’, Belize. M.A. thesis, Trent University (Canada). 305 leaves.

2548. Weeks, John M., ed. 2009. Carnegie Maya II: The Carnegie Institution of Washington Current Reports, 1952-1957. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 625 p. Republication of Current Reports series on archaeological investgations at Mayapán, Yucatan. Includes searchable CD-ROM. Appendix by Marilyn A. Masson.

2560. Stewart, Lisa C. 2005. Public archaeology in action: Creating sustainable cultural tourism development plans for the ancient Maya archaeological site of Minanha, Belize. M.A. thesis, Trent University (Canada). 277 leaves. 2561. Turuk, Janais Y. 2007. More grist for the mill: An analysis of the grinding stones recovered from the ancient Maya site of Minanha, Belize. M.A., Trent University (Canada). 396 leaves.

Medicinal Trail 2549. Rodriguez, George L. 2008. The investigation and analysis of a rural household structure and its associated courtyard group at the ancient Maya site of Medicinal Trail. M.A. thesis, University of Texas at San Antonio. 138 leaves.

Molobka 2562. Cortés de Brasdefer, Fernando. 2001. Molobka o Molobkab: pueblo maya congregado en hondonada. Mexicon 24(6):120-121.

Mérida 2550. Hernández Hernández, Concepcion, and Teresa N. Ceballos Gallareta. 2006. Complejos cerámicos del sitio arqueológico 15QD(7)152, Fracc. Villa Magna del Sur en el Mpio. de Merida. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 227-240.

Montes Azules 2563. López, Fredy. 2003. Lost city allegedly found in Montes Azules, Chiapas. Mexicon 25(6):143. A brief notice regarding the possible discovery of a Maya site named Sak Tz’i’ (White Dog) in the Biosphere Reserve of Montes Azules.

Minanha 2551. Iannone, Gyles. 2001. Rediscovery of the ancient Maya center of Minanha, Belize: background, description, and future prospects. Mexicon 23(5):125-129.

Moral-Reforma 2564. Juarez Cossio, Daniel. 2003. Moral-Reforma: en la senda de Xibalba. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):38-43.

2552. Iannone, Gyles. 2005. The rise and fall of an ancient Maya petty royal court. Latin American Antiquity 16(1):26-44. Discussion of the elimination by reburial of Minanha’s royal residential compound.

2565. Martin, Simon. 2003. Moral-Reforma y la contienda por el oriente de Tabasco. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):44-47.

2553. Macrae, Scott A. 2010. A comparative approach to the socio-political and socio-economic organization of the intensive terrace farming at the ancient Maya centre of Minanha, Belize. M.A. thesis, Trent University (Canada). 262 leaves.

Motúl de San José 2566. Emery, Kitty F. 2003. Natural resource use and Classic Maya economics: environmental archaeology at Motúl de San José, Guatemala. Mayab 16:33-48.

156

2579. Parry, Roberta G. 2007. Maya Water Management: Excavations in the Reservoir at Naachtun, El Petén, Guatemala. M.A., University of Calgary (Canada). 266 leaves.

2567. Foias, Antonia E. 2003. Perspectivas teoricas en las dinámicas del estado Clásico maya: resultados preliminares del Proyecto Eco-Arqueológico Motúl de San José, 19982003. Mayab 16:15-32.

Nacimiento 2580. Eberl, Markus. 2007. Community Heterogeneity and Integration: The Maya Sites of Nacimiento, Dos Ceibas, and Cerro de Cheyo (El Petén, Guatemala) During the Late Classic. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University. 713 leaves.

2568. Garrido, José L., and Ellen Spensley. 2009. Evidencia de saqueo en asentamientos prehispánicos adyacentes a Motúl de San José, Petén, Guatemala. Utz’ib 4(6):1-10. 2569. Halperin, Christina T. 2004. Realeza maya y figurillas con tocados de la Serpiente de Guerra de Motúl de San José, Guatemala. Mayab 17:45-60.

Naco Valley 2581. Douglass, John G. 2001. Hinterland Households: Rural Agrarian Household Diversity in Northwest Honduras. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 192 p. The author tests four models of household wealth and production through the analysis of Late Classic (600-950 AD) household sites in the Naco valley of northwest Honduras.

2570. Halperin, Christina T. 2008. Classic Maya textile production: insights from Motúl de San José, Petén, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica 19(1): 111-126. 2571. Halperin, Christina T. 2007. Materiality, Bodies, and Practice: The Political Economy of Late Classic Maya Figurines From Motúl de José, Petén, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 441 leaves.

2582. Schortman, Edward M., Patricia A. Urban, and Marne Ausec. 2001. Politics with style: identity formation in prehispanic southeastern Mesoamerica. American Anthropologist 103(2):312-330.

2572. Halperin, Christina T., Ronald L. Bishop, Ellen Spensley, and E. James Blackman. 2009. Late Classic (A.D. 600-900) Maya market exchange: analysis of figurines from the Motúl de San José region, Guatemala. Journal of Field Archaeology 34(4):457-480.

2583. Stockett, Miranda K. 2001. Archaeology in the Borderlands: Rural Communities in NW Honduras. M.A. thesis, University of Pennsylvania. 144 p. Author discusses archaeological investigations at Naco and Cacaulapa in northwestern Honduras.

2573. Jensen, Christopher T., Matthew D. Moriarty, Kristofer D. Johnson, Richard D. Terry, Kitty F. Emery, and Sheldon D. Nelson. 2007. Soil resources of the Motúl de San José Maya: correlating soil taxonomy and modern Itzá Maya soil classification within a Classic Maya archaeology zone. Geoarchaeology 22(3):337-358.

2584. Urban, Patricia, Edward Schortman, and Marne Ausec. 2002. Power without bounds? Middle Preclassic political developments in the Naco Valley, Honduras. Latin American Antiquity 13(2):131-152. Authors suggest that emergent elites had variable success in constructing sociopolitical hierarchies in the Rio Chamelecon drainage by 1200 BC

2574. Moriarity, Matthew D. 2004. Settlement archaeology at Motúl de San José, Petén, Guatemala: preliminary results from the 1998-2003 seasons. Mayab 17:21-44.

Naj Tunich 2585. Armitage, Ruth A., James E. Brady, Allan Cobb, John R. Southon, and Marvin W. Rowe. 2001. Mass spectrometric radiocarbon dates from three rock paintings of known age. American Antiquity 66(3):471-480. Radiocarbon age determinations are presented on three hieroglyphic texts from Naj Tunich cave in Guatemala containing Maya calendar dates. The ages obtained are on average 110-140 years older than the calendar dates. Several possible reasons are discussed for this discrepancy: one that is applicable to all radiocarbon dates on charcoal, one that applies to rock paintings, and one that is specific for the tropics. Possible problems with the ages ascribed to the Maya calendar dates are also discussed. Even with the potential problems that may exist, these dates still fall within 110-140 years of the ascribed calendar dates. Caution is urged in the interpretation of dates on charcoal pigments from rock paintings; consideration of the old wood and old charcoal factors is important.

2575. Webb, Elizabeth A., Henry P. Schwarcz, Christopher Jensen, Richard E. Terry, Matthew D. Moriarity, and Kitty F. Emery. 2007. Stable carbon isotope signature of ancient maize agriculture in the soils of Motúl de San José, Guatemala. Geoarchaeology 22(3): 291-312. Mountain Cow 2576. Morris, John M. 2004. Archaeological Research at the Mountain Cow Sites: The Archaeology of Sociocultural Diversity, Ethnicity and Identity Formation. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles. 286 leaves. Muklebal Tzul 2577. Prufer, Keith M., Phil Wanyerka, and Mónica Shah. 2003. Wooden figurines, scepters, and religious specialists in Pre-Columbian Maya society. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(2):219-236. Authors describe a small wooden figurine recovered from a cave near the Late Classic center of Muklebal Tzul in the Maya Mountains of southern Belize.

Nakúm 2586. Bazy, Damien. 2004. Le groupe résidentiel du patio 6, Acropole intérieure de Nakúm, Petén, Guatemala. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1. 2587. Hermés, Bernard. 2002. Síntesis preliminaria de la ocupación prehispánica en el area central de Nakúm. Beiträge zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie 20:277285.

Naachtun 2578. Morton, Shawn G. 2007. Procession Ritual at Naachtun, Guatemala During the Late Classic Period. Doctoral dissertation, University of Calgary. 193 leaves. 157

2600. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. Stela 42 from Naranjo, Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 23(4):78-78.

2588. Hermés, Bernard, Justyna Olko, and Jarosław Źrałka. 2001. Entre el arte elitista y el arte popular: los graffiti de Nakúm, Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 24(6): 123-132. Discussion of the architectural and archaeological data pertaining to the execution and function of graffiti at Nakúm, as well as the results of analysis of subject matter and formal characteristics. See also Bernard Hermés, Justyna Olko, and Jarosław Źrałka, En los confines del arte; los graffiti de Nakúm (Petén, Guatemala) y su contexto arquitectónico, arqueológico e iconográfico (Anales del Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas 79:29-70, 2001).

2601. Mayer, Karl H. 2002. Stela 43 from Naranjo, Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 24(4):72. 2602. Quintana, Oscar, and Wolfgang W. Wurster. 2004. Un nuevo plano del sitio maya de Naranjo, Petén, Guatemala. Beiträge zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie 24:149-178. Nébaj 2603. Becquelin, Pierre. 2001. Arqueología de la región de Nébaj, Guatemala. Cuadernos de Estudios Guatemaltecos, 5. Guatemala: Centro Francés de Estudios Mexicanos y Centroamericanos; Escuela de Historia, Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. 301 p. Spanish language translation of 1969 French report on excavations at Nébaj.

2589. Hermés, Bernard, and Jarosław Źrałka. 2008. La ocupación del périodo clásico terminal en Nakúm, Petén. Antropología e Historia de Guatemala 3(7):47-104. 2590. Koszkul, Wieslaw, Bernard Hermés, and Zoila Calderón. 2006. Preliminary report on the discovery of taludtablero architecture, green obsidian artifacts and a cylindrical tripod vessel at the Maya site of Nakúm, Petén, Guatemala. Recherches Archéologiques de 1999-2003, pp. 397-414.

Nixtun-Ch’ich’ 2604. Rice, Prudence M. 2009. Mound ZZI, Nixtun-Ch’ich’, Petén, Guatemala: Rescue Operations at a Long-Lived Structure in the Maya Lowlands. Journal of Field Archaeology 34(4):403-422.

2591. Koszkul, Wieslaw, Bernard Hermés, and Zoila Calderón. 2006. Teotihuacan-related finds from the Maya site of Nakúm, Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 28(6):117-127.

Noh-Bec 2605. Rodriguez Pérez, Mónica, Christian Méndez Colli, Julio Chi Keb, Agustin Peña Castillo, Andrea Cucina, and Vera Tiesler. 2008. Vida y muerte en el centro peninsular; los restos humanos de Noh-Bec, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 153-164.

2592. Koszkul, Wieslaw, and Jarosław Źrałka. 2008. Polskie wykopaliska w Nakúm. Badania nad kultura Majow. Alma Mater 99: 228-235. 2593. Quintana, Oscar, and Wolfgang W. Wurster. 2002. Un Nuevo plano del sitio Maya de Nakúm, Petén, Guatemala. Beiträge zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie 20:243-275.

Nohcacab 2606. Normark, Johan. 2009. The Making of a home: assembling houses at Nohcacab, Mexico. World Archaeology 41(3):430-444.

2594. Źrałka, Jarosław. 2008. Terminal Classic Occupation in the Maya Sites Located in the Area of Triángulo Park, Petén, Guatemala. Krakow: Jagiellonian University Press 268 p.

Nochoch Ek 2607. Taschek, Jennifer T., and Joseph W. Ball. 2003. Nochoch Ek revisited: the minor center as manor. Latin American Antiquity 14(4):371-388. Authors argue that the minor center of Nochoch Ek, a minor center in the Upper Belize valley, functioned like a medieval European agricultural manor.

2595. Źrałka, Jarosław, Bernard Hermés, and Zoila Calderón. 2006. Periphery of the Maya site of Nakúm, Petén, Guatemala: results of research carried out between 2001 and 2003. Recherches archeologiques de 1999-2003: 375-396. 2596. Źrałka, Jarosław, Wieslaw Koszkul, and Bernard Hermés. 2008. Investigaciones en Nakúm, Petén, Guatemala: resultados de las excavaciones realizadas por el proyecto arqueológico Nakúm en los años 2006 y 2007. In Polish Contributions in New World Archaeology. Janusz K. Kozlowski and Jarosław Źrałka, eds. pp. 73-128. Krakow: Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences, Jagiellonian University - Institute of Archaeology.

Nohpot 2608. Mayer, Karl H. 2010. Maya hieroglyphic inscriptions from Nohpat, Yucatan, Mexico. Mexicon 32(1-2):9-13. Opchen 2609. Burgos Villanueva, Rafael, Miguel Covarrubias Reyna, and Sara Dzul Gongora. 2007. Las ruinas de Opchen: estudios sobre arquitectura y patrón de asentamiento en la región centro-norte del estado de Yucatán. Mexicon 29(2):49-56.

Naranjo 2597. Fialko, Vilma. 2004. Investigaciones arqueológicas en Naranjo: primeras observaciones sobre el desarrollo cultural del centro urbano. Beiträge zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie 24:179-193.

Oxkintok 2610. Rivera Dorado, Miguel. 2006. Comentarios sobre la arquitectura de Oxkintok. Revista española de antropología americana 36(1):9-25.

2598. Fialko, Vilma. 2004. Naranjo, Guatemala. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):56-57. 2599. Grube, Nikolai. 2004. La historia dinastica de Naranjo, Petén. Beiträge zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie 24:195-213. 158

2624. Bernal Romero, Guillermo. 2009. El Tablero de K’an tok; una inscripción maya del Grupo XVI de Palenque, Chiapas, México. Serie Testimonios y Materiales Arqueológicos para el Estudio de la Cultura Maya, 2. México: UNAM; Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas. 178 p. Includes chapters on the tablet’s reconstruction, epigraphic analysis and historical implications.

2611. Rivera Dorado, Miguel. 2007. Geometría monumental del poder maya: el caso de Oxkintok. Revista española de antropología americana 37(2): 7-21. Oxpemul 2612. Folan, William J., Raymundo González H., Hubert Robichaux, Edwin Barnes, Abel Morales L., Armando Anaya H., Pedro Zamora C., María del Rosario Domínquez C., Joel D. Gunn, and Ciriaco Requina S. 2008. Ruinas de Oxemul, Campeche, México: su mapa y avances en el estudio de su patrón de asentamiento, textos jeroglíficos, cerámica y vegetación. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 107-134.

2625. Carpenter, Maureen. 2001-2002. What’s new in Palenque. PARI Journal 2(4)-3(1):27. 2626. Carpenter, Maureen. 2002-2003. Palenque Cross Group Project team uncovers structures, residential fragments near Temple XX. PARI Journal 3(2-3):1-3.

2613. Robichaux, Hubert R., and Candace Pruett. 2008. Investigaciones epigráficas en Oxpemul, Campeche: descubrimientos recientes. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 89-106.

2627. Chinchilla Mazariegos, Oswaldo. 2006. The stars of the Palenque sarcophagus. RES 49-50:40-58.

Oxtakah 2614. Melgar Tisoc, Emiliano R. 2008. La Explotación de recursos marino-litorales en Oxtakah. México: INAH, (Premios INAH). 391p. “En esta obra se responde a preguntas tales como que recursos acuáticos tenian a su disposición los mayas prehispánicos de Oxtankah, como los explotaban y cuales fueron sus patrónes de distribución y consumo”.

2628. Cuevas García, Martha. 2007. Los Incensarios efigie de Palenque; deidades y rituales mayas. México: UNAM: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Centro de Estudios Mayas, Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas/ CONACULTA: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. 350 p. A detailed study of the architectural make-up and iconographical facets of Palenque. Examined topics are placed under the following categories: “El Incienso en los rituales mayas”, “El Contexto de excavación” and “Análisis formal e iconográfico de los incensarios.”

Pacbitun 2615. Healy, Paul F., Christophe G. B. Helmke, Jaime J. Awe, and Kay S. Sunhara. 2007. Survey, settlement, and population history at the ancient Maya site of Pacbitun, Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 32(1): 41-64.

2629. Davoust, Michel. 2001. Venus cycle used in the throne text of Temple XIX at Palenque. PARI Journal 2(1):23-24.

2616. Helmke, Christophe G. B., Nikolai Grube, Jaime Awe, and Paul F. Healy. 2006. A reinterpretation of Stela 6, Pacbitun, Belize. Mexicon 28(4):70-75.

2630. Desai, Prajna. 2009. Read, See, Do: Palenque’s Palace, Mexico (c. AD 647-720) and the Materiality of Knowledge. Doctoral dissertation, Yale University. 510 leaves.

2617. Wagner, Teresa B. 2009. Ancient Lowland Maya Mollusc Exploitation at Pacbitun, Belize. M.A. thesis, Trent University (Canada). 280 leaves.

2631. Filloy Nadal, Laura, and Sofía Martínez del Campo Lanz. 2002. El nuevo rostro de Pacal. Arqueología mexicana 9(53):12.

Palenque 2618. Aldana, Gerardo. 2007. The Apotheosis of Janaab’ Pakal: Science, History, and Religion at Classic Maya Palenque. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 230 p.

2632. French, Kirk D. 2001. The precious Otolum of Palenque. PARI Journal 2(2):12-16. 2633. French, Kirk D. 2002. Creating Space Through Water Management at the Classic Maya Site of Palenque, Chiapas, Mexico. M.A. thesis, University of Cincinnati. 96 leaves.

2619. Barnhart, Edwin L. 2001. The Palenque Mapping Project: Settlement and Urbanism at an Ancient Maya City. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 161 leaves.

2634. French, Kirk D. 2009. The Hydroarchaeological Approach: Understanding the Ancient Maya Impact on the Palenque Watershed. Doctoral dissertation, Pennsylvania State University. 221 leaves.

2620. Barnhart, Edwin J. 2001-2002. Extreme core settlement density discovered at Palenque. PARI Journal 2(4)-3(1):12, 16.

2635. Garza Camino, Mercedes de la. 2007. Palenque como imago mundi y la presencia en ella de Itzamna. Estudios de cultura maya 30:15-36.

2621. Barnhart, Edward L. 2008. Mapping Palenque. Explorers Journal 86(3):46-53. 2622. Baudez, Claude F. 2003. T de tierra … y otros signos que la representan. Arqueología mexicana 10(60):54-63. Investigation of the significance of niches and windows at Palenque in the form of a T or a cross.

2636. González C., Arnoldo, and Juan Alfonso Cruz B. 2002. Dos mascaras funerarias de la tumba de la Reina Roja. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):15. 2637. González Rul, Francisco. 2002. La mascara de Pacal. Arqueología mexicana 10(55):16.

2623. Bernal Romero, Guillermo. 2008. Los orejeras de K’inich Janahb’ Pakal: comentarios sobre una inscripción olvidada de Palenque. Estudios de cultura maya 31: 91-122. 159

illustrations with descriptions, as well as color photo plates of animal life surrounding the swamps and other areas; text in Spanish and English. See also Blandine Escoffier, Etude de l’évolution de la documentation du site de Palenque (avant l’apparition de la photographie, et étude de son apport)(M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2000).

2638. Harris, John F. 2005. Two remarkable Maya hieroglyphic inscriptions of 96 glyphs from Palenque and Ek’ Balam. The Codex 13 (1-2):35-47. 2639. Liendo Stuardo, Rodrigo. 2001. Palenque y su area de sustentación: patrón de asentamiento y organización política en un centro maya del Clásico. Mexicon 23(2):36-41.

2645. Neeley, Paula. 2010. Evidence of water pressure found at Palenque. American Archaeology 14(2):9.

2640. López Bravo, Roberto, and Benito J. Venegas Duran. 2006. Origénes y expansión urbana de la antigua ciudad de Palenque: resultados preliminares de las dos primeras temporadas de campo del proyecto de crecimiento urbano. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 297-306.

2646. Nuevo descubrimiento en Palenque. Revista de arqueología 259:15, 2003. 2647. Olton, Elizabeth D. 2010. The Once and Future King: A New Approach to Ancient Maya Mortuary Monuments From Palenque, Tikal, and Copán. Doctoral dissertation, University of New Mexico. 442 leaves.

2641. López Jiménez, Fanny. 2004. Quien es la Reina Roja? Arqueología mexicana 12(69):66-69. Author suggests woman in the tomb in Temple XIII at Palenque was named Hun K’Anleum (Señora 1 Telaraña).

2648. Piñeirua Menéndez, Laura. 2003. En busca de especialidad. Boletín Informativo: La Pintura Mural Prehispánica en México 9(18):43-46. Description of murals found on the west face of House E, Palace E1, at Palenque.

2642. Marken, Damian R., ed. 2007. Palenque: Recent Investigations at the Classic Maya Center. Lanham: Altamira Press. 335 p. Contents include: Peter Mathews, Palenque archaeology: an introduction (pp. 1-16); Robert L. Rands, Chronological chart and overview of ceramic development at Palenque (pp. 17-24); Robert L. Rands, Palenque and selected survey sites in Chiapas and Tabasco: the Preclassic (pp. 25-56); Damien B. Marken, The construction chronology of Palenque: seriation within an architectural form (pp. 57-84); Rodrigo Liendo Stuardo, The problem of political integration in the Kingdom of Baak (pp. 85-106); Edwin M. Barnhart, Indicators of urbanism at Palenque (pp. 107-122); Kirk D. French, Creating space through water management at the Classic Maya site of Palenque, Chiapas (pp. 123-134); Damien B. Marken, and Arnoldo González Cruz, Elite residential compounds at Late Classic Palenque (pp. 135-160); Joshia A. Balcells González, Following the traces of Temple XX: Proyecto Grupo de las Cruces 2002 excavations (pp. 161-174); Kirk D. Straight, A house of cards: construction, proportion, and form at Temple XIX, Palenque, Chiapas, Mexico (pp. 175-206); David Stuart, Gods and histories: mythology and dynastic succession at Temples XIX and XXI at Palenque (pp. 207232); Mark B. Child, Ritual purification and the ancient Maya sweatbath at Palenque (pp. 233-264); C. Rudy Larios Villata, Why restore architecture at Palenque? (pp. 265-278); Damien B. Marken, and Kirk D. Straight, Conclusion: Reconceptualizing the Palenque polity (pp. 279-324). See also Damien Marken, L’architecture de Palenque, Chiapas: Les temples (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2002).

2649. Robertson, Merle G. 2001. Palenque Cross Group Project: news and latest discoveries. PARI Journal 2(3):1-5. 2650. Robertson, Merle G. 2002-2003. The Merriam stela. PARI Journal 3(2-3):18. 2651. Robertson, Merle G. 2007. The Palenque sarcophagus story. PARI Journal 8(3):1-4. 2652. Romano Pacheco, Arturo. 2004. Las manos y los pies de Pakal. Arqueología mexicana 12(71):42-43. 2653. Ruz Lhuillier, Alberto. 2007. Palenque 1947-1958. Roberto García Moll, ed. México: CONACULTA; Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. 580p. “Este libro reune, gracias al cuidadoso trabajo de Roberto García Moll, los informes de Ruz Lhuillier, (1906-1979) sobre Palenque, uno de 1947, cuando inspeccionó la zona, y los de 1949 a 1958, périodo en que las excavaciones y obras de consolidación y restauración estuvieron a su cargo, los cuales se publican acompañados de las fotográfias y los dibujos originals”. 2654. Sambale, Thomas. 2001. Jaina-style figurine from Palenque. Mexicon 24(1):2. 2655. Schubart, Annie, and Maureen Carpenter. 2001. Palenque Cross Group season update. PARI Journal 2(2):1011.

2643. Mathews, Peter. 2001. Palenque. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 973-974. Santa Bárbara: ABC-Clio.

2656. Spencer, Kaylee R. 2007. Framing the Portrait: Towards an Understanding of Elite Late Classic Maya Representation at Palenque, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 427 leaves.

2644. Möller, Mayo, and Edwin Barnhart. 2008. Visto como nunca antes Palenque; Palenque as Never Seen Before. Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas: Gobierno del Estado de Chiapas/Virtual Archaeología de México. 207 p. Large-format exploration of the Palenque archaeo-logical complex. “Palenque is a medium-sized site, much smaller than such huge sites as Tikal or Copán, but it contains some of the finest architecture, sculpture, roof comb and bas-relief carvings the Maya produced”. With numerous black-and-white period of the complex from the late-19th century, as well as contemporary color ones of the complex from various angles. Features color

2657. Straight, Kirk D., and Damien B. Marken. 2001-2002. U-Pakal K’inich at Palenque and its use as a pre-accession name. PARI Journal 2(4)-3(1):1-3. 2658. Stuart, David, and George Stuart. 2008. Palenque: Eternal City of the Maya. London: Thames and Hudson. 272 p. 160

2659. Tiesler, Vera, and Andrea Cucina, eds. 2006. Janaab’ Pakal of Palenque: Reconstructing the Life and Death of a Maya Ruler. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 219 p. Contents include: Vera Tiesler, and Andrea Cucina, Studying Janaab’ Pakal and reconstructing Maya dynastic history (pp. 3-20); Vera Tiesler, Life and death of the ruler: recent bioarchaeological findings (pp. 21-47); Jane E. Buikstra, George R. Milner, and Jesper L. Boldsen, Janaab’ Pakal: the age at death controversy revisited (pp. 48-59); Sam D. Stout, and Margaret Streeter, A histomorphometric analysis of the cortical bone of Janaab’ Pakal’s rib (pp. 60-67); Lourdes Marquez, Patricia Hernández, and Carlos Seranno, Pakal’s age in the demographic context of Late Classic Palenque society (pp. 68-83); Arturo Romano, Did Pakal suffer from deforming diseases? True facts and iconographic myths (pp. 84-90); T. Douglas Price, James H. Burton, Vera Teisler, Simon Martin, and Jane E. Buikstra, Geographic origin of Janaab’ Pakal and the “Red Queen”: evidence from strontium isotopes (pp. 91-100); Andrea Cucina, and Vera Tiesler, The companions of Janaab’ Pakal and the “Red Queen” fropm Palenque, Chiapas: meanings of human companion sacrifice in Classic Maya society (pp. 101-125); Patricia Hernández, and Lourdes Marquez, Longevity of Maya rulers of Yaxchilán: the reigns of Shield Jaguar and Bird Jaguar (pp. 126-145); Nikolai Grube, Ancient Maya royal biographies in a comparative perspective (pp. 146-166); Andrea Cucina, and Vera Teisler, The companions of Janaab’ Pakal and the “Red Queen” from Palenque, Chiapas: meanings of human companion sacrifice in Classic Maya society (pp.);

Paso de la Amada 2664. Hill, Warren D., and John E. Clark. 2001. Sports, gambling, and government: America’s first social compact? American Anthropologist 103(2):331-345.

2660. Tiesler Blos, Vera, Andrea Cucina, and Arturo Romano Pacheco. 2002. Vida y muerte del personaje hallado en el Templo XIII-sub, Palenque: 1. Culto funerario y sacrificio humano. Mexicon 24(4):75-78. Description of osteotaphonomic characteristics in the remains of a dignitary recovered from a tomb in Temple XIII sub at Palenque.

2670. Child, Mark B. 2006. The Archaeology of Religious Movements: The Maya Sweatbath Cult of Piedras Negras. Doctoral dissertation. Yale University, Department of Anthropology. 633 leaves.

Petexbatún 2665. Emery, Kitty F. 2006. Definiendo el aprovechamiento de la fauna por la elite: evidencia en Aguateca y otros sitios de Petexbatún, Guatemala. U tz’ib 4(1): 1-16. 2666. Emery, Kitty F. 2010. Dietary, Environmental, and Societal Implications of Ancient Maya Animal Use in the Petexbatún: A Zooarchaeological Perspective on the Collapse. Vanderbilt Institute of Mesoamerican Archaeology, 5. Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press 366 p. 2667. Johnson, Kristofer D., David R. Wright, and Richard E. Terry. 2007. Application of carbon isotope analysis of ancient maize agriculture in the Petexbatún region of Guatemala. Geoarchaeology 22(3):313-336. 2668. Wright, David R. Richard E. Terry, and Markus Eberl. 2009. Soil properties and stable carbon isotope analysis of landscape features in the Petexbatún region of Guatemala. Geoarchaeology 24(4):466-491. Piedras Negras 2669. Borgstede, Greg. 2005. Site-seeing from the field: five weeks in the Petén rainforest. The Codex 13(1-2):3-10.

2671. Clancy, Flora S. 2009. Monuments of Piedras Negras, An Ancient Maya City. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. 228 p.

2661. Villaseñor, Isabel, and Clifford A. Price. 2008. Technology and decay of magnesium lime plasters: the sculptures of the funerary crypt of Palenque, Mexico. Journal of Archaeological Science 35(4): 1030-1039.

2672. Coe, William R. 2004. Piedras Negras: Artifacts, Caches, and Burials. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. CD-ROM. A reissue, in electronic format, of Coe’s Piedras Negras Archaeology: Artifacts, Caches, and Burials (Philadelphia: University Museum, University of Pennsylvania, 1959. 176, 139 p.).

2662. Zalaquett, Francisca. 2006. Rituales públicos mayas realizados en Palenque durante el Périodo Clásico; un análisis arqueológico y antropológico sobre su función social y lugares donde se efectuaban. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 381-388.

2673. Escobedo, Hector L., and Stephen D. Houston. 2004. La antigua ciudad maya de Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):52-55. 2674. Fernández, Fabian G. 2002. Chemical and Physical Properties of Anthrosols in Rural Areas Near the Ancient Maya City of Piedras Negras, Guatemala. M.S. thesis, Brigham Young University. 125 leaves.

Palo Verde 2663. Chinchilla Mazariegos, Oswaldo, Sébastien PerrotMinnot, and José Vicente Génovez. 2001. Palo Verde: un centro secundario en la zona de Cotzumalguapa, Guatemala. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 87:303-325. See also Sébastien Perrot-Minnot, La divinité plongeante dans la région de Cotzumalguapa (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2000), Le site de Palo Verde (Escuintla, Guatemala), et sa relation avec la zone nucléaire de Cotzumalguapa (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2001), and Définition archéologique de l’entité culturelle de Cotzumalguapa (Guatemala-El Salvador)(Doctoral dissertation, Université de Paris 1, 2006).

2675. Fitzsimmons, James L., Andrew Scherer, Stephen D. Houston, and Hector L. Escobedo. 2003. Guardian of the acropolis: the sacred space of a royal burial at Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Latin American Antiquity 14(4):449-468. 2676. Golden, Charles W. 2002. Bridging the Gap Between Archaeological and Indigenous Chronologies: An Investigation of the Early Classic/Late Classic Divide at 161

2687. Satterthwaite, Linton, Mary Butler, and J. Alden Mason. 2004. Piedras Negras Archaeology, 1931-1939: Piedras Negras Preliminary Papers; Piedras Negras Archaeology: Architecture. John M. Weeks, Jane Hill, and Charles Golden, eds. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. 512 p. Situated on the banks of the Usumacinta River in northwestern Guatemala, Piedras Negras is an important Maya site known for its carved monuments and panels. Between 1931 and 1938 the University Museum conducted research at Piedras Negras, excavating the site core, producing an excellent site map, and documenting architectural developments to an unprecedented standard. Project member Tatiana Proskouriakoff revolutionized Maya historiography with her architectural reconstructions and visionary synthesis of the position and dating of texts and monuments at the site. Innovative excavation methods included test pitting, probing in more modest structures, and the identification of new building types such as sweat baths. More importantly, the Piedras Negras project developed the logistical and methodological criteria that are now standard in the field. ituated on the banks of the UsRiver in northwestern Guatemala, 2688. Zackowitz, Margaret G. 2003. Royal city of the Maya. National Geographic 204(2):96-99. German language translation: Margaret G. Zackowitz, Das Versailles der Maya (National Geographic Deutschland 2003 (2):138-141, 2003).

Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 566 leaves. 2677. Golden, Charles, Andrew Scherer, Rene A. Muñoz, and Rosaura Vásquez. 2008. Piedras Negras and Yaxchilán: divergent political trajectories in adjacent Maya polities. Latin American Antiquity 19(3): 249-274. 2678. Houston, Stephen D., Hector Escobedo, and Zachary Nelson. 2008. Encontrando el contexto para la historia y la historia para el contexto: excavaciones en la Estructura K-5 de Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Mayab 20: 45-64. 2679. Hruby, Zachary X. 2006. The Organization of ChippedStone Economies at Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 364 leaves. 2680. Hruby, Zachary X. 2007. Ritualized chipped-stone production at Piedras Negras, Guatemala. In Rethinking Craft Specialization in Complex Sociétés: Archeological Analyses of the Social Meaning of Production. Z. X. Hruby, R. K. Flad, and G. P. Bennett, eds. pp. 68-87. Archaeological Papers, 17. Washington, DC: American Anthropological Association. 2681. Muñoz, Arturo Rene. 2006. Power, Production and Practice: Technological Change in the Late Classic Ceramics of Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Arizona, Department of Anthropology. 403 leaves. 2682. Nelson, Zachary N. 2005. Settlement and Population at Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Pennsylvania State University. 503 leaves.

Pocboc 2689 Tuz Chi, Lazaro. 2006. Los “intrusos” en los espacios sagrados y rituales mayas de los cementerios de Pomuch y Pocboc, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 573-582.

2683. Pallan Gayol, Carlos. 2010. The Classic court of Itzam K’an Ahk of Piedras Negras: new information on a vessel from the Yaxche Phase with hieroglyphic dedicatory formula. PARI Journal 10(4):1-10.

Pol Box 2690. Esparza Olguin, Octavio Q., and Vania E. Pérez Gutierrez. 2009. Archaeological and epigraphic studies in Pol Box, Quintana Roo. PARI Journal 9(3):1-16.

2684. Parnell, J. Jacob. 2001. Soil Chemical Analysis of Activity Areas in the Archaeological Site of Piedras Negras, Guatemala. M.A. thesis, Brigham Young University.

Pomona 2691. García Moll, Roberto. 2003. Pomona: entre sierras y planicies. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):24-29.

2685. Parnell, J. Jacob, Richard E. Terry, and Charles W. Golden. 2001. Using in field phosphate testing to rapidly identify middens at Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Geoarchaeology 16(8):855-873. See also Charles W. Golden, Andrew K. Scherer, and A. Rene Muñoz. 2005. Exploring the Piedras Negras-Yaxchilán border zone: archaeological investigations in the Sierra del Lacandon, 2004 (Mexicon 27(1):11-16, 2005).

2692. Pérez Suárez, Tomás. 2003. El glifo emblema de Pomona. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):28-29.

2686. Parnell, J. Jacob, Richard E. Terry, and Zachary Nelson. 2002. Soil chemical analysis applied as an interpretive tool for ancient human activities in Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Journal of Archaeological Science 29:379-404. The applicability of soil chemical analysis to the interpretation of ancient human activity areas in the Maya region was studied for potential implications in anthropogenically modified soils. Statistical analysis of chemical patterns indicated possible areas of food preparation and craft production as well as sweeping patterns. Authors found that elevated phosphate, barium and manganese levels indicate areas of organic refuse disposal. Mercury and lead concentrations indicate areas of craft production.

Potonchan 2694. Chávez Jiménez, Ulises. 2007. Potonchan y Santa María de la Victoria: una propuesta geomorfológico/arqueológica a un problema histórico. Estudios de cultura maya 29:103140.

Pomuch 2693. Tuz Chi, Lazaro. 2006. Los “intrusos” en los espacios sagrados y rituales mayas de los cementerios de Pomuch y Pocboc, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2):573-582.

Progresso Lagoon 2695. Briggs, Margaret L. 2002. Terminal Classic to Postclassic Transition in the Maya of Northern Belize: Biological Continuity and Cultural Change in the Burials of Progresso and Honey Camp Lagoons. M.A. thesis, University of Houston. 201 leaves. 162

2696. Oland, Maxine H. 2009. Long-Term Indigenous History on a Colonial Frontier: Archaeology at a 15th-17th Century Maya Village, Progresso Lagoon, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Northwestern University. 358 leaves.

Puuc 2707. Casademunt, Tomás. 2009. Maya Puuc. Barcelona: Editorial RM; México: CONACULTA: INAH/Fundación Televisa. 95p. Collection of contemporary black-and-white photographs of various Mayan architectural monuments and complexes, at Uxmal, Santa Elena Nohcacab, Labna, Koom and Chichén Itzá, among other locations, by Barcelonan photographer, Tomás Casademunt; includes physical descriptions of sites and other commentaries following; with an English translation of texts appended.

Pueblito 2697. Carillo, Juddy A. 2008. Arquitectura en el conjunto palaciego de la Plaza B de Pueblito, Dolores, Petén. Utz’ib 4(5):22-32. Punta de Chimino 2698. Bachand, Bruce R. 2006. Preclassic excavations at Punta de Chimino, Petén, Guatemala: Investigating social emplacement on an early Maya landscape. Doctoral dissertation, University of Arizona. 738 leaves.

2708. Jean, Bernard. 2004. Un moment et un style de la civilization maya: le Puuc. L’Archéologue, Archéologie nouvelle 69:39-43. Paris. Illustrated overview of the Puuc region, with descriptions of Uxmal, Kabah, Sayil, and Labna.

2699. Bachand, Bruce R. 2007. The Pre-Classic ceramic sequence of Punta de Chimino, Petén, Guatemala. Mayab 19: 527.

2709. Kowalski, Jeff K. 2009. Crafting Maya Identity: Contemporary Wood Sculptures From the Puuc Region of Yucatán, Mexico. DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Press 247 p.

2700. Bachand, Bruce R. 2008. Bayesian refinement of a stratified sequence of radiometric dates from Punta de Chimino, Guatemala. Radiocarbon 50(1): 19-52.

2710. Stuart, George E. 2002. Yucatan cities ancient Maya ruins stud Mexico’s hill country. National Geographic 201(4):54-69. German language translation: George E. Stuart, Yucatan: Das Rätsel der Puuc-Kultur (National Geographic Deutschland 2002 (4):52-67, 2002). See also Stephan Merk, Maya ruins in the Puuc area south of Dolores, Campeche, Mexico (Mexicon 27(1):2-4, 2005).

Punta Ycacos Lagoon 2701. McKillop, Heather I. 2002. Salt: White Gold of the Ancient Maya. Gainesville: University Press of Florida. 256 p. Underwater discovery and excavation of salt works at Stingray Lagoon, Orlando’s Jewfish, David Westby, and Killer Bee sites in Punta Ycacos Lagoon indicate that the Classic Maya produced salt by boiling brine in pots over fires at specialized workshops on the Belizean coast. See also: Heather I. McKillop, Finds in Belize document Late Classic Maya salt making and canoe transport. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102(15):5630-5634, 2005).

2711. Toscano Hernández, Lourdes, and José Huchim Herrera. 2004. La región puuc de Yucatan. Arqueología mexicana 12(70):80-87. Quexil-Peténxil 2712. Schwarz, Kevin R. 2004. Understanding Classic to Postclassic Household and Community Spatial Transformation: The Rural Maya of the Quexil-Peténxil Basins, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 730 leaves.

2702. Somers, Bretton M. 2007. Spatial Analysis of the Preserved Wooden Architectural Remains of Eight Late Classic Maya Salt Works in Punta Ycacos Lagoon, Toledo District, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College. 167 leaves.

Quincunx 2713. Zaro, Gregory, and Jon C. Lohse. 2005. Agricultural rhythms and rituals: ancient Maya solar observation in hinterland Blue Creek, northwestern Belize. Latin American Antiquity 16(1):81-98. Excavations at Quincunx provide evidence that some rural communities may have had access to and control over esoteric knowledge involved in Late Classic agricultural practice.

Pusilha 2703. Braswell, Geoffrey E., Christian M. Prager, Cassandra R. Bill, Sonja A. Schwake, and Jennifer B. Braswell. 2004. The rise of secondary states in the southeastern periphery of the Maya world: a report on recent archaeological and epigraphic research at Pusilha, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 15(2):219-233.

Quintana Roo 2714. López Camacho, Javier. 2005. Investigaciones recientes en el sur de Quintana Roo. Arqueología mexicana 13(73):7273.

2704. Braswell, Geoffrey E., and Megan R. Pitcavage. 2009. The cultural modification of teeth by the ancient Maya: a unique example from Pusilha, Belize. Mexicon 31(1):24-27.

2715. Martos López, Luis A. 2007. Mayas in Quintana Roo, Southeastern México: Quintana Roo. México: CONACULTA: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia/Grupo Azabache. 64 p. Exploration of various sites in Quintana Roo, Mexico, with numerous lively color and illustrations. This volume covers the following sites: Tulum, Kohunlich, Cobá and other sites. With numerous of sculptures and ceramic works, as well as illustrations of Mayans; texts in English.

2705. Nickels, Karen. 2008. Food Function and Status: Analysis of Faunal Remains From the Maya Site of Pusilha, Belize. M.A. thesis, University of California, San Diego. 50 leaves. 2706. Somerville, Andrew D. 2010. Telling Friends From Foes: Strontium Isotope and Trace Element Analysis of Companion Burials From Pusilha, Toledo District, Belize. M.A., University of California, San Diego. 64 leaves.

2716. Villamil, Laura P. 2005. Divergent Cityscapes: Urban Patterns at Two Ancient Maya Centers in Central Quintana 163

2729. Nondédéo, Philippe, Dominque Michelet, M. Charlotte Arnauld, Eric Taladoire, Julie Patrois, and Ramzy Barrois. 2003. Río Bec: primeros pasos de una nueva investigación. Mexicon 25(4):100-10105. Summary report on preliminary results of a new project at the Río Bec site.

Roo, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Michigan. 605 leaves. Quirigua 2717. Ashmore, Wendy. 2007. Settlement Archaeology at Quirigua, Guatemala. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology. 362 p.

2730. Sion, Julien, 2010. La structure 5N2bis, Río Bec (Campeche, Mexique): caractérisation fonctionnelle et étude de son mobilier céramique. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

2718. Ashmore, Wendy. 2009. Biographies of place at Quirigua, Guatemala. In Archaeology of Meaningful Places. Brenda J. Bowser and María Nieves Zedeno, eds. pp. 15-31. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.

2731. Thomas, Prentice M., and L. Janice Campbell. 2008. Excavations at Río Bec Group B, Structure 6N-1, Campeche, Mexico. Estudios de cultura maya 31:123-148.

2719. Looper, Matthew G. 2003. Lightning Warrior: Maya Art and Kingship at Quirigua. Austin: University of Texas Press. 288 p. Using epigraphic, iconographic, and stylistic analyses, author explores the político-religious meanings of Quirigua’s monumental sculptures during the eighth-century AD reign of the city’s most famous ruler, K’ak’ Tiliw.

Río Bravo 2732. Kunen, Julie L. 2001. Ancient Maya agricultural installations and the development of intensive agriculture in northwestern Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 28(3-4):325346. Archaeological study of the spatial arrangement of agricultural features such as terraces and berms yields insight into the scale, mode, and tempo of farm production and the social organization of farming communities. Data from five regions of the Maya lowlands where such features have been extensively documented demonstrate the range of strategies employed by the ancient Maya to organize agricultural production.

2720. Looper, Matthew. 2007. Quirigua: A Guide to an Ancient Maya City. Guatemala: Editorial Antigua, S.A. 194 p. 2721. Santizo de Polanco, Miriam O. de. 2008. El origén de asentamiento maya de Quirigua. Antropología e Historia de Guatemala 3(7):105-128.

Río Chiquibul 2733. Laporte, Juan A., Hector Escobedo Mejía, and Jorge E. Chocón. 2006. Reconocimiento arqueológico en zona de frontera: la cuenca del río Chiquibul en Petén, Guatemala. Mesoamérica 27(48):1-46.

2722. Segura, André. 2007. The ancient Maya et la stèle E de Quirigua. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 93(1):167174 2723. Sharer, Robert J. 2004. Arqueología e historia en Quirigua, Guatemala. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):58-63.

Río Grijalva 2734. Wheeler, Dean H. 2008. The organization of agricultural production on the southwest periphery of the Maya lowlands: A settlement patterns study in the Upper Grijalva Basin, Chiapas, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pittsburgh. 361 leaves.

Río Bec 2724. Arnauld, Marie-Charlotte, and Alfonso Lacadena. 2004. Asentar su autoridad: banquetas en el Grupo B de Río Bec (Campeche, México). Journal de la Société des Américanistes 90(1):203-222.

Río Mopan 2735. Laporte, Juan A., and Hector Escobedo Mejía. 2006. La cuenca baja del río Mopan: El asentamiento arqueológico en Guatemala y Belice. Mexicon 28(3): 52-57.

2725. González Gómez, Emyly. 2008. Río Bec: una zona “desconocida”, hoy dia “en recuperacion”. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 275-288. 2726. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. A new discovery in the Río Bec region. Institute for Maya Studies Newsletter 30(10):1-2.

Río Salsipuedes 2736. Laporte, Juan P., and Hector Escobedo Mejía. 2001. Los sitios arqueológicos de la cuenca del Río Salsipuedes en el sureste de Petén, Guatemala. Mexicon 23(3):65-72.

2727. Merk, Stephen. 2004. Some Maya sites in the northern Río Bec region, Campeche. Mexicon 26(3):46-47. Summary results of an archaeological survey of the Río Bec zone in southeastern Campeche; sites include Dos Lagunas A and B, Rancho El Ceiba, Rancho Tepeyate, Rancho El Carmen, Crucero de Limones, and Salan.

Río Usumacinta 2737. Canter, Ronald L. 2007. Rivers among the ruins: the Usumacinta. PARI Journal 7(3): 1-24. 2738. Canter, Ronald L., and Dave Pentecost. 2007. Rocks, ropes, and Maya boats; stone bollards at ancient waterfronts along the Usumacinta: Yaxchilán, Mexico to El Porvenir, Guatemala. PARI Journal 8(3): 5-14.

2728. Michelet, Dominique, Nicolas Latsanopoulos, and Julie Patrois 2004. El ocaso de un estilo? Nota preliminar sobre la fachada norte del edificio con torres del Grupo A a de Río Bec. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 90(1):223-240. See also Benjamin Blaisot, La restauration architecturale de l’édifice A du site de Río Bec, dans le sud de l’Etat du Campeche (Mexique), au cours de la campagne de terrain 2009 (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2009).

2739. Golden, Charles, and Andrew Scherer. 2006. Border problems: Recent archaeological research along the Usumacinta River. PARI Journal 7(2):1-16.

164

zu, Exploración en el Proyecto Regional San Bartolo (Arqueología guatemalteca 1(1):25-28, 2003).

2740. Johnson, Kristofer D., Richard E. Terry, Mark W. Jackson, and Charles W. Golden. 2007. Ancient soil resources of the Usumacinta River Region, Guatemala. Journal of Archaeological Science 54(7):1117-1129.

San Claudio 2752. Romero Rivera, José L. 2003. Investigaciones en San Claudio, Tabasco. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):7.

2741. Sears, Erin L. 2006. Las figurillas mayas del Clásico tardío de sistemas de los ríos de Usumacinta/Pasión. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 389-402. Roaring Creek 2742. Helmke, Christophe, Andrew Bevan, and Jaime Awe. 2004. Roaring Creek: life along an ancient Maya valley. Current World Archaeology 4:10-16. Summary of recent archaeological investigations at Late Classic (AD 550-950) period sites in the Roaring Creek Valley in western Belize.

San Estevan 2753. Levi, Laura. 2002. An institutional perspective on prehispanic Maya residential variation: settlement and community at San Estevan, Belize. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 21(2):120-141. Author examines the implications of a pattern of residential settlement found at the prehispanic Maya community of San Estevan in northern Belize.

Sabana Piletas 2743. Benávides Castillo, Antonio, and Sara Novelo Osorno. 2008. Sabana Piletas, Campeche: los inicios de su arqueología. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(1): 219-232.

2754. Rosenwig, Robert M., and Douglas J. Kennett. 2008. Reassessing San Estevan’s role in the Late Formative political geography of northern Belize. Latin American Antiquity 19(2): 123-145.

Sacul 2744. Mayer, Karl H. 2003. A polychrome Maya vase from Sacul 1, Petén. Mexicon 25(6):143-145.

San Gervasio 2755. Galindo Trejo, Jesús. 2002. El Templo de Ixchel en San Gervasio, Cozumel: Un observatorio lunar? Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 8(16):29-34.

Saktunha 2745. Speal, C. Scott. 2006. Regional economic integration in the coastal Maya lowlands: the lithic assemblage of Saktunha, Belize. Lithic Technology 31(1):3-26.

San Jerónimo II 2756. Rockmore, Matthew D. 2006. The Classic/Postclassic Transition: The Maya of San Jerónimo II, Petén, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, Pennsylvania State University Department of Anthropology. 573 leaves.

San Bartolo 2746. Craig, Jessica H. 2010. Shifting perceptions of sacred spaces: Ceremonial reuse of Maya architecture and monuments at San Bartolo, Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation, University of Kansas. 317 leaves.

San Lorenzo (Belize) 2757. Yaeger, Jason. 2000. Changing Patterns of Social Organization: The Late and Terminal Classic Communities at San Lorenzo, Cayo District, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 1372 leaves.

2747. Garrison, Thomas G. 2007. Ancient Maya territories, adaptive regions, and alliances: Contextualizing the San Bartolo-Xultun intersite survey. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard University. 556 leaves.

San Lorenzo (Mexico) 2758. Mayer, Karl H. 2003. The Maya ruins of San Lorenzo, Campeche, relocated. Mexicon 25(5):114-117.

2748 Garrison, Thomas, and Nicholas P. Dunning. 2009. Settlement, Environment, and Politics in the San Bartolo-Xultun Territory, El Petén, Guatemala. Latin American Antiquity 20(4):525-552.

San Mateo Ixtatán 2759. Wölfel, Ulrich, and Lars Frühsorge. 2008. Archaeological sites near San Mateo Ixtatán: hints at ethnic plurality. Mexicon 30(4): 86-93.

2749. Kaufmann, Carol. 2003. Sistine chapel of the early Maya. National Geographic 204(6):72-77. Includes photographs and reconstruction drawings by Heather Hurst of recently uncovered murals; see also www.// nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0312.

Santa Bárbara (Petén) 2760. Mayer, Karl. 2004. A new archaeological museum on Santa Bárbara, Petén. Mexicon 26(5):94-96. Santa Bárbara (Yucatan) 2761. Stanton, Travis W., Ramón Carrillo Sánchez, Teresa Ceballos Gallareta, Markus Eberl, Socorro Jiménez Alvarez, and Julieta Ramos Pacheco. 2003. Puuc settlement on the northwest coastal plain of Yucatan: preliminary research from Santa Bárbara. Mexicon 25(1):24-33. Authors present preliminary data on the site of Santa Bárbara. The site possesses numerous sculptured monuments stylistically related to the Puuc region and northern Campeche. Ceramics suggest an occupation extending from the Late Classic (600 AC) to the Terminal Classic (800-1050 AC). Ceramic evidence suggests connections with the Gulf Coast.

2750. O’Neill, T. 2002. Maya mural; researchers uncover a unique Maya wall painting. National Geographic 201(4):7075. Report on the discovery of a polychrome mural at San Bartolo, a Classic period Maya site in northern Guatemala. German language translation: Tom O’Neill, Ein himmlischer Herrscher (National Geographic Deutschland 2002 (4):74-79, 2002). 2751. Saturno, William B., and Karl A. Taube. 2004. Hallazgo: las excepcionales pinturas de San Bartolo, Guatemala. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):34-35. See also Mónica Urqui165

Peterson, Shedding light on Xibalba through cave survey and surface collection (pp. 37-58); Amalia Kenward, Ritual pathways and the alteration of cave features (pp. 59-70); Marvin Rowe, Allan Cobb, Polly A. Peterson, and Patricia A. McAnany, Terminal Classic pictographs from Actun Ik (pp. 7178); Carolyn M. Audet, Pottery from the caves of the Thumb District (pp. 79-102); Justin Ebersole, Ritual feasting in the twilight zone: mollusca from the caves (pp. 103-116); Ben Thomas, and Corlyn Secchiaroli, Settlements in the middle and lower valley (pp. 117-122); Eleanor Harrison, and Kevin Acone, Further investigations at Pechtun Ha: feasting and mass importation of cave speleothems (pp. 123-140); Katie Cockerell, Pottery (pp. 141-146); Adam Weik, Chipped stone tools and debitage (pp. 147-150); Sally Graver, Fauna (pp. 151-156); Eleanor Harrison, Initial investigations at Pakal Na: a shrine, a cave torch, and the house of a putative cacao lord (pp. 157-176); Steven Morandi, and Ben Thomas, First shovel at the Samuel Oshon site (pp. 177-188); Jason Paling, Obsidian from the settlements and caves (pp. 189-194); Errin Weller, Comparing artifact densities among the sites of Pechtun Ha, Pakal Na, and the Oshon site (pp. 195-210); Patricia A. McAnany, Colonial period settlement in the valley (pp. 211218); Geralyn Dion, Belizean perspectives on archaeological research (pp. 219-228); Elizabeth Dembrowsky, A river runs through it: oral histories and perspectives (pp. 229-235). See also Ben S. Thomas, Maya Settlement and Political Hierarchy in the Sibun River Valley, Belize, Central America (Doctoral dissertation, Boston University, 2005. 205 p.).

Santa Rita Corozal 2762. Davoust, Michel. 2001. Nouvelles données historiques dans les fresques de Santa Rita Corozal et les Annales de Bacalar des Chilam Balam de Mani et Tizimin (1342-1362). Mayab 14:71-89. See also Jesper Nielsen, and Bente Juhl Andersen, Collecting in Corozal: Late Postclassic Maya effigy censers from Belize in the Danish National Museum (18601865) (Mayab 17:84-98, 2004). Analysis of 17 fragments of Late Postclassic period effigy censers from Santa Rita Corozal, initially collected in the 1860s by Matthias Levy, and later deposited in the National Museum of Copenhagen. Santa Rosa Xtampak 2763. Graña-Behrens, Daniel. 2002. Fechas en dos tapas de boveda de Santa Rosa Xtampak, Campeche. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 8(17):34-38. 2764. Morales López, Abel, and William Folan. 2006. Santa Rosa Xtampak, Campeche: su patrón de asentamiento. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1): 37-46. 2765. Zapata, Renee L. 2004. Investigaciones en Santa Rosa Xtampak. Arqueología mexicana 12(71):15. Sayil 2766. Mayer, Karl H. 2003. A megalíthic phallus from Sayil, Yucatan. Mexicon 25(5):118. Seibal 2767. Aoyama, Kazuo. 2008. Preclassic and Classic Maya obsidian exchange, artistic and craft production, and weapons in the Aguateca region and Seibal, Guatemala. Mexicon 30(4):78-86.

2773. Peterson, Polly A. 2006. Ancient Maya Ritual Cave Use in the Sibun Valley, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Boston University, Department of Archaeology. 344 leaves. 2774. Thomas, Ben S. 2005. Maya Settlement and Political Hierarchy in the Sibun River Valley, Belize, Central America. Doctoral dissertation, Boston University. 205 p.

2768. Just, Bryan R. 2006. The Visual Discourse of NinthCentury Stelae at Machaquila and Seibal. Doctoral dissertation, Tulane University, Department of Anthropology. 561 leaves.

Sierra de Lacandon 2775. Muñoz, A. Rene, Charles W. Golden, and Andrew K. Scherer. 2003-2004. Archaeological explorations in the Sierra de Lacandon National Park, Guatemala. The Codex 12(1-3):310.

2769. Mayer, Karl Herbert. 2003. Stolen glyphic fragment from Seibal in Florida. Mexicon 25(4):96-97. Semetabaj 2770. Barrientos, Tomás. 2009. Planes de la Universidad del Valle de Guatemala en el sitio arqueológico de Semetabaj. Mexicon 31(6):131-132.

Sisila 2776. Benávides C., Antonio. 2003. Labores de conservación arquitectónica en Sisila, Campeche. Mexicon 25(6):161-164. Summary of the 2002 Centro INAH Campeche’s project Maintenance to Archaeological Sites Not Open to the Public (MANZANA) work at Sisila, south of Calkini.

Sibun River 2771. Harrison-Buck, Eleanor. 2007. Materializing Identity Among the Terminal Classic Maya: Architecture and Ceramics in the Sibun Valley, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, Boston University. 502 leaves.

Site Q 2777. Harris, John F. 2006-2007. Connections between Site Q and La Corona from Site Q texts. The Codex 15(1-2):26-47.

2772. McAnany, Patricia A., ed. 2002. Sacred Landscape and Settlement in the Sibun River Valley; XARP 1999 Archaeological Survey and Excavation. Institute of Mesoamerican Studies, Occasional Publication, 8. Albany: Department of Anthropology, State University of New York at Albany. 235 p. Contents include: Patricia A. McAnany, Sacred landscape and settlement in the Middle and Lower Sibun Valley (pp. 1-4); Steven Morandi, and Brian Norris, Locating sites within the river valley and adjacent karst (pp. 5-10); Pat Farrell, and Heather Adkins, Evaluating soil potential in the middle and lower reaches of the Sibun River valley (pp., 11-36); Polly A.

Site R 2778. Harris, John. 2008. Where is Site R? The Codex 16(3):38-55. Southeast Periphery 2779. Braswell, Geoffrey E., Silvia Salgado González, Laraine A. Fletcher, and Michael D. Glascock. 2002. La antigua Nicaragua, la periferia sudeste de Mesoamérica y la región maya: interacción interregional (1-1522 d.C.). Mayab 15:19-39. 166

2780. Izaguirre, José D. 2001. Frontera y zona fronteriza en Mesoamérica prehistorica, el caso de Honduras. Yaxkin 19:77118.

Tecolote 2793. Scherer, Andrew K., and Charles Golden. 2009. Tecolote, Guatemala: archaeological evidence for a fortified Late Classic Maya political border. Journal of Field Archaeology 34(3):285-305.

2781. Joyce, Rosemary A., and John S. Henderson. 2002. La arqueología del périodo Formativo en Honduras: nuevos datos sobre el “Estilo Olmeca” en la zona maya. Mayab 15:5-17.

Temozon 2794. Merk, Stephan. 2001. Two stone heads from Temozon, Yucatan, Mexico. Mexicon 23(4):80-82.

Siho 2782. Cobos, Rafael. 2003. Investigaciones arqueológicas en Siho, Yucatan. Mexicon 25(3):67.

Tenam Puente 2795. Lalo Jacinto, Gabriel. Arqueología mexicana 9(50):37.

Soconusco 2783. Voorhies, Bárbara. 2005. Postclassic Soconusco Society: The Late Prehistory of the Coast of Chiapas, Mexico. Albany, NY: University at Albany, Institute for Mesoamerican Studies; Austin: University of Texas Press. 250 p. This timely report presents new archaeological data on Postclassic sites in one of the key regions of Mesoamerica. The Pacific coast of Soconusco was at the forefront of cultural developments from the time of its earliest farmers in the Formative period through the Spanish conquest. Yet until now the Postclassic archaeology of this region has remained poorly known. This book presents the results of archaeological fieldwork at the political center Acapetahua and other key Postclassic sites in Soconusco.

2001.

Tenam

Puente.

Tikal 2796. Aguila Flores, Patricia del. 2008. Tikal: sus linajes e historia. Guatemala: Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes Dirección General del Patrimonio Cultural y Natural. 2797. Ayala Falcón, Maricela. 2002. El Bulto ritual de Mundo Perdido, Tikal. Cuadernos del Centro de Estudios Mayas, 27. México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 157 p. Analysis of a “bulto” ritual of Tikal. 2798. Barrios, Edy A. 2009. Catálogo de monumentos depositados en la bodega de estelas del parque nacional Tikal. U tz’ib 1(9):1-95.

Tabasco 2784. García Moll, Roberto. 2003. Sitios arqueológicas de Tabasco. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):72-79. 2785. García Moll, Roberto. 2003. Tabasco, una visión general. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):12-17.

2799. Becker, Marshall J. 2003. A Classic Period barrio producing fine polychrome ceramics at Tikal, Guatemala: notes on ancient Maya firing technology. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):95-112.

2786. Izquierdo y de la Cueva, Ana L. 2003. Tabasco: parteaguas del descubrimiento y conquista de México. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):52-57.

2800. Becker, Marshal J. 2009. Skull rituals and plaza plan 4 at Tikal: lowland Maya mortuary patterns. The Codex 17(12):12-41.

2787. Los mayas de Tabasco. Arqueología mexicana 11(61):10-11, 2003.

2801 Becker, Marshall J. 2010. Site-Seeing: Notes from the Field: Forest travelers: unusual skills. The Codex 18(3): 3-15.

2788. Olmecs, Mayas, and Other Cultures; Tabasco and the Archaeological Site of Palenque. México: CONACULTA: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia/Grupo Azabache, 2006. 64 p. A brief anthropological and archaeologial study of various sites in Tabasco, with numerous lively color and illustrations. This volume covers the following sites: Palenque, La Venta, Malpasito, Moral Reforma, Pomona and San Claudio.

2802. Borowicz, James J. 2003. Images of Power and the Power of Images: Iconography of Stelae as an Indicator of Socio-Political Events in the Early Classic Maya Lowlands. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Albany. 729 leaves. “The placement of carved monuments in the public spaces of Lowland Maya cities throughout the Classic period was to convey information to the public concerning the importance of the ruler to the polity. Iconographic programs were developed for use on stelae by rulers in order to convey the message of their importance to the polity in an efficient manner. Once established, if one were to change an iconographic program there would be a risk of losing established meanings and jeopardizing the communicative power of the stelae imagery. Yet change does occur in the iconographic programs at a number of sites. This dissertation explores the nature of these changes and what factors lead to them.”

Tabasqueño 2789. Benávides, Antonio, and Sara Novelo O. 2010. Cuatro relieves de Tabasqueño, Campeche. Mexicon 32(3):48-52. Tabi 2790. Sweitz, Samuel R. 2005. On the periphery of the periphery: Household archaeology at Hacienda Tabi, Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Texas A&M University. 497 leaves.

2803. Callendar, Donald. 2010. Nightfall on the TikalUaxactun Trail. The Codex 18(3): 16-19.

Tamactun-Acalan 2792. Ciudad Ruiz, Andrés, and Alfonso Lacadena GarcíaGallo. 2001. Tamactun-Acalan: interpretación de una hegemonia politica maya de los siglos XIV-XVI. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 87:9-38.

2804. Craveri Slaverio, Michela, and Vera Tiesler Blos. 2001. El glífo emblema de Tikal, uso local e integración regional. Estudios de cultura maya 21:33-55. 167

decoration and reworking, spatial distribution, occurrence in the various types of structure groups, recovery context, and date. While few artifact reports go beyond a catalogue of objects organized by type or raw material, this report puts the materials into their past cultural contexts and thus is of interest to a wide range of scholars.“

2805. Fialko, Vilma. 2004. Tikal, Guatemala: la cabeza del reino de los hijos del sol y del agua. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):36-43. 2806. Fry, Robert E. 2003. Social dimensions in ceramic analysis: a case study from peripheral Tikal. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):85-93.

2818. Moholy-Nagy, Hattula. 2003. The hiatus of Tikal, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica 14(1):77-83.

2807. Harris, John F. 2003. Tikal wars as documented in Maya hieroglyphic inscriptions. The Codex (3):25-42.

2819. Montgomery, John. 2001. Tikal: An Illustrated History: The Ancient Maya Capital. New York: Hippocrene Books. 271 p.

2808. Harrison, Peter D. 2008. Animales como nombres de familias reales en Tikal y algunas consideraciones sobre Calakmul. Mayab 20: 109-124.

2820. Muñoz Cosmé, Gaspar. 2006. Templo I de Tikal; arquitectura y restauración. International Series, 1557. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 168 p.

2809. Herman de León, Carlos H. 2008. Las etapas constructivas en la Plaza A del Grupo 3D-XIV o Zona Norte de Tikal, Petén, Guatemala. Estudios de cultura maya 31: 45-64.

2821. O’Neil, Megan E. 2009. Ancient Maya Sculptures of Tikal, Seen and Unseen. RES 55/56:119-134.

2810. Hockaday, Brian, and David L. Lentz. 2009. Tikal timbers and temples: ancient Maya agroforestry and the end of time. Journal of Archaeological Science 36 (7):1342-1353.

2822. Roberts, David. 2004. Secrets of the Maya: deciphering Tikal. Smithsonian 35(4):42-48. See also Estuardo Solorzano, Aquiles Hernández, and Jaime Escobar, Rescate y conservación de aguadas en el Parque Nacional Tikal (Arqueología guatemalteca 1(1):48-50, 2003).

2811. Laporte, Juan Pedro, and María Josefa Iglesias Ponce de León. 2004. Objetos de concha y caracol: contexto y función en una colección de Tikal. Utz’ib, Serie reportes 4(1). Guatemala: Asociación Tikal. 71 p.

2823. Sabloff, Jeremy A., ed. 2003. Tikal: Dynasties, Foreigners and Affairs of State: Advancing Maya Archaeology. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press. 419 p. Contents include: Simon Martin, In line of the founder: a view of dynastic politics at Tikal (pp. 3-46); T. Patrick Culbert, The ceramics of Tikal (pp. 47-82); Hattula Moholy-Nagy, Beyond the catalog: the chronology and contexts of Tikal artifacts (pp. 83-110); William A. Haviland, Settlement, society, and demography at Tikal (pp. 111-142); Robert E. Fry, The peripheries of Tikal (pp. 143-170); Peter D. Harrison, The central acropolis of Tikal (pp. 171-206); Christopher Jones, The Tikal renaissance and the East Plaza ball court (pp. 207-226); H. Stanley Loten, The North Acropolis: monumentality, function, and architectural development (pp. 227-252); Marshall J. Becker, Plaza plans at Tikal: a research strategy for inferring social organization and processes of culture change at lowland Maya sites (pp. 253280); Juan Pedro Laporte, Thirty years later: some results of recent investigations in Tikal (pp. 281-318); Robert J. Sharer, Tikal and the Copán dynastic founding (pp. 319-354).

2812. Loten, H. Stanley. 2002. Miscellaneous Investigations in Central Tikal. Tikal Report, 23A. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. 161 p. Presents detailed descriptions of unexcavated structures in the periphery of the site center. 2813. Loten, H. Stanley. 2007. Additions and Alteration: A Commentary on the Architecture of the North Acropolis, Tikal, Guatemala. Tikal Reports, 34A. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. 92 p. Includes CD-ROM. 2814. Martin, Simon. 2001. Unmasking Double Bird, ruler of Tikal. PARI Journal 2(1):7-12. See also Simon Martin, Caracol Altar 21 revisited: more data on Double-Bird and Tikal’s wars of the mid-sixth century (PARI Journal 6(1):1-9). 2815. Mathews, Peter. 2001. Tikal. In Encyclopedia of Archaeology: History and Discoveries. Tim Murray, ed. v. 3, pp. 1270-1272. Santa Bárbara: ABC-Clio.

2824. Santos Corea, Oscar Roberto. 2001. Los mayas en Tikal y su cuarta dimensión en la arquitectura. Antigua: La Copia Fiel. 186 p. Speculative architectural survey of Tikal.

2816. Misdea, Sharon A. 2002. A visual history of archaeology at Tikal. Expedition 44(2):36-44. 2817. Moholy-Nagy, Hattula. 2002. The Artifacts of Tikal: Utilitarian Artifacts and Unworked Material. Tikal Report, 27B. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. 288 p. and CD-ROM. “Occupied continuously for 1500 years, Tikal was the most important demographic, economic, administrative, and ritual center of its region. The collection of recovered materials is the largest and most diverse known from the Guatemalan lowlands. This book provides a major body of primary data. The artifacts are organized by such raw materials as chert and shell, and then by type, number, condition, possible ancient use, form, size, and such secondary modifications as

2825. Shook, Edwin M., and Alfred V. Kidder II. 2009. Siteseeing: Notes from the field. The painted tomb at Tikal. The Codex 17(1-2):3-10. 2826. Silverstein, Jay E., David Webster, Horacio Martínez, and Alvaro Soto. 2009. Rethinking the great earthwork of Tikal: a hydRaúlic hypothesis for the Classic Maya polity. Ancient Mesoamerica 20(1):45-58. 2827. Thompson, Lauri M. 2005 A Comparative Analysis of Burial Patterning: The Preclassic Maya sites of Chiapa de 168

Corzo, Kaminaljuyú, Tikal, and Colhá. Doctoral dissertation, University of Texas at Austin. 752 leaves.

Topoxté 2838. Wurster, Wolfgang, ed. 2000. El Sitio Maya de Topoxté: Investigaciones en una isla del lago Yaxhá, Petén, Guatemala. Materialien zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Archäologie, Band 57. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern. 336 p. Contents include: Wolfgang Wurster, Editorial (p. 1); Juan Antonio Valdés, Prológo (pp. 2-3); Oscar Quintana Samayoa, Agradecimientos (pp. 4-5); Oscar Quintana Samayoa, and Wolfgang Wurster, Los programas de investigación (pp. 7-8); Miguel Flores, and Ximena Leiva, La cuenca de Yaxhá-Sacnab (pp. 8-11); Wolfgang Wurster, Descripción de la isla (pp. 11-13); Wolfgang Wurster, Antecedentes de investigación en la sila Topoxté y las islas Paxte y Cante (pp. 13-17); Oscar Quintana Samayoa, Acciones realizadas por el Proyecto Nacional Tikal en Topoxté (pp. 17-21); Oscar Quintana Samayoa, Consideraciones generales para la investigación y conservación (pp. 21-22); Wolfgang Wurster, Leventamiento topográfico (pp. 22-24); Oscar Quintana Samayoa, Programa de arquitectura (pp. 24-28); Bernard Hermés, Programa de arqueología (pp. 28-30); Miguel Flores and Ximena Leiva, Programa patrimonio nacional (pp. 30-31); Bernard Hermés, Secuencia constructiva (pp. 31); Wolfgang Wurster, La arquitectura visible y la distribución urbana del Posclásico (pp. 31-34); Bernard Hermés, Raúl Noriega, Oscar Quintana Samayoa, and Wolfgang Wurster, Sector alto central (pp. 3552); Bernard Hermés, Raúl Noriega, Oscar Quintana Samayoa, and Wolfgang Wurster, Sector bajo central (p. 53); Bernard Hermés, Raúl Noriega, Oscar Quintana Samayoa, and Wolfgang Wurster, Sector alto norte (p. 53); Bernard Hermés, Raúl Noriega, Oscar Quintana Samayoa, and Wolfgang Wurster, Sectores bajos perifericos (pp. 53-54); Bernard Hermés and Zoila Calderón, Plataformes habitacionales (pp. 54-58); Bernard Hermés, Resumen de la secuencia constructiva (pp. 58-63); Bernard Hermés and E. Pinto, Excavaciones en Cante y Paxte (p. 63); Bernard Hermés and Oscar Quintana Samayoa, Estelas y altares (pp. 64-66); Bernard Hermés and Zoila Calderón, CHultúnes (pp. 66-73); Brenda Lou, Recorridos en tierra firme (pp. 74-76); Bernard Hermés, Hallazgos (pp. 76-77); Bernard Hermés, Ofrendas (pp. 77-91); R. Acevedo, Entierros (pp. 91-127); Bernard Hermés, Entierro 49 (pp. 127-144); Vilma Fialko, El espejo del Entierro 49; morfología y texto jeroglífico (pp. 144-158); Lori E. Wright, Henry P. Schwarcz, and Renaldo Acevedo, La dieta de los habitantes de Topoxté, una reconstrucción isotópica (pp. 158-164); Bernard Hermés, Industria cerámica (pp. 164-202); Bernard Hermés and Zoila Calderón, Aretefactos de cerámica (pp. 202-205); Bernard Hermés, Vasijas de miniatura y figuras de miniatura (pp. 205-208); Geoffrey Braswell, Industria lítica clase tallada: obsidiana (pp. 208-221); Jennifer Briggs Braswell, Industria lítica clase tallada: pedernal (pp. 222-229); G. Orellana, Industria lítica clase pulida: piedra verde (pp. 229-231); Oswaldo Gómez, Industria lítica: artefactos de basalto y granito (pp. 231-240); Bernard Hermés, Industria de metal (p. 240); Bernard Hermés and Zoila Calderón, Industrias de material malacológico y oseo (pp. 240-246); Bernard Hermés, Restos oseos de fauna (pp. 246-247); Wolfgang Wurster and Bernard Hermés, Fechas de carbono 14 (pp. 247-249); Nicolai Grube, Monumentos esculpidos e inscripciones jeroglíficas en el triángulo Yaxhá-Nakúm-Naranjo (pp. 249-268); Raúl Noriega and Wolfgang Wurster, Resultados de conservación de monumentos (pp. 269-279); Miguel Flores and Ximena Leiva, Resultados del programa patrimonial natural (pp. 280-296);

2828. Webster, David, Jay Silverstein, Timothy Murtha, Horacio Martínez, and Kirk Straight. 2004. The Tikal Earthworks Revisited. Occasional Papers in Anthro-pology, 28. University Park: Pennsylvania State University, Department of Anthropology. 2829. Webster, David, Timothy Murtha, Kirk D. Straight, Jay Silverstein, Horatio Martínez, Richard E. Terry, and Richard Burnett. 2007. The great Tikal earthwork revisited. Journal of Field Archaeology 32(1):65-82. 2830. Weller, Errin. 2006. Satellites, survey, and settlement: the Late Classic Maya utilization of bajos (seasonal swamps) at Tikal and Yaxhá, Guatemala. In In From Space to Place: 2nd International Conference on Remote Sensing in Archaeology: Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop, CNR, Rome, Italy, December 4-7, 2006. Stefano Campana and Maurizio Forte, eds. pp. 31-36. International Series, 1568. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports. 2831. Wright, Lori E. 2004. Identifying immigrants to Tikal, Guatemala: defining local variability in strontium isotope ratios of human tooth enamel. Journal of Archaeological Science 32(4):555-566. Stable strontium isotopes are used to identify the skeletons of eight migrants from distant geological zones among 83 Tikal skeletons sampled. See also Lori E. Wright, In search of Yax Nuun Ayiin I: revisiting the Tikal Project’s Burial 10 (Ancient Mesoamerica 16(1):89-100, 2005). Tila 2832. Monroy Valverde, Fabiola P. 2004. Tila, santuario de un cristo negro en Chiapas. Cuaderno, 29. México, UNAM: Instituto de Investigaciones Filologicas, Centro de Estudios Mayas. 157 p. History of a religious sanctuary from its Prehispanic antecedents to its incorporation (includes indigenous rebellions, legends, etc. Tixchel 2833. Rocha Segura, Fernando. 2007. Reconocimiento arqueológico en Hacienda Tixchel y el Anonal, Sabancuy, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1): 315-326. Tohcok 2834. Rocha Segura, Fernando. 2003. Una tapa de boveda pintada en la bodega de Guadalupe. Boletín Informativo: La Pintura Mural Prehispánica en México 9(18):47-50. Description of mural fragment, probably from Tohcok, a site located 4 km west of Hopelchen, Campeche. Toniná 2835. Mathews, Peter. 2001. The dates of Toniná and a dark horse in its history. PARI Journal 2(1):1-6. See also Margarita Espinosa Diáz, Creación y destrucción en Toniná (Arqueología mexicana 9(50):16, 2001). 2836. Patrois, Julie. 2000. Les sculptures en pierre de Toniná, Chiapas, Mexique. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1. 2837. Yadeun, Juan. 2001. El Museo de Toniná: territorio del tiempo. Arqueología mexicana 9(50):44-49. 169

Wolfgang Wurster, Síntesis de arquitectura y urbanismo (pp. 296-310); Oscar Quintana Samayoa, Turismo (pp. 310-313).

Uaymil 2851. Benávides Castillo, Antonio. 2003. Isla Uaymil: un Puerto precolombino. Investigadores de Mesoamérica 3:98106. See also Diego Gerez, L’archéologie de la région des lacs de Uaymil (M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1, 2002).

Tortuguero 2839. Arellano, Alfonso. 2006. Tortuguero: una historia rescatada. México: UNAM: Instituto de Investigaciones Filologicas, Centro de Estudios Mayas. 276 p. An archaeological study of a Mayan site located in Chiapas.

Ucanal 2852. Laporte, Juan Pedro, and Hector E. Mejía. 2002. Ucanal: una ciudad del Rio Mopan en Petén, Guatemala. U tz’ib: Serie Reportes 1(2). Guatemala: Asociación Tikal. 71 p.

2840. Gronemeyer, Sven. 2006. The Maya Site of Tortuguero, Tabasco, Mexico: Its History and Inscriptions. Acta Mesoamericana, 17. Markt Schwaben: Verlag Anton Saurwein. 212 p.

Utatlán 2853. Macario Calgua, Micaela R. 2004. Les habitants de Q’umarkaaj, capitale Maya-K’iché postclassique, Hautes terres du Guatemala; données archéologiques et représentations actuelles. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

2841. Kinsman, Hutch. 2010. Grammar in the Script: Tortuguero Monument 6: Part I. The Codex 18(3): 37-51. Tres Lunas 2842. Sulak, Jack. 2001. The Maya ruins of Tres Lunas, Campeche. Mexicon 23(1):2-4.

Uxmal 2854. Desmond, Lawrence G., et al. 2001. Stereophotogrammetric documentation of the Advino Pyramid at Uxmal, Yucatan. PARI Journal 2(1):19-22. See also Uxmal and the Puuc Region: Tourist Guide. 2 ed. (Merida: Editorial Dante, 2009. 48 p.).

Tulum 2843. Gómez Cárdenasz, Luis. 2007. Tulum: A Pictorial Guide. México: Editorial Fotográfica Marina Kukulcan. 24 p. Guide of the Mayan temples, ancient structures, and general scenic sires of Tulum, Mexico. Text in Spanish and English. 2844. Kauffmann, Emma. 2008. Tulum, une synthèse des recherches, et nouvelles interpretations; redefine-tion de l’espace religieux. M.A. thesis, Université de Paris 1.

Uxul 2855. Grube, Nikolai, and Iken Paap. 2008. La exploración de Uxul, Petén campechano: resultado de las investigaciones en el 2007. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 267-289 Vaca Plateau 2856. Colas, Pierre R., Ulrich Wölfel, Philip P. Reeder, Katja C. Stengert, and James Webster. 2009. Sites and sinkholes: archaeological investigations of Terminal Classic Maya society on the northern Vaca Plateau, Belize. Mexicon 30(6):126135.

2845. Paxton, Meredith D. 2001. Una pintura en la Estructura 16 de Tulum, Quintana Roo y el simbolismo regional para algunos sitios arqueológicos. Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 7(14):51-57. See also Meredith D. Paxton, Retrato de un dios que rige en la Estructura 16 de Tulum, Quintana Roo (Boletín Informativo La Pintura Mural Prehispánica 10(29):72-82, 2005).

2857. Jones, Stefan D. A. 2009. The organization of Classic Maya epicenters: A space syntax investigation of the Vaca Plateau, Belize. M.A. thesis, Trent University (Canada). 178 leaves.

2846. Solari, Amara. 2000. The Tulum Murals of the Post Classic: A Study of Maya Subjectivity as Represented in the Visual Arts. Seniors Honors thesis, University of California at Berkeley. 67 leaves.

Victoria 2858. Mathews, Jennifer. 2003. Megalithic architecture at the site of Victoria, Quintana Roo. Mexicon 25(3):74-77.

2847. Sullivan, Paul. 2002. Tulum: a portal between two worlds. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):98-100. Spanish translation: Tulum: umbral entre dos mundos (Arqueología mexicana 9(54):56-59, 2002).

Vista Alegre 2859. Glover, J. B., and D. Rissolo. 2004. Recent reconnaissance of the site of Vista Alegre, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Mexicon 26(2):22-23.

2848. Velazquez Morlet, Adriana. 2002. Tulum: city of dawn. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):97-98. Spanish translation: Tulum: ciudad del amanecer. Arqueología mexicana 9(54):5255, 2002.

Wild Cane Cay 2860. Seidemann, Ryan M., and Heather McKillop. 2007. Dental indicators of diet and health for the Postclassic coastal Maya on Wild Cane Cay, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 18(2): 303-314.

Tzum 2849. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. Tapas de bóveda pintadas de Xcakochna, Yucatán, y Tzum, Campeche. Boletín Informativa La Pintura Mural Prehispánica en México 7(15):23-26.

X’kala-ka 2861. Chandler, Dana R. 2002. X’akala-ka: a new Mayan site. Central States Archaeological Journal 49(1):18-20. Brief report on a small site in southern Yucatan.

Uaxactun 2850. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. Two unprovenanced Maya ceramics in Uaxactun. Mexicon 23(5):110.

X-ual-canil 2862. Gray, Nadine L. 2001. Into the Darkness: Investigations of Maya Chultúnob from X-ual-canil (Cayo District), Belize. 170

2871. Wanner, I. S., T. S. Sosa, K. W. Alt, and V. Tiesler Blos. 2007. Lifestyle, occupation, and whole bone morphology of the pre-Hispanic Maya coastal population from Xcambo, Yucatan, Mexico. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 17(3): 253-268.

M.A. thesis, Trent University. 208 leaves. Analysis of Protoclassic and Late Classic period chultúns excavated at X-ualcanil, and other Upper Belize River valley sites, suggests these chambers were used for short term storage, the interment of human remains, as well as termination and dedicatory rituals.

Xchan 2872. Benávides C., Antonio. 2001. Xchan, Campeche, un sitio Puuc con columnas decoradas. Mexicon 23(6):146-148. Report on an archaeological zone located 18 km southeast of Hecelchakan in Campeche. The site contains two monolithic relief columns and fragments of two lintels with glyphs.

2863. Schwake, Sonja A. 2000. On the Road: Excavations Along the Maya Sacbe at X-ual-canil, Cayo District, Belize. M.A. thesis, Trent University (Canada). 130 leaves. Xanaba 2864. Quiñones Cetina, Lucía, and Sylviane Boucher. 2006. El grupo Xanaba: crisol de experimentación y cambios en las modas cerámicas del Clásico temprano en las planicies del norte. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 471-480.

Xcoch 2873. Smyth, Michael P., and David Ortegon Zapata. 2008. A Preclassic center in the Puuc region: A report on Xcoch, Yucatan, Mexico. Mexicon 30(3): 63-68.

Xbaatun 2865. García Targa, Juan, Miguel Covarrubias, Rafael Burgos, and José Estrada. 2006. Xbaatun (Tekal de Venegas). Estudio urbanistio-arquitectónico local y patrón de asentamiento en la región. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(1):199-210.

Xicalanco 2874. Ochoa, Lorenzo, and Alba González Jacome. 2009. Antes y el desputes de los humedales de la Peninsula de Xicalanco, Campeche. Itinerarios 9:145-168. Xkakatz 2875. Merk, Stephan. 2001. The Maya ruins of Kakoch and Xkakatz, Yucatan, Mexico. Mexicon 24(1):4-5. Report on two archaeological sites located west of the town in Tekax, Yucatan.

Xcakochna 2866. Mayer, Karl H. 2001. Tapas de boveda pintadas de Xcakochna, Yucatan, y Tzum, Campeche. Boletín Informativa La Pintura Mural Prehispánica en México 7(15):23-26. Xcalumkín 2867. Becquelin, Pierre. 2006. De Xculoc a Xcalumkín: estudio tipológico comparativo de sitios del Puuc occidental. In Los mayas de ayer y hoy. A. Barrera Rubio y R. Gubler, eds. v. 1, pp. 275-285. Mérida: CONACULTA-INAH/UAY. See also Pierre Becquelin, and D. Michelet, Xcalumkín: del establecimiento de secuencias arquitectónica y cerámica a preguntas sobre la naturaleza del sitio (In Escondido en la selva. H. J. Prem, ed. pp. 137-157. México: Universidad de Bonn; Conaculta, INAH, 2003), and D. Michelet, Del proyecto Xculoc al proyecto Xcalumkín: interrogantes acerca de la organización política en la zona Puuc (Estudios de cultura maya 22:75-86, 2002).

Xkipche 2876. Dyckerhoff, Ursula. 2003. A mask’s snout from Xkipche, Yucatan, Mexico. Mexicon 25(3):66. 2877. Paap, Ikeen. 2007. Olvido y remembranza en el registro arqueológico: Xkipche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1): 303-314. 2878. Prem, Hanns J. 2003. Xkipche, un a ciudad maya clásica en el corazon del Puuc: 1. El Asentamiento. México: Universidad de Bonn; Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. 324 p. 2879. Vallo, Michael. 2002. Die Keramik von Xkipche. British Archaeological Reports, International Series, 1056. Oxford, England: BAR Publishing. 603 p. “This book provides a detailed analysis of the Mayan pottery from Xkipche in the Puuc area of the Yucatan peninsula, Mexico. During the 7th century, in Puuc area a regional type of Mayan culture emerged, recog-nizable by characteristic architectural style. So far it was im-possible to date the beginnings and ends of the settlements in this area. The site of Xkipche offers clues to the dating, with almost half a million of studied pottery fragments. This is by far the largest prehispanic pottery assemblage from the whole of the northern Yucatan.”

Xcambo 2868. Chi Keb, Julio, Thelma Sierra Sosa, and Andrea Cucina. 2007. ¿Eres lo que Comes? El desgaste dental en Xcambo, Yucatan, como indicador alimenticio y de estilo de vida. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1): 85-94. See also Christian Mendez Colli, Andrea Cucina, and Thelma Sierra Sosa, El impacto medioambiental de la costa y cienega sobre la población prehispánica de Xcambo, Yucatan; una perspectiva bioarqueológica a través del estudio de la hipoplasia del esmalte dental (Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1): 73-84, 2007). 2869. Jiménez Alvarez, Socorro, Thelma Sierra Sosa, Haejoo Chung, and Roberto Belmar Casso. 2006. El estudio tecnológico de la cerámica de pasta fina “Chablekal” e “Isla Fina” del sitio costero de Xcambo, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 501-516.

2880. Vallo, Michael, and Iken Paap. 2002. The Maya ruins of Xkipche, Yucatan, Mexico. Mexicon 25(4):91-92, Brief note on excavations at Xkipche being conducted by the Institute of American Anthropology and Ethnology (IAE), University of Bonn. http://www.voelk.unibonn. de/Epiklassikum_ Allgemein.htm.

2870. Reyes Gutierrez, Georgina, and Telma Sierra Sosa. 2006. Paleopatología infantil de Xcambo, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 461-470. 171

2881. Voss N., Alexander W., and Yazmin Lizarraga Pérez. 2006. Xkipche, Yucatan: los artefactos no-ceramicos. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 403-418.

an urban settlement culminating in the Terminal Classic. Publication of a doctoral dissertation submitted to Uppsala University in 2002.

Xkombec 2882. Mayer, Karl H., and Stephan Merk. 2003. Maya mural paintings at Xkombec, Campeche. Mexicon 25(3):6769.

2891. Isendahl, Christian. 2006. The Puuc landscape: settlement archaeology at Xuch, Campeche. Mexicon 28(6):111117.

Xocen 2883. Terán Contreras, Silvia, and Christian H. Rasmussen. 2005. Xocen, el pueblo en el centro del mundo. Mérida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán. 496 p. “Xocen, El Pueblo en el Centro del Mundo pretende llenar este hueco que existe sobre el conocimiento de los mayas yucatecos actuales. El libro describe la historia de un pueblo tradicional en el oriente del estado del Yucatán, su organización social y política, sus costumbres y tradiciones sociales y religiosas.”

Xuental 2892. Manahan, T. Kam, and Traci Ardren. 2008. Cambios y conflictos en la región Cupul: resultados preliminares de la temporada 2006 en Xuental, Yucatán. Investigadores de la cultura maya 16(2): 255-266. Xunantunich 2893. Keller, Angela H. 2006. Roads to the Center: The Design, Use, and Meaning of the Roads of Xunantunich, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of Penn-sylvania. 833 leaves.

2884. Teran Contreras, Silvia, and Christian Heilskov Rasmussen. 2008. Jinetes del cielo maya: dioses y diosas de la lluvia en Xocen. Merida: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Yucatan. 388 p. Presenta los resultados de un estudio sobre los dioses de la lluvia, realizado por el pueblo de Xocen, Yucatan. Contiene la descripción completa y los rezos de la ceremonia agrícola conocida como Ch’a Chaak. Appendix includes reprint of the first recorded observation of a Ch’a Chaak ceremony by Thomas Gann, originally published in the Proceedings of the Nineteenth International Congress of Americanists held at Washington, December 27-31, 1915 (Washington, 1917) under the title: Chachac, or rain ceremony, as practiced by the Maya of southern Yucatan and northern British Honduras.

2894. LeCount, Lisa J. 2001. Like water for chocolate: feasting and political ritual among the Late Classic Maya at Xunantunich, Belize. American Anthropologist 103(4):935953. Comparison of ceramic assemblages across civic and household contexts at Xunantunich demonstrates that drinking chocolate served as a symbolic cue that established the political significance of events among the Classic Maya. 2895. LeCount, Lisa J., Jason Yaeger, Richard M. Leventhal, and Wendy Ashmore. 2002. Dating the rise and fall of Xunantunich, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1):41-63. Authors reconstruct the political history of Xunantunich in the Upper Belize River valley. Based on excavations conducted between 1991 and 1997, results indicate that Xunantunich emerged as a regional center during the Samal (AD 600-670) and Hats’ Chaak (AD 670-780) phases of the Late Classic period. Xunantunich achieved political autonomy during the subsequent Tsak’ phase (AD 780-890) of the Terminal Late Classic period. Civic construction diminished and rural populations declined until the site collapsed during the late ninth or early tenth century.

Xpilha 2885. Merk, Stephen. 2003. Savanna Xpilha and Chuhe: Maya ruins in northern Campeche, Mexico. Mexicon 25(3):70-71. Xpostanil 2886. Prem, Hanns J. 2001. Monument from Xpostanil. Mexicon 23(3):54-55.

2896. Lentz, David L., Jason Yaeger, Cynthia Robin, and Wendy Ashmore. 2005. Pine, prestige and politics of the Late Classic Maya at Xunantunich, Belize. Antiquity 79(305):573585.

Xpuhil 2887. Hohmann, Hasso. 2003. Maya ruins of Kitam Xpuhil Sur, Campeche. Mexicon 25(3):69-70. 2888. Suárez Aguilar, Vicente, Albertina Ortega Palma, David Salaza Aguilar, and Eyden Navarro Martínez. 2007. Hallazgos arqueológicos y osteológicos a la Vera de la Carretera Escarcega-Xpuhil, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15(1): 103-118.

2897. Neff, L. Theodore. 2008. A Study of Agricultural Intensification: Ancient Maya Agricultural Terracing in the Xunantunich Hinterland, Belize, Central America. Doctoral dissertation, University of Pennsylvania. 529 leaves. 2899. Preziosi, Aimee M. 2003. Patterns of Style: The Ceramic Record and Community Differentiation, A Study from Xunantunich, Belize. Doctoral dissertation, University of California at Los Angeles. 284 leaves. Author attempts to evaluate the usefulness of ceramic material in differentiating ancient Maya communities. Research focuses on the patterns of choice or styles of ceramics between communities to differentiate the social groups. The choice of some vessel attributes over other, allowed community members to express the unique identity of their community. Individual communities responded to the fluctuating social landscape by emphasizing their unique attributes thus establishing and attesting to their place within society.

Xtampac 2889. Graña-Behrens, Daniel. 2004. Santa Rosa Xtampac, Campeche, y sus inscripciones Estudios de cultura maya 25:33-46. Xuch 2890. Isendahl, Christian. 2002. Common Knowledge: Lowland Maya Urban Farming at Xuch. Studies in Global Archaeology, 1. Uppsala: Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Uppsala University. 242 p. Investigations of architecture and pottery at Xuch, Campeche, provide a spatiochronological framework demonstrating the rapid growth of 172

ary 10-12, 2000. The writer discusses the monuments in Yaxchilán (in the Mexican state of Chiapas) attributed to the long reign of Shield Jaguar, king of the city. Of the many monuments attributed to the king, only four depict him in the act of capturing men by the convention of grabbing their hair: the three lintels of Structure 44 and Stela 15. These monuments incorporate the compositional field of the framed panel and the compositional mode of narrative asymmetry, the panel presenting the imagery and the narrative mode signaling that the imagery tells a story. With their monuments of civic and courtly sculpture, it seems that Shield Jaguar and his sculptors were seeking to produce visually striking differences between their monuments and the more traditional compositions for monumental sculpture.”

Yalbac 2900. Graebner, Sean M. 2002. Monumental Architecture and the Ancient Maya: The Royal Acropolis at Yalbac, Central Belize. M.A. thesis, New Mexico State University. 61 leaves. Yalahau 2901. Amador Berdugo, Fabio E. 2005. Ancient Pottery in the Yalahau Region: A Study of Ceramics and Chronology in Northern Quintana Roo, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, State University of New York at Buffalo. 447 leaves. 2902. Glover, Jeffrey B. 2006. The Yalahau Regional Settlement Pattern Survey: A Study of Ancient Maya Social Organization in Northern Quintana Roo, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 853 leaves.

2911. García Moll, Roberto. 2003. La arquitectura de Yaxchilán. México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. 379 p. See also Akira Kaneko, Artefacts líticos de Yaxchilán (México: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH), 2003. 271 p.).

2903. Mathews, Jennifer. 2001. Radiocarbon dating of architectural mortar: a case study in the Maya region, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Journal of Field Archaeology 28(4):395-400. The Yalahau Regional Human Ecology Project in northern Quintana Roo use charcoal inclusions within mortar or plaster is a useful way to date the construction of architecture, particularly when options for other chronometric methods are limited.

2912. Golden, Charles, Andrew Scherer, Rene A. Muñoz, and Rosaura Vásquez. 2008. Piedras Negras and Yaxchilán: divergent political trajectories in adjacent Maya polities. Latin American Antiquity 19(3): 249-274.

2904. Rissolo, Dominique A. 2001. Ancient Maya Cave Use in the Yalahau Region, Northern Quintana Roo, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 400 leaves.

2913. Herbert Pesquera, Luz de Lourdes. 2008. Preservación de una zona: Yaxchilán, Chiapas. México: CONACULTA: INAH. 251p. Examines architectural conservation and restoration endeavors at the Yaxchilán; features the following sections: “Relación de las intervenciones en el sitio”, “Análisis del estado de conservación de la zona” and “Propuesta de manejo integral de la zona”.

2905. Sorensen, Kathryn, Jeffrey B. Glover, and Scott L. Fedick. 2004. 2004. A volumetric assessment of ancient Maya architecture: a GIS approach to settlement patterns. In [Enter the Past]: The E-Way Into the Four Dimensions of Cultural Heritage; CAA 2003; Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology; Proceeds of the 31st Conference, Vienna, Austria, April 2003. pp. 308-311. British Archaeological Reports, International Series, 1227. Oxford, England: BAR Publishing.

2914. Iwaniszewski, Stanislaw, and Jesús Galindo Trejo. 2006. La orientación de la Estructura 33 de Yaxchilán: una reevaluación. Estudios de cultura maya 27:15-26. 2915. Josserand, J. Kathryn. 2007. The missing heir at Yaxchilán: literary analysis of a Maya historical puzzle. Latin American Antiquity 18(3):295-312.

2906. Wollwage, Lance. 2008. Looking into murky waters: A multiproxy study of human/environment interaction in the Yalahau region, Quintanna Roo, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Riverside. 148 leaves.

2916. Nahm, Werner. 2006. New readings on Hieroglyphic Stairway 1 of Yaxchilán. Mexicon 28(2):29-39.

Yarumela 2907. Aquiles Valladares, Omar. 2008. Yarumela: revalorizando un sitio arqueológico en el Valle de Comayagua. Yaxkin 24(3): 211-225.

2917. Robin, Cynthia. 2001. Kin and gender in Classic Maya society: a case study from Yaxchilán, Mexico. In New Directions in Anthropological Kinship. Linda Stone, ed. pp. 204-228. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield.

Yaxche Xlapek 2908. Benávides C., Antonio, and Stephan Merk. 2007. Tras las huellas de Maler en Chundsinab, Dzancab y YaxcheXlabpak. Mexicon 29(5):124-130.

2918. Vega Villalobos, María E. 2008. La composición dinástica de Yaxchilán durante el reinado de Yaxuun B’ahlam IV. Estudios de cultura maya 31: 17-44. Yaxhá 2919. Giswitz, Tom. 2002. Pioneers of the Bajo; Guatemala area which produced most of the food for the Mayas. Archaeology 55(1):28-36. Research at the Mayan site of Yaxhá to prove that the “bajo” wetlands held agricultural importance for the Mayan world and holds the key to its fall is discussed. Mayan farmers eventually caused a massive drought which robbed Mayans of the ability to feed themselves.

2909. Merk, Stephan. 2002. Two buildings at Yaxche Xlapak, Campeche, Mexico. Mexicon 24(2):23-24. Yaxchilán 2910. Clancy, Flora S. 2002. Shield Jaguar’s monuments. Res: Anthropology and Aesthetics 42:24-33. “Part of a special issue presenting papers delivered at the conference “West by Nonwest,” celebrating the 50th anniversary of pre-Colombian art history, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Janu173

2932. Vesilind, Priit J. 2003. Water graves of the Maya. National Geographic 204(4):82-101. “A source of life for the ancient Maya of the Yucatan lay in an underworld of cenotes, pools and cave rivers, many created after the impact of a meteorite 65 million years ago. Now, newly discovered skeletons yield evidence of funerary rites and human sacrifice.” German language translation: Priit J. Vesilind, Die Wassergräber der Maya (National Geographic Deutschland 2003 (4):122-141, 2003).

2920. Hermés, Bernard. 2004. Arte en material malacológico en la laguna Yaxhá, Guatemala. Arqueología mexicana 11(66):74-77. 2921. Mayer, Karl H. 2003. Two unpublished relief fragments from Yaxhá, Petén. Mexicon 25(6):145-146. 2922. Weller, Errin. 2006. Satellites, survey, and settlement: the Late Classic Maya utilization of bajos (seasonal swamps) at Tikal and Yaxhá, Guatemala. In In From Space to Place: 2nd International Conference on Remote Sensing in Archaeology: Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop, CNR, Rome, Italy, December 4-7, 2006. Stefano Campana and Maurizio Forte, eds. pp. 31-36. International Series,1568. Oxford, England: British Archaeological Reports.

Zacpeten 2933. Cecil, Leslie G., and Hector Neff. 2006. Postclassic Maya slips and paints and their relationship to socio-political groups in El Petén, Guatemala. Journal of Archaeological Science 33(10):1482-1491. 2934. Pugh, Timothy W. 2001. Architecture, Ritual, and Social Identity at Late Postclassic Zacpeten, Petén, Guatemala: Identification of the Kowoj. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. 659 leaves.

Yaxuna 2923. Ambrosino, James N. 2007. Warfare and Destruction in the Maya Lowlands: Pattern and Process in the Archaeological Record of Yaxuna, Yucatan, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Southern Methodist University, Department of Anthropology. 519 leaves.

2935. Pugh, Timothy W. 2003. The exemplary center of the Late Postclassic Kowoj Maya. Latin American Antiquity 14(4):408-430. Author argues that late Postclassic period temple assemblages at Mayapán in northern Yucatan and at Zacpeten in the Petén were microcosms of the Kowoj social and physical universe, and were replicated as the Kowoj recentered themselves in new lands.

2924. Hernández Alvarez, Hector, and Gustavo Novelo Rincon. 2007. Una visión diacrónica de la arquitectura doméstica de Yaxuna, Yucatan. Investigadores de la cultura maya 15 (1): 279-292. 2925. Shaw, Justine M., and Dave Johnstone. 2001. The Late Classic at Yaxuna, Yucatan, Mexico. Mexicon 23(1):10-14.

2936. Pugh, Timothy W. 2005. Activity areas, form, and social inequality in residences at late Postclassic Zacpeten, Petén, Guatemala. Journal of Field Archaeology 29(3-4):351-367.

2926. Stanton, Travis. 2000. Heterarchy, Hierarchy, and the Emergence of the Northern Lowland Maya: A Study of Complexity at Yaxuna, Yucatan, Mexico (400 BC-AD 600). Doctoral dissertation, Southern Methodist University. 2 v.

2937. Pugh, Timothy W. 2005. Caves and artificial caves in Late Postclassic Maya ceremonial groups. In Stone Houses and Earth Lords: Maya Religion in the Cave Context, edited by Keith M. Prufer and James E. Brady, pp. 47-69. Boulder: University Press of Colorado.

Yo’okop 2927. Normark, Johan. 2006. The Roads In-Between: Causeways and Polyagentive Networks at Ichmul and Yo’okop, Cochuah Region, Mexico. Doctoral dissertation, Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Göteborg University. 342 p.

2938. Pugh, Timothy W. 2009. Contagion and alterity: Kowoj Maya appropriations of European objects. American Anthropologist 111(3):373-386. 2939. Rice, Prudence M., and Don S. Rice, eds. 2009. The Kowoj Identity, Migration, and Geopolitics in Late Postclassic Petén, Guatemala. Boulder: University Press of Colorado. 458 p. Contents include: Prudence M. Rice, Introduction to the Postclassic-and-contact-period Kowoj (pp. 1-2); Prudence M. Rice, and Don S. Rice, Introduction to the Kowoj and their Petén neighbors (pp. 3-16); Prudence M. Rice, Who were the Kowoj? (pp. 17-20); Prudence M. Rice, The Kowoj in geopolitical-ritual perspective (pp. 21-54); Grant D. Jones, The Kowoj in ehtnohistorical perspective (pp. 55-69); Charles A. Hofling, The linguistic context of the Kowoj (pp. 70-80); Prudence M. Rice, The archaeology of the Kowoj: settlement and architecture at Zacpeten (pp. 81-84); Timothy W. Pugh, and Prudence M. Rice, Zacpeten and the Kowoj: field methods and chronologies (pp. 85-122); Prudence M. Rice, Don S. Rice, Timothy W. Pugh, Romulo Sánchez Polo, Defensive architecture and the context of warfare at Zacpeten (pp. 123140); Timothy W. Pugh, and Prudence M. Rice, Kowoj ritual performance and societal representations at Zacpeten (pp. 141-172); Timothy W. Pugh, Residential and domestic contexts at Zacpeten (pp. 173-191); Timothy W. Pugh, Prudence

Yotoch Xooc 2928. Ojeda Mas, Heber, Eyden Navarro Martínez, and Fernando Rocha Segura. 2006. Yotoch Xooc, un sitio del Périodo Clásico en la región de la Montaña, Campeche. Investigadores de la cultura maya 14(2): 481-490. Yucatan 2929. Andrews, Anthony P. 2001. Archaeological reconnaissance of northwest Yucatan, Mexico. Inquiry 4(1):89. See also Anthony P. Andrews, and Fernando Robles Castellanos, An archaeological survey of northwest Yucatan, Mexico (Mexicon 26(1):7-14. 2004. 2930. Götz, Christopher M. 2008. Verwendung von Wirbeltieren Durch die Maya des Nördlichen Tieflandes Während der Klassik und Postklassik (600-1500 n.Chr.). Rahden/Westf.: Verlag Marie Leidorf GmbH. 336 p. 2931. Ichon, Alain. 2002. El juego de pelota: nuevos hallazgos en el noroeste de Yucatan. Investigaciones de la cultura maya 10(2):278-284. 174

Rice, Leslie G. Cecil, Zacpeten group 719, the last noble residence (pp. 192-216); Prudence M. Rice, The archaeology of the Kowoj: Pottery and identity (pp. 217-220); Leslie G. Cecil, Technological styles of slipped pottery and Kowoj identity (pp. 221-237); Prudence M. Rice, and Leslie G. Cecil, The iconography and decorative programs of Kowoj pottery (pp. 238-275); Prudence M. Rice, Incense burners and other ritual ceramics (pp. 276-312); Prudence M. Rice, Additional perspectives on the Kowoj (pp. 313-316); David Stuart, The symbolism of Zacpeten Altar 1 (pp. 317-326);: Prudence M. Rice, and Leslie G. Cecil, Postclassic trade: Sources of obsidian at Zacpeten (pp. 327-339); William N. Duncan, The bioarchaeology of ritual violence at Zacpeten (pp. 340-367); Timothy W. Pugh, The Kowoj and the Lacandon: migrations and identities (pp. 368-384); Prudence M. Rice, Summary and conclusions: The Kowoj through a glass, darkly (pp. 385-395).

Zaculeu 2940. Aìguila Flores, Patricia del. 2007. Zaculeu: ciudad postclásica en las tierras altas Mayas de Guatemala. Guatemala: Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes Dirección General del Patrimonio Cultural y Natural. Zapote Bobal 2941. Breuil-Martínez, Véronique, Laura Gámez, James Fitzsimmons, Jean Paul Mètailie, Edy Barrios, and Edwin Román. 2004. Primeras noticias de Zapote Bobal, una ciudad maya clásica del noroccidente de Petén, Guatemala. Mayab 17:6183.

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7 NON-PRINT RESOURCES 2947. Cakchiquel Maya of San Antonio Palopo. University Park: Penn State Media Sales, 2008. DVD (52 min.). Documentary about the increasing encroachment of civilization on the Cakchiquel Maya who have lived on the shores of Lake Atitlan in Guatemala for centuries. The Cakchiquel Maya of San Antonio Palopo, Guatemala, prefer to avoid modern influences. This film shows how the Cakchiquel are adapting to the tourist industry and modernization of daily life.

DVD AND VHS 2942. Ancient Civilizations of Mexico: The Maya and the Aztec. Silver Spring, Md.: Discovery Education, 2006. DVD (20 min.). “Traces the history of the two most powerful aboriginal groups in the Americas, the Maya and the Aztecs. Students will learn about the many successes of Mayan civilization, which include advancements in agriculture, trade, mathematics, astronomy, and writing. Then they’ll examine Aztec life, including their focus on trade along with warfare and religion.”

2948. Chac. Harrington Park, NJ: Milestone Film & Video, 2001. VHS (95 min.). Based on ritual and legends from the Popol Vuh and Mayan stories, the film focuses on a small Tzeltal village during a terrible drought. Desperate for relief, thirteen men set out on a quest to save their people by seeking a solitary diviner who lives in the mountains and knows the ways of the ancients. Hoping that he can summon Chac, the rain god, the men follow the diviner who takes them on a strange journey that challenges their beliefs and even their sanity. English; In Tzeltal and Mayan dialects with English subtitles. Originally produced as a motion picture in 1974.

2943. The Ancient Maya: Tools of Astronomy. New York: A&E Home Video, 2006, 2009. DVD (50 min.). “Thousands of years before the Hubble telescope, the Ancient Maya were observing and recording details about the universe with a precision that continues to astound scientists today. In this exciting program, HISTORYTM travels to Mexico s Yucatan peninsula to get a firsthand look at the ancient world s most skilled astronomers: the Maya. With host Michael Guillen, visit the stunning site of Chichén Itzá, home to the giant pyramid of Kukulkan, which once functioned as an enormous solar observatory. Explore the remains of the round structure known as El Caracol, which looks remarkably like a modernday observatory, and learn how the Maya built it to track the astronomical cycle of Venus. Finally, discover how the Maya used the sun to lay out their various temples and observatories and examine their incredibly complex and accurate calendar system.”

2949. Children of Zapata. New York: Filmakers Library, 2000. DVD. Looks at the Zapatista National Liberation Army’s struggle to attain justice for the Maya Indians of Chiapas, who have been ruthlessly marginalized by the Mexican government and live in grinding poverty. A 1994 revolt by Zapatista guerrillas briefly succeeded in occupying four towns and focusing world attention on the abuses of power in Mexico.

2944. Between Light and Shadow: Maya Women in Transition. Berkeley, CA: Berkeley Media LLC, 1997, 2000. DVD (27 min.). Interviews with Mayan women artists who work to preserve Mayan culture, improve the lives of the Mayan people and promote a Maya presence in their community. Includes Mayan popular art in the form of woven textiles, embroidery and paintings.

2950. Cracking the Maya Code. Boston: WGBH Educational Foundation, 2008. DVD (54 min.). The ancient Maya civilization of Central America left behind an intricate and mysterious hieroglyphic script carved on monuments and painted on pottery and bark books. This program highlights the ingenious breakthroughs that cracked the code, unleashing a flood of dramatic new insights about the ancient civilization.

2945. Breaking the Maya Code. Los Angeles, CA: Night Fire Films, 2007. DVD (116 min.). The story of the 200-year struggle to unlock the secrets of the hieroglyphs. This amazing detective story is filled with false leads, rivalries and colliding personalities.

2951. Curanderos de los Mayas; Healers of the Maya. Mexico: Buena Vida Productions, 2007. DVD (28 min.). Documentary film about a Mayan community on the Yucatan peninsula, where healers use herbs and perform healing rites that have been passed down from generation to generation.

2946. Brujo; Shaman. Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources, 1977, 2005. DVD (55 min). Brujo is an exploration of shamanism and curing among the Mazatec Indians of Oaxaca, Mexico, and among two groups of Maya Indians in southern Mexico and Guatemala. The film is divided into three sequences. The first, filmed in Chichicastenango (Guatemala), shows Diego, a shaman, cure a woman on whom a spell has been cast. The cure takes place partly in a church and partly in the mountains, where a sacrificed chicken is used to bring back the ailing woman’s spirit. The second sequence moves to Oaxaca, where a Mazatec shaman, her husband, and her patient consume hallucinogenic mushrooms.

2952. Dawn of the Maya. Washington, DC: National Geographic Television and Film, 2003, 2005. DVD (60 min.). “Through breathtaking discoveries, archaeologists are uncovering the early years of the ancient Maya to reveal a dynamic, sophisticated culture that was flourishing before the time of Christ. The Preclassic Maya, once dismissed as primitive, created massive pyramids, elaborate art, early writing, and more. Join National Geographic’s ‘Dawn of the Maya’ as it investigates the rise of one of the world’s greatest and most mysterious civilizations.” 2953. Estructura derecho maya. Guatemala: Productora Comunicarte, 2001. VHS (14 min.). An introduction to the 176

2962. The Lacandon Maya. New York: Filmakers Library, 2007. DVD (47 min.). In 1960 Canadian explorer Collin Hanney discovered a group of Mayan Indians living in the jungle near Chiapas who had escaped the Spanish conquest and preserved a way of life for 400 years. This documentary features film Hanney shot at that time as well as a more recent visit to the Lacandon Maya by Hanney’s widow, Shendra, and examines their culture today and changes they have experienced since the 1960s.

philosophical basis and major concepts of Mayan law; Spanish language with English subtitles. 2954. Fall of the Aztec and Maya Empires. Chicago: Questar, 2002. VHS (65 min.). This video story not only traces the Spanish conquest of the Aztecs and Maya, but also follows the journeys, in 1839, of New York explorer John L. Stephens to these strange and wonderful cities. Using computer graphic reconstruction, animated maps, classic art, reenactment and beautiful on-location cinematography, the viewer sees Teotihuacan, Cholula, Monte Alban, Chichén Itzá, Tenochtitlan, Tikal, Copán, Uxmal, and Palenque as they might have looked 1000 years ago.

2963. The Living Maya. Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources, 1977, 2004. 4 DVDs (232 min.). Chronicles the everyday life of a present-day Mayan family as it tries to cope with modern society. Shows the stresses induced by the fact that farming is no longer the only male occupation available. Includes traditional rituals and actual conversations.

2955. Forging Peace in Guatemala. Princeton, NJ: Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 2002. VHS (53 min.). Presents portraits of three Mayan women and their efforts towards restoring peace after a 36-year civil war in Guatemala. Adela is a widow struggling to support her refugee family, Justina travels the countryside explaining the human rights movement, and Francesca, a Mayan priestess, reaffirms the cultural identity of her people.

2964. Lost Cities of the Maya. Wheeling, IL: Film Ideas, 2003. VHS (27 min.). In the 27-part series, Secrets of Archaeology, state of the art technology coupled with enhanced three dimensional graphics allow viewer to see the most celebrated and ancient sites as only the original inhabitants could. The addition of high end location photography and insights of some of the world’s leading archaeology experts enhance the reality. “Travel to the magnificent Mayan cities of Uxmal, Tulum, Chichén Itzá and the capital Palenque, with its great pyramid built by master mathematicians.”

2956. El futuro es nuestro, el presente es de lucha. Guatemala: Productora Comunicarte, 2003. VHS (35 min.). Documentary by the Comité de Unidad Campesino, of 25 years of struggle for land rights and a campaign to end human rights abuses; Spanish language with English subtitles.

2965. Lost Cities of the Maya. London: BBC; Sydney, NSW: SBS, 2003. VHS (48 min.). Investigation into the demise of the ancient Mayan civilization, why their cities were abandoned when apparently at height of power. Follows the expedition to sites in the Guatemalan jungle by an archaeologist and an epigrapher in search of answers to the unsolved mystery. Off-air recording of television program broadcast on August 16, 2003.

2957. Guatemala: The Mystery of the Maya. Tahoe City, CA: Cinergy Television, 2002. VHS (25 min.). 2958. La herencia Maya en Guatemala. Princeton, NJ: Films for the Humanities & Sciences, 2004. DVD (53 min.). “This timeless program examines the lives and lifestyles of the descendents of the ancient Mayans in present-day Guatemala. From the western mountains to the subtropical region, we explore the persistent Mayan influence on Guatemalan religion, festivals, crafts, and manufacturing. Several archaeological sites and ruins of Tikal are examined, and the regions of Selva Maya and Lake Atitlan are highlighted.

2966. Lost King of the Maya. Boston: WGBH Educational Foundation; South Burlington, VT: WGBH Boston Video, 2001. VHS (60 min.). “From 200 to 900 A.D., the dynasty of Blood Lords presided over the Maya city of Copán, conducting hallucinogenic vision quests, ritual warfare and human sacrifice. Today, a team of archaeologists and historians are piecing together a more complete look at the fascinating rise and fall of Copán civilization and Yax K’uk Mo’s pivotal role as founder. Originally broadcast on February 13, 2001 as part of the Nova television series.

2959. Huellas que no se borran; martires del 21 de junio. Guatemala: Productora Comunicarte, 2001. VHS (19 min.). Testimonials by family members and survivors comprise this documentary on the disappearance of 27 labor leaders of the Centro Nacional de Trabajadores in 1980; Spanish language with English subtitles.

2967. Martin Prechtel: Cline Library Talk. Flagstaff, AZ: Northern Arizona University Television Services, 2001. VHS (121 min.). Martin Prechtel talks about his life with the Tz’utujil Indians in Santiago Atitlan, cultural diversity, and his love of language, which comes from the indigenous soul and becomes the ancient eloquence that touches the heart. Recorded in the Cline Library Assembly Hall at Northern Arizona University on February 28, 2001.

2960. In Search of the Maya. Bethesda, MD: TLC, the Learning Channel, 1995, 2000. VHS (27 min.). Describes much about Maya civilization by examination of artifacts from a particular period of history. 2961. Knorosov: el desciframiento de la escritura maya; The Decipherment of the Mayan Script. Brooklyn: Icarus Films, 2000; Mexico: CONACULTA, 2007. DVD (57 min.). Documentary on Yuri V. Knorozov, who in 1952 while working at the Russian Institute of Ethnography discovered the key to the Mayan writing system. The film also includes work that Knorozov undertook in later years on the origin and migration of the Mayan people. Includes interviews with Knorozov and Michael Coe, author of Breaking the Maya Code.

2968. Maya. Sudwestrundfunk (Germany); Schlessinger Media; Wynnewood, PA: Schlessinger Media. 2005. VHS (50 min.). An overview of Mayan civilization, including the cities of Chichén Itzá, Tikal and Copán. 2969. Maya Heritage in Guatemala. Princeton, NJ: Films for the Humanities & Sciences, 2005. DVD (53 min.) “This timeless program examines the lives and lifestyles of the descen177

among the Maya Indians, the white landowners, and the conflicted mestiza class in the Chiapas region of Southern Mexico.

dents of the ancient Mayans in present-day Guatemala. From the western mountains to the subtropical region, we explore the persistent Mayan influence on Guatemalan religion, festivals, crafts, and manufacturing. Several archaeological sites and ruins of Tikal are examined, and the regions of Selva Maya and Lake Atitlan are highlighted.

2978. Palenque: Metropolis of the Maya. New York: A&E Home Video, 2009. DVD (50 min.). “The group uses evidence from recent excavations including the Mayans own sacred geometry, which underpins the city’s grand design state-of-the-art scientific studies, and fascinating archival documents to digitally reconstruct the metropolis, resulting in a stunningly beautiful and historically accurate vision of Palenque at its zenith.”

2970. Los Mayas de Guatemala. San Antonio, TX: Babbitt Instructional Resources, 2002. VHS (28 min.). Mayan life is studied at the ruins of Tikal, Uaxactun and Quirigua in Guatemala and Copán in Honduras. Gives an overview of the historical significance of the Mayas, the geography of Guatemala, and the Maya number system. Modern Mayan life is also depicted.

2979. La pasión de Chichupac. Guatemala: Ak’Kutan, 2004. VHS (55 min.). Documentary of the 1982 massacre of Mayans by army troops in Chichupac, Alta Verapaz. One of the victims has taken on a special aura of a religious martyr and his memory is celebrated in a passion ritual.

2971. Mexican Indian Civilizations: The Maya. Chicago: New Dimension Media, 2001. VHS (30 min.). The pyramids and monumental cities built by the Yucatan people rivaled those of Egypt. Yet beneath their splendor, problems were escalating that would destroy them. This program re-creates, through modern media, how it may have looked and prospered at this time.

2980. A Place Called Chiapas: A Film. New York: Zeitgeist Films, 2005. DVD (92 min.). In 1994 the Zapatista National Liberation Army, made up of impoverished Maya Indians, took over five towns and 500 ranches in southern Mexico. Fighting for indigenous Mexicans to regain control over their lives and the land, the Zapatista Army, led by Subcommandante Marcos, started sending their message to the world via the Internet. The result was what the New York Times called “the world’s first post-modern revolution.”

2972. El misterio de los Maya. Mexico: DVD Vision: Quality Films, 2001, 2003. DVD (38 min.). “In the depths of the forests of Mexico and Guatemala, and extending to the Yucatan peninsula, the legendary pyramids, temples and palaces of the Mayans lie.”

2981. Popol Vuh. Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources, 2007. DVD (10 min.). “This animated short from Chile tells the tale of creation based on Popol vuh: the ancient stories of the Quiché,’ written by the indigenous Maya Quiché people after the Spanish Conquest. The vibrant illustrations are taken from Mayan codices, paintings found on vessels, and stones carved with scenes from the Popol vuh between the years 300-900 A.D.

2973. Mystery of the Maya. Burbank, CA: SlingShot Entertainment. DVD (40 min.). Explores the culture, science, and history of the Mayans. Discusses their work with architecture, math, calendrics, writing systems, and buildings. 2974. Mystic Lands: Messages in Stone. Silver Spring, MD: Discovery Communications, Inc. 2005. VHS (26 min.) + 1 teacher’s guide. “Explore the mysterious cities of the Maya Tikal, Chichén Itzá, and Palenque to learn about the legends, history, and facts derived from the ‘rock records.’ See how Mayan religious beliefs explain the ritual of human sacrifice.”

2982. Popol Vuh: Sacred Book of the Quiché Maya. Berkeley, CA: Berkeley Media LLC, 1988, 2004. DVD video 1 videodisc (61 min.) Portrays the creation myth of the Quiché Maya of ancient Guatemala. Gives life to the mystic history and art of the Maya, using animated drawings taken directly from classic Maya pottery.

2975. A New Fire Lights Our Way. Guatemala: Productora Comunicarte, 2003. VHS (35 min.). Documentary on the problems of gender discrimination in society and the labor structure in the village of Santa Maria Tseja, Ixcán, Guatemala.

2983. Por los caminos de la justicia: 20 años de genocido en Guatemala (Huehuetenango, San Martin Jilotepeque, Rabinal Quiché). Guatemala: Productora Comunicarte, 2002. VHS (18 min.). Documentary on genocide in Guatemala since the beginning of government-sanctioned massacres under President Rios-Montt in 1982; Spanish language with English subtitles.

2976 Nimla ha ‘kok tijek’, q’usek’ sa’xyanqeb’ li yookeb’ chi’ k’iik; Comunicación entre generaciones. Guatemala: Caracol Producciones, 2008. DVD (29 min.). “Los ancianos y jóvenes de Nimla ha ‘kok han iniciado recientemente un proceso de recuperación y transmisión de la tradición oral maya q’eqchi’. Este documental muestra este esfuerzo de comunicación entre generaciones”

2984 Proyecto videoastas indígenas de la frontera sur. México, D.F.: CIESAS; San Cristobal de Las Casas: UNICACH, Centro de Estudios Superiores de Mexico y Centroamérica; Zürich: Xenix Film, 2007. 12 videos on 3 DVDs (293 min.). “The objective of the project is the development of a collaborative decolonized anthropology that permits intercultural dialogue and self-representation of indigenous groups in Chiapas and along the southern border of Mexico. The project began in 2000 that allowed the “videoastas populares” (popular video artists) to promote new forms of self-representation.”

2977. Oficio de tinieblas. Mexico, D.F.: Zima Entertainment, 1981, 2008. DVD (108 min.). “Hay una mujer que conoce, mejor que nadie, este ‘oficio de tinieblas.’ Una historia que envuelve la visión de las antiguas creencias indígenas en contraste con la religión católica. En este universo onírico, los indígenas, hartos de que un cacique les mal pague por trabajar, se sienten favorecidos por el ‘supuesto’ apoyo del gobierno y deciden apoyarse en sus creencias que en el mundo capitalista del hombre trabajador.... This film explores the struggle 178

2993. Who killed the Maya? The Vanished Civilization. New York: International Masters Publishers, 2007, 2008. DVD (50 min). “The Maya were an advanced and powerful people who dominated Central America for over 700 years. Then, around 900 AD, it disappeared within a century. Experts travel deep into the Guatemalan jungle to try and solve the puzzle of what happened to this powerful civilization.”

2985. El Rescate de la cultura maya y la lucha por la tierra es la lucha por vida y la paz: 10 años de lucha y resistencia CONIC. Guatemala: Productura Comunicarte, 2003. VHS (25 min.). Documentary on the struggle of an indigenous organization to recover or establish land rights; Spanish language with English subtitles 2986. Rigoberta Menchu: Cassandra and Crusader. Princeton, N.J.: Films for the Humanities & Sciences, 2002. VHS (28 min.) In Spanish with English subtitles. An interview with Rigoberta Menchu, an Indian rights advocate from Guatemala. Topics discussed include her life at home and in exile, her autobiographical book, and her associations with political organizations.

2994. Xiao shi de Maya; Mystery of the Maya. Burbank, CA: SlingShot Entertainment; Taibei Shi: [Zong dai li] Wan tong ying yin ke ji gu fen you xian gong si, 2001. DVD (40 min.). Explores the culture, science, and history of the Mayans. Discusses their work with architecture, math, calendrics, writing systems, and buildings; in Chinese. 2995. Yucatán, Belize and Guatemala: La Ruta Maya. Los Angeles, CA: Pilot Productions, 2002. VHS (50 min.). Visit the Mayan ruins, swim with dolphins, scale an active volcano and join the Easter celebrations in Antigua.

2987. Sastun. Watertown, MA: Documentary Educational Resources, 2002. VHS tape (20 min.). Sastun tells the story of American herbalist Rosita Arvigo, whose quest to explore the healing powers of plants led her to the rain forest of Belize where she befriended one of the last remaining Maya shamans, Don Elijio Panti.

MACHINE READABLE DATA 2996. Enciclopedía Electrónica Mesoaméricana; Digital Mesoamerican Encyclopedia. México: Fundación Cultural Armella Spitalier, 2005-2007. 36 CD-ROM + 36 printed guides. “The Armella Spitalier Cultural Foundation houses a collection of 3600 pre-Hispanic vessels and objects from the Mesoamerican area ... rescued and restored to be used for educational, research and cultural purpose s ... Previously, the Foundation presented live exhibitions; today, it publishes the Mesoamerican Electronic Encyclopedia, which makes use of multimedia and interactivity to allow users the opportunity of entering a … series of virtual thematic exhibitions.” Contents include: v. 1(1): Documents on clay; 1(2): Formative fragments; 1(3): Ancient Itzocan: Mesoamerican testimonies; 1(4): Ancient Itzocan: the collapse; 1(5) Mezcala and granular; 1(6): Design in Precolombian art: exhibition at the Palacio de Mineria; 2(7): Chupicuaro: style and tradition; Chupicuaro: style et tradition; 2(8): Great miniatures; 2(9): Aztecs; 2(10): Olmecan icons; 2(11): Goddesses and mortals; 2(12): Clay and songs; 3(13): Teotihuacan: ascent to power; 3(14); Teotihuacan: the end of an era; 3(15): Restoring the collection; 3(16): Ancient offerings; 3(17): Cacaxtla; 3(18): Tlatilco, the place of hidden things; 4(19): Tlaloc, the one who makes rain fall; 4(20): Garments in Mexico; 4(21): Human face in mesoamerica; 4(22): Stone creations; Creations en pierre; Steinkreationen; 4(23): The Mayans through their art; 4(24): Totonacapan; 5(25): Pre-hispanic glyphs: the language of ideas; 5(26): Mixtecos: people of the rain; 5(27): Monte Alban: at the top of the sacred mountain; 5(28): Postclassic period in Mesoamerica and the nine power nucleuses; 5(29): Xochicalco; 5(30): Mesoamerican fauna; 6(31): Ballgame in Mesoamerica; 6(32): Western Mexico; 6(33): Cholula; 6(34): Veracruz: an approach to its archaeological ceramics; 6(35): Pre-hispanic gastronomy in Mexico; 6(36): Tula.

2989. Silver Cities of Yucatan: the Mason-Spinden Expedition. New York Times Company. Washington, DC: Bob Connelly. 2002. VHS (39 min.). Documents the expedition to the Cozumel Island area in the 1920’s to search for lost Mayan cities, identify rare birds, and re-map the eastern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula. Based on the reports Gregory Mason sent back to the New York Times, his subsequent book, and on additional material from the McClurg Archives and family. Includes pertinent headlines from the New York Times. 2990. Simply Belize: A Cultural Diary: 2. Mopan Maya. Belize City: Video Unit, Ministry of Culture, Government of Belize, 2002. VHS (23 min.). Examines the traditions of the Mopan Maya of southern Belize. Visits the Toledo District for lessons in dress and embroidery making; explores questions of identity and cultural myths, and the story behind the San Luis Rey of San Antonio. 2991. Time Life’s Lost Civilizations: 3. Maya, Inca. Alexandria, VA: Time-Life Video and Television, 1995, 2002. 4 DVDs (100 min.). “Maya: As Europe suffered through the Dark Ages, the culture of the Maya of Central America was reaching its apex. The classical Maya possessed a complicated writing system, mathematics for complex astrological calculations, still accurate today, and cities of stone set like jewels in the jungle. Life in the majestic temples, broad plazas, painted ball courts, and palaces revolved around the king--who was divine, infallible, and expected to pay for the success of his people with his blood.” 2992. El universo maya. México: RTC, Secretaría de Gobernación, 2008. 10 DVDs. Ten volume documentary DVD set, in Spanish and English, exploring 37 archaeological landmarks in Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras. Contents include: 1. Chichén Itzá, Yucatán, México; 2. Uxmal, Yucatán, México; 3. Palenque, Chiapas, México; 4. Yaxchilan, Chiapas, México; 5. Tonina, Chiapas, México; 6. Tulum, Quintana Roo, México; 7. Tikal, Guatemala, América Central; 8. Copán, Honduras, América Central; 9. Edzna, Campeche, México; 10. Frederick Catherwood, ilustrador inglés, 1799-1854.

2997. GeoKit Middle and South America. Washington, DC: National Geographic, 2002. CD-ROM, 2 binders of color overhead transparencies, 2 videocassettes, 1 map, 1 teacher’s guide. A visual library of images illustrating the civilizations that flourished in Middle and South America before Europeans arrived. Covers the Olmecs, Zapotecs, Maya, Aztecs, Nazca, Mochica, Chimu, and Incas. Contents: CDROM entitled: NGS PictureShow: Middle and South America. Macintosh and Windows v. 5.0; Transparency binder 1 179

capable of handling thousands of colors (millions is preferred); monitor resolution of at least 800 x 600 (1024 x 760 preferred); CD-ROM drive.

entitled: NGS picture pack: Ancient civilizations of Middle America; Transparency binder 2 entitled: NGS picture pack: Ancient civilizations of South America; Video 1 entitled: Lost empire of Tiwanaku; Video 2 entitled: The Maya way of death, and, Mystery of the Maya; Map entitled: Ancient Mesoamerica. 1997. System Info: Macintosh system requirements: System vers. 7.1.1 or higher, PowerPC-based Mac OS computer with at least 16 MB of RAM, monitor capable of 640 x 480 pixels with at least 256 colors (16 bit recommended), printer (optional), 4x CD-ROM drive (minimum); Windows system requirements: Multimedia PC with at least 16 MB of RAM and a Pentium microprocessor, Windows 95 or later, DirectX version 3.0 or later is recommended, monitor with at least 256 colors, printer (optional), 4x CDROM drive (minimum).

INTERNET RESOURCES The Internet is a linked series of worldwide electronic networks that provides an increasing wealth of information on every subject imaginable. In addition to providing access to a variety of information resources, the Internet serves as an important medium through which individuals may communicate with each other and exchange data. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of websites and other internet resources concerned with the ancient and modern Maya. Unfortunately these sites appear and disappear with great frequency. Listed here are only a few of the web resources considered by the author to be especially useful.

2998. Legislación indígena vigente en Guatemala. Guatemala: Centro de Documentación e Investigación Maya; Guatemala: Comision Presidencial contra la Discriminación y el Racismo contra los Pueblos Indígenas en Guatemala, 2006. CD-ROM. “Una iniciativa técnica y jurídica de interés prioritario que CEDIM pone a disposición de operadores de justicia, profesionales, estudiantes y dirigentes sociales”; “Proyecto Sistema de Apoyo Estratégico de la Presidencia/Vicepresidencia de la República de Guatemala; CODISRA, Comision Presidencial contra la Discriminación y el Racismo contra los Pueblos Indigenas en Guatemala”; Contains: t. 1. Tratados y convenios inter-nacionales y normativas nacionales; t. 2. Acuerdos gubernativos, ministeriales y otros.

The internet addresses for the resources given here were accurate when this listing was compiled. It is possible that some have changed or ceased in the intervening time. 3003. Fraguas, Alfonso. 2001. Direcciones de interés en Internet: presencia maya en la red. Mayab 14:90-95. General Sites 3004. Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc. (FAMSI). Crystal River, FL. http://www. famsi.org/

2999. Memoria Lacandona Apología de un Pueblo Maya. Mexico: Asociación Cultural Na Bolom: El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, 2000. CD-ROM.

The Foundation (FAMSI) was created in 1993 to foster increased understanding of ancient Mesoamerican cultures. The Foundation aims to assist and promote qualified scholars who might otherwise be unable to undertake or complete their programs of research and synthesis in the disciplines of anthropology, archaeology, art history, epigraphy, ethnography, ethnohistory, linguistics, and related fields. The Foundation supports several interrelated departments.

3000. Mesolore: Exploring Mesoamerican Culture. Wilmington, DE: Brown University; Scholarly Resources, 2001. CD-ROM. “An interactive. Cross-disciplinary introduction to current North American and European scholarship- on Mesoamerica and Native American issues.” Includes Primary sources, Atlas, Lectures, Mentors, Debates, Library, Glossary, and Search index. System requirements: Quicktime 4.0; 133 MHz or faster, 32 MB RAM; Macintosh; OS 8.1 or newer, PowerMac; Windows: Windows 95 or 98, Pentium.

The Granting Department ceased in 2007. When active it provided funds on an annual basis to support research projects that promised to make significant contributions to the understanding of ancient Mesoamerican cultures. The FAMSI website still includes a list of grants requested and funded to date. The Foundation required Interim and Final Reports that document grantee research projects, copies of which are posted to the website. These reports must be written for comprehension by both specialists and an educated audience interested in Mesoamerican topics. Final reports, in Spanish and English, are accessible by author’s name, site or region, year funded, or through links included on a map of Mesoamerica. The Foundation sponsors conferences that encourage interdisciplinary and cross-cultural interaction in an atmosphere of academic integrity and intellectual freedom while contributing to the advancement of Mesoamerican studies. The results of these conferences are also accessible on the WWW.

3001. Popul Vuh: Sacred Book of the Ancient Maya. Provo, Utah: Center for the Preservation of Ancient Religious Texts, Brigham Young University, 2007. CD-ROM + 1 booklet (9 p.). Provides the user with a fully-searchable electronic tool, including high-resolution scans of the oldest known manuscript of the Popol Vuh text, to study the ancient Maya culture from the highlands of Guatemala. Contains images of the Newberry Library Popol Vuh manuscript (Ayer Ms 1515); introductory essays on the text’s origin, history, authorship, and poetics; the original sixteenth-century text and modern Maya orthographies; English and Spanish translations with extensive notes and commentary. 3002. Pre-Columbian Arch. Worcester, MA: Davis Digital Images, 2002. CD-ROM. Thirty-two images of Chichén Itzá, Mexico with Microsoft Excel spreadsheet listing images. System requirements: Windows, Macintosh, or Linux computer; minimum 32 MB RAM; web browser (Netscape 3.0+, Internet Explorer 3.0+); Adobe Acrobat Reader (Version 3.0+); software to read Microsoft Excel files; video card

The Research Department provides access to a variety of unique and important Internet resources. The Department also houses a Mesoamerican library that includes over 2,600 volumes donated by Michael D. Coe.

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Bibliografía Mesoaméricana. Ignacio Bernal’s “Bibliografía de Arqueologia e Etnografia” (1962) lists some 15,000 entries covering the period AD 1514-1960. While thousands of items have been published since then, there has not been a corresponding increase in the quality of bibliographic control over this literature. Bibliografía Mesoaméricana provides pertinent information of the published literature pertaining to most aspects of the ancient cultures of Mesoamerica. The Bibliografía Mesoaméricana is an ongoing and joint project of FAMSI, and the Museum Library of the University of Pennsylvania.

provides active features, such as hyperlinks to available homepages and e-mail addresses.

Graz Codices. Through the courtesy of Akademische Druck u. Verlagsanstalt, Graz, Austria, FAMSI provides access to their definitive facsimiles of the ancient accordion fold books created hundreds of years ago by Aztec, Maya and Mixtec scribes.

Piedras Negras Online. A photographic archive of the Piedras Negras Project, 1997-2000 by Stephen Houston, Hector Escobedo, Zachary Hruby, and Jessica Skousen. This project excavated at Piedras Negras, Guatemala, over a span of four seasons, from 1997 to 2000. “Our objective as archaeologists has been to collect and share evidence.

Mesoamerican Language Texts Digitization Project. The Mesoamerican Language Texts Digitization Project developed from a desire to make available to scholars, students, and enthusiasts world-wide, a selection of primary documents pertaining to the ethnohistory and linguistics of the indigenous populations of Mexico and northern Central America. This is a collaborative arrangement between FAMSI and the Libraries of the University of Pennsylvania.

John Montgomery Drawing Collection. This database of John Montgomery’s drawings is designed to allow scholars to study the sculpture and glyphic inscriptions in clear, linear drawings, while retaining the sensibility of the prehispanic Maya artists. The drawings are primarily of Maya sculpture and objects from the ancient sites of Bonampak, Palenque, Piedras Negras, Seibal, and Tikal, among others. Informative captions accompany each image.

Tikal Digital Access Project. During the fifteen years (19561970) that the University of Pennsylvania Museum (UPM) carried out archaeological investigations at the ancient Maya city of Tikal, Guatemala, professional photographers and researchers created over 60,000 photographic images. A great many of these images recorded primary data about the Maya past during architectural restoration, excavation, survey, and laboratory work.

John Pohl’s Mesoamerica. When Mexican historian Paul Kirchhoff first introduced the term “Mesoamérica,” he defined it as a cultural zone where the indigenous inhabitants spoke as many as sixty different languages, but were united by a common history and shared a specific set of cultural traits that made their civilization unique in the world. Pohl, an authority on American Indian civilizations, has put together a primer of Mesoamerican History.

3005. Mesoweb. Excellent website, mainly concentrating on the ancient Maya, but with some contemporary content, is maintained by Charles Golden, Stanley Guenter, Rodrigo Liendo Stuardo, Leonardo López Luján, Jorge Pérez de Lara, William Saturno, Joel Skidmore, and Marc Zender, with photographs by Mark Van Stone and Merle Greene Robertson. A large collection of articles and resources on Mesoamerica and its cultures, primarily Maya, Aztec and Olmec. Includes an illustrated encyclopedia of Mesoamerica. http://www.mesoweb.com.

Kerr Maya Vase Collection. The Maya Vase Database is a photographic archive created by Justin Kerr, who devised a method of peripheral photography to create rollout photographs of circular vessels.

Mesoweb is devoted to the ancient cultures of Mexico and adjacent Central America, including the Olmec, Zapotec, Mixtec, Teotihuacan, Toltec, Aztec, and Maya (reserving the word Mayan for the language and the word Maya for the people and their culture). This is, of course a huge area for any one website to cover, and so we have chosen to specialize in the Maya and, more particularly, Maya history, viewing it through the lens of archaeology and the related disciplines and the written records left by the Maya themselves.

Kerr PreColumbian Portfolio. The PreColumbian Portfolio is an easily searchable database of photographs. It can be searched by selecting an item from a menu or by typing a word. Material is added frequently and spans a myriad of prehispanic cultures. The Portfolio provides an opportunity to see images of sites, sculpture and ceramics other than vases. Linda Schele Drawing Collection. The Schele Drawing Collection consists of about 1,000 drawings of Mesoamerican monuments, buildings, objects, and hieroglyphic texts, with an emphasis on ancient Maya objects from Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala, and Belize. To date approximately 500 of Linda Schele’s drawings have been catalogued with brief descriptions; more groups of images and textual data will be added during the year. These drawings are available to the public free of charge, with restrictions for commercial use and publication.

Articles Aldana, G., K’in in the Hieroglyphic Record. Bassie, K., Corn Deities and the Male/Female Complementary Principle. Bassie, K., Maya Creator Gods. Bassie, K., J. Pérez de Lara, and M. Zender. The Cave of Jolja’. Bassie-Sweet, K., J. Miller, and A. Morales, Don Juan Mountain and the Road to Palenque. Beliaev, D., and R. Tunesi, A Possible Full Form of the Syllable. Biro, P., Sak Tz’i’ in the Classic Period Hieroglyphic Inscriptions. Biro, P., The Inscriptions on Two Lintels of Ikil and the Realm of Ek’ B’ahlam,.

Maya Museum Database. An online resource, the Maya Museum Database gives students, scholars, and anyone interested in Maya art a good starting point for their research. Along with a list of Maya collections, the database also 181

Hruby, Z. X., and J. S. Robertson, Evidence for Language Change in Ancient Maya Writing: A Case Study of the Verb Tzutz. Kistler, S. A., The Search for Five-Flower Mountain: ReEvaluating the Cancuen Panel. Kowalski, J. K., The Mythological Identity of the Figure on the La Esperanza (“Chinkultic”) Ball Court Marker. Krochock, R., Hieroglyphic Inscriptions at Chichén Itzá, Yucatan, Mexico: The Temples of the Initial Series, the One Lintel, the Three Lintels, and the Four Lintels. Lacadena, D., Regional Scribal Traditions: Methodological Implications for the Decipherment of Nahuatl Writing. Lopes, L., A Probable Reference to Na-”Gourd” Chan Ahk on Naranjo Stela 15. Lopes, L., A Reading for the “STINGER” Glyph. Lopes, L., On the Text and Iconography of a Vessel in the Popol Vuh Museum. Lopes, L., Some Notes on Fireflies. Lopes, L., The Water-Band Glyph. Love, B., Glyph T93 and Maya “Hand-scattering” Events. Love, B., The Hieroglyphic Lintels of Yula, Yucatan, Mexico. Martin, S., A Broken Sky: The Ancient Name of Yaxchilan as Pa’ Chan. Martin, S., and N. Grube, Evidence for Macro-Political Organization Amongst Classic Maya Lowland States. Martin, S., Caracol Altar 21 Revisited. Martin, S., Of Snakes and Bats: Shifting Identities at Calakmul. Martin, S., The Queen of Middle Classic Tikal. Martin, S., Unmasking “Double Bird”, Ruler of Tikal. Martin, S., Wives and Daughters on the Dallas Altar. Mathews, P., The Dates of Tonina and a Dark Horse in its History. Mora-Marin, D., The Syllabic Value of Sign T77 as k’i, by David Mora-Marin Orejel, J. L., The “Axe/Comb” Glyph as ch’ak, by Jorge L. Orejel Pendergast, D. M., Lamanai Stela 9: The Archaeological Context. Pérez de Lara, J., A Glimpse Into the Watery Underworld. Pérez de Lara, J., A Study of the Gestures on the Palenque Temple XIX Bench. Pérez de Lara, J., A Tour and History of Acanceh. Pérez de Lara, J., A Tour and History of Chichén Itzá. Pérez de Lara, J., A Tour and History of Copán. Pérez de Lara, J., A Tour and History of Edzna. Pérez de Lara, J., A Tour and History of Tikal. Pérez de Lara, J., A Tour and History of Uxmal. Reents-Budet, D., The Iconography of Lamanai Stela 9. Ringle, W. M., Of Mice and Monkeys: The Value and Meaning of T1016, the God C Hieroglyph. Robertson, J. S., From Common Cholan-Tzeltalan to Classical Ch’olti’: The Identification of the Language of Mayan Hieroglyphs. Sachse, Frauke, and Allen Christenson, Tulan and the Other Side of the Sea Skidmore, J., Life and Death in Ancient Mexico. Skidmore, J., Recent Findings in Maya History: Teotihuacan and Tikal, the Founder of Copán, the Captor of a Palenque King. Skidmore, J., Recent Finds in Ek Balam. Skidmore, J., The Old Chichen Rubbings Project. Stuart, D., A Cosmological Throne at Palenque. Stuart, D., A New Carved Panel from the Palenque Area.

Boot, E., An Annotated Overview of “Tikal Dancer” Plates. Boot, E., An Overview of Classic Maya Ceramics Containing Sequences of Day Signs. Boot, E., An Oxkintok Region Vessel: An Analysis of the Hieroglyphic Texts. Boot, E., Early Maya Writing on an Unprovenanced Monument: The Antwerp Museum Stela. Boot, E., Left- and Right-Handedness in Classic Maya Writing-Painting Contexts. Boot, E., Long-Lipped Corner Masks as the Animated “Hill, Mountain”. Boot, E., Performance and Competence of a Late Classic Maya Master Scribe. Boot, E., Portraits of Four Kings of the Early Classic? Boot, E., The Dos Pilas-Tikal Wars from the Perspective of Dos Pilas Hieroglyphic Stairway 4. Boot, E., The Human Hand in Classic Maya Hieroglyphic Writing. Boot, E., The Life and Times of B’alah Chan K’awil of Mutal (Dos Pilas), According to Dos Pilas Hieroglyphic Stairway 2. Chase, A. F., N. Grube, and D. Z. Chase, Three Terminal Classic Monuments from Caracol, Belize. Christenson, A., Weaving the Fabric of the Cosmos. Ciaramella, M. A., The Weavers in the Codices. Closs, M. P., I Am a kahal; My Parents Were Scribes. Closs, M. P., The Hieroglyphic Text of Stela 9, Lamanai, Belize. Coe, M. D., The Royal Fifth: Earliest Notices of Maya Writing. Davletshin, A., Glyph for Stingray Spine. Fahsen, F., A New Early Classic Text from Tikal. Freidel, D., The Jim Merrett Archive - vintage photos of Yaxchilan, Tikal and Palenque. Frumker, B., Night Errant: A Look at Wayward Lords of the Night. Graña-Behrens, D., Some Remarks on Chichén Itzá Stela 2. Grube, N., Notes on the Reading of Affix T142. Grube, N., and D. Stuart, Observations on T110 as the Syllable ko. Grube, N., and W. Nahm, A Sign for the Syllable mi. Grube, N., B. MacLeod, and P. Wanyerka, A Commentary on the Hieroglyphic Inscriptions Of Nimli Punit, Belize. Guenter, S., A Reading of the Cancuen Looted Panel. Guenter, S., The Inscriptions of Dos Pilas Associated with B’ajlaj Chan K’awiil. Guenter, S., The Tomb of K’inich Janaab Pakal: The Temple of the Inscriptions at Palenque. Hammond, N., S. Howarth, and R. R. Wilk, The Discovery, Exploration, and Monuments of Nim Li Punit, Belize. (addendum) Hansen, R. D., An Early Maya Text from El Mirador, Guatemala. Housley, G., and R. A. Housley, A Maya Wooden Figure from Belize. Houston, S. D., and D. Stuart, The Way Glyph: Evidence for “Co-essences” among the Classic Maya. Houston, S. D., and P. Amaroli, The Lake Güija Plaque. Houston, S. D., Hurricane! Houston, S. D., J. Robertson, and D. Stuart, Quality and Quantity in Glyphic Nouns and Adjectives. Houston, S. D., Problematic Emblem Glyphs: Examples from Altar de Sacrificios, El Chorro, Rio Azul, and Xultun. 182

Winfield Capitaine, F., La Estela 1 de La Mojarra, Veracruz, Mexico. Wren, L., P. Schmidt, and R. Krochock, The Great Ballcourt Stone of Chichén Itzá. Zender, M., A Concordance of the Palenque Temple 18 Stucco Glyphs. Zender, M., Citation and Referencing Strategies. Zender, M., ‘Flaming Ak’bal’ and the Glyphic Representation of the aj- Agentive Prefix. Zender, M., Glyphs for “Handspan” and “Strike” in Classic Maya Ballgame Texts. Zender, M., One Hundred and Fifty Years of Nahuatl Decipherment. Zender, M., Sport, Spectacle and Political Theater: New Views of the Classic Maya Ballgame. Zender, M., The Raccoon Glyph in Classic Maya Writing.

Stuart, D., A New Child-Father Relationship Glyph. Stuart, D., A New Variant of the chak Sign. Stuart, D., A Possible Logogram for TZ’AP. Stuart, D., and A. Morales, Chinikiha: The Modern Threat to an Ancient Maya Kingdom. Stuart, D., and N. Grube, A New Inscription from Nim Li Punit, Belize. Stuart, D., Copán’s Last Saklaktuun. Stuart, D., Earthquake! Stuart, D., Glyphs for “Right” and “Left”? Stuart, D., Longer Live the King: The Questionable Demise of K’inich K’an Joy Chitam of Palenque. Stuart, D., New Year Records in Classic Maya Inscriptions. Stuart, D., Notes on Accession Dates in the Inscriptions of Coba. Stuart, D., On the Paired Variants of TZ’AK. Stuart, D., Ritual and History in a Stucco Inscription from Temple XIX at Palenque. Stuart, D., Ten Phonetic Syllables. Stuart, D., The Entering of the Day: An Unusual Date from Northern Campeche. Stuart, D., The Inscribed Markers of the Coba-Yaxuna Causeway and the Glyph for Sakbih. Stuart, D., The Paw Stone: The Place Name of Piedras Negras, Guatemala. Stuart, David, A Reading of the “Completion Hand” as TZUTZ. Stuart, David, An Unusual Calendar Cycle at Tonina. Stuart, David, Spreading Wings: A Possible Origin of the k’i Syllable. Stuart, David, The Yaxha Emblem Glyph as Yax-ha. Stuart, G. E., An Inscribed Shell Drinking Vessel from the Maya Lowlands. Stuart, G. E., The Beginning of Maya Hieroglyphic Study. Stuart, G. E., The Hieroglyphic Record of Chichén Itzá and its Neighbors. Stuart, G., Glyph Drawings from Landa’s Relación : A Caveat to the Investigator. Taube, K., A Representation of the Principal Bird Deity in the Paris Codex. Taube, K., and B. Bade, An Appearance of Xiuhtecuhtli in the Dresden Venus Pages. Taube, K., Itzam Cab Ain: Caimans, Cosmology, and Calendrics in Postclassic Yucatan. Taube, K., The Writing System of Ancient Teotihuacan. Teasing the Turtle from its Shell: AHK and MAHK in Maya Writing. Tiesler Blos, V., Cranial Surgery in Ancient Mesoamerica. Tiesler Blos, V., Head Shaping and Dental Decoration Among the Ancient Maya. Tokovinine, A., A Classic Maya Term for Public Performance. Tokovinine, A., Divine Patrons of the Maya Ballgame. Tunesi, R., and L. Lopes, A New Plate Naming a K’uhul Mutu’l Ajaw. Velásquez Garcia, E., The Captives of Dzibanche. Velásquez Garcia, E., The Maya Flood Myth and the Decapitation of the Cosmic Caiman. Villela, K. D., Morley Hires Tatiana Proskouriakoff. Illustrated with rare preliminary versions of Proskouriakoff’s drawings Wichmann, S., A Mixe-Zoquean Loanword in the Late Preclassic Murals of San Bartolo?

Informés or Progress Reports Chinikiha Segundo Informé Parcial, Proyecto Arqueológico Chinikiha, Temporada 2008 El Peru-Waka Ceramic Studies from El Peru-Waka’ 2004, 2005 Excavations in the Grupo Chok, El Peru-Waka’ 2007 Excavations in the Tolok Group, El Peru-Waka’ 2006 Excavations in the Tolok Group, El Peru-Waka’: Addendum 2007 Operation WK-08, El Peru-Waka’ 2003, 2004 Operation WK-11, El Peru-Waka’ 2005, 2006 Proyecto Arqueológico El Peru-Waka’: Informé No. 4, Temporada 2006 Proyecto Arqueológico El Peru-Waka’: Informé No. 5, Temporada 2007 Proyecto Arqueológico El Peru-Waka’: Informé No.1, Temporada 2003 Proyecto Arqueológico El Peru-Waka’: Informé No.2, Temporada 2004 Proyecto Arqueológico El Peru-Waka’: Informé No.3, Temporada 2005 La Corona Proyecto Arqueológico La Corona: Informé Final, Temporada 2008 Motul de San José Proyecto Arqueológico Periferia Motul de San José: Informé final, temporada de campo 2008 Mesoweb Resources Databases Mesoweb-PARI Photo Database Rubbings of Maya Sculpture Publications A Classic Maya-English/English-Classic Maya Vocabulary of Hieroglyphic Readings Introduction to Maya Hieroglyphs Monuments Cancuen Panel 3 Cancuen Ballcourt Markers Piedras Negras Panel 3 Two Stelae from Dos Caobas 183

Dos Pilas Hieroglyhic Stairway 2 Olmec-Style Effigies from Zazacatla

Frontera Corozal A Must-See on the Way to Yaxchilan (5/05) In Memoriam Enrique Nalda (4/10) J. Kathryn Josserand (7/06) Pierre Robert Colas (9/08) Izapa Considerations and Alternative Proposal for the Encroachment On the Archaeological Site of the TapachulaTalisman Highway (5/07) Jade Blue Jade Fever (2/04) La Corona La Corona Find Sheds Light on Site Q Mystery (9/05) New Find at La Corona (9/05) Archaeology Interview with Stanley Guenter Looting Archaeologists Call For Responsible Museum Acquisitions Policies (press release: 2/06) Looting in Guatemala (newspaper article: 7/01) Mirador Basin Mirador Basin News (10/04) U.S. and Guatemala Agree to Protect El Mirador (9/06) Museums Treasures of Sacred Maya Kings (6/06) Naranjo Looting at Naranjo (news report: 12/03) Naranjo on the Endangered List (11/05) Olmec The Cascajal Block: The Earliest Precolumbian Writing Evidence for Olmec writing? (1/03) Olmec Discovery at Zazacatla (2/07) Vandalism to Olmec Monuments in Villahermosa (1/09) Palenque Advanced Age Confirmed for Pakal of Palenque (8/03) Major Find in Temple XXI (10/03) Recent discoveries at the Temple of the Inscriptions (8/02) What’s New in Palenque? (2/03) Piedras Negras Piedras Negras in Extreme Peril (8/06) Plan de Ayutla Significant Maya Site of Plan de Ayutla (10/04) Rab’inal Achí Declared World Heritage Masterpiece (12/05) San Bartolo Evidence of Earliest Maya Writing (01/06) West Wall Revealed (12/05) Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicas Some highlights of the XX Simposio (6/06) Stone Box Stone Box from Cave Near Cancuen Recovered from Looters (5/06) Temple V Now Open for Climbing (1/04) Tikal New Information on Tikal Temple V (7/02) Temple V Now Open for Climbing (1/04) Tonina New Ballplayer Panel (3/04) Usumacinta River Maya Sites Threatened by Dam (5/03) Wooden Box Precolumbian carved wooden box found in Tabasco, Mexico (8/01) A new piece of the box (7/02)

Additional Resources Map Timeline Media Flash animations Maya dancer animation Palenque Temple XX tomb video Rollout: Photographing Maya Vases Linda Schele’s “Edgewalker” video clip Linda Schele audio clip from the second Palenque Round Table Reports and News Aguateca Bad news from Aguateca (10/00) Apocalypto Maya Scholars Weigh In (7/06) A New Beginning or a Step Backward? (12/06) Orcs in Loincloths (external link) Belize Macal River Valley Threatened (external link) Cancuen Cancuen Palace Reported (10/01) New Discoveries at Cancuen (4/04) New Ballcourt Marker from Cancuen (4/04) Cancuen in the News (11/05) Caracol Caracol in the News (12/00) Chinikiha The Modern Threat to an Ancient Maya Kingdom (4/03) Cival A Preclassic Maya Site in the News (5/04) Copán Possible royal tomb 1km from city center (6/01) Decipherment Breaking (and Cracking) the Maya Code (4/08) Deforestation Onslaught of clearing (newspaper article: n.d.) Forests in Guatemala saved by villages like Uaxactun (newspaper article: 12/01) Dos Caobas A Must-See on the Way to Yaxchilan (7/05) Dos Pilas More Looting at Dos Pilas (5/04) The New Inscriptions at Dos Pilas (9/02) El Pajaral El Pajaral Rediscovered (6/01) El Peru Maya Queen’s Tomb Found at El Peru (5/04) More Tomb Finds at El Peru (6/05) New Royal Tomb at El Peru (5/06) El Zotz Royal Tomb Discovered in the Diablo Group at El Zotz, Guatemala (7/10) Fakes and Forgeries Unesco’s Digital Library Includes Fake Maya Manuscript (5/09) Film and Television Critical Notes on “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” (5/08) 184

allows you to travel to each site in Maya Adventure, or access specific information from each site. http://www.smm.org/

Community welcomes visitors (7/02) Forest fires menace Tabasco communities including box site (5/03) Yaxchilan Peabody Corpus Project Tests New Technology at Yaxchilan (5/07)

3015. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. http://www.penn.museum

3006. Mike Ruggeri’s News & Links for Pre-Columbian Cultures. The Ancient America and Mesoamerica Web Page present links to Paleo-America, Mesoamerica, Ancient Southwest and Mound Building Cultures, Andean Cultures and constantly updated New World News stories. http://community-2.webtv.net/ Topiltzin-2091/ MIKERUGGERISANCIENT/

ASSOCIATIONS AND ORGANIZATIONS 3016. Asociación Interdisciplinaria de Estudios Mayas / Interdisciplinary Association for Maya Studies, Graz, Austria: http://ia-maya.at/es/index.html 3017. Canadian Society for Mesoamerican Studies. www.csms.ca/ The Canadian Society for Mesoamerican Studies (CSMS) was founded in 1992 as a not-for profit corporation with charitable status. It operates on an entirely voluntary basis and depends on donations (membership dues) for operating funds. The Society’s objectives are: 1. to assist Canadian Mesoamericanists in the countries of Central America; 2. to provide a means of communication between Mesoamericanists, primarily across Canada, but also among all scholars in this field; and 3. to present the general public with up-to-date and reliable information on the cultures of Mesoamerica. The Society is able to act as an intermediary body to facilitate intergovernmental negotiations and can assist in establishing relationships between Canadian and Central American Mesoamericanists and/or institutions.

MUSEUMS 3007. Copán Museum, Copán, Honduras. http://www.asociacionCopán.org/index.php/projects/complete d/sculture-museum 3008. Hudson Museum, University of Maine, Orono, ME. Includes Maya ceramics from the Palmer Collection. http://www.library.umaine.edu/hudson/palmer/ 3009. Museo Carlos Pellicer, Tabasco, Mexico. Featuring ancient Olmec and Maya Art and Sculpture. The Museo Regional de Antropologa Carlos Pellicer is mainly dedicated to the Olmec and the Maya of the home state of Tabasco but there are also loans from other areas of Mexico, such as Teotihuacan. http://www.mayaarchaeology.org/museums/carlospellicermus eo/carlosmuseo.php

3018. Center for Maya Research. Boundary End Study Center and The Center for Maya Research. A Future Research Facility in the Western North Carolina Mountains, 1459 Dillingham Road, Box 220, Barnardsville, NC 28709-0220, (828) 626-3843; Fax (828) 626-3840, The purpose of the Center for Maya Research is to promote research in the Maya area in fields of anthropology and art history, including archaeology, epigraphy, ethnohistory, ethnology, and linguistics; 2. to publish educational materials and research findings; and 3. to conduct small-scale research projects related to these purposes. The Center for Maya publishes the Research Reports on Ancient Maya Writing whose subject matter includes, but is not necessarily limited to, 1. interpretative works dealing with both Maya hieroglyphic writing and iconography, with emphasis on the former; 2. issues of interest and utility on the history and bibliography of Maya research; and 3. the presentation of new texts and, when deemed desirable, the revision of previously available drawings of hieroglyphic texts. precolumbia.com/bearc/ about.html

3010. Museo de la Cultura Maya. Maya Ruins. Photographs and description of Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://www.secqr.gob.mx/index.php?option=com_content&tas k=view&id=20&Itemid=41 3011. Museo Ixchel. Guatemala City. The Ixchel Museum of indigenous Maya weaving, textiles, and indigenous clothing is adjacent to the Museo Popol Vuh of Mayan art and archaeology. http://www.museoixchel.org/ web/index.php 3012. Museo Popol Vuh. Guatemala City. This English and Spanish site features Museo Popol Vuh presenting an important collection of ancient Maya art, archaeology, colonial art of Guatemala. http://www.popolvuh.ufm.edu/

3019. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. The Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection has important research resources in the areas of Byzantine studies, the history of landscape architecture, and Pre-Columbian studies. The collections of Pre-Columbian art and the rare books and prints relating to the gardens are on public display. The Pre-Columbian Studies links includes information on conferences and lectures held, the collection, project grants, fellowships, a list of current fellows, links to the research library, and a list of recent publications. http://www.doaks.org/

3013. Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University. Founded in 1866, the Peabody Museum is one of the oldest museums in the world devoted to anthropology and houses one of the most comprehensive records of human cultural history in the Western Hemisphere. http://www. peabody.harvard.edu/ 3014. Science Museum of Minnesota. Provides Maya Adventure, a WWW site that highlights science activities and information related to ancient and modern Maya culture. Maya Adventure includes images from the Science Museum’s anthropological collections and activities developed by the Science Museum’s education division. The Maya site list

3020. European Association of Mayanists. European Association of Mayanists. Formed by young scholars 185

searching for academic contacts. Links professionals, students and amateurs for conferences, information exchange, and workshops. Links, bibliography, publications, collection inventories, news, and conference information. http://www.wayeb.org/.

3028. Precolumbian Society at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. The Society is engaged in the study of the indigenous peoples of the New World, their cultures and their descendents. http://www.precolumbian.org/

3021. Foundation for the Advancement of Latin American Anthropological Research. The Foundation of Latin American Anthropological Research provides information about archaeology, art and architecture of the ancient Maya and other pre-Columbian cultures; photographic archive; travel; book service; and photography and imaging. http://www.maya-art-books.org/.

3029. Precolumbian Society of Washington, DC. Precolumbian Society of Washington, DC. Established in 1993, the Society exists to increase awareness and understanding of Pre-Columbian societies and to provide a forum for exchange of information regarding those cultures. The Society seeks to promote interest in Pre-Columbian cultures through monthly symposia, Special Interest Groups, and organized tours. http://www.pcswdc.org/.

3022. Guatemalan Indian Centre. Maya: The Guatemalan Indian Centre. Resource center serves as a venue for regular talks and exhibitions; also includes a textile collection and an extensive library and video archive. http://web.ukonline.co.uk/maya/index.htm

3030. University of Texas Maya Meetings. http://www.utexas.edu/cofa/a_ah/programs/maya/maya.html. 3031. Yax Te’ Foundation. Yax Te’ Foundation. United States-based publishers, with an extensive catalogue and excellent links from their website. http://www.yaxte.org.

3023. Institute for Mesoamerican Studies, State University of New York at Albany. Institute for Mesoamerican Studies. Non-profit institute studying the ancient and modern peoples and cultures of Mesoamerica. http://www.albany.edu/ims/.

3032. Zapatistas. Website dedicated to the Zapatistas. http://www.ezln.org. Hieroglyphic Writing 3033. Mayan Epigraphic Database Project. An experiment in networked research on Classic Mayan epigraphy; a relational database of glyphs (“g numbers”), images, phonetic values (“p values”), and semantic values (“s values”) according to the consensus among various American Mayanists; archive of digitally transcribed Mayan texts. http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/med/

3024. Institute of Maya Studies. The Institute of Maya Studies, Inc. is a non-profit organization founded in 1971 and affiliated with the Miami Museum of Science. Its mission is to educate the public on prehispanic cultures of the Americas, with emphasis on the study of the Maya. It offers a monthly newsletter, and four meetings each month. http: www.instituteofmayastudies.org/ 3025. Maya Society of Minnesota. Maya Society of Minnesota. Offers monthly programs and lectures: includes newsletter, calendar of events, and links. http://www.hamline.edu/mayasociety.

Human Rights 3034. Foundation for Human Rights in Guatemala; charitable group that publishes regular news and human rights updates and a free newsletter. http://www.fhrg.org.

3026. Middle American Research Institute. The Middle American Research Institute of Tulane University, conducts, supports, and publishes research in the anthropology, and especially the archaeology, of Mexico and Central America. Its publications have ranged across the social sciences, natural sciences, and humanities. The Institute provides instruction and research opportunities for graduate students in the Department of Anthropology and related disciplines at Tulane University. Its collections, which predate 1940, come mostly from Mesoamerica and Central America. A museum gallery on the fourth floor of Dinwiddie Hall is open during regular university work hours. http://www.tulane.edu/~mari/

3035. Mexico Solidarity Network. Coalition of more than 80 organizations dedicated to improving human rights and democracy in Mexico. http://www.mexicosolidarity.org. 3036. Minority Rights Group. Publishers of useful background leaflet The Maya of Guatemala by Philip Wearne, and analysis and news summaries of issues affecting indigenous people. http://www.minorityrights.org. 3037. Rigoberta Menchu Foundation. Rigoberta Menchu Tum Foundation. Rigoberta Menchu’s homepage detailing the work of her organization and providing links to other sites. http://www.frmt.org/

3027. PreColumbian Art Research Institute. The primary purpose of the Pre-Columbian Art Research Institute is to support and carry on research and exploration of Mesoamerican civilizations, their art, archaeology and glyphic texts, as well as research concerning the tropical environment and its ancient monuments. The role that PARI has played in ongoing studies and research in Latin American countries of Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and Belize has been significant. Twenty years of research has been carried out at Palenque, and ten years at Chichén Itzá in Yucatan. http://www.mesoweb. com/pari/.

3038. Tracking Maya Regional Organization. Using a community centered perspective to examine how rural Maya affected and were affected by political changes. (2001) http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/ioa/backdirt/Spr01/maya.html.

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region of southern Tabasco (Mexico) has prompted researchers to an in-depth study of these rare ceremonial objects. An extraordinary collection of 15 pieces dating to the Classic period (250-900 A.D:) is now on display at the Museo Regional de Antropologia e Historia de Tabasco. http://www.mayadiscovery.com/ing/archaeology/default.htm.

Linguistics 3039. Combined dictionary-concordance of the Yucatec Maya language. http://www.famsi.org/reports/bolles/bolles.htm 3040. Project for the Documentation of the Languages of Mesoamerica (PDLMA). El Proyecto para la Documentación de las Lenguas de Mesoamerica (PDLMA). Terrence Kaufman, John Justeson and Roberto Zavala Maldonado, directors. This site presents the aims, history, and results of research by the Project for the Documentation of the Languages of Mesoamerica, internally known as the “Snake Jaguar Project”. The pages that describe the aims and history of the Project, and instructions for access to and use of posted materials, are updated at moderately frequent intervals. The online databases and the NO FRAMES version that we are making available will be updated only at intervals of about a year or more. Papers by project members are posted irregularly. http://www.albany.edu/anthro/maldp/.

Religion 3047. The Gods of Mexico: The Maya Pantheon. Brief descriptions of the main deities and their attributes. http://ancientmexico. com/gods/gods.html. 3048. The Maya Gods. Some of the gods that archaeologists and anthropologists have identified. http://www.jaguar-sun.com/gods. html. Settlement Patterns 3049. Electronic Atlas of Ancient Maya Sites; Building a Geographic Information System of Ancient Maya Settlement. Project by Walter R. T. Witschey and Clifford T. Brown, to study settlement patterns: includes research papers and maps. http://mayagis.smv.org/.

Photography 3041. Mesoamerican Photo Archives. David R. Hixson, graduate student in Tulane University’s Department of Anthropology, presents photographs of archaeological sites and museums from all over Mexico, with detailed captions. http://studentweb.tulane.edu/~dhixson/.

ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE PAGES Acanceh 3050. Acanceh. The Acanceh Dream. A young Mexican archaeologist’s dreams came true when she discovered three Maya masks in the vestiges of the pre-Hispanic city of Acanceh, in Yucatan. http://www. mayadiscovery. com/ing/ archaeology/ default. htm.

Popol Vuh 3042. Popol Vuh. Popol Vuh: The Sacred Book of the Mayas. Complete text of the Popol Vuh, containing an account of the cosmogony, mythology, traditions, and history of the Quiché Maya. http://www.geocities.com/athens/academy/7286/popolvuhmai n.ht.

Aguateca 3051. Aguateca Archaeological Project. Aguateca is a Classic (250- 900 A.D.) period Maya archaeological site located in the southwestern Peten region of Guatemala. Since 1996, Takeshi Inomata of the University of Arizona has been directing the Aguateca Archaeological Project. http://www. ic.arizona.edu/ic/anth453/

3043. Popol Vuh. The Popol Vuh: The Creation Story of the Maya; an excerpt from the book as translated by Dennis Tedlock. http://www.jaguar-sun.com/popolvuh.html.

Ambergris Caye 3052. Ambergris Caye. Early Belize History: Glyphs and Timeline. Article describing discoveries in the interpretation of the Mayan script, and understanding of their historical records.

3044 Popol Wuj Online. Ohio State University Libraries. The purpose of the present online edition of the facsimile of the Popol Wuj is to provide the Mayan peoples with access to the oldest surviving written version of their tzijs in a digital version available on the internet. In addition, we wish to make this facsimile available to scholars, students, and a general audience throughout the world. http://www.library.osu.edu/sites/popolwuj/

Baking Pot 3053. Belize Valley Archaeology Reconnaissance. History of Baking Pot, by Carolyn Audet. http://www.bvar.org/History%20of%20Occupation%20 at%20 Baking%20Pot.HTM.

Pottery 3045. Maya Vase Database. Justin Kerr Archive. The Maya Vase Database is an archive of rollout and still photographs of vases, plates, and bowls from the various cultures of Mesoamerica. The basic database has been under construction for many years. The objects pictured are from museums and collections throughout the United States, Mesoamerica, Canada, and Europe and were photographed by Justin Kerr. http://www.mayavase.com/.

Becan 3054. Becan. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com. 3055. Becan. Maya Ruins. Photographs and descriptions by Phil Konstantin. Includes Chichén Itzá, Kabah, Uxmal, Labna, Xlapak, Sayil, Palenque, Xpuhil, Becan and Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://americanindian. net/maya.html.

3046. Vessels of Tapijulapa, by Pilar Marquez The ancient Maya used ceramic vessels to burn incense, mostly for purification purposes. The discovery of a collection of sculpted vessels in a series of caves located in the Sierra 187

Chan 3065. Chan. San Jose Soccotz, Belize, a Northwestern University Archaeological Project. Chan is a Maya farming village located southeast of the modern day community of San Jose Soccotz, Belize. It was occupied from the Middle Preclassic period (ca. 900-400 BC) to the Terminal Classic period (post AD 790). During these times Chan’s farmers seem to have intensified the land using hill-slope terraces to create a productive agricultural landscape that supported centuries of habitation. http://www.anthropology.northwestern.edu/chan/

Belize River 3056. Belize River Archaeological Settlement Survey (BRASS)/El Pilar Program. An interdisciplinary research initiative into the prehistory and ecology of the Belize River Valley. Offers photographs of monuments, maps, field reports, publications, and contact details. http://www.marc.ucsb.edu/ elpilar/ Blue Creek 3057. Blue Creek Ruin; Maya Research Program. Research organization that focuses on the ancient Maya. Archaeological excavations at the Blue Creek Ruin, Belize, Central America. http://www.mayaresearch program.org/.

Chau Hiix 3066. Chau Hiix Archaeological Project. Chau Hiix was first occupied during the Preclassic period around 1200 BC (as indicated by the site’s Swasey Phase ceramic assemblage). The community’s occupational sequence is unusually complete for the Maya area, extending through the Postclassic period (A.D. 900-1450). Anne Pyburn, project director. www.indiana.edu/~capi/ChauHiix.htm

Bonampak 3058. Bonampak Documentation Project. Describes a project at Yale University to document, reconstruct and study the ancient murals. http://www.yale.edu/bonampak. 3059. Bonampak. Maya Murals May Depict Murder of Royal Scribes. Article describing interpretations of the murals, November 26, 2001). http://news.nationalgeographic.com/ news/2001/11/1126_Mayansc.

Chicanna 3067. Chicanna. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com.

Calakmul 3060. Calakmul. Friends of Calakmul. Working to help the Calakmul Biosphere. http://www.calakmul.org/.

Chichén Itzá 3067. Chichén Itzá. Maya Ruins. Photographs and descriptions by Phil Konstantin. Includes Chichén Itzá, Kabah, Uxmal, Labna, Xlapak, Sayil, Palenque, Xpuhil, Becan and Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://americanindian.net/maya.html.

Caracol 3061. Caracol Archaeological Project. Directed by Arlen and Diane Chase of the University of Central Florida, investigations began at the site in the early 1980s. Results have revealed a large Maya site occupied continuously from 600 BC to AD 1100, with its largest and most dense population levels reached during the Late Classic period (ca. 650 AD). http://www.caracol. org/.

3068. Chichén Itzá. Mayan Ruins and Unexplained Acoustics. Discussion of various acoustical oddities of the Great Ballcourt and the Castillo at Chichén Itzá and the pyramids at Palenque. http://www.mm 2000.nu/sphinxw.html. 3069. Chichén Itzá. Tour of Chichén Itzá. An illustrated guide from Mysterious Places to this spectacular Mayan legacy: Kukulcan pyramid, Temple of the Warriors, Observatory, Nunnery, Ball Court and Cenote. http://www.mysteriousplaces.com/mayan/TourEntrance.html.

Caucalapa 3062. Caucalapa Archaeological Project. The lower Caucalapa valley is approximately 7km west of Naco. Like Naco slightly more than two decades earlier, the lower Caucalapa is archaeologically unknown. http://www.kenyon.edu/x11534.xml

3070. Chichén Itzá. Chirped Echo from the Mayan Pyramid of Kukulkan at Chichén Itzá. David Lubman of the Acoustical Society of America argues that the echo sounds like the primary call of the Mayan sacred bird, the Quetzal. http://www.ocasa. org/MayanPyramid.htm.

Ceren 3063. Ceren Web Resources. Ceren is an agricultural village in El Salvador that was buried in volcanic ash nearly fourteen centuries ago. Ceren is registered as a UN Heritage site and has been called the “Pompeii of the New World.” http://www.meierweb.us/ceren/CONTENT/INDEX. HTML.

3071. Chichén Itzá. Maya Archaeological Sites in Yucatan. Information from Chichén Itzá, Uxmal, and Dzibilchaltun. Includes location, photos, history, and services. http://www.thenettraveler.com/Yucatan/ArqYuc_in.htm.

Chacmultun 3064. Chacmultun. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com.

Chinkultic 3072. Chinkultic. General description of the late Classic-Early Postclassic ruins near Comitan, Chiapas, Mexico. http://www.cnca.gob.mx/cnca/inah/zonarq/chinkul.html.

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http://whc.unesco.org/sites/ 129.htm.

Chunchucmil 3073. Pakbeh Regional Economy Program (PREP). This research program, directed by Bruce Dahlin and Scott Hutson, uses archaeology and other sciences to learn about the ancient Maya from the site of Chunchucmil, located in the northwest corner of the Yucatan Peninsula, about an hour southwest of the modern city of Merida. http://www.geocities.com/chunchucmil/index.html

Dzibilchaltun 3085. Dzibilchaltun. Maya Archaeological Sites in Yucatan. Information from Chichén Itzá, Uxmal, and Dzibilchaltun. Includes location, photos, history, and services. http://www.thenettraveler.com/Yucatan/ArqYuc_in.htm. Dzibilnoac 3086. Dzibilnoac. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com.

Cihuatan 3074. Cihuatan Archaeological Project. The Postclassic period site of Cihuatan in El Salvador has long remained Central America’s least known and most spectacular treasure. Now an archaeological project will attempt to unlock its secrets. http://userwww.sfsu.edu/~kbruhns/cihuatan/arch.html. Copán 3075. Copán Village Archaeology Museum. Includes photos and virtual-reality views of exhibits. http://maya-archaeology.org/ html/ Copán. html.

Edzna 3087. Edzna. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com.

3076. Copán. Archaeology at Copán, Honduras: Twelve seasons of excavations completed; research and conservation continue. http://www.museum.upenn.edu/new/research/Exp_Rese_Disc/ Americas/Copán.shtml.

Ek Balam 3088. Ek Balam. Recent finds in Ek Balam, by Joel Skidmore. http://www.mesoweb. com/ features/ ek_ balam /01.html El Mirador 3089. El Mirador Basin Project. El Mirador, with a population possibly as high as 80,000, flourished as a trading center from around 200 BC to AD 150 AD during the Preclassic Period. http://www. miradorbasin.com/

3077. Copán. Copán News 1995. Article on finds by expeditions from University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. http://www.upenn.edu/museum/News/Copán95.html. 3078. Copán. Copán. Paper by David Stuart on epigraphy and history; quicktime movies of Altar Q. http://www.peabody.harvard.edu/Copán/default.html.

El Peru 3090. Waka Archaeological Project. The Proyecto Arqueológico Waka’ is examining the site’s role in the struggle for domination between the Maya superpowers Tikal and Calakmul. http://smu.edu/smunews/waka/

3079. Copán. Anthroarcheart: Copán. Photo gallery: sells high-resolution images; displays freely re-usable mediumresolution images. http://www.anthroarcheart.org/ Copán.htm.

El Paraiso (Honduras) 3091. El Paraiso Archaeological Project. The Proyecto Arqueológico Regional El Paraiso (the El Paraiso Region Archaeological Project--PAREP) was established in 2002 to explore these and other questions through an integrated program of archaeological reconnaissance, mapping, excavation, and analysis. http://www.kenyon.edu/x21849.xml

3080. Copán. Copán Ruins. Tourist guide including sites and local businesses. http://www.Copánruins.com/. 3081. Copán. Lords of Copán. National Geographic’s virtual tour of a Mayan necropolis. Interactive timeline and plan with clickable index. http://www.nationalgeo graphic. com/ Copán/.

Holmul 3092. Holmul Archaeological Project. http://www.vanderbilt.edu/estrada-belli/ holmul/

3082. Copán. Nova Online: Tour Copán with David Stuart. Includes video clips [RealVideo and QuickTime]. http://www. pbs.org/wgbh/nova/maya/Copán.html.

Izapa 3093. Izapa. Chichén Itzá, A Photo Gallery. Captioned images of the famous archaeological site, includes the Castillo, Caracol, Temple of the Columns and ballcourt. http://www.jqjacobs.net/mesoamerica/chichen.html.

3083. Copán. Rescuing the Rosalila. The architects and sculptors of Copán eulogized their rulers and reaffirmed their religious beliefs through colorful buildings and works of art. Rosalila temple, an impressive example of this tradition, survived the passing of centuries in pristine condition. By Barbara W. Fash. http://www.mayadiscovery.com/ing/archaeology/default.htm.

Jaina 3094. Jaina. The Statuettes of Jaina. Numerous pre-Hispanic tombs have been discovered in Jaina, a small island off the coasts of Campeche (Mexico). In keeping with Maya tradition, the dead were buried with various utensils, ceremonial objects and, above all, small clay statuettes.

3084. Copán. UNESCO: Maya Site of Copán. Notice of declaration as a World Heritage site. 189

http://www.mayadiscovery.com/ing/archaeology/default.htm.

Lamanai 3104. Lamanai. Lamanai Archaeological Project. Includes history, and information about York University classes. http://www.lamanai.org/.

Kabah 3095. Kabah. Maya Ruins. Photographs and descriptions by Phil Konstantin. Includes Chichén Itzá, Kabah, Uxmal, Labna, Xlapak, Sayil, Palenque, Xpuhil, Becan and Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://americanindian.net/maya.html.

3105. Lamanai. Lamanai On-Site Museum. Information and photos. http://www.rom.on.ca/digs/belize/on-site.html. 3106. Lamanai. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com.

K’axob 3096. K’axob. Archaeology of K’axob and Xibun. Welcome to K’axob and Xibun: Research into the Maya Past In this site, you’ll be able to keep up with archaeologists’ research and explore along with them. Click a link on the left, or explore the map on the left. We will try to keep this site as current as possible. As we do further archaeological explorations, we will post information and pictures in our slide shows. http://www.bu.edu/tricia/.

Mayapan 3107. Mayapan Archaeological Research Project. Investigating the ancient urban economy of the capital city of the Postclassic Maya world. http://www.albany.edu/ims/mayapan.html

Kohunlich 3097. Kohunlich. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com.

Motul de San Jose 3108. Motul de San Jose. Video tour of Motul de San Jose site. http://www.williams.edu/AnthSoc/foias.php Muyil 3109. Muyil. http://muyil.smv.org/

La Joyanca 3098. La Joyanca Archaeological Project. La Joyanca is a small to medium-sized Classic period Maya site discovered in 1994 during construction of the Xan-La Libertad pipeline in northwestern Peten. http://web.mae.u-pais10.fr/ traduction/ gbdetail2. php?ID=32930

Naachtun 3110. Naachtun. High-quality images from Naachtun, including Structure XXXIX south wall, Looter’s trench, Ernesto Arredondo Leiva, and stela at Naachtun. http://www.fp.ucalgary.ca/unicomm/news/Jan_03/naachtun/pi cs.htm.

La Milpa 3099. La Milpa. La Milpa Archaeological Project. Boston University investigations: includes images and panoramas, vector data, maps, reports, and links. http://www. bu.edu/lamilpa/.

3111. Naachtun. News from the University of Calgary; Dr. Kathryn Reese-Taylor and her team from the University of Calgary are seeking approval from the Guatemalan government for a 10-year project in the Maya city of Naachtun. www.fp.ucalgary.ca/unicomm/news/Jan_03/maya.htm.

3100. La Milpa. Land and People at La Milpa. Research paper on land use and site placement in the area and the city. http://caslab.bu.edu/course/ar506/LM_saa99.html. La Sufricaya 3101. La Sufricaya. Conservation of the La Sufricaya murals. http://www.vanderbilt.edu/estradabelli/holmul/conservation/page_01.htm

Naco Valley 3112. Naco Archaeological Project. http://www.kenyon.edu/x11531.xml Naj Tunich 3113. Naj Tunich Cave Archaeology. http://www.calstatela.edu/academic/anthro/jbrady/najtunich/N aj%20Tunich%201.htm

Labna 3102. Labna. Maya Ruins. Photographs and descriptions by Phil Konstantin. Includes Chichén Itzá, Kabah, Uxmal, Labna, Xlapak, Sayil, Palenque, Xpuhil, Becan and Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://americanindian.net/maya.html.

Palenque 3114. Palenque Project. Palenque Project - extensive information about the current archaeological dig at the classic Mayan site. Also provides the history of the ruin and its discovery. http://www.mesoweb.com/palenque/.

3103. Labna. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com.

3115. Palenque. First Palenque Round Table: Lords of Palenque. Epochal paper by Peter Mathews and Linda Schele. http://www.mesoweb.com/pari/publications/RT01/lords/RT01 _lor. 190

3116. Palenque. Eighth Palenque Round Table: Palenque in the Maya World. Paper by Nikolai Grube. http://www.mesoweb.com/pari/publications/RT08/001grube/p alen.

Santa Barbara (Honduras) 3124. Santa Barbara Archaeological Project. The archaeological and ethnohistorical investigations described were conducted from 1983-1986 within the middle Rio Ulua drainage in the department of Santa Barbara, west-central Honduras. http://www.kenyon.edu/x22816.xml

3117. Palenque. Lords of Palenque: The Glyphic Evidence publication examines the hieroglyphic texts of Palenque to determine characteristics of the rulers of Palenque. http://www.mesoweb.com/pari/publications/RT01/lords/RT01 _lords001.html.

Sayil 3125. Sayil. Maya Ruins. Photographs and descriptions by Phil Konstantin. Includes Chichén Itzá, Kabah, Uxmal, Labna, Xlapak, Sayil, Palenque, Xpuhil, Becan and Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://americanindian.net/maya.html.

3118. Palenque. Maya Ruins. Photographs and descriptions by Phil Konstantin. Includes Chichén Itzá, Kabah, Uxmal, Labna, Xlapak, Sayil, Palenque, Xpuhil, Becan and Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://americanindian.net/maya.html.

3126. Sayil. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com.

3119. Palenque. Simon Fraser University Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology: Palenque. Includes an illustrated tour. http://www.sfu.ca/archaeology/museum/laarch/tour/palenque/ pa.

Sibun River Valley 3127. Xibun Archaeological Project. Initiated in 1997, this project aims to document the history of settlement along the course of the Sibun River in Belize as well as the ritual use of the labyrinthine cave system of the Sibun-Manatee cone-karst. http://www.bu.edu/tricia/xarp/index.shtml

Piedras Negras 3120. Piedras Negras. Full text of Piedras Negras Archaeology, 1931-1939. http://www.famsi.org/research/piedras_negras/u_penn/index.h tm 3121. Piedras Negras. Photographic Archive of the Piedras Negras Project, 1997-2000, by Stephen Houston, Hector Escobedo, Zachary Hruby, and Jessica Skousen. http://www.famsi.org/research/piedras_negras/pn_project/pied ras_negras.htm

Sierra de Lacandon 3128. Sierra de Lacandon National Park Archaeological Project. Directed by Charles Golden, this project seeks an understanding of the landscapes between sites, particularly as this pertains to ancient economy and commerce, patterns of settlement from the level of peasant to that of royalty, the spatial relationships between sites, and particularly the development of political frontiers between kingdoms, the relationship between the natural environment and settlement, and ancient agricultural patterns that maintained the large urban capitals of the region. http://www.sierralacandon.org/po-archaeology.html

Quirigua 3122. Quirigua. Inhabited since the 2nd century A.D., Quirigua had become during the reign of Cauac Sky (723–84) the capital of an autonomous and prosperous state. The ruins of Quirigua contain some outstanding 8th-century monuments and an impressive series of carved stelae and sculpted calendars that constitute an essential source for the study of Mayan civilization. http://whc.unesco.org/pg.cfm?cid=31&id_site=149

Site Q 3129. Site Q. Bearers of war and creation: A Site Q monument in the Dallas Museum of Art is changing our view of ancient Maya royal women, by David Freidel and Stanley Guenter. http://www.archaeology.org/magazine.php?page=online/featu res/siteq2/index.

San Bartolo 3123. San Bartolo. In March, 2001, fieldwork by the Peabody Museum’s Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic inscriptions Program led to the discovery of extraordinary ancient Maya wall paintings at the remote ruins of San Bartolo, El Peten, Guatemala. The early date of the murals, ca. A.D. 100 by their style, establishes them among the most important finds in Maya archaeology the last few decades. William Saturno, working at the time as assistant to the Corpus project, came upon San Bartolo when led there by local guides, walking through a very remote and forested region of northeastern Guatemala. The guides had Informéd him of carved monuments, but upon arrival none were found. Before returning, and short on water, he investigated a large pyramid vandalized by a recent looter’s trench and tunnel. Within the trench, he found vestiges of an older structure, covered by later construction. The vandals had exposed part of a room; the one visible wall bore a colorful mural painting. http://www.peabody.harvard.edu/SanBartolo.htm.

Tikal 3130. Tikal Digital Access Project. Site Pages. Tikal. The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology initiated the Tikal Digital Access Project in February 2002 in order to address the preservation of and access to the Tikal Archive. The Archive is the result of the Museum’s historic 15 year (1956-1970) archaeological investigation at the ancient Maya site of Tikal, Guatemala. The entire contents of the archive will be made available to international scholarly and interested public audiences through a digitized web-accessible catalog and virtual facsimiles of the originals. OUR MISSION. The mission of the Tikal Digital Access Project includes a commitment to: ~the dissemination of archaeological knowledge of Tikal to a 191

broad audience via its website; ~fostering the exchange of ideas and further collaborative work on Tikal between scholars, museums, archives, and libraries via the web; ~expanding our understanding of the Maya past at Tikal through this public access and collaboration. The contents include primary documents such as field notes, correspondence, administrative records, maps, drawings, negatives, print photographs, slides, films, and secondary records such as published and unpublished papers, theses and dissertations, and analytic materials. The Tikal Archive was chosen for digitization because of its completeness, its organization based on a system of nomenclature later widely adopted by Maya archaeological projects and that will translate well for web delivery, and the potential for previously unpublished data to change our understanding of the Maya past. The preservation of and access to the Tikal Archive is particularly important given Tikal’s role in both the Maya past and in the present. From much of its preColumbian existence - from it’s founding around 800 BC to its decline in the ninth century - Tikal was one of the largest and most powerful Maya centers in all of Mesoamerica. In 1979, the archaeological site of Tikal was inscribed by UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee as a World Heritage Site. The World Heritage Site List now numbers 730 sites considered to be of “outstanding universal value” in 125 countries. Tikal is a principal tourist destination in Guatemala, and one of the most visited archaeological sites in the world. Why is this important? Archaeological excavations usually destroy sites that have remained intact for centuries, rendering access to information about the original context of and for recording data all the more critical for interpreting or reinterpreting the past. Archaeological field methodology requires that what a scholar observes and experiences is recorded in field notes, photographs, maps, drawings, and other media, only a fraction of which will be used for traditional publication. Access to the remaining materials is subject to their appropriate preservation in proper repositories and interested parties’ ability to access those repositories. The Tikal Digital Access Project will provide access for a broad audience to the original data collected through the University Museum’s historic effort at Tikal. http://www.museum.upenn.edu/TDAP.

Tulum 3135. Tulum. Article, background and travel information for Tulum, Mexico and the Mayan Ruins. http://www.discovermexico.com/ArticleSite.cfm?PageID=519 9107. Usumacinta 3136. Usumacinta. Rios Mayas and Grupo de los Cien: A Coalition of Environmentalists, Writers, Archaeologists, and Citizens Opposed to Planned Dams on the Usumacinta River. Rios Mayas is a loose affiliation of independent conservationists, archaeologists, scientists, writers, artists and citizens in Mexico, Guatemala, and the United States, dedicated to the preservation of free-flowing rivers and watershed management in the Maya region of Mesoamerica. We propose geographic and biological continuity, archaeological preservation, low-impact tourism, and equal rights and economic opportunity for local populations as our primary objectives. These forces are necessary to achieve a collective sense of place, a corresponding sense of possibility, peaceful change, and appropriate development in the region. http://www.gomaya.com/riosmayas/. Uxmal 3137. Uxmal. Maya Ruins. Photographs and descriptions by Phil Konstantin. Includes Chichén Itzá, Kabah, Uxmal, Labna, Xlapak, Sayil, Palenque, Xpuhil, Becan and Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://americanindian.net/maya.html. 3138. Uxmal. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com. West Belize 3139. West Belize Regional Cave. The Western Belize Regional Cave Project is not a field school designed to train beginners, but for individuals with prior archaeological or caving experience. For information on the Belize Valley Archaeological Reconnaissance’s Field School go to http://www.bvar.org. Since 1996 archaeologists of Western Belize Regional Cave Project have been studying the use of caves by the prehistoric Maya. The Western Belize Regional Cave Project is designed to introduce experienced participants to the fundamental approaches to the practice of speleoarchaeology and to provide training in a variety of archaeological techniques. Lectures will provide an overview of Maya civilization with a particular focus on ideology and cosmology relating to the use of caves by prehistoric Maya. Participants will work together as a team in the field, executing excavations and performing survey procedures. In the laboratory students will employ various techniques of analysis and illustration. http://www.indiana.edu/~belize/.

3131. Tikal National Park. World Heritage Sites: Tikal National Park. Presents details of the ruins, surrounding flora, fauna, history, culture, and conservation. http://www.wcmc.org.uk/protected_areas/data/wh/tikal.html. 3132. Tikal. Jaguar in the Night. Excerpts from Teobert Maler’s journal and photos of his expedition to Tikal in 1895. http://www.mesoweb.com/maler/jaguar.html. 3133. Tikal. Tomb of the Jade Jaguar. Slide show for museums, libraries, and schools on how archaeologists find the tombs of ancient Maya kings beneath the pyramidtemples. Lecture is based on Nicholas Hellmuth’s discovery of the Tomb of the Jade Jaguar. http://www.maya-art books.org/ html/ jade_ lecture.html.

Xkipche 3140. Xkipche Archaeological Project. An important excavation project is sponsored by the University of Bonn. http://voelk.unibonn.de/xkipche/index.htm

3134. Tikal. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com. 192

Xlapac 3141. Xlapak. Maya Ruins. Photographs and descriptions by Phil Konstantin. Includes Chichén Itzá, Kabah, Uxmal, Labna, Xlapak, Sayil, Palenque, Xpuhil, Becan and Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://americanindian.net/maya.html. Xpuhil 3142. Xpuhil. Maya Ruins. Photographs and descriptions by Phil Konstantin. Includes Chichén Itzá, Kabah, Uxmal, Labna, Xlapak, Sayil, Palenque, Xpuhil, Becan and Museo de la Cultura Maya. http://americanindian.net/maya.html. 3143. Xpuhil. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com. Xunantunich 3144. Xunantunich. The Maya Ruins Page. Photos from Uxmal, Labna, Sayil, Chacmultun, Becan, Xpuhil, Tikal, Xunantunich, Lamanai, Kohunlich, Chicanna, Edzna, and Dzibilnocac. http://mayaruins.com. Yaxuna 3145. Yaxuna. Yaxuna Archaeology Project. This graphicsintensive site, provided by the Selz Foundation, headquartered at Southern Methodist University, details archaeological work done on the little-known city site of Yaxuna in the heart of the Yucatan. At the site, users will find a summary of the archaeological work completed, information on the scientists involved, and full-text versions of papers, articles, and reports that have resulted from this project. In addition, there are a number of maps, QuickTime movies and QTVR scenes; Donovan Rittenbach’s 3D animated movies and the Yaxuna and North Acropolis QTVR scenes are notable examples. Users should be warned that movie file sizes are large and download time can be very lengthy. Future site plans include interactive maps, Shockwave animations of Yucatan geopolitics, and a Yucatan art portfolio. http://tesla.csuhayward.edu/sacredplaces/yaxuna/YaxFrames.h tml.

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AUTHOR INDEX Amador Berdugo, F. E., 2901 Amador Naranjo, A., 1339 Amador, F. E., 1996, 1997 Amaroli, P. E., 1996, 2259 Ambrosino, J. N., 1244, 1666, 1984, 2923 Amrhein, L. M., 1556 Anawalt, P. R., 23, 24 Anaya Hernández, A., 1807, 2109, 2120, 2265, 2612 Anaya, J. A., 1998 Anda Alanis, G. de, 2208 Anderson, B. J., 2762 Anderson, E. N., 129, 201, 584, 920, 1088 Anderson, J. H., 2455 Anderson, M., 1514 Andrade, S., 1144 Andres, C. R., 853, 2047, 2196, 2197, 2499 Andrews, A. P., 23, 24, 805, 807, 812, 849, 851, 867, 1629, 1991, 1997, 2367, 2929, 2930 Andrews, B., 1764 Andrews, C., 2003 Andrews, E. W., V, 23, 851, 853, 1666, 2280 Andrews, G. F., 23, 24 Andrews, J. M., 584 Andrews, S., 2003 Andrieu, C., 1761 Anleo, B. de, 275 Annereau, M., 841 Annis, V. L., 806 Aoyama, K., 1762, 1996, 1997, 2026-2028, 2281-2283, 2767 Aquiles Valladares, O., 2907 Arango, L. A., 456 Araroli, P. E., 1711 Arce Ibarra, A. M., 130 Arceo Ortíz, A. E., 1358 Archila, R., 1996 Arcón Puzul, A. L., 319 Ardren, T., 853, 867, 901, 1244, 1470, 1471, 1964, 1984, 2227, 2248, 2249, 2892 Arechiga Viramontes, J., 1044 Arellano Hernández, A., 82 Arellano, A., 2839 Ares, N., 110 Arias Reyes, L., 920 Arias, A., 1240, 1420 Arie, J. C., 1446 Arjona de Castro, A., 916 Armijo Torres, R., 1753, 2274 Armitage, R. A., 1999, 2585 Armstrong, C. W., 1050, 1078, 1079 Armstrong-Fumero, F., 571-573 Arnauld, M. C., 131, 832, 1973, 1976, 1977, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2477, 2724, 2730 Arnold, D. E., 1700, 1701, 1740 Arnold, K., 90 Arnold, P. P., 23 Arredondo, E., 1995, 1996 Arrevillaga, D., 47 Arriaza, L. J., 1194

Abdelnur, H. J., 1787 Abrams, E. M., 24 Acevedo, R., 1043, 1995, 1996, 2838 Acevedo, S., 1196 Aceves Romero, D., 1995, 1997, 1998 Acone, K., 2772 Acosta, M. E., 1998, 2000 Acuña, H. G., 2108 Acuña, M. J., 1995 Acuña, R., 669 Adams, A. E., 83, 505, 1209, 1288, 1347 Adams, J. J., 1649, 1988 Adams, R. N., 386 Adams, R.E.W., 24, 34, 853, 1649, 1974, 1988 Adams, W. R., 990 Adánez Pavón, J., 1995-1997, 1999 Adkins, H., 2772 Adler, R. H., 1143 Adorno, R., 23 Aeschlimann, B., 183 Aguila Flores, P. del, 2796, 2940 Aguila, R. del, 1176 Aguilar, B. A., 1995 Aguilar, M., 1634 Aguilera, C., 23 Aguilera, M. A., 1389, 1554 Aguirre Tanus, M., 1656 Aguirre, M., 1513 Aguirre, R. D., 49 Agurcia Fasquelle, R., 2276, 2280, 2287 Ahlfeldt, J. F., 2277 Aimers, J. J., 850, 1760, 1987, 2068, 2071, 2497, 2498 Aitken, J. A., 1466 Ajin, J., 2001 Ajmac Cuxil, C., 1973 Ajmac Cuxil, M. V., 1973 Ajpacaja Tum, F. P., 273, 274 Ak’abal, H., 455 Akers, D. C., 1555 Akkeren, R. van, 411, 762, 1954, 1973, 1995, 1998 Al-Ali, A. J., 1998 Alba Villalobos, C., 1607 Alcalá, L. E., 1533 Alcina Franch, J., 59, 72 Aldana, G. V., 1816-1818, 2278, 2279, 2618, 3005 Alejos García, J., 387, 1190, 1986 Alexander, R. T., 804, 1103, 1144 Alfaro, L., 1788 Aliphat F., M., 939, 1720, 1999, 2001 Almanzana Velázquez, H., 991 Alt, K. W., 2871 Alvarado Galindo, C., 2000 Alvarado, R. C., 23, 1141 Alvarado, W., 1998 Alvarez Aguilar, L. F., 1975 Alvarez Hernández, F. R., 544, 545 Alvarez, F., 1996 Alvarez, S., 1995, 1996 195

Barba de Piña Chan, B., 1480, 1975 Barba Meinecke, H., 821, 2447 Barber, S. B., 2177 Bargellini, C., 23 Barjau Martínez, L., 670, 1975 Barnes, E. B., 2388, 2612 Barnet-Sánchez, H., 23 Barnhart, E. L., 1607, 2619-2621, 2642, 2644 Barrera Nuñez, J. O., 1209 Barrera Rubio, A., 1984 Barrera Vásquez, A., 350, 574, 1958 Barrett, J. W., 2080, 2081 Barrientos de Arriaga, C. I., 457 Barrientos Q., T., 189, 1995-2000, 2770 Barrios, C., 1831, 2005 Barrios, E., 1997, 2000, 2798, 2941 Barrios-Klee Ruiz, W., 1472 Barrois, R. R., 1635, 1638, 1996, 2730 Bartlett, M. L., 2466 Bartolomé, M. A., 671 Baschet, J., 1181 Bascope, G. L., 584, 994 Basly, A., 1559 Bassie-Sweet, K., 1298, 1480, 3005 Bastarrachea Manzano, J. R., 351, 924 Bastida Muñoz, M. C., 1195 Bastos, S., 386, 407, 1168, 1196 Batalla Rosado, J. J., 721 Batún Alpuche, A. I., 2338 Batzibal, J., 232 Baudez, C. F., 735, 1261, 1321, 1383, 1384, 1560, 1976, 2622 Baudot, G., 23 Bauer, J. R., 1997, 1998, 2346, 2347 Bautista Vázquez, R., 1474 Bawaya, M., 2158, 2242 Bayles, B., 528-530, 1751 Bazy, D., 1378 Beach, T., 881, 920, 934, 1974, 1980, 1997, 2075, 2090, 2149 Beaubien, H. F., 203, 1997, 2038, 2177, 2298 Beaucage, P., 1343 Beaudry-Corbett, M., 1470, 1988, 1995, 2177 Becerra, L., 2285 Beck, W. E., 1822 Becker, M. J., 23, 1434, 1977, 2799-2801, 2823 Becquelin, P., 1977, 2603 Becquelin-Monod, A., 535 Beddows, P., 171 Bedford, W., 2241 Beezley, W. H., 23 Begley, C., 1995 Beliaev, D., 920, 1280, 1879, 1981, 3005 Bell, E. E., 1470, 1997, 999, 2280, 2286, 2287, 2289, 2397, 2398 Bellingeri, M., 594 Belmar Casso, R., 1998, 2868 Beltrán, B., 1995, 1998, 2000 Benavides Castillo, A., 23, 106, 638, 824, 1196, 1561, 1629, 2146, 2148, 2257, 2360, 2367, 2369, 2375, 2447, 2448, 2450, 2743, 2776, 2789, 2851, 2872, 2908 Benítez Frausto, R. L., 1084 Benítez, H., 729, 1996, 1997 Benítez, J. E., 1995 Benito Pérez, J. G., 301 Benjamin, T. J., 889, 906

Arroyave Prera, A. L., 1595, 1629, 1998, 1999 Arroyo, B., 155, 847, 1442, 1965, 1988, 1995-2001 Arroyo, E., 1995, 1996 Arroyo, S. R., 82 Artis, S. J., 436 Arzapalo Marin, R., 791 Ascher, S., 1974 Asensio Ramos, P., 1308 Ashmore, W., 23, 24, 853, 1447, 1452, 1470, 1609, 1980, 1985, 2071, 2717, 2718, 2895, 2896 Asselbergs, F.G.L., 631, 633, 753 Astor-Aguilera, M., 843 Athie, I., 23, 24 Atran, S., 888, 1017, 1976 Attolini Lecon, A., 842 Atwood, R., 917 Aubry, A., 637, 1190 Aubry, B. S., 1046 Audet, C. M., 1974, 2772 Audouze, F., 23, 50, 730, 744-746 Ausec, M., 2582, 2584 Avendaño y Loyola, A. de, 1934 Aveni, A. F., 849, 1819, 1820, 1993, 2004, 2528 Aviña Cerecer, G., 1821 Avitabile, C., 594 Awe, J. J., 33, 1288, 1292, 1451, 1773, 1974, 2056, 2063, 2071, 2615, 2616, 2742 Axpuac, O., 1999 Ayala Falcon, M., 1470, 1860, 1878, 2797 Ayers, M., 132 Aylesworth, G. R., 1448 Ayora Diaz, S. I., 1135 Ayres, G., 260 Azcarate Soto, M. A., 2339 Azcorra Alejos, G. J., 1419 Bacci Casadio, M., 1706 Bach, C., 87 Bachand, B. R., 1996, 2698-2700 Bachand, H. S., 1712, 1996 Bacon, W. J., 1557 Bade, B., 3005 Badilla, M., 2413 Badillo Sánchez, A., 2099 Béez, C. M., 803 Baeza Braga, H., 1610 Bailey Vargas, B., 2001 Bailey, D., 2172 Baker, J. L., 133, 2075 Balam Pereira, G., 992, 993, 1056, 1089 Balam, C., 134 Balanzario, S., 2361, 2468 Balcarcel, B., 1996, 1998 Balcells Gonzal;ez, J. A., 2642 Bales, J. R., 1997 Balkansky, A. K., 1731 Ball, J. W., 24, 1668, 1750, 2069, 2071, 2103, 2607 Baltasar López, R. F., 324 Baltazar Gutierrez, E., 325, 327 Balutet, N., 1558, 1634, 2209 Bandeita, F. P. de F., 542 Baquedano, E., 23 Baqueiro López, O., 1260 Barabás, A. M., 606 Barán, M., 888 196

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Torres Talamante, P., 171 Torres Urizar, J., 1185 Torres, C. R., 1995 Torres, L. A., 23 Torres, R. M., 967 Touchard, A., 902 Tourtellot, G., 23, 853, 1452, 1976, 2075, 2483, 2486 Tovalin Ahumada, A., 1607, 2099, 2491 Townsend, R. F., 24 Toyoda, M., 2186 Trachman, C. M., 1646 Trachman, R. M., 1764, 2356 Traslosheros, J. E., 23 Traverse, A., 193 Traxler, L. P., 15, 407, 1666, 1668, 1978, 2280, 2287, 2324, 2333 Treece, T., 863 Trejo Mojica, J. A., 1695 Trelut, E., 1855 Tremblay, A. M., 1872 Trevelyan, A. M., 1480 Treyvaud Amiguet, V., 1034 Triadan, D., 1251, 1666, 1978, 1980, 1997, 1999, 2038-2040, 2044 Tschohl, P., 717 Tsesmeli, E., 1998 Tsukamoto, K., 1996 Tsuruga, K., 2186 Tucker, B., 1974 Tucker, D. B., 2177 Tucux Coyoy, E. D., 1108 Tuerenhout, D. van, 1258 Tumilowicz, A. T., 1505 Tun Ayore, G., 2439 Tunesi, R., 1727, 2135, 3005 Turqui, J. E., 930 Turrent, L., 1545 Turuk, J. Y., 2561 Tutino, J., 23 Tuxill, J., 903, 920 Tuz Chi, L., 2689, 2693 Tykot, R. H., 901, 1779 Tzoc, J., 1108 Ucan Ek, E., 888, 1017 Ugarte, R., 1995, 1998 Umberger, E. G., 24 Underiner, T . L., 1963 Unneberg, V., 4e08 Urban, P. A., 23, 24, 1452, 2287, 2391, 2582, 2584 Urcid Serrano, J., 23 Uriarete Torres, A. J., 2363 Uriarte, M. T., 82, 1035, 1540, 1631, 1638, 1699 Urizar, A., 1997 Urkidi, N. P., 2s Urquizu, M., 1996-1998 Urton, G., 1830 Uruñela, G., 24 Vackimes, S. C., 1546 Vail, G., 23, 727, 728, 740, 744, 745, 746, 843, 849, 942, 1279, 1280, 1388, 1413, 1470, 1941 Valasco Lozano, A.M.L., 1035 Valcarcel García, C. A., 2474 Valdeavellano, M., 1205 Valdeón Baruque, J., 1977 218

Weinberg, B., 1281 Weiss-Krejci, E., 407, 935, 1311, 1444, 1978, 1997 Weller, E. T., 1365, 1445, 2065, 2772, 2830, 2922 Wells, A., 23 Wells, E. C., 878-880, 1547, 1996, 2391 Wernecke, D. C., 1632, 1655, 2412 Werner, L., 199 Werness, M. D., 1732 West, G., 867 Wheeler, D. H., 2734 White, C. D., 203, 920, 1072, 1388, 1509, 2048, 2049, 2200, 2273, 2505, 2524 Whitelegg, I., 1776 Whiteside, A., 617, 1166 Whittaker, J. C., 2411, 2413 Whittington, E. M., 1638 Whittington, S. L., 2442, 2443 Wichelt, D., 2170 Wichmann, S., 113, 222, 407, 1280, 1925-1927, 1981, 3005 Widdifield, S. G., 23 Widmer, R. J., 24, 883 Wiebe, A. D., 291, 498, 1510 Wiewall, D. L., 2506 Wilford, J. N., 1259 Wilhelmy, H., 18, 1983 Wilk, R. R., 3005 Wilkerson, S.J.K., 24 Wilkinson, D., 1237 Wille, S. J., 2203 Willett, B. M., 969 Willey, G. R., 23, 24, 2071 Williams, E., 920 Williams, J. S., 2524 Williams, J. W., 1511 Williams-Beck, L. A., 24, 918, 1103, 1131, 1986, 2051 Williamson, R. V., 2298 Willnik, P. W., 1367 Wilson, E. E., 990 Wilson, J. H., 1740 Wilson, R. A., 1177 Winemiller, T. L., 203, 936, 1974, 2215 Winfield Capitaine, F., 3005 Wing, E. S., 203 Winter, M., 1729, 1977 Winterbauer, N. L., 1167 Wiseman, J., 25 Witchell, J., 1176 Witschey, W.R.T., 23, 1449 Witze, A., 2407 Wobeser, G. von, 23 Wolf, E. R., 24 Wolf, M., 1997, 2000, 2486 Wölfel, U., 1413, 2759, 2856 Wolley, C., 1666, 1973, 1995, 1996, 2001 Wollwage, L., 2906 Woodbury, R. B., 96, 123 Woodfill, B.K.S., 1682, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2000 Woodruff, J. M., 787 Woods, J. C., 1764, 1995 Woodward, M., 2177 Worley, P. M., 1405 Woynar, M., 1996, 2256 Wren, L., 1454, 3005 Wright, A. C., 1633

Vera Vera, J. R., 1235 Vesilind, P. J., 1377, 2932 Vicente Reynoso, M.A.V., 1229 Victoria Ojeda, J., 708 Vicuña, C., 1795 Vidal Lorenzo, C., 1988, 1996-1999, 2001, 2473, 2474 Vidas, A. A. de, 1976 Viel, R., 1973, 1995, 2287, 2301, 2302, 2311 Viesca Treviño, C., 1004 Villa Kamel, A., 1608 Villacorta C., J. A., 786 Villacorta O., M. R., 1165 Villalobos González, M. H., 161 Villamil, L. P., 2492, 2716 Villar, M. del, 47 Villaseñor Black, C., 23 Villaseñor, I., 2661 Villatoro Gómez, L., 1507 Villatoro, O. V., 1995 Villela, K. D., 3005 Vinot, C., 1254 Viqueira Alban, J. P., 23, 1193 Vit Suzan, I., 1631 Vivas Valdés, V., 2341 Vogt, B., 127 Vogt, E. Z., 561, 1288, 1442 Volek, E., 1241 Voorhies, B., 24, 2509, 2783 Vos, J. de, 803 Voss N., A. W., 1983, 2880 Vrooman, M. D., 234, 369 Wade, T. A., 203 Wagner, E., 407, 1311, 1942, 1981, 1983, 2334, 2335 Wagner, T. B., 2617 Wagner, W. G., 1015 Wahl, D. B., 182, 196, 197 Wainwright, J. D., 905 Wald, R . F., 1894, 1927 Walker, C. J., 968, 1180, 1549 Walker, D. S., 867, 1998 Walker, G., 1508 Wallace, H., 384 Wallace, M. T., 24 Walling, S., 1974 Wanner, L. S., 2871 Wanyerka, P. J., 1873, 2084, 2577, 3005 Ware, G. A., 1995, 1998, 2101, 2431 Warinner, C., 1641 Warner, F. R., 525, 526 Warren, K. B., 23, 409 Washbrook, S., 667 Wasserman, M., 24 Watanabe, J. M., 385, 879, 1443 Watson, R., 1974 Wauchope, R., 1647 Webb, E. A., 1974, 2167, 2575 Webb, R. W., 1987, 2511 Webster, D. L., 24, 193, 853, 864, 1465, 1668, 1977, 1988, 1997-1999, 2280, 2826, 2828, 2829 Webster, J. W., 198, 1292, 1942, 2856 Weeks, J. M., 21, 23, 24, 63, 68, 71, 760, 1852, 1994, 2184, 2548, 2687 Weigand, P. C., 24 Weik, A., 2772 219

Wright, D. R., 881, 2667, 2668 Wright, J., 162 Wright, L. E., 1066, 1071, 1075, 1076, 1388, 1978, 1980, 2287, 2324, 2831, 2838 Wrobel, G. D., 1050, 1077-1079, 2200, 2204 Wurster, W. W., 18, 1456, 1983, 2593, 2602, 2838 Wyatt, A. R., 904 Yabe, R., 2186 Yadeun, J., 2837 Yaeger, J. C., 853, 1169, 1442, 1452, 1461, 1974, 1980, 1997, 1998, 2757, 2895, 2896 Yamase, S., 668 Yanagisawa, S., 1658 Yasugi, Y. 1989 Yoder, C. J., 1071 Yoffee, N., 78 Yol Jeronimo, V., 239 Yool Gómez, J., 272 Yoshida, S., 1989 Young, E. van, 23 Young, P. A., 25 Young, S., 1978 Yukes, J., 990 Zabala, P., 998 Zackowitz, M. G., 2688 Zalaquett, F., 136, 2662 Zamora C., P., 2612 Zamora, F. M., 1995-1997 Zapata Alonzo, G., 2237 Zapata, R. L., 2137, 2765 Zapeta García, J. A., 1282 Zarger, R. K., 315, 1037-1039 Zaro, G., 2713 Zavatone Veth, H. M., 1016, 1512 Zeitlin, R. N., 97 Zender, M. U., 1357, 1458, 1889, 1915, 1927, 1979, 1993, 2444, 3005 Zetina, S., 737 Zorich, Z., 2336 Zorn, E., 2160 Zralka, J., 1999, 2587-2589, 2592, 2594-2596

220

SUBJECT INDEX Altar de Sacrificios, 24, 200, 3005 Altars see Architecture Altepetl, 1465 Altún Ha, 24, 825, 965, 1765, 2047-2049, 2196, 2499; Tomb F-8/1, 2049 Alvarado, P., de, 1994 Amaranth, 23, 1982 Amatitlán (lake), 1995-1997 Amber see Resins Ambergris Caye, 2050-2052, 2522, 2523, 3052; Burial 14, 2050 Ambulantes, 885 American Alternative Trade Organization, 375 Ancestor veneration, 8, 23, 24, 407, 466, 1283, 1339, 1540, 1681, 1994, 2400 Animals see Fauna Annals of the Cakchiquels see Memorial de Sololá Annals, 826 Anonal, 2833 Anthropometry, 1050, 1061, 1067, 1068, 1075, 1076, 1078, 1079, 1997, 1998, 2871 Antigua Guatemala, 384, 815, 885, 1808, 1995, 1997-1999, 2001, 2053; Nuestra Señora de los Dolores del Llano church, 2001; Real Palacio, 2001; Santa Teresa convent, 2001; Santo Domingo convent, 1997, 2001, 2053 Antiquities trade see Cultural patrimony Antler, 1942 Apiculture, 23, 952-954; see also Fauna Archaeoastronomy see Astronomy Archaeology, analytical methods, 24; research design and field methods, 24 Architecture, 5 18, 23, 806, 1525, 1533, 1609-1633, 1815, 1974, 1977, 1981, 1983, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2024, 2047, 2075, 2082, 2084, 2085, 2131, 2136, 2143, 2144, 2173, 2175, 2181, 2186, 2196, 2197, 2218, 2229, 2246, 2347, 2363, 2375, 2399, 2473, 2474, 2499, 2528, 2531, 2541, 2544, 2545, 2609-2611, 2642, 2687, 2697, 2746, 2771, 2813, 2820, 2838, 2858, 2865, 2890, 2900, 2905, 2908, 2909, 2911, 2913, 2924, 2939; civic-ceremonial, 24; vernacular-mundane, 24; acropolis, 2280, 2375, 2385, 2823; altars, 23, 563, 2155, 2838; ball court, 18, 23, 24, 1620, 1634-1638, 1976, 1983, 1998, 1999, 2265, 2375, 2405, 2823; corbel vault, 1611; plazas, 23, 1997, 1999; pyramids, 23; range structures, 1669, 2083; sweat baths, 24, 1684-1687, 2177, 2346, 2670; temple complexes, 23, 1688, 1689, 2935; thrones and benches, 24, 1981, 1993, 2280, 2629, 2724 Archives, Archivo Edwin M. Shook, 1997; Archivo General de Centroamérica, 796; Archivo General de las Indias, 654; Archivo Técnico de la Coordinación Nacional de Arqueología de Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 1697 Armillas, P., 23, 24

2012 phenomenon, 2003-2018 Abaj Takalik, 24, 1995-1998, 2019-2021; Burial 1, 1996; Structure 7, 2021 Abandoned architecture see Site abandonment Abrasives, 1783 Acalán, 1103 Acanceh, 24, 3005, 3050 Acanmul, 2022, 2143 Acción Católica, 459 Acculturation, 23 Achí, ethnography, 410, 411; linguistics, 235-239 Acid rain, 1596 Acropolis see Architecture Acteal, 1206 Activity analysis, 24, 1980, 1997, 2182, 2936 Actún Ik, 2772 Actún Tunichil Muknal, 1288, 2023 Actuncán, 1974, 1987, 1995, 2024 Acupuncture, 993 Adams, R.E.E., 65 Adobe, 2186 Advino Pyramid see Uxmal Aesthetics, 1513 Agave, 24 Agriculture, 5, 23, 24, 442, 487, 509, 514, 515, 888-912, 920, 922, 958, 967, 1815, 1983, 1990, 1998, 2001, 2091, 2108, 2165, 2167, 2175, 2177, 2556, 2713, 2734, 2844, 2897; see also Beans, Maize Agua Fría, 1206 Aguacatán, 412 Aguacate, 1456, 2025; Stela 1, 2025 Aguada Petapilla, 193 Aguateca, 510, 1666, 1719, 1996-1999, 2026-2044, 2665, 2767, 3005, 3051; Barranca Escondida, 2040; Palace Group, 2040; Palace of the Fallen King, 2038; Plaza, 1997; Structure L8-8, 1996, 2037 Ah Kin Chen, 2045 Ah Kinob, 1986 Ah Puch, 1303 Ajpacaja Tum, F. P., 66 Akan, 1981 Akateko, ethnography, 412; linguistics, 240, 241 Ake, 2046 Alcina Franch, J., 72 Alcoholic beverages see Intoxicants Aldama, 544 Aldea Ilom, 922 Aldea Ixtupil, 922 Aldea María Tecúm, 922 Aldea Sajsiban, 922 Aldea Sotsil, 922 Almendaréiz, R., 59 Alta Verapaz, 24, 143, 1973, 1999-2001, 2979 221

Bibliography, 19-21 Bilboa, 24 Binational research centers, 1613 Biography, 65-128, 562 Bird Jaguar, 1244, 2659 Birth, 23 Black Christ, 618, 2832 Blackman Eddy, 1244, 1629, 1974, 2071, 2078, 2079 Blacks, 637 Blom, F., 61, 73, 1554 Blom, G. D., 67 Blood and bloodletting, 23, 24, 1279, 1280, 1367; see also Sacrifice Blood of Kings, 1993 Blowgun, 435 Blue Creek, 1639, 1666, 1974, 1981, 2075, 2080-2091, 3057; Structure 3, 2084 Body modification, 1080-1084, 1388; cranial modification, 24, 1052, 1064, 1082, 1084, 2182; dental modification, 24, 1064, 1081, 1083, 1084, 2182, 2704 Bolivia, 1207 Bolón Dz’acab, 1303 Bolonchen, 2092 Bolonk’in, 2102 Bonampak, 14, 24, 25, 74, 1540, 1607, 1668, 1983, 20932101, 3058, 3059; acropolis, 1607; Panels, 2, 4, 5, 2093 Bone, 1690-1695, 2107, 2208, 2348, 2466, 2659, 2838; bone collagen, 2273; bone setters, 1003, 1004; see also Skeletal remains Boserup, E., 891 Bourne, J., 74 Brasseur de Bourbourg, C.E., 23 Bravo (river), 2732 Breton, A., 25 Brinton, D. G., 68 Buena Vista, 1668, 2338 Buenavista del Cayo, 2071, 2103, Burial BVC88-1/2. 2103 Buenos Aires, 1456 Bullfighting, 609 Bundle, 23, 24, 1311 Burials, 203, 1290, 1301, 1388, 1444, 1470, 2021, 2050, 2103, 2172, 2186, 2206, 2287, 2450, 2459, 2466, 2527, 2672, 2675, 2695, 2706, 2827, 2838; see also Mortuary customs; Abaj Takalik, Altún Ha, Ambergris Caye, Buenavista del Cayo Burkitt, R. J., 69-71, 1752, 1852 Butler, M., 2687 Butz’ Chan, 1942 Cabildo, 23 Cabrican, 496 Cacao, 23, 216, 867, 920, 937-946, 1726, 1983, 1998, 2001, 2224, 2314; see also Chocolate Cacaulapa, 2583 Cacaxtla, 2104-2106, 2996 Cache, 24, 920, 1639, 1640, 1981, 2181, 2314, 2446, 2466, 2672 Cacique, 23 Cahal Pech, 965, 1668, 2071, 2107 Cakhay, Altar 1, 1997 Calakmul, 23, 24, 180, 853, 1012, 1047, 1358, 1656, 1657, 1668, 1928, 1975, 1988, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000, 21082137, 2143, 2144, 2357, 2808, 3005, 3060; acropolis, 2136; plaza, 1975; Stela 52, 2128; Structure Sub 1-4, 2110

Arnold, C., 61 Arroyo de Piedra, 1719, 2054 Art market, 1526-1528; see also Cultural patrimony Art, 18, 23, 24, 582, 1513-1525, 1985 Artifacts and industries, 24 Astrology, 24, 1818, 1819; zodiac, 719 Astronomy, 5, 23-25, 849, 1816-1830, 1970, 1983, 1993, 1995, 2278, 2362, 2528, 2531; constellation, 1825, 1826; eclipse, 23, 1822, 1983, 1984; lightning and thunder, 24; meteor and meteorite, 23; moon, 23, 506, 1327, 1829, 1830; planet, 23; Scorpius, 1826; stars and constellations, 23; sun, 23, 506, 2278; Venus, 849, 1250, 1830, 1849, 1941, 1984, 2217, 2278, 2279, 2629 Atitlán (lake), 384, 566, 843, 1359, 1360, 1382, 1396, 1976, 1996, 2969 Atlantean figure see Sculpture Atlases, 22, 223 Atole, 920 Autosacrifice see Sacrifice Avila, 2171, 2172 Awakatek, ethnography, 1031, linguistics, 242-247 Awe, J., 2158 Axe, 2413 Axolotl, 920 Ayarza, 1553 Azul (river), 24, 1456 Baak, 2642 Bacabs, 23 Bacalar, 2762 Bachajon, 1976 Baja Verapaz, 1996, 2417 Bajo Hill (site), 2055 Bajos see Wetlands Baking Pot, 1451, 1974, 1987, 2056, 2057, 2071, 3053 Balam Ná, 2058; Cave 4, 2058 Balamkú, 24, 1997, 2000, 2059, 2144; Structure 1-A sub, 2059 Balancan, 2060 Balché, 2061 Bali, 899 Ball courts see Architecture Ball, 1587 Baptism, 23 Barcohaltún de las Dos Cruces, 2062 Bark cloth, 482 Barranca de Gálvez, 1999 Barrera Vásquez, A., 1421 Barton Creek Cave, 2063, 2064 Barton Ramie, 2065 Batik see Textiles Beans, 23, 920 Beatniks, 619 Becan, 24, 2066, 2067, 2144, 3054, 3055, 3118, 3134, 3138, 3141-3144 Beekeeping see Apiculture Beheading, 632 Bejucal, 1456 Belize (river), 920, 1451, 1780, 1996, 2068-2077, 3056 Bells, copper, 2186 Belmopan, 1718 Berlin-Neubart, H., 1575 Bernasconi, A., 59 Betania, 598 Beverages, 23, 920, 472, 499, 656, 938 222

Cenote, 23, 171-174, 1372, 1979, 2365, 2932 Census, 801 Ceremonial centers, 23 Ceren, 25, 1470, 1987, 2174-2178, 3063; Household 1, 2177; Household 2, 2177; Household 4, 2177; Structure 4, 2177; Structure 9, 2177; Structure 10, 2177; Structure 12, 2177; Structure 16, 2177 Cerro de Cheyo, 2179, 2354, 2580 Cerro Palenque, 24 Cerros, 24, 965 Ch’ol, ethnography, 413, 1104, 1161, 1190; linguistics, 248, 249 Ch’orti’, ethnography, 23, 414-424, 639, 1413, 1978, 1994, 1176, 1177, 1196; linguistics, 251-254 Chaa Creek, 1451, 2180 Chaac, 1303, 1328-1331, 1337, 1338, 1413 Chac II, 2181 Chac, 24 Chacchac, 2884 Chacmool see Sculpture Chacmultún, 3064, 3134, 3138, 3143-3144 Chaculá, 2184 Chagüite, 2184 Chalchuapa, 24, 1995-1997, 1999, 2000, 2186; Casa Blanca, 1995, 1996, 2186; Structure B1-1, 1999 Chalpate, 1456 Chamelco see San Juan Chamelco Chamelecón (river), 2584 Champoton, 1388, 2187-2190 Chamula Revolt of 1869, 1986 Chamula see San Juan Chamula Chan Chich, 2193; Group H, 2193; Structure C-6, 2193; Temple of the Jaguar Skull, 2193; Upper plaza, 2193 Chan Kom, 54, 614 Chan Muan II, 1607 Chan Noohol, 1470, 2194 Chan, 1974, 2191, 2192, 3065 Chana, 496 Channa Sur, 2195 Chapman, A. M., 877 Charnay, D., 51, 61 Chase, A. F., 2158 Chase, D. Z., 2158 Chau Hiix, 853, 2196-2204, 2499, 3066 Chechem Ha, 2205 Chenalhó, 1481, 1608 Chenes, 23, 1648 Chi Xiu, A., 1986 Chiapa de Corzo, 24, 2206, 2273, 2459, 2827 Chiapas Interior plateau, 24 Chibal, 1103 Chicabal, 1366 Chicaman, 299 Chicanna, 2143, 2207, 3067, 3134, 3138, 3143, 3144 Chichancanab (lake), 857 Chichén Itzá, 23, 24, 54, 101, 105, 582, 849, 853, 1311, 1388, 1453, 1465, 1470, 1934, 1977, 1995-1998, 2381, 22082237, 2528, 2707, 2943, 2954, 2968, 2974, 2964, 2992, 3005, 3027, 3067-3071, 3118, 3141, 3142; Ball court, 1997; Caracol, 2237; Castillo Viejo, 2234, 2237; Nunnery, 2237; Sacred Cenote, 2214; Structure 5D-2, 1997; Sweatbath, 2237’ Temple of Kukulcan, 2237; Temple of the Jaguars, 2231; Temple of the Warriors, 2237 Chichicastenango, 2946

Calcehtock, 1407 Calderón, J. A., 59 Calendar round, 23 Calendar, 5, 24, 478, 1125, 1815, 1819, 1824, 1831-1852, 1999; Christian, 23; correlation, 23; wheels, 23 Calepino de Motúl, 711 Calkini chronicle, 712, 1103 Calkini, 712, 2776 Calpulli, 23 Camino real, 653 Campeche (region), 2138-2148 Canada, 1014, 1598 Canajaste, 24 Canby, P., 61 Cancuc, 1994 Cancuen, 25, 879, 1995-1999, 2149-2155, 2263, 2404, 3005; Group L-6, 1997 Cancun, 970, 1162, 1167, 2156 Candelaria (river), 194, 195, 1997 Canek manuscript, 713 Canek, J., 23 Cannibalism, 23, 24 Canoe, 2701 Cantares de Dzitbalché, 714, 715 Cante (island), 2838 Cantón Corralito, 1998 Cantón Tapalschucut, 1711 Capitalism, 869 Capstone texts, 1611 Captives, 1555 Cara Blanca, 1974, 2157 Caracol, 23-25, 203, 853, 965, 1244, 1531, 1668, 1928, 1974, 1977, 2071, 2158-2167, 3005, 3061; Altar 10, 1931; Stela 17, 1931 Caribbean (coast), 597, 625, 2000 Carmack, R. M., 1994 Carnegie Institution of Washington, 63, 1623, 1647, 2548 Carneval, 535, 1368, 1607, 1950 Casa de Golondrinas, 1995, 1997, 1999 Cash crops, 895 Caso, A., 1575 Castas paintings, 23 Caste War, 23, 405, 676, 685, 701, 706, 1132-1134, 1974, 1986 Catastrophe, 1311, 1997 Catherwood, F., 24, 51, 119 Catholicism, 23, 516, 1262, 1284, 1285 Caucalapa, 3062 Caucel, 2168 Causeways see Roads Caves Branch Rock Shelter, 2169 Caves, 23, 24, 1286-1297, 1413, 1462, 1976, 1983, 1999, 2023, 2058, 2063, 2169, 2205, 2508, 2512, 2772, 2773, 2904, 2932, 2937; cave art, 843; Cueva de las Pinturas, 2350; Cueva de los Quetzales, 1997 Cawinal see Kawinal Caye Coco, 1451, 2170-2173, 2494; Cemetery 1, 2172; Cemetery 2, 2172Structure 1, 2172; Structure 5, 2172; Structure 8, 2172; Structure 13, 2172; Structure 19, 2172 Cayo (district), 1974, 2554, 2862, 2863 Cehache, 1934 Celestial dragon, 1303 Cemetery, 808 Cen, B., 706 223

2695, 2757, 2761, 2771, 2856; Epiclassic, 1683; Postclassic, 18, 23, 24, 841-849, 861, 862, 1049, 1051, 1086, 1248, 1253, 1256, 1365, 1388, 1817, 1977, 1983, 1992, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2068, 2182, 2189, 2224, 2338, 2368, 2423, 2473, 2504, 2533, 2538, 2545, 2695, 2783, 2846, 2860, 2931, 2933, 2940; Early, 1683, 1974, 2390, 2474, 2495; Late, 1245, 1626, 1734, 2173, 2506, 2543, 2544, 2762, 2934-2939 Chuhe, 2885 Chuj, ethnography, 425, 426; linguistics, 255-257 Chultún, 1996, 2862 Chumayel, 718 Chunchimai, 2246, 2247 Chunchucmil, 867, 1458, 1629, 1997, 1999, 2248-2256, 3073 Chundsinab, 2257, 2360 Chunhuhub, 201 Chunhuitz, 1456, 1977 Chupicuaro, 2996 Chupol, 469 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, 51 Churches and cathedrals, 23, 2001 Cihuatan, 24, 2258, 2259, 3074 Cinnabar and hematite, 24 Ciudad Real, 637, 654 Ciudad Real, A. de, 61 Ciudad Viejo, 1997 Cival, 1999, 2000, 2151, 2260-2263, 2404, 3005 Civic-ceremonial center, 24 Civil disobedience, 494 Civil records, 23 Civil-religious hierarchy, 23 Claro (river), 24 Class, 1103 Climate, 154, 155, 159, 175-199, 1998, 2144 Clothing see Dress Cobá, 23, 24, 584, 1942, 1977, 2264-2266, 2715, 3005 Cobán, 1366, 1539, 1995 Cochineal, 1805 Cochuah (region), 2267, 2268, 2927 Codices, 23, 21-748, 1941, 1981, 1983, 1992, 2218; Borgia, 849, 1279, 1280; Chugüila, 729; Dresden, 23, 730-734, 1413, 1607, 1830, 1927, 1984, 1999; Grolier, 735-737; Madrid, 23, 738-746, 849, 1280, 1607; Paris, 23, 747; Prague, 748 Coe, M. D., 75 Coe, W. R., 76 Coffee, 897, 948 Cofradia, 23, 570, 659, 1289, 1462, 1986, 2186 Colhá, 24, 1765, 1974, 2269-2273, 2549, 2827 Collapse of Maya civilization, 3, 18, 183, 850-864, 891, 1987, 1998, 2308, 2309, 2498 Colonialsm, 23, 2506 Color, 1641, 1641, 1991, 2302, 2473, 2585 Comalcalco, 24, 1990, 1998, 2274, 2275 Comitán, 330 Commerce, 615, 939, 1979, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2051, 2939 Community engagement, 1547-1549 Community kingdoms, 23 Compadrazgo, 23 Concepción Chiquirichapa, 408 Concepción Huista, 264 Confession, 23 Conquest, 4, 23, 631, 633, 634, 643, 843, 1983, 1994

Chichimena, 2186 Chichupac, 2979 Chicle, 947 Chikinchel, 1103 Chilam Balam, 23, 716-720, 1413, 1975, 1984; Chumayel, 718; Ixil, 719; Kaua, 720; Maní, 2762; Tizimin, 2762 Childbirth, 990 Childhood, 378 Chilies, 23 Chilon, 2102 Chimaltenango, 408, 1995 Chimban, 1353 China, 1437 Chinaja, 2000 Chinikiha, 3005 Chinkultic, 1999, 2238, 2239, 3005, 3072 Chipped stone tool production and products, 24 Chiquibul (river), 2240, 2733 Chiquimula de la Sierra,639, 1999 Chiquiuitan, 2387 Chisec, 1196, 2000 Chixoy (river), 1973, 1996 Choatalum, 1196 Chochkitam, 1456 Chocoha, 2242 Chocolá, 1997-1999, 2242-2245 Chocolate, 24, 937, 939, 2894; see also Cacao Cholula, 2224, 2954, 2996 Chontal, linguistics, 250 Chontalapa, 1103 Chronology, 828-849; Paleoindian, 24; Archaic, 23, 24, 828, 2170-2172, 2494; Preclassic, 18, 23, 24, 182, 829-831, 871, 1329, 1731, 1774, 1978, 1988, 1997-2000, 2058, 2073, 2206, 2243, 2244, 2262, 2272, 2273, 2346, 2376, 2509, 2642, 2699, 2781, 2827, 2873; Early, 1728, 1730, 1974, 1983, 1988, 1997, 2287; Middle, 1244, 1988, 1997, 2000, 2069, 2071, 2344, 2345, 2347, 2348, 2445, 2472, 2584; Late, 1442, 1654, 1711, 1888, 1911, 1988, 1993, 1998, 2069, 2426, 2427, 2449, 2459, 2502; Classic, 3, 8, 18, 23-25, 832-840, 853, 870, 871, 880, 935, 1047, 1049, 1061, 1070, 1094-1096, 1109, 1116, 1246, 1253, 1255, 1280, 1293, 1311, 1330, 1365, 1388, 1434, 1442, 1457, 1482, 1520, 1557, 1558, 1579, 1589, 1669, 1683, 16891692, 1695, 1712, 1721, 1723, 1744, 1747, 1824, 1839, 1871-1873, 1875, 1885, 1894, 1896, 1905, 1906, 1917, 1927, 1928, 1943, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2026, 2032, 2034, 20372041, 2054, 2064, 2129, 2161, 2165, 2224, 2253, 2256, 2281-2283, 2286, 2294, 2297, 2298, 2301, 2306, 23082310, 2324, 2368, 2368, 2427, 2477, 2480, 2483, 2508, 2525, 2536, 2567, 2570, 2633, 2642, 2662, 2701, 2750, 2802, 2826, 2857, 2879, 2928, 2931; Early, 825, 901, 941, 1244, 1573, 1612, 1656, 1657, 1666, 1668, 1693, 1738, 1816, 1888, 1981, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2051, 2056, 2113, 2136, 2333, 2356, 2445, 2527, 2676, 2802, 2864; Late, 887, 1086, 1272, 1438, 1458, 1476, 1496, 1666, 1668, 1721, 1723, 1738, 1991, 1995-1999, 2042, 2072, 2149, 2179, 2194, 2215, 2240, 2271, 2278, 2280, 2289, 2291, 2300, 2327, 2332, 2354, 2355, 2372, 2391, 2406, 2411, 2464, 2482, 2485, 2571, 2577, 2578, 2580, 2581, 2656, 2676, 2681, 2702, 2713, 2757, 2761, 2793, 2830, 2896, 2922, 2925; Terminal, 183, 190, 850, 853, 861, 901, 1723, 1731, 1974, 1995, 1996, 2051, 2068, 2170, 2173, 2182, 2215, 2271, 2406, 2474, 2481, 2538, 2589, 224

Curanderos, 993, 1984, 1003, 1004, 1006 Curing and healing, 23 Current Reports, 2548 Cuyamel Caves, 24 Cylinder seals, 1996 Dallas, Texas, 1143 Dams, 1604, 2389 Dance, 23, 788-790, 1413, 1943-1954; Dance of K’awiil, 1943; Dance of the Conquest, 1951, 1952; Dance of the Deer, 1953, 1954 Dating methods, 24 David Westby (site), 2701 Day of the Dead and Todos Santos, 23, 1376 Daykeeper, 866 Day-signs, 23 Death, 23, 920, 1308-1320, 1981, 1983, 2314, 2400 Deforestation, 137, 138, 169, 2316 Deities, 8, 23, 24, 1321-1340, 1392, 1540, 1727, 1981-1983; God A, 1303; God B, 1303; God C, 1935; God D, 1303; God E, 1303; God G., 1303; God K., 1303; God L, 1322; Goddess O, 1470; creator deities, 23; death deities, 23; earth deities, 23; fire deities, 23; maize deity, 1303, 1413, 1480; mother goddesses, 23; mountain deities, 551; old deities, 23; rain deities, 23, 1326, 1330, 1979 Demography, 24, 419, 544, 601, 699, 1010, 1994, 2169, 2182, 2187, 2485, 2616, 2823 Dentistry, 990 Dentition see Teeth Depression, 990 Development, 375, 457, 955-958, 990, 1209 Devil, 23 Devotional texts and manuals, 23 Diaz del Castillo, B., 23, 24, 61 Dictionaries and grammars, 23 Diet, 18, 24, 25, 901, 915, 920, 990, 1071, 1076, 1978, 2504, 2838, 2860, 2867 Disease, illness and curing, 24 Divination, 23, 24, 480, 2177 DNA see Mito Docks, 2081 Documents, historical and hagiographical, 23; indigenous, 709-794 Dogs, 23, 24, 2273, 2451 Dolores (Campeche), 2710 Dolores (Petén), 1997, 1999 Dolores, 1108, 2353, 2354, 2697 Domestic shrines, 407 Domination, 666 Dominicans, 23, 665 Dos Aguadas, 1456 Dos Caobas, 1942, 3005 Dos Ceibas, 2179, 2354, 2580 Dos Hombres, 1442, 2355, 2356 Dos Lagunas A, 2727 Dos Lagunas A, 2727 Dos Pilas, 24, 52, 1666, 1719, 1928, 1934, 1987, 1996, 23572359, 2408, 3005; Murcielagos Complex, 1666; Stairway 2, 1996; Stela 8, 1934 Double Bird, 2814 Doubloon Bank Lagoon, 2494 Dragons, 1982 Dresden codex see Codices Dress, 23, 24, 1479, 1540 Drought, 176, 183, 184, 186, 190, 854, 856, 857, 1292

Conquistadors, 631, 660 Conservation and restoration, 18, 23, 1999 Construction materials and techniques, 1632, 1997, 1998, 2037, 2117 Contract labor, 1147 Conversion, 618 Cook, J., 61 Copal, 1786 Copán, 14, 23-25, 101, 193, 200, 203, 407, 417, 853, 879, 883, 920, 1365, 1453, 1458, 1470, 1609, 1629, 1666, 1668, 1816, 1823, 1827, 1928, 1941, 1973, 1978, 1979, 1983, 1991, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2276-2336, 2399, 2647, 2823, 2954, 2970, 2966, 2968, 2992, 3005, 3075-3084; Acropolis, 2280, 2333; Children’s Museum, 1542; Hieroglyphic Stairway, 2001; Margarita Structure, 2290; Patio H, 883; Plaza, 1978; Rosalila Structure, 2287; Stela H, 1998; Structure 10L-2, 2331; Structure 10L-16, 2280; Structure 22, 2277; Temple 11, 1941; Temple 16, 2325 Copper see Metals Cordoncillo Corozal, 1456 Corozal (district), 1456, 2513 Corozal Torre, 1456 Corporate-network dimension, 1099 Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic Inscriptions, 1877 Corregidores and alcaldes mayores, 23 Corriental, 2337 Cortés, H., 23, 707 Cosmic trees, 23 Cosmology, 23, 24, 563, 843, 920, 1261, 1298-1307, 1316, 1408, 1455, 1983, 1976, 1979, 1993, 1996, 2486, 2935 Cotton, 24 Cotzumalhuapa (region), 23, 24, 1716, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2663 Cotzumalhuapa style, 24 Covarrubias, M., 23, 1575 Cozumel, 24, 843, 2338-2341, 2755 Craft specialization, 24, 883-887, 2032, 2075, 2193, 2270, 2271, 2680 Creation mythology, 23, 25, 920, 1410, 1413-1415, 1418, 1607, 1983, 2534 Cremation, 1978; see also Mortuary customs Cristos de caña, 23 Crosses and crucifixes, 23, 1554 Crucero de Limones, 2727 Cruzoob, 1273 Cuba, 1156, 1207 Cubulco, 1366 Cucalhuitz, 1607 Cuch, 1368 Cuchumatanes (mountains), 2342, 2343 Cuello, 24, 1991, 2344-2349 Cueva Santillan, J., 61 Culbert, T. P., 77, 78 Culhua Mexica, 849 Cults, 1540 Cultural evolution and development, 824-864 Cultural interaction, 23 Cultural patrimony, 1528, 1595-1608, 1995-2001, 2148, 2312, 2318, 2319, 2456, 2474, 2838 Culture history and society, 824-1512 Cumpich, 2351 Cumtum, 2352; Sacbé 3, 2352 Cunén, 468 Cunlaj, 496 225

El Perú-Waka, 1629, 1997-1999, 2400-2407, 2151, 2263, 3005, 3090; Ball court, 2405; Mirador Complex, 1999; Structure M13-1, 1999, 2406; Structure M14-15, 2400;Structure N14-2, 2401 El Pilar, 25, 965, 1456, 1974, 2071, 2410-2413 El Portal, 2414 El Porvenir, 2738 El Pozito, 2416 El Quiché, 1973, 1997 El Rancho, 496 El Rincón, 496 El Salto Este, 2417 El Salto, 1996 El Susto Mirador, 2496 El Susto, 2496 El Tigré, 1456, 1996, 2143, 2418, 2419; Masks 1-3, 2418; Structure 1, 1996 El Tortuguero, 1990 El Ujuxté, 1997, 2420, 2421 El Zacatal, 2422; Stela 1, 2422 El Zotz, 25, 1456, 1999, 3005 Electronic resources, 23 Elmendorf, M., 584 Emergetics, 2287 Encomiendas and repartimientos, 23, 2367 Encyclopedias, 23, 24 Enema, 1746 Energetics, 1648 Environment, 14, 129-204, 1980 Environmental preservation, 163-170; Biosfera Maya, 997; Biosphere Reserve of Montes Azules, 2563; Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, 135, 139, 166, 170, 584; Calakmul Model Forest, 957; Ixchel Tropical Research Foundation, 1032, 1932; Maya Biosphere Reserve, 888, 892, 900, 1150; Parque Archaeológico Kaminaljuyú, 1999; Parque Nacional Sierra del Lacandón, 1108, 1997, 1999; Parque Nacional Tikal, 2000; Parque Nacional Yaxhá, 2000; Terra Nova Medicinal Reserve, 1032 Epidemics, 1008 Epigraphy see Hieroglyphic writing Escuintla, 1995, 1997; San Jerónimo Complex, 1997 Estrada-Belli, F., 2260, 2261 Ethnicity, 23, 24, 386-409, 429, 438, 458, 471, 550, 585-587, 662, 703, 849, 1103, 1209, 1226, 1989, 2325, 2342, 2759 Ethnoarchaeology, 453, 1740, 1995, 2000 Ethnobotany, 536, 749, 750, 1017-1039, 1291, 1751, 1999, 2091, 2171, 2172, 2177, 2186, 2313, 2410, 2473, 2442, 3810 Ethnoecology, 542 Ethnogeography, 538 Ethnography Ethnography, 370-621, 1244, 1969; see also Achí, Akateko, Awakatek, Ch’ol, Ch’orti’, Chuj, Itzaj, Ixil, Jakalteko, K’iche’, Kaqchikel, Lakandon, Mam, Mopán, Poqomam, Poqomchí, Q’anjob’al, Q’eqchi, Tektiteko, Tojol’abal, Tz’utujil, Tzeltal, Tzotzil, Yukateko Ethnohistory, 622-803, 1244, 1470, 1985, 1999, 2186, 2939; highland, 637-668; lowland, 669-708; sources and methods, 24 Ethnomedicine, 1984 Ethnopharmacology, 1018 Etzna see Edzna Everton, M., 61 Exchange media, 24

Drums, 2040 Dualism, 23, 872, 2388 Dumbarton Oaks, 1941 DVD and VHS format, 2942-2995 Dwarfs, 1588, 1753, 1557-1559, 1983 Dwellings, 510, 520, 925, 1442, 1622, 1625, 1642-1647, 1976, 2070, 2198, 2251, 2252, 2303, 2480, 2506, 2549, 2581, 2838, 2939 Dyckerhoff, U., 79 Dyes, 24; see also Cochineal Dynasties, 23 Dzancab, 2257, 2360 Dzibanché, 1047, 2361, 3005 Dzibilchaltún, 24, 52, 1977, 1984, 2362-2366, 3085; Sacbe 2, 2363; Sacbe 5, 2363; Substructure 44, 1984 Dzibilnocac, 1998, 3086, 3134, 3138, 3143, 3144 Dzitbalche, 714, 715 Dzonotchuil, 801 Earspools, 1123 Earthquake, 200, 1605 Earth-star, 1884 Ecab, 2367 Ecclesiastical records, 23 Eckixil, 2368 Economic and tribute manuscripts, 23 Economics, 14, 23, 24, 373, 580, 600, 602, 865-954, 1974, 1992, 1995, 2052, 2075, 2198, 2266, 2426, 2522, 2553, 2566 Edmonson, M. S., 80 Education, 512, 610, 682, 972-989, 1196, 1209, 1490 Edzná, 24, 2143, 2369-2375, 2992, 3005, 3087, 3134, 3138, 3143, 3144; Ball court, 2375; Complex VI, 2375; Complex XI, 2375; Edificio de los Cinco Pisos, 2374; Hieroglyphic Stairway, 1, 2372; Structure 424, 2375; Templo de los Moscos, 2373 E-groups, 2087 Egypt, 1275, 1491, 1892 Ehecatl, 1982 Ejidos, 23 Ek Balam, 853, 2376-2385, 3005, 3088; Acropolis, 2384, 2385, 2638 Ek Xux, 2386 El Bálsamo, 24 El Baul, 24, 1996, 2387 El Cajón, 24, 2389 El Carmen, 1456 El Castillo, 24 El Cayo, 1993 El Chagüite, 1973 El Chorro, 3005 El Coyote, 1996, 2390, 2391 El Diablo, 1456 El Duende, 1719 El Kinel, 1995 El Manatí, 24 El Mesak, 24 El Mirador (Guatemala), 23, 24, 45, 182, 1456, 1629, 1996, 1998-2000, 2392-2394, 3005, 3089 El Niño, 188 El Pajarral, 2395, 3005 El Papal, 496 El Paraíso (Guatemala), 2396 El Paraíso (Honduras), 2289, 2397-2399, 3091 226

General summaries, 1-18 Genetics, 1058 Geoarchaeology, 1972 Geographic Information Systems, 1467, 1469, 1997, 2023 Geography and archaeology, 1465; and climate, 24 Geology, 23 Geophagy, 1341 Globalization, 373, 381, 385, 387, 418, 440, 445, 508, 521, 600, 1135-1140, 1153, 1176, 1177, 1389, 2389 Gloria-Sacul, 2424 Glottochronology, 901 Glycemia, 1009, 1063 God House, 939 Goubaud Carrera, A., 83 Gourds, 2176 Government relations, 454, 1175-1180; Chiapas, 1111, 1120, 1122, 1181-1193; Guatemala, 1112, 1114, 1120, 11941237 Graffiti, 2467, 2537, 2587, 2588 Graham, I., 25 Grijalva (river), 2734 Grinding implements, 23 Grolier codex see Codices Groundstone, 1995, 2170, 2186, 2193, 2466, 2561, 2838 Gualjoquito, 24 Guatemala City, 1209, 1716 Guides to archaeological sites, 31-36 Güija (lake), 3005 Guijarral, 2425 Gulf Coast (region), 1907, 2761 Gulf of Fonseca, 24 Haciendas and plantations, 23, 651, 804, 2790, 2833 Halliburton, R., 61 Hallucinogens, 23 Handbooks, 26 Hands, human, 1561, 1562 Havana, 1156 Headband, 2030 Health care, 410, 529, 471, 501, 616, 1989, 2182, 2280 Heart extraction, 1386, 1387 Heaven and hell, 23 Hecelchakan, 2872 Herbal medicine, 990, 992, 1984 Herding and livestock, 23 Hermeneutics, 853 Hero twins, 23 Herrera manuscript, 749, 750 Hershey Foods Corp., 944 Heterarchy, 2075, 2200 Hieroglyphic writing, 8, 18, 23, 25, 414, 833, 920, 934, 939, 1106, 1244, 1280, 1470, 1533, 1625, 1860-1942, 1974, 1980, 1981, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2046, 2056, 2060, 2102, 2109, 2126, 2162, 2234, 2249, 2280, 2287, 2351, 2357, 2358, 2372, 2380, 2384, 2444, 2458, 2469, 2514, 2608, 2612, 2613, 2624, 2638, 2641, 2683, 2691, 2703, 2719, 2722, 2769, 2777, 2807, 2822, 2823, 2836, 2838, 2841, 2872, 2889, 2916, 2921; introductions, 18601873; bibliography, 1874; catalogs, 1875, 1876; specialized studies, 1878-1915; phonetic-cism, 1916-1927; decipherments, 1928-1939; electronic resources, 1941, 1942; Glyph D, 1827; Glyph E, 1827; Glyph F, 1942; Glyph G, 1818; Glyph T158, 1904; Glyph T299, 1942; T510cd, 1941; T536, 1941; T540, 1941; Glyph T683a, 1941; Glyph T683b, 1941; Glyph T757, 1941; Glyph T855,

Exchange, 867 Fajardo, D., 683 Family planning, 419, 1040 Family, 23, 24 Famine, 1311 Fasting, 23 Fauna, 24, 157, 201-204, 913, 1982, 2031, 2166, 2171, 2177, 2190, 2292, 2508, 2644, 2665, 2666, 2705, 2808, 2838; bats, 23; bees, Africanized honey, 952; bees, stingless, 952; birds, 153, 2224; butterfly, 23; caiman, 1982; centipede, 1978; deer, 23, 1741, 2273; eagle, 23; firefly, 558; fish, 203, 882, 1934, 2190, 2524; frogs and toads, 23; hummingbirds, 23; jaguars and pumas, 23, 24, 1324, 1384, 2213; opossums, 23; owls, 23; peccary, 1998; quetzal, 1982; rabbits, 23; serpents and snakes, 23, 1324, 1591, 1942, 1978, 1982; stingray, 1367; turkeys, 24; turtles, 23; waterfowl, 23 Feasting, 920, 1439, 1442, 2177, 2314, 2391, 2401, 2772 Feathered serpent, 23-25 Feathers and featherwork, 23 Fernández, M. A., 74 Fertility, 23, 529, 904 Festivals and festival cycles, 23 Field schools, 2086 Figurines, 1123, 1497, 1753-1787, 1995, 2000, 2044, 2127, 2186, 2275; Figurine-whistles, 1755, 2402, 2448, 2451, 2569, 2572, 2577, 2741 Finca El Paraíso, 2396 Fire drilling, 1279, 1280 Flood, 1404 Flora, 157 Flores, 1081, 1999, 2423 Florida, 988 Flower mountain, 1589 Flowers, 24, 849, 1607 Flutes, 25 Folk art, 23 Folklore, 425, 449, 493, 500, 502, 503, 527, 547, 558, 567, 569, 617, 1393-1405 Food and cuisine, 23, 24, 591, 915-921, 2178, 2705 Förstemann, E., 23 Forsyth, D., 81 Fortification, 24, 203, 1247, 1254, 1984, 1997-1999, 2793, 2826, 2828, 2829, 2939 France, 701 Franciscans, 23, 1670, 679, 687, 700, 703, 704, 1975 Fred Smith (site), 2170, 2494 Freidel, D. A., 61 French structuralism, 826 French, 50 Frenchman’s Cay, 98, 203 Freshwater Creek, 2170 Frontera Corozal, 408 Frontier, 1103, 1999, 2780 Fuente, B. de la, 82 Funerary cults, 1310 Gall, T., 61 Games and gambling, 24 Gangster rap, 619 Gann, T., 2884 Gardens see Home gardens Gender, 23, 24, 383, 602, 920, 939, 1159, 1453, 1470, 1512, 1757, 1788, 1986, 2160, 2917 Genealogical manuscripts, 23 227

Indigenous rights movements, 23 Industrial archaeology, 1998 Industrialization, 928 Infancy, 553 Information flow, 524 Inquisition, 23 Institutional Revolutionary Party, 1187 Institutions, 23; Asociación de Sacerdotes Mayas de Guatemala, 1196; Belize Department of Archaeology, 1718; Dirección General del Patrimonio Cultural y Natural de Guatemala, 1719; Instituto Hondureño de Antropología e Historia, 1544; Instituto Indígenista Nacional de Guatemala, 83; Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia de México, 1536; Ministerio de Cultura y Deportes de Guatemala, 1719 Insurgency, 652, 677, 1121 Intellectual life, 1815-1963 Inter-American Court of Human Rights, 1238 Intermediate area, 24 International Congress of Americanists, 2884 International Congress of Copán, 2293 Internet resources, 3003-3145 Interregional interactions, 24 Intoxicants and intoxification, 24, 1983 Iron pyrite, 1649, 1650 Isla Cerritos, 1979 Isla Cilvituk, 1103 Isla de los Cerros, 2438, 2439 Islam, 1281 Itzaj, ethnography, 23, 939, 1402, 1614, 1720, 1934, 2471; linguistics, 258, 259 Itzám Cab Ain, 1303 Itzám K’an Ahk, 2683 Itzamal, 704 Itzamcab, 695 Itzamná, 23, 1303, 2635 Itzán, 24, 2440 Itzimté, 1977, 1997, 2415 Ix Balam, 1400 Ixbalanqué, 1336 Ixcán (region), 427, 2975 Ixcán (river), 1456, 1973, 1997 Ixchel, 23, 1327, 1986, 2755 Ixchelbelyax, 1327 Ixil, ethnography, 23, 71, 427, 428, 719, 922, 1176, 1177, 2000; linguistics, 259, 260 Iximché, 23, 24, 2441-2443 Ixkún, 53, 1977, 1999 Ixlú, 1456 Ixtatán see San Mateo Ixtatán Ixtinto, 1456 Ixtupil, 922 Ixtutz, 53, 2444; Stela 4, 2444 Izalco, 1711 Izamal, 24, 2445 Izapa, 23, 1607, 1988, 3005, 3093; Group F, 1607; Stela 25, 1988 Jacaltenango, 264 429, 1148, 1806 Jade and greenstone, 23, 24, 883, 1123, 1771-1776, 1941, 1983, 2153 Jaguar Hill, 2446 Jaguar prophet, 1267 Jaguar Slayer, 1413 Jaina, 24, 1983, 2143, 2447-2451, 2654, 3094

1941; Glyph T86:700, 1941; Glyph T87, 1942; Emblem glyphs, 24, 1885, 2403, 2692, 2804; Jog sign, 1941; Way glyph, 1934 Hip-hop, 619 Hippies, 619 Historical archaeology, 804-820, 867, 1615, 1997-1999, 2001 Historiography, 23 History of Maya research, 49-128 Hochob, 24 Holmúl (river), 1456 Holmúl, 24, 1456, 1469, 1996-1999, 2426-2432, 3092; Group III-B, 1998; Palace, 2431 Holotunich, 2433 Holtún, 1456 Holy Week, 2186 Home gardens, 24, 889, 906-912, 1029 Hondo (river), 133 Honey Camp Lagoon, 2695 Honey, 23 Hope, Massachusetts, 1154 Hopelchen, 2834 Hormiguero, 2144 Houselots, 1977, 2199 Huech, 1456 Huehuetenango, 1148, 1973, 1989, 1999 Huichol, 1982 Huista, 264 Hultún, 2434; acropolis, 2434 Human body, 23 Human remains see Skeletal remains Human rights, 1176, 1177, 1191, 1192, 1196, 1225, 1472, 1481, 1983 Humboldt, A. von P., 23 Hun K’anleum, 2641 Hunab Ku, 1303 Hunapuh, 643 Hunchbacks, 1397 Hunter-gatherers, 2001 Huntichumul, 2435 Hunting, 913, 914 Hunto Chac, 2436 Hurricane Mitch, 25 Hurst, H., 2749 Hurter, G., 55 Hydroelectric dams see Dams Hydrology, 24, 2201 Ichmul, 2437, 2927 Ichon, A., 1973 Iconography, 407, 825, 1388, 1389, 1470, 1554-1591, 1692, 1991, 1995, 1997-1999, 2004, 2144, 2229, 2234, 2280, 2466, 2512, 2543, 2659, 2802, 2939 Identity, 228, 418, 433, 436, 447, 448, 483, 517, 518, 528, 534, 559, 579, 583, 589, 596, 603, 611, 680, 681, 887, 1215, 1266, 1480, 1803, 1968, 1803, 1986, 1996, 2065, 2082, 2191, 2224, 2298, 2934 Ideology, 516, 849, 920, 934, 1142, 1252, 1988, 2032 Idolatry, 23, 636, 678, 1986 Ik’ see Motul de San Jose Ilom, 922 Ilopango, 144 Ilotenango see San Antonio Ilotenango Impersonation of deities, 23 Incense see Resins Indígenismo and pre-hispanic revivals, 23 228

La Lagunita, 1973 La Libertad, 24, 1108, 1995-1997, 1999, 2000 La Lima, 1999 La Mar, 1993 La Milpa, 24, 853, 1451, 1976, 1997, 2075, 2481-2487, 2546, 3099, 3100; Structure 199, 2482 La Mojarra, 24, 3005 La Montaña, 954 La Muertita, 2487 La Muralla, 1456 La Naya, 1456 La Pasadita, 1244, 2488 La Pita, 1456 La Reforma (Guatemala), 1995 La Sierra, 24 La Sufricaya, 1456, 1942, 1996-2000, 2429, 2489, 3101; Stela 1, 2489; Structure 1, 1942 La Trinidad, 1998 La Tulane, 2144 La Vega de Cobán, 1995; Group D, 1995 La Vega, 1995 La Venta, 1990, 2788 La Ventana, 496 La Victoria, 496 Labná, 24, 2707, 2708, 3102, 3103, 3134, 3118, 3138, 3141, 3142-3144 Labor, 23, 599, 925-930, 1201, 1470, 1994, 2377, 2465 Lacandán (forest), 151 Lacandán, 23, 24, 843, 939, 1283, 1288 Lacanhá, 74, 482, 2491 Lady K’awil, 1470 Lagartera, 2492 Lagartero, 24, 203, 2493 Laguna de On (island), 1451, 2172, 2494 Laguna de Pozas, 2495 Laguna Pucteal, 2496 Laja (river), 23 Lakandon, ethnography, 479-492 Lamanai, 24, 965, 1060, 1442, 1765, 1766, 1974, 1991, 2107, 2196, 2497-2506, 3005, 3104-3106, 3134, 3138, 3143, 3144; temple, 1991 Lamay, 2507 Land tenure, 141, 169, 513, 595, 922-924, 1205, 2389 Landa, D. de, 23, 24, 61, 802 Language policy, 23 Lapidary industry, 23, 24 Larrainzar see San Andrés Larrainzar Las Casas, B. de, 23 Las Cubetitas, 2496 Las Higueras, 24 Las Margaritas, 531, 534, 1190 Las Pacayas, 2508 Las Pozas, 510, 1995 Las Ventanas, 1456 Las Victorias, 24 Law, 23 Le Plongeon, A., 23, 51, 61 Leadership and rulership, 24, 439, 977, 1215 Left/right symbolism, 1584 Legitimization, 1614 LEH see Linear enamel hypoplastic Levy, M., 2762 Lienzo, 23, 751-754; Lienzo de Quauhquecholán, 751-754 Lightning Warrior, 2719

Jakalteko, ethnography, 429-435, 1196, 1976; linguistics, 261265 Jakawits, 1995 Jalapa, 391, 2452 Janaab’ Pakal, 2659 Jesús, 23 Jiménez Sánchez, V., 1193 Jobal, 1456 Jocotenango see San Bartolomé Jocotenango Jonuta, 2453 Judas, 23 Jupiter, 1993 Jupiter, Florida, 1148, 1149 K’ak Tiliw, 2719 K’an Tik, 2624 K’awil, 1591, 2022 K’axob, 2462-2466, 3096 K’iche’, ethnography, 23, 455-478, 1152, 1154, 1196, 1197, 1203, 1205, 1209, 1229, 1280, 1282, 1332, 1396, 1419, 1462, 1493, 1945, 1973, 1986, 1994, 1995, 2001; linguistics, 273-285 K’ichean, 23, 1992 K’inich Janahb’ Pakal, 2623 K’inich Yax K’uk’ Mo’, 2287, 2304 K’ox, 1417 K’uk’ulkan, 1817 Ka’an, 1656, 1657 Kabah, 24, 2708, 3095, 3118, 3141, 3142 Kajtún, 2729 Kakoch, 2454, 2875 Kaminaljuyú, 24, 189, 825, 1973, 1988, 1997-1999, 2272, 2287, 2455-2461, 2827 Kanek’, 1983 Kaqchikel, ethnography, 23, 436-454, 895, 1042, 1396, 2442; linguistics, 266-272 Kaua, 594, 720 Kawinal, 1973 Killer Bee (site), 2701 Kinal, 1456, 2467 Kingship, 8, 826, 867, 1094, 1095, 1141, 1142, 1888, 1891, 1928, 1929, 1940, 1980, 1983, 2427, 2477, 2552 Kinich Ahau, 1303 Kisin, 1339 Kites, 444 Knorosov, Y., 25 Kohunlich, 1047, 2361, 2468-2470, 2715, 3097, 3134, 3143, 3144 Koom, 2707 Kowoj, 843, 2934, 2935, 2938, 2839 Kubler, G., 1575 Kukulkan, 23, 2220, 2534 Kulubá, 2471 Kumix Angel, 1413 La Blanca (Pacific coast), 1997, 2472; Monument 3, 1998 La Blanca (Petén), 1456, 1605, 1998, 1999, 2473, 2474; Acropolis, 2473; Offering P7TT-03, 2474; palace, 1999; Structure 6J-1, 2474; Structure 6J-2, 2474 La Caldera, 2475 La Corona, 25, 2476, 2777, 3005 La Estancia, 2000 La Florida, 1996 La Gloria, 1148 La Honradez, 1456, 1977 La Joyanca, 1995-1998, 2000, 2477-2480, 3098 229

Maps and place-names, 23, 24 Maquiladoras, 926 Mara Salvatrucha, 619 Marble, 1777-1779 Marco González, 1051, 2522-2524 Margarita, 2492 María Tecún, 922 Marianism, 23 Marijuana, 950, 993, 1351 Maritime commerce, 882, 883 Markets, 23, 24, 462, 640, 881, 920, 1975, 2001, 2110, 2572 Marriage, 23, 373, 531, 697, 1440, 1441, 1983; Marriage alliance, 23, 691 Martin, P., 1749 Martin, R., 1749 Mask Flange iconographic complex, 1574 Masking, 2637 Masks, 23, 1811-1813, 2112, 2348, 2418, 2419, 2876 Mason, G., 61 Material culture, 1513-1814 Mathamatics, 5, 985, 1815, 1853-1859, 1983 Matrifocality, 664, 1500 Maudslay, A. P., 23, 24, 61, 1967 Maxcan\ú, 699 Maximon, 23, 1325, 1333, 1334 Maya blue, 1660, 1700-1710 Maya culture and history, 24 Maya Hieroglyphic Workshop, 1940 Maya Mountains, 1293, 1873, 2386, 2525-2527, 2577 Maya Riviera, 1549 Mayapán, 24, 843, 849, 862, 934, 1388, 1817, 2528-2548, 3107; Structure Q-141, 2541; Structure Q-152, 2531 Mayflower (site), 1974 Medical anthropology, 990-1042 Medicinal Trail, 2549 Medicine, 1815 Medieval society, 2607 Memorial de Sololá, 755-760 Memorialization, 1520 Menchú Tum, R., 23, 1219, 1240-1243 Mendoza (lake), 1999 Mennonites, 507 Menopause, 1045 Mensabok, 1288 Mental health, 990 Mercer, H., 61 Merchants, 23 Mérida, 23, 624, 808, 2550 Mesoamerica, 23 Mesopotamia, 1892 Messianism and millenarianism, 23 Mestizaje, 23 Metal, 24, 1992, 1999, 2186, 2503, 2539, 2838 Mexica, 849 Mezcala, 2996 Middens, 2685 Middle class, 25 Midwifery, 497, 530, 990, 1004, 1041, 1042 Migration, 380, 614, 1010, 1049, 1057, 1066, 1143-1167, 1473, 1974, 1994, 1995, 2186, 2939 Militarism, 24, 825 Military attache, 1207 Miller, W., 61 Milpa, 966, 1986, 2177

Lime, 24, 1651-1655, 1995, 1996, 2059, 2661 Lineage, 695, 1443, 2072 Linear enamel hypoplastic, 1051 Linguistic atlases, 223 Linguistics, 23, 205-369, 901, 920, 939, 1280, 1540, 1989, 2939; Descriptive linguistics, 212; Historical linguistics, 213-222; Sociolinguistics, 224-234; see also Achí, Akateko, Awakatek, Ch’ol, Ch’orti’, Chuj, Itzaj, Ixil, Jakalteko, K’iche’, Kaqchikel, Mam, Mopán, Poqomam, Poqomchí, Q’anjob’al, Q’eqchi, Tektiteko, Tojol’abal, Tz’utujil, Tzeltal, Tzotzil, Yukateko, Lintels, 2872 Literacy, 1172 Literature, 5, 23, 470, 476, 1419-1433, 6905 Lithics, 23, 1761-1779, 1980, 1995-1999, 2027, 2028, 2052, 2075, 2144, 2164, 2168, 2172, 2177, 2186, 2193, 22692273, 2281-2283, , 2413, 2466, 2493, 2522, 2523, 2554, 2672, 2679, 2680, 2772, 2817, 2823, 2838, 2880, 2911; chalcedony, 1766, 2523; chert, 23, 1767, 2164, 2523, 2532, 2817; flint, 24, 1995, 1996; obsidian, 23, 24, 867, 1541, 1762, 1764, 1766, 1768-1770, 1974, 1983, 1992, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2027, 2172, 2192, 2224, 2282, 2356, 2387, , 2420, 2421, 2455, 2493, 2554, 2767, 2772, 2838; green, 2186, 2590, 2838 Livingston, 517-519 Long count, 23 Long-distance commerce, 877 Looting, 25, 1983, 1996, 1997, 2029 Los Cerritos, 2509 Los Horcones, 2510 Los Lagos (region), 1456 Los Naranjos, 24, 2511, 2512 Lothrop, S. K., 24 Louisville, 2513 Lubaantún, 24, 965 Lunar series, 1827, 1839 Lynching, 1223 Maax Na, 2075 Macal (river), 3005 Macanché (lake), 1995 Macehual, 606 Machaquila, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2514-2516, 2768 Machine readble data files, 2996-3002 Mack Chang, M., 1238, 1239 Macoba, 2517, 2518 Macuahuitl, 1245 Macupana (Tabasco), 250 Madrid codex see Codices Magic, 506, 1260 Mahosik’, 1039 Maize, 23, 24, 407, 543, 882, 893, 901, 901, 1373, 1970, 1982, 1983, 1995, 2167, 2371, 2667 Mal de ojo, 23 Maler, T., 23, 52, 55, 61, 2062 Malnutrition, 990 Malpasito, 2788 Maltrata (valley), 1997 Mam, ethnography, 493-498, 1161, 1190, 1986; linguistics, 286-291 Mamean, 23 Manantial, 1456, 2519 Man-gods, 23 Manifest Destiny, 51 Manos Rojas A, 2520, 2521; Structure 1, 2521 230

1930, 1931, 1933, 2687; Yale University Art Gallery, 1693 Mushrooms, 23, 539, 1027 Music, 23-25, 472, 1955-1957, 1997, 2100 Muyil, 3109 Mythology, 506, 1142, 1260, 1280, 1404, 1406-1418, 1984, 1994, 1998 Na Bolom, 1616 Naachtun, 1456, 2578, 2579, 3110, 3111 Nacimiento, 1997, 2179, 2580, 2354 Naco (valley), 24, 1735, 2581-2584, 3112 Nadzca’an, 24, 2000, 2144 Naha, 482, 486 Nahua, 1907 Nahuala, 990 Naj Tunich, 24, 1996, 3113 Naj Tunich, 2585 Nakbé, 45, 1456, 1995, 2000 Nakúm, 1456, 1605, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 25862596 Names and naming, 24, 407, 1094, 1095 Naranjal, 24 Naranjito, 1456 Naranjo, 24, 1456, 1977, 1928, 1995, 1997-1999, 2000, 25972602, 3005; Acropolis, 1997; Pyramid of the Hieroglyphic Stairway, 1997; Stela 42, 2600 Navigation, 1828, 1979 Nawal, 570, 1374 Near East seafarers, 221 Nébaj, 260, 1121, 2603 Negro (river), 1973 Nentón, 256, 264 New directions, 1964-2018 New York Times, 1188 New York, 784 Nicaragua, 2779 Niche, 2622 Nim Li Punit, 965, 1994, 3005 Nixtunchich, 1456, 2604 Nobility, 23 Nochoch Ek, 2607 Noh-Bec, 2605 Nohcacab, 407, 2606 Nohmul, 24 Nohpot, 2608 Norman, B. M., 61 North Carolina, 1153 Numerical notation, 23 Numerology, 1816, 1849, 1857 Nunkiní, 1361 Nutrition, 23, 1007, 1010, 1388, 2182 Nuun Ujol Chaak, 1932 Ober, F. A., 61 Ocarinas, 25 Oceans, 23 Ocosingo, 552 Olmec, 1774, 1977, 1996, 1998, 2781, 2788 Omens, 23 Opchen, 2609 Oracles, 23 Oral sources, 23 Orange Walk, 2172 Origins of Maya civilization, 827, 1999, 2926 Orlando’s Jewfish (site), 2701

Minanhá, 1458, 1974, 2551-2561; Group L, 2555; Structure 12A, 1458, 1974 Mining, 23, 24 Mirrors, 24, 1649, 1650, 2321 Missions, 23, 672, 687, 1997 Mixco Viejo, 24 Mixe, 1994 Mixe-Zoque, 1998 Modernization, 552, 566, 571-573, 982 Modification, 2189 Moho Cay, 2071 Molobka, 2562 Molobkab see Molobka Momostenango, 276, 1282, 1366, 1994 Monasteries and convents, 23 Monster motif, 1560 Montaña de las Flores, 1998 Monte Albán, 2954, 2996 Montes Azules, 2563 Month names, 1844 Mopán (river), 1456, 1995, 2735, 2852 Mopán, ethnography, 71, 499, 500; linguistics, 292-295 Moral Reforma, 2788 Morán, F., 1927 Morelet, A., 61 Morley, S. G., 23, 24, 61 Morris, A. A., 61 Morris, E., 61 Mortar, 2903 Mortuary customs, 1978, 1981, 1995, 1996, 2064, 2111, 2112, 2121, 2123, 2133, 2169, 2172, 2182, 2363, 2450, 2647, 2800; see also Burials, Cremation Motagua, (river), 24, 883, 1772, 1995, 2000 Motúl (river), 711, 1456, 2240 Motúl de San José, 1997-1999, 2566-2575, 3005, 3108 Motúl-Reforma, 2564, 2565 Mountain Cow, 1974, 2576 Mukelbal Tzul, 2386, 2577 Multepal, 1090, 1984, 2224 Murals, 23-25, 1035, 1540, 1550, 1607, 1656-1665, 16961699, 1942, 1983, 1996, 2000, 2022, 2095-2098, 2101, 2104, 2110, 2115, 2136, 2207, 2374, 2384, 2385, 2429, 2467, 2474, 2517, 2520, 2541, 2648, 2749-2751, 2834, 2846, 2849, 2866, 2881 Museums and exhibitions, 23, 24, 1528-1546, 1983; Cancun Archaeological Museum, 2156; Centro Cultural de la Villa de Madrid, 1533; Consorci del Patrimoni de Sitges, 1534; Field Museum of Natural History, 57; Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, 1540; Frans Blom Collection, 1616; Kimball Art Museum, 1555; Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2097, 2910; Musée d’Ethnographie d’Anvers, 1795; Musée de Picardie, 1532; Museo de Arqueología Maya, 1663; Museo Na Bolom, 1694; Museo Nacional de Antropología de Mexico, 1546; Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología de Guatemala, 1533; Museo Popol Vuh, 1717; Museo Principé Maya, 1539; Museo Regional de Antropología de Yucatan Palacio Cantón, 1535; Museo Regional del Sureste de Peten, 1999; National Gallery of Art, 1540; National Museum of Copenhagen, 2762; Parc de la Villette, 1538; Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University, 1537, 1713, 1934; Poznan Archaeological Museum, 1541; United States National Museum, 1934; University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, 1531, 231

Phosphorus, 2176 Photography, 55, 1592-1594, 1607; rollout, 87, 88 Physical anthropology, 1043-1087, 2169, 2170, 2287 Pictographs see Petroglyphs Pictorial manuscripts, 23 Piedra Parada, 1988 Piedras Negras, 23, 24, 1071, 1461, 1465, 1531, 1540, 1629, 1684, 1977, 1928, 1933, 1977, 1978, 1988, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2408, 2669-2688, 2912, 3004, 3005, 3120, 3121; acropolis, 1540; Ruler 4, 1540; Structure K-5, 1998, 2678 Pigment see Color Pilgrimage, 23, 608, 618, 1342, 1362, 1975, 1983, 2578 Pine, 904, 1809, 2896 Pinula, 1999 Pipes, 2186 Pipil, 2186 Pirates, 698, 708, 809 Piste, 581, 582, 1026 Pixoy, 1977 Plague, 1311 Plan de Ayutla, 3005 Plantation, 619 Plaster see Stucco Playa de los Muertos, 24 Plazas see Architecture Pluralism, 1110 Pocboc, 2689, 2693 Pochitoca, 1456 Poetry, 23, 218, 441, 455, 456, 464, 504, 690 Pol Bol, 1998, 2690; Stela 2, 1998 Polho see San Pedro Chenalhó Politics, 23, 25, 544, 602, 681, 691, 853, 867, 894, 1046, 1088-1131, 1533, 1815, 1885, 1974, 1989, 1992, 1994, 1998- 2000, 2041, 2054, 2075, 2182, 2196, 2224, 2235, 2230, 2266, 2280, 2375, 2399, 2525, 2571, 2582, 2584, 2642, 2792, 2895 Pomona, 1990, 2691, 2692, 2788 Pomuch, 2689, 2693 Popayan, 1996 Popol Vuh, 23, 762-787, 1345, 1428; Ch’orti’, 769; Chuj, 774; Kaqchikel, 782; K’iche’, 772, 779, 781; Mam, 775; Poptí, 773; Poqomchí, 768; Poqomam, 770; Sakapultec, 771; Tektiteka, 776 Poptí see Jakalteko Poptún, 1996 Poqomam, ethnography, 503; linguistics, 302, 303, 797 Poqomchí, ethnography, 501, 502; linguistics, 296-301 Porfiriato, 23 Ports of trade, 24 Posh see Alcoholism Potlach, 867 Potonchan, 2694 Pottery, 24, 853, 867, 939, 1244, 1280, 1442, 1534, 1639, 1720-1760, 1973, 1980, 1988, 1995-2000, 2040, 2056, 2068, 2069, 2074, 2076, 2116, 2142, 2144, 2168, 2170, 2171, 2177, 2186, 2193, 2218, 2224, 2236, 2287, 2302, 2305, 2311, 2349, 2375, 2376, 2396, 2416, 2426, 2432, 2442, 2463, 2464, 2466, 2473, 2474, 2478, 2502, 2512, 2540, 2547, 2550, 2590, 2612, 2642, 2681, 2683, 2687, 2699, 2701, 2771, 2772, 2806, 2823, 2838, 2850, 2864, 2878, 2890, 2894, 2899, 2901, 2933, 2939; analysis, 1722-1727, 1906; censers, 843, 1540, 1752, 1785, 1978, 1996, 2628, 2762, 2939; Chinese, 815; chronology, 1728-

Oshon (site), 2772 Osteoarthritis, 1060 Oxkintok, 24, 825, 1782, 1988, 2610, 2611, 3005 Oxkutzcab, 42 Oxlahun tun, 74 Oxpemul, 2612, 2613 Oxtakah, 2614 Pacal, 23, 1580 Pacaño, 2000 Pacbitun, 2071, 2615-2617 Pacific coast, 12, 154, 1973, 1988, 1993, 1995-1999 Pacrem, 423 Painting, 23, 24, 1696-1699 Pakal Na, 2772 Pakal, 2631, 2637, 2652 Palabor, 1999 Palace, 18, 23, 25, 1630, 1666-1668, 1977, 1998, 2038, 2040, 2258, 2431, 2474, 2486, 2630; see also Aguateca Palenque, 23, 24, 101, 934, 1190, 1540, 1580, 1607, 1816, 1823, 18891928, 1934, 1941, 1978, 1979, 1983, 1991, 1998, 2618-2662, 2788, 2954, 2964, 2974, 2978, 2992, 3005, 3027, 3114-3119, 3141, 3142; Group XVI, 2624; Palace, 2630; Palace E-1, 2648; Sweatbath, 2642; Temple XIII, 2641, 2660; Temple XIX, 1540, 19982629, 2642; Temple XX, 2626, 2642; Temple XXI, 1540, 2642 Palm Beach County, Florida, 1504 Palo de tinta, 161 Palo Gordo, 1988 Palo Verde, 2663 Palo volador, 1370 Palygorskite, 1700, 1701 Panajachel, 60, 451 Panamá, 1973 Pan-Mayanism, 23, 227, 930, 1168-1174 Paper, 23, 24, 1996 Paradise, 1589 Paris codex see Codices Parishes, 23 Parramos, 1995 Pasión (river), 1076, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2741 Paso de la Amada, 24, 203, 2664 Pastoralism, 920 Pataxte, 920 Patolli, 23 Patriarchy, 592, 684 Patronyms, 2808 Patt Work (site), 2494 Patzún, 1196, 1366 Paxbolon papers, 761 Paxté (island), 2838 Pechtún Ha, 2772 Peissel, M., 61 Pencuyut, 801 Performance arts, 1943-1963 Perigny, M. de, 2241 Periodical literature and reference works, 23 Personhood, 371, 522, 523 Pesticides, 1021 Petén Lakes (region), 853, 1734, 2474 Petexbatún, 24, 203, 853, 867, 1997, 1999, 2031, 2035, 2508, 2665-2668 Petroglyphs, 1550-1553, 1995-1997, 1999, 2350, 2585, 2772 Peyote, 23 Phallic imagery, 1556 232

Q’eqchi, ethnography, 23, 71, 505-526, 888, 1018, 1020, 1028, 1034, 1037, 1038, 1196, 1288, 1344, 1347, 1393, 1394, 1492, 1995, 2001; linguistics, 308-315 Q’um’arkaaj see Utatlan Quadripartite symbol, 1554 Quauhquecholan, 619, 660, 751-754 Quebec, 611, 1154 Quebrada, 423 Quemada Corozal, 1456 Quetzal Suquite, 1995 Quetzalcoatl see Kukulkan Quetzaltenango, 55, 383, 384, 969, 1593, 1798, 1998 Quexil-Petenxil (basin), 1996, 2712 Quincunx, 2713 Quiriguá, 23, 24, 200, 1827, 1870, 1928, 1941, 1993, 27172723, 2970, 3122; Zoomorph P, 1993 Rabinal Achí, 788-790 Rabinal, 410, 411, 471, 472, 474, 751 788-790, 1366, 1493, 1592 Radio, 1175 Radiocardon dating, 2350 Rafts, 882 Rain making, 1523 Ramonal, 1456 Ramonalito, 1456 Rancho El Carmen, 2727 Rancho El Ceiba, 2727 Rancho Tepeyate, 2727 Range structures see Architecture Rastafarianism, 619 Ratón Pucteal, 2496 Red Queen see Reina Roja Redfield, R., 23, 60 Reducción, 1976 Reed, N., 61 Reforma, 1990 Refugees, 525, 526, 1151, 1163, 1164 Refuse disposal, 1645 Regional and site reports, 2019-3145 Regional interaction, 825, 849, 867, 1280, 2069, 2181, 2287, 2745 Reina Roja, 2636, 2659 Relaciones geográficas, 23 Relics, 23 Religion, 5, 14, 24, 380, 432, 487, 596, 613, 616, 636, 920, 1161, 1196, 1203, 1260-1392, 1819, 1981, 1982, 1996, 2020, 2041, 2175, 2249, 2297, 2541, 2577, 2670 Religious practitioners, 1352-1357 Remesal, A. de, 655, 665 Remittances, 1149 Resbalon, 1996 Reserva de la Biosfera Maya, 163, 169 Resins, 1784-1786; amber, 1785; incense, 23, 938 Resistance and rebellion, 23 Respect, 1091 Retablos, 23 Ribera, P. de, 2186 Río Azul, 1988, 3005 Río Bec, 23, 1648, 1977, 2000, 2144, 2724-2731; Group A, 2728; Group B, 2724; Structure 6N-1, 2731 Río, A. del, 59 Rites of passage, 23 Ritual de los Angeles, 1413 Ritual of the Bacabs, 791, 792, 1993

1732; figurines, 24; Fine Paste, 2868; Muna Slate Ware, 1723; Pabellon Molded-Carved pottery, 1732; Plumbate, 24, 1995, 1998; polychrome, 1741-1749, 1983, 1995, 2122, 2744, 2799; Pre-Mamon, 1996; Princeton vessel, 1748; specialized studies, 1758, 1759; spiked pottery, 1751; spindle whorls, 1792; spouted pottery, 1726; technology, 1731, 1733-1740; Thin Orange, 24; three-prong incense burner, 1750; Tiquisate Molded pottery, 1758 Poxté (river), 1997 Poza Maya, 1456, 1995 Pozas de Ventura, 1997 Prague codex see Codices Prague, 748 Preservation see Cultural patrimony Priests, 23 Primary Standard Sequence, 1942 Primordial titles, 23 Privatization see Land tenure Procession see Pilgrimage Processions, 23 Progresso Lagoon, 1974, 2170-2172, 2695, 2696 Projects, Blue Creek Project, 2089; Chichén Itzá-Ek Balam Transect Project, 2381; Chixoy River Basin Project, 1973; Chocolá Archaeological Project, 2242; Mision FrancoGuatemalteca, 1973; Pakbeh Regional Economy Program, 2248; Palenque Mapping Project, 2619; Programme for Belize Archaeological Project, 1974; Proyecto Arqueológico Cancuen, 1995; Proyecto Arqueológico del Valle de Maltrata, 1997; Proyecto Arqueológico Etzná, 2375; Proyecto Arqueológico Nakúm, 1999; Proyecto Arqueológico Regional San Bartoló, 1996, 1998; Proyecto Costa del Caribe, 2000; Proyecto Eco-Arqueológico Motúl de San José, 1997; Proyecto Etno-Arqueológico Q’umarkaaj, 1999, 2000; Proyecto Petén Noroccidente La Joyanca, 1995; Proyecto Regional Arqueológico Sierra de Lacandón, 1999; Proyecto Triangulo Cultural YaxháNakúm-Naranjo, 1995, 1999; Proyecto Yaxchilán, 2001 Proskouriakoff, T., 23, 24, 1967, 2687 Protestantism and religious conversion, 23, 618, 1209, 13431350 Psychoactive plants, 1351, 1982 Psychology, 1815 Psychotropics see Psychoactive plants Public health, 380 Pueblito, 1997, 1999, 2697; acropolis, 1999 Puerto Escondido, 24 Puerto Quetzal, 1995 Pulltrouser Swamp, 24 Pulque, 23 Puluul, 2103 Puma, 2213 Punk, 619 Punta de Cacao, 1974 Punta de Chimino, 2698-2700 Punta Ycacos (lagoon), 2701 Purification, 2642 Purulhá see San Antonio Purulha Pusilhá, 200, 1974, 1996, 2703-2706 Putún, 23, 24 Puuc (region), 23, 42, 1648, 1810, 1983, 2707-2711, 2761 Pyramids see Architecture Q’anjob’al, ethnography, 23, 504; linguistics, 304-307

233

San Antonio Las Barrancas, 496 San Antonio Palopo, 2947 San Antonio Purulhá, 299 San Antonio Sacatepéquez, 496 San Bartolo Aguas Calientes, 1196 San Bartolo, 1614, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2746-2751, 3005, 3123; Las Plumas Group, 1999; palace, 1626; Pirámide de las Pinturas Sub-1, 1997; Pirámide Las Pirámides, 1998; Tigrillo Group, 1997 San Bartolomé Jocotenango, 1205 San Claudio, 2752, 2788 San Clemente, 1456 San Cristóbal Cahcoh, 797 San Cristóbal de Las Casas, 550, 637, 664, 961, 1616 San Cristóbal Verapaz, 299, 501 San Diego de la Gomera, 637 San Estevan, 2171, 2753, 2754 San Francisco (Petén), 1995, 1997 San Francisco, California, 617, 1540 San Gervasio, 2755 San Ildefonso Ixtahuacán, 496 San Jerónimo II, 2756 San José, 361 San Juan Chamelco, 520, 554, 548, 2001 San Juan Chamula, 340, 1003, 1190 San Juan Comalapa, 1505 San Juan Cotzumalhuapa, 1999 San Juan de Dios, 1997 San Juan Ixcoy, 999, 1353 San Juan Ostuncalco, 496 San Juan Sacatepéquez, 1196 San Lorenzo (Belize), 2757 San Lorenzo (Mexico), 2758 San Lorenzo Zinacantán see Zinacantán San Lucas, 911 San Marcos, 1999, 1201 San Martin Jilotepeque, 867, 999, 1196 San Mateo Ixtatán, 331, 1353, 2759 San Máximo, 1456 San Miguel Dueñas, 1999 San Miguel Totonicapán, 1196 San Miguel, Campeche, 1663 San Miguelito, 1798 San Pedro (Belize), 680, 1051, 1997, 2522, 2524 San Pedro Chenalhó, 370 542, 546, 651, 1190 San Pedro La Laguna, 1196 San Pedro Maya Project, 1974 San Pedro Sacatepéquez, 2001 San Rafael Sacatepéquez, 496 San Román, 1999 San Sebastián Coatán, 256, 1353 San Sebastián Lemoa, 1225 Santa Apolonia, 1995 Santa Bárbara (Honduras), 3124 Santa Bárbara (Petén), 2760 Santa Bárbara (Yucatan), 2761 Santa Catarina Ixtahuacán, 66, 273, 990, 1110 Santa Catarina Palapo, 445 Santa Cruz del Quiché, 1366, 2000 Santa Cruz Verapaz, 299, 2001 Santa Elena Nohcacab, 2707 Santa Eulalia, 24, 1353, 1999 Santa Lucia Cotzumalhuapa, 1995; El Castillo, 1995 Santa Lucia Utatlán, 1121

Ritual, 25, 453, 478, 568, 588, 597, 604, 606, 879, 880, 887, 896, 933, 934, 938, 1109, 1142, 1244, 1261, 1279, 1280, 1285, 1288, 1303, 1358-1377, 1388, 1607, 1620, 1976, 1978, 1981, 1991, 1993, 1999, 2000, 2084, 2174, 2182, 2188, 2298, 2385, 2406, 2426, 2472, 2475, 2479, 2508, 2526, 2558, 2628, 2642, 2662, 2772, 2773, 2797, 2800, 2862, 2884, 2934, 2939, 2939; accession rituals, 23; hunting, 1280, 1360, 1364; new fire ceremony, 23; rain, 2042, 2884; termination, 1645 Rivers and lakes, 23 Riviera Maya, 960, 968, 970, 971, 1167, 1180 Roads, 1311, 1670-1679, 1983, 2159, 2215, 2437, 2893, 2927 Roaring Creek, 2742 Robertson, M. G., 25 Rock art see Petroglyphs, 24 Rollout photography see Photography Roman Catholic Church, 23 Rome, 1977 Roof cross tradition, 1616 Root food see Tubers Roys, R. L., 1421 Rubber, 1587, 1638 Rude boys, 619 Rulers and rulership, 23, 858, 1583, 2054, 2224 Rural movements, 23 Russell, P., 61 Ruta Maya, 959 Ruz Lhuillier, A., 23, 2653 Sabana Piletas, 2743 Sabancuy, 2833 Sacapulas, 1366 Sacatepéquez, 1995, 1999 Sacbé, 2268, 2363, 2863 Sacnab, 2838 Sacpetén, 1456 Sacred cenote, 1388 Sacred space, 24, 1142, 1298, 1303, 1378-1382, 1453, 1978, 1995, 2000, 2205, 2526, 2675, 2689, 2693, 2746, 2772 Sacrifice, 23-25, 1141, 1279, 1280, 1303, 1319, 1369, 13831388, 1978, 1991, 1996, 2401, 2659, 2660 Sacrifice, Autosacrifice, 23 Sacul, 2744 Sagebiel, K. L., 2546 Sages, 23 Saints, 23 Sajcabajá, 1973 Sajsiban, 922 Sak Tz’i’, 2563 Sakapulteko, linguistics, 316-321 Saktunha, 2745 Salamá, 2417 Salán, 2727 Salinas la Blanca, 24 Salpetén (lake), 192 Salsipuedes (river), 2736 Salt, 23, 24, 867, 882, 920, 1413, 1442, 1992, 2701 Salto Grande, 1997 Samabaj, 1996 Samuel Oshon (site), 2772 San Andrés Duraznal, 545 San Andrés Larrainzar, 557, 1339 San Antonio Aguas Calientes, 445 San Antonio Huista, 264, 429 San Antonio Ilotenango, 459 234

Sexual dimorphism, 1067 Sexuality see Gender Shamanism, 23, 478, 604, 1004, 1263, 1294, 1303, 1305, 1352-1357, 1582, 1891, 2527 Shame, 413 Shell, 23, 1780-1782, 1937, 1979, 1982, 1997, 2073, 2079, 2171, 2186, 2466, 2617, 2772, 2811, 2817, 2838, 2920 Shield Jaguar, 2659, 1540, 2910 Shook, E. M., 1988 Shrine, 1359, 1680-1682, 2280, 2400, 2772; hunting, 1680; miniature, 1681 Sibal, 1456 Sibinal, 496 Sibún (river), 1974, 2771-2774, 3127 Sickness, 548 Sierra de Lacandón (region), 138, 164, 1998, 1999, 2685, 2775, 3128 Sierra de las Minas, 1774 Siete Cuevas, 1924 Siho, 1996, 1997, 2782; Palace, 1996 Simojovel, 666 Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueológicos en Guatemala, 1995-2002, 2461 Sin, 23 Sipacapa, 999 Sipakapense, linguistics, 322, 323 Sisilá, 2776 Site abandonment, 1629, 1987, 1990, 2034, 2176, 2474, 2568 Site Q, 25, 2476, 2777, 3129 Site R., 2778; Lintel 5, 1941 Skeletal remains, 24, 2170, 2171, 2182, 2186, 2204, 2208, 2442, 2443, 2466, 2473, 2474, 2500, 2501, 2605, 2831, 2888 Skull racks, 23 Slavery, 23 Smith, J., 51 Social consciousness, 1516 Social movements, 581 Social organization, 1434-1445, 1994, 1996, 2161, 2253, 2280, 2355, 2386, 2757, 2823, 2902; kinship, 697, 826, 1441; social structure, 23, 649, 703, 1076 , 1977, 1986, 2057, 2080, 2160, 2191 Soconusco, 24, 813, 901, 1103, 1607, 1992, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2783 Soils, 1995, 2001, 2118, 2144, 2176, 2573, 2668, 2674, 2685, 2686, 2740 Sololá, 454, 755-760, 1129, 1209 Solomá, 1353 Sotheby, 1527 Sotzil, 922 Soul and spirit companion, 23, 24, 549, 553 Southeast Periphery (region), 2779-2781 Spanish colonial documents, 795-803 Spatial order, 1609 Speleotherms, 132 Spinden, H. J., 24, 1575 Spoons, 1773 Springs, 23 Stacy-Judd, R., 61 Stamps, 2186 Stann Creek (district), 24, 1974 Star wars, 1816 States and empires, 23

Santa María de Jesús, 450, 1995 Santa María de la Victoria, 2694 Santa María Tzeja, 1214, 2975 Santa María Visitación, 1196 Santa María, 24 Santa Martín Sacatepéquez, 496 Santa Mateo Ixtatán, 255, 256 Santa Rita Corozal, 24, 1974, 2762 Santa Rita Komchen, 584 Santa Rita, 849, 965 Santa Rosa (Guatemala), 1988 Santa Rosa Xtampak, 2143, 2763-2765, 2889 Santiago Atitlán, 563, 564, 568, 570, 1339, 2967 Santiago Chimaltenango, 496 Santiago de Guatemala see Antigua Guatemala Santo Tomás Chichicastenango, 60, 384, 469, 786, 1366 Sashes, hair, 1806 Satterthwaite, L., 2687 Sayaxché, 1108, 1996, 1999, 2000 Sayil, 24, 1609, 2708, 2766, 3118, 3125, 3126, 3134, 3138, 3141-3144 Schele, L., 25, 1967, 1993 Scientific applications, chemical analysis, 2116, 2153, 2176, 2287, 2473, 2685, 2686; electronic magnetic induction, 2202; flouride analysis, 2204; ground penetrating radar (GPR), 1466-1469, 1995, 2065, 2460, 2830; high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), 1707; ICP-AES spectroscopy, 2391; instrumental neutron activation analysis, 1701; laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), 1701, 1739, 2387, 2504; mass spectrometric radiocarbon, 2585; mitochondrial DNA, 1085-1087, 1996; raman microprobe analysis, 2301; raman spectroscopy, 1706; residue analysis, 1980, 1995, 2043, 2149, 2674, 2684; scanning electron microscopy (SEM/EDX), 1703; spectroscopy, 1733; stable carbon isotope analysis, 901, 2048, 2049, 2130, 2167, 2324, 2524, 2575, 2667, 2668, 2838; strontium isotope analysis, 1057, 1066, 2659, 2831, 2706; trace element analysis, 2706; ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy (UV-VIS), 1706; X-ray defraction, 1999; XAS, 1707 Scribes, 23, 24, 849, 1896, 2536 Scroll support, 1760 Sculpture, 23-25, 1533, 1540, 1607, 1711-1719, 1976, 1983, 1984, 1993, 1995, 2093, 2186, 2259, 2260, 2265, 2287, , 2418, 2419, 2423, 2434, 2449, 2472, 2513, 2661, 2729, 2766, 2789, 2794, 2821, 2838, 2872, 2886; Atlantean figures, 24; chacmool, 21, 2182; pot-belly, 1714, stone sphere, 1714; yokes, 2102 Second hair illness, 540 Secularization, 636, 661 Seibal, 23, 24, 200, 853, 1609, 1719, 1977, 1999, 2027, 27672769 Seler, E., 23 Selva lacandona, 1976 Semana Santa, 568, 570 Semetabaj, 1999, 2770 Serials, 27-30 Settlement patterns and settlement systems, 24, 1103, 1244, 1446-1462, 1974, 1980, 1985, 1995-2000, 2075, 2091, 2157, 2171, 2182, 2254, 2267, 2287, 2300, 2306, 2379, 2381, 2386, 2484, 2525, 2544, 2574, 2612, 2615, 2620, 2639, 2642, 2682, 2717, 2721, 2732, 2761, 2772, 2774, 2812, 2823, 2865, 2891, 2895, 2939 Seville, Spain, 629, 654 235

Tenejapa, 335, 338 Tenochtitlán, 1977, 1998, 2954 Tenosique, 1950 Teopisca, 336 Teotihuacan, 825, 875, 1099, 1977, 1123, 2049, 2181, 2321, 2431, 2510, 2591, 2954, 2996, 3005, 3009 Terracing, 2553, 2897 Terrestrial dragon, 1303 Tetiz, 1364 Textiles see Weaving and textiles Theater, 1977, 1958-1963, 2038 Thompson, E. H., 57, 61 Thompson, J.E.S., 23, 24, 57, 61 Three Rivers region, 2075 Thrones and benches see Architecture Thumb District (cave), 2772 Ti’ho see Mérida Ticul, 1740 Tikal Digital Archive Project, 64 Tikal, 23, 24, 53, 64, 76, 109, 115, 203, 407, 825, 1456, 1609, 1666, 1668, 1816, 1928, 1932, 1977, 1978, 1983, 1987, 1995-2000, 2272, 2357, 2459, 2474, 2647, 2796-2831, 2838, 2954, 2968-2970, 2974, 2992, 3005, 3130-3134, 3138, 3143, 3144; Central Acropolis, 1668; Earthwork, 2826, 2828, 2829; Ruler A, 1932; Group 3D-IV, 1999; Group 3D-XIV, 2809; Group 6D-11, 1997; North Acropolis, 2813; Plaza A, 2809; Seven Temples Plaza, 1998, 1999; Structure 3D-43, 1996; Structure 5D-87, 1995 Tila, 618, 2832 Tintal, 1456, 1998 Tiolan, 2186 Tipú, 843, 1078, 1079, 1766 Tiquisate, 1201, 1988 Tiscacauchén, 801 Tisipe, 423 Title of the Lords of Totonicapan see Titulo Totonicapan Título Totonicapan, 793 Tiwitz, 496 Tixchel, 2833 Tixkokob, 616, 675 Tizimin, 801 Tláloc, 1759 Tlaxcalans, 631, 660 Tobacco, 23, 658, 938, 951 Todos Santos Cuchumatán, 1366 Tohcok, 2834 Tojol’abal, ethnography, 71, 528-534, 1190; linguistics, 330333 Toledo (district), 2702, 2706 Toltec, 2224, 2233 Tomalamatl, 1982 Tombs, 23, 25, 920, 1311, 1470, 1978, 2049, 2287, 2307, 2314, 2321, 2356, 2402, 2407, 2636; see also Burials, Mortuary customs Toniná, 24, 1928, 1977, 2835-2837, 2992, 3005 Toponyms, 1993 Topoxte, 1456, 1605, 2838 Torre, T. de la, 61 Tortuguero, 2839-2841 Totonac, 1973 Totonacapán, 2996 Totonicapán, 456, 458, 477, 793, 1209 Tourism Development Project, 965

Stela, 24, 1288, 1683, 1997, 2025, 2128, 2134, 2135, 2238, 2279, 2287, 2320, 2353, 2435, 2446, 2482, 2489, 2515, 2600, 2601, 2626, 2647, 2650, 2671, 2746, 2768, 2798, 2802, 2838, 2910; stela cult, 24; also Aguacate, Calakmul, Caracol, Copán, Dos Pilas, El Zacatal, Ixtutz, Izapa, La Sufricaya, Naranjo, Pol Bol, Yaxchilán Stephens, J. L. 23, 24, 51, 61 Stereo-photogrammetry, 2853 Stingray Lagoon, 2701 Stingray spine, 1367 Stirling, M. W., 23 Stoll, D., 1219, 1240 Stone Trap Man, 1413 Stone, D. Z., 24 Stormy Sky, 23 Strath Bogue (site), 2170, 2171, 2494 Stratification see Social structure Stress, 1167 Stucco, 23, 2059, 2099, 2301, 2364, 2473, 2513, 2661 Subcomandante Marcos, 1188, 1189 Sugar, 694 Summer Institute of Linguistics, 385 Sumpango, 1366 Supports, 1760 Sustainability, 898, 899 Susto, 23 Sweat bath see Architecture Symbolism, 849, 1244, 1389, 1390, 1515, 1517, 1857, 1976, 1982, 1992, 2032, 2084, 2844, 2939 Syncretism, 23, 1391, 1392 Tabasqueño, 1998, 2789 Tabí, 817, 2790 Tacaná, 496 Tactic, 299 Tajumulco, 496 Taltic, 2000 Taltilco, 2996 Talud-tablero, 1612, 2590 Tamactún-Acalan, 2792 Tamahú, 299 Taphonomy, 2189 Tapotzingo (Tabasco), 250 Tax, S., 60, 869 Tayasal, 1456 Tazumal see Chalchuapa Tecoh, 810 Tecolote, 1998, 2793; Structure D3-1, 1998 Tecpán Guatemala, 438, 440, 1121, 1973 Teculután, 1995 Tecún, 525, 526 Teeth, 990, 1047-1049, 1069, 1077, 1996, 2169, 2831, 2860, 2867, 2869 Tejeda, A., 2396 Teka, 801 Tekal de Venegas see Xbaatun Tekax, 694 Tektiteko, ethnography, 527; linguistics, 324-329 Temblor, 1456 Temozón, 2794 Temple complexes see Architecture Temporality, 598 Tenam Puentes, 2795 Tenam Rosario, 24 Tenampua, 24 236

Veracruz, 1976, 1997, 2996 Verapaz, 1121, 1209 Veszelyte, 1705 Victoria, 2858 Viejo, 23 Villa Rojas, A., 61 Villahermosa, 496, 3005 Violence, 460, 511, 612, 1209, 1214, 1217, 1223, 1227 Virgen de Magdalena, 1339 Virgin of Tetiz, 1364 Vista Alegre, 2859 Visual culture studies, 1519 Volcano, 25, 144, 1300, 1983, 1987, 2174-2178 Volumetrics, 1648, 2895 Volute, 1590 Wajxaqib’ B’at, 1366 Waka see El Peru-Waka Wakna, 1456 Waldeck, J. F., 61 Wamaaw K’awiil, 2135 Warfare, 18, 23, 24, 52, 1244-1259, 1983, 1987, 2034, 2036, 2224, 2231, 2236, 2273, 2357, 2358, 2408, 2767, 2923 Water management, 451, 931-936, 935, 1979, 2001, 2280, 2294, 2295, 2557, 2579, 2633-2645, 2642 Water, 1979, 2115 Wayeb, 1942 Weaponry, 24; bow and arrow, 1256 Weaving and textiles, 23, 24, 880, 877, 1787-1806, 1983, 1986, 2063, 2160, 2186, 2570; batik, 2186; spindle whorls, 2411 Wells see Water management Wetlands, 133, 150, 871, 934, 1976, 2830, 2919, 2922 Wild Cane Cay, 98, 2860 Wilhelm, Prince of Sweden, 61 Witchcraft, 1388, 1416 Women, 373, 387, 472, 507, 537, 546, 584, 593, 594, 666, 1009, 1028, 1045, 1147, 1205, 1209, 1470-1512, 1592, 2641 Wood, 24, 1807-1810, 2186, 2577, 2702, 2709, 2810; balsa, 882 Workshops, 23, 1994, 2177, 2413 Writing systems, 23, 24 X Kopchen, 361 X’kala-ka, 2861 X’ual-canil, 2862 Xanaba, 2864 Xbaatún, 2865 Xcakochna, 2849, 2866 Xcalumkin, 1977 Xcambo, 601, 1061, 1995, 1996, 2867-2871 Xcaret, 1086 Xchan, 2872 Xcoch, 2873 Xelaju see Quetzaltenango Xibalba, 1411, 1428, 2772 Xibún, 818 Xicalanco, 24, 2874 Ximénez, F., 23 Xinca, 922 Xipe Totec, 1996, 2259 Xiu Chronicles, 794 Xiu family, 1986, 1993 Xkakatz, 2875 Xkipché, 1983, 2876-2880, 3140

Tourism, 23, 447, 448, 614, 959-971, 1136, 1997, 2158, 2293, 2318, 2511, 2560, 2838 Tozzer, A. M., 23 Trade enclaves, 849 Transculturation, 23 Transnationalism, 385, 445, 447, 448, 617, 865, 925, 1169 Transportation, 23, 24 Travel guides, 37-48 Traven B., 644 Travesia, 24, 1779 Tree crops, 937-950 Tres Islas (site), 1997 Tres Lunas, 2842 Tribute, 23, 24 Trinidad de Nosotros, 1999 Trumpets, 2100 Tubers, 917 Tucurú, 299 Tula, 1998, 2220, 2224, 2996, 2213, 2220, 2224 Tulúm, 23, 24, 849, 964, 1134, 1596, 2715, 2843-2848, 2964, 2992, 3135; Structure, 16, 2844, 2845 Tunuco, 423 Turquoise, 23 Tz’utujil, ethnography, 23, 562-570, 1196, 1396; linguistics, 355, 345 Tzeltal, ethnography, 535-541, 1021, 1022, 1027, 1038, 1104, 1176, 1177, 1190, 1339, 1975, 1978, 1986; linguistics, 334-338 Tzikintzakan, 1456, 1605 Tzotzil, ethnography, 23, 71, 542-561, 1019, 1029, 1104, 1190, 1274, 1317, 1413, 1494, 1607, 1976, 1986, 1994; linguistics, 339-343 Tzum, 1977, 2849, 2866 Uaxactún, 23, 24, 853, 892, 1456, 1977, 2803, 2850, 2970 Uaymil, 1979, 1996, 2851 Ucanal, 1977, 1996, 2852 Uicab, M., 1133 Uinal, 674 Ujuxté, 1995 Ulúa (river), 203, 1779 Underwater archaeology, 821-823 Underworld, 23, 24, 939, 941, 1634, 1881, 1983 United Fruit Company, 1201 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1176 Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala, 1973 Uolantun, 1456 U-Pakal K’inich, 2657 Uprising, 619 Urbanism, 23, 462, 1463-1465, 1533, 1614, 1977, 1983, 1988, 2642, 2838 Urias, 1988 Uspanteko, linguistics, 346-349 Usumacinta (river), 167, 1244, 1604, 1996, 2737-2741, 3005, 3136 Utatlán, 23, 24, 641, 1999, 2000 Utopias, 23 Utzpak, 593 Uxmal, 23, 24, 1480, 1977, 2707, 2708, 2853, 2854, 2954, 2964, 2992, 3005, 3134, 3137, 3138, 3141-3144; Advino Pyramid, 2853 Uxul, 2855 Vaca Plateau, 1942, 2856, 2857 Valley of Peace, 1974, 2071 Vanilla, 949 237

Zoque, 1998 Zunil, 1366

Xkombec, 2881 Xlapak, 3118, 3141, 3142 Xmacabatun, 1456 Xocén, 621, 1340, 2882-2884 Xochicalco, 2996 Xochitecatl, 2106 Xohuayan, 1380 Xpilhé, 2885 Xpostanil, 2886 Xpuhil, 2144, 2887, 2888, 3118, 3134, 3138, 3141-3144 Xuch, 2890, 2891 Xuental, 2892 Xukalnah, 2093 Xultún, 1456, 1977, 1997, 2747, 2748, 3005 Xunantunich, 24, 200, 853, 965, 1442, 1461, 1609, 1977, 1998, 2071, 2893-2899, 3134, 3138, 3143, 3144 Xutilhá, 200 Yalahau, 1996, 2901-2906 Yalain, 1456, 1995 Yalbac, 1974, 2900 Yaloch, 1456 Yarumela, 2907 Yax k'uk mo', 23 Yax Nuun Ayiin I, 2831 Yaxá, 794 Yaxbé, 600 Yaxcabá, 804 Yaxché-Xlabpak, 2257, 2360, 2908, 2909 Yaxchilán, 23, 24, 1540, 1977, 1928, 1983, 2408, 2659, 2677, 2685, 2910-2918, 2992, 3005; Hieroglyphic Stairway, 2916; Stela 15, 2910; Structure 23, 1540; Structure 33, 2914; Structure 44, 2910 Yaxcopoil, 25 Yaxhá, 24, 1456, 1605, 1995, 1997-2000, 2838, 2919-2922, 3005; Calzada Blom, 1997; Structure 218, 2000 Yaxuna, 24, 853, 1244, 1470, 1666, 1984, 1987, 2249, 29232926, 3005, 3145 Yaxuun B’ahlam, 2918 Year bearers, 1279, 1280 Year cycle, 23 Yo’okop, 2437, 2927 Yohualteuctin, 1818 Yokes see Sculpture Yotoch Xooc, 2928 Youth movements, 619 Yuhknoo’m Too’k’kawiil, 2128 Yukateko, ethnography, 71, 571-621, 1025, 1026, 1145, 1156, 1166, 1283, 1339, 1405, 1413, 1976, 1984, 1986, 1989, 1994; linguistics, 350-368 Yula, 3005 Yun Kaax, 1995 Zacapa, 1995 Zacpetén, 2933-2939 Zacualpa, 1152 Zaculeu, 24, 2940 Zapatistas, 494, 558, 644, 652, 656, 664, 961, 1111, 1182, 1186-1192, 1389, 1500, 1509 Zapote Bobal, 1999, 2000, 2941 Zapote Corozal, 1456 Zapotitán (valley), 1987 Zazacatla, 3005 Zinacantán, 342, 343, 553, 561, 1019, 1190, 1442, 1791 Zodiac see Astrology Zooarchaeology, 1980 238