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Conferences

SYMPOSIUMS AND CONFERENCES ON THE MAYA

The University of Texas at Austin - http://www.utmesoamerica.org/maya/2012-maya-meetings

Tulane University's Maya Symposium - http://mari.tulane.edu/TMS/

University of Pennsylvania Museum - www.penn.museum/mayaweekend

Pre-Columbian Society of Washington D.C. - www.pcswdc.org

 

Maya Related Blogs

 

Maya Related Blogs

 

Maya Decipherment is a weblog devoted to ideas and developments in ancient Maya epigraphy and related fields, overseen by Dr. David Stuart, who is the David and Linda Schele Professor of Mesoamerican Art and Writing at the University of Texas at Austin.


Maya News Updates    provides irregular updates on items about the Maya and related cultures in Mesoamerica. It is by Erik Boot.

 

Archaeological Haecceities This is a blog created by a haecceity (the essence that makes something the kind of thing it is and makes it different from any other) and archaeologist known as Johan Normark.


From the Stormy Sky Blog written by archaeologist and epigrapher, Stanley Guenter.

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thumb APMaudslay_001Pioneers in Maya Archaeology

Biographical sketches of men and women who did much of the early defining
work in Maya studies.


Reviewed: Astronomy in the Maya Codices

by Harvey and Victoria Bricker

In this remarkable volume, Maya scholars Harvey Bricker and Victoria Bricker offer invaluable insight into the complex world of the Precolumbian Maya, in particular the amazing achievements of Maya astronomy, as revealed in the Maya codices. Read the Review

Reviewed: Lost Secrets of Maya Technology

Front CoverLost Secrets of Maya Technology is a must read for any serious student of the Maya Civilization and a welcomed addition to the corpus of the literature on the subject. Read the review here.

 

Tikal Project Videos

The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology has placed 21 silent videos taken between 1951 and 1959 on Youtube.

More information

Tobacco found in Mayan Flask

Researchers have identified remains of tobacco inside a 1,300 year old clay flask that is decorated with hieroglyphics that read "the home of his/her tobacco." Read More.

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