“Two Roads Diverged: The Middle Preclassic Period in the Eastern Puuc”with Kenneth Seligson
Associate Professor and Chair College of Natural and Behavioral Sciences
Department of Anthropology
California State University, Dominguez Hills
The transition to settled agricultural life began around 900 BCE in the hilly Bolonchen District of the Northern Maya Lowlands. Investigations at the small-scale sites of Xanab Chak and Paso del Macho have identified similar site foundation processes that suggest a shared template for early community organization. However, their growth trajectories began to diverge as small residential clusters gave way to planned civic spaces. Paso del Macho maintained a relatively small central plaza (1600 m2) and only added a small ballcourt late in its occupation, while less than 4 km away, the residents of Xanab Chak constructed an earlier ballcourt, built a large central platform, and expanded their central plaza to over 3000 m2. Comparing the evolution of the two site centers with a few larger acropolis sites like Muluchtzekel and Yaxhom indicates a multi-tiered site hierarchy developed in the region prior to a widespread depopulation near the start of the Late Preclassic Period.
Webpage: https://kenseligson.wordpress.com