It was asked:
"Ever heard of the Mayan site Comalcalco in today’s Mexico?"
Comalcalco, known as "Joy’Chan" by the Maya, is an archaeological site located in
the middle of Tabasco (coastal) Plain. Its apogee occupation was during the Late
Classic (between 500/600-900 AD)(Torres and Gómora 2017).
Some publications:
Bíró, P., 2012. Politics in the western Maya region (ii): Emblem
glyphs. Estudios de cultura maya, 39, pp.31-66.
[
www.scielo.org.mx]
Gallegos Gómora, M.J., 2018. Vida cotidiana e identidad de la
region de Comalcalco en el contexto mesoamericano. Nuevo
Mundo Mundos Nuevos. Nouveaux mondes mondes nouveaux-
Novo Mundo Mundos Novos-New world New worlds.
[
journals.openedition.org]
Gómora, M.J.G. and Torres, R.A., 2003, Sistemas constructivos
y materiales en la arquitectura de Comalcalco, Tabasco. XXV
Convegno Internazionale di Americanistica - Perugia 9, 10 e 11
maggio 2003/Xalapa 21, 22, 23 e 24 ottobre 2003
[
www.academia.edu]
Gómora, M.J.G. and Torres, R.A., 2017. Comalcalco la ciudad
Maya de ladrillos: descubriendo su pasado y la conservación de
su futuro. Restauro Archeologico, 25(1), pp.128-147.
[
flore.unifi.it]
[
oaj.fupress.net]
Torres, R.A. and Gómora, M.J.G., 2017. La impronta de los
mayas prehispánicos en los conocimientos tradicionales de
Tabasco, México. Archaeobios, (11), pp.144-163.
[
dialnet.unirioja.es]
[
www.researchgate.net]
If any of the above URLs get garbled, do a Google Scholar
search to find one that works.
Yours,
Paul H.
"The past is never dead. It's not even past."
William Faulkner, Act 1, Scene III, Requiem for a Nun (1951)
Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 04/10/2022 07:53PM by Paul H..