That dam -- constructed from cut stone, rubble and earth -- stretched
more than 260 feet in length, stood about 33 feet high and held about
20 million gallons of water in a human-made reservoir.
These findings on ancient Maya water and land-use systems at Tikal,
located in northern Guatemala, are scheduled to appear this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)
in an article titled "Water and Sustainable Land Use at the Ancient
Tropical City of Tikal, Guatemala." The research sheds new light on how
the Maya conserved and used their natural resources to support a
populous, highly complex society for over 1,500 years despite
environmental challenges, including periodic drought.
The paper is authored by Vernon Scarborough, UC professor of
anthropology; Nicholas Dunning, UC professor of geography; archaeologist
Kenneth Tankersley, UC assistant professor of anthropology; Christopher
Carr, UC doctoral student in geography; Eric Weaver, UC doctoral
student in geography; Liwy Grazioso of the Universidad de San Carlos de
Guatemala; Brian Lane, former UC master's student in anthropology now
pursuing doctoral studies at the University of Hawaii; John Jones,
associate professor of anthropology, Washington State University; Palma
Buttles, technical staff senior member, SEI Carnegie Mellon University;
Fred Valdez, professor of anthropology, University of Texas-Austin; and
David Lentz, UC professor of biology.
Starting in 2009, the UC team was the first North American group permitted to work at the Tikal site core in more than 40 years.
Detailed in the latest findings by the UC-led efforts are
- The largest ancient dam built by the ancient Maya of Central America
- Discussion on how reservoir waters were likely released
- Details on the construction of a cofferdam needed by the Maya to dredge one of the largest reservoirs at Tikal
- The presence of ancient springs linked to the initial colonization of Tikal
- Use of sand filtration to cleanse water entering reservoirs
- A "switching station" that accommodated seasonal filling and release of water
- Finding of the deepest, rock-cut canal segment in the Maya lowlands
An example of the thick vegetation common in the area where a UC-led team worked in and around Tikal.
According to UC's Scarborough, "The overall goal of the UC research
is to better understand how the ancient Maya supported a population at
Tikal of perhaps 60,000 to 80,000 inhabitants and an estimated
population of five million in the overall Maya lowlands by AD 700."
He added, "That is a much higher number than is supported by the
current environment. So, they managed to sustain a populous, highly
complex society for well over 1,500 years in a tropical ecology. Their
resource needs were great, but they used only stone-age tools and
technology to develop a sophisticated, long-lasting management system in
order to thrive."
Water collection and storage were critical in the environment where
rainfall is seasonal and extended droughts not uncommon. And so, the
Maya carefully integrated the built environment -- expansive plazas,
roadways, buildings and canals -- into a water-collection and management
system. At Tikal, they collected literally all the water that fell onto
these paved and/or plastered surfaces and sluiced it into man-made
reservoirs. For instance, the city's plastered plaza and courtyard
surfaces and canals were canted in order to direct and retain rainwater
runoff into these tanks.
In fact, by the Classic Period (AD 250-800), the dam (called the
Palace Dam) identified by the UC-led team was constructed to contain the
waters that were now directed from the many sealed plaster surfaces in
the central precinct. It was this dam on which the team focused its
latest work, completed in 2010. This gravity dam presents the largest
hydraulic architectural feature known in the Maya area. In terms of
greater Mesoamerica, it is second in size only to the huge Purron Dam
built in Mexico's Tehuacan Valley sometime between AD 250-400.
Said Scarborough, "We also termed the Palace Dam at Tikal the
Causeway Dam, as the top of the structure served as a roadway linking
one part of the city to another. For a long time, it was considered
primarily a causeway, one that tourists coming to the site still use
today. However, our research now shows that it did double duty and was
used as an important reservoir dam as well as a causeway."
Another discovery by the UC-led team: To help purify water as it
sluiced into the reservoir tanks via catchment runoff and canals, the
Maya employed deliberately positioned "sand boxes" that served to filter
the water as it entered into the reservoirs. "These filtration beds
consisted of quartz sand, which is not naturally found in the greater
Tikal area. The Maya of Tikal traveled at least 20 miles (about 30
kilometers) to obtain the quartz sand to create their water filters. It
was a fairly laborious transportation effort. That speaks to the value
they placed on water and water management," said UC's Nicholas Dunning.
According to UC's Ken Tankersley, "It's likely that the overall
system of reservoirs and early water-diversion features, which were
highly adaptable and resilient over a long stretch, helped Tikal and
some other centers survive periodic droughts when many other settlement
sites had to be abandoned due to lack of rainfall."
UC paleoethnobotanist David Lentz explained that the sophisticated
water management practiced by the ancient Maya impacted the availability
of food, fuel, medicinal plants and other necessities. He said, "Water
management by the Maya included irrigation, which directly impacted how
many people could be fed and overall population growth. Accordingly, it
is essential to understand the array of canals and reservoirs at Tikal,
which conserved water during the annual dry season and controlled
floodwaters during the rainy months. These practices allowed the Tikal
Maya to sustain relatively high population densities for several
centuries. As it evolved, this system of reservoirs was largely
dependent on rainfall for recharging. With the onset of the 9th century
droughts however, water supplies dwindled, causing the resource base and
social fabric of the Tikal Maya to come under considerable stress.
These developments may well have contributed to the abandonment of the
city."
Of significance to Scarborough and the entire team are the potential
lessons that can be gleaned from identifying a water system like that at
ancient Tikal. Said Scarborough, "Water management in the ancient
context can be dismissed as less relevant to our current water crisis
because of its lack of technological sophistication. Nevertheless, in
many areas of the world today, the energy requirements for even simple
pumping and filtering devices -- to say nothing about replacement-part
acquisition -- challenges access to potable sources. Tropical settings
can be especially difficult regions because of high infectious disease
loads borne by unfiltered water schemes. The ancient Maya, however,
developed a clever rainwater catchment and delivery system based on
elevated, seasonally charged reservoirs positioned in immediate
proximity to the grand pavements and pyramidal architecture of their
urban cores. Allocation and potability were developmental concerns from
the outset of colonization. Perhaps the past can fundamentally inform
the present, if we, too, can be clever."
UC's research at Tikal is supported by the Alphawood Foundation, by the National Science Foundation and by the university.
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