July 2023
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37 Reads
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1 Citation
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July 2023
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37 Reads
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1 Citation
January 2022
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618 Reads
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9 Citations
Until recently, an extensive area in the central lowlands of the Yucatán peninsula was completely unexplored archaeologically. In 2013 and 2014, during initial surveys in the northern part of the uninhabited Calakmul Biosphere Reserve in eastern Campeche, Mexico, we located Chactún, Tamchén and Lagunita, three major Maya centers with some unexpected characteristics. Lidar data, acquired in 2016 for a larger area of 240 km², revealed a thoroughly modified and undisturbed archaeological landscape with a remarkably large number of residential clusters and widespread modifications related to water management and agriculture. Substantial additional information was obtained through field surveys and test excavations in 2017 and 2018. While hydraulic and agricultural features and their potential for solving various archaeologically relevant questions were discussed in a previous publication, here we examine the characteristics of settlement patterns, architectural remains, sculpted monuments, and ceramic evidence. The early Middle Preclassic (early first millennium BCE) material collected in stratigraphic pits at Tamchén and another locale constitutes the earliest evidence of colonization known so far in a broader central lowland area. From then until the Late Classic period, which was followed by a dramatic demographic decline, the area under study witnessed relatively constant population growth and interacted with different parts of the Maya Lowlands. However, a number of specific and previously unknown cultural traits attest to a rather distinctive regional development, providing novel information about the extent of regional variation within the Maya culture. By analyzing settlement pattern characteristics, inscriptional data, the distribution of architectural volumes and some other features of the currently visible archaeological landscape, which largely reflects the Late Classic situation, we reconstruct several aspects of sociopolitical and territorial organization in that period, highlighting similarities with and differences from what has been evidenced in the neighboring Río Bec region and elsewhere in the Maya area.
... The algorithms contained in RVT have been used in a variety of studies and applications demonstrated by the extensive list of more than 400 references available on their website (RVT, 2023). More than half of these are represented by archaeological studies, where RVT (and especially SVF) is commonly used for representation of elevation data (some examples include Burigana and Magnini, 2017;Masini et al., 2018;Costa-Garcıá et al., 2019;Bernardini and Vinci, 2020;Lim et al., 2020;Lozićand Sťular, 2021;Sprajc et al., 2022;Affek et al., 2022;Danese et al., 2022). Use of RVT is much less common in geoscientific studies which represent less than ten percent of the references (RVT, 2023). ...
January 2022