Rising into the warm light of the Mexican sunrise, the ancient city of Teotihuacan slowly came into view below. From the hot ...
A team of researchers are using aerial scanning technology to study Teotihuacán, the sprawling ancient city built over a thousand years before the Aztecs's arrival in Mexico whose construction remains ...
Teotihuacán in its heyday was one of the largest cities in the world, supporting over 100,000 people in an 8-square-mile stretch of what is now Central Mexico. Now, a team of archaeologists have used ...
A lidar mapping study shows ancient residents of Teotihuacan moved astonishing quantities of soil and bedrock for construction and reshaped the landscape in a way that continues to influence the ...
Nawa Sugiyama, assistant professor with the Department of Anthropology at the University of California, Riverside, is co-director of Project Plaza of the Columns Complex at the UNESCO world heritage ...
"The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, M.H. de Young Memorial Museum, 26 May through 31 October 1993"-- Verso of t.p. The place where time began : an archaeologist's interpretation of what happened ...
In 2004, Saburo Sugiyama, an anthropologist from the University of Japan and Arizona State University, who has spent decades studying Teotihuacán, and Rubén Cabrera, of Mexico’s National Institute of ...
For years, the mysterious signs found on the city’s murals were thought to be nothing more than decorative symbols. But now, scientists suggest they could be a form of early writing. Teotihuacan, once ...
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