Mapping La Milpa: a Maya city in northwestern Belize.
Tourtellot, Gair, III ; Clarke , Amanda ; Hammond, Norman 等
Introduction
La Milpa is a major Lowland Maya site in northwestern Belize, close
to the frontiers with the Guatemalan Department of El Peten and the
Mexican State of Quintana Roo, and in an area until recently relatively
inaccessible because of the lack of roads through the rainforest. The
research reported here, complementing that by several other projects in
the region, follows the acquisition of some 350,000 acres of forest by
the Programme for Belize as an ecological preserve and the establishment
of a Scientific Advisory Board for Archaeology.
The Boston University-National Geographic Society La Milpa
Archaeological Project (LaMAP) began field operations in February 1992:
our aim is to build up an holistic picture of an ancient Maya community
that appears to have flourished for several centuries, by mapping the
pattern of settlement and its relationship to landscape, studying the
range of mineral and plant resources available to the inhabitants and by
carrying out surface collection and excavations to determine the nature,
extent and persistence of Maya culture there and understand the ancient
city in its environmental context.
Because of the location of La Milpa in a biosphere reserve, our
methods are designed to have the minimum impact on the present forest
environment: large-scale stripping of vegetation and topsoil from the
temples and plazas of the site core, followed by consolidation or
restoration of numerous buildings, such as has been carried out on some
other Maya sites in Mexico, Guatemala and Belize, is not part of our
remit. Such exposure of buildings as we do carry out over the next
decade must reconcile the legitimate demands of archaeo- and eco-tourism
with the long-term conservation of La Milpa.
The site of La Milpa
La Milpa is located on the eastern edge of the core area of Classic
Maya civilization, centred in the northeastern Peten and adjacent areas
of Mexico. It lies mid-way between the well-known and recently
investigated sites of Rio Azul (Adams 1990) and Lamanai (Pendergast
1981), both with a long history of occupation, from perhaps as early as
the late Middle Preclassic (600-400 BC) onwards. The city occupied an
upland area between the Rio Bravo escarpment to the east and south, and
the Rio Azul to the north; the western side of the site is drained by an
intermittent tributary of the Rio Azul which we have named
Thompson's Creek. The centre of La Milpa stands about 180 m above
sea level (asl) on a prominent limestone ridge, the highest point for
some distance around. Rugged forested terrain stretches west into
Guatemala and east to the Rio Bravo, where the scarp drops from 160 m
asl to the coastal plain at 20 m asl within 2 km.
Loran coordinates for La Milpa are given by Ford & Fedick (1988:
15) as 17 |degrees~ 49 16N and 89 |degrees~ 0321W. We independently
obtained a location approximately 1 km farther north at 17 |degrees~
5006N, 89 |degrees~ 0306 (UTM 16Q BQ 2-82-637E, 19-72-929N), using a
hand-held Magellan GPS receiver atop Pyramid 1 on the Great Plaza. The
research area of LaMAP is defined as a 6-km radius from the Great Plaza:
comparison with existing maps of Tikal, Seibal and other sites suggests
that the entire community, including several subordinate ceremonial
precincts, should lie within this 113 sq. km.
Previous work
La Milpa was first explored and named by the late Sir Eric Thompson in March 1938. He mapped the main plaza and the locations of 12 stelae
therein, and noted the complex of courtyards south of the plaza
(Thompson 1938; Hammond 1991). Stela 7 bore a clear CR date of 12 Ahau 8
Pax and the corresponding IS of 9.17.10.0.0. (30 November AD 780), and
the other carved stelae Thompson was able to observe were also Late
Classic in style. Thompson thought that the site might be the largest in
British Honduras (as Belize then was; neither Caracol nor Lamanai had
been explored at this point), but the only other published reference to
it (Thompson 1939: 280) simply lists the 'pyramids, mounds,
enclosed courts, nine sculptured and three plain stelae, plain
altars'.
No further exploration took place until David M. Pendergast and H.
Stanley Loten paid a brief visit in the 1970s, and made a
pace-and-compass map of the main plaza (unpublished); M. Gutchen and E.
Luna of the Department of Archaeology in Belmopan visited La Milpa in
1979 to follow up reports of looting, which were unfortunately true;
further Department of Archaeology visits took place in 1985, the first
with the Police Tactical Services Unit to check on reports of extensive
looting and marijuana fields (both true): by then all the main
structures around the Great Plaza and numerous smaller ones had been
penetrated by large trenches. Some of these revealed earlier buildings,
and some had struck the tombs they were seeking, but many had done
little beyond destabilising the rubble fill of the structures.
The first archaeological exploration since Thompson's time was
carried out in 1988 by two separate groups: the Rio Bravo Project made a
sketch map of part of the site centre (Guderjan 1989), and the Programme
for Belize commissioned an evaluation of the archaeological resource
potential and management of the lands it was acquiring in northwestern
Belize (Ford & Fedick 1988). Ford & Fedick mapped the main plaza
area and the enclosed courtyards to the south, including the locations
of stelae and looters' trenches. Guderjan (1989: figure 5) combined
this with his own 1988 data to produce a composite map of the main plaza
that corrected the orientation of some structures and provided numerical
identifiers for the structures (I-XVI) and stelae. Ford & Fedick
(1988: figure 6) also mapped a 1-ha sample of settlement north of the
centre, finding a density equal to 240 strs/sq. km.
In February-April 1990 Guderjan carried out extensive further
mapping, including four plazas, 20 residential courtyards and 85
structures in a 1 km X 0.5 km area of the site core. Looters'
trenches were investigated and profiled where appropriate (Guderjan
1991: figures 3-8). Guderjan estimates that La Milpa would have at least
24 and perhaps up to 30 courtyards, which on Adams & Jones'
(1981) scale would place the site in the topmost rank.
A visit by Hammond in March 1990 resulted in the identification of
one fragmentary monument (Stela 1) as Early Classic in date, and in
corroboration of the impression obtained from Thompson's field
notes that much of the major architecture was likely to be Preclassic in
origin; a visit by Vernon Scarborough (University of Cincinnati)
resulted in the identification of two large depressions south of the
main plaza as reservoirs (although they probably originated as the
quarries from which the construction fill for the plaza was dug), as
well as other water management features; these were investigated in 1992
and will be reported on separately by Scarborough.
Overall, the work carried out at La Milpa through 1990 resulted in
the clearing and mapping of the bulk of the site core as initially
explored by Thompson, and in brief descriptions of its structures and
monuments (Guderjan 1991: 7-34); Guderjan's numbering of the stelae
in the Great Plaza (Plaza A) unfortunately differs from that established
by Thompson (1938) and cited by others (e.g. Proskouriakoff 1950: figure
64c). LaMAP uses Thompson's numbering of Stelae 1-12, with the
subsequently discovered monuments as Stelae 13-16.
Investigations in 1992
The mapping and excavation programmes pursued by LaMAP in 1992 were
an attempt to understand the structure and chronology of the ancient
community. The three basic goals of the mapping, directed by Tourtellot,
were
1 to acquire an understanding of social organization based on the
variety, typology and distribution of architectural assemblages;
2 to match this with information on economic and political
organization, including sectorial development, location of production
facilities and communications such as causeways, and definition of
community boundaries and satellite centres;
3 to understand how the rugged and diverse environment of the
tropical rainforest was exploited in terms of agriculture, silviculture and the associated management of land and water resources.
Procedures can conveniently be divided into survey and mapping: the
former used an electronic distance measuring instrument (EDMI),
supplemented with Lietz optical transits, to align and stake out a grid
of trails (brechas) cut through the undergrowth at 500-m intervals.
These were highly controlled for azimuth, distance and altitude, and the
initial set of brechas formed a 1 X 1 km cruciform within a 1 X 1 km
square, giving four closed cells each 500 m on a side; most of this
central 1 sq. km was mapped in detail in 1992. The arms of the cross
will be extended outwards in 1993 and lateral brechas run from them. The
baseline was laid out on 1992 magnetic north along the east side of the
Great Plaza, just west of the line of stelae that stand in front of the
major pyramids; it was extended south between Structures 3 and 8, and
the main east-west cross brecha placed where it would not have to pass
over tall buildings.
This intersection was designated E6000/N6000 in the survey grid,
which had a hypothetical southwestern origin beyond the 6-km radius of
the project's research area, and became the Point of Beginning
(POB) for all subsequent work. An altitude of 180 m asl was assigned to
the POB on the basis that the 180-m contour on the Belize 1:50,000 map
(D.O.S. 4499, Sheet 8, 1976) enclosed the area of the site core, and
that this was somewhat corroborated by several GPS readings of just over
190 m asl for the top of Structure 1 on the Great Plaza (which lies at
215.8 m asl on the basis of the datum used here).
Stakes (in most cases recycled aluminium tent poles cut into 0.5 m
sections) were sunk into the ground at 100-m intervals along the main
brechas to serve as tie-ins for more detailed mapping. In addition the
Great Plaza was staked on a 25-m grid to check the size and orientation
of structures on the earlier maps made by Thompson (Hammond 1991: figure
1) and Guderjan and Lindeman (Guderjan 1991: figure 2), and provide
convenient datum points for excavations. Altitudes on stakes and
intermediate and lateral ground points were used to contour the natural
topography.
Mapping, as distinct from survey, used the compass and pace technique
developed at Tikal (Puleston 1983: 4-9). This uses teams systematically
walking back and forth in parallel along narrow transects on compass
headings, with the team leader using calibrated pace, traverse compass
and hand level to measure all cultural and natural features reported by
team members. In 1992 teams consisted of a surveyor, flanking student
observers and a Belizean worker clearing the way with a machete; each
team sweep covered a transect about 75 m wide. We used this method
because of its speed: no sight lines needed to be cleared for an EDMI.
Transect bearings and building orientations were determined with
Suunto KB14/360 |degrees~ traverse compasses, elevations from a hand
level mounted on a 1.5-m staff. A pace was calculated at 0.7 m, and the
length of each transect was retroactively calibrated by dividing the 500
m between brechas by the number of paces taken. Most structures were
plotted in the field, allowing the map to be checked for ground truth.
Accuracy in detail is fair, especially at the 1:1000 scale of plotting
where the thickness of a pencil line can equal 0.5 m on the ground and
given the imprecise edges of most ruined Maya structures under bush
cover; ground plans as plotted tend to be more regular than the actual
lines of collapse. Wall stones at La Milpa tend to be heavily eroded and
disordered, and structural lines were usually established from a
combination of contour breaks and toppled walls or exposed fill. More
precise means than compass and pacing are needed where exact
orientations, dimensions and volumes are needed, but the methods we used
did not run the risk of being more precise than the data available
warranted. In either case, accuracy depends more on the archaeologist
than the instruments used.
Gross control was provided by the staked brechas into which the
mapping transects tied, so that the maximum possible locational error
under dense bush was |approximately~ 15 m. Such mapping is highly
efficient for finding and identifying ruins, plotting their gross
orientation and spacing, numbers and clustering, approximate sizes and
floor plans and association with topography. Natural features mapped
included major changes in contour, elevations such as rock outcrops and
rock shelters under overhangs, depressions which may be solution hollows
and streambeds. Cultural features apart from the mounds of collapsed
buildings included spreads of rocks (perhaps construction stockpiles),
possible quarries and underground chultun chambers cut into bedrock.
Site layout
The ceremonial precinct of La Milpa lies on a ridge about a kilometre
across and more than that in length from north to south; its summit at
c. 195 m asl is just north of the Great Plaza, and the ridge slopes
gently southwards and more steeply to east and west. The eastern side,
with steep drops of up to 20 m, is heavily dissected by the channels of
seasonal streams, bordered by exposures of limestone caprock over softer
marl which has often undercut to form rockshelters. Late/Terminal
Classic bowl and jar fragments from these suggest their use for the
collection of zuhuy ha, ritually-important 'virgin water',
issuing magically from inside the rock. A quarry for high-quality
limestone existed along one of these small gorges, and stone of this
type was used for the carved stelae erected in the Great Plaza (James R.
Ashby pers. comm.. An aguada (waterhole) 100 m across was found beyond
the southwest end of the ridge, holding water well into the dry season;
this is the only permanent water source so far known at La Milpa,
although two reservoirs (initially quarries) lie just south of the Great
Plaza and were investigated by Vernon Scarborough in 1992. The satellite
centre of Say Ka is some 4 km to the southwest, within the posited
settlement zone of La Milpa; other sites lie on the ridges beyond, and
are being investigated by a project from the University of Texas
directed by R.E.W. Adams and Fred Valdez, Jr.
The public architecture of La Milpa occupies an area some 680 X 250 m
along the ridge, with two principal areas of construction. In the north
the Great Plaza, at c.165 X 120 m (about 20,000 sq. m) one of the
largest public spaces ever built by the Maya, is dominated by four large
temple-pyramids (Strs. 1-3, 10). South of this are the two reservoirs,
and beyond them the second main group of buildings, consisting of three
open plazas and a series of enclosed courtyards, with only one pyramid
and no stelae. No excavations were carried out in this southern area in
1992: our efforts were concentrated in the northern sector. The map of
the Great Plaza area used here shows the conventions used in Maya
archaeology: mounds are depicted as geometric solids with a diagonal and
inner rectangle proportional to the height and top surface area. In many
cases the top surface would have supported a walled superstructure, but
only where (as on Str. 8) the outlines of the rooms are fairly clear
even below vegetation and topsoil is this shown. Whether the retaining
walls of substructures were battered (as the convention implies),
terraced or vertical can only be established by excavation: all three
types are exposed in the sections of looters' trenches at La Milpa.
The plaza is dominated by the line of three pyramids along its
eastern side, and by Str. 10 within the plaza itself. Str. 1, the
tallest, stands 24 m above the plaza floor; its flat top and rough
masonry suggest a Late Preclassic date similar to structures at El
Mirador and Nakbe in the Peten (Graham 1967). Several looters'
tunnels reveal earlier buildings within Str. 1 (Guderjan 1991: figure
3), and later ones were added at plaza level against its west front.
None of the other pyramids has been investigated as yet, although the
location of Str. 10 on the same axis as Str. 1 suggests that they may be
coeval. The small Str. 5 in front of the gap between Strs. 1 and 2
should be later, although it also has at least two phases of
construction visible in looters' trenches; one of these may be
coeval with Stela 7 of AD 780, which stands directly in front of Str. 5.
The South Ballcourt, Strs. 6 and 7, similarly blocks part of the view of
Str. 3 from the plaza, suggesting that it is a later insert, while the
North Ballcourt, Strs. 11 and 12, lies athwart the main entry into the
Great Plaza from the north and is known from excavation to be of
Terminal Classic date.
The south side of the plaza is occupied by a single range structure
90 m long, Str. 8, with a collapsed masonry superstructure, apparently
of 13 rooms. The number was significant to the Classic Maya, there being
13 oxlahuntiku, gods of the heavens, who stood in opposition to the 9
bolontiku, lords of the night and the underworld. Adjoining it on the
west is a raised 'acropolis' with an enclosed courtyard some 6
m higher than the plaza and cut off from it by the bulk of Str. 9 rising
to a height of 14 m. The buildings on the courtyard (Strs. 13-15) are
more modest in scale and probably formed a royal residence compound,
defensible and difficult of access. The northwestern and northern sides
of the Great Plaza are bordered by low substructures, a curious contrast
to the massive architecture of the other sides; the location of the
large Str. 3, at 75 X 50 m in basal area the bulkiest of the pyramids,
half off the plaza facing the end of Str. 8 is also odd.
Monuments
Most of the 16 stelae so far found at La Milpa line the eastern side
of the plaza in front of the pyramids. Thompson (1938) recorded 12, most
of them still in situ; Stela 4 is probably buried under looters'
rubble just north of Stela 5, and Stelae 9 and 10 have not yet been
disentangled from the pile of fragments at the northwest corner of Str.
3 (Guderjan (1991: 33-34) here has one stela, his #13, and an altar).
Stela 1 was turned by one of us (NH) in 1990 and identified as being of
Early Classic date (AD 250-600) on stylistic criteria. Of the others,
Stelae 2 and 5, although broken and eroded, may be Late Classic (AD
600-800) in date, as are certainly the better-preserved Stela 8 (still
standing in front of Str. 2) and Stela 12 (recumbent in front of Str.
3). Stela 7, the only one with a well-preserved inscription, was dated
by Thompson (1938) to 9.17.10.0.0. 12 Ahau 8 Pax (30 November AD 780
(11.16. correlation at 584,283)). The Initial Series date on the north
edge is confirmed by repetition of the Calendar Round date on the west
front; both the south edge and the cruciform glyph panel on the back
should be readable with proper lighting, as may be the two glyphs on the
front at lower right which seem to name the ruler portrayed.
Stela 12 has survived erosion better on its lower part and side,
where the legs and elaborate ex loincloth with its squared spirals and
the left arm outstretched holding a circular shield are clear, than on
the upper, where the profile face is carved as inset relief and the
right hand holds an upright spear decorated with stiff lozenges. Some of
the glyphs on the north edge may be readable.
Two other stelae lie in the Great Plaza: Stela 13 stood opposite the
east end of the North Ballcourt, and although tall (3.45 m) was
uncarved. The tiny Stela 16, lying loose, beyond the west end of the
ballcourt beside a much larger and fragmented altar, was carved in Early
Classic style with a standing figure rather similar to that on Stela 1.
Both of these monuments were noted by Guderjan (1991: his #8 and 10), as
were the two monuments outside the Great Plaza, Stelae 14 and 15 (his
#11 and 12). Of these, Stela 14, standing in front of the west side of
Str. 16 but actually facing northwards towards Str. 3, is both plain and
broken into three; the butt and the altar in front are still in situ.
Stela 15, 3.42 m high, was found lying face down in front of a small
and heavily-looted mound south of Reservoir A, adjacent to two linear
structures which may frame a southern approach to the Great Plaza. Glyph
panels on the edges have been eroded, but when the stela was raised to a
vertical position, night photography revealed a striking figure on the
west face. Standing in right profile, with well-defined chest, back,
buttocks and thighs, he wears what seems to be a small round shield on
his shoulder with one or more spears tucked behind it. His head and face
are disproportionately large, with a prominent nose; part of the
elaborate headdress hangs down in front of his face. A small panel of
incised glyphs in front of the shins may be readable, but stylistically
Stela 15 looks to be late in Maya history.
Overall the stelae of La Milpa, of which we found eight to be carved
(Thompson thought another four were, now too eroded to tell) and three
plain, span a period of at least two centuries, c. AD 580-780, and
possibly double that. While many of the late monuments were more or less
complete (Stelae 5, 7, 8, 12, 15) and in some cases still standing
(Stelae 7, 8), the earlier Stela 1 had been broken off midway and the
upper half removed elsewhere. Stelae 2 and 6 were similarly mutilated:
all three monuments stood in front of Str. 1 (although Stelae 3 and 5
there seem to be undamaged). What political events in La Milpa's
history this reflects remains to be ascertained.
That this history was a long one is clear from the results of our
initial excavations and surface collections. A test pit in the centre of
the Great Plaza (Op. A01) showed that deep Late Preclassic construction
deposits underlay the final levelling-up of the plaza surface in Late
Classic times; another (Op. A03) north of the elite acropolis compound
west of the plaza, yielded almost entirely Late Classic and Tecep
(Terminal Classic-Early Postclassic: AD 800-1100) material, as did
superficial excavations around the North Ballcourt. Surface collections,
from the settlement as well as in the site core, were predominantly of
Tecep date, constituted of heavy storage jars and basins of a coarse
calcite-tempered paste. The same range of vessels was found in the
excavation of two residential courtyards just northeast of the Great
Plaza (Ops. A06 and A07; Guderjan 1991: figure 2, #48, 49). Their
typology links the late ceramics of La Milpa to Peten sites further west
and south, rather than to Lamanai and Nohmul to the east and north, with
their strong links to the Yucatan Peninsula: La Milpa seems to be at the
northeastern limit of Peten regional culture, something confirmed by the
site's architecture and sculpture.
Some northern influence is apparent at the very end of La
Milpa's history, however: a rectangular building with metre-wide
dwarf walls was constructed in the southwestern corner of the Great
Plaza, arguably when it had ceased to be a functioning ceremonial space,
and investigated as Op. A04. The abundance of domestic pottery indicated
that this was a residence, and its closest architectural parallels are
Strs. 132, 139 (Hammond 1985: figures 4.6-4.29), and 141 in the northern
suburbs of Nohmul; these in turn have strong architectural and ceramic
links with Tecep and Postclassic Yucatan. Given the northern influence,
perhaps even invasion, seen at this time at Rio Azul by Adams (1990:
35), where there is also a late monument (Stela 4) possibly comparable
with La Milpa Stela 15, it seems likely that we are here close to the
southernmost limit of that movement of Yucatecan culture, be it by
invasion, migration or simply emulation.
Acknowledgements. Funding for LaMAP was provided by the National
Geographic Society, by Boston University, and by donations from Francis
Ford Coppola and an anonymous benefactor. Permission to work at La Milpa
was granted by the Government of Belize through the Department of
Archaeology, where we are most grateful for John Morris and his staff.
Programme for Belize offered the use of research station facilities and
the fullest cooperation: we are most grateful to Arnold Brown, Joy
Grant, Peter Herrera and John Masson. Kathy Tips and Francisco Estrada Belli supervised excavations; these and mapping were carried out by
students from Boston University and the University of Texas at San
Antonio. Laboratory work was directed by Jim Spriggs and Sarah Kingsley,
and drafting by Sheena Howarth and Sarah Kingsley; logistics were
managed by Mark Hodges and Ovel Martinez, and the kitchen by Argelia
Martinez. Our colleagues Richard E.W. Adams, Thomas H. Guderjan, Vernon
Scarborough, and Fred Valdez, Jr, who are also working in and around La
Milpa, have been hospitable collaborators. We owe diverse debts of
gratitude to Neva Folk, Mary Ann Harrell, Yvonne Keast, Evelyn Y.
LaBree, Mary Griswold Smith and George E. Stuart.
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