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January 18 2025 / 04:50 AM
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Riviera Maya News
Visitors can now explore this ancient site

The “new” archaeological zone of Ichkabal will officially open its doors to the public on January 3, 2025. It will be the first time since its discovery in 2009 that it will open publicly.

The Ichkabal Archaeological Zone is located 40 kilometers west of the Bacalar lagoon and is more than 2,400 years old. According to the General Director of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), Diego Prieto Hernández, the site remained undiscovered until the end of the 20th century.

Although the ancient Mayan political center began to be the subject of research by the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) in 2009, it was fully restored through the Program for the Improvement of Archaeological Zones (Promeza), derived from the priority Maya Train project.

Prieto Hernández says that given its size and history, it will become a great cultural attraction in the region, since it connects with the Maya Train Bacalar station.

The “new” archaeological zone of Quintana Roo, he noted, was the seat of the powerful Kaan’ul dynasty, or the Serpent dynasty, which arose in Dzibanché and moved to Calakmul, extending its influence to the north of the territory now occupied by Guatemala, thus rivaling Tikal.

Thanks to the Promeza, a dozen structures of various heights and volumes have been fully or partially liberated and consolidated from this splendor. Their facades were dismantled by the inhabitants of the place during its period of decline, according to the hypotheses of the archaeological team, led by Luz Evelia Campaña and Javier López Camacho.

As its translation from Mayan indicates, “among lows”, Ichkabal was located on land that tends to flood during rainy periods, so it has a great work of hydraulic engineering, a rectangular reservoir 80 by 60 meters, known as Aguada de los Cocodrilos, made by the ancient Mayans to have water all year round.

According to the photographic survey and aerial images captured with LiDAR technology, which allows the presence of architectural structures to be recorded beneath the forest cover, the pre-Hispanic settlement had an area of more than 60 square kilometers, and was connected to Dzibanché by means of a 40-kilometer road system or sacbe’ob.

Jan 16, 2025

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