The Daily Mail published a piece on an extensive archaeological site recently uncovered on the Yucatan Peninsula. The story begins:
“The ruins of an ancient Mayan city filled with palaces, pyramids and plazas have been unearthed on a construction site near Merida on Mexico‘s Yucatan Peninsula.
“Known as Xiol, which means ‘Spirit of Man’ in Mayan, the pre-Columbian city is thought to have been home to around 4,000 people between 600 and 900 A.D.
“It has features of the Mayan Puuc style of architecture, archaeologists said, which is common in the southern Yucatan Peninsula but rare near Merida.
“‘There were people from different social classes… priests, scribes, who lived in these great palaces, and there were also the common people who lived in small buildings,’ said Carlos Peraza, one of the archaeologists who led the excavation of the city.”
Read the entire piece