Wednesday, March 3, 2010

joya de ceren, el salvador

gift shop skulls

gift shop ceramic reproductions


getting the juice out to eat the fruit




i've totally forgotten the name of the fruit



one of the ginger plants on our way to the excavation

dried leaves everywhere


it looks small but it's really quite large, remains of a building


the village center with home in the front and the sauna in the background - it looks small in the picture but it's really a full scale village


the sauna




Joya de Ceren (“Jewel of the Ceren”) is a humanity heritage by UNESCO. It’s the only place in the world that shows the daily life of a pre-Columbian Mayan farming village. You get a sense of what every day life was like for the great majority of Maya who were not priests or officials. We saw adobe houses, communal baths and public structures. Because Joya del Ceren’s building materials were susceptible to erosion and quick decay, it took ash from a nearby volcano that erupted around 600 A.D. to bury the village and protect it from the elements. The excavation resembles the process of excavation at Pompeii and Herculaneum.

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