Trenches found under Edinburgh Castle

DFN: Castle often were build on top of previous settlements.

Trenches found under Edinburgh Castle
By Andrea McCallum
http://deadlinescotland.wordpress.com/2010/01/15/trenches-unearthed-beaneth-edinburgh-castle2494/

MEDIEVAL trenches dating back to the 16th century have been found underneath Edinburgh Castle.

The foundations – which formed part of the castle’s outer defences – were discovered by archaeologists.

Workers unearthed the walls and foundations during work to install new seating for Edinburgh Military Tattoo audiences.

Two separate structures were found buried about two metres beneath the castle’s esplanade.

The remains of a two-foot-wide wall was uncovered in the first trench – which is thought to be part of the north boundary between the city and the castle.

And a second trench revealed the foundations of a Spur – a 16th century defensive stronghold that protected the entrance to the castle.

Both appear in a 17th century drawing by Gordon of Rothiemay but until now their precise location was unknown.

Fiona Hyslop, Minister for Culture and External Affairs, said: “Edinburgh Castle has a long and important role at the centre of the country’s history.

“Finds of this kind are extremely valuable in terms of improving our understanding of the development of the castle, and its defensive needs during key periods in time, as well as showcasing effective modern day partnership working between the heritage and construction sectors.”

CFA Archaeology is working for Edinburgh Military Tattoo Ltd at the castle as part of Scheduled Monument Consent granted by Scottish Ministers for the new Tattoo stands.

Peter Yeoman is the head of CRT for Historic Scotland who looks after both Edinburgh Castle and the castle esplanade on behalf of Scottish Ministers.

He said: “As the remains have effectively lain covered for over 250 years, this is a unique opportunity to learn more about the esplanade during this period in the castle’s history.

“Until recently we have only had early drawings to go by, but we are now able to examine the archaeology and record and preserve as much of it as is possible for future generations.

“The remains are too deep down to be displayed, but to have this knowledge is a great step forward. In carry out these works Edinburgh Military Tattoo Ltd are to be commended for applying best conservation practice in ensuring that any discoveries are properly preserved and recorded. ”

The esplanade was formed in 1753 to create a parade ground for the military.

Archaeologists will continue to work with the Tattoo Company and their contractor Sir Robert MacAlpine to record the remains before they are re-buried.

Pyramids build by ‘freemen’

DFN: So, "The 10 Commandments" presented an inaccurate picture of ancient Egypt? Surprise, surprise, surprise.

Pyramids may have been built by free men, not slaves
By Yuval Azoulay, Haaretz Correspondent and Reuters
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1141728.html

Tombs discovered in recent years near the Great Pyramids in Egypt may reveal that the builders of the famed monuments were free workers, rather than slaves, as is commonly thought. The discovery of the tombs also showed that the workers received pay, food and lodging near the construction site, the Egyptian Antiquities Ministry said yesterday.

Egyptian archaeologists said they found evidence of settlements near the pyramids of Khufu and Khare, at Giza near Cairo.
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Popular culture has long depicted slaves toiling away in the desert to build the mammoth pyramids only to meet a miserable death at the end of their efforts. The new tombs, which are approximately 4,100 years old, may dispel these myths.

"These tombs were built beside the king’s pyramid, which indicates that these people were not by any means slaves," Zahi Hawass, the chief archaeologist heading the Egyptian excavation team, said in a statement.

Hawass said evidence had been found showing that farmers in the Delta and Upper Egypt had sent 21 buffalo and 23 sheep to the plateau every day to feed about 10,000 builders.

The builders were rotated every three months and those who died on the job were buried in these tombs.

The first of the laborers’ tombs were uncovered in the early 1990s and were studied for many years by scholars from around the world. The cone-shaped tombs were built mainly of mud-brick and covered with white plaster. Scholars have said the plaster may have been added to imitate the royal pyramids.

Such discoveries reveal aspects of ancient Egyptian society, and can show the social origins of the lower classes, Salima Ikram, a professor of Egyptology and the American University of Cairo told The Associated Press.

Tel Aviv University Egyptologist Dr. Raphael Ventura said yesterday he was not surprised at the reports on ancient labor conditions.

"Those who study the subject properly know that slaves did not build the pyramids and certainly not the Israelites, as many mistakenly think," he said. However, Ventura and other Egyptologists said the reason people worked hands was the good deed of building a tomb for the king.

"They felt it was their duty to come when they were called," leaving their farms and fields during the Nile’s flood season, he said.


Doug

Cortes was impressed by the Market of Tenochtilan

DFN: Tenochtilan was built on Lake Texoco; article describes elaborate market system in the Aztec world.

The Markets of Tenochtitlan
A Vast Choice of Goods in the Aztec Capital
Jan 14, 2010 Brenda Ralph Lewis
http://aztec-history.suite101.com/article.cfm/the_markets_of_tenochtitlan

The Aztecs held their tianguis (markets) in Tenochtitlan every five days, selling everything from food and medicines to ornaments, tiles and woods.

When the Spanish conquistadores arrived in Tenochtitlan in 1519, the Aztec capital on Lake Texcoco held up to 300,000 inhabitants. They were augmented by thousands more who made long journeys on foot from the surrounding areas to attend the markets. This was more than enough population to support the vast amount of trade carried on in Tenochtitlan, which was the hub of a market network that extended throughout the Valley of Mexico.

Cortes Writes to his Royal Master

In the second of five lengthy reports, written on October 30, 1520, the conquistadores’ leader, Hernan Cortes, informed King Charles of Spain of the vast variety to be found in the markets of the city he mistakenly called ‘Temixtitan”:

“The city has many squares where trading is done…There is one square twice as big as that of Salamanca (in Spain) with arcades all around, where more than sixty thousand people come each day to buy and sell, and where every kind of merchandise produced in these lands is found…

“There is a street where they sell game and birds of every species … partridges, quails,, turtledoves, pigeons, eagles ….falcons, sparrow hawks and kestrels.

“There are streets of herbalists where all the medicinal herbs and roots found in the land are sold. There are shops like apothecaries, where they sell ready-made medicines as well as liquid ointments and plasters…”

Yet nowhere in all this bustle of trade did any money change hands, for the Aztecs knew nothing of coins or paper money but traded entirely by barter and exchange.

When one of Cortes’ men, Bernal Diaz del Castillo visited the market at Tlatelolco, which was even more extensive than those in Tenochtitlan, he observed how the barter system worked.

“There were many …merchants who sold gold in grains as it came from the mines,” Bernal wrote. “ They put it in goose quills…They calculated how much so many blankets or gourds of cacao were worth, or slaves, or whatever else they traded, according to the length and thickness of the quills.”

Judges and Officials Ensure Fair Trading

The Aztec markets had their own courts comprising ten or twelve judges. Their task was to regulate trading, with special reference to the danger of giving short measure.

As long as the market was open, officials mingled with the crowds “observing what it sold and the measures with which it which it is measured.” Bernal added: “We saw one measure broken which was false.” Punishments for wrongdoing could be a great deal worse than this: anyone found guilty of stealing was flogged to death on the spot.

The Rules of Proper Measure

The rules about giving proper measures were extremely strict and covered a multitude of goods, including paper, paint, glue, feathers, rubber, salt, obsidian blades and mirrors, pottery, jewels, baskets, lengths of cloth, herbs and potions or slaves.

Maize and grains, for instance, were sold in measures of around 198 lbs. called troje, or about 132 lbs. called tlacopintli. Cloth was reckoned by the length of a hand, by the emmitl – the distance between outstretched arms – or by a longer measurement from the ground to the tips of the fingers when the arm was stretched above the head.

Paying for Goods with Cloaks

There were, though, some fixed “prices” in which the “currency” was a number of quachtli, or cloaks. For instance, a slave who was good at dancing was worth forty cloaks, while one without such talent merited only around thirty.

A canoe cost one cloak, a gold lip-plug cost twenty-five and a military costume with a feathered shield, sixty-four. A string of jade beads was a luxury item: it cost six hundred cloaks.

The Aztec Merchants, a Favoured Class

The Aztec pochteca, the merchants, who carried goods to the more distant markets by caravan, were something of a class apart. They enjoyed more privileges than was usual for commoners – for instance, they had their own lawcourts – but the nature of their work meant that they also took more than the usual risks.

Trading journeys could last for a year or more and safety could never be guaranteed, when the caravans had to cross hot, thirsty deserts, dangerous mountain passes and fast-flowing rivers.

The rituals observed before a caravan set out reflected these dangerous possibilities. First, the stars would be consulted to ensure that the day of departure was a lucky one.

Once the date was decided, the merchants, their wives and children would ceremonially wash their heads and cut their hair. None of them did these things again until the merchants had safely returned.

Then, some time during the night, the merchants would slip silently from their homes. By the time their families woke next morning, they would be far away and out of sight, somewhere in the mountains.

Sources

Aguilar-Moreno, Manuel: Handbook to Life in the Aztec World (New York, NY, Oxford University Press, 2007) ISBN-10: 0195330838/ISBN-13: 978-0195330830

Aghajanian, Alfred: Chinampas: Their Role in Aztec Empire – Building and Expansion (Los Angeles, California: IndoEuropean Publishing, 2007)ISBN-10: 1604440031/ISBN-13: 978-1604440034

How to keep your search on the DL

DFN: Tips on how to look for work while working.

Five Ways to Keep Your Job Search at Work on the DL
By: WORKS by Nicole Williams (View Profile)
http://www.divinecaroline.com/22276/91424-five-ways-keep-job-search/2

It’s hard enough to keep up with a demanding boss and your never-ending to-do list, but finding a new job on top of everything else is enough to make even the most organized and on-top-of-it gal feel a little crazed. If you’re as guilt prone as I am, then you may feel a little like you’re cheating on your company by sneaking around behind your co-workers’ backs. The long lunches, the extra lipstick stashed in your purse, the secret phone calls behind closed doors … you get the idea. Here are a few tips to keeping your search on the DL.

Nix the guilt.
Gone are the days when people would work for the same company for thirty years and get a gold watch at their retirement dinner. Job hunting is a fact of life. Your boss or co-workers may be doing the same thing, so don’t feel like you’re being disloyal. Remind yourself that a new job will give you a better quality of life and help advance your career.

Schedule accordingly.
Many interviewers understand that you’re currently employed and are willing to accommodate a request for an early-morning or late-afternoon interview to minimize interference with your current job responsibilities. If someone insists that you must meet with them from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. on a Monday afternoon and that is wildly inconvenient for you, consider whether you really want to work for someone who is so inflexible!

Give yourself time to breathe.
In an ideal world, you’d take the day off to go to several interviews scheduled a few hours apart and allow yourself plenty of time to prepare mentally and physically (plus, you’d avoid giving lame excuses to your co-workers). In reality, you’re probably sneaking out during lunch and praying your boss doesn’t notice that you’ve already had two “dentist appointments” in the past month. I normally take the subway to work, but if I’m unsure of where an interview is or I’m concerned I might be late, I’ll splurge on a cab so I can arrive unruffled and on time. Time permitting, you could scope out the address a few days in advance so you’ll know where you’re going.

Get personal business cards printed.
Some companies are totally chill about you fielding calls from recruiters, but my past employers were not. I used VistaPrint to order custom business cards with my cell phone and gmail address printed on them. That way, I could give potential contacts my digits without scrawling them on a napkin. Personally, I think my cards are a lot better looking and better reflect my professional brand than my company’s logo.

Excel at your current job.
If you’re kicking butt at the office, who can fault you for taking an hour off here and there? Delegate when you need to, but keep plugging along so you’ll earn a solid reference from your boss. Though she’ll be sad to see you go, she’ll be happy that you’re off to bigger and better things.

Originally published on WORKS by Nicole Williams

Value of a Baseball Player’s Contract

DFN: This is the first in a series of articles regarding how to establish a value for a baseball players contract.

Ahead in the Count
Revising Player Contract Valuation, Part 1
by Matt Swartz
The first of a three-part series.
http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=9955

Rumors pertaining to Johnny Damon’s eventual contract, not just as far as potential suitors go, but also what they might offer are increasing in frequency. If one were to buy into the hype, Damon could get anywhere from a one-year deal worth $4 million to one paying $33 million over three years. To come up with reasonable price estimates of his services, analysts are looking at recent deals doled out to comparables like Bobby Abreu and Mike Cameron, and it certainly seems like whoever brings Damon aboard will pay a similar price, a tad shy of the $10 million mark. Of course, when Matt Holliday was still on the free-agent market, there were no other comparable players getting deals. Holliday provided a WARP3 of 20.7 over the last three years compared to Damon’s 11.4. Considering age and basic regression factors, it stands to reason that Holliday is about twice as good as Damon, but does that mean he should be getting twice as much in salary? Is he worth more than twice as much? Evaluating the monetary value of free agents presents a tricky proposition, but an important one worthy of discussion nevertheless.

One of my upcoming projects at Baseball Prospectus is the development of a new version of MORP, or Market Value Over Replacement Player. Nate Silver developed MORP here for Baseball Prospectus in 2005 as a means of gauging the monetary value added by players and based the metric on the formula for WARP, which has since changed. Nate also developed the stat in a different market, when very few teams had sabermetricians in their front offices and Billy Beane could roam free. Times change, and with the changing market, MORP needs a makeover.

MORP’s purpose is not to estimate what the average team would get in value from a given player. It also does not attempt to answer what would happen if everybody in the league were a free agent at once. The latter situation would represent an entirely different labor market and it would be futile to speculate about what players would be paid in this case. MORP should only attempt to estimate what the market value would be for a given amount of production, holding everything else constant.

It is also important to acknowledge that players have different values to different teams. Matt Holliday made a lot more sense for the Cardinals than the Orioles. As teams bid on free agents in an auction format, the market value of a player becomes his value to the highest bidder, or really, the second-highest bidder. However, the difference between Holliday’s value to the Cardinals, Yankees or Red Sox might be very small compared to the difference between his value to the Cardinals and Pirates. Nate showed us that the marginal value of a win is much higher to teams who are on the cusp of making the playoffs because of the extra revenue the postseason generates. Therefore, a player’s monetary value to a team will be based on how much he would add to a squad in a situation of being projected to win, for example, 87 games but miss the playoffs, because those teams will get the most bang for their buck from the signed players.


Doug

Antiquity – Queen Berenice’s Temple?

DFN: Learned something new, Cleopatra was the last in the line of the Greek-speaking Ptolemaic Dynasty.

Egypt announces find of ancient cat goddess temple
By HAMZA HENDAWI
The Associated Press
Tuesday, January 19, 2010; 7:21 PM
http://blogs.wsj.com/laidoff/2010/01/21/good-ways-to-get-rejected/

CAIRO — Archaeologists have unearthed a 2,000-year-old temple that may have been dedicated to the ancient Egyptian cat goddess, Bastet, the Supreme Council of Antiquities said Tuesday. The ruins of the Ptolemaic-era temple were discovered by Egyptian archaeologists in the heart of the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, founded by Alexander the Great in the 4th century B.C.

The city was the seat of the Greek-speaking Ptolemaic Dynasty, which ruled over Egypt for 300 years until the suicide of Queen Cleopatra.

The statement said the temple was thought to belong to Queen Berenice, wife of King Ptolemy III who ruled Egypt in the 3rd century B.C.

Mohammed Abdel-Maqsood, the Egyptian archaeologist who led the excavation team, said the discovery may be the first trace of the long-sought location of Alexandria’s royal quarter.

The large number of statues depicting Bastet found in the ruins, he said, suggested that this may be the first Ptolemaic-era temple dedicated to the cat goddess to be discovered in Alexandria.

This would indicate that the worship of the ancient Egyptian cat-goddess continued during the later, Greek-influenced, Ptolemaic period, he said.

Statues of other ancient Egyptian deities were also found in the ruins, he added.

Zahi Hawass, Egypt’s chief archaeologist, said the temple may have been used in later times as a quarry as evidenced by the large number of missing stone blocks.

Modern Alexandria was built squarely on top of the ruins of the classical-era city and many of its great temples, palaces and libraries remain undiscovered.

The temple was found in the Kom el-Dekkah neighborhood near the city’s main train station and home to a Roman-era amphitheater and well preserved mosaics.

Rejection

DFN: I’ve never had a problem in getting rejected! Its best just to think of rejection as a necessary evil of job search, and the quicker you can move on, the better, for you.

Good Ways to Get Rejected
1/21/2010
By Brent Humphries
http://blogs.wsj.com/laidoff/2010/01/21/good-ways-to-get-rejected/

Brent Humphries was a technical project manager at the Iowa Foundation for Medical Care. His position was eliminated in June 2009, after five years with the nonprofit. Previously, he worked as an IT contractor for various financial services companies. Mr. Humphries, 37, earned a part-time MBA from the University of Iowa in 2009. He lives in Des Moines, Iowa.

When courting my first girlfriend, in classic elementary school style, I wrote my request on a piece of spiral notebook paper, complete with convenient checkboxes for Yes and No. Unfortunately, I didn’t include my name. After asking around and discovering the identity of her “secret” admirer, she walked up to me and tossed my heart on my desk with a single word before walking away.

Looking back on that event in the context of my current job search, I’m nostalgic for the days when rejection was borne in the hand of a brown-eyed girl, but job rejection seems to come in all shapes and sizes today. Some employers send an email, or snail mail, a few will make phone calls, many don’t respond at all, and one employer rejected me in person. I feel I should get a rejection at the same level of interaction I’ve reached as part of the application process. If I’ve sent a resume by email, I should get an email notifying me of my rejection.

With Internet job posting and one-click multi-job applications, there is less justification for rejecting job applicants personally. If an employer hasn’t engaged an applicant, there’s no reason to engage at the point of rejection. But, applicants are vendors with a potentially valuable service to offer. Shouldn’t they be treated with the same consideration given to the vendor that supplies you with raw materials, or plans your corporate events?

Not surprisingly, applicants who use their personal networks seem to do better than applicants who go through the standard process. At the very least, it’s possible for someone in your personal network to find out why you didn’t get the job if they helped you get the interview in the first place. I was recently interviewed and rejected for a job, but there was no communication from the company to notify me (or my contact) of my rejection. After my contact exerted considerable effort to discuss my candidacy with the appropriate people, my contact was told that there were stronger candidates under consideration, and nothing more. Personally, I consider this type of response an HR-safe way of saying that I was qualified but not a good fit for the organization. Beyond that, I’m not sure I’ll ever know why.

I used to believe that employers who didn’t notify an applicant when a position was filled were unprofessional, but I’m rethinking that position because of the current job climate. With so many well-qualified applicants, some employers have changed their hiring process. These employers are clearly trying to minimize the time they spend evaluating candidates, so they choose to talk to a small number of candidates who fully meet every item on a long list of very specific qualifications. After a round of interviews where a good fit can’t be found, the list of qualifications is modified, and a new request goes out. I’ve seen more than one occasion where I’m a better candidate for the revised position than I was for the original one. For a situation like that, should the employer have sent a rejection notice after the first round of candidates had been selected? I don’t believe so.

Recently, I’ve been a candidate three times for what was essentially the same position. Each time, the company made a request to each of their contacts in the placement community to submit only their “best candidate” for consideration. I was submitted and rejected the first time, submitted and interviewed (then rejected) the second time, and submitted (and currently under consideration) the third time. Each time the job description changed, but not markedly so. Here’s hoping that the third time is a charm.

Mayan Stele found in Lagartero, Mexico

DFN: This is interesting as this is SW of Mexico City, one of the northern most Mayan discoveries.

1000-Year-Old Monument with Image of Mayan Ruler Found in Lagartero, Mexico
19 January 2010
http://www.presentthepast.com/2010/01/mayan-ruler-lagartero-mexico/

A 1000-year-old stele with the sculpted image of a Mayan ruler was found in the archaeological area of Lagartero in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas, the National Anthropology and History Institute, or INAH, said.

The Location of the dicovery – Lagartero, Mexico; Source: Google Earth

In the bas-relief sculpture the Mayan ruler rises above an individual who lies at his feet, “a scene representing the seizing of power by one Maya group from another,” INAH said, adding that the archaeological area of Lagartero will be open to the public this year.

INAH experts found the stone monument in late 2009 at the 10th section of Pyramid 4 in Lagartero, the source said. Archaeologist Sonia Rivero Torres, who heads the Lagartero archaeological project, said that the stele or commemorative monument – the first to be found complete on the site – measures 2 meters (6 1/2 feet) long, 55 centimeters (22 inches) wide and 6 centimeters (2 1/3 inches) thick.

The stele was sculpted in metamorphic rock, known locally as “heart of stone.” “In the pre-Colombian monument the profile image of a Mayan ruler is seen standing over a bench carrying a bag of incense in one hand and dressed in a loincloth bound with a sash and wearing sandals and a feather headdress.

“At his feet, lying on his back on the bench, lies another, smaller person with his torso opened as a sign of sacrifice or of being overthrown,” the archaeologist said.

The expert added that the stele was discovered while exploring a rectangular stone casket, which had possibly been plundered in pre-Columbian times since no bones were found inside. The archaeologists also found, when they went down to a lower level of the pyramid, a pair of large earthenware pots, broken but complete, one of which contained an smaller, unbroken pot.

Together with these ceramics was a polychrome plate and a black vase with a zoopmorphic lid that contained a rich offering of jade objects, notable among which were two earflaps, a jointed turtle and a beaded necklace. Another box was found in the fifth section of Pyramid 4, from which 40 vessels of different shapes, zoomorphic vases and a few human bones were recovered, INAH said. Lagartero’s pre-Columbian ceremonial center extends the length and breadth of the 8 hectares (2 1/2 acres) that make up the islet of El Limonar, the biggest of the 11 dotting the lakes of Lagos de Colon, in the community of Cristobal Colon in the municipality of La Trinitaria, Chiapas.

Lagartero is known to have been occupied from the Classical Period to the Early Post-Classical Period, which is to say from 300 A.D. to 1200 A.D. Given its strategic wetlands location, the habitat of fresh-water species like the alligator, the Maya settlement controlled the area’s natural resources and could also restrict access by water. Lagartero was a key point for trading goods and products between the highlands of Guatemala and Mexico’s central plateau.

Archaeologists working at the site have uncovered an enclosed ball-playing court together with its five altars, along with a series of architectural structures, INAH said.

Peru’s Ollantaytambo

DFN: Another place to put on my must see list!

Peru’s Ollantaytambo — a ‘living Inca town’
Secure heights: The hillside fortress at Ollantaytambo, Peru. – INDRANIL CHOUDHURI
Nivedita Choudhuri
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/life/2010/01/22/stories/2010012250080200.htm

Peru is blessed with arguably the most fascinating, and some of the most accessible, archaeological remains in all the Americas. Machu Picchu is said to be the ultimate destination, but Peru has much more. Ollantaytambo, often described as a living Inca town because its residents still maintain ancient traditions such as tilling fields with foot ploughs, is absolutely spectacular.

We reached Ollantaytambo as dusk was setting in. I let out a moan when I realised we’d been allotted a room on the second floor of our hotel. Lugging our belongings we huffed and puffed up the two flights of steps — no easy task at 2,800 metres above sea level.

Ollantaytambo is the most populous town in southern Peru’s Sacred Valley, a mountain-hemmed corridor of Edenic farmland bordering the silvery Rio Urubamba. With relaxed rural hotels and several key Inca sites nearby, this is the perfect place to catch not only your breath but also attune to the enigmas of one of history’s most fascinating cultures. Few visitors linger long at Ollantaytambo as most scurry to board the train to Aguas Calientes, the town closest to Machu Picchu.

Steeped in history

The place takes its name after Ollanta, the Inca general who fell in love with the ninth ruler Pachacutec’s daughter. He was forced to flee the city, but was united with her after Pachacutec’s death. Significant in history for the greatest Inca victory over the Spanish, the town was conquered again by the Spaniards in 1537.

After gulping down a few cups of coca tea, which tastes like most herbal teas and is great at relieving altitude sickness, we set off to tour the town. Ollantaytambo’s cobbled streets and mountainside ruins of 15th-century storehouses and agricultural terraces immediately appealed to us. Most of the houses are traditional, stone-built Inca structures with open courtyards that look straight up at some of the most dramatic ruins.

Promoting tourism

To encourage tourism in the Sacred Valley, many agencies have launched Quechua home stays and home visits whereby visitors are welcomed into the dwellings of local families. Quechua is an indigenous language of the Andean region and is spoken by around 13 million people. Many Quechua speakers are direct descendants of the Incas and live as subsistence farmers in the high-altitude areas.

Our guide Alfredo took us to the home of a Quechua family not far from our hotel. A lady ushered us in and showed us around. It was a one-room house — there were a couple of beds at one end and cooking utensils at the other. Scores of cuddly guinea pigs darted about, unaware of what fate had in store for them. Peruvians reportedly consume more than 20 million guinea pigs — or cuy — a year and they are omnipresent at Andean fiestas. In fact, cuy has been an essential source of protein in Peru for hundreds of years. The home visit put my husband off guinea pigs for life. He had been looking forward to tasting them before the trip started, but just couldn’t bring himself to order roast guinea pig at any of the restaurants we visited later on.

We entered a small café in the corner of the main plaza for dinner. To our surprise, we found burgers, lasagne and farmhouse chicken casserole on the menu. Not the typical Andean fare. But the food was not the only surprise at Hearts Café. It was opened by Sonia Newhouse, a British woman in her 70s who bid adieu to the UK and travelled to Peru some years ago. Shocked at how few resources the local women had, she decided to help them become more independent. The café was thus born and its profits are used to educate children and help local women become more self-sufficient.

Alfredo arrived next morning to take us up to the massive hillside fortress — Araqama Ayllu. We walked past the lively local market where people dressed in bright fabrics were selling a bewildering variety of fabulous knitted and woven clothes. This part of Peru is famous for its colourful knitwear. If there is one item to buy, it has to be the chullo: the alpaca Incan hat with ear-flaps. While they wait for visitors, the women pass the time spinning wool or knitting hats.

Standing tall and strong

We purchased tickets at the counter and then proceeded to walk up countless steps to reach the fortress. I was amazed at the Incas’ fanatical building style.

The fort comprises the Temple of the Sun, the Royal Hall, the Princess’ Baths, and the Intihuatana, used to trace the sun’s path. Although unfinished, the Temple of the Sun is a superb example of Inca stonework. The stone was quarried from the mountainside a few km away, high above the opposite bank of the Rio Urubamba. Transporting the huge stone blocks to the site must have been a stupendous feat involving the sweat and blood of thousands of workers.

A trip to Ollantaytambo should be combined with a visit to the nearby village of Chinchero. The village has Inca ruins, a colonial church, some wonderful mountain views and a colourful Sunday market. The market is less touristy than the one at Ollantaytambo.

An advantage of starting a trip at Ollantaytambo is that you don’t have to get up quite early to catch the train to Machu Picchu. We left for the station around noon. The train passed between snow-topped peaks. We pushed deep into the recesses of the Andes, winding through a thickly wooded world of raging rivers, exotic flora and remote, overgrown Inca ruins. I looked happily out of the window at the gangs of gasping unfortunates who had chosen to trudge to Machu Picchu along the dreaded Inca Trail. Life wasn’t too bad after all.

Mayan city of Calakmul

DFN: Calakmul was one of the many cities my wife and I visited in 2005. We traveled over 2,000 kilometres around the Yucatan Peninsula, and did not spend 1 day in Cancun. We drove 65 kilometers south of highway 186, a few miles from the Guatemala border. When we got there, its was a Sunday, we were charged a couple of pesos to get into the ruins (we’d expected to get in for free). Much bigger ball court than Chicen Itza, impressive temple which you could climb to the top, seven levels, with wide, expansive terraces. Wonderful views from the top. We had the ruins to ourselves that day, NOBODY, expect the ticket takers.

Calakmul: Into the Kingdom of the Serpent’s Head
BY DENNIS J. BUSTER
http://www.miamiherald.com/living/travel/v-fullstory/story/1422373.html

CALAKMUL, MEXICO — The dawn had crept slowly through the jungle, seeking out the places the night had been and shining its light onto the ruins of this ancient Mayan metropolis.

It was barely 7 a.m., but we were already on top of the world, with the jungle canopy spread wide beneath us — thick green rising 80 feet and stretching unbroken to every horizon. Howler monkeys had the volume dialed up to 11, and squawking swarms of parrots and parakeets raced among the treetops.

My wife, Kate, and I and our guide, Diane Lalonde, had slowly worked our way 175 feet into the sky among the long-abandoned bits and pieces of this city and past giant stone masks set into this pyramid’s face. We stood atop the massive building known as Structure II and had this lost world in the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve to ourselves.

We were temporary lords of a city that covers 10 square miles, where 7,000 structures have been mapped so far, virtually all, save for those within a few hundred yards of this pyramid, dozing untouched and overgrown.

Royal tombs, troves of jade, carved stone masks, human sacrifice, tales of kings and conquest — Calakmul has produced enough of each to fuel a million Indiana Jones fantasies. It may be Mexico’s best-kept archaeological secret, blessedly off the beaten path in a 1.8 million-acre wilderness the jaguar still haunts along the Guatemala border. You have to want to be here. We wanted to be here badly enough to pile into Diane’s aging SUV well before dawn for the two-hour ride to the ruins.

The Maya never achieved an empire, as did the Aztecs or Inca; they existed in frequently warring city states, with shifting allegiances often sealed by marriage or other blood ties. In its 14 centuries, Calakmul became one of the largest and most powerful of them all, with armies, vassal states and trade routes to the corners of its world. For more than a century, it dominated even mighty Tikal 60 miles south in what is now Guatemala.

Calakmul was a city built to impress, ruled by men whose names — even today and in English — sound heroic: Jaguar Claw, Ax Wielder, Sky Witness, Split Earth. Its enormous structures, huge plazas and sheer size reflect pure power.

Today, it leaves much to the imagination. The buildings on which archaeologists have worked are generally only partly restored or just stabilized. Most, even in the city’s central acropolis, sprout at least a few trees. They’re left where they are because the roots do more to staple a building together than pry it apart.

Structure II is huge almost beyond belief. At more than 160 yards on a side, this centerpiece pyramid covers more than five acres. And just when you think you’ve climbed near the top, the pyramid’s crowning temple rears even higher and farther back. It’s so big and so steep that the only way to see the entire thing is from a narrow rock wall atop another building clear across the site.

Throughout Calakmul, beautiful stone masks stared at us from shapeless cascades of rock the jungle had set loose. Layers of staircases from buildings’ architectural pasts stepped right on top of each other. Some dilapidated structures — little more than tree-studded hills, really — show trenches where archaeologists have dug away the first layer to reveal an earlier building beneath. It was the Maya habit to build the next era’s pyramids over those of the last. That makes excavation of each building like unwrapping a succession of ever-more-astounding presents.

Gigantic stone altars lie all over. The Maya used them for rituals magnificent and mundane. We used one about 10 feet across for our picnic table.

AERIAL DISCOVERYCalakmul was rediscovered in 1931 because of the world’s taste for chewing gum. The ruins were spotted from the air during a search for sources of chicle, the raw material for gum. The site has been a treasure trove since serious archaeological work began about 25 years ago. Burials have yielded exquisite jade funeral masks, ceramics and other grave goods.

We stood outside a series of small, plain temples to the north of the main plaza. They contain what are said to be some of the most beautiful murals found so far in the Maya world — paintings that cover every square inch of interior wall space. The murals have been restored, but the buildings have been sealed with concrete. I looked at photos in a magazine Diane carried and tried to imagine the jaw-dropping jolt as the first person in 10 centuries laid eyes on something so magnificent.

“I got to peek into the temples for a look when the restorers from Mexico City were working on the murals,” she said. “They were pretty good about letting me in for a quick look. The archaeologists never would have.”

Later, we ran our hands over a 12-foot-tall intricately carved limestone slab planted vertically. On it was the well-weathered likeness of a king of Calakmul in the guise of the god he personified. In his hand was what looked like a knife or a scepter and at his feet appeared to be a captive. In a ritual designed to satisfy both political expedience and the gods’ blood lust, rulers of other cities captured in battle usually were executed.

More than 200 of these slabs — called stelae — have been found so far at Calakmul. They were the political billboards of the day. Glyphs carved into the stone tell the king’s lineage and tales of conquest and glory.

We found them singly and in bunches among the plazas and sometimes lying where they’d fallen along tiny trails littered with pea-sized pottery shards. Some bore the scars of saws, where looters had tried to steal the valuable carvings — and sometimes had succeeded.

t took decades for scientists to decipher those glyphs. But once they did, the ancient Mayas’ tale began to be told. Now, we know the city’s real name. It translates as Kingdom of the Serpent’s Head, far more formidable sounding than City of Adjacent Pyramids, the English translation of Calakmul, a name bestowed by early researchers.

Whoever carved that stela reached through time, telling me he had stood where I stood, seen what I saw, touched what I touched. That connection has always been the magic that draws me to ancient places, and it never gets old.

No tour buses jam Calakmul’s parking lot, large enough for maybe 15 cars. A relative handful of small hotels — most a couple of hours from the ruins proper — house the few people who venture to Calakmul. This site is the crown jewel of a collection of Mayan archaeological sites. The area is known as the Rio Bec region, after the architectural style of the buildings. It stretches along about 70 miles of Mexico Hwy. 186 where the Yucatan bolts onto the Americas, about midway between the cities of Chetumal on the Caribbean coast and Campeche on the Gulf of Mexico.

For the 15,000 people a year who take this unbeaten track to explore the ruins and experience the biosphere’s intense wealth of life, the rewards are close to incomparable, the lessons sobering.

A millennium ago, much of the jungle around Calakmul and mortal foe Tikal would have been farm fields and smaller settlements. Each of the super-cities was packed with perhaps 50,000 people or more. Feeding everyone required much of the surrounding countryside and demanded much from the poor soil. And creating the lime used to plaster the buildings and pave the roads required enormous amounts of firewood, leading many archaeologists to think the ancient Maya over-farmed, over-populated and clear-cut their way to ecological trouble.

It’s a story that echoes down the centuries: The Maya wreaked havoc on an environment far more fragile than it looks.

The jaguar, worshipped by the ancient Maya, is threatened by modern man. The chance to see one of these cats was why we wanted to enter the reserve as close to dawn as possible — and as early as we could persuade Diane that it was sensible to go. She and her husband, Rick Bertram, run Rio Bec Dreams, a collection of cozy cabañas and a terrific restaurant about an hour from the biosphere’s entrance. They also guide visitors to Calakmul and other Rio Bec ruins.

We didn’t see any cats, but as Diane drove the 35 miles of one-lane paved road from Hwy. 186 into the biosphere, we surprised dozens of flocks of ocellated turkeys, who found the road easier going than a walk through the solid green wall of the jungle. The iridescent birds ran along the pavement ahead of us and launched themselves with all the grace of bowling balls on the wing. We also saw currasow, chachalacas, a few hawks and enough other kinds of birds to fill an Audubon scrapbook.

The biosphere is a Noah’s Ark, home to almost 300 species of birds, 100 species of mammals, hundreds of types of butterflies and moths and dozens of reptile and amphibian species. Bats snoozed away the day in some of the ruins, oblivious to our wanderings just a few feet below. Shortly after we left the car, I had stepped carefully across 6-inch wide tracks worn into the hard ground by countless generations of leafcutter ants, each carrying over its head a postage stamp-size piece of leaf to the nest to be used in the cultivation of the fungus they eat.

Delicate orchids — dozens of varieties decorate the biosphere — cascade colorfully from trees, and spiky bromeliads line trunks from bottom to top. Spanish moss and vines drape branches. Strangler vines wrap some trunks to create breathtaking natural sculpture.

In more than eight hours exploring the city, we crossed paths with three small groups of visitors — fewer than a dozen people.

When we returned to the parking lot, one other car was there, and the sun had already started to settle.

Soon, the mid-winter night would recapture the jungle it had lost just hours ago, and once-mighty Calakmul would sleep in darkness again

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