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Mexico Find May Be Clue to an Old Civilization

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Associated Press

Deep in a mangrove swamp near the Gulf of Mexico, archeologists have discovered traces of what could be another ancient Mexican civilization.

So far, the only clues to these mysterious people are a 4-ton stele, or stone slab, covered with hieroglyphic writing and a 19-inch-high clay figure of a fertility-rite priest.

“But,” says Fernando Winfield Capitaine, director of the Xalapa Museum of Anthropology, “the finds are so promising that the museum is planning to mount an expedition to that area of Veracruz state in cooperation with the National Geographic Society.”

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The stele was found in November, 1986. It is covered with inscriptions in an unknown language but with some Mayan numerals.

The priest in the clay figure is wearing the human skin of a flayed sacrificial victim.

Both are about 1,800 years old.

‘Before the Mayas’

“That would place them in the 2nd Century AD, which is after the archeological Olmecs, who flourished in the area from around 1050 to 500 BC, and before the Mayas who emerged around the 4th Century AD,” Winfield said in an interview.

Adding to the intrigue, the Mayas lived in the Yucatan Peninsula, more than 700 miles to the east, Winfield said at the museum in Xalapa, where the stele and figure are kept.

“But there are two dates on the stele in Mayan writing, in their so-called Long Count Calendar made up of dots and bars, equivalent to May 22, 143 (AD), and July 13, 156,” Winfield said.

If the mysterious people did exist, Winfield said, they also appeared to be unrelated to the other two of the four known civilizations that inhabited the Gulf Coast: the Totonacas, who emerged around the AD 700 in the area where the artifacts were found, or the Huaxtecas farther north, about one century later.

“They could be the Xicalancas, which Clavijero briefly talked about,” Winfield said, referring to Father Francisco Javier Clavijero (1731-1787), a Jesuit priest who was the first systematic students of Mexico’s ancient languages and peoples.

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Details Missing

In his “History of Ancient Mexico,” Clavijero in three lines briefly mentioned the Xicalanca civilization in relation to the Olmecs but did not go into details.

In nahuatl, the trading language of the Aztecs, who came much later, Xicalanca means “the people who live by the Great Body of Salt Water,” as the Gulf of Mexico was called.

The two artifacts were found within 130 feet of each other in the village of La Mojarra, where the Piojo River meets the Acula River. The crocodile-infested region is so swampy that it can be reached only by boat, Winfield said.

La Mojarra, with a population of fewer than 200, is up the Acula about 20 miles south of the port of Alvarado in Veracruz state. But neither the village nor the Piojo River can be found on any map of Mexico.

Carved in relief on the previously polished stele, which is of basalt, one of the world’s hardest rocks, is the full length profile of a regal figure, a man about 25 years old, holding out in both hands a vessel in a gesture of offering.

“He was probably a ruler, or a chief warrior, or a high priest--or maybe all three since that was the custom in the gulf region in ancient times,” Winfield said.

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Allegorical Figures

The figure wears ear-stops, a tall headdress adorned with four representations of something like a rain god, trimmed with eight feathers, and a breastplate full of other allegorical figures over what appears to be a pleated cotton shirt or tunic.

A total of 577 glyphs, or picture-words, divided into 21 neat rows running from top to bottom, plus 33 “elements” like the rain-god representations, cover the rest of the slab.

“It was all carved during one continuous period,” Winfield said. “It was a single piece of work. It is the oldest and richest piece of writing found yet about this area of ancient Mexico.”

About 7 feet tall, slightly oblong and with a gently rounded top, the stele once stood on the right bank of the Acula, just outside La Mojarra.

Over the years, erosion toppled it, and it lay in the river until a fisherman discovered it and dragged it out with the help of villagers.

Archeologists retrieved the stele, but Winfield said he kept the find quiet for two years so work could proceed “without the pressure that such a discovery creates.”

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Clay Figure

The second piece, the ceramic figure of a priest made with the region’s thick orange clay, has a square base. It is the only one of two artifacts from that area with a base. The other, also in the museum, is so badly damaged it cannot be studied, Winfield said.

In the La Mojarra figure, only the head is missing.

That type of clay figure was very popular among the four gulf cultures. The Aztecs called it Xipe Totec, or the Lord of the Flayed, and it was variously worshiped as the god of spring, of fertility, of abundance and of the metalworkers.

A peasant at La Mojarra found the shattered figure many years ago while digging the foundations for his house and kept the pieces in a cardboard box.

“We got wind of it . . . and we convinced him to let the museum have it,” Winfield said.

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