Statue of Mayan corn god discovered in Mexico

The Mexican National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) announced on Tuesday, May 31, the discovery of a carved head approximately 1,300 years old, representing one of the gods of corn among the Mayas. The find was made during the summer of 2021 under an alley of the palace of Palenque, an ancient Mayan city located in the state of Chiapas.

45 centimeters long, the head was associated with a basin and a deposit of various offerings: the remains of animals were thus found – quails, white turtles, fish, dogs -, shells, crustacean claws, carved bone fragments, ceramic pieces, three pieces of anthropomorphic figurines, one hundred and twenty obsidian arrowhead fragments, a portion of greenstone bead and two shell beads, as well as seeds and small conch shells.

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For INAH archaeologist Arnoldo Gonzalez Cruz, this discovery allows us to begin to understand “how the ancient Maya of Palenque constantly revived the myth of the birth, death and resurrection of the maize deity”.

The World of Science and Medicine

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