Wednesday November 30th |
This presentation on art and iconography of jaguars in the murals of Bonampak and Cacaxtla and in the stelae, lintels, vases, bowls and plates of the Classic Maya is potentially the most complete full-color presentation on this subject.
Those that attend in-person will be able to ask questions before-after-or during each aspect of the conference. This is labeled as a Master Classic, so much more than just."a lecture".
Aechmea magdalenae has an edible pineapple shaped “fruit.” The individual parts are edible; so it's different than a cultivated pineapple. Bromelia karatas is another edible terrestrial bromeliad (so a bromeliad that does not grow in trees). Lots of other edible terrestrial bromeliads in the Maya Lowlands.
We are making lists of what plants in grassland savannas, cibales, and tasistal savannas of the RBG are edible. Since you have to hike many kilometers to reach these never-before-studied savannas, you also find wild native plants in the bajos that are also edible.
Aechmea bracteata also has edible parts. We found lots in Nakum area and Poza Maya area of Parque Nacional Yaxha, Nakum and Naranjo (PNYNN).
Bromelia pinguin also has edible parts: we found this in Nakum and other sectors of PNYNN.
We continue to find regional variants of Mayan cacao. We will return with a 3-meter tall ladder so we can photograph each Theobroma species and each variant of Theobroma cacao up in the trees. We will bring portable studio lighting and a photography team.
Not all these pods are Theobroma cacao! Estimate how many are Theobroma cacao and which are other species? More to come: we visited a lot of Mayan cacao trees in kitchen gardens around Mayan houses; lots more than just "chocolate trees."
FLAAR Mesoamerica Founder, Dr Nicholas Hellmuth was invited by El Búho and Canal Más TV to speak about his many years of experience in Guatemala and how he created FLAAR Mesoamérica and MayanToons and about more of what we do. Here you can watch the entire interview held in Spanish.
Veracruz is the best known area for mass production of vanilla. Did the Totonac spread vanilla production over a thousand years ago? But the Olmecs were also in Veracruz plus Tabasco. Adjacent to the Classic Maya ruins of Comalcalco (Tabasco) is a cacao orchard with vanilla growing up and down the shade trees. So was the route Veracruz-Tabasco-Peten?
Whoa, there are several species of wild vanilla orchid vines in Peten, Belize (and in Campeche, Quintana Roo, Chiapas, etc.). In May 2022 we found wild Vanilla insignis vines flowering in two different bajo areas of Peten (Los Pescaditos-La Gloria which is west of Uaxactun; and along the road from Yaxha to Nakum). We will have two FLAAR Reports ready during June to show the vanilla vines and to discuss all the wild vanilla plants that the Maya had. So no need for Veracruz or Tabasco to have introduced this (though processing technology information could have been shared).
Flavoring chocolate (foods and drinks from Theobroma cacao) is the best known use of vanilla but vanilla has many more uses past, present, and future. I am curious why no vanilla flowers or vanilla beans have been featured in palace scenes.
It helps to stay at the Ecolodge El Sombrero to accomplish field work to find and photograph wild orchids in flower. Be sure to have a licensed registered Peten area guide with you and high-axel 4WD for the road from Yaxha to Nakum. No SUV can survive the deep ruts. You can rent a vehicle and driver from the hotel.
Gonolobus is a vine we are interested in because parts of some species are eaten, especially in Peten and adjacent Alta Verapaz. Best before it is totally ripe; you eat as if it were guisquil asado (Teco, personal communication, 2022).
The photos by park ranger Teco (Moises Daniel Perez Diaz) are in Parque Nacional Yaxha, Nakum and Naranjo (PNYNN), near the border of Yaxha-Nakum area and adjacent Parque Nacional Tikal (PNAT). North of Yaxha, but closer to Nakum, en route from El Tigre. After El Tigre (forest consession of Arbol Verde), (CONAP) campamento La Perra.
El Tigre is where you can climb the pyramid and to see Temple IV on the horizon. Comparable view from climbing the main temple pyramid of El Zotz: from there you can see Tikal on the horizon from a different angle.
There are several species of Gonolobus vines native to different parts of Peten. Two species we raise in our FLAAR. Here are photos of seed pods of one of these vines in our garden (today, 21 March, 2022). They are not yet mature; a few weeks more and they will pop open and the seeds will fluff out on kapok-like cotton parachutes (like Ceiba kapok).
We show additional photographs on our www.Maya-ethnobotany.org web site.
In past decades archaeologists, geologists, soil scientists, pollen core specialists and ecologists have nicely studied many areas of Parque Nacional Yaxha, Nakum and Naranjo. Our goal for the 5-year project of cooperation and coordination with CONAP is to continue to find, document, photograph, and publish the photos of the flora, fauna and biodiverse ecosystems of the Reserva de la Biosfera where other scholars have not yet visited or if visited did not do high-resolution digital photography. This way we can suggest to other professors and students, where their own future projects could be productive.
It’s a lot easier as a professor or student in the era of COVID 19 work-from-home to plan your future field work in the comfort of your home if lots of fresh documentation is available in advance from our FLAAR reports.
It would be great if soil scientists, geologists, botanists and geographical specialists could consider the several relatively pristine lagoons west and northwest of Lake Yaxha. And would be remarkable to have core samples collected from the Laguneta of 3 Conjoined Cenotes; all of us were amazed and astonished to see how many biodiverse ecosystems exist in this previously unpublished part of PNYNN.
Every month we are finding more open grassland savannas. We are focusing on the Reserva de la Biosfera Maya: northern half of Peten: from Chiapas-Peten border across Guatemala to the Peten-Belize border. And from Lake Peten Itza up north to the Peten-Campeche border.
We focus on this area since the savannas of southern Peten (around Poptun have lots of pine and karst dome (small hills) in the middle of most of the savannas). And the savannas from south of Lake Peten to the west around La Libertad towards Sayaxche are mostly destroyed (and were studied in the 1930’s by ethnobotanist Cyrus Lundell). Plus these savannas are different than the ones in the Reserva de la Biosfera Maya (RBM, which, so far, lack pine and lack Curatella americana, sandpaper leaf trees).
Were savannas burned annually for thousands of years? The tasiste, nance, and jicarra trees have evolved to be adapted to survive these fires.
Were the savanna areas of the RBM ever “forested” or were they always grasslands surrounded by bajo forest and sometimes hilltop forests at their edges?
Were any or many of these savannas or cibal sawgrass grasslands modified by the Maya (the way the Aguada Maya was totally modified, in Parque Nacional Yaxha, Nakum and Naranjo)?
And why do most of the savannas and cibal-savannas have a ring of stagnant water around their edges (in the transition zone between the open savanna and the closed bajo forest or hillside forest surrounding the open grasslands)?
Here is my emotional reaction to standing at the edge of an open grassland savanna that the helpful local people said had not been studied by ecologists, geographers, botanists, geologists, or students. This is why we are initiating our wetlands field work in remote areas, far from any comfortable hotel or base camp. 80% of the Parque Nacional Laguna del Tigre has been capably studied by archaeologists, and other experienced soil scientists, botanists, zoologists, etc. We can contribute more by looking for hard-to-reach biodiverse ecosystems that need conservation. In order to preserve and preserve it helps to find and document what needs conservation. |
If you wish to donate your library on pre-Columbian Mesoamerica and related topics, FLAAR will be glad to receive your library and find a good home for it. Contact:
ReaderService@FLAAR.org