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Belize River Front Real Estate and Investment Properties
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Mayan Caves
Adorned with stunning stalactites and stalagmites,
visitors to Belize's caves may see crystal rooms and ancient mayan
artifacts over 1,000 years old. Approximately 200 million years ago the beginning
stages of limestone formation occurred, creating the backbone of
Belize's extensive cave system. Sea levels fell and the mountains
impelled themselves upward. After 120 million years of wind, rain,
and faulting, the Maya Mountains were created, and underground
rivers carved out channels, rooms, and caverns.
Today, many of the caves are part of an underground river
course that forms massive aquifiers beneath Belize. Blue Creek runs
underground in one cave for over 5 miles, with several waterfalls of
20 feet or more. The caves also reveal intriguing stories about the Maya. Archeological finds include
pottery shards, intact pottery and even human remains. Caves: The Mayan dark
kingdom, Ac-tun is mayan word for cave, literally meaning
"hollow rock." The Maya believed that caves marked the dark
underworld kingdom of Xibalba, said to harbor the spirits of the
deities. They believed there were nine layers of the underworld,
representing not only death and decay but life.
For the Maya, the underworld was an area where souls had hopes of defeating death
and becoming revered ancestors. As a result, caves were important
burial chambers and places of rituals, ceremonies, and sacrifices.
Caves served as the place to commune with the spirits and to learn
the correct time to plant corn, to burn the milpas (fields), and to
offer sacrifices. The Maya also used caves for utilitarian
purposes. Caves were a source of fresh water, especially during dry
periods, and clay pots of grains were safely stored for long periods
of time in the cool air.
Belize is an ideal location for the formation of caves. With abundant
limestone and a wet climate, caves abound in many places throughout
Belize.
Caving is a dangerous sport, and it is adviseable to check with the
locals before exploring any caves on your own. Because of the isolation of
many caves, they have not been thoroughly explored.
There are hundreds of caves, mostly unexplored in the limestone hills between the Maya Mountains
and the plain. The role of caves in Maya culture is principally ritual,
although they have also been used as places of refuge, storage, clay
quarries, and as a source for both ritual and drinking water. Believed to
be the entrance to the underworld, the ancient Maya preferred those with
difficult access for their ritual descent down to Xibalba, the abode for
the dead.
The Popul Vuh, a Quiche Maya document from the Guatemala highlands,
makes reference to the Maya's origin in caves. Since many caves in that
area are vertical, and completely inaccessible, it is argued that
underworld mythology developed in the lowland area where caves are more
easily entered. Vuh also mentions the Hero Twins who journeyed the
hazardous path to the underworld. Their trials in the "House of Darkness"
may reflect actual rites wherein the young elite Maya duplicate the
legendary journey.
Often restrictions such as stalagmites, if not natural, were placed at
the mouth of the cave or at the opening to an inner chamber within the
cave. Stalagmites resembling the sacred ceiba tree have been depicted in
the Dresden Codex, one of the four surviving Maya books. Ceiba supports
the heavens at the center of the Maya universe and represents the fifth up
and-down direction of the Maya conception of space which divided space
into four quadrants corresponding to the Cardinal directions.
There are nine levels in the Maya underworld, each represented by a
deity. In the Long Count Calendar, the lords make up a perpetual cycle
each serving as a current lord of the night, influencing daily events. The
Jaguar; god of the number seven and lord of the underworld, was most
revered. The death god, a human skeleton figure often depicted with
saurian characteristics, is also a prominent figure.
The interpretation of caves as an access to the underworld is enforced
by evidence of snail shells, which had death symbolism, strewn along paths
inside many caves. Rites often include the burning of copal incense in
censers to honor ancestors. Offerings of ground cocoa and sacrifices of
birds, dogs or children were often made to the gods, especially to Chac,
the rain god. Other archaeological material includes stingray spines, an
item used to draw blood. Finally, caves were also used to collect "Zuhuy
ha" or "remote water." Jars (ollas) were placed as receptacles for water
dripping from stalactites and used for a variety of ceremonial purposes.
Individual pot shards were often placed in wet crevices which kept the
"virgin" water from touching the ground. It is interesting to note that
ceramic vessels found in graves at Lamanai usually lacked one fragment
suggesting that a single shard was retained for ceremonial purposes. The
demands for Zuhuy ha were probably great and the olla jars and fancy
polychrome wares were very likely smashed at the semi-annual renewal
rites. Caves may have been the receptacle for these broken vessels
explaining the large number of pot shards often heaped or strewn in them.
Actun Chapat
The cave site of Actun Chapat (Centipede Cave) is located
approximately 19 miles south of the modern town of San Ignacio, in
the foothills of the Maya Mountains. Preliminary reconnaissance of the site was conducted by
members of the Belize Department of Archaeology in 1982. They
identified such architectural features as walls, terraced and raised
platforms, as well as human remains, and disturbed ceramic artifacts
dating between 300 B.C. and A.D. 1000. Additional investigations of
Actun Chapat were conducted by the Western Belize Regional Cave
Project during the 1999 field season, focusing primarily on the
ongoing mapping and reconnaissance of the cave and excavations in
the area immediate to Entrance II.
The majority of artifacts found in the cave consisted of
ceramic sherds, however, a number of lithic and faunal items
have also been recovered. Actun Chapat has a walled burial
chamber that has been looted, plus several fragments of human
remains. Artifacts found here also include wooden items such
as a fragment of a torch and a carved backing for a pyrite
mirror. The largest and most abundant form of construction in
the cave are terraced platforms, of which there are over 30.
Other artificial constructions identified in Actun Chapat
include platforms, staircases, and a bench. Over 200 caves
have been identified in Belize, however, fewer than ten have
been intensively examined by archaeologists. Actun Chapat
potentially holds the largest corpus of artificial
constructions in western Belize, perhaps the country. The site
of Actun Chapat thus presents a formidable opportunity to
conduct a case study in the examination of architecture within
Maya caves.
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Actun Halal
Actun Halal (Dart Cave) was found
in 1999 and is being investigated further this summer. The
Maya carved faces in the cave's soft flowstone. It is
relatively small, with two entrances, and resembles a
rock-shelter rather than a true cavern. When this cave was discovered, it was found to share
similarities in overall morphology to Actun
Uayazba Kab--the petroglyphs are nearly identical. Because
of this, the same methodology applied to the study in Actun
Uayazba Kab in 1997 are being employed in the research at
Actun Halal.Large face carved in te wall of Actun
Halal. |
Actun Nak Beh
Actun Nak Beh, meaning Cave at the End of the Road, is a
small dry cave located in the Upper Roaring Creek Valley, Cayo
District, Belize. It is connected to a medium-sized ceremonial center,
Cahal Uitz Na, by a 780-foot causeway or sacbe. The main cave
entrance is at the base of a 80-foot cliff face and opens into
a winding series of passages that joins to a second, smaller
entrance. Research at Actun Nak Beh by the Western Belize
Regional Cave Project began this summer and focuses on its
relationship to neighboring ceremonial, settlement, and cave
sites.
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Actun Tunichil Muknal

The skeleton of a young female was found in Actun Tunichil Muknal. Dripwater has completely encrusted it
with calcite over the years. Actun Tunichil Muknal (Cave of the Crystal Sepulchre) was named after the
sacrificial chamber within the cave where the remains of a young
woman were found. Fourteen burials have been found in Actun Tunichil
Muknal. The cave also contains two slate stelae in front of which
Maya elites cut themselves with obsidian blades to collect their
blood and offer it to the gods. A stream flows out of this cave,
providing the main water supply for the camp. Actun Tunichil Muknal
also contains large broken pottery. Calcite from dripwater has
encased many of these finds over the centuries. |
Actun Uayazba Kab
Actun Uayazba Kab, (Handprint Cave) is a small cave
atop a steep bluff face, part of two large interconnected cave
mouths with several small caves inside. Discovered in 1996,
Actun Uayazba Kab has plaster floors, human burials,
petroglyphs, and pictographs. Its name comes from the
handprints left on the walls. The cave also acts as a sound
amplifier--people below the tropical canopy have been known to
overhear conversations from the cave mouth.
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Actun Yaxteel Ahau

Actun Yaxteel Ahau translates
to Cave of the Ceiba Tree Lord. The Maya performed their
rituals on this cave's towering cliffs and ledges. It is
difficult to enter, requiring a swim through a collapsed cave
passage. | |
Barton Creek Cave
Barton Creek is a large river cave possibly over 4.5 miles
long. The cave consists of giant passages
covered with numerous large speleothems over a navigable
river. These features of the cave have made it a popular
tourist destination. Our research at Barton Creek Cave hopes
to record prehistoric Maya activity at the site and to
incorporate this information in the production of a report
that can be shared with other archaeologists and interested
visitors.
Recent investigations at Barton Creek Cave have provided a
wealth of information toward our understanding of the
importance of caves within Maya culture. An abundance of Maya
cultural material has been discovered and is being analyzed
from ten ledges located above a large subterranean river.
Based on preliminary results, artifacts from these areas
suggest the cave was used for a variety of purposes by the
Maya including agricultural rituals, possible fertility rites,
ritual bloodletting, human sacrifice, and lineage
internment.
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Web site and all contents © Copyright Graham Heyes 2006 - 2007,
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