Ancient Maya marketplace discovered

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Chemical residues found in soil from Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula indicate that the ancient Maya traded food in marketplaces, a practice long considered unlikely by archaeologists.
This present-day marketplace in Antigua, Guatemala has a similar pattern of soil residue to that of an ancient Maya site, proving that the ancient people had a market economy.
This present-day marketplace in Antigua, Guatemala has a similar pattern of soil residue to that of an ancient Maya site, proving that the ancient people had a market economy.

Chemical residues found in soil from Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula indicate that the ancient Maya traded food in marketplaces, a practice long considered unlikely by archaeologists.

From examining the sites of ancient Maya cities, archaeologists have long recognized that the cities were home to more people than the local agricultural capacities could have supported, said Shepherd University archaeologist Bruce Dahlin, who led the new study of the Yucatan soil.

So for years, archaeologists looked for evidence of advanced farming practices that could have ramped up agricultural capacities beyond what archaeologists can observe, thus sustaining the populations. The idea that the Maya might have imported food and other goods wasn't taken seriously because most archaeologists thought that the Maya elite had a system whereby underlings were paid for loyalty by goods passed down the social ladder.

Still, large, open areas found in settlements of the Classic era (about A.D. 300 to 900) seemed to look like possible marketplaces, but archaeologists could find no strong indications of the areas' purpose. This is where the chemical residues came in handy.

Dahlin brought in environmental scientist Richard Terry of Brigham Young University and his team to analyze surface soil samples from Chunchucmil in the western Yucatan for indications that food had once been there. These indications come in the form of phosphorus, left in the soil by decomposed food.

"All food materials contain phosphorus, and a common denominator of all humans is that they bring food to places where they live," Terry said. "Over time, the organic matter is ground into the soil and rots, but the phosphorus holds to the soil particles even in a tropical rain forest that gets a meter or two of rain every year."

Terry and his team found concentrations of phosphorus up to 40 times higher in these open areas than those in ancient patios and streets. The pattern of phosphorus residue matched that found in the last remaining modern market that runs atop soil (all other modern markets have been paved).

The matching patterns indicate that the Maya did in fact have a market economy, and studies from other sites may reveal just how far that economy may have spread.

The team's results are detailed in the journal Latin American Antiquity.

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