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Quote:Mayan pyramid bulldozed by road construction firmBelize pyramid dating back at least 2,300 years is destroyed by firm to extract crushed rock for road-building project


Associated Press in Belize City
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 14 May 2013 15.14 BST
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A digger claws away at the sloping sides of the Mayan pyramid in Belize. Photograph: Jaime Awe/AP
A construction company has essentially destroyed one of Belize's largest Mayan pyramids with diggers and bulldozers to extract crushed rock for a road-building project, authorities have announced.


The head of the Belize Institute of Archaeology, Jaime Awe, said on Tuesday that the destruction at the Nohmul complex in northern Belize was detected late last week. The ceremonial centre dates back at least 2,300 years and is the most important site in northern Belize, near the border with Mexico.


"It's a feeling of incredible disbelief because of the ignorance and the insensitivity … they were using this for road fill," Awe said. "It's like being punched in the stomach, it's just so horrendous."


Nohmul was in the middle of a privately owned sugar cane field, and lacked the even stone sides frequently seen in reconstructed or better-preserved pyramids. But Awe said the builders could not possibly have mistaken the pyramid mound, which is about 30 metres (100ft) tall, for a natural hill because the ruins were well known and the landscape there was naturally flat.


"These guys knew that this was an ancient structure. It's just bloody laziness," Awe said.


Photos from the scene showed diggers clawing away at the pyramid's sloping sides, leaving an isolated core of limestone cobbles at the centre, with what appears to be a narrow Mayan chamber dangling above one clawed-out section.


"Just to realise that the ancient Maya acquired all this building material to erect these buildings, using nothing more than stone tools and quarried the stone, and carried this material on their heads, using tump lines," Awe said. "To think that today we have modern equipment, that you can go and excavate in a quarry anywhere, but that this company would completely disregard that and completely destroyed this building. Why can't these people just go and quarry somewhere that has no cultural significance? It's mind-boggling."


Belizean police said they were conducting an investigation and criminal charges were possible. The Nohmul complex sits on private land, but Belizean law says that any pre-Hispanic ruins are under government protection.


The Belize community action group Citizens Organised for Liberty Through Action called the destruction of the archaeological site "an obscene example of disrespect for the environment and history".


It is not the first time this has happened in Belize, a country dotted with hundreds of Mayan ruins, though few as large as Nohmul.


Norman Hammond, an emeritus professor of archaeology at Boston University who worked on Belizean research projects in the 1980s, wrote in an email that "bulldozing Maya mounds for road fill is an endemic problem in Belize (the whole of the San Estevan centre has gone, both of the major pyramids at Louisville, other structures at Nohmul, many smaller sites), but this sounds like the biggest yet".


Arlen Chase, chairman of the department of anthropology at the University of Central Florida, said: "Archaeologists are disturbed when such things occur, but there is only a very limited infrastructure in Belize that can be applied to cultural heritage management.


"Unfortunately, they [destruction of sites] are all too common, but not usually in the centre of a large Maya site."


Chase said there had probably still been much to learn from the site. "A great deal of archaeology was undertaken at Nohmul in the 70s and 80s, but this only sampled a small part of this large centre."


Belize isn't the only place where the handiwork of the prolific Maya builders is being destroyed. The ancient Mayas spread across south-eastern Mexico and through Guatemala, Honduras and Belize.


"I don't think I am exaggerating if I say that every day a Maya mound is being destroyed for construction in one of the countries where the Maya lived," wrote Francisco Estrada-Belli, a professor at Tulane University's anthropology department.


"Unfortunately, this destruction of our heritage is irreversible but many don't take it seriously," he added. "The only way to stop it is by showing that it is a major crime and people can and will go to jail for it."


Robert Rosenswig, an archaeologist at the State University of New York at Albany, described the difficult and heartbreaking work of trying to salvage information at the nearby site of San Estevan following similar destruction around 2005.


"Bulldozing damage at San Estevan is extensive and the site is littered with Classic period potsherds," he wrote in an academic paper describing the scene. "We spent a number of days at the beginning of the 2005 season trying to figure out the extent of the damage … after scratching our heads for many days, a bulldozer showed up and we realised that what appear to be mounds, when overgrown with chest-high vegetation, are actually recently bulldozed garbage piles."


However small the compensation, bulldozing pyramids is one very brutal way of revealing the inner cores of the structures, which were often built up in periodic stages of construction.


"The one advantage of this massive destruction, to the core site, is that the remains of early domestic activity are now visible on the surface," Rosenswig wrote.

It would seem obvious journalism to name the construction company and go to them for a comment. But no.
Long overdue to change the name of our species from Homo Sapiens to Homo Stupidum

Note the attempt at journalistic 'balance' by citing the 'up side'....
Quote:"However small the compensation, bulldozing pyramids is one very brutal way of revealing the inner cores of the structures, which were often built up in periodic stages of construction.
"The one advantage of this massive destruction, to the core site, is that the remains of early domestic activity are now visible on the surface," Rosenswig wrote."
:joystick:
Peter Lemkin Wrote:Long overdue to change the name of our species from Homo Sapiens to Homo Stupidum

Note the attempt at journalistic 'balance' by citing the 'up side'....
Quote:"However small the compensation, bulldozing pyramids is one very brutal way of revealing the inner cores of the structures, which were often built up in periodic stages of construction.
"The one advantage of this massive destruction, to the core site, is that the remains of early domestic activity are now visible on the surface," Rosenswig wrote."
:joystick:

Just as well "they" discovered the destruction of the pyramid in mid-stride so to speak, otherwise the inner core would've been road shingle too - and that would've truly buggered the upside wouldn't it.

My suggestion for Homo Sapiens in business is to change the title to Homo Greedium, or if they're politicians, then Homo ElectUs, and for ordinary citizens to Homo StiffUs. :what:
Reminds me of the desecration of Machu Picchu:

Quote:Fury at sacred site damage

BBC News

Chip off the old block: The "hitching post of the sun"
Peru's most sacred site, Machu Picchu, has been damaged during a shoot for a beer commercial.

"They've struck at our most sacred inheritance. This is an affront to our ancestors."
Archaeologist Federico Kaufmann Doig

The Inca citadel, 2,400 metres (7,782 feet) high in the Andes, was being used in the ad for Cusquena beer by US publicity firm J Walter Thompson when a crane smashed into a centuries-old granite sun clock.

The Intihuatana, or "hitching post for the sun", an integral part of the spectacular site which is protected by the UN and is visited by thousands of tourists every year, now has a gash as long as a ball-point pen.

Criminal charges, which carry a two-to-four-year prison sentence have been filed against the production company.

Federico Kaufmann Doig, a prestigious Peruvian archaeologist, said: "Machu Picchu is the heart of our archaeological heritage and the Intihuatana is the heart of Machu Picchu.

"They've struck at our most sacred inheritance.

"This is an affront to our ancestors."

Machu Picchu
Probably built and occupied from the mid-15th to the early or mid-16th century
"Discovered" in 1911 by Yale University professor Hiram Bingham
UNESCO World Heritage site since 1983

J Walter Thompson, the advertising agency contracted to shoot the advert for Cusquena beer, one of Peru's most popular brands, said it "deeply regretted" the accident.

"It was caused by a mechanical failure," said spokesman Alex Traugott, adding JWT had been making adverts for Cusquena's manufacturers Cervesur for 12 years and had shot other commercials at Machu Picchu.

Cervesur, one of the biggest companies in the impoverished Cuzco region, promised to help repair the damage, a procedure experts said would require advanced restoration techniques.

Criminal charges

Peru has sent restoration experts to Machu Picchu to assess the damage.

The shoot was approved by the National Institute of Culture's office at nearby Cuzco.

However, Gustavo Manrique, director of the office, said the permit specified only light equipment could be used.

Mr Manrique said the production crew sneaked the crane into the sanctuary at dawn after the National Institute of Culture specifically prohibited the use of a crane.
Yup


And let's not forget how Coalition forces trashed Babylon during the Iraq War.


'Babylon, a city renowned for its beauty and its splendour 1,000 years before Europe built anything comparable, was chosen as the site for a US military base in April 2003, just after the invasion of Iraq.'


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/jan/15/iraq.arts1