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Wooster’s Navarro-Farr and Proyecto Arqueol贸gico Waka’ team discover Stela 51 and Burial 110: a royal tomb at El Per煤-Waka’ site in Maya Biosphere Reserve in Guatemala

Olivia C. Navarro-Farr

Olivia C. Navarro-Farr, associate professor of archaeology and anthropology at 69直播 and co-director of the Proyecto Arqueol贸gico Waka’ (PAW) team from the archaeological site of El Per煤-Waka麓 located in the Laguna del Tigre National Park within the Maya Biosphere Reserve in Guatemala celebrated two significant discoveries after her work this year.

The Ministry of Culture and Sports of Guatemala and the Proyecto Arqueol贸gico Waka鈥 announced the first discovery, , as the second earliest dated monument thus far discovered at the archaeological site. It was found incorporated into the building鈥檚 late-phase architecture (roughly from between the late 8th to the early 11th century A.D.) meaning it had been re-interred into a phase of the building that dates centuries after the monument was actually commissioned (in A.D. 435). In an earlier substructure or phase of the building, dating to the same period as the commissioning of Stela 51 (the Early Classic, about A.D. 250-500), the team investigated an ancient tunnel penetrating the wall directly over a protruding platform. In that investigation, archaeologists revealed a small opening amidst a layer of capstones inside the structure which led to the discovery of , a royal tomb.

鈥淲e are definitely seeing with recent evidence that the site, politically, was a very major player in the Early Classic period and in the Late Classic period,鈥 said Navarro-Farr. 鈥淭he waves that this will make in the community of Maya epigraphy, will be significant. It is going to be a very much studied, and restudied, and restudied monument because of the texts that are on it.”

Co-directors of Proyecto Arqueol贸gico Waka' Olivia C. Navarro-FarrThe ancient city of Waka’ located within the Laguna del Tigre National Park which is itself inside the Maya Biosphere Reserve is the location of a great number of archaeological zones of immense importance to Guatemala鈥檚 cultural heritage. Navarro-Farr has been the principal investigator for investigations within Structure M13-1, the monumental civic-ceremonial building where these discoveries were made, since 2003. She is co-director of the Proyecto Arqueol贸gico Waka’ (PAW) with Damien Marken of Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania, and Juan Carlos P茅rez Calder贸n, affiliated with the University of San Carlos of Guatemala. Her investigations at Structure M13-1 were undertaken collaboratively with P茅rez Calder贸n, and Griselda P茅rez Robles, also affiliated with the University of San Carlos of Guatemala.

Found within Structure M13-1, a monumental civic-ceremonial structure in the site center, the Stela was broken into two fragments: the team discovered the lower section standing 2.4 meters in height in 2019. This fragment features hieroglyphic inscriptions and the image of a standing figure. In March of 2022, they discovered the second fragment, 1.20 meters in height, behind the upright lower portion of the monument in the same network of excavation tunnels. The second fragment features the upper part of the monument, including part of the face of the standing figure as well as a grand headdress in the form of a jaguar adorned with large feathers. As a whole, Stela 51 depicts a standing male dressed as a Teotihuac谩n warrior wearing a feline headdress and carrying a rectangular shield. Teotihuac谩n was a great city in the Valley of Mexico 800 km west of the Maya lowlands.

Professor Navarro-Farr captures images of Burial 110.As they continued to define the architecture of the structure, archaeologists came upon a feature that led them to what was designated as Burial 110. This royal tomb includes human remains, vessels, artifacts, and worked jade. Some items are rendered in a style linked to Teotihuac谩n, an ancient Mesoamerican city located 50 km northeast of modern-day Mexico City. 鈥淢uch remains to be seen at this point but preliminarily what we know is that it’s Early Classic in date from the diagnostics of the ceramics that we’ve seen, and we can say that the individual who’s interred there is really an important ancestral figure鈥.,鈥 said Navarro-Farr, 鈥淭here鈥檚 definitely more to come in the years ahead, and we鈥檙e really, really excited about what an incredible season we’ve had this year.鈥 Look for a full documentary with more about the Proyecto Arqueol贸gico Waka麓 and their work coming soon.

Photo 1: Navarro-Farr turns over a jade mask found within the tomb for the first time to reveal to members of the Proyecto Arqueol贸gico聽Waka’.

Photo 2: Co-directors of Proyecto Arqueol贸gico Waka’ Olivia C. Navarro-Farr and Juan Carlos P茅rez Calder贸n set up a ladder to use to climb in and out of the palace tunnels.

Photo 3: Professor Navarro-Farr captures images of Burial 110.

All images are courtesy of the Ministry of Culture and Sports of Guatemala and the Proyecto Arqueol贸gico Waka鈥.

Posted in Faculty, News on August 2, 2022.


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