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| mexican
rivera in The Mayan Yucatan |
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THE
YUCATAN: |
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| FLORA AND
FAUNA: Flamingos, herons, manatees and sea turtles, their numbers now increasing in response to Mexico's awakened ecological consciousness, find idyllic watery habitats in and above the coastline's mangrove swamps, lagoons and sandbars. Orchids, bougainvillea, bromeliads and palms thrive; lush greens, dazzling reds, purples, pinks and oranges offer visual feasts everywhere you look. |
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BRIEF
MAYAN HISTORY: Read more about the Maya and the different ruins in PlayaInfo's Mundo Maya section. The Maya were noted for elaborate and highly decorated ceremonial architecture, including temples, pyramids, palaces and observatories. They were also skilled farmers, clearing large sections of tropical rain forest and building sizable underground reservoirs for rainwater. The Maya were equally skilled as weavers and potters, and traded extensively throughout what is today Mexico and Central America. One of the most amazing Maya feats was the system of roads connecting the more important centers and trade posts. Sacbe means white road in Mayan.The roads were built up on platforms, paved with white stones and could be up to 30 ft wide. They were built in perfectly straight lines between cities - an amazing accomplishment thorough this dense jungle. The longest sacbe known to modern man connectes Coba and Yaxuna, a distance of 100 km (61 miles). Cenotes, plentiful throughout the Yucatan, were sacred to the Mayans. The main source of fresh water, cenotes were also considered to be the connection between this world and the underworld. |
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| website by lakin ka - copyright 2005 - use of images prohibited |
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