Advanced technique being used to decipher Maya glyphs
May 31st, 2010 - 6:47 pm ICT by ANIMexico City, May 31 (ANI): An advanced technique known as Reflection Transformation Imaging (RTI) is being applied for the first time on Maya sculptures in Mexico to document the ancient monuments.
Carlos Pallan Gayol, archaeologist at the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH), Mexico, said the method allows manipulating light on a photographic sequence in an interactive way, obtaining great quality images.
Pallan, responsible of the Maya Hieroglyphic and Iconographic Heap (AJIMAYA), said that although other Mesoamerican societies like Zapoteca, Mixe-Zoque and Nahua developed writing, Maya is by far the best understood and deciphered.
He pointed out that Tonina is the Maya site with more inscriptions known to present, being more than 300 the glyphs carved in monuments and some portable objects, quantity comparable only to the one found in Copan, Honduras.
He said: “Different aspects help us envision that Tonina was an important city during its peak between 688 and 708 AD, when great K’inich B’aaknal Chaak ruled over it.”
Pallan, also co director of Tonina Archaeological Project, said samples of highly developed writing can be located since 400-300 AC, being contemporary of written manifestations such as those in Monte Alban, Oaxaca.
He said: “We know other civilizations developed writing as well, so it is not right to attribute it to Mayas, but to a Mesoamerican phenomenon that originated somewhere and diffused from there. Some specialists think these common features could be interpreted as forms of diffusion that parted from a Mother Culture (one of the earliest) to later ones, although new dating points out to more complex processes.” (ANI)
- 'Mayan texts doesn't predict end of world in 2012' - Jul 08, 2010
- 2,700-year-old human skeletons found in Mexico - May 20, 2010
- Millennium-old sarcophagus could unravel mystery of Mayan civilisation - Jan 29, 2010
- Mayas had their own musical scale, say experts - Dec 14, 2011
- Scientists plan to decipher ancient Zapoteca Writing in new Mexico lab - Aug 24, 2009
- 2,700-yr-old pyramid tomb with royal burials, jewels unearthed in Mexico - Nov 19, 2010
- Archaeologists find a Yacata pyramid in Mexico - Aug 17, 2009
- 2,800-year-old monument found in Mexico - Jul 27, 2011
- Collapse of Mayan civilization was due to environmental damage - Mar 17, 2011
- 2,300-year-old Maya ruins destroyed for private ranch - Dec 05, 2010
- Mayan civilisation collapse blamed on environmental damage - Mar 16, 2011
- Boffins unravel secret of ancient Mayan dye's longevity - Jul 31, 2010
- Tlaltecuhtli Cult in ancient Mexico was exclusively for priesthood - Jun 22, 2009
- Treasure hunters eye underwater cultural heritage in Mexico - Feb 03, 2011
- 3,000-yr-old Mesoamerican sculpture discovered in southern Mexico - Feb 15, 2011
Tags: ancient monuments, anthropology, archaeological project, archaeologist, civilizations, co director, copan honduras, heap, inah mexico, inscriptions, manifestations, maya hieroglyphic, mexico city, monte alban, mother culture, photographic sequence, quality images, rti, sculptures, tonina