QUINTANA ROO, MEXICO—According to a report in Mexico News Daily, three panuchos, or limestone objects used by ancient Maya beekeepers, helped a team of archaeologists from Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) identify the site of an apiary in southern Mexico during construction work on a section of the Maya Train project. Each lid measures about eight inches across and would have been used to plug holes in a hollow log known as a jobón to create a hive for Melipona bees. The artifacts have been dated to the Postclassic period, from about A.D. 950 to 1539, when the Yucatán Peninsula was a hub of honey production. “Only one of the lids is in a good state of conservation,” said INAH archaeologist Carlos Fidel Martínez. The other two objects are highly eroded, he explained. Melipona honey was used by the Maya in ceremonies, as a food, and as a trade commodity. INAH archaeologist Raquel Liliana Hernández Estrada added that the apiary was situated in a residential area on the outskirts of Los Limones, a site where a Maya pyramid still stands, and Chacchoben, a larger Maya settlement inhabited from about 200 B.C. to A.D. 700. For more on Maya honey production, go to "Maya Beekeepers."
Ancient Maya Beekeeping Site Discovered in Mexico
News May 22, 2024
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