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IPFS News Link • Archaeology

1,100-year-old Mayan ruins found in North Georgia

• www.rawstory.com

Archaeologists have discovered the ruins of an ancient Mayan city in the mountains of North Georgia believed to be at least 1,100 years old. According to Richard Thornton at Examiner.com, the ruins are reportedly what remains of a city built by Mayans fleeing wars, volcanic eruptions, droughts and famine.

In 1999, University of Georgia archeologist Mark Williams led an expedition to investigate the Kenimer Mound, a large, five-sided pyramid built in approximately 900 A.D. in the foothills of Georgia’s tallest mountain, Brasstown Bald. Many local residents has assumed for years that the pyramid was just another wooded hill, but in fact it was a structure built on an existing hill in a method common to Mayans living in Central America as well as to Southeastern Native American tribes.

Speculation has abounded for years as to what could have happened to the people who lived in the great Meso-American societies of the first century. Some historians believed that they simply died out in plagues and food shortages, but others have long speculated about the possibility of mass migration to other regions.

 

2 Comments in Response to

Comment by Mi Paddock
Entered on:

 Maybe if the Archaeologists would read the Book of Mormon, it wouldn't have taken them so long to find this.  We have known about the mass migrations since the 1830's.

Comment by PureTrust
Entered on:

I always wondered, if you happened to be an archaeologist out of work, if you couldn't simply go out and find just the right hill, in the geologically appropriate mountain, and excavate a bunch of walls and buildings into being that never existed before you got there.



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