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CrowdScience

Why did the ancient Maya abandon their cities?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 22 April 2022

⏱️ 34 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The ancient Maya flourished in modern day Mexico and Central America for millennia. They built incredible cities and they had sophisticated knowledge of astronomy, architecture and the natural world. But although Maya culture continues to exist today, around 900 AD, many of their great settlements collapsed, and today they lie in ruins.

CrowdScience listener Michael wants to know - how did the Maya sustain their populations successfully for so long? And what happened 1000 years ago that led them to abandon their cities?

To find out, presenter Melanie Brown travels to the forests of Western Belize. She visits the archaeological site of Xunantunich to learn about what life would have been like for the Maya living in what was once a prosperous city. She hears about the importance of water to the Maya way of life in this region, and their ingenious methods for capturing and storing rainfall.

She meets archaeologists using lasers and drones to map Maya settlements that have lain hidden by jungle for centuries. And she discovers what material from the bottom of lakes can tell us about how the Maya faced a changing climate, which may have had huge consequences for their society.

This episode is being released on Earth Day 2022. As we face an uncertain future of our own amid a climate crisis, are there any lessons we can learn from the Maya about how to live sustainably on this planet?

Presented by Melanie Brown and produced by Anand Jagatia

Featuring: Elias Cambranes, Maya expert and tour guide Prof Lisa Lucero, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Prof Tim Murtha, University of Florida Dr Eben Broadbent, University of Florida Prof Mark Brenner, University of Florida

Photo: Ancient ruins of the Mayas deep in the forest of Belize Credit: Simon Dannhauer/Getty Images

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Here we are located at the Hankranck Ferry over the Mopan River flows out of the Maya Mountains, goes for a short visit into Waya Mountains, goes for a short visit into Guatemala, and then it returns into Belize.

0:18.0

This is crowd science from the BBC World Service.

0:22.0

I'm Melanie Brown, and to get where we're going on this

0:24.4

episode we've got to get our 4 by 4 over this fast flowing river. Luckily for

0:29.9

us there's a floating barge which we can drive on to and we're being ferried

0:34.8

across by hand. We're in Belize in Central America. On the other side of the

0:40.2

Mopan River is our destination, Shenantinich.

0:45.0

2,000 years ago, the city of Shenantinich was home to the ancient Maya,

0:52.0

who thrived in this region for millennia.

0:54.0

At its height 40 to 60,000 people would have lived here.

0:58.0

The towering stone pyramids, temples, palaces and plazas

1:02.0

attest to the past splendour of this place.

1:05.3

But today, they lie in ruins.

1:08.9

Here to show us around the site is our guide, Elias.

1:12.4

We are in front of the most significant structure for Shenantonich, the building

1:19.3

known as El Castillo. In ancient times, these would be plastered colored buildings in

1:26.6

reds and blues and yellow looking as magnificent structures from great

1:32.2

distances because they stood clean on a hilltop.

1:36.0

It's going to be a great view from the top. So shall we go up Helius?

1:40.9

Let's go.

1:48.0

While we slowly make our way up to the top, not what I'm scared of fights or anything, let's hear from this week's listener who wants to know more about what happened to places like Shenantinich. My name is Michael Kutcher and I'm

1:57.1

calling from Seattle, Washington. My question is why did the ancient Maya abandon their cities?

...

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