The remains of an ancient palace complex dating back 2,300 years have been unearthed Mexico's Valley of Oaxaca. It is the oldest royal building excavated to date in the area, providing some of the earliest evidence of early states' emergence in Mesoamerica.
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| El Palenque royal palace has been excavated [Credit: Elsa M. Redmond & Charles Spencer] |
Hence, discovering remains of these structures is often helpful for researchers who seek to understand the period of archaic state emergence in different regions of the world.
Oaxaca is widely believed to have been among the earliest archaic states to have emerged in Mesoamerica. The discovery of the palace, described in a study now published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, backs up this idea.
Researchers have been working at the El Palenque archaeological site in the Oaxaca Valley since 1993, carrying out intensive mapping, surface collecting and excavations. On the north side of El Palenque's plaza, the archaeologists have exposed a palace complex that once extended over more than 2,000 sq metres.
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| Water shrine, where a stone-lined drain descending from ruler’s residence supplied rainwater to cistern [Credit: Elsa M. Redmond & Charles Spencer] |
The sheer size of the palace highlights how powerful the ruler was as it suggests his ability to amass considerable manpower for the building's construction.
The archaeologists have also conducted radiocarbon dating to find out when it was built and inhabited. Using a series of radiocarbon dates derived from charcoal samples found at the site, including samples embedded in the walls of the palace, the team established that the construction dates back to between 300 and 100 BC. An analysis of the ceramics found within the walls of the palace confirms this.
This is a time for which there is considerable evidence of state organisation in the Valley of Oaxaca and the palace is a further proof of that. "This 2,300-year-old palace is the oldest multifunctional palace excavated to date in the Valley of Oaxaca and is a key indicator of the early state society that emerged there at this time", the authors conclude.
Author: Léa Surugue | Source: IBTimes [March 27, 2017]







