enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Salinas de los Nueve Cerros - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salinas_de_los_Nueve_Cerros

    At the time of the Spanish conquest, the region was under the control of the Akalaha Maya [1] [2] who were engaged in salt production at the site and referred to the nearby sierra as Bolontewitz ("Nine Hills"). The Spaniards began to refer to the salt works as las salinas de los Nueve Cerros ("the salt source of the Nine Hills").

  3. Maya civilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_civilization

    Cities such as Kaminaljuyu and Qʼumarkaj in the Guatemalan Highlands, and Chalchuapa in El Salvador, variously controlled access to the sources of obsidian at different points in Maya history. [161] The Maya were major producers of cotton, which was used to make the textiles to be traded throughout Mesoamerica. [162] The most important cities ...

  4. History of salt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_salt

    Salt has played a prominent role in determining the power and location of the world's great cities. Liverpool rose from just a small English port to become the prime exporting port for the salt dug in the great Cheshire salt mines and thus became the entrepôt for much of the world's salt in the 19th century. [5]

  5. Ancient Mayan compartments — used to hold water — discovered ...

    www.aol.com/ancient-mayan-compartments-used-hold...

    Just 21 inches long and 18 inches wide, the opening was the top of a chultún. This is the first chultún that has been discovered inside a Mayan construction, officials said.

  6. Kaminaljuyu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaminaljuyu

    In addition to Chayal obsidian, the strategic location of Kaminaljuyu as a nexus for trade between the Pacific coast and piedmont and the Maya Lowlands – salt, fish, and shells from the coast, cacao and other agricultural products from the piedmont, jaguar skins, feathers, and other commodities from the Lowland jungles – underlay ...

  7. Trade in Maya civilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trade_in_Maya_civilization

    The Maya relied on a strong middle class of skilled and semi-skilled workers and artisans which produced both commodities and specialized goods. [1] Governing this middle class was a smaller class of specially educated merchant governors who would direct regional economies based upon simple supply and demand analysis, and place mass orders for other regions.

  8. Maritime trade in the Maya civilization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maritime_trade_in_the_Maya...

    Maritime trade goods of the Maya. The extensive trade networks of the Ancient Maya contributed largely to the success of their civilization spanning three millennia. Maya royal control and the wide distribution of foreign and domestic commodities for both population sustenance and social affluence are hallmarks of the Maya visible throughout much of the iconography found in the archaeological ...

  9. Chultun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chultun

    A chultún (or chultun, plural: chultunob' or chultúns) is a bottle-shaped underground storage chamber built by the pre-Columbian Maya in southern Mesoamerica. Their entrances were surrounded by plastered aprons which guided rainwater into them during the rainy seasons.