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     21 <h1><a href="/">Chris Bracken</a></h1>
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     35 <h2 class="post-title"><a href="https://chris.bracken.jp/2001/09/dzibilchaltun-yucatan-mexico/">Dzibilchaltún, Yucatán, México</a></h2>
     36 11 September 2001
     37 <p>About halfway between Mérida and Progresso lie the ruins of Dzibilchaltún, an
     38 important centre in the ancient world of the Maya. The name means &lsquo;The place
     39 with writing on the stones.&rsquo;</p>
     40 <figure><img src="/post/2001-09-11-munecas-door.jpg"
     41     alt="View framed by the doorway of the of Templo de las Siete Muñecas looking out over the ruins of a stone building and four-sized stone stela on a raised platform. A path leads past the ruins, through the low jungle, and towards the horizon.">
     42 </figure>
     43 
     44 <p>Dzibilchaltún covers an area of about 16 square kilometres, in which there are
     45 about 8400 structures. The central part of the site covers three square
     46 kilometres, which includes several temples and pyramids, as well as a cenote of
     47 unknown depth, one of the largest in the Yucatán. Many of the structures date
     48 back as far as 500 B.C.</p>
     49 <p>From downtown Mérida, you can catch a colectivo that stops down the road from
     50 the temple. A 10 minute hike from there along a trail through the jungle gets
     51 you to the entrance to the site, where they charge 50 pesos per person ($7.50
     52 CDN) to get in. The day we arrived, it was a scorching 40-something degrees,
     53 with 100% humidity, so the fact that the small museum on the site was
     54 air-conditionned was worth the price of admission in itself.</p>
     55 <p>The site is divided into two parts, separated by a one kilometre long road. At
     56 one end is the Temple of the Seven Dolls, named after seven ceramic dolls found
     57 there as offerings to the gods. At the other end is a courtyard, a pyramid, a
     58 ball court and the cenote, as well as an open chapel that was constructed
     59 during the Colonial era, in the late 16th and early 17th century.</p>
     60 <figure><img src="/post/2001-09-11-munecas-outside.jpg"
     61     alt="View of the Templo de las Siete Muñecas from the path. In the foreground, a hiker walks toward a large worn stela on a raised platform.">
     62 </figure>
     63 
     64 <p>The Temple of the Seven Dolls is probably the most interesting part of the
     65 site. At least it was to us. At one time, the temple was adorned with plaster
     66 friezes, molded to the shapes of intertwined serpents, hieroglyphs, and masks,
     67 though these friezes are no longer on the structure itself. The building is
     68 thought to have served as an astronomical observatory, and during the Vernal
     69 and Autumnal Equinoxes, an interesting phenonmenon can be seen at sunrise.
     70 During the Equinoxes, the sun is perfectly aligned such that the morning
     71 sunlight passes directly between two sets of opposing doors on the temple,
     72 casting the light down into the courtyard facing the structure. Many people
     73 pile into Dzibilchaltún between 5:00 and 6:00 in the morning to witness the
     74 sunrise, then run back out and pile into a bus to Chichen Itza to watch the
     75 more spectacular effect of the sun casting light in the shape of a giant
     76 serpent slithering up the side of the temple there in the afternoon. If you
     77 don’t happen to be a teacher who has classes on these days, this is apparently
     78 the thing to do.</p>
     79 <p>The cenote on the other side of the site is open for swimming, if you don’t
     80 mind thousands of little fish chasing you around the whole time. What’s
     81 curious, of course, is that there are any fish at all in the cenotes, since
     82 they’re fed by a series of deep, underwater channels of water that snake
     83 beneath the entire peninsula. There are no rivers or streams connecting them on
     84 the surface, so the fish have to descend to incredible depths (over 100 m) to
     85 move between one cenote and the next. From what people have told us, the fish
     86 that live in the cenotes are blind, which is kind of cool.</p>
     87 <p>We hiked back out to the road after a few hours of wandering around, the sat
     88 waiting for a colectivo to drive by and pick us up. For 30 minutes we sat
     89 around, the air totally still and boiling hot, with only the sound of the
     90 mosquitos and the cow in the field next to us. I’m not entirely sure what was
     91 wrong with it, but the way it hollered made it sound demented and insane. I
     92 honestly hope I never drink any milk from that one; no way that’s safe.</p>
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