MAYA SITES FACE FLOODING
Archaeological Institute of America http://www.archaeology.org/online/news/usumacinta.html
February 19, 2003
Evidence continues to surface that a hydroelectric
dam proposed by Mexico's Federal Commission of Electricity
(CFE) will flood an area of southeastern Mexico rich
in Maya ruins and artifacts. Archaeologists working
in the Usumacinta River basin--many of whom are advisers
to the electricity commission--have established that
the dam would inundate a largely unexplored area near
the Guatemalan border they believe to have been the
seventh-century Maya kingdom of Ponomá. Adding to the
public relations fallout for CFE was the recent discovery
of remarkably well-preserved cave paintings at a lesser-known
site called Chinikiha, which lies well within the proposed
flood area.
This is the third time since 1987 that the Mexican
government has made plans to dam the Usumacinta, which
is the longest river in Mesoamerica and the most torrential
in Mexico. Attempts by Mexican presidents Miguel de
la Madrid in 1987 and Carlos Salinas in 1992 met with
stiff civic resistance and were canceled. This latest
version is planned for the same location as its predecessors,
5.5 miles south of Tenosique, where the river rushes
northward out of the Chiapas highlands en route to the
coastal plain of Tabasco.
The site is known as Boca del Cerro, or Mouth of the
Hill. Although the presence of archaeological ruins
in the area has long been suspected, dense jungle cover
and a shortage of government funds for exploration have
combined to leave its contents largely unknown. Between
A.D. 600 and 800 the region flourished as Pomoná, a
kingdom whose strategic location on the Usumacinta brought
it into many confrontations with powerful neighbors
in Palenque to the west and Piedras Negras to the south.
Boca del Cerro and the proposed dam site was once a
Pomoná settlement known as Panhale.
The original CFE plan called for a dam 330 feet high
whose floodwaters, the government admits, would have
endangered two well-known Late Classic Maya centers:
Yaxchilán in Mexico, and Piedras Negras across the border
in Guatemala. According to the project outline, the
ruins at Yaxchilán and Piedras Negras would be taken
apart and their stones moved uphill to be reassembled
out of flood reach.
Newspapers around the world sounded the alarm, including
the New York Times, which quoted archaeologist Stephen
D. Houston, who works at Piedras Negras, proclaiming
the proposed dam "the biggest disaster ever to be visited
on a classic Maya site." The CFE promptly revised its
plan, announcing before the Mexican Congress on October
7, 2002, their intent to build a dam 132 feet high that
would flood approximately 22 square miles of land, and
would generate 500 megawatts of electricity, fulfilling
two percent of Mexico's total need.
Even with a scaled-down plan, problems have persisted
for CFE. Its all-important partnership with Mexico's
National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH),
whose archaeologists had been evaluating the proposal
favorably, is now strained. INAH spokesman Rubén Regnier
had earlier described candidly the agreement reached
between project archaeologists and engineers in a July
23 interview with the newspaper Reforma. In the event
of a discovery around Boca del Cerro, said Regnier,
"INAH will attend to the event immediately, with the
purpose of avoiding delays in the execution of the electrical
energy works." But INAH changed its tune on December
22, when it published an open letter to the Mexican
people in the magazine Proceso under the headline "INAH
Protects the Archaeological Patrimony of the Mexican
People." Although most of the letter only restates INAH's
responsibilities regarding the Boca del Cerro dam project,
its opening sentence is telling: "Up to this moment,
the Institute has not received the definitive technical
plans of Boca del Cerro."
Within CFE discretion has given way to secrecy. None
of its project engineers would speak to ARCHAEOLOGY,
and one of its spokesman, Gerardo Cubos, denied that
the the Boca del Cerro dam project even exists. Indeed,
it appears CFE is already preparing itself should the
Boca del Cerro project be canceled once again.
According to an internal CFE report that appeared last
October, the commission has dispatched experts to survey
possible Usumacinta dam sites further south in the state
of Chiapas. But a dam site at Boca del Cerro would harness
the Usumacinta at its greatest velocity, and governmental
plans that appear on the website "México Tercer Milenio"
describe the Boca del Cerro project as "a strong priority"
that has the capacity to be the most productive hydroelectric
dam in Mexico.
Begun by an ex-CFE engineer named Manuel Frías Alcaraz,
the website provides information about the energy projects
under consideration by the CFE, including their price
tags. Investors are encouraged to submit offers through
the site. Despite its cooler relationship with CFE,
INAH remains open to the Boca del Cerro project. INAH
coordinator Alejandro Martinez Muriel told ARCHAEOLOGY
that "from the point of view of an archaeologist, the
flooding will affect very little.
No important Maya site is within reach." Nevertheless,
in July INAH archaeologists like Laura Pescador and
Luis Alberto López Wario were calling for "salvage operations"
to collect whatever precious Maya artifacts could be
found before the flooding, which would take place in
two years, according to CFE. For his part, López Wario,
who directs INAH's archaeological salvage project, told
Proceso that there are 25 unexplored archaeological
zones near the proposed dam site. He said that while
the high-profile sites of Piedras Negras and Yaxchilán
will likely be protected, lesser-known sites like Chinikiha
are faced with destruction.
Cave paintings at Chinikiha (Alfonso Morales and Julia
Miller) [LARGER IMAGE] It was in Chinikiha that a series
of prehispanic cave paintings of bats were discovered
on November 8. Bordered in reddish tones and painted
on stucco, these murals recount the myth of twin bats
who played a key part in the Maya creation myth.
In addition to the nine caves that are virtually unexplored,
Chinikiha has structures, including a ball court, said
Juan Antonio Ferrer, INAH's director for the Usumacinta
basin. Since the site is a mere seven miles from the
proposed dam, the cave paintings will be underwater
if the project goes forward. Ferrer has said that the
Boca del Cerro project would endanger no less than 220
archaeological sites. Panhale, the ancient Maya settlement
where the dam is to be constructed, has been little
explored.
However, a report recently published by archaeologist
Armando Anaya Hérnandez on the website of the Foundation
for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc., begins
to offer the scope of the problem. Anaya, a professor
at Le Trobe University in Australia, located what he
believes were two distinct population centers of Panhale.
Both were built atop a limestone ridge overlooking the
Usumacinta, with one center located 325 feet and the
other 975 feet above sea level.
During their broad sweep through these two overgrown
locations, Anaya and his team found ceramic fragments,
human skeletal remains, a one-room temple, a watchtower,
and a two-roomed building with vaulted ceilings, among
other discoveries. "Sadly," he wrote, "Panhale has been
considerably affected by the mining activities of the
nearby lime plant, the exploration works of [CFE], and
the ubiquitous actions of professional looters." Anaya
describes how CFE disturbed one of the limestone terraces
on which some of Panhale's ruins are situated, digging
a trench 7.5 feet deep and 750 feet long as part of
a dam feasibility study.
He also describes three more ancient Maya settlements
he found within four miles south of the dam site that
would be partly or completely submerged. They are San
Carlos Boca del Cerro, Chan Marín/Súchite, and Rancho
La Herradura. Although the outcome remains uncertain,
support for dam opponents has come from Rios Mayas and
El Grupo de Cien. The latter, a leading environmental
organization in Mexico, is credited with spearheading
the previous two defeats of the Boca del Cerro dam project.
Its founder, the Mexican poet Homero Aridjis, says the
Usumacinta is the lifeblood of the Lacandón jungle in
southeastern Mexico. "In Walt Whitman terms, you could
say it is our Mississippi," he said. Under the direction
of the Grupo de Cien, a letter was delivered to Mexico's
president Vicente Fox on December 3 signed by 64 writers,
artists, archaeologists, and environmentalists opposed
to the Boca del Cerro dam.
The letter, which was published the same day in Reforma,
suggests a binational corridor be established to protect
the jungle shared by southern Mexico and Guatemala.
Fox, however, has thrown his complete support behind
the dam project, calling it an important step toward
developing the area according to the ambitious Plan
Puebla Panama, which aims to industrialize the Central
American isthmus from southern Mexico to Panama. Six
additional dam projects in the Usumacinta River basin
are being planned as part of the PPP. "There has been
absolutely no response from anyone regarding the letter,"
said Aridjis in a telephone interview. "None at all."--JASON
MCGAHAN ______________________________________