According to official records, Mexico’s most visited archaeological sites are Teotihuacán and Chichén Itzá. The first is a ...
DNA recovered from 1,000-year-old dried feces indicates that intestinal infections from pinworm or Shingella may have plagued ...
Archaeologists don’t always find bones or artifacts. Sometimes, they found something unglamorous that offers a unique type of ...
It is clear that the sprawling city of Teotihuacan near Mexico City was a major metropolis of the ancient world, but what do ...
In the late 1950s, archaeologists discovered a cave in the Rio Zape Valley of Mexico. There were ancient human remains in the cave dated to between 660 and 1430 A.D., many of which belonged to ...
Mexico City commemorated 700 years since the founding of México-Tenochtitlan, the ancient Aztec capital on Sunday (October 26 ...
Three thousand years ago, in what is now southern Mexico, Olmec art and culture flourished. No written documents survive, but the exceptional beauty and technical brilliance of the sculpture and its ...
DNA within dried feces dating from more than 1,000 years ago provides valuable insights into the pathogens that plagued ...
The Tex-Mexplainer series explores the ingredients, techniques, history, and culture of Mexican food in Texas. Unlike many frozen desserts, such as sorbet, shaved ice, and sherbet, nieves de garrafa ...
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