TULUM, QRoo, April 12, 2023.- The government of municipal president Diego Castañón, strengthens cooperation with the National Institute of Anthropology and History…
Archaeology
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HeadlinesNewsPeninsulaState NewsTravelYucatan
Chichen Itza is positioned as the undisputed most visited archaeological site in Mexico
MÉRIDA, Yucatan – Since the Covid-19 health crisis began, Chichén Itzá, in Yucatán, and Tulum, in Quintana Roo, have displaced the pre-Hispanic…
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September 14, 2022.- The Ministry of Foreign Affairs delivers to the National Institute of Anthropology and History works given to embassies voluntarily…
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HeadlinesLocal NewsMaya UniverseNewsPeninsulaPlanetYucaState NewsYucatan
New museum under construction in the archaeological site of Kabah, Yucatan
MERIDA – The museum being built in the archaeological zone of Kabah, located in the municipality of Santa Elena, will “narrate” the…
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HeadlinesMaya UniverseNewsPeninsulaPlanetYucaQ, Roo
The archaeological site of Ichkabal will be open to the public in Quintana Roo
The central part of the archaeological zone of Ichkabal will be opened to the public in May 2024, after specialists explore the…
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HeadlinesMaya UniverseNewsPeninsulaPlanetYucaState NewsYucatan
Meet the ‘new’ archaeological jewel of the Yucatan: Chacmultún
State government will inject 11 million pesos to build the Services Unit of the Archaeological Zone located in Tekax With an investment…
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InternationalNews
Archaeolgical site of Machu Picchu shut down due to growing anti-government protests in Peru
Peru indefinitely shut the famed ancient ruins of Machu Picchu on Saturday in the latest sign that anti-government protests that began last…
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HeadlinesNewsPeninsulaState News
The AMLO administration will buy Uxmal from its owners, and build a whole new tourist complex there
“We are about to buy, it seems incredible, the lands of Uxmal because it is a very important archeological zone but the…
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Expat CommunityFeatureLifestyleTravel
New Maya structures found in a pre-Hispanic paradise in Yucatán
Archaeologists from Spain and Mexico returned to X’baatún, in Yucatán, a pre-Hispanic Maya paradise that is difficult to access, to continue with…
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Art and CultureFeatureLifestyleMaya UniversePlanetYuca
Loltún and Balamcanché are the only two Yucatán archaeological sites still closed to the public
INAH authorities informed that several sections of the Loltún and Balamcanché caves are flooded. In the state, 15 of the 17 archaeological…