Mayan Urbanism: Impact on a Tropical Karst Environment
- 19 October 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 206 (4416) , 298-306
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.206.4416.298
Abstract
From the first millennium B.C. through the 9th-century A.D. Classic Maya collapse, nonurban populations grew exponentially, doubling every 408 years, in the twin-lake (Yaxha-Sacnab) basin that contained the Classic urban center of Yaxha. Pollen data show that forests were essentially cleared by Early Classic time. Sharply accelerated slopewash and colluviation, amplified in the Yaxha subbasin by urban construction, transferred nutrients plus calcareous, silty clay to both lakes. Except for the urban silt, colluvium appearing as lake sediments has a mean total phosphorus concentration close to that of basin soils. From this fact, from abundance and distribution of soil phosphorus, and from continuing post-Maya influxes (80 to 86 milligrams of phosphorus per square meter each year), which have no other apparent source, we conclude that riparian soils are anthrosols and that the mechanism of long-term phosphorus loading in lakes is mass transport of soil. Per capita deliveries of phosphorus match physiological outputs, approximately 0.5 kilogram of phosphorus per capita per year. Smaller apparent deliveries reflect the nonphosphatic composition of urban silt; larger societal outputs, expressing excess phosphorus from deforestation and from food waste and mortuary disposal, are probable but cannot be evaluated from our data. Eutrophication is not demonstrable and was probably impeded, even in less-impacted lakes, by suspended Maya silt. Environmental strain, the product of accelerating agroengineering demand and sequestering of nutrients in colluvium, developed too slowly to act as a servomechanism, damping population growth, at least until Late Classic time.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Northeast Petén RevisitedAmerican Antiquity, 1980
- Land Floras: The Major Late Phanerozoic Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide/Oxygen ControlScience, 1978
- Applicability of Phosphorus Budget Models to Small Precambrian Lakes, Algonquin Park, OntarioJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1978
- Phosphorus loadings to lakes and some of their responses. Part 1. A new calculation of phosphorus loading and its application to 13 New York lake 1Limnology and Oceanography, 1978
- Maya Formative phase radiocarbon dates from BelizeNature, 1977
- Natural Water and Chemical Budgets for a Small Precambrian Lake Basin in Central CanadaJournal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 1976
- Reconstructing the Rate of Accumulation of Lake Sediment: The Effect of Sediment FocusingQuaternary Research, 1975
- An Experimental Approach to the Function of Classic Maya ChultunsAmerican Antiquity, 1971
- Milpas and Milperos: Implications for Prehistoric Times1American Anthropologist, 1967
- El Bajo de Santa FeTransactions of the American Philosophical Society, 1963