All Stories

  1. Growth and decline of a sustainable city: A multitemporal perspective on blue-black-green infrastructures at the pre-Columbian Lowland Maya city of Tikal
  2. Late Neolithic community, clay pipes and water diversion in monsoonal North Central China
  3. IF THE PAST TEACHES, WHAT DOES THE FUTURE LEARN? Ancient Urban Regions and the Durable Future
  4. Creating an Earth Archive
  5. Environmental DNA reveals arboreal cityscapes at the Ancient Maya Center of Tikal
  6. Zeolite water purification at Tikal, an ancient Maya city in Guatemala
  7. Molecular genetic and geochemical assays reveal severe contamination of drinking water reservoirs at the ancient Maya city of Tikal
  8. Distributed urban network systems in the tropical archaeological record: Toward a model for urban sustainability in the era of climate change
  9. Water and ancient cities: Urban supply systems
  10. Imperial resource management at the ancient Maya city of Tikal: A resilience model of sustainability and collapse
  11. James C. Scott: Against the Grain: a Deep History of the Earliest States
  12. Water uncertainty, ritual predictability and agricultural canals at Chaco Canyon, New Mexico
  13. Soil analysis in discussions of agricultural feasibility for ancient civilizations: A critical review and reanalysis of the data and debate from Chaco Canyon, New Mexico
  14. The hydraulic lift of early states societies
  15. Human niches, abandonment cycling, and climates
  16. Water management and paleoecology of an ancient city
  17. Forests, fields, and the edge of sustainability at the ancient Maya city of Tikal
  18. Hisat’sinom: Ancient Peoples in a Land without Water
  19. Does water have agency? Does it need to?
  20. 1 Diversity, Resiliency, and IHOPE-Maya: Using the Past to Inform the Present
  21. 9 The Alternative Economy: Resilience in the Face of Complexity from the Eastern Lowlands
  22. 3 Water and Landscape: Ancient Maya Settlement Decisions
  23. 2 Tropical Landscapes and the Ancient Maya: Diversity in Time and Space
  24. A TALE OF TWO COLLAPSES: ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABILITY AND CULTURAL DISRUPTION IN THE MAYA LOWLANDS
  25. Agricultural Land Use and Intensification
  26. Water and sustainable land use at the ancient tropical city of Tikal, Guatemala
  27. Developing an Integrated History and future of People on Earth (IHOPE)
  28. Evidence for volcanic ash fall in the Maya Lowlands from a reservoir at Tikal, Guatemala
  29. Climate Change and Classic Maya Water Management
  30. Ancient Waterworks Water Engineering in the Ancient World: Archaeological and Climate Perspectives on Societies of Ancient South America, the Middle East, and South-East Asia . By Charles R. Ortloff. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.
  31. The non-hierarchical development of complexity in the semitropics: water and cooperation
  32. Complexity and Sustainability: Perspectives from the Ancient Maya and the Modern Balinese
  33. THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF SUSTAINABILITY: MESOAMERICA
  34. Cuello: An Early Maya Community in Belize
  35. Rate and process of societal change in semitropical settings: The ancient Maya and the living Balinese
  36. [GEOARCAHEOLOGICAL STDIES OF LANDSCAPE CHANGE AND HUMAN SETTLEMENT DURING THE PAST 2500 YEARS] Ancient water management and landscape transformation at Sebatu, Bali
  37. Tipon: Water Engineering Masterpiece of the Inca Empire
  38. Intensification and the Political Economy:
  39. Rappaport’s Rose
  40. Heterarchy, Political Economy, and the Ancient Maya
  41. Ancient Water Management: The Flow of Power: Ancient Water Systems and Landscapes, by Vernon Scarborough, 2003. Santa Fe (NM): SAR Press; ISBN 1-930618-32-8 paperback, £27.95 & US$27.95, xvii + 204 pp.
  42. The Flow of Power: Ancient Water Systems and Landscapes
  43. Cultivated Landscapes of Middle America on the Eve of the Conquest
  44. Real-time Maya: The Fall of the Ancient Maya: Solving the Mystery of the Maya Collapse, by David Webster, 2002. London: Thames & Hudson; ISBN 0-500-051135 hardback, £19.95 & US$34.95, 368 pp., 84 ills.
  45. How to interpret an ancient landscape
  46. Arising from theBajos: The Evolution of a Neotropical Landscape and the Rise of Maya Civilization
  47. Volcanic fertilization of Balinese rice paddies
  48. Ecology and Ritual: Water Management and the Maya
  49. : Economic Aspects of Water Management in the Prehispanic New World . Vernon L. Scarborough, Barry L. Isaac.
  50. Economic Aspects of Water Management in the Prehispanic New World
  51. Water and Land at the Ancient Maya Community of La Milpa
  52. MesoamericanGraffiti
  53. The Pre-Hispanic Maya Reservoir System at Kinal, Peten, Guatemala
  54. The Mesoamerican Ballgame.
  55. FLOW OF POWER
  56. Cuello: An Early Maya Community in Belize:Cuello: An Early Maya Community in Belize.
  57. The Mesoamerican Ballgame
  58. A Water Storage Adaptation in the Maya Lowlands
  59. Canal Irrigation in Prehistoric Mexico: The Sequence of Technological Change
  60. Site Structure of a Village of the Late Pithouse-Early Pueblo Period in New Mexico
  61. Site Structure of a Village of the Late Pithouse-Early Pueblo Period in New Mexico
  62. Civic and Residential Settlement at a Late Preclassic Maya Center
  63. Civic and Residential Settlement at a Late Preclassic Maya Center
  64. : Pulltrouser Swamp: Ancient Maya Habitat, Agriculture, and Settlement in Northern Belize . B. L. Turner II, Peter D. Harrison.
  65. Ball Courts and Ceremonial Plazas in the West Indies
  66. A Preclassic Maya Water System
  67. Subsistence, Trade, and Development of the Coastal Maya
  68. Two Late Preclassic Ballcourts at the Lowland Maya Center of Cerros, Northern Belize
  69. Two Late Preclassic Ballcourts at the Lowland Maya Center of Cerros, Northern Belize
  70. Tikal Land, Water, and Forest
  71. The Evolution of an Ancient Waterworks System at Tikal
  72. At the Core of Tikal: Terrestrial Sediment Sampling and Water Management
  73. Defining the Constructed Niche of Tikal: A Summary View
  74. References
  75. Bringing the University of Pennsylvania Maps of Tikal into the Era of Electronic GIS
  76. Examining Landscape Modifications for Water Management at Tikal Using Three-Dimensional Modeling with ArcGIS
  77. Fire and Water: The Archaeological Significance of Tikal’s Quaternary Sediments