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A little about Playa Zipolite, The Beach of the Dead . . .

Playa Zipolite, Oaxaca, Southern Mexico, on the Pacific Ocean. A little bit about my favorite little get-away on this small world of ours.

Zipolite, a sweaty 30-minute walk west from Puerto Angel, brings you to Playa Zipolite and another world. The feeling here is 1970's - Led Zep, Marley, and scruffy gringos.

A long, long time ago, Zipolite beach was usually visited by the Zapotecans...who made it a magical place. They came to visit Zipolite to meditate, or just to rest.

Recently, this beach has begun to receive day-trippers from Puerto Angel and Puerto Escondido, giving it a more TOURISTY feel than before.

Most people come here for the novelty of the nude beach, yoga, turtles, seafood, surf, meditation, vegetarians, discos, party, to get burnt by the sun, or to see how long they can stretch their skinny budget.

I post WWW Oaxaca, Mexico, Zipolite and areas nearby information. Also general budget, backpacker, surfer, off the beaten path, Mexico and beyond, information.

REMEMBER: Everyone is welcome at Zipolite.

ivan

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Zipolite Thorntree forum


ZipoliteThorntree forum






Recent posts

  1. JillSparklingWaters avatar

    Re: San Agustinillo

    by JillSparklingWaters 06 August 2012
    We want to go to San Agustinillo in late November and I'm wondering about what the weather and beach conditions will be like. The hotels…
  2. BOOMER1 avatar

    RE: Month-long living in Central America

    by BOOMER1 04 August 2012
    I agree with chef that if Zipolite works for you (and I agree that it is great) then you'll find it pretty hard to beat. That said, there…
  3. chefhagan avatar

    RE: Month-long living in Central America

    by chefhagan 04 August 2012
    Stick to Zipolite or Mazunte a little farther north. Neither one is my cup of tea but that is not the point.
  4. p0gue avatar

    RE: Yucatan peninsula or Pacific coast?

    by p0gue 03 August 2012
    The Oaxaca coast is far less developed and touristy. Puerto Angel, Zipolite, San Agustinillo, Mazunte... beautiful. Huge crashing…
  5. p0gue avatar

    RE: Yucatan peninsula or Pacific coast?

    by p0gue 03 August 2012
    The Oaxaca coast is far less developed and touristy. Puerto Angel, Zipolite, San Agustinillo, Mazunte... beautiful. Huge crashing…
  6. nsdub avatar

    Month-long living in Central America

    by nsdub 03 August 2012
    Hi! My girlfriend and I are looking to try a remote lifestyle somewhere in Central America. We recently traveled to Playa Zipolite, Oaxaca,…
  7. nsdub avatar

    Remote working in Central America

    by nsdub 03 August 2012
    Hi! My girlfriend and I are looking to try a remote lifestyle somewhere in Central America. We recently traveled to Playa Zipolite, Oaxaca,…
  8. hexstatic1 avatar

    RE: Yelapa, Boca de Tomatlán or somewhere else?

    by hexstatic1 31 July 2012
    Something else occurred to me...if you are looking to do a chilled out beach vacation on the Pacific, you might want to consider the beaches…
  9. drMingo avatar

    Re: Oaxaca vs. Peninsula Maya

    by drMingo 28 July 2012
    Tough choice to make, both are great places, but if as a mater of fact I do prefer Oaxaca, why? because it has a lot of choices that you…
  10. wannabewritter avatar

    Re: Yucatan summer-too much the "High"season? Baja better?

    by wannabewritter 11 July 2012
    If you've already been to Baja and Caribbean, give a chance to Huatulco. As you mentioned that you are a diver, you're gonna love the…
  11. p0gue avatar

    RE: want a beach trip after Mexico City, have about a week or so

    by p0gue 06 July 2012
    What #1 said. Cheap 1hr flights on VivaAirobus to either Puerto Escondido or Huatulco. The Oaxaca coast has several cheap, laid back…
  12. geriande avatar

    RE: Rebuild Shambhala

    by geriande 02 July 2012
    I remmember that Hurricanes Paulina and Rick almost totally destroyed Shambahla in the late 1990s, but Gloria laboriously, and with help…
  13. p0gue avatar

    RE: Rebuild Shambhala

    by p0gue 02 July 2012
    Shambhala update: we've had 4 days with very little rain, so things are drying out nicely and we've had a chance to do some cleaning…
  14. drMingo avatar

    RE: Oaxaca, is it safe?

    by drMingo 30 June 2012
    Was there 2 days ago, yes it is safe, the only time I did not feel safe was at the beach before hurricane Carlota hit that afternoon on…
  15. p0gue avatar

    RE: Oaxaca, is it safe?

    by p0gue 29 June 2012
    Writing from the Oaxaca coast, Zipolite. Nothing at all to worry about here for a pregnant woman. Hot and sunny alternating with rain.…
  16. p0gue avatar

    RE: Itinerary help!

    by p0gue 29 June 2012
    Me, I would add more time on the Oaxaca coast and in Chiapas/Guate and skip Yucatan. Zipolite's great, and not really out of your way.…
  17. p0gue avatar

    RE: Help with September itenary

    by p0gue 28 June 2012
    I'm in Zipolite. We just got battered by a hurricane, but things are recovering nicely. People spend weeks, months, years here,…
  18. Nick1980 avatar

    Re: Help with September itenary

    by Nick1980 28 June 2012
    Thank you all for your informative comments!! I have finally booked the flight - and have turned it into 3 weeks thus allowing a bit more…
  19. gracious101 avatar

    Re: Zipolite is a mess after Hurricane Carlotta

    by gracious101 27 June 2012
    Does anyone on here know Crazy Horse who owns El Chocolate Invincencible in Zipolite? Could you get back to me if you do. Much appreciated.…
  20. gracious101 avatar

    Re: Zipolite is a mess after Hurricane Carlotta

    by gracious101 26 June 2012
    So glad to hear that the internet is back up in Zipolite. I was there in June of 2010 and loved it. I hope Crazy Horse, Kevin, Bernice,…
  21. sangroncito avatar

    RE: Zipolite is a mess after Hurricane Carlotta

    by sangroncito 26 June 2012
    Internet now up in Zipo....
  22. sangroncito avatar

    RE: Zipolite is a mess after Hurricane Carlotta

    by sangroncito 25 June 2012
    Update: electricity and water is on, but internet is still down in Zipolite. You can get internet in down the road a few km. in Puerto…
  23. softseattraveler avatar

    Re: Looking for Mexico winter location suggestions

    by softseattraveler 23 June 2012
    My suggestions for favorite places on the Pacific Coast of Mexico that meet your specs would include Zipolite Beach in Oaxaca. You might…
  24. sangroncito avatar

    RE: Zipolite is a mess after Hurricane Carlotta

    by sangroncito 22 June 2012
    The electricty is back! Time to head back down the mountain to Zipolite!
  25. Jetgirly avatar

    RE: Rebuild Shambhala

    by Jetgirly 21 June 2012
    I was in Zipolite over New Years and we attended the annual New Years Eve party. Shambhala puts on this party annually and charges nothing.…


Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/mexico/oaxaca-state/zipolite/forum#ixzz23II32UwE

Playa Zipolite: Getting there & away

http://www.lonelyplanet.com/mexico/oaxaca-state/zipolite/transport/getting-there-away


Playa Zipolite:  Getting there & away


The camionetas from Pochutla via Mazunte and San Agustinillo terminate at the far west end of Zipolite (about 2km from the east end of the beach). Colectivo taxis from Puerto Ángel (M$5), if you can find one, will go to the same spot too, but pass along the length of Zipolite en route, so they are a better bet if you’re heading for the east end of the beach.
After dark, a non-colectivo taxi is your only option for getting to Puerto ÁngelSan Agustinillo or Mazunte (about M$50 until about 10pm, more after that).


Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/mexico/oaxaca-state/zipolite/transport/getting-there-away#ixzz23ICB1UgW

Introducing Zipolite

http://www.lonelyplanet.com/mexico/oaxaca-state/zipolite


Introducing Zipolite

The beautiful 1.5km stretch of pale sand called Zipolite, beginning about 2.5km west of Puerto Ángel, is fabled as southern Mexico’s perfect budget chill-out spot. It’s a place where you can do as little as you like and enjoy good food and inexpensive accommodation all in wonderfully elemental surroundings of crashing surf, pounding sun, rocky headlands and tree-covered hills. Inexpensive places to stay and eat line the beach, many still reassuringly ramshackle and wooden and with tall thatched roofs that help to create the unique Zipolite landscape. This is one of those magical places where you may find yourself postponing departure more than once.
Last updated: Feb 17, 2009Zipolite has a certain fame as a nudist beach; in fact total nudity is common only at the western end of the beach and in the small cove called Playa del Amor at the east end.

Tips & articles

  1. Traditional beach 'palapa' on Isla Mujueres.

    Mexico’s most blissful beaches

    12 July 2011
    When people think Mexico, many see  golden sand, blue water and green palms. Hundreds of beaches fit this bill: some...


Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/mexico/oaxaca-state/zipolite#ixzz23I8GdAEv


Ernesto kills nine in Mexico Posted: 11 August 2012 0903 hrs

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Ernesto kills nine in Mexico
Posted: 11 August 2012 0903 hrs




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XALAPA, Mexico: Ernesto killed at least nine people in Mexico, officials said 
Friday, with the dissipating storm threatening more heavy rain and possible 
flooding.

In the southeastern state of Tabasco, a 17-year-old fisherman drowned off

 the coast of the town of Centla, according to authorities, and the body of a 
second victim was found in the Samaria River.

A landslide in the neighboring state of Veracruz left five dead and one 

missing on Thursday.

"Three people died when a tree fell" amid strong winds and rain in the 

municipality of Rio Blanco, Veracruz Governor Javier Duarte told reporters.

Another woman was killed in her car when a river swept across a highway, 

and lightning fatally struck a 62-year-old man, according to a government
 report.

In the southwestern state of Oaxaca, authorities said a woman was killed 

when heavy rains and landslides caused her car to crash. A child less than 
12 years old died in his home after the runoff from a hill caused the building 
to collapse.

Ernesto, which has petered out, made landfall for a second time near the 

Mexican port of Coatzacoalcos on Thursday, dumping heavy rain and causing
 flooding in the Gulf coast region.

The high mountains of southern Mexico have disrupted the storm, 

whose remnants are expected to move off Mexico into the eastern 
Pacific over the weekend, when it could become a tropical cyclone, 
according to the US-based National Hurricane Center.

It first became a hurricane on Tuesday, before being downgraded to 

a tropical storm and heading back out to sea.

As the storm moves inland, some areas could still see up to 15 inches 

(38 centimeters) of rain before skies clear, the NHC said, adding that
 the storm would likely disintegrate late Friday.

Mexican civil defense officials said 10 communities had been cut off by

 flooding, although no major damage was reported.

The states of Veracruz, Tabasco, Puebla, Oaxaca and Guerrero were 

expected to see downpours through late Friday.

"These rainfall amounts may produce life-threatening flash floods and 

mudslides," the NHC warned, but all coastal watches and warnings have 
been lifted.

Ernesto -- which was the second hurricane of the Atlantic season -- 

had already been buffeting Caribbean countries last week and also 
dumped heavy rain on areas of Belize, Guatemala and Honduras.

In the Pacific, Gilma, which had swelled into a category one hurricane 

on Wednesday, was downgraded to a tropical storm and expected to 
weaken further.

According to the latest NHC bulletin, it was 665 miles (1,070 kilometers) 

west-southwest of the southern tip of Baja California and was not 
expected to make landfall.

On Thursday, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 

raised the severity of its predictions for the current hurricane season, 
which officially runs from June 1 to November 30.

The latest outlook calls for 12 to 17 named storms, including five to 

eight hurricanes, of which two to three could be major. In May, it had 
forecast nine to 15 named storms.


View of a beach in Veracruz, Mexico, after the passage of Tropical Storm Ernesto, on August 9, 2012. 
- AFP/cc

Tropical Storm Ernesto Kills 6 in Mexico 2012-08-11 10:03:32 Xinhua Web Editor: dingxiaoxiao


Tropical Storm Ernesto Kills 6 in Mexico
    2012-08-11 10:03:32     Xinhua       Web Editor: dingxiaoxiao
Tropical storm Ernesto killed six people as it brought torrential rain to the southern Mexican states of Veracruz, Tabasco and Oaxaca, before being reduced Friday to a tropical depression, official sources said.
The civil protection agency in Veracruz said three people had died in Rio Blanco county past midnight Thursday, when the storm knocked over a tree that in turn brought down electric cables onto the victims' truck.
The state governments of Tabasco and Oaxaca had reported two deaths in the first and one in the latter while Ernesto was a category-1 hurricane on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale earlier in the week.
Once Ernesto came ashore on the Gulf coast of Veracruz, it weakened into a tropical storm that still dumped inches of rain on 212 counties.
Ernesto continued to weaken throughout the day Friday, with the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami saying the depression was moving westward through south Mexico and was expected to head out into the Pacific Ocean around the resort of Acapulco.
Veracruz state Governor Javier Duarte issued a communique saying steady downpours Thursday and Friday had caused several rivers to overflow, and asked the local civil protection agency to take steps to protect people living in affected communities.
Duarte said everything should go back to normal Saturday in Veracruz as Ernesto heads out of the state.
As a preventive measure, in Veracruz hundreds of people were evacuated from a total of 27 counties, including Rio Blanco and Nogales, near the La Carbonera River.
The National Meteorological Service said Ernesto had reached the state of Guerrero, where Acapulco is located, and could still potentially dump inches of rain on central, eastern, south and southeast Mexico.

Cheap Travel in Mexico


Cheap Travel in Mexico

You have three options for traveling in Mexico – by car, bus, or plane. There are no trains to speak of. If you drive, you can take the pay highways (expensive) or the free ones (confusing and dangerous).
Flying around Mexico is a great option. Three airlines go everywhere: Volaris, Aerobus, and Interjet. If you want to fly, start checking their websites a few weeks early and check often because big deals come up. I use Volaris to fly to the states – they have direct flights to Chicago and several cities in California. I have flown for $200 US round trip, and they still give you free drinks! Also with Volaris, if they are late (something like more than an hour), they will refund your money. You have to call them for your refund and use it within something like 3 months or a year, but why not?
Probably you will do most of your traveling by bus. Rather than an overpriced, inefficient near-monopoly like Greyhound, Mexico has numerous bus companies that go all over the country with big price variations. The best buses are more comfortable than airplanes, but then domestic flights can be even cheaper than those! If you like to rough it, like me, you can get a very uncomfortable and unreliable bus across the country for very cheap, as low as 20 dollars for a 20 hour trip.
In the major, official bus stations (there are four or five in D.F., including Tapo, Terminal Norte, and Observatorio) you will find mostly first class buses. But like I said above, if you use a first class bus for a long trip, it will probably be more expensive than a flight. Really there is no reason to travel to somewhere like San Cristobal de las Casas or Cancun by first class bus – if you fly it will only be a one hour flight and probably cheaper!
If you want to travel really cheap, you have to seek out the second class buses. I know a few for destinations south.

For Oaxaca

In D.F. there is a line called FYPSA. It is near the Blvd. Pto. Aereo metro stop. Ask directions. There are no reservations so show up an hour early.
In Oaxaca city there is an entire terminal for second class buses. It is next to the Central Abastos, a huge market about 15 minutes from the center of town. Here you can travel all over Oaxaca and to Chiapas for cheap.

For Chiapas

Several bus company offices for Mexico City to Tuxtla Gutierrez or San Cristobal de las Casasare located near the Candelaria metro station – ask for directions in the market outside the metro. They cost only 300-350 pesos for the long trip south. The company I used was Viajes Aury. I don’t know if they have websites, but most of the buses leave in the late afternoon, like between 4-6.
Same for returning to D.F. or traveling around Chiapas – avoid the first class buses. Combis, small passenger vans, go everywhere.

Palenque

Once you are in small towns, the second class bus companies are much easier to find. Palenquein particular seemed to be quite a hub. I saw buses for Cancun and all points in between for very cheap, like 300 pesos. Also combis go everywhere from here.
It’s true that Mexico’s first class buses are incomparably luxurious, with big reclining seats and free food. But you will pay!

Surf Puerto Escondido on Vimeo Vimeo is the home for high-quality videos and the people who love them. vimeo.com/47143959

Surf Puerto Escondido from Lorena Gonzalez & Pierre Rouault on Vimeo.

Con Gas En Oaxaca | SURFER Magazine Puerto Escondido performs in the swell of the summer. ... Carlotta's Wake. After a devastating hurricane, Puerto Escondido lifeguards begin to rebuild....more ... www.surfermag.com/videos/con-gas-en-oaxaca/

2do Aniversario Vik e Ilce Huatulco 2012

Friday, August 10, 2012

A Guide To Drinking Tequila In Mexico


A Guide To Drinking Tequila In Mexico

tequila While tequila is typically thought of as something you took too many shots of during a crazy night out, the drink actually has a deep cultural meaning, rich history and a proper way to be sipped. To help you get better acquainted with the libation, here is a guide to drinking tequila in Mexico.

History

Originating in the northwestern state of Jalisco, tequila is North America's first distilled and commercially produced alcohol. It is distilled from the blue agave plant, which produces sugar and is native to Jalisco. Tequila's roots reach back into pre-Hispanic times when the Aztecs fermented sap from the local agave plants, long before the Spanish arrived in 1521. Then, when the brandy the Spaniards had brought with them ran out, they began to distill the agave plant to make tequila.

By law, tequila can only be called "tequila" if it is made in Jalisco. The first qualifications for the drink were written in 1947, and have been constantly updated ever since. If you're looking for top-shelf tequila, make sure it's made with 100% blue agave.
How It's Made

According to tequila distillers Daniel Osuna and Alfonso Pelayo Osuna, there is a very specific process for making tequila. First, the agave is cultivated for seven to eight years, before the spines are cut off and the piñas are transported to the distillery. Once this is done, there are four steps in the production process.

1. The piñas are roasted in the oven. This is to change the starch into fermentable sugars and to soften the piñas' texture to be able to extract their juice.

2. Now comes the sugar extraction, where the largest amount of sugar within the agave is extracted.

3. Fermenting is the most important stage in the process for obtaining the desired characteristics of the tequila. The sugar is isolated to allow it to change to alcohol and for the pleasant aromas to appear.

4. Finally, the product is distilled. This is when the tequila is refined for perfect flavor and aroma in oak barrels. The alcohol absorbs the oak, allowing the tequila to have perfect body, softness and texture.

blue agave Classifications

There are two basic classifications of tequila, "100% blue agave" and "tequila mixto" (mixed). Mixed tequila contains at least 51% blue agave, with the rest typically coming from cane sugar. Other ingredients you may find in this type of tequila include caramel color, oak extract flavoring, glycerin, and sugar based syrup. This type does not need to be made in Jalisco. The other classification, 100% blue agave, will read "Tequila 100% de agave" or "Tequila 100% puro de agave" on the bottle. If it simply says "tequila," it's probably mixed.

From the two classifications there are five sub-classifications:
  • Tequila Silver - Blanco - Plata - White - Platinum: This type of tequila is in its purest form. It usually isn't aged, with the true flavors, intensity and sweetness being present.
  • Tequila Gold - Joven - Oro: This type of tequila is usually mixed, with added colors and flavors. Most times, this type of tequila is inexpensive and used for mixed drinks in bars; however, there are exceptions to this, like when silver tequila is mixed with a reposado and/or añejo tequila. By doing this, you're still keeping the product 100% blue agave.
  • Tequila Reposado: Known as an "aged" or "rested" tequila, the drink is aged in wood barrels or storage tanks from anywhere between 2 to 11 months. It's usually gold in color and has flavors of agave and wood. Sometimes, the tequila will be aged in a barrel that once contained a different spirit like whiskey or wine, giving it some of those tastes, as well.
  • Tequila Añejo: This "extra aged" tequila is aged for at least one year. The liquid usually takes on an amber color that is more smooth, dark and complex than the other sub-classifications.
  • Tequila Extra Añejo: Known as "ultra aged," this tequila is aged for three years or more. The extended aging gives it a very dark color, and the flavor is often hard to distinguish between other high-quality aged spirits. After the aging process, distilled water is added to dilute the tequila.
The Difference Between Tequila and Mescal 

Today, majority of mezcal is made in the state of Oaxaca, Mexico. Unlike tequila, there are five varieties of agave mezcal can be distilled from. Additionally, while tequila is double and sometimes triple distilled, mezcal is usually only distilled once to give it a stronger taste. Currently, more than 500 different brands of tequila are on the market, while mezcal boasts only 100.

To make mezcal, the sugar-rich core of the agave plant called the piña, is baked in a rock-lined pit oven over charcoal. It is covered with layers of palm-fiber mats and dirt, giving the drink a strong, smoky flavor. Locals in Oaxaca drink mezcal to calm their minds and lift their spirits, as well as stimulate their creativity. Moreover, the libation is made by hundreds of small family businesses called "palenques," which preserve traditional methods of mezcal production.

barrels How To Sip Tequila

Typically, tequila is sipped slowly and enjoyed without salt and fruit. People began doing shots in this fashion because, in the past, the liquor was so strong drinkers needed to take the salt and lemon or lime to make it smoother. Specifically, tequila used to be made with 55 to 60º of alcohol, while today it is made with 38 to 40º, or 80 proof. To properly enjoy tequila, you should follow these steps:
  • Purchase the bottle of your preference
  • Pour a small portion into a globe glass, which keeps the aromas inside for you to enjoy
  • Swirl the drink around like you would a fine wine
  • Smell the tequila with your left nostril, then with your right nostril, to discover hidden scents
  • Tap a small sip and swirl it around your mouth, swallow and take a deep breath. You'll hopefully be able to taste some flavors of wood andmelchonte, or cooked agave.
  • Drink slowly and enjoy how the flavors and aromas interact with your senses

Distillery Tours

The Tequila Express (or Tequila Train) is a Mexican regional train service that operates from Guadalajara, Jalisco, to the municipality of Amatitán, Jalisco. Why is it called the Tequila Express? Because passengers will be given tequila tastings, ride through blue agave fields and end at the Tequila Herradura distillery at the San José del Refugio Hacienda. Prices are $850 M.N. (about $65 USD) for adults, and $480 M.N. (about $37) for children 12 and under. Children under 5 ride free. You can purchase tickets on Ticketmaster's Mexico website or call 333-818-3802.

[Images via PhotomagMexico Tourism Board, Mexico Tourism Board]

Ernesto weakening over Mexico


Ernesto weakening over Mexico

(0) |
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Image courtesy of Weather Underground
Published: Aug. 9, 2012 at 11:18 PM
MIAMI, Aug. 9 (UPI) -- Tropical Storm Ernesto was weaker but still producing heavy rains as it crossed southern Mexico Thursday night, U.S. forecasters said.
The National Hurricane Center in Miami said in its 11 p.m. EDT advisory that Ernesto, centered about 85 miles south-southwest of Veracruz and about 80 miles north of Oaxaca, was mustering maximum sustained winds of 40 mph as it slid westward at 14 mph, the U.S. forecasters said.
Ernesto's deterioration allowed the Mexican government to drop its tropical storm warning for the country's coastal region.
The hurricane center said Ernesto was expected to dissipate Friday as it moves inland over the high terrain of southern Mexico.
Still, the storm was forecast to drop another 2-5 inches of rain over the Mexican states of Veracruz, Tabasco, Puebla and Oaxaca through Friday night. Forecasters said isolated areas could be inundated with up to 15 inches, however, meaning life-threatening flash floods and mudslides would be possible.
Ernesto made landfall earlier Thursday near the city of Coatzacoals, Mexico, Thursday, sporting winds of 60 mph.
Ernesto made its first of two landfalls Tuesday night as a Category 1 hurricane on the eastern coast of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula before advancing across southern Mexico.


Read more: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2012/08/09/Ernesto-weakening-over-Mexico/UPI-74561344510285/#ixzz23CQzoTYc

New Zapotec Pyramid Found With Vivid Murals, Stacked Tombs


New Zapotec Pyramid Found With Vivid Murals, Stacked Tombs
Democratic Underground
Dating from about A.D. 650 to 850, the funerary complex was part of an elite neighborhood of the Zapotec, an agrarian culture that once thrived throughout what's now the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca (map). "Painted motifs in funerary contexts are ...
See all stories on this topic »

New Zapotec Pyramid Found With Vivid Murals, Stacked Tombs


"No Humans Here"
Photograph courtesy Héctor Montaño, INAH

One of three stacked tombs newly discovered within a pyramid, this vividly painted chamber is unique among ancient Zapotec funerary architecture, Mexican archaeologists announced in late July.

Dating from about A.D. 650 to 850, the funerary complex was part of an elite neighborhood of the Zapotec, an agrarian culture that once thrived throughout what's now the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca (map).

"Painted motifs in funerary contexts are quite usual in this culture," excavation director Nelly Robles García said. "But at other sites they show important people: priests, warriors, and rulers—most likely the deceased."

No humans appear here. Instead, the designs seem to refer to the sacred ritual ball game played by many pre-Hispanic peoples in Mesoamerica. A bit like soccer combined with basketball, the game involved hitting a hard rubber ball around a court, and sometimes ended in sacrificial death for the losers.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/08/pictures/120809-pyramid-zapotec-murals-science-mexico-tombs/