Researchers working in Guatemala have found excessive ranges of mercury contamination on the historical Maya metropolis of Ucanal, 280km north-east of Guatemala Metropolis. Recognized in soil samples taken from throughout the town’s core and its water reservoirs, the poisonous steel might have prompted Ucanal’s inhabitants severe well being issues.
“The invention of mercury within the soil and reservoirs was anticipated, however the extent of it was a shock,” says Jean Tremblay, a PhD pupil in anthropology on the Université de Montréal in Canada and lead creator of the analysis paper printed within the Journal of Archaeological Science: Experiences. “What’s explicit to our examine is that we systematically detected mercury all through the town core (close to each elite and non-elite residential zones) and thru your complete occupation historical past of the location. Everybody was uncovered to mercury, no matter social standing.”
Tremblay and his colleagues recognized mercury in dried sediments from three of Ucanal’s historical reservoirs, which collected water that drained from the elements of the town surrounding them. The typical mercury focus in every was at a degree categorised as closely polluted. Past the reservoirs, the workforce discovered the very best focus of mercury in a ceremonial zone on the metropolis’s core, with decrease however nonetheless vital quantities in samples taken from different areas, together with residential zones.
“Our examine reveals that mercury dispersed into the setting was mobilised throughout precipitation occasions and located its means into the reservoirs as particles which accrued on the backside of the reservoirs,” Tremblay says.
Ucanal’s harmful ranges of mercury contamination most likely outcomes from the Maya’s in depth use of cinnabar, a vibrant crimson ore of mercury and sulphur. “Cinnabar was utilized in burial rituals, employed as pigments used to color buildings and as ornamental colouring for luxurious ceramics, engraved bone objects, carved stone ornaments and collectible figurines, and as ritual choices in themselves,” Tremblay explains.
“It’s believed that the Maya used this inorganic substance because of its intense crimson color related to blood and due to this fact to dying and rebirth, an essential a part of Maya cosmology,” he provides. “It differs from different crimson mineral pigments, corresponding to these deriving from iron oxides, in its vibrant purplish shades of crimson.”
The workforce discovered mercury contamination all through the town’s historical past—a interval roughly from 800 BCE to 1521 CE—and observed that its ranges sharply elevated in the course of the ninth century, when Ucanal reached its peak. This will likely have been because of Ucanal having elevated entry to long-distance commerce, Tremblay says, which might have introduced extra mercury to the town.
With mercury such a outstanding characteristic of on a regular basis life, the folks of Ucanal may have been uncovered to the poisonous steel by ingesting water, by chance inhaling or ingesting it when grinding cinnabar, or when touching cinnabar throughout rituals. Nonetheless, it’s troublesome for researchers to know whether or not mercury present in skeletal stays outcomes from environmental publicity throughout life or occurred after dying due to the funerary rituals.
Over latest years, it has grow to be clear that mercury contamination was a widespread drawback for the Maya. “Cinnabar was used all through the traditional Maya world and mercury has been measured in soils at quite a few historical Maya websites,” Tremblay says. One examine, printed within the journal Frontiers in Environmental Science in 2022, lists 9 Maya archaeological websites the place elemental mercury and cinnabar have been discovered. Amongst them was the essential website of Copan in Honduras, the place mercury was recognized in ten contexts.
The workforce will proceed its archaeological work at Ucanal, Tremblay says. “This explicit analysis highlights the likelihood that historical Maya peoples had been dwelling in environments that would pose opposed well being results,” he says. “We intend to research additional the geochemistry of the location to additional doc the traditional native setting.”