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UTSA archaeologists rescue Maya royal vessels missed by looters

Inside the trench with members of his expedition team
Inside the trench with members of his expedition team
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APRIL 2, 2020 — The looters’ trench was not small. And it definitely was not a one-man job. It stretched 4 feet wide and ran over 30 feet deep into an ancient Maya pyramid in Belize. By some miracle—or perhaps, Indiana Jones’ luck—the thieves passed just over a royal tomb with elaborate painted drinking cups used by nobility who ruled the kingdom 1,300 years ago. 

“The looters missed the royal tomb by just a few centimeters,” said Jason Yaeger, the President’s Endowed Professor of Anthropology at UTSA and associate dean of the College of Liberal and Fine Arts, who leads a team of researchers with M. Kathryn Brown, the Lutcher Brown Professor of Anthropology. 

Archaeologists at UTSA now have the opportunity to study the royal tomb’s precious objects. Yaeger and Brown take groups of anthropology students to Belize each summer for archaeological field work. 

“The research opportunities and real-world applications that our students get working with us is priceless for them,” Yaeger said. 

In July 2018 they were wrapping up their research at a site called Buenavista—the UTSA team discovered that its ancient Maya name was Komkom—when they made an exciting find. 

“While excavating in the looters’ trench, one of the local men who works with us scraped his trowel across the trench’s floor. That’s where we found a layer of flint flakes,” said Yaeger. 


“This is one of the most exciting finds for our UTSA team. These items are priceless to us…for what they will tell us about the ancient Maya.”



Reading Mayan Symbols