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Showing posts from October, 2019

Chichen Itza, Mexico Mayan Ruins photo tour by Steven Skelley and Thomas Routzong

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Chichen Itza, Mexico Mayan Ruins photo tour by Steven Skelley and Thomas Routzong Chichen Itza is one of our favorite archeological sites in Mexico. We have visited several times and enjoyed ourselves each time. We want to return again just to see the evening light displays which we've heard are spectacular. Chichen Itza means the city on the edge of the well of the Itzáes. Cancun means nest of vipers. ​The town of Chichen Itza was built close to two natural cavities (cenotes or chenes) which gave the town its name "At the edge of the well of the Itzaes". The cenotes allowed them to tap into underground water. Chichen Itza is the second most visited archeological site of Mexico today. The Kukulkan Pyramid in Chichen Itza, also known as El Castillo  or The Castle, is one of the new seven wonders of the world. Each equinox, as the sun rises over the horizon, light seems to descend the down the stairway until it reaches the serpent's head.  The design of the s

El Rey Mayan Ruins Photo Tour in Cancun, Mexico by Steven Skelley and Thomas Routzong

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El Rey Mayan Ruins Photo Tour in Cancun, Mexico by Steven Skelley and Thomas Routzong We spent a week at an all-inclusive resort in Cancun, Mexico. We were delighted to discover a Mayan ruins just down the street. The El Rel archeological site is the perfect place for an easy walk through ancient Mayan history. Admission was onlt $3.00 U.S. El Rey reached its peak in the early classical period of 250-600 AD. The first settlers built houses.  Between the years 200 and 1200 AD. the inhabitants of the site worked as fishermen and in salt extraction. In a later period the site gained importance because immigrants arrived from the interior of the Yucatan Peninsula, approximately between 1300 and 1500 AD. The structures that can currently be seen date from then. Within the coastal commercial network El Rey was one of the ports on the Caribbean coast. Other important ports in the south were Xcaret, Xelha, Tulum, and Muyil. After the arrival of the Spaniards in the