Psychoactive and other ceremonial plants from a 2,000-year-old Maya ritual deposit at Yaxnohcah, Mexico
Author:
Lentz David L.ORCID,
Hamilton Trinity L.,
Meyers Stephanie A.,
Dunning Nicholas P.,
Reese-Taylor Kathryn,
Hernández Armando Anaya,
Walker Debra S.ORCID,
Tepe Eric J.ORCID,
Esquivel Atasta Flores,
Weiss Alison A.
Abstract
For millennia, healing and psychoactive plants have been part of the medicinal and ceremonial fabric of elaborate rituals and everyday religious practices throughout Mesoamerica. Despite the essential nature of these ritual practices to the societal framework of past cultures, a clear understanding of the ceremonial life of the ancient Maya remains stubbornly elusive. Here we record the discovery of a special ritual deposit, likely wrapped in a bundle, located beneath the end field of a Late Preclassic ballcourt in the Helena complex of the Maya city of Yaxnohcah. This discovery was made possible by the application of environmental DNA technology. Plants identified through this analytical process included Ipomoea corymbosa (xtabentun in Mayan), Capsicum sp. (chili pepper or ic in Mayan), Hampea trilobata (jool), and Oxandra lanceolata (chilcahuite). All four plants have recognized medicinal properties. Two of the plants, jool and chilcahuite, are involved in artifact manufacture that have ceremonial connections while chili peppers and xtabentun have been associated with divination rituals. Xtabentun (known to the Aztecs as ololiuhqui) produces highly efficacious hallucinogenic compounds and is reported here from Maya archaeological contexts for the first time.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
Seed grant, University of Calgary
Universidad Autónoma de Campeche
Intellectual Property Fund of the University of Cincinnati
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)