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A trail leading from near St. Louis, Missouri to Natchitoches, Louisiana, teaches us about a race that ruled “the new world” long before people from “the old world” arrived.
Also known as the Aztec Codex, it was created sometime between 1570 and 1595 and shows native Aztec and Nahuatl maps, hieroglyphs and illustrations side-by-side with some text written in Spanish.
The report findings will be highlighted during the Arboretum's National Hispanic Heritage Month programming. More information: Conservation Gap Analysis of Native Mesoamerican Oak, mortonarb.org ...
Girl Scouts from Luzerne County's Back Mountain and surrounding communities are taking part in the annual Camp Mocanaquah ...
An analysis of facial expressions in ancient Mesoamerican sculptures finds that some emotions expressed in these artworks match the emotions that modern US participants would anticipate for each ...
This little-known Native American society was once as powerful as the Aztecs and Incas. The Spiros were once “the single most powerful group ever to exist” in North America.
In 1949, Robert Garrett, Class of 1897, donated 18 Mesoamerican manuscripts and documents to the Princeton University Library (PUL). Spanning from the 16th to 20th centuries, the donation included ...
LISLE, Ill. (Sept. 24, 2024)— Over a third of threatened or understudied oak tree species in Mesoamerica are not held in managed botanical collections anywhere in the world, and for many species ...