WHAT DOES THE PAST MEAN
TO PEOPLE TODAY?
DR SARAH KURNICK
Mario and Lorenzo excavating at Punta Laguna, Yucatán, Mexico. Photo credit: Conrad Erb
WHAT DOES THE PAST
MEAN TO PEOPLE TODAY?
WHO WE ARE AND HOW WE LIVE IN
OUR BELIE FS ABO UT THE PAST HELP DEFI NE
T PROF ESSO R OF ANTH ROPO LOGY
THE PRES ENT. DR SARA H KURN ICK, ASSI STAN
, IN THE US, STUD IES HOW ANC IENT
AT THE UNIV ERSI T Y OF COLO RADO BOU LDER
PERC EIVE D THEI R OWN HIST ORY. THE
MAYA PEOP LES AT PUN TA L AGU NA, MEXI CO,
AY A KEY ROLE IN THIS RESE ARCH ,
MAYA WHO LIVE IN PUN TA L AGU NA TODAY PL
ICAT ING THEI R OWN HERI TAGE
DISC OVER ING, INTE RPRE TING AND COM MUN
TALK LIKE AN
ARCHAEOLOGIST
ANCIENT MAYA – The ancient Maya
flourished in Mesoamerica (contemporary
Belize, Guatemala, and parts of Mexico,
Honduras and El Salvador) between about
1800 BCE and 1500 CE. The descendants of
the ancient Maya continue to live in this region
and to speak Mayan languages
CLASSIC PERIOD – The period from about
250 to 925 CE when divine kingship was at its
height. This is when we most commonly see the
erection of stelae (stone slabs) with detailed
hieroglyphic inscriptions, and when we see the
peak of famous sites like Tikal
POSTCLASSIC PERIOD – The period
from about 925 to 1500 CE when many of
the Classic period dynasties ended, leading to
more decentralised political structures and less
inequality
CIST – a burial chamber
POLITY – a political entity
Archaeology is the study of the human past
through material remains. Digging for ancient
artefacts may seem innocuous, but archaeology
has been political from its beginnings. In
some instances, nations have claimed roots in
early complex polities like Rome to legitimise
contemporary political goals, especially
imperialist expansion. In other instances,
archaeologists have excavated the graves of
indigenous peoples without consideration for
the wishes of their descendants or have taken
home their finds without obtaining permission
from, or compensating, local people. Too often,
archaeologists have used data collected about past
peoples to benefit themselves and archaeology,
and not descendent communities.
To combat this history of injustice, many
modern archaeologists, like Dr Sarah Kurnick
at the University of Colorado Boulder, practise
community archaeology, where archaeological
research is done with, by and for local people.
THE IMPORTANCE OF COMMUNITY
ARCHAEOLOGY
Located in the jungle of the Yucatán Peninsula in
Mexico, Punta Laguna is a small Maya village and
spider monkey reserve. The Maya who live there
today are descendants of the ancient Maya who
lived in the same region over a thousand years ago.
Sarah and her colleague, David Rogoff of the
University of Pennsylvania, are co-directors
of the Punta Laguna Archaeology Project, a
community-led excavation that aims to learn
more about the people who once lived in Punta
Laguna. This project is an example of community
archaeology, where the members of the modern
Maya community of Punta Laguna make
decisions about research questions, excavations,
interpretation of evidence and presentation of
findings. The goal is for Maya peoples to take
charge of their own history and lead the research
into their own ancestors.
Today, Punta Laguna is a tourist attraction, where
visitors can explore the archaeological site to learn
about the ancient Maya, go on a tour of the spider
monkey reserve, canoe across the lagoon and
experience contemporary Maya culture. These
activities are all run by and benefit members of
the local community. One of Sarah’s goals is
to help tour guides give visitors comprehensive
information about the site’s archaeology. In this
way, community archaeology helps participants
control narratives about their past while also
providing economic benefits for the village.
Not only is community archaeology a moral and
ethical imperative but incorporating different
viewpoints into the research agenda also makes
for better science. Local people will have practical
and cultural knowledge of archaeological sites that
help them frame important research questions
and propose new interpretations. “This project
could not exist without the expertise of local
community members,” Sarah explains. “They
advise us on everything from the nature of
political authority among contemporary Maya
peoples, to which snakes are poisonous.”
THE ANCIENT MAYA OF PUNTA LAGUNA
Like nearby Cobá, one of the largest ancient
Maya cities ever built, Punta Laguna was
DR SARAH KURNICK
Assistant Professor of Anthropology,
University of Colorado Boulder, USA
FIELD OF RESEARCH
Anthropological archaeology
RESEARCH PROJECT
How did Postclassic Maya communities at
Punta Laguna interact with their Classic
Maya past?
occupied continuously during the Late Classic
and Postclassic periods. Nevertheless, both
sites experienced a profound reduction in size
and population during the Classic to Postclassic
transition. Sarah is studying how the Postclassic
Maya perceived their own past. Did they look
back on the Classic period as a golden era, or did
they distance themselves from their history? Did
Postclassic inhabitants at Punta Laguna venerate,
destroy or ignore the buildings, monuments
and objects constructed by their Classic
period ancestors?
So far, members of the Punta Laguna
Archaeology Project have documented over
200 structures at the site. “Some of these are
just above ground level, while the tallest reach
over 6m in height,” says Sarah. Many of the
structures are solid platforms built of stone
that would have supported buildings made from
perishable materials, like wood. They may have
been houses, religious buildings or administrative
centres. Miniature masonry shrines are also
common. These one-room stone buildings
are too small to enter and may have been
the locations of deity or ancestor veneration.
Similar shrines have been found at Cobá and
at several Maya sites on the east coast of the
Yucatán Peninsula.
The team’s excavations have also uncovered
numerous artefacts, the most common being
pieces of ceramic vessels. Obsidian blades, most
likely imported from present-day Guatemala,
and marine shells, imported from the coast,
indicate ancient trade links with Punta Laguna.
“Most surprisingly,” Sarah says, “we have
excavated an empty cist with two complete
vessels, pieces of pyrite and greenstone, and a
burial with the remains of two individuals.”
The team’s research so far suggests that the
Postclassic occupants of Punta Laguna revered
their Classic past. “In one instance, Postclassic
people seem to have built a small mound to
ceremonially bury two ceramic vessels made
during the Classic period,” says Sarah. “We are
still working to understand what the site of Punta
Laguna reveals more broadly about Postclassic
Maya political authority, following the major
social transformations that accompany the
transition to the Postclassic period.” Sarah and
the team will need at least one more field season
before they can make more interpretations.
MANIPULATING THE PAST TO CONTROL
THE PRESENT
Controlling the image of the past has been
a political tool in ancient cultures and is still
witnessed today. Consequently, defacing
monuments of past public figures is a tradition
stretching back thousands of years.
The ancient Akkadians of Mesopotamia defaced
a bronze likeness of the historical King Sargon
of Akkad. The Mesoamerican Olmec disfigured
colossal basalt portrait heads of past rulers.
The ancient Romans even had a formal process
called damnatio memoriae, where all images
of a condemned individual were destroyed.
And today, activists in the US pull down and
deface monuments of Confederate leaders and
FUNDER
National Science Foundation (NSF)
other controversial figures such as Christopher
Columbus, to protest continuing systemic
racism. People of all cultures are concerned
with how to present the past, what should be
remembered, and how.
The presentation of the past is sensitive because
beliefs about a community’s origins and history
justify political choices made today. A ruler
may use images of successful conquerors of the
past to legitimise their own military campaigns.
Claims that indigenous peoples lack a sense of
national identity or are simply extinct rationalise
denial of their sovereignty and their exclusion
from political power.
Sarah’s project explores the manipulation of the
past at Punta Laguna, for both its Postclassic
and contemporary residents. What was the
relationship between the Postclassic people
of Punta Laguna and their Classic heritage?
How did they perceive the decline of the
nearby city of Cobá? How will giving control of
today’s archaeological research to the modern
inhabitants of Punta Laguna help them shape
their present? Like their Postclassic ancestors,
the modern people of Punta Laguna must have
the freedom and power to investigate, interpret
and communicate their history to others.
Archaeology can aid them in doing so.
ABOUT ARCHAEOLOGY
‘Material culture’ refers to human-made
artefacts (e.g., pottery and clothing), art and
even the rubbish dumped by ancient societies,
as well as human-driven environmental changes
such as irrigation and domestication of animals.
It also includes the social behaviours associated
with these objects and practices. Archaeologists
find, catalogue and interpret material culture
with the aim of understanding what life was like
for past societies.
describes a day of work at Punta Laguna: “We
wake up early and start working as soon as it is
light enough to see. It is hot, and there are a lot
of bugs and snakes. Sometimes there are also
spider monkeys watching us. To excavate, we
start by clearing vegetation from an area with
machetes. We then lay out excavation units
with string and wooden stakes, usually in 2 m
by 2 m squares. We use trowels to remove the
dirt within each square in 10 cm layers. We
excavate very slowly and keep detailed records
including notes, drawings, photographs and
GPS points. All dirt removed from the units
is screened through mesh and all artefacts
are taken back to a lab house. There, we wash
them, dry them, label them, count them, weigh
them, describe them, and photograph them.”
A DAY ON A DIG
Excavations, or ‘digs’, are a key part of
archaeological research, allowing archaeologists
to uncover the remains of past societies. Sarah
THE POWER OF THE PAST
Community archaeology harnesses the power
of storytelling about the past to create a more
just present. Powerful groups in society can use
Archaeology, which in the US is a subfield of
anthropology, is the study of the human past
through material remains. While historians
read ancient texts to understand the past,
archaeologists examine the structures and
objects our ancestors left behind.
EXPLORE A CAREER IN ARCHAEOLOGY
•
Sarah recommends visiting the website of the Archaeological Institute of America
(www.archaeological.org) if you want to learn more about the field. It contains articles about
careers in archaeology, information about what to do if you think you have discovered an
archaeological artefact, and archaeology lesson plans for schools. It also features interactive
digs, where you can follow excavations taking place around the world.
• The Society for American Archaeology (www.saa.org) also has a wealth of information about
archaeology, including resources for schools and information about careers.
• Archaeologists do not spend all their time excavating ancient sites in exotic locations! They
also work in laboratories, analysing the artefacts they uncover to understand what they
represent about past societies and cultures. Archaeologists who work in universities also
teach students, ensuring the next generation of archaeologists are equipped to conduct
high-quality, ethical research.
•
Many archaeologists work in ‘cultural resource management’. This subfield includes
managing museum collections, developing educational resources about the human past,
evaluating construction sites for potential archaeological finds before work begins, and
working for government agencies and non-profit organisations that preserve heritage sites.
SARAH’S TOP TIPS
01 Develop relationships with archaeologists (in universities, museums, government
agencies, etc.) who can mentor and encourage you. I could not have succeeded without the
support of several people who believed in and helped me.
02 Look for internships and field opportunities that you can participate in.
claims about the past to legitimise social and
economic inequalities. And marginalised groups
can reclaim power and upend social hierarchies
by building their own narratives. Archaeologists
have a moral imperative to work with, not
around, local communities when interpreting
their history.
Far from being merely a study of dusty
artefacts without impact on the present day,
archaeology is a tool for social change. “We
need to consider who communicates the past
– who decides what is included in history books
and who is memorialised in monuments,” Sarah
says. “Just imagine how our understanding
of history might change if it was told by the
marginalised rather than the powerful.”
PATHWAY FROM
SCHOOL TO
ARCHAEOLOGY
• Sarah recommends taking anthropology
courses as soon as you can. If these aren’t
available, history courses will be useful,
especially those that focus on regions
outside Europe.
• In the US, many universities offer
degrees in anthropology which will
allow you to major in archaeology. In
other countries, specialised archaeology
degrees may be available. Most practising
archaeologists will have a master’s degree
or PhD in archaeology or anthropology.
• Archaeology apprenticeships are
available in some countries, providing
a practical, hands-on route into the
profession. For example, Historic England
provides a range of heritage-related
apprenticeships (www.historicengland.org.
uk/services-skills/training-skills/workbased-training/heritage-apprenticeships).
• Having relevant work experience will be
a benefit when applying for university or
an archaeology job. Look for opportunities
to participate in digs as soon as possible
and reach out to local archaeological
societies and museums to enquire about
excavations and internships.
HOW DID SARAH BECOME
AN ARCHAEOLOGIST?
HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO BE
AN ARCHAEOLOGIST?
I’ve always been interested in the past. When
I went to college, I thought I was going to
study history. Then I started taking classes in
anthropology and archaeology and realised
that archaeology was a better fit for me. I
like working with objects instead of texts and
appreciate being able to do research outside.
WHY DO YOU FIND THE ANCIENT
MAYA SO FASCINATING?
The Maya area was one of a handful of
regions in the world where individuals
independently developed agriculture as a
means of subsistence, established large,
sedentary centers, and developed socially
complex, hierarchical societies. This makes the
ancient Maya a fantastic example of arguably
A spider monkey at Punta Laguna.
Photo credit: Conrad Erb
the most important change in all of human
history: the transformation of small, nomadic,
largely egalitarian groups into large, settled,
hierarchical societies.
WHAT IS YOUR FAVOURITE
FIELDWORK MEMORY?
I always love interacting with children at Punta
Laguna, especially the young girls, and giving
them tours of our lab house and showing them
the artefacts we have excavated.
WHAT DO YOU MOST ENJOY
ABOUT YOUR WORK AS AN
ARCHAEOLOGIST? AND WHAT DO
YOU FIND MOST CHALLENGING?
I enjoy fieldwork the most. There is something
incredibly compelling about seeing an object
no one else has seen for hundreds, if not
Roberto and Mario excavating at Punta Laguna.
Photo credit: Conrad Erb
thousands, of years. Fieldwork is also the
most challenging part of the job. The logistics,
such as getting permission from foreign
governments and securing grant money, are
often very difficult and time-consuming. But
the effort is worth it!
WHAT HAS BEEN THE HIGHLIGHT OF
YOUR CAREER SO FAR, AND WHAT
ARE YOUR AMBITIONS FOR THE
FUTURE?
Being hired as an assistant professor of
anthropology at the University of Colorado
Boulder has definitely been a highlight! In
the future, I hope to get tenure [a permanent
position] and to continue the Punta Laguna
Archaeological Project over the long term.
Lorenzo, Mario, Ignacio and Yordi on their way
to the excavation area. Often, local dogs join in!
Photo credit: Conrad Erb
ARCHAEOLOGY WITH
DR SARAH KURNICK
TALKING POINTS
KNOWLEDGE
1. What defines the Maya Classic and Postclassic periods?
2. How are excavations conducted at Punta Laguna?
3. What do the obsidian and shell artefacts found at Punta Laguna tell
archaeologists about the site?
COMPREHENSION
4. How can archaeology be used either to justify or combat inequality?
5. Why is the modern community of Punta Laguna essential for the Punta
Laguna Archaeology Project?
6. And how are they benefitting from the project?
APPLICATION
7. Community archaeology engages non-specialists in a field that requires
formal training and education. What other fields could benefit from
involving local communities?
EVALUATION
8. Do you think there are objective truths about the past? Why, or why
not?
9. Should anyone be free to practise archaeology, or do we need
qualifications and regulations to make sure heritage is handled
professionally and with care?
CREATIVITY
10. What monument would you build to commemorate your community’s
history or values?
11. Imagine you are an archaeologist planning your next dig. Where are
you going, what do you want to discover and how will you involve local
communities in your research?
12. “Just imagine how our understanding of history might change if it was
told by the marginalised rather than the powerful.” What do you think
the world would look like today, if history was written by those who are
marginalised and oppressed?
HEAD TO SARAH’S FUTURUM WEBPAGE FOR A SPANISH
VERSION OF HER ARTICLE AND ACTIVITY SHEET:
www.futurumcareers.com/what-does-the-past-mean-to-people-today
ACTIVITIES YOU CAN DO AT
HOME OR IN THE CLASSROOM
1. The transition between the Maya Classic and Postclassic
periods has often been described as a ‘collapse’, when the
more complex and more hierarchical society transitioned
to a less complex way of life. Research the Classic and
Postclassic periods and create a short presentation explaining
their similarities and differences to your classmates. Do you
agree that the transition between these periods represents a
collapse?
2. In recent years, statues and monuments to historical figures
across the US have been defaced and toppled in response
to modern racial inequality. Read this article Sarah wrote
for The Conversation about how this is an ancient method
of redefining the past: www.theconversation.com/ancientcancel-cultures-the-defacement-of-statues-in-americareplicates-a-tradition-going-back-millennia-142029
Then, organise a class debate about the role of statues and
monuments. Considering ancient and modern examples,
discuss whether and how significant people should be
remembered and celebrated.
MORE RESOURCES
• Learn more about Punta Laguna:
www.puntalagunamx.com
• Watch Sarah’s TED talk about the dangers of pseudoarchaeology, ‘Aliens built the pyramids and other
absurdities of pseudo-archaeology’:
www.ted.com/speakers/sarah_kurnick
• Sapiens is an online magazine about anthropology and
archaeology, full of interesting articles: www.sapiens.org
A community meeting at Punta Laguna. Photo credit: Conrad Erb
David and Ignacio excavating at Punta Laguna. Photo credit: Conrad Erb
Yordi and Armando excavating at Punta Laguna. Photo credit: Conrad Erb
The lab house at Punta Laguna, where project members wash, photograph, count,
and weigh artefacts recovered during excavations. Photo credit: Conrad Erb
A miniature masonry shrine at Punta Laguna. Photo credit: Conrad Erb
Project members walking through the jungle to reach one of the structures in
Punta Laguna. Photo credit: Conrad Erb
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