Vol. 27 / No. 3

By: Elin C. Danien

Send Me Mr. Burkitt…Some Whisky and Wine!: Early Archaeology in Central America

At the end of the last century, the pre-Columbian ruins of Mexico and Gua­temala attracted adven­turers and archaeologists whose names […]

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Vol. 39 / No. 3

By: Elin C. Danien

The Ritual on the Ratinlixul Vase: Pots and Politics in Highland Guatemala

One of the ironies of archaeology is that as it has matured and changed from what was called “antiquarianism” to […]

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Vol. 43 / No. 3

By: Elin C. Danien

Chicken Soup and Canvas Bags: Advice for the Field

Today when the Internet is almost ubiqui­tous and air travel is as common as a walk down the lane, it’s […]

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Vol. 45 / No. 2

By: Elin C. Danien

Food Notes: Yom Yom Cacao!: A Favorite Maya Drink Lives On

  One of the most important choc­oholics who ever lived was, argu­ably, Carl von Linné, the 18th-century Swedish scientist who created the […]

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Vol. 46 / No. 1

By: Elin C. Danien

On the Dilemma of a Horn: The Horned Shamans of West Mexico

In one of the Wall cases of the Penn Museum’s Mesoamerican Gallery two small figures curl and turn around each […]

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Vol. 47 / No. 3

By: Elin C. Danien

A Ritual Vessel in a Maya Cave: Chocolate-Loving Monkeys and Humans: What in the World

Caves in the Alta Verapaz region of Guatemala were frequently used for rituals and burials by the ancient Maya. This cylindrical […]

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Vol. 48 / No. 1

By: Elin C. Danien

Caroline Dosker: She Dusted the Mummies: Portrait

For many of us who knew her, Caroline Dosker’s death on June 26, 2005, marked the end of a more […]

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Vol. 50 / No. 2

By: Elin C. Danien

Treasure in the Stable: The Long Lost Papers of Robert Burkitt: Field Experience

Eccentrics abound among the explorers, adventurers, and archaeologists who have contributed to Mesoamerican archaeology. One who has intrigued me for […]

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Vol. 51 / No. 1

By: Elin C. Danien

Painted Metaphors: Politics and Pottery of the Ancient Maya

Pottery and Politics of the Ancient Maya features a unique collection of Maya artifacts, including the Chama polychrome ceramic cylinders, […]

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Vol. 51 / No. 1

By: Elin C. Danien

Maya Home and Hearth: From the Archives

  Robert Burkitt, who was Penn Museum’s “man in Guatemala” from 1912 to 1937, had an insatiable curiosity bout all […]

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Vol. 51 / No. 1

By: Elin C. Danien

Mirroring the Maya: From the Guest Editor

Not too long ago the Maya were thought of as an enigmatic people who had inhabited a large portion of […]

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