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Teotihuacan

Index Teotihuacan

Teotihuacan, (in Spanish: Teotihuacán), is an ancient Mesoamerican city located in a sub-valley of the Valley of Mexico, located in the State of Mexico northeast of modern-day Mexico City, known today as the site of many of the most architecturally significant Mesoamerican pyramids built in the pre-Columbian Americas. [1]

497 relations: Acanceh, Acapulco, Acolhuacan, AD 1, AD 100, Adela Breton, Agriculture in Mexico, Agua Hedionda Spa, Aguamiel, Altar de Sacrificios, Altavista (Zacatecas), Altun Ha, Americas, Amparo Museum, Ana Karen Allende, Anabel Ford, Anahuacalli Museum, Ancient Aliens, Ancient history, Ancient Maya art, Apartment, Apaxco, Apple Maps, Araceli Torres Flores, Arch, Archaeology of the Americas, Architecture of Mexico, Area codes in Mexico by code (500-599), Arqueología Mexicana, Arthur G. Miller, Arturo Ortega Olive, Awaking the Gods: Live in Mexico, Axis mundi, Azcapotzalco, Azcapotzalco (altepetl), Aztec creator gods, Aztec Massacre, Aztec mythology, Aztec mythology in popular culture, Aztec religion, Aztec society, Aztec warfare, Aztecs, Balberta, Balcón de Montezuma, Beatriz de la Fuente, Becan, Bejucal (Mesoamerican site), Benito Juárez, Mexico City, Bilbao (Mesoamerican site), ..., Bosnian pyramid claims, Butterfly, Cañada de la Virgen, Calakmul, Cantona (archaeological site), Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora, Casa Blanca, El Salvador, Censer, Ceramics of indigenous peoples of the Americas, Cerro de la Estrella (archaeological site), Cerro de la Estrella National Park, Cerro de las Mesas, Cerro Gordo, Chaac, Chacmool, Chak Tok Ich'aak I, Chalchihuites Municipality, Chalchiuhtlicue, Chappie Angulo, Chapultepec, Child sacrifice in pre-Columbian cultures, Cholula (Mesoamerican site), Cholula, Puebla, Chunchucmil, Chupícuaro, City, Classic Maya collapse, Classic stage, Classic Veracruz culture, Codex Xolotl, Colima, Copán, Copilco, Costa Grande of Guerrero, Coverage of Google Street View, Coydog, Coyote, Criticism of Walmart, Crystal skull, Cuahilama, Cuicuilco, Cuitzeo, David Carrasco, David Keys (author), De Young Museum, Demographics of Oaxaca, Detailed logarithmic timeline, Disappearance of Federico Tobares, Dogs in Mesoamerica, Dogs in Mesoamerican folklore and myth, Doris Heyden, Dumbarton Oaks, Dzibanche, Earth structure, Ecatepec de Morelos, Eccentric flint, Economy of Prehispanic Mexico, Economy of the Maya civilization, Eduardo Matos Moctezuma, Eduardo Pareyón Moreno, El Cerrito (archaeological site), El Perú (Maya site), El Tajín, El Zotz, Engineering, Eruviel Ávila Villegas, Esther Pasztory, Expedition Unknown, Face Off (season 7), Feathered Serpent, Federal electoral districts of Mexico, Football, Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills), Francisco Goitia, Fred Friedrich, Frida Kahlo Museum, Geography of Mesoamerica, George Cowgill, Giovanni Francesco Gemelli Careri, Graciela Salicrup, Great Goddess of Teotihuacan, Great Pyramid of Cholula, Greater Mexico City, Grid plan, Guardians of Ga'Hoole, Guaytán, Guerrero, Guiengola, Guillermina Dulché, Handcrafts of Guerrero, Harry Kipling, Helen Perlstein Pollard, Heriberto Juárez, Hill people, Historical urban community sizes, History of art, History of engineering, History of Latin America, History of Mexico City, History of Native Americans in the United States, History of painting, History of swimming, History of Texas, History of the Americas, History of the city, History of the United States, History of the world, Holmul, Holy city, Huamango, Huamantla, Huandacareo, Huapalcalco, Huastec people, Human sacrifice in Aztec culture, Human trophy taking in Mesoamerica, Ignacio Bernal, Ihuatzio (archaeological site), Index of Mexico-related articles, Indigenous peoples of Mexico, Indigenous peoples of the Americas, Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Isthmian script, Itzam K'an Ahk I, Itzam K'an Ahk II, Ixcateopan (archaeological site), Iximche, Ixtenco, Iztapalapa, Jago Cooper, Jaguars in Mesoamerican cultures, Jaime Lagunez, Jalisco, Jalpan de Serra, James W. 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Acosta, Jorge Reyes (musician), K'inich Yax K'uk' Mo', K'inich Yo'nal Ahk I, Kaminaljuyu, Karl Taube, La Noche Triste, La Pintada (archaeological site), La Quemada, La Soledad de Maciel, La Sufricaya, Lake Texcoco, Lake Xochimilco, Language, Laurette Séjourné, León, Guanajuato, Leonardo López Luján, Leopoldo Batres, Lepidoptera, List of archaeoastronomical sites by country, List of archaeological periods (Mesoamerica), List of archaeological sites by continent and age, List of archaeological sites by country, List of cities in the Americas by year of foundation, List of Classical Age states, List of Darkstalkers characters, List of Digging for the Truth episodes, List of largest monoliths, List of Mesoamerican pyramids, List of North American settlements by year of foundation, List of oldest structures in Mexico City, List of places referred to as the Center of the Universe, List of political entities in the 1st century, List of political entities in the 1st century BC, List of political entities in the 2nd century, List of political entities in the 3rd century, List of political entities in the 4th century, List of political entities in the 5th century, List of political entities in the 6th century, List of political entities in the 7th century, List of political entities in the 8th century, List of pre-Columbian cultures, List of pre-Columbian engineering projects in the Americas, List of pre-modern states, List of presidential trips made by Christian Wulff, List of rulers of Copán, List of sovereign states by date of formation, List of sovereign states in 220, List of sovereign states in 221, List of sovereign states in 501, List of sovereign states in 502, List of sovereign states in 503, List of state leaders in the 4th century, List of state leaders in the 5th century, List of states during Late Antiquity, List of states during the Middle Ages, List of street railways in Mexico, List of tallest structures built before the 20th century, List of wars before 1000, List of World Heritage Sites by year of inscription, List of World Heritage Sites in Mexico, List of World Heritage Sites in North America, Liturgical architecture, Lord Fanny, Lost city, Malinalco, Man Finds Food, Manuel Gamio, Margarita Tomb, Marjorie Schick, Mauricio García Vega, Maya architecture, Maya cave sites, Maya ceramics, Maya city, Maya civilization, Maya stelae, McCloud (TV series), Meanings of minor planet names: 293001–294000, Mercury (element), Mesoamerica, Mesoamerican architecture, Mesoamerican ballcourt, Mesoamerican ballgame, Mesoamerican calendars, Mesoamerican chronology, Mesoamerican cosmovision, Mesoamerican languages, Mesoamerican pyramids, Metallurgy in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, Metepec, Metro Indios Verdes, Mexican art, Mexican cuisine, Mexican peso, Mexican wolf, Mexicans, Mexico, Mexico's Next Top Model (cycle 5), Mezcala culture, Mezquital Valley, Mica, Miniature park, Mirrors in Mesoamerican culture, Misantla Totonac, Miss Earth México 2017, Mixe–Zoque languages, Monks Mound, Montana (Mesoamerican site), Monte Albán, Morelia, Morelos, Mundo Perdido, Tikal, Muography, Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino, Museo Popol Vuh, Nahuatl, National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico), Native Americans in the United States, Naucalpan, Nicarao people, Nicolás Moreno (artist), Nopaltepec, State of Mexico, North Acropolis, Tikal, Oaxaca, Oaxaca Valley, Obsidian use in Mesoamerica, Order of Quetzalcoatl, Oryol i Reshka, Oto-Manguean languages, Otomi, Otomi language, Outline of Mexico, Outline of Nicaragua, Oxkintok, Pachuca, Pacific Coast of Mexico, Painting in the Americas before European colonization, Palace of the Parliament, Pan American Games, Pan-American Highway (North America), Patolli, Pedro Armillas, Pelota purépecha, Piedras Negras, Coahuila, Pipil people, Piraña (Efteling), Polygonal masonry, Popocatépetl, Popular fixed markets in Mexico, Porfirio Díaz, Post-classical history, Pre-Columbian art, Pre-Columbian era, Pre-Columbian Mexico, Pseudoarchaeology, Pseudoscientific metrology, Puebla, Pueblo Culhuacán, Pulque, Puppetry, Pyramid, Pyramid of the Moon, Pyramid of the Sun, Pyramidology, Querétaro, Querétaro City, Quetzalcoatl, Quetzalpapálotl, Quinametzin, R. H. Barlow, Rafael Yela Günther, Río Azul, Richard Diehl, Robert E. Lee Chadwick, San Andrés Cholula (municipality), San Andrés Mixquic, San Cristóbal de las Casas, San Gregorio Atlapulco, San Mateo Atenco, San Miguel Ixtapan (archaeological site), San Pedro Cholula, Santa María Atzompa, Santiago Tianguistenco, Sayil, Sculpture, Sentinels of Silence, Sierra Gorda, Singuilucan, Sixto Paz Wells, Siyaj K'ak', Snake worship, Southern Maya area, Spearthrower Owl, Speech scroll, Spider Grandmother, Spring equinox in Teotihuacán, State formation, State of Mexico, Tacubaya, Takalik Abaj, Talud-tablero, Tamuín, Tarascan state, Tarzan and the Mermaids, Tarzan and the Valley of Gold, Tazumal, Tecámac, Tecpatl, Tehuantepec, Temple of the Feathered Serpent, Teotihuacan, Templo Mayor, Teopanzolco, Teotenango, Teotihuacan Ocelot, Teotihuacán Municipality, Tepetlaoxtoc de Hidalgo, Tepotzotlán, Texas, Texas–Indian wars, Texcaltitlán, Texcoco, State of Mexico, The Amazing Race 28, The Amazing Race 3, The Bachelor (season 20), The Lost Charts of Columbus, The Mystery of the Aztec Warrior, The Ragged Edge of Science, The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest, The Unexplained, Tikal, Tikal Temple 33, Tikal Temple IV, Timeline of the Middle Ages, Timequest, Tingambato, Tlaloc, Tlalocan, Tlaxco Municipality, Tlaxcala, Tláhuac, Tollan, Toltec, Toltec Empire, Toluca Valley, Toniná, Totonac, Totonacapan, Tourism in Mexico, Tree of Life (craft), Tres Islas, Trujillo, Peru, Tula (Mesoamerican site), Tula de Allende, Tulancingo, Tultitlán de Mariano Escobedo, Tulum, Uaxactun, Universum (UNAM), Valley of Mexico, Villa del Carbón, Villa Guerrero, State of Mexico, Visual arts by indigenous peoples of the Americas, Wagner Murals, Where the Hell is Matt?, Wolfdog, Xico, State of Mexico, Xitle, Xiuhcoatl, Xochicalco, Xochitecatl, Xolotl, Yahoo! Time Capsule, Yax Nuun Ahiin I, Yaxchilan, Yaxha, Zacatecas City, Zaculeu, Zapotec civilization, Zaragoza Corla, 150, 1905 in archaeology, 1998 World Monuments Watch, 1st century, 1st millennium, 1st millennium BC, 2000 World Monuments Watch, 2004 World Monuments Watch, 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games, 2011 Pan American Games, 2011 Pan American Games torch relay, 2012 phenomenon, 2015 Pan American Games, 2015 Pan American Games torch relay, 250, 303, 374, 378, 439, 4th century, 500 BC, 501, 600, 6th century, 750, 7th century, 901. Expand index (447 more) »

Acanceh

Acanceh is an ancient Maya archaeological site located in Mexico's Yucatán State.

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Acapulco

Acapulco de Juárez, commonly called Acapulco, is a city, municipality and major seaport in the state of Guerrero on the Pacific coast of Mexico, south of Mexico City.

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Acolhuacan

Acolhuacan or Aculhuacan (Nahuatl: ācōlhuahcān) was a pre-Columbian province in the east of the Valley of Mexico, inhabited by the Acolhua.

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AD 1

AD 1 (I), 1 AD or 1 CE is the epoch year for the Anno Domini calendar era.

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AD 100

AD 100 (C) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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Adela Breton

Adela Catherine Breton (31 December 1849 – June 1923) was an English archaeological artist and explorer.

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Agriculture in Mexico

Agriculture in Mexico has been an important sector of the country’s economy historically and politically even though now it accounts for a very small percentage of Mexico’s GDP.

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Agua Hedionda Spa

The Spa of Agua Hedionda (Spanish: "Balneario de Agua Hedionda") is a mineral spring - day spa located in the city of Cuautla, in the state of Morelos, Mexico, about south of Mexico City.

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Aguamiel

Aguamiel (literally agua "water" miel "honey") is the sap of the Mexican maguey plant which is believed to have therapeutic qualities.

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Altar de Sacrificios

Altar de Sacrificios is a ceremonial center and archaeological site of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization, situated near the confluence of the Pasión and Salinas Rivers (where they combine to form the Usumacinta River), in the present-day department of Petén, Guatemala.

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Altavista (Zacatecas)

Alta Vista or Chalchihuites, is an archaeological site near the municipality of Chalchihuites in the Mexican state of Zacatecas, in the northwest of Mexico.

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Altun Ha

Altun Ha is the name given to the ruins of an ancient Mayan city in Belize, located in the Belize District about north of Belize City and about west of the shore of the Caribbean Sea.

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Americas

The Americas (also collectively called America)"America." The Oxford Companion to the English Language.

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Amparo Museum

The Amparo Museum, located in the historic center of Puebla, is one of the most important historical museums in Mexico.

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Ana Karen Allende

Ana Karen Allende is a Mexican artisan from the Mexico City borough of Coyoacán, who specializes in creating rag dolls and soft fabric animals.

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Anabel Ford

Anabel Ford (born 22 December 1951) is an American archaeologist specializing in the study of Mesoamerica, with a focus on the lowland Maya of Belize and Guatemala.

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Anahuacalli Museum

The Museo Diego Rivera Anahuacalli or simply Anahuacalli Museum is a museum located in Coyoacán, in the south of Mexico City.

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Ancient Aliens

Ancient Aliens is an American television series that premiered on April 20, 2010, on the History channel.

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Ancient history

Ancient history is the aggregate of past events, "History" from the beginning of recorded human history and extending as far as the Early Middle Ages or the post-classical history.

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Ancient Maya art

Ancient Maya art refers to the material arts of the Maya civilization, an eastern and south-eastern Mesoamerican culture that took shape in the course of the later Preclassic Period (500 BCE to 200 CE).

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Apartment

An apartment (American English), flat (British English) or unit (Australian English) is a self-contained housing unit (a type of residential real estate) that occupies only part of a building, generally on a single storey.

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Apaxco

Apaxco is a municipality located in the Zumpango Region (northeastern part of the State of Mexico) in Mexico.

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Apple Maps

Apple Maps (or simply Maps) is a web mapping service developed by Apple Inc. It is the default map system of iOS, macOS, and watchOS.

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Araceli Torres Flores

Araceli Torres Flores (born 17 October 1960) is a Mexican politician affiliated with the Labor Party.

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Arch

An arch is a vertical curved structure that spans an elevated space and may or may not support the weight above it, or in case of a horizontal arch like an arch dam, the hydrostatic pressure against it.

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Archaeology of the Americas

The archaeology of the Americas is the study of the archaeology of North America (Mesoamerica included), Central America, South America and the Caribbean.

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Architecture of Mexico

Many of Mexico's older architectural structures, including entire sections of Pre-Hispanic and colonial cities, have been designated World Heritage sites for their historical and artistic significance.

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Area codes in Mexico by code (500-599)

The range of area codes 500-599 is currently reserved for the states of Mexico and Hidalgo.

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Arqueología Mexicana

Arqueología Mexicana (Mexican Archaeology) is a bimonthly magazine published by Editorial Raíces and the Mexican Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (National Institute of Anthropology and History).

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Arthur G. Miller

Arthur G. Miller (born 19 May 1942) is an American art historian, archaeologist and academic.

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Arturo Ortega Olive

Arturo Ortega Olive is the general director for Aerolíneas Ejecutivas.

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Awaking the Gods: Live in Mexico

Awaking the Gods: Live in Mexico is the first live album by the German symphonic metal band Haggard.

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Axis mundi

The axis mundi (also cosmic axis, world axis, world pillar, center of the world, world tree), in certain beliefs and philosophies, is the world center, or the connection between Heaven and Earth.

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Azcapotzalco

Azcapotzalco (Āzcapōtzalco,, from āzcapōtzalli “anthill” + -co “place”; literally, “In the place of the anthills”) is one of the 16 municipalities (municipios) into which Mexico's Mexico City is divided.

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Azcapotzalco (altepetl)

Azcapotzalco was a pre-Columbian Nahua altepetl (state), capital of the Tepanec empire, in the Valley of Mexico, on the western shore of Lake Texcoco.

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Aztec creator gods

In Aztec mythology, the Creator-Gods are the only four sons of the creator couple Ometecuhtli and Omecihuatl "Lord and Lady of Duality", "Lord and Lady of the Near and the Close", "Father and Mother of the Gods", "Father and Mother of us all", who received the gift of the creation to create other living beings without childbearing, they are residing atop a mythical thirty heaven Ilhuicatl-Omeyocan"the place of duality".

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Aztec Massacre

Aztec Massacre is a 2008 television documentary produced by Thirteen/WNET New York and ITVS International and broadcast as part of PBS's Secrets of the Dead series.

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Aztec mythology

Aztec mythology is the body or collection of myths of Aztec civilization of Central Mexico.

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Aztec mythology in popular culture

Figures from Aztec mythology have appeared many times in works of modern culture.

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Aztec religion

The Aztec religion is the Mesoamerican religion of the Aztecs.

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Aztec society

Pre-Columbian Aztec society was a highly complex and stratified society that developed among the Aztecs of central Mexico in the centuries prior to the Spanish conquest of Mexico, and which was built on the cultural foundations of the larger region of Mesoamerica.

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Aztec warfare

Aztec warfare concerns the aspects associated with the militaristic conventions, forces, weaponry and strategic expansions conducted by the Late Postclassic Aztec civilizations of Mesoamerica, including particularly the military history of the Aztec Triple Alliance involving the city-states of Tenochtitlan, Texcoco, Tlacopan and other allied polities of the central Mexican region.

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Aztecs

The Aztecs were a Mesoamerican culture that flourished in central Mexico in the post-classic period from 1300 to 1521.

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Balberta

Balberta is a major Mesoamerican archaeological site on the Pacific coastal plain of southern Guatemala, belonging to the Maya civilization.

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Balcón de Montezuma

Balcón de Montezuma, also known as "Balcon del Chiue" is an archaeological site located at the Alta Cumbre ejido, some south of Ciudad Victoria, in the state of Tamaulipas, México.

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Beatriz de la Fuente

Beatriz Ramírez de la Fuente (6 February 1929 in Mexico City — 20 June 2005 in Mexico City) was a Mexican art historian, notable for her work on pre-Hispanic art in America.

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Becan

Becan (Spanish: Becán) is an archaeological site of the Maya civilization in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica.

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Bejucal (Mesoamerican site)

Bejucal is a Maya archaeological site in the Petén Department of Guatemala.

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Benito Juárez, Mexico City

Benito Juárez, is one of the 16 delegaciones (boroughs) into which Mexico City is divided.

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Bilbao (Mesoamerican site)

Bilbao is a Mesoamerican archaeological site about from the modern town of Santa Lucía Cotzumalguapa in the Escuintla department of Guatemala.

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Bosnian pyramid claims

The 'Bosnian pyramid complex' is a debunked, pseudoarchaeological notion to explain the formation of a cluster of natural hills in central Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Butterfly

Butterflies are insects in the macrolepidopteran clade Rhopalocera from the order Lepidoptera, which also includes moths.

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Cañada de la Virgen

Cañada de la Virgen is an Otomi archaeological site that has been recently excavated.

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Calakmul

Calakmul (also Kalakmul and other less frequent variants) is a Maya archaeological site in the Mexican state of Campeche, deep in the jungles of the greater Petén Basin region.

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Cantona (archaeological site)

Cantona (La casa del sol) is a Mesoamerican archaeological site in Mexico.

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Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora

Don Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora (August 14, 1645 – August 22, 1700) was one of the first great intellectuals born in the Spanish viceroyalty of New Spain.

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Casa Blanca, El Salvador

Casa Blanca is a pre-Columbian Maya archeological site in Chalchuapa, El Salvador.

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Censer

A censer, incense burner or perfume burner (these may be hyphenated) is a vessel made for burning incense or perfume in some solid form.

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Ceramics of indigenous peoples of the Americas

Native American pottery is an art form with at least a 7500-year history in the Americas.

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Cerro de la Estrella (archaeological site)

Cerro de la Estrella is a mesoamerican archaeological site located in southeastern Central Mexico's Valley of Mexico, in the Iztapalapa delegación (borough) of the Mexican Federal District at an elevation of 2460 meters (8070ft) above sea level, hence its Summit is 224 m over the Valley of Mexico level.

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Cerro de la Estrella National Park

Cerro de la Estrella National Park is centered on the Cerro de la Estrella mountain which is located entirely within eastern Mexico City, in the borough of Iztapalapa.

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Cerro de las Mesas

Cerro de las Mesas, meaning "hill of the altars" in Spanish, is an archaeological site in the Mexican state of Veracruz, in the Mixtequilla area of the Papaloapan River basin.

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Cerro Gordo

Cerro Gordo ("Fat Hill" in Spanish) may refer to several places:;Mexico.

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Chaac

Chaac (also spelled Chac or, in Classic Mayan, Chaahk) is the name of the Maya rain deity.

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Chacmool

Chacmool (also spelled chac-mool) is the term used to refer to a particular form of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican sculpture depicting a reclining figure with its head facing 90 degrees from the front, supporting itself on its elbows and supporting a bowl or a disk upon its stomach.

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Chak Tok Ich'aak I

Chak Tok Ich'aak IThe ruler's name, when transcribed, is CHAK-TOK-ICH'A:K, translated "Great Misty? Claw", Martin & Grube 2008, p.28.

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Chalchihuites Municipality

Chalchihuites is a municipality in the Mexican state of Zacatecas in northwest Mexico.

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Chalchiuhtlicue

Chalchiuhtlicue (from chālchihuitl "jade" and cuēitl "skirt") (also Chalciuhtlicue, Chalchiuhcueye, or Chalcihuitlicue) ("She of the Jade Skirt") was an Aztec goddess of water, rivers, seas, streams, storms, and baptism, related to another water god, Chalchiuhtlatonal.

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Chappie Angulo

Chappie Angulo (born 1928) is an American-Mexican painter and illustrator whose work has been recognized with membership in Mexico’s Salón de la Plástica Mexicana.

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Chapultepec

Chapultepec, more commonly called the "Bosque de Chapultepec" (Chapultepec Forest) in Mexico City, is one of the largest city parks in the Western Hemisphere, measuring in total just over 686 hectares (1,695 acres).

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Child sacrifice in pre-Columbian cultures

Tlatelolco. The practice of child sacrifice in Pre-Columbian cultures, in particular Mesoamerican and South American cultures, is well documented both in the archaeological records and in written sources.

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Cholula (Mesoamerican site)

Cholula (Cholōllān) (Spanish) was an important city of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, dating back to at least the 2nd century BCE, with settlement as a village going back at least some thousand years earlier.

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Cholula, Puebla

Cholula (Spanish) is a city and district located in the center west of the state of Puebla, next to the city of Puebla de Zaragoza, in central Mexico.

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Chunchucmil

Chunchucmil was once a large, sprawling pre-Columbian Maya city located in the western part of what is now the state of Yucatán, Mexico.

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Chupícuaro

Chupícuaro is an important prehispanic archeological site from the late preclassical or formative period.

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City

A city is a large human settlement.

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Classic Maya collapse

In archaeology, the classic Maya collapse is the decline of Classic Maya civilization and the abandonment of Maya cities in the southern Maya lowlands of Mesoamerica between the 8th and 9th centuries, at the end of the Classic Maya Period.

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Classic stage

In archaeological cultures of North America, the classic stage is the theoretical North and Meso-American societies that existed between DC 500 and 1200.

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Classic Veracruz culture

Classic Veracruz culture (or Gulf Coast Classic culture) refers to a cultural area in the north and central areas of the present-day Mexican state of Veracruz, a culture that existed from roughly 100 to 1000 CE, or during the Classic era.

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Codex Xolotl

The Codex Xolotl (also known as Codicé Xolotl) is a postconquest cartographic Aztec codex, thought to have originated before 1542.

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Colima

Colima, officially the Free and Sovereign State of Colima (Estado Libre y Soberano de Colima), is one of the 32 states that make up the 32 Federal Entities of Mexico.

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Copán

Copán is an archaeological site of the Maya civilization located in the Copán Department of western Honduras, not far from the border with Guatemala.

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Copilco

Copilco was an important Mesoamerican ceremonial center, southwest of Mexico City, Mexico.

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Costa Grande of Guerrero

Costa Grande of Guerrero is a sociopolitical region located in the Mexican state of Guerrero, along the Pacific Coast.

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Coverage of Google Street View

Google Street View was first introduced in the United States on May 25, 2007, and until November 26, 2008, featured camera icon markers, each representing at least one major city or area (such as a park), and usually the other nearby cities, towns, suburbs, and parks.

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Coydog

A coydog (sometimes called dogote) is a canid hybrid resulting from a mating between a coyote and a dog.

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Coyote

The coyote (Canis latrans); from Nahuatl) is a canine native to North America. It is smaller than its close relative, the gray wolf, and slightly smaller than the closely related eastern wolf and red wolf. It fills much of the same ecological niche as the golden jackal does in Eurasia, though it is larger and more predatory, and is sometimes called the American jackal by zoologists. The coyote is listed as least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature due to its wide distribution and abundance throughout North America, southwards through Mexico, and into Central America. The species is versatile, able to adapt to and expand into environments modified by humans. It is enlarging its range, with coyotes moving into urban areas in the Eastern U.S., and was sighted in eastern Panama (across the Panama Canal from their home range) for the first time in 2013., 19 coyote subspecies are recognized. The average male weighs and the average female. Their fur color is predominantly light gray and red or fulvous interspersed with black and white, though it varies somewhat with geography. It is highly flexible in social organization, living either in a family unit or in loosely knit packs of unrelated individuals. It has a varied diet consisting primarily of animal meat, including deer, rabbits, hares, rodents, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates, though it may also eat fruits and vegetables on occasion. Its characteristic vocalization is a howl made by solitary individuals. Humans are the coyote's greatest threat, followed by cougars and gray wolves. In spite of this, coyotes sometimes mate with gray, eastern, or red wolves, producing "coywolf" hybrids. In the northeastern United States and eastern Canada, the eastern coyote (a larger subspecies, though still smaller than wolves) is the result of various historical and recent matings with various types of wolves. Genetic studies show that most North American wolves contain some level of coyote DNA. The coyote is a prominent character in Native American folklore, mainly in the Southwestern United States and Mexico, usually depicted as a trickster that alternately assumes the form of an actual coyote or a man. As with other trickster figures, the coyote uses deception and humor to rebel against social conventions. The animal was especially respected in Mesoamerican cosmology as a symbol of military might. After the European colonization of the Americas, it was reviled in Anglo-American culture as a cowardly and untrustworthy animal. Unlike wolves (gray, eastern, or red), which have undergone an improvement of their public image, attitudes towards the coyote remain largely negative.

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Criticism of Walmart

Walmart has been criticized by groups and individuals, including labor unions and small-town advocates protesting against Walmart policies and business practices and their effects.

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Crystal skull

The crystal skulls are human skull hardstone carvings made of clear or milky white quartz (also called "rock crystal"), claimed to be pre-Columbian Mesoamerican artifacts by their alleged finders; however, these claims have been refuted for all of the specimens made available for scientific studies.

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Cuahilama

Cuahilama is a Hill and an archaeological site located south east of Santa Cruz Acalpixca, in the Cuahilama neighborhood, near the Xochimilco Archaeological Museum.

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Cuicuilco

Cuicuilco is an important archaeological site located on the southern shore of Lake Texcoco in the southeastern Valley of Mexico, in what is today the borough of Tlalpan in Mexico City.

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Cuitzeo

Cuitzeo (Spanish) (full name Cuitzeo del Porvenir) is a town and municipality located in the north of the Mexican state of Michoacán.

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David Carrasco

Davíd Lee Carrasco (born November 21, 1944) is a Mexican-American academic historian of religion, anthropologist, and Mesoamericanist scholar.

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David Keys (author)

David Keys is archaeology correspondent for the London daily paper, The Independent and has contributed to more than 20 archaeological documentaries and other TV programmes in the US and the UK.

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De Young Museum

The M. H. de Young Memorial Museum, commonly referred as the de Young, is a fine arts museum located in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park, and one of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco along with the Legion of Honor.

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Demographics of Oaxaca

The state of Oaxaca, Mexico has a total population of about 3.5 million, with women outnumbering men by 150,000 and about 60% of the population under the age of 30.

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Detailed logarithmic timeline

This timeline shows the whole history of the universe, the Earth, and mankind in one table.

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Disappearance of Federico Tobares

On June 5, 2013, Argentine chef Federico Tobares disappeared while driving from Puerto Vallarta to Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

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Dogs in Mesoamerica

Various sorts of dogs are known to have existed in prehispanic Mesoamerica, as shown by archaeological and iconographical sources, and the testimonies of the 16th-century Spaniards.

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Dogs in Mesoamerican folklore and myth

Dogs have occupied a powerful place in Mesoamerican folklore and myth since at least the Classic Period right through to modern times.

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Doris Heyden

Doris Heyden (née Heydenreich; June 2, 1905 – September 25, 2005) was a prominent scholar of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures, particularly those of central Mexico.

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Dumbarton Oaks

Dumbarton Oaks is a historic estate in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. It was the residence and garden of Robert Woods Bliss (1875–1962) and his wife Mildred Barnes Bliss (1879–1969).

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Dzibanche

Dzibanche (sometimes spelt Tz'ibanche)Martin and Grube 2000, p. 103.

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Earth structure

An earth structure is a building or other structure made largely from soil.

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Ecatepec de Morelos

Ecatepec, (Spanish once officially Ecatepec de Morelos, is a city and municipality in the State of Mexico. Both are usually known simply as "Ecatepec". The city is practically co-extensive with the municipality, with the city's 2005 population of 1,687,549 being 99.9% of the total municipal population of 1,688,258. The provisional population at the 2010 Census was 1,658,806. The city forms the most populous suburb of Mexico City (Ciudad de México) and the fifteenth suburb in the world in population. It is also Mexico's most populous municipality after Iztapalapa, Mexico City. The name "Ecatepec" is derived from Nahuatl, and means "windy hill" or "hill devoted to Ehecatl." It was also an alternative name or invocation to Quetzalcoatl. "Morelos" is the last name of José María Morelos, a hero of the Mexican War of Independence. Most inhabitants commute to Mexico City for work, and the Mexico City metro subway system was extended into Ecatepec. "San Cristóbal" (Saint Christopher) is the city's patron saint. His feast day is celebrated on July 25 each year. Points of interest include the newest Catholic Cathedral in Mexico, Sagrado Corazón de Jesús, several colonial era churches and the colonel edifice Casa de los virreyes.

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Eccentric flint

An eccentric flint is an elite chipped artifact of an often irregular ('eccentric') shape produced by the Classic Maya civilization of ancient Mesoamerica.

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Economy of Prehispanic Mexico

The first forms of economic organization in prehispanic Mexico were agriculture and hunting activities.

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Economy of the Maya civilization

Economy is conventionally defined as a function for production and distribution of goods and services by multiple agents within a society and/or geographical area.

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Eduardo Matos Moctezuma

Eduardo Matos Moctezuma (born December 11, 1940) is a prominent Mexican archaeologist.

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Eduardo Pareyón Moreno

Eduardo Luis Pareyón Moreno (December 2, 1921 – March 15, 2000) was a Mexican architect and archaeologist.

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El Cerrito (archaeological site)

The Cerrito is an archaeological zone in Queretaro State.

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El Perú (Maya site)

El Perú (also known as Waka'), is a pre-Columbian Maya archeological site occupied during the Preclassic and Classic cultural chronology periods (roughly 500 BC to 800 AD).

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El Tajín

El Tajín is a pre-Columbian archeological site in southern Mexico and is one of the largest and most important cities of the Classic era of Mesoamerica.

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El Zotz

El Zotz is a Mesoamerican archaeological site of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization, located in the Petén Basin region around west of the major center of Tikal and approximately west of Uaxactun.

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Engineering

Engineering is the creative application of science, mathematical methods, and empirical evidence to the innovation, design, construction, operation and maintenance of structures, machines, materials, devices, systems, processes, and organizations.

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Eruviel Ávila Villegas

Eruviel Ávila Villegas (born May 1, 1969) is a Mexican politician, member of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (Partido Revolucionario Institucional, PRI), and the Governor of the State of Mexico from 2011 to 2017.

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Esther Pasztory

Esther Pasztory is a professor of Pre-Columbian art history at Columbia University.

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Expedition Unknown

Expedition Unknown is an American reality television series that premiered on January 8, 2015, on the Travel Channel.

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Face Off (season 7)

The seventh season of the Syfy reality television series Face Off premiered on July 22, 2014.

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Feathered Serpent

The Feathered Serpent was a prominent supernatural entity or deity, found in many Mesoamerican religions.

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Federal electoral districts of Mexico

The federal electoral districts (Spanish: distritos electorales federales) of Mexico are the 300 constituencies or electoral districts into which Mexico is divided for the purpose of federal elections.

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Football

Football is a family of team sports that involve, to varying degrees, kicking a ball with a foot to score a goal.

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Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills)

Forest Lawn Memorial Park – Hollywood Hills is one of the six Forest Lawn cemeteries in Southern California.

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Francisco Goitia

Francisco Bollaín y Goitia García (4 October 1882 – 26 March 1960) was a Mexican artist.

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Fred Friedrich

Fred Friedrich(Alfred Erwin Günter, Friedrich), (Kreuzberg Berlin, 25 January 1943 is a painter, sculptor and German architect whose works of art are linked to Neoexpressionism, flows of the Art Postmodern current emerged in the 80 (Neue Wilde), subsequently to the Abstract expressionism and "Informela Abstraction" (Trachismus) and Avant-garde.

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Frida Kahlo Museum

The Frida Kahlo Museum (Spanish: Museo Frida Kahlo), also known as the Blue House (La Casa Azul) for the structure's cobalt-blue walls, is a historic house museum and art museum dedicated to the life and work of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo.

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Geography of Mesoamerica

The geography of Mesoamerica describes the geographic features of Mesoamerica, a culture area in the Americas inhabited by complex indigenous pre-Columbian cultures exhibiting a suite of shared and common cultural characteristics.

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George Cowgill

George L. Cowgill (born 1929) is an American anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Giovanni Francesco Gemelli Careri

Giovanni Francesco Gemelli Careri (1651–1725) was a seventeenth-century Italian adventurer and traveler.

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Graciela Salicrup

Graciela Beatriz Salicrup López (7 April 1935 – 29 June 1982) was a Mexican architect, archaeologist and mathematician.

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Great Goddess of Teotihuacan

The Great Goddess of Teotihuacan (or Teotihuacan Spider Woman) is a proposed goddess of the pre-Columbian Teotihuacan civilization (ca. 100 BCE - 700 CE), in what is now Mexico.

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Great Pyramid of Cholula

The Great Pyramid of Cholula, also known as Tlachihualtepetl (Nahuatl for "made-by-hand mountain"), is a huge complex located in Cholula, Puebla, Mexico.

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Greater Mexico City

Greater Mexico City refers to the conurbation around Mexico City, officially called Valley of Mexico Metropolitan Area (Zona Metropolitana del Valle de México), constituted by Mexico City itself composed of 16 Municipalities—and 41 adjacent municipalities of the states of Mexico and Hidalgo.

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Grid plan

The grid plan, grid street plan, or gridiron plan is a type of city plan in which streets run at right angles to each other, forming a grid.

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Guardians of Ga'Hoole

Guardians of Ga'Hoole is a fantasy book series written by Kathryn Lasky and published by Scholastic.

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Guaytán

Guaytán is an archaeological site of the Maya civilization in the municipality of San Agustín Acasaguastlán, in the department of El Progreso, in Guatemala.

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Guerrero

Guerrero (Spanish for "warrior"), officially the Free and Sovereign State of Guerrero (Estado Libre y Soberano de Guerrero), is one of the 31 states which, with the Federal District, comprise the 32 Federal Entities of Mexico.

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Guiengola

Guiengola is a Zapotec archeological site located north of Tehuantepec, and southeast of Oaxaca city on Federal Highway 190.

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Guillermina Dulché

Guillermina Dulché is a Mexican painter, whose work has been recognized with membership in the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana.

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Handcrafts of Guerrero

The handcrafts of Guerrero include a number of products which are mostly made the indigenous communities of this Mexican state.

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Harry Kipling

Harry Kipling is a comics character appearing in the British weekly anthology 2000 AD, created by Simon Spurrier and Boo Cook.

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Helen Perlstein Pollard

Helen Perlstein Pollard (born 1946) is an American academic ethnohistorian and archaeologist, noted for her publications and research on pre-Columbian cultures in the west-central Mexico region.

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Heriberto Juárez

Heriberto Juárez (March 16, 1932 – August 26, 2008) was a self-taught Mexican sculptor, known for his depictions of women and animals, especially bulls.

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Hill people

Hill people is a general term for people who live in hills and mountains.

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Historical urban community sizes

These are estimated populations of historical cities over time.

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History of art

The history of art focuses on objects made by humans in visual form for aesthetic purposes.

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History of engineering

The concept of engineering has existed since ancient times as humans devised fundamental inventions such as the pulley, lever, and wheel.

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History of Latin America

The term "Latin America" primarily refers to the Spanish and Portuguese-speaking countries in the New World.

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History of Mexico City

The city now known as Mexico City was founded as Tenochtitlan in 1324 and a century later became the dominant city-state of the Aztec Triple Alliance, formed in 1430 and composed of Tenochtitlan, Texcoco, and Tlacopan.

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History of Native Americans in the United States

The history of Native Americans in the United States began in ancient times tens of thousands of years ago with the settlement of the Americas by the Paleo-Indians.

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History of painting

The history of painting reaches back in time to artifacts from pre-historic humans, and spans all cultures.

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History of swimming

Competitive swimming in Britain started around 1830, mostly using breaststroke.

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History of Texas

The recorded history of Texas begins with the arrival of the first Spanish conquistadors in the region of North America now known as Texas in 1519, who found the region populated by numerous Native American / Indian tribes.

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History of the Americas

The prehistory of the Americas (North, South, and Central America, and the Caribbean) begins with people migrating to these areas from Asia during the height of an Ice Age.

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History of the city

Towns and cities have a long history, although opinions vary on which ancient settlement are truly cities.

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History of the United States

The history of the United States began with the settlement of Indigenous people before 15,000 BC.

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History of the world

The history of the world is the history of humanity (or human history), as determined from archaeology, anthropology, genetics, linguistics, and other disciplines; and, for periods since the invention of writing, from recorded history and from secondary sources and studies.

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Holmul

Holmul is a pre-Columbian archaeological site of the Maya civilization located in the northeastern Petén Basin region in Guatemala near the modern-day border with Belize.

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Holy city

Holy city is a term applied to many cities, all of them central to the history or faith of specific religions.

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Huamango

Huamango is an early Postclassical (Toltec period) archaeological located about 4 kilometers northwest of the modern city of Acambay in the State of Mexico.

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Huamantla

Huamantla (Spanish) is a small city in Huamantla Municipality located in the eastern half of the Mexican state of Tlaxcala.

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Huandacareo

Huandacareo (or Guandacareo) is an archaeological zone located about 60 kilometers north of the city of Morelia, in the state of Michoacán.

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Huapalcalco

Huapalcalco is an archeological site located some 5 kilometers north of Tulancingo in the state of Hidalgo, Mexico.

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Huastec people

The Huastec or Téenek (contraction of Te' Inik, "people from here"; also known as Huaxtec, Wastek or Huastecos), are an indigenous people of Mexico, living in the La Huasteca region including the states of Hidalgo, Veracruz, San Luis Potosí and Tamaulipas concentrated along the route of the Pánuco River and along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico.

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Human sacrifice in Aztec culture

Human sacrifice was common to many parts of Mesoamerica.

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Human trophy taking in Mesoamerica

Most of the ancient civilizations of Mesoamerica such as the Olmec, Maya, Mixtec, Zapotec and Aztec cultures practised some kind of taking of human trophies during warfare.

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Ignacio Bernal

Ignacio Bernal (February 13, 1910 in Paris - January 24, 1992 in Mexico City) was an eminent Mexican anthropologist and archaeologist.

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Ihuatzio (archaeological site)

Ihuatzio is an archeological site located at the southern slopes of "Cerro Tariaqueri", just north of the Ihuatzio town, in the Tzintzuntzan municipality, of Michoacán state.

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Index of Mexico-related articles

The following is an alphabetical Mexico-related index of topics related to the United Mexican States.

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Indigenous peoples of Mexico

Indigenous peoples of Mexico (pueblos indígenas de México), Native Mexicans (nativos mexicanos), or Mexican Native Americans (Mexicanos nativo americanos), are those who are part of communities that trace their roots back to populations and communities that existed in what is now Mexico prior to the arrival of Europeans.

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Indigenous peoples of the Americas

The indigenous peoples of the Americas are the pre-Columbian peoples of the Americas and their descendants. Although some indigenous peoples of the Americas were traditionally hunter-gatherers—and many, especially in the Amazon basin, still are—many groups practiced aquaculture and agriculture. The impact of their agricultural endowment to the world is a testament to their time and work in reshaping and cultivating the flora indigenous to the Americas. Although some societies depended heavily on agriculture, others practiced a mix of farming, hunting and gathering. In some regions the indigenous peoples created monumental architecture, large-scale organized cities, chiefdoms, states and empires. Many parts of the Americas are still populated by indigenous peoples; some countries have sizable populations, especially Belize, Bolivia, Canada, Chile, Ecuador, Greenland, Guatemala, Guyana, Mexico, Panama and Peru. At least a thousand different indigenous languages are spoken in the Americas. Some, such as the Quechuan languages, Aymara, Guaraní, Mayan languages and Nahuatl, count their speakers in millions. Many also maintain aspects of indigenous cultural practices to varying degrees, including religion, social organization and subsistence practices. Like most cultures, over time, cultures specific to many indigenous peoples have evolved to incorporate traditional aspects but also cater to modern needs. Some indigenous peoples still live in relative isolation from Western culture, and a few are still counted as uncontacted peoples.

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Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia

The Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH, National Institute of Anthropology and History) is a Mexican federal government bureau established in 1939 to guarantee the research, preservation, protection, and promotion of the prehistoric, archaeological, anthropological, historical, and paleontological heritage of Mexico.

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Isthmian script

The Isthmian script is a very early Mesoamerican writing system in use in the area of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec from perhaps 500 BCE to 500 CE, although there is disagreement on these dates.

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Itzam K'an Ahk I

Itzam K'an Ahk I (May 22, 626 - November 15, 686) was a king of Maya city Piedras Negras in Guatemala.

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Itzam K'an Ahk II

Itzam K'an Ahk II, also known as Ruler 4, was an ajaw of Piedras Negras, an ancient Maya settlement in Guatemala.

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Ixcateopan (archaeological site)

Ixcateopan is an archaeological site located in the town and municipality of Ixcateopan de Cuauhtémoc, 36 kilometers from Taxco, in the isolated and rugged mountains of the northern part of Guerrero state, Mexico.

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Iximche

Iximche (or Iximché using Spanish orthography) is a Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican archaeological site in the western highlands of Guatemala.

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Ixtenco

Ixtenco is located in Ixtenco Municipality in the southeast of the Mexican state of Tlaxcala.

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Iztapalapa

Iztapalapa is one of the Federal District of Mexico City’s 16 boroughs, located on the east side of the entity.

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Jago Cooper

Jago Cooper (born 1 June 1977) is a British archaeologist and the Curator of the Americas at the British Museum whose career has focused on the archaeology of South America and the Caribbean, in particular the historic effects of climate change on island communities.

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Jaguars in Mesoamerican cultures

The representation of jaguars in Mesoamerican cultures has a long history, with iconographic examples dating back to at least the mid-Formative period of Mesoamerican chronology.

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Jaime Lagunez

Jaime Lagunez is a scientist and activist included by Marquis' of Who's Who in Science and Engineering and Who's Who in the World.

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Jalisco

Jalisco, officially the Free and Sovereign State of Jalisco (Estado Libre y Soberano de Jalisco), is one of the 31 states which, with the Federal District, comprise the 32 Federal Entities of Mexico.

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Jalpan de Serra

Jalpan de Serra (Spanish) is a town in Jalpan de Serra Municipality located in the north of the state of Querétaro, Mexico.

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James W. Washington Jr.

James W. Washington Jr. (November 10, 1909 – June 7, 2000) was an African-American painter and sculptor who grew into prominence in the Seattle, Washington, art community.

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Janet Catherine Berlo

Janet Catherine Berlo is an American art historian and academic, noted for her publications and research into the visual arts heritage of Native American and pre-Columbian cultures.

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January 16

No description.

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Jay Samonie

Rev. Jay Samonie, Ph.

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Jean-Michel Jarre

Jean-Michel André Jarre (born 24 August 1948) is a French composer, performer and record producer.

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Jocotitlán

Jocotitlán is a town and municipality located in the northwestern part of the State of Mexico on the central highlands of the country of Mexico.

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Johann Moritz Rugendas

Johann Moritz Rugendas (29 March 1802 – 29 May 1858) was a German painter, famous for his works depicting landscapes and ethnographic subjects in several countries in the Americas, in the first half of the 19th century.

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Jorge R. Acosta

Jorge R. Acosta (1904–5 March 1975) was a Mexican archaeologist who worked on numerous major archaeological sites in Mesoamerica, including Chichen Itza, Teotihuacán, Oaxaca, Palenque, Monte Albán and Tula.

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Jorge Reyes (musician)

Jorge Reyes (September 24, 1952 – February 7, 2009) was a Mexican ambient electronic musician who incorporated elements of his native Mexican culture into his music.

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K'inich Yax K'uk' Mo'

K'inich Yax K'uk' Mo' ("Great Sun, Quetzal Macaw the First", ruled 426 – c. 437) is named in Maya inscriptions as the founder and first ruler, k'ul ajaw (also rendered k'ul ahau and k'ul ahaw - meaning holy lord), of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization polity centered at Copán, a major Maya site located in the southeastern Maya lowlands region in present-day Honduras.

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K'inich Yo'nal Ahk I

K'inich Yo'nal Ahk I, also known as Ruler 1 (died February 3, 639 AD), was an ajaw of Piedras Negras, an ancient Maya settlement in Guatemala.

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Kaminaljuyu

Kaminaljuyu (pronounced) is a Pre-Columbian site of the Maya civilization that was primarily occupied from 1500 BC to AD 1200.

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Karl Taube

Karl Andreas Taube (born September 14, 1957) is an American Mesoamericanist, archaeologist, epigrapher and ethnohistorian, known for his publications and research into the pre-Columbian cultures of Mesoamerica and the American Southwest.

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La Noche Triste

La Noche Triste ("The Night of Sorrows", literally "The Sad Night") on June 30, 1520, was an important event during the Spanish conquest of Mexico, wherein Hernán Cortés and his invading army of Spanish conquistadors and native allies were driven out of the Mexican capital at Tenochtitlan following the death of the Aztec king Moctezuma II, who had been held hostage by the Spaniards.

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La Pintada (archaeological site)

La Pintada is an archaeological site located some 60 kilometers south of the city of Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, within the “La Pintada” canyon, part of the “Sierra Libre”, a small mountain massif of the coastal plains that extends throughout the Sonoran Desert.

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La Quemada

La Quemada is an archeological site, also known (according to different versions) as Chicomóztoc.

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La Soledad de Maciel

La Soledad de Maciel is a Mesoamerican archeological site located on the Costa Grande of the Mexican state of Guerrero, near Zihuatanejo.

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La Sufricaya

La Sufricaya is an archaeological site of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization, located in the Petén Basin region of present-day Guatemala.

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Lake Texcoco

Lake Texcoco (Lago de Texcoco) was a natural lake within the "Anahuac" or Valley of Mexico.

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Lake Xochimilco

Lake Xochimilco (Xōchimīlco) is an ancient endorheic lake, located in the present-day Borough of Xochimilco in southern Mexico City.

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Language

Language is a system that consists of the development, acquisition, maintenance and use of complex systems of communication, particularly the human ability to do so; and a language is any specific example of such a system.

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Laurette Séjourné

Laurette Séjourné (October 19, 1911 – May 25, 2003) was a Mexican archeologist and ethnologist best known for her study of the civilizations of Teotihuacan and the Aztecs and her theories concerning the Mesoamerican culture hero, Quetzalcoatl.

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León, Guanajuato

León is the most populous city and municipality in the Mexican state of Guanajuato.

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Leonardo López Luján

Leonardo Náuhmitl López Luján (born in Mexico City, 31 March 1964) is an archaeologist and one of the leading researchers of pre-Hispanic Central Mexican societies and the history of archaeology in Mexico.

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Leopoldo Batres

Leopoldo Batres (Ciudad de México, 1852–1926) was a pioneer of the archaeology of Mexico.

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Lepidoptera

Lepidoptera is an order of insects that includes butterflies and moths (both are called lepidopterans).

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List of archaeoastronomical sites by country

This is a list of sites where claims for the use of archaeoastronomy have been made, sorted by country.

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List of archaeological periods (Mesoamerica)

The chronology of Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica is usually divided into the following eras.

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List of archaeological sites by continent and age

This list of archaeological sites is sorted by continent and then by the age of the site.

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List of archaeological sites by country

This is a list of notable archaeological sites sorted by country and territories.

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List of cities in the Americas by year of foundation

This is a list of cities in the Americas (South, Central and North) by founding year and present-day country.

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List of Classical Age states

The classical age (also the classical antiquity, classical period or classical era) is a broad term for a long period of cultural history generally centered on the Mediterranean Sea and Near East, comprising the interlocking ancient civilizations, c. 600 BC to 200 AD.

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List of Darkstalkers characters

This is a list of characters from Capcom's Darkstalkers fighting game series and animated-media franchise, who are either based on various iconic literary and cinematic monsters, or inspired by international mythology and fairy tales.

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List of Digging for the Truth episodes

Digging for the Truth was a History Channel television series.

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List of largest monoliths

This is a list of monoliths organized according to the size of the largest block of stone on the site.

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List of Mesoamerican pyramids

This is a list of Mesoamerican pyramids or ceremonial structures.

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List of North American settlements by year of foundation

This is a list of settlements in North America by founding year and present-day country.

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List of oldest structures in Mexico City

This is a list of the oldest buildings and other structures in Greater Mexico City.

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List of places referred to as the Center of the Universe

Several places on Earth have been given the nickname "Center (or Centre) of the Universe." In addition, several fictional works have described a depicted location as being at the center of the universe.

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List of political entities in the 1st century

;Political entities in the 1st century BC – Political entities in the 2nd century – Political entities by year This is a list of political entities that existed between 1 AD and 100 AD.

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List of political entities in the 1st century BC

;Political entities in the 2nd century BC – Political entities in the 1st century – Political entities by year This is a list of political entities that existed between 100 BC and 1 BC.

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List of political entities in the 2nd century

;Political entities in the 1st century – Political entities in the 3rd century – Political entities by year This is a list of political entities that existed between 101 and 200 AD.

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List of political entities in the 3rd century

This is a list of political entities that existed between 201 and 300 AD.

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List of political entities in the 4th century

;Political entities in the 3rd century – Political entities in the 5th century – Political entities by year This is a list of political entities in the 4th century (301–400) AD.

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List of political entities in the 5th century

;Political entities in the 4th century – Political entities in the 6th century – Political entities by year This is a list of political entities in the 5th century (401–500) AD.

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List of political entities in the 6th century

;Political entities in the 5th century – Political entities in the 7th century – Political entities by year This is a list of political entities in the 6th century (501–600) AD.

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List of political entities in the 7th century

;Political entities in the 6th century – Political entities in the 8th century – Political entities by year This is a list of political entities in the 6th century (601–700) AD.

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List of political entities in the 8th century

;Political entities in the 7th century – Political entities in the 9th century – Political entities by year This is a list of political entities in the 8th century (701–800) AD.

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List of pre-Columbian cultures

This list of pre-Columbian cultures includes those civilizations and cultures of the Americas which flourished prior to the European colonization of the Americas.

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List of pre-Columbian engineering projects in the Americas

Engineering in the Americas before the arrival of Christopher Columbus was advanced in agriculture, hydrology, irrigation systems, transportation, mechanical engineering, civil engineering and astronomy.

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List of pre-modern states

This article lists the many extinct states, countries, nations, empires or territories from Ancient History to just before the Early Modern period, grouped geographically.

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List of presidential trips made by Christian Wulff

This is a list of presidential visits to foreign countries made by Christian Wulff as President of Germany.

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List of rulers of Copán

This is a list of the rulers of the ancient Maya city state Copán (current western Honduras).

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List of sovereign states by date of formation

Below is a list of sovereign states with the dates of their formation (date of their independence or of their constitution), sorted by continent.

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List of sovereign states in 220

(under construction).

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List of sovereign states in 221

(under construction).

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List of sovereign states in 501

No description.

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List of sovereign states in 502

No description.

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List of sovereign states in 503

No description.

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List of state leaders in the 4th century

;State leaders in the 3rd century – State leaders in the 5th century – State leaders by year This is a list of state leaders in the 4th century (301–400) AD.

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List of state leaders in the 5th century

;State leaders in the 4th century – State leaders in the 6th century – State leaders by year This is a list of state leaders in the 5th century (401–500) AD.

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List of states during Late Antiquity

Late Antiquity is a historiographical term for the historical period from c. 200 AD to c. 700 AD, which marks the transition from Classical Antiquity to the Middle Ages.

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List of states during the Middle Ages

Post-classical history (also called the Post-classical Era) is the period of time that immediately followed the end of ancient history.

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List of street railways in Mexico

This is a list of street railways in Mexico by state.

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List of tallest structures built before the 20th century

List of pre-twentieth century structures by height ! Some building may be left and that will be added after.

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List of wars before 1000

This is a list of wars that began before 1000 AD. Other wars can be found in the historical lists of wars and the list of wars extended by diplomatic irregularity.

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List of World Heritage Sites by year of inscription

This is a list of the UNESCO World Heritage Sites around the world by year of inscription.

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List of World Heritage Sites in Mexico

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Sites are places of importance to cultural or natural heritage as described in the UNESCO World Heritage Convention, established in 1972.

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List of World Heritage Sites in North America

Below is a list of the UNESCO World Heritage Sites located in North America.

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Liturgical architecture

Liturgical architecture refers to religious structures, forms, spaces and orders.

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Lord Fanny

Lord Fanny is a fictional character in the comic book series The Invisibles, a series published by DC Comics as a part of that company's Vertigo imprint.

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Lost city

A lost city is a settlement that fell into terminal decline and became extensively or completely uninhabited, with the consequence that the site's former significance was no longer known to the wider world.

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Malinalco

Malinalco (Malinalco.ogg) is the municipality inside of Ixtapan Region, is a town and municipality located 65 kilometers south of the city of Toluca in the south of the western portion of the State of Mexico.

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Man Finds Food

Man Finds Food (currently called Secret Eats) is an American food reality television series that premiered on the Travel Channel on April 1, 2015.

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Manuel Gamio

Manuel Gamio (1883–1960) was a Mexican anthropologist, archaeologist, sociologist, and a leader of the indigenismo movement.

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Margarita Tomb

The Margarita Tomb, also known as The Queens tomb, lies buried deep in the center of the Late Classic Acropolis of Copán, Honduras.

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Marjorie Schick

Marjorie Schick (August 29, 1941 – December 17, 2017) was an innovative American jewelry artist and academic who taught art for 50 years.

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Mauricio García Vega

Mauricio García Vega is a Mexican painter whose work has been recognized by various awards and membership in the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana.

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Maya architecture

A unique and intricate style, the tradition of Maya architecture spans several thousands of years.

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Maya cave sites

Maya cave sites are caves used by and associated with the Maya civilization of pre-Columbian Mesoamerica.

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Maya ceramics

Maya ceramics are ceramics produced in the Pre-Columbian Maya culture of Mesoamerica.

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Maya city

Maya Cities were the centres of population of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization of Mesoamerica.

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Maya civilization

The Maya civilization was a Mesoamerican civilization developed by the Maya peoples, and noted for its hieroglyphic script—the only known fully developed writing system of the pre-Columbian Americas—as well as for its art, architecture, mathematics, calendar, and astronomical system.

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Maya stelae

Maya stelae (singular stela) are monuments that were fashioned by the Maya civilization of ancient Mesoamerica.

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McCloud (TV series)

McCloud is an American television police drama that aired on NBC from 1970 to 1977.

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Meanings of minor planet names: 293001–294000

366 | 293366 Roux || || Pierre Paul Emile Roux (1853–1933) was a French bacteriologist.

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Mercury (element)

Mercury is a chemical element with symbol Hg and atomic number 80.

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Mesoamerica

Mesoamerica is an important historical region and cultural area in the Americas, extending from approximately central Mexico through Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and northern Costa Rica, and within which pre-Columbian societies flourished before the Spanish colonization of the Americas in the 15th and 16th centuries.

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Mesoamerican architecture

Mesoamerican architecture is the set of architectural traditions produced by pre-Columbian cultures and civilizations of Mesoamerica, traditions which are best known in the form of public, ceremonial and urban monumental buildings and structures.

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Mesoamerican ballcourt

A Mesoamerican ballcourt is a large masonry structure of a type used in Mesoamerica for over 2,700 years to play the Mesoamerican ballgame, particularly the hip-ball version of the ballgame.

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Mesoamerican ballgame

The Mesoamerican ballgame was a sport with ritual associations played since 1400 BCSee Hill, Blake and Clark (1998); Schuster (1998).

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Mesoamerican calendars

Mesoamerican calendars are the calendrical systems devised and used by the pre-Columbian cultures of Mesoamerica.

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Mesoamerican chronology

Mesoamerican chronology divides the history of prehispanic Mesoamerica into several periods: the Paleo-Indian (first human habitation–3500 BCE), the Archaic (before 2600 BCE), the Preclassic or Formative (2000 BCE–250 CE), the Classic (250–900CE), and the Postclassic (900–1521 CE), Colonial (1521–1821), and Postcolonial (1821–present).

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Mesoamerican cosmovision

The pre-Columbian societies of Mesoamerica shared a world view or "cosmovision".

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Mesoamerican languages

Mesoamerican languages are the languages indigenous to the Mesoamerican cultural area, which covers southern Mexico, all of Guatemala and Belize and parts of Honduras and El Salvador and Nicaragua.

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Mesoamerican pyramids

Mesoamerican pyramids or pyramid-shaped structures form a prominent part of ancient Mesoamerican architecture.

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Metallurgy in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica

The emergence of metallurgy in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica occurred relatively late in the region's history, with distinctive works of metal apparent in West Mexico by roughly AD 800, and perhaps as early as AD 600.

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Metepec

Metepec (Metepec.ogg) is a city and municipality in the State of Mexico in Mexico and is located directly to the east of the state capital, Toluca, at an altitude of above sea level.

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Metro Indios Verdes

Indios Verdes is a station on the Mexico City Metro.

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Mexican art

Mexican art consists of various visual arts that developed over the geographical area now known as Mexico.

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Mexican cuisine

Mexican cuisine began about 9,000 years ago, when agricultural communities such as the Maya formed, domesticating maize, creating the standard process of corn nixtamalization, and establishing their foodways.

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Mexican peso

The Mexican peso (sign: $; code: MXN) is the currency of Mexico.

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Mexican wolf

The Mexican wolf (Canis lupus baileyi), also known as the lobo, is a subspecies of gray wolf once native to southeastern Arizona, southern New Mexico, western Texas and northern Mexico.

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Mexicans

Mexicans (mexicanos) are the people of the United Mexican States, a multiethnic country in North America.

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Mexico

Mexico (México; Mēxihco), officially called the United Mexican States (Estados Unidos Mexicanos) is a federal republic in the southern portion of North America.

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Mexico's Next Top Model (cycle 5)

Cycle five of Mexico's Next Top Model, the Mexican adaptation of Tyra Banks' America's Next Top Model, aired on Sony Entertainment Television from September to December 2014.

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Mezcala culture

The Mezcala culture (sometimes referred to as the Balsas culture) is the name given to a Mesoamerican culture that was based in the Guerrero state of southwestern Mexico,Coe and Koontz 1962, 2002, p.55.

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Mezquital Valley

The Mezquital Valley (Nahuatl: Teotlalpan and Otomi: B’ot’ähi) is a series of small valleys and flat areas located in Central Mexico, about north of Mexico City, located in the western part of the state of Hidalgo.

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Mica

The mica group of sheet silicate (phyllosilicate) minerals includes several closely related materials having nearly perfect basal cleavage.

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Miniature park

A miniature park is an open space that displays miniature buildings and models, and is usually open to the public.

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Mirrors in Mesoamerican culture

The use of mirrors in Mesoamerican culture was associated with the idea that they served as portals to a realm that could be seen but not interacted with.

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Misantla Totonac

isantla Totonac, also known as Yecuatla Totonac and Southeastern Totonac (Totonac: Laakanaachiwíin), is an indigenous language of Mexico, spoken in central Veracruz in the area between Xalapa and Misantla.

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Miss Earth México 2017

The 16th annual Miss Earth México pageant was held at Cancún on Quintana Roo.

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Mixe–Zoque languages

The Mixe–Zoque languages are a language family whose living members are spoken in and around the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Mexico.

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Monks Mound

Monks Mound is the largest Pre-Columbian earthwork in the Americas and the largest pyramid north of Mesoamerica.

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Montana (Mesoamerican site)

Montana is a Mesoamerican archaeological site on the Pacific coastal plain of southern Guatemala.

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Monte Albán

Monte Albán is a large pre-Columbian archaeological site in the Santa Cruz Xoxocotlán Municipality in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca (17.043° N, 96.767°W).

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Morelia

Morelia (from 1545 to 1828 known as Valladolid) is a city and municipality in the north central part of the state of Michoacán in central Mexico.

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Morelos

Morelos, officially the Free and Sovereign State of Morelos (Estado Libre y Soberano de Morelos), is one of the 32 states, which comprise the 32 Federal Entities of Mexico.

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Mundo Perdido, Tikal

The Mundo Perdido (Spanish for "Lost World") is the largest ceremonial complex dating from the Preclassic period at the ancient Maya city of Tikal, in the Petén Department of northern Guatemala.

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Muography

Muography is an imaging technique that produces a projectional image of a target volume by recording elementary particles, called muons, either electronically or chemically with materials that are sensitive to charged particles such as nuclear emulsions.

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Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino

The Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino (English: Chilean Museum of Pre-Columbian Art) is an art museum dedicated to the study and display of pre-Columbian artworks and artifacts from Central and South America.

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Museo Popol Vuh

The Museo Popol Vuh (Popol Vuh Museum) is home to one of the major collections of Maya art in the world.

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Nahuatl

Nahuatl (The Classical Nahuatl word nāhuatl (noun stem nāhua, + absolutive -tl) is thought to mean "a good, clear sound" This language name has several spellings, among them náhuatl (the standard spelling in the Spanish language),() Naoatl, Nauatl, Nahuatl, Nawatl. In a back formation from the name of the language, the ethnic group of Nahuatl speakers are called Nahua.), known historically as Aztec, is a language or group of languages of the Uto-Aztecan language family.

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National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico)

The National Museum of Anthropology (Museo Nacional de Antropología, MNA) is a national museum of Mexico.

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Native Americans in the United States

Native Americans, also known as American Indians, Indians, Indigenous Americans and other terms, are the indigenous peoples of the United States.

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Naucalpan

Naucalpan, officially Naucalpan de Juárez, is a city and municipality located just northwest of Mexico City in the adjoining State of Mexico.

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Nicarao people

The Nicarao people were a Nahuat-speaking Mesoamerican people that migrated from central and southern Mexico over the course of several centuries from approximately 700 AD onwards.

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Nicolás Moreno (artist)

Nicolás Moreno (28 December 1923 in Mexico City – 4 February 2012) was a Mexican landscape painter, considered to be one of the best of this genre of the 20th century, as well as heir to the Mexican tradition of José María Velasco and Dr. Atl.

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Nopaltepec, State of Mexico

Nopaltepec is a village and municipality in State of Mexico, Mexico.

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North Acropolis, Tikal

The North Acropolis of the ancient Maya city of Tikal in Guatemala is an architectural complex that served as a royal necropolis and was a centre for funerary activity for over 1300 years.

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Oaxaca

Oaxaca (from Huāxyacac), officially the Free and Sovereign State of Oaxaca (Estado Libre y Soberano de Oaxaca), is one of the 31 states which, along with Mexico City, make up the 32 federative entities of Mexico.

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Oaxaca Valley

The Central Valleys (Valles Centrales) of Oaxaca, also simply known as the Oaxaca Valley, is a geographic region located within the modern-day state of Oaxaca in southern Mexico.

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Obsidian use in Mesoamerica

Obsidian is a naturally formed volcanic glass that was an important part of the material culture of Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica.

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Order of Quetzalcoatl

The Order of Quetzalcoatl, colloquially known as the "Q", is a Masonic invitational body.

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Oryol i Reshka

Oryol i Reshka (Орел і Решка, Орёл и Решка, lit. Heads and Tails) is a Ukrainian television travel series that launched in 2011.

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Oto-Manguean languages

Oto-Manguean languages (also Otomanguean) are a large family comprising several subfamilies of indigenous languages of the Americas.

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Otomi

The Otomi (Otomí) are an indigenous people of Mexico inhabiting the central Mexican Plateau (Altiplano) region.

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Otomi language

Otomi (Spanish: Otomí) is a group of closely related indigenous languages of Mexico, spoken by approximately 240,000 indigenous Otomi people in the central ''altiplano'' region of Mexico.

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Outline of Mexico

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Mexico: The United Mexican States, commonly known as Mexico, is a federal constitutional republic located in North America.

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Outline of Nicaragua

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Nicaragua: Nicaragua – sovereign, representative democratic republic and the most extensive nation in Central America.

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Oxkintok

Oxkintok is a pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site in the Puuc region of Yucatán state, in southeastern Mexico.

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Pachuca

Pachuca, formally known as Pachuca de Soto, is the capital and largest city of the Mexican state of Hidalgo.

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Pacific Coast of Mexico

The Pacific Coast of Mexico or West Coast of Mexico stretches along the coasts of western Mexico at the Pacific Ocean and its Gulf of California (Sea of Cortez).

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Painting in the Americas before European colonization

Painting in the Americas before European colonization is the Precolumbian painting traditions of the Americas.

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Palace of the Parliament

The Palace of the Parliament (Palatul Parlamentului) is the seat of the Parliament of Romania.

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Pan American Games

The Pan American Games (also known colloquially as the Pan Am Games) is a major sporting event in the Americas featuring summer sports, in which thousands of athletes participate in a variety of competitions.

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Pan-American Highway (North America)

The Pan-American Highway route in North America is the portion of a network of roads nearly 48,000 km in length which travels through the mainland nations of the Americas.

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Patolli

Patolli or patole is one of the oldest known games in America.

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Pedro Armillas

Pedro Armillas Garcia (9 September 1914 – 11 April 1984) was Spanish academic anthropologist, archaeologist, and an influential pre-Columbian Mesoamerica scholar of the mid-20th century.

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Pelota purépecha

Pelota purépecha (Spanish for "Purépecha ball"), called Uárukua Ch'anakua (literally "a game with sticks") in the Purépecha language, is an Indigenous Mexican sport similar to those in the Hockey family.

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Piedras Negras, Coahuila

Piedras Negras is a city and seat of the surrounding municipality of the same name in the Mexican state of Coahuila.

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Pipil people

The Pipils or Cuzcatlecs are an indigenous people who live in western El Salvador, which they call Cuzcatlan.

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Piraña (Efteling)

Piraña is a river rapids ride in amusement park Efteling in the Netherlands.

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Polygonal masonry

Polygonal masonry is a technique of stone construction.

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Popocatépetl

Popocatépetl (Nahuatl: Popōcatepētl) is an active stratovolcano, located in the states of Puebla, Mexico, and Morelos, in Central Mexico, and lies in the eastern half of the Trans-Mexican volcanic belt.

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Popular fixed markets in Mexico

Traditional fixed markets in Mexico are multiple-vendor markets permanently housed in a fixed location.

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Porfirio Díaz

José de la Cruz Porfirio Díaz Mori (15 September 1830 – 2 July 1915) was a Mexican general and politician who served seven terms as President of Mexico, a total of three and a half decades, from 1876 to 1880 and from 1884 to 1911.

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Post-classical history

Post-classical history (also called the Post-Antiquity era, Post-Ancient Era, or Pre-Modern Era) is a periodization commonly used by the school of "world history" instead of Middle Ages (Medieval) which is roughly synonymous.

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Pre-Columbian art

Pre-Columbian art refers to the visual arts of indigenous peoples of the Caribbean, North, Central, and South Americas until the late 15th and early 16th centuries, and the time period marked by Christopher Columbus' arrival in the Americas.

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Pre-Columbian era

The Pre-Columbian era incorporates all period subdivisions in the history and prehistory of the Americas before the appearance of significant European influences on the American continents, spanning the time of the original settlement in the Upper Paleolithic period to European colonization during the Early Modern period.

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Pre-Columbian Mexico

The pre-Columbian history of the territory now comprising contemporary Mexico is known through the work of archaeologists and epigraphers, and through the accounts of the conquistadors, clergymen, and indigenous chroniclers of the immediate post-conquest period.

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Pseudoarchaeology

Pseudoarchaeology—also known as alternative archaeology, fringe archaeology, fantastic archaeology, or cult archaeology—refers to interpretations of the past from outside of the archaeological science community, which reject the accepted datagathering and analytical methods of the discipline.

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Pseudoscientific metrology

Some approaches in the branch of historic metrology are highly speculative and can be qualified as pseudoscience.

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Puebla

Puebla, officially the Free and Sovereign State of Puebla (Estado Libre y Soberano de Puebla) is one of the 31 states which, with the Federal District, comprise the 32 Federal Entities of Mexico.

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Pueblo Culhuacán

Pueblo Culhuacán is an officially designated neighborhood of the Iztapalapa borough of Mexico City, which used to be a major pre Hispanic city.

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Pulque

Pulque (occasionally referred to as agave wine) is an alcoholic beverage made from the fermented sap of the maguey (agave) plant.

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Puppetry

Puppetry is a form of theatre or performance that involves the manipulation of puppets – inanimate objects, often resembling some type of human or animal figure, that are animated or manipulated by a human called a puppeteer.

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Pyramid

A pyramid (from πυραμίς) is a structure whose outer surfaces are triangular and converge to a single point at the top, making the shape roughly a pyramid in the geometric sense.

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Pyramid of the Moon

The Pyramid of the Moon is the second largest pyramid in modern-day San Juan Teotihuacán, Mexico, after the Pyramid of the Sun.

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Pyramid of the Sun

The Pyramid of the Sun is the largest building in Teotihuacan, believed to have been constructed about 200 CE, and one of the largest in Mesoamerica.

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Pyramidology

Pyramidology (or pyramidism) refers to various religious or pseudoscientific speculations regarding pyramids, most often the Giza pyramid complex and the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt.

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Querétaro

Querétaro, officially the Free and Sovereign State of Querétaro (Estado Libre y Soberano de Querétaro, formally Querétaro de Arteaga), is one of the 32 federal entities of Mexico.

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Querétaro City

Santiago de Querétaro, known simply as Querétaro, is the capital and largest city of the state of Querétaro, located in central Mexico.

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Quetzalcoatl

Quetzalcoatl (ket͡saɬˈkowaːt͡ɬ, in honorific form: Quetzalcohuātzin) forms part of Mesoamerican literature and is a deity whose name comes from the Nahuatl language and means "feathered serpent" or "Quetzal-feathered Serpent".

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Quetzalpapálotl

The Quetzalpapálotl complex are ruins located in Teotihuacán.

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Quinametzin

In Aztec mythology, the Quinametzin Giants populated the world during the previous era of the Sun of Rain (Nahui-Quiahuitl).

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R. H. Barlow

Robert Hayward Barlow (May 18, 1918 – January 1 or 2, 1951Joshi & Schultz (2007): p. xx.) was an American author, avant-garde poet, anthropologist and historian of early Mexico, and expert in the Nahuatl language.

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Rafael Yela Günther

Rafael Yela Günther (September 18, 1888 in Quetzaltenango – April 17, 1942 in Guatemala City) was a Guatemalan painter and sculptor.

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Río Azul

Río Azul is an archaeological site of the Pre-Columbian Maya civilization.

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Richard Diehl

Richard A. Diehl (born 1940) is an American archaeologist, anthropologist and academic, noted as a scholar of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures.

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Robert E. Lee Chadwick

Robert E. Lee Chadwick (March 29, 1930 – January 3, 2014) was an American anthropologist and archeologist, primarily known for his contributions to the.

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San Andrés Cholula (municipality)

San Andrés Cholula Municipality is a municipality in Puebla in south-eastern Mexico.

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San Andrés Mixquic

San Andres Mixquic is a community located in the southeast of the Distrito Federal (Mexico City) in the borough of Tláhuac.

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San Cristóbal de las Casas

San Cristóbal de las Casas (Spanish), also known by its native Tzotzil name, Jovel, is a town and municipality located in the Central Highlands region of the Mexican state of Chiapas.

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San Gregorio Atlapulco

San Gregorio Atlapulco is a neighbourhood located in the borough of Xochimilco in Mexico City, Mexico.

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San Mateo Atenco

San Mateo Atenco is a city and a municipality located in the State of México in Mexico.

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San Miguel Ixtapan (archaeological site)

San Miguel Ixtapan is an archaeological site located in the municipality of Tejupilco (Nahuatl "Texopilco" or "Texopilli"), in the State of Mexico.

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San Pedro Cholula

San Pedro Cholula is a municipality in the Mexican state of Puebla and one of two municipalities which made up the city of Cholula.

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Santa María Atzompa

Santa María Atzompa is a town and municipality located in the Mexican state of Oaxaca, about five km from the state capital of Oaxaca.

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Santiago Tianguistenco

Santiago Tianguistenco, often just simply called Tianguistenco, is a city and municipality located in Mexico State about thirty km south of the state capital of Toluca.

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Sayil

Sayil is a Maya archaeological site in the Mexican state of Yucatán, in the southwest of the state, south of Uxmal.

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Sculpture

Sculpture is the branch of the visual arts that operates in three dimensions.

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Sentinels of Silence

Sentinels of Silence (Centinelas del silencio) is a 1971 short documentary film on ancient Mexican civilizations.

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Sierra Gorda

The Sierra Gorda is an ecological region centered on the northern third of the Mexican state of Querétaro and extending into the neighboring states of Guanajuato, Hidalgo and San Luis Potosí.

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Singuilucan

Singuilucan is a town and one of the 84 municipalities of Hidalgo, in central-eastern Mexico.

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Sixto Paz Wells

Sixto Paz Wells (Lima, Peru, December 12 1955) is an author and lecturer focused on the UFO phenomena, particularly alien contact, from a spiritual viewpoint.

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Siyaj K'ak'

Siyaj K'ak' (alternative spelling: Siyah K'ak'), also known as Fire is Born (formerly nicknamed "Smoking Frog"), was a prominent political figure mentioned in the glyphs of Classic Period (250-800 C.E.) Maya civilization monuments, principally Tikal (which he conquered on January 16, 378), as well as Uaxactun and the city of Copan.

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Snake worship

Snake worship is devotion to serpent deities.

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Southern Maya area

The Southern Maya Area (SMA) is a part of Mesoamerica, long believed important to the rise of Maya civilization, the period that is also known as Preclassic Maya.

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Spearthrower Owl

Atlatl Cauac, translated as "Spearthrower Owl" (364 – 439 AD) is the name commonly given to a Mesoamerican personage from the Early Classic period, who is identified in Maya inscriptions and iconography.

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Speech scroll

In art history, speech scroll (also called a banderole or phylactery) is an illustrative device denoting speech, song, or, in rarer cases, other types of sound.

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Spider Grandmother

Spider Grandmother (Hopi Kokyangwuti, Navajo Na'ashjé'ii Asdzáá) is an important figure in the mythology, oral traditions and folklore of many Native American cultures, especially in the Southwestern United States.

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Spring equinox in Teotihuacán

Spring equinox in Teotihuacán is an annual event which takes place around the 20th and 21st of March at the pre-Hispanic site of Teotihuacán, Mexico.

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State formation

State formation is the process of the development of a centralized government structure in a situation where one did not exist prior to its development.

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State of Mexico

The State of Mexico (Estado de México) is one of the 32 federal entities of Mexico.

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Tacubaya

Tacubaya is an area of Mexico City located in the west, in the borough of Miguel Hidalgo, consisting of the colonia Tacubaya proper and adjacent areas in other colonias, with San Miguel Chapultepec sección II, Observatorio, Daniel Garza and Ampliación Daniel Garza being also considered part of Tacubaya.

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Takalik Abaj

Tak'alik Ab'aj is a pre-Columbian archaeological site in Guatemala.

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Talud-tablero

Talud-tablero is an architectural style most commonly used in platforms, temples, and pyramids in Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, becoming popular in the Early Classic Period of Teotihuacan.

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Tamuín

Tamuín is a ''municipio'' (second-level administrative division) in the Mexican state of San Luis Potosí.

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Tarascan state

The Tarascan state was a state in pre-Columbian Mexico, roughly covering the geographic area of the present-day Mexican state of Michoacán, parts of Jalisco, and Guanajuato.

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Tarzan and the Mermaids

Tarzan and the Mermaids is a 1948 adventure film based on the Tarzan character created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

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Tarzan and the Valley of Gold

Tarzan and the Valley of Gold (1966) is an adventure film starring Mike Henry in his debut as Tarzan.

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Tazumal

Tazumal is a pre-Columbian Maya archeological site in Chalchuapa, El Salvador.

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Tecámac

Tecámac is a municipality in State of Mexico in Mexico.

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Tecpatl

In the Aztec culture, a tecpatl was a flint or obsidian knife with a lanceolate figure and double-edged blade, with elongated ends.

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Tehuantepec

Tehuantepec (in full, Santo Domingo Tehuantepec) is a city and municipality in the southeast of the Mexican state of Oaxaca.

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Temple of the Feathered Serpent, Teotihuacan

The Temple of the Feathered Serpent is the third largest pyramid at Teotihuacan, a pre-Columbian site in central Mexico (the term Teotihuacan (or Teotihuacano) is also used for the whole civilization and cultural complex associated with the site).

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Templo Mayor

The Templo Mayor (Spanish for " Greater Temple") was the main temple of the Aztecs in their capital city of Tenochtitlan, which is now Mexico City.

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Teopanzolco

Teopanzolco is an Aztec archaeological site in the Mexican state of Morelos.

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Teotenango

Teotenango was in important pre-Hispanic fortified city located in the southern part of the Valley of Toluca.

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Teotihuacan Ocelot

The Teotihuacan Ocelot or Teotihuacán Ocelot is the name of an alabaster sculpture of a feline found at the ancient Mesoamerican site of Teotihuacan, central Mexico.

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Teotihuacán Municipality

Teotihuacán is a town and municipality located in the State of Mexico.

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Tepetlaoxtoc de Hidalgo

Tepetlaoxtoc de Hidalgo is a town and the seat of the municipality of Tepetlaoxtoc, which contains the archeological site of Tepetlaoxtoc, in the State of Mexico in Mexico.

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Tepotzotlán

Tepotzotlán (Spanish) is a city and a municipality in the Mexican state of Mexico.

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Texas

Texas (Texas or Tejas) is the second largest state in the United States by both area and population.

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Texas–Indian wars

The Texas–Indian wars were a series of 19th-century conflicts between settlers in Texas and the Southern Plains Indians.

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Texcaltitlán

Texcaltitlán is a town and a municipality of the State of Mexico in Mexico.

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Texcoco, State of Mexico

Texcoco is a city and municipality located in the State of Mexico, 25 km northeast of Mexico City.

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The Amazing Race 28

The Amazing Race 28 is the twenty-eighth U.S. season of the reality television show The Amazing Race.

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The Amazing Race 3

The Amazing Race 3 is the third installment of the US reality television show, The Amazing Race.

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The Bachelor (season 20)

The 20th season of The Bachelor premiered on January 4, 2016.

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The Lost Charts of Columbus

The Lost Charts of Columbus is the sequel of The Golden Helmet.

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The Mystery of the Aztec Warrior

The Mystery of the Aztec Warrior is volume 43 in the original The Hardy Boys Mystery Stories published by Grosset & Dunlap.

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The Ragged Edge of Science

The Ragged Edge of Science is a science book by L. Sprague de Camp, illustrated by Don Simpson.

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The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest

The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest (also known as Jonny Quest: The Real Adventures) is an American animated action-adventure television series produced by Hanna-Barbera and broadcast on Cartoon Network from August 26, 1996 to April 16, 1997.

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The Unexplained

The Unexplained is an American paranormal television series that originally aired from January 2, 1996 to May 7, 2000 on A&E and is currently being broadcast on the Biography Channel.

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Tikal

Tikal (Tik’al in modern Mayan orthography) is the ruin of an ancient city, which was likely to have been called Yax Mutal, found in a rainforest in Guatemala.

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Tikal Temple 33

Tikal Temple 33 (referred to in archaeological reports as 5D-33) was a ancient Maya funerary pyramid located in the North Acropolis of the great Maya city of Tikal.

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Tikal Temple IV

Tikal Temple IV is a Mesoamerican pyramid in the ruins of the ancient Maya city of Tikal in modern Guatemala.

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Timeline of the Middle Ages

Note: All dates are Common Era. The following is a timeline of the major events during the Middle Ages, a time period in human history mostly centered on Europe, which lies between classical antiquity and the modern era.

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Timequest

Timequest is an interactive fiction game released by Legend Entertainment, and written by Bob Bates.

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Tingambato

Tingambato is a municipality in the north-central part of the Mexican state of Michoacán.

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Tlaloc

Tlaloc (ˈtɬaːlok) was a member of the pantheon of gods in Aztec religion.

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Tlalocan

Tlālōcān ("place of Tlaloc") is described in several Aztec codices as a paradise, ruled over by the rain deity Tlaloc and his consort Chalchiuhtlicue.

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Tlaxco Municipality, Tlaxcala

Tlaxco (Nahuatl: "place of the ball game") is a municipality in Tlaxcala, Mexico.

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Tláhuac

Tláhuac is one of the 16 municipios into which Mexico City is divided.

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Tollan

Tollan, Tolan, or Tolán is a name used for the capital cities of two empires of Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica; first for Teotihuacan, and later for the Toltec capital, Tula, both in Mexico.

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Toltec

The Toltec culture is an archaeological Mesoamerican culture that dominated a state centered in Tula, Hidalgo, Mexico in the early post-classic period of Mesoamerican chronology (ca. 900–1168 CE).

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Toltec Empire

According to Mesoamerican historiography, the Toltec Empire, Toltec Kingdom or Altepetl TollanCe-Acatl: Revista de la cultura Anáhuac (1991) was a political entity in Mexico.

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Toluca Valley

The Toluca Valley is a valley in central Mexico, just west of the Valley of Mexico (Mexico City), the old name was Matlatzinco.

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Toniná

Tonina (or Toniná in Spanish orthography) is a pre-Columbian archaeological site and ruined city of the Maya civilization located in what is now the Mexican state of Chiapas, some 13 km (8.1 mi) east of the town of Ocosingo.

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Totonac

The Totonac are an indigenous people of Mexico who reside in the states of Veracruz, Puebla, and Hidalgo.

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Totonacapan

Totonacapan refers to the historical extension where the Totonac people of Mexico dominated, as well as to a region in the modern states of Veracruz and Puebla.

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Tourism in Mexico

Tourism in Mexico is a huge industry.

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Tree of Life (craft)

A Tree of Life (Árbol de la vida) is a theme of clay sculpture created in central Mexico, especially in the municipality of Metepec, State of Mexico.

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Tres Islas

Tres Islas (Spanish for "Three Islands") is a small pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site north of Cancuen in Petén Department, northern Guatemala.

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Trujillo, Peru

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Tula (Mesoamerican site)

Tula is a Mesoamerican archeological site, which was an important regional center which reached its height as the capital of the Toltec Empire between the fall of Teotihuacan and the rise of Tenochtitlan.

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Tula de Allende

Tula de Allende (Otomi: Mämeni) is a town and one of the 84 municipalities of Hidalgo in central-eastern Mexico.

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Tulancingo

Tulancingo (officially Tulancingo de Bravo; Otomi: Ngu̱hmu) is the second-largest city in the Mexican state of Hidalgo.

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Tultitlán de Mariano Escobedo

Tultitlán de Mariano Escobedo is the seat of the municipality of Tultitlán located in the northeastern part of the State of México in Mexico.

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Tulum

Tulum (Yucatec: Tulu'um) is the site of a pre-Columbian Mayan walled city serving as a major port for Coba, in the Mexican state of Quintana Roo.

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Uaxactun

Uaxactun (pronounced) is an ancient sacred place of the Maya civilization, located in the Petén Basin region of the Maya lowlands, in the present-day department of Petén, Guatemala.

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Universum (UNAM)

Universum (full name Universum, el Museo de las Ciencias de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México) which translates to Universum, the Science Museum of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, is Mexico’s primary museum dedicated to promoting science and technology to the public as well as support the university’s science missions.

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Valley of Mexico

The Valley of Mexico (Valle de México; Tepētzallāntli Mēxihco) is a highlands plateau in central Mexico roughly coterminous with present-day Mexico City and the eastern half of the State of Mexico.

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Villa del Carbón

Villa del Carbón is a town and municipality located in the northern part of Mexico State, just northwest of Mexico City.

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Villa Guerrero, State of Mexico

Villa Guerrero is a town and municipality in the State of Mexico, Mexico.

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Visual arts by indigenous peoples of the Americas

Visual arts by indigenous peoples of the Americas encompasses the visual artistic traditions of the indigenous peoples of the Americas from ancient times to the present.

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Wagner Murals

The Wagner Murals are the name for over 70 mural fragments illegally removed from the Pre-Columbian site of Teotihuacán in the 1960s.

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Where the Hell is Matt?

Where the Hell is Matt? is an Internet phenomenon that features a video of Dancing Matt (Matt Harding) doing a dance "jig" in many different places around the world in 2005.

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Wolfdog

A wolfdog (also called a wolf–dog hybrid or wolf hybrid) is a canid hybrid resulting from the hybridization of a domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris) to one of four other Genus Canis taxa, the gray (Canis lupus), eastern timber (Canis lycaon), red (Canis rufus), or ethiopian (Canis simensis).

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Xico, State of Mexico

Xico is a city in the State of Mexico, Mexico.

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Xitle

Xitle (Nahuatl, "navel") is a monogenetic volcano in the Ajusco range in Cumbres del Ajusco National Park.

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Xiuhcoatl

In Aztec religion, Xiuhcoatl was a mythological serpent, it was regarded as the spirit form of Xiuhtecuhtli, the Aztec fire deity, and was also an atlatl wielded by Huitzilopochtli.

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Xochicalco

Xochicalco is a pre-Columbian archaeological site in Miacatlán Municipality in the western part of the Mexican state of Morelos.

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Xochitecatl

Xochitecatl is a pre-Columbian archaeological site located in the Mexican State of Tlaxcala, 18 km southwest of Tlaxcala city.

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Xolotl

In Aztec mythology, Xolotl was the god with associations to both lightning and death.

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Yahoo! Time Capsule

The Yahoo! Time Capsule, a brainchild of Jonathan Harris, is a time capsule project by Yahoo! Inc.

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Yax Nuun Ahiin I

Yax Nuun Ahiin I, also known as Curl Snout and Curl Nose, (died June 17, 404?), was an ajaw of the Maya city of Tikal.

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Yaxchilan

Yaxchilan is an ancient Maya city located on the bank of the Usumacinta River in the state of Chiapas, Mexico.

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Yaxha

Yaxha (or Yaxhá in Spanish orthography) is a Mesoamerican archaeological site in the northeast of the Petén Basin region, and a former ceremonial centre and city of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization.

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Zacatecas City

Zacatecas is a city and municipality in Mexico, and the capital and largest city of the state of Zacatecas.

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Zaculeu

Zaculeu or Saqulew is a pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site in the highlands of western Guatemala, about outside of the modern city of Huehuetenango.

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Zapotec civilization

The Zapotec civilization was an indigenous pre-Columbian civilization that flourished in the Valley of Oaxaca in Mesoamerica.

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Zaragoza Corla

In 1956 brothers Joseph (José) and Andrew (Andrés), Zaragoza founded the Zaragoza Arms Factory in Mexico City, near Mexico City International Airport.

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150

Year 150 (CL) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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1905 in archaeology

The year 1905 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1998 World Monuments Watch

The World Monuments Watch is a flagship advocacy program of the New York-based private non-profit organization World Monuments Fund (WMF) and American Express to call to action and challenge government authorities responsible for important cultural resources to identify sites immediately at risk, and to stimulate public awareness of the tremendous need to preserve and create sustainable uses for significant heritage made by man.

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1st century

The 1st century was the century that lasted from AD 1 to AD 100 according to the Julian calendar.

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1st millennium

The first millennium was a period of time that began on January 1, AD 1, and ended on December 31, AD 1000, of the Julian calendar.

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1st millennium BC

The 1st millennium BC encompasses the Iron Age and sees the rise of many successive empires, and spanned from 1000 BC to 1 BC.

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2000 World Monuments Watch

The World Monuments Watch is a flagship advocacy program of the New York-based private non-profit organization World Monuments Fund (WMF) and American Express to call upon every government in the world, preservation organizations, and other groups and individuals to nominate sites and monuments that are particularly endangered.

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2004 World Monuments Watch

The World Monuments Watch is a flagship advocacy program of the New York-based private non-profit organization World Monuments Fund (WMF) that is dedicated to preserving the historic, artistic, and architectural heritage around the world.

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2010 Central American and Caribbean Games

The 21st Central American and Caribbean Games (Spanish: XXI Juegos Centroamericanos y del Caribe, Mayagüez 2010) took place in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico, from 18 July 2010 to 1 August 2010.

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2011 Pan American Games

The 2011 Pan American Games, officially the XVI Pan American Games, was an international multi-sport event that was held from October 14–30, 2011, in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

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2011 Pan American Games torch relay

The 2011 Pan American Games torch relay was a 50-day torch run, from August 26–October 14, 2011, held prior to the 2011 Pan American Games.

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2012 phenomenon

The 2012 phenomenon was a range of eschatological beliefs that cataclysmic or otherwise transformative events would occur on or around 21 December 2012.

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2015 Pan American Games

The 2015 Pan American Games, officially the XVII Pan American Games and commonly known as the Toronto 2015 Pan-Am Games (Jeux panaméricains de 2015 à Toronto), were a major international multi-sport event celebrated in the tradition of the Pan American Games, as governed by Pan American Sports Organization (PASO).

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2015 Pan American Games torch relay

The 2015 Pan American Games torch relay was a 41-day torch run, occurring from May 30 to July 10, 2015, being held prior to the start of the Games.

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250

Year 250 (CCL) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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303

Year 303 (CCCIII) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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374

Year 374 (CCCLXXIV) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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378

Year 378 (CCCLXXVIII) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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439

Year 439 (CDXXXIX) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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4th century

The 4th century (per the Julian calendar and Anno Domini/Common era) was the time period which lasted from 301 to 400.

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500 BC

The year 500 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar.

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501

Year 501 (DI) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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600

Year 600 (DC) was a leap year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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6th century

The 6th century is the period from 501 to 600 in accordance with the Julian calendar in the Common Era.

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750

Year 750 (DCCL) was a common year starting on Thursday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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7th century

The 7th century is the period from 601 to 700 in accordance with the Julian calendar in the Common Era.

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901

Year 901 (CMI) was a common year starting on Thursday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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Redirects here:

Pre-Hispanic City of Teotihuacan, Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, Tehotihuacan, Tehotihuacán, Teotihuaca'n, Teotihuaca'n, Mexico, Teotihuacan Empire, Teotihuacan Pyramids, Teotihuacan, Mexico, Teotihuacan, State of Mexico, Teotihuacano, Teotihuacano Empire, Teotihuacán, Teotihuacán Pyramids, Teotihuacán, State of Mexico, Teotihucan, Terotihuacan, Teutihuacan temples, Theotihuacan.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teotihuacan

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