Human remains found in Chapultepec Park show shared Catholic – pre-Hispanic graves

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A view shows human remains discovered by archaeologists from INAH in Chapultepec park

CDMX.- As we previously published in The Mexico City Post, a cemetery from the early viceregal period was found by archaeologists in Chapultepec Park.

The remains of 28 human bodies buried at least four hundred years ago in that spot of Mexico City indicate the comingling of pre-Hispanic and Catholic cultures that Spanish colonizers introduced, local researchers said.

The discovery took place during the construction of a scenic pavilion in Mexico City’s Chapultepec park in February when researchers stumbled across a cemetery from the early viceregal period of 1521 to 1620 AD.

Maria de Lourdes Lopez Camacho, the head of archeological salvage and the National History Museum, said what is most striking is that, although the bodies originate from distinct populations, they were buried in the same period.

“Two burial systems are coexisting, the Christian burial and the burial in dorsal decubitus: the fetal position, on the side, with pre-Hispanic ceramic or obsidian, precisely from this Mexica or Tepaneca period,” Lopez Camacho said, referring to the early viceregal period.

She added that it is possible the individuals had died from the same cause.

“(The fact that) we have three levels of graves and there are a few centimeters that differentiate one level from another… tells us that there could have been one death or many deaths in a short period of time, which could tell us about an epidemic,” she said.

The burials also suggest that a nearby pre-Hispanic population could have been used as a labor force for the nearby mills, the first industries the Spanish set up, the archeologist added.

Studies conducted by Mexico’s Directorate of Archaeological Salvage (DSA) indicate the bodies belong to two different groups and that they had suffered from infections and diseases related to nutritional deficiency. More studies are scheduled.

Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) led the study.

Source: El Universal

The Mexico City Post