The Mayan Civilization: Science, Astronomy, and Mysterious Collapse — Fexingo History

Maya Salt Production and the Great Eastern Trade Routes

8 min · 25 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Maya Salt Production and the Great Eastern Trade Routes

Descripción

When we think of Maya trade, we often picture jade, cacao, and obsidian. But the most essential and profitable commodity was salt. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the massive salt industry of the Yucatán Peninsula, centered on the northern coast at sites like Emal and Xcambo. They discuss how salt was produced through solar evaporation in salt pans, then transported via canoe along the eastern trade routes to inland cities like Tikal, where it was worth its weight in gold. They delve into the archaeological evidence from recent LiDAR surveys and underwater excavations, revealing the scale of production and the complex distribution networks that supported Maya civilization for centuries. The episode also examines how salt—both as a dietary necessity and a preservative—shaped Maya politics, as the Itzá and Cocom controlled the prime salt beds. Finally, they consider the role salt scarcity may have played in the Classic Maya collapse, when drought disrupted both production and transport. #MayaSalt #Emal #Xcambo #Yucatán #SaltTrade #MayaEconomics #LiDAR #UnderwaterArchaeology #Tikal #Cocom #Itzá #ClassicMaya #Collapse #Mesoamerica #FexingoHistory #History #Archaeology #TradeRoutes Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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130 episodios

episode The Maya Collapse: A New Theory on Drought and the Itzá Exodus artwork

The Maya Collapse: A New Theory on Drought and the Itzá Exodus

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore a fresh angle on the Maya collapse, focusing on the Itzá people's migration from Chichén Itzá to the Petén lakes after a devastating 11th-century drought. They discuss paleoclimate evidence from Lake Punta Laguna, the role of the Chaak rain god in political legitimacy, and how the Itzá re-established power at Mayapán. Lucas explains how drought cycles, deforestation, and social upheaval combined to end Classic Maya civilization, but also how Maya resilience continued in the Postclassic. The conversation touches on the Chilam Balam prophecies, the 13 Ahau k'atun, and the importance of cenotes and chultuns in water storage. New insights from LiDAR and sediment cores suggest that the collapse was not a single event but a series of regional crises. This episode offers a nuanced look at how the Maya adapted—or failed to adapt—to environmental stress. #MayaCollapse #Itzá #ChichénItzá #Drought #Chaak #Paleoclimate #LakePuntaLaguna #Mayapán #TerminalClassic #Postclassic #ChilamBalam #Katun13Ahau #Cenote #Chultun #LiDAR #Petén #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

2 de jul de 20269 min
episode Maya Kings and the Cacao Trade: Currency and Power artwork

Maya Kings and the Cacao Trade: Currency and Power

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how cacao beans fueled the Maya economy and served as a sacred currency tied to royal power. They trace the journey of cacao from the Soconusco region to the great cities of Tikal and Palenque, discussing its role in tribute, trade, and ritual. The hosts examine the glyph for kakaw, the cacao tree's botanical demands, and the elite monopoly over its production. They also touch on Spanish accounts of cacao use and the surprising value of beans in everyday transactions. A fresh angle on an old topic, this episode reveals how chocolate shaped Maya politics and society. #Maya #Cacao #Kakaw #Tikal #Palenque #Soconusco #MayaEconomy #JasawChanKawiil #KuhulAjaw #Chocolate #MayaTrade #Currency #History #Mesoamerica #FexingoHistory #MayaRitual #ChilamBalam #MayaGlyphs Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
episode Maya Astronomy: The Eclipses that Shook the Gods artwork

Maya Astronomy: The Eclipses that Shook the Gods

The Maya were master astronomers, and few celestial events commanded as much dread and reverence as a solar eclipse. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how Maya priests predicted eclipses with astonishing precision using the Dresden Codex, why eclipses were seen as cosmic attacks by the gods, and what archaeological evidence tells us about the ritual responses to these events. We look at the famous eclipse table in the Dresden Codex, the role of the Chaak rain god in eclipse mythology, and the specific 16th-century eclipse recorded in the Chilam Balam books. We also touch on how the Maya's deep understanding of the eclipse cycle — the 177-day and 5,780-day intervals — puts them on par with ancient Greek and Babylonian astronomers. And we address the controversial theory that an eclipse may have influenced the collapse of the Classic Maya city of Dos Pilas. From hieroglyphic staircases to sacrificial offerings in cenotes, this episode reveals how the Maya turned skywatching into a matter of life and death. #MayaAstronomy #SolarEclipse #DresdenCodex #Chaak #ChilamBalam #DosPilas #MayaRitual #EclipseTable #MayaCalendar #MayaMythology #Xibalba #Cenote #ClassicMaya #Mesoamerica #History #FexingoHistory #AncientAstronomy #Archaeoastronomy Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode Maya Blue: The Lost Chemistry of a Sacred Color artwork

Maya Blue: The Lost Chemistry of a Sacred Color

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the science behind Maya Blue, a remarkably durable pigment used by the ancient Maya from the Classic period through Spanish contact. They discuss how modern researchers discovered that the color comes from a unique clay-mineral complex combining indigo from the añil plant with palygorskite, a fibrous clay mineral found in specific deposits like those at Sacalum in Yucatán. The hosts examine how Maya Blue was made, its ritual use in murals at Bonampak and in offerings at the Sacred Cenote at Chichén Itzá, and its surprising resilience against acids, heat, and time. They also touch on the broader role of color in Maya thought — how blue was associated with sacrifice, rain, and the god Chaak — and the ongoing mystery of whether the pigment was intentionally heated to stabilize it. The conversation weaves chemistry, archaeology, and Maya worldviews into a single narrative, revealing how a tiny molecule can bridge ancient knowledge and modern curiosity. #MayaBlue #AncientPigment #MayaScience #Palygorskite #Indigo #Sacalum #Bonampak #ChichenItza #SacredCenote #Chaak #MayaChemistry #ArchaeologicalScience #Mesoamerica #MayaArt #MayaRitual #ClassicMaya #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

30 de jun de 20265 min
episode Maya Math: Zero, Place Value, and the Long Count artwork

Maya Math: Zero, Place Value, and the Long Count

Long before the concept of zero reached Europe, Maya mathematicians were using it in a sophisticated base-20 place-value system. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how Maya scribes and astronomers developed the Long Count calendar, a linear count of days from a mythical creation date in 3114 BCE. They discuss the bar-and-dot numeral system, the use of a shell glyph for zero, and how these tools enabled precise tracking of celestial cycles. The conversation touches on the interplay between mathematics and prophecy, the Dresden Codex's role in preserving these calculations, and the challenges of correlating Maya dates with our Gregorian calendar. Along the way, they explain how numbers were not just abstract but carried sacred and political significance, linking royal lineages to cosmic time. This episode is for anyone curious about how ancient peoples conceptualized infinity and order. #MayaMath #MayaZero #LongCountCalendar #MayaNumerals #DresdenCodex #Base20 #MayaAstronomy #MayaScribes #CorrelationProblem #GoodmanMartinezThompson #GMT #3114BCE #BarAndDot #ShellGlyph #Mesoamerica #FexingoHistory #History #Mathematics Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

30 de jun de 20266 min