Understanding
Kiuic's Resources

The Helen Moyers Biocultural
Reserve, managed by Kaxil Kiuic, supports a
variety of research programs in the natural and social
sciences. There is a core group of Research
Associates that provides leadership and expertise
to the Reserve in these fields. Dr.
William Ringle serves as the Director of Research
at the Reserve, Dr.
Sarah Armstrong is the Director of Biological
Research at the Reserve, and Dr.
John Hayden directs the Kiuic Plant Inventory
Project.
Below
you can access information, research and articles
from these various programs.
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
RESEARCH PROGRAMS

Labna-Kiuic Regional
Archaeological Project
Centered
at Kiuic, the Labna-Kiuic Regional Archaeological
Project (LKRAP) is a long-term archaeological research
program studying the adaptation of the ancient Maya
from their first appearance in the Preclassic until
the contemporary period in the Puuc area of central
Yucatan. This area formed one of the major regions
of Maya culture during the pre-Columbian period. The
project is financially supported by Millsaps
College, Mexico's
National Institute of Anthropology and History
(INAH), Davidson
College and several private foundations. The
project directors are Dr.
George J. Bey III (Millsaps College), Arq.
Tomas Gallareta Negron (INAH), and Dr.
William M. Ringle (Davidson College). The
archaeological site of Kiuic, which forms the central
study area of LKRAP is a major Maya center that flourished
between 600 B.C. and A.D. 1000. Research has focused
on three main areas:
1)
The mapping of Kiuic with an emphasis on the size
and nature of the settlement
2)
Excavations within a major Maya palace known today
as the Yaxche Group
3) A regional program
of survey and excavation focused on the areas immediately
surrounding the site of Kiuic, the zone between
Kiuic and Labna, and the larger Puuc region.
For
more information concerning the Labna-Kiuic Regional
Archaeological Project, please click
here.

Save the House of Diamonds
Project
The
Kiuic site has an impressive amount of standing architecture
reflecting some of the lesser known styles of the
Puuc period. There are several unique and important
structures in urgent need of excavation and preservation,
including the magnificent Casa de las Diamantes (House
of Diamonds) , first illustrated by Stephens and Catherwood
in their publication "Incidents of Travel in
Yucatan." There is a special
funding drive to restore this structure to
its former magnificence before the collapse of the
final standing architecture.
To
see a sketch by Catherwood
click here.

San Sebastian Research
Project
The
Puuc region continued to be inhabited after the so-called
collapse, and LKRAP is studying the continued use
of the region after the abandonment of the great centers.
Within the Helen Moyers Biocultural
Reserve is the San Sebastian archaeological
site. This community was founded no later than the
late 18th century and continued to be occupied until
the 1950's. San Sebastian is the focus of an archaeological,
ethnohistoric and ethnographic project examining the
efforts of the Maya to adapt to the changing worldsystem
after the arrival of Europeans. The "Casa Real",
where Stephens and Catherwood stayed during their
visit to Kiuic in the 19th century is still standing.
There is a special project to preserve this important
historic monument.
BIOLOGICAL
RESEARCH PROJECTS

The
management of biological sustainablity for the Helen
Moyers Biocultural Reserve into
the indefinite future requires we begin by creating
a set of baseline inventories. At present, biological
research focuses on generating these types of inventories.
Dr.
Sarah Armstrong has begun initiating a field
biology program at the reserve designed for undergraduates.

Kaxil Kiuic Plant Inventory
Project
The
Plant Inventory Project is the most fully developed
biological research project at the reserve and its
main goal is to document the flora of the reserve.
Dr. John Hayden,
director of the project, uses undergraduates, graduate
students from the Autonomous
Univeristy of Yucatan (UADY) and the considerable
local expertise of two INAH employees, Mario Magaña
Arana and Pedro Gongora Interián to carry out
this work. The project is collecting, identifying,
and curating plant specimens. It is compiling the
data to generate a complete inventory of the plants
found on the reserve . The research program is presently
sampling the forest during different seasons in an
effort to find specimens with diagnostic flowers and
fruits, which are, of course, seasonal and often transitory
in their appearance. So far, the inventory tally hovers
around 250 species. Dr. Hayden is also contributing
to the Ethnoflora of Yucatan project, sponsored by
UADY, by agreeing to contribute a systematic treatment
of Euphorbiaceae for this flora project.

Millsaps College Undergraduate
Field Biology Program
This
project is co-directed by Dr.
Sarah Armstrong and
Dr. James McKeown. The purpose of the program is two-fold:
to introduce undergraduate students to research methods
in field biology, and to begin a baseline biological
survey of the property encompassed by the region.
At present the primary research goal has been to carry
out a baseline survey of the insect diversity at the
reserve. To date three orders - Diptera, Hymenoptera,
Coleoptera - have been systematically collected. In
addition, an effort has been made to determine the
general diversity of the insect population. Another
research project has been started: the cataloging
(collecting and identification) of flowering plants
and pollen found in the area.

Kaxil Kiuic Bird Inventory
Project
This
project is in its developmental stages. The reserve
is recognized by ornithologists and amateur birdwatchers
in and outside Yucatan as one of the great remaining
dry forest environments for bird populations. A preliminary
inventory has been performed by two friends of the
reserve, Sr. Miguel Mendez, Sr. David Bacab, and Barbara
MacKinnon. They are respected amateur birdwatchers
and have offered their expertise in beginning an inventory
of bird species found within Kaxil Kiuic. They have
presently identified some 120
species.
To support the Kaxil Kiuic Bird Inventory Project
click
here.

OTHER RESEARCH EFFORTS
In
addition to the archaeological and biological initiatives
underway within the reserve, there is a geological
and a cultural anthropological project in their initial
stages. The geological project is being developed
by Dr. Stan Galicki of Millsaps
College.
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