Were the ancient Maya space pilots? Not even close, prof says
鈥楶seudo-archaeology鈥 is subject of anthropologist鈥檚 麻豆免费版下载on the Weekend talk on March 16
Swiss author and pseudo-archaeologist Erik Von D盲niken famously claims that a Maya sarcophagus lid depicts an ancient king piloting a rocket ship.听听But the sarcophagus really depicts the king鈥檚 descent into the underworld, according to Sarah Kurnick, an assistant professor of anthropology at the University Colorado Boulder.听
![Kurnick](/asmagazine/sites/default/files/styles/medium_750px_50_display_size_/public/article-image/kurnick.jpg?itok=TgJOgfMS)
Sarah Kurnick
Kurnick says such 鈥減seudo-archaeology鈥 has seized the popular imagination, often to the detriment of contemporary indigenous communities like the Maya.
She will address this issue in a talk, titled 鈥Ancient Aliens and Contemporary Archaeology,鈥澨齛t 1听p.m. March 16 at the Jenny Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building in the Butcher Auditorium. The lecture, which is free and open to the public, is part of the 麻豆免费版下载Boulder Office for听Outreach and Engagement鈥檚听麻豆免费版下载on the Weekend, a series of informational talks given by 麻豆免费版下载faculty doing engaging work.
鈥淧seudo-archaeology is everywhere.听It is on TV, in movies, and in books,鈥 says Kurnick. 鈥淎nd because of its popularity and omnipresence, pseudo-archaeology is the primary way that most people get information about the human past. Many may think that pseudo-archaeological claims鈥攍ike aliens built the pyramids or we are all descendant from inhabitants of the lost continent of Atlantis鈥攁re just silly or strange. But these claims are often at their core racist and do significant harm to contemporary marginalized groups.鈥
Kurnick, a specialist on the ancient Maya people, focuses her work on contemporary inequalities and how popular perceptions of the ancestors of indigenous peoples鈥攑erceptions often caused and reinforced by pseudo-archaeology鈥攂uttress these inequalities. Pseudo-archaeology does this by discounting the historical significance of certain accomplishments, such as attributing the pyramids to aliens.
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Many may think that pseudo-archaeological claims鈥攍ike aliens built the pyramids or we are all descendant from inhabitants of the lost continent of Atlantis鈥攁re just silly or strange. But these claims are often at their core racist and do significant harm to contemporary marginalized groups.鈥
Notably, Kurnick has been working with modern Maya people in the community of Punta Laguna in the Yucat谩n peninsula. There, residents have developed their own eco-tourism venture based around a nature reserve of the same name.听
Tourism is huge in this area of Mexico, and much of it is based around Maya culture, explains Kurnick. The appropriation of Maya culture is very lucrative for the tourism industry, but contemporary Maya people often do not reap any benefits.
Kurnick鈥檚 project, launched in 2014, aims to document the Maya archaeological site within the nature reserve and to work collaboratively with residents of Punta Laguna to learn about Maya history. Punta Laguna residents can then use this information to bolster the appeal of their tours and local economy.听