Aztec skull trophy rack discovered at Mexico City’s Templo Mayor ruin site
Aztec skull trophy rack discovered at Mexico Citys Templo Mayor ruin site
Such racks, or tzompantli, were used to display severed heads of sacrifice victims on wooden poles, and this one is made partly of skulls mortared together
Associated Press in Mexico City
Thursday 20 August 2015 22.10 EDT
Archaeologists say they have have found the main trophy rack of sacrificed human skulls at Mexico Citys Templo Mayor Aztec ruin site.
Racks known as tzompantli were where the Aztecs displayed the severed heads of sacrifice victims on wooden poles pushed through the sides of the skull. The poles were suspended horizontally on vertical posts.
Eduardo Matos, an archaeologist at the National Institute of Anthropology and History, suggested the skull rack in Mexico City was a show of might by the Aztecs. Friends and even enemies were invited into the city, precisely to be cowed by the grisly display of heads in various stages of decomposition.
Paintings and written descriptions from the early colonial period showed descriptions of such racks. But institute archaeologists said the newest discovery was different.
More:
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/21/peru-authorises-military-to-shoot-down-cocaine-smuggling-planes
Anthropology:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/12292262