Thursday, June 11, 2015

A Grand Quest


Greetings my love and random followers of this grand adventure! 

So late this morning, I am enjoying the air conditioning and the company of Pork chop Sandwiches (The Atom Dog Co Official lounge dog) when the doorbell rings and a package is placed at the foot of the door.

I'm waiting for some pants to come in the mail so it was no surprise when the package was addressed to me. Sure, it was heavier than expected, but I ordered some text books too.... 

When I opened it I found a mish mash of things including a military sighting compass, measuring tape, a small trowel. This is nothing close to anything I would normally order. What is this for? Am I being sent on a quest? Summoned for some grand adventure?

I call up my dad to see if he ordered anything that he accidentally shipped to me. It became this whole tag team ordeal. Well, did James order anything? How about Meredith? No?

I'm digging through this box trying to find some receipt or proof of order when I stumble across what might perhaps be a small pick ax. Then all the pieces tumble together. This. This is Cas' stuff. She ordered a bunch of shit for field school. No one back in PA needs a small pick ax type device.... 

So alas, I am not being sent on a quest. But the good news is your stuff arrived!

Always with Love,
-Hill

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Murals, Updates, and Lentijuelas, the Glitteriest Buttons*

*Title shamelessly stolen from Jenny Lawson's book Let's Pretend This Never Happened.


Hello, Hello, Hello!

Look! Have fuzz on the sides, that's how long its been!

Wow, updates updates updates. It's been a week since my last post and we've been busy churning through obsidian at a frenetic pace. I'm fairly sure that we are on track to the goal of 300,000 analyzed pieces. If not, I honestly don't want to see what that pace looks like because this one is blistering enough.
Occasionally, our obsidian is candy-striped.

TINY OBSIDIAN VELOCIRAPTOR

PUPPY

I have pictures for you of many things, including myself and the Mural Museum in Teotihuacan. We actually visited the mural museum the same day as the pyramids, but honestly the pyramid post was somewhat huge and honestly deserved its own space.

The Mural Museum was fantastic, and an example of excellent conservation. Properly titled the Beatriz de la Fuente Museum, the murals and figurines showcased within come directly from the site of the Pyramids, more specifically a compound just outside the Pyramid of the Sun.

Lizard man?

Quetzal Bird, maybe..

Quetzalpapolotl, or Bird-Butterfly

Censer figurines


Next tattoo, probably. Not even sure what it is, but its pretty

Obsidian. LOOK FAMILIAR?!

Notice goggle eyes. Probably Tlaloc.


Elaborate censer top.

Reconstruction!!!

Jade Quetzal thing

Abalone shell.


Jaguars!!

Look at these figures. Awesome.

I say "goggle eyes and moustache," you say Tlaloc.

More Abalone

Stars and stuff

Primordial Earth/Jade Goddess

Really, the mural museum was absolutely amazing and I can't say enough about foreign museums when compared to those in the United States. Having been to the National Museums of Ireland and Scotland in addition to this small museum, the amount of conservation that goes into artifacts is astounding. Don't get me wrong I love the national museums in D.C., but there's so much more going on outside of the United States in the preservation of cultural heritage.

Now for something completely different. The second part of his post is a really cool bit of technology unique to Teotihuacan, which is the lentijuela, or sequin. Crafted from 3rd series sections, usually medial though also proximal, these were used for decoration and are incredibly tiny.

Lentijuela!!

We also find, given the difficult nature of crafting these tiny sequins, a lot of distinctive shatter from when a section broke during crafting. Most of the time, this breaking comes when the center drill is being drilled.

Sad broken sequin.

But its cool tech and they are really fun to find.

Hope you are doing well, I will try to also update this weekend in a more personal post. Missing you much, my dear. 

Hope the rest of you are well!

Cheers,

Cas

Sunday, May 31, 2015

Pyr Snappin'

Greetings my love.

Wow, what a breathtaking place you're working in. I would love to join you adventuring the pyramids (and NO, it's not just because of book 12 of the Dresden Files okay? I've always thought they were gorgeous). Both the art and the architect are beautiful.


Time sure flies when you're taking a Maymester class while puppy-ing and teaching part time... It's busy but  I've certainly toned down on the number of things on my plate this summer and it's lovely. I have time to spend goofing off the with dogs and am enjoying quiet evenings in the company of my fellow communards. 

Jumping into laps is her favorite
She and Harley Quinn are the best of friends. Tali has learned to respect Knight's space and has already started bringing me toys to play fetch with. She's so funny. If you give her a sock or something to play fetch with, she'll dance around with it like it the greatest gift in the entire universe before bringing it back to be tossed again. 


Tali has mastered the "I am but a pyr snap" look from "aunt" Orca. She is for sure one of the cutest puppies I have ever seen. 


She's started learning a few things for her lunch and dinner. She thinks "to to your mat" is the bestest game. "I can get cookies just by standing on this?? This is GREAT!". Recalls our the main focus so she has a good foundation with those for the future. Since she's happiest in someone's lap, they currently involve tossing kibble away from me so I have the chance to call her from a few feet away. 


Kristen was away fro the weekend, when she returned she exclaimed "Tali'Zorah has grown legs!! I was gone for two days and she has legs!" Sure enough your little girl currently has legs that go on for days. All the better for keeping up with her big sister Harley Quinn. 

She is quite popular among the ORCA crew that come out and train with us on Saturdays. She has yet to meet a single stranger and happily runs up into every lap she sees.

Tali'Zorah is sweet and kind and happy happy happy. I don't think she's ever known a single wrong in her whole life. A very bright soul that brings smiles to everyone she crosses. She is a delight.

A video is in the works, possibly up within the next two weeks I believe.

Take care my love,
-Hill, the paps, and your skap




Saturday, May 30, 2015

In the Shadows of the Stars

Wow, what a day, love. 

Yesterday, a group of us went to La Zona, which is the local way of referring to the major archaeological zone of Teotihuacan. Originally, the zone was pretty much open and not really a point of interest unless if one was an archaeologist, or one of the federales. However, sometime in recent decades, the whole zone was turned into a tourist attraction monitored by INAH (Instituta de Nacianale Anthropologica y Historia) and UNAM (Universidad Nacionale de Autonoma Mexica) which is the federal division and the major university of mexico, respectively.

This is both good and bad. Good, because now there is constant surveillance and regulation of the site, which is massive and still has a ridiculous amount of work to be done, so the extra safety is extremely important. Bad, because in order to make the site accessible, the Mexican governement installed parking lots and paved parts of the Avenue of the Dead. Some of these parking lots were probably market places. Some of these parts of the Avenue of the Dead might have been ball courts.

Ugh. Love/Hate government intervention.

Anyway, we did our morning of work and then packed up for the walk to Teotihuacan. Pyramids. Literally in comfortable walking distance. AWESOME. SUPER AWESOME I LOVE MY JOB.
The Road to Teotihuacan is paved not at all, or with ceramic bits.

Stone, or ceramics? Not sure, though we did find some pieces.

Most tourist groups will enter in near the pyramids of the Sun and Moon, which is a shame because they miss a massive part of the site. If you enter in the other end, you walk straight into the end of the Avenue of the Dead, near La Ciudadela (The Citadel) and the Pyramid of the Feathered Serpent. SUPER COOL.

Talud-tablero platforms; thatched houses would be on top, residences of the elites.

More Talud-tablero, with merchandise hawkers for size (also annoyance)

Fun fact: This site is populated by tourists and hawkers of tourist goods, some fine, some entirely shitty. It is entirely polite to ignore them, or politely with them a good afternoon and move on. Totally fine, no need to stop at every one, like some people I saw.

Avenue of the Dead, towards San Juan. Notice shitty pavement. Assholes.

Avenue of the Dead, towards the ceremonial precinct and the Pyramids. (PYRAMIDS)

Alright, so the thing you gotta realize about Teo (shortening of Teotihuacan that I will be using for the rest of the post) is that the main form of architecture, talud-tablero, is enabled by a stupid amount of steps. Preferably extremely steep steps that require some crawling. La Ciudadela has the easiest steps to get up, which is why I would recommend people coming here first, to get acclimated to the rigors of climbing these things before attempting the Pyramids. 

Steps. These were pretty okay. 

View to the left of the platform we just climbed.

The defining feature of La Ciudadela is its massive, enclosed, open courtyard. And by massive, I mean really, really, huge. You can fit like all three pyramids in the space or something ridiculous like that. Notice the little covered area? Open excavation. So much is being done here all the time, and so much has yet to be done. We'd pass these massive grassy hillocks and Sean would just be like "oh yeah, excavated compound/household or something." AND THEY WERE EVERYWHERE. 


Panorama shot of the area, so you can get an idea of the size.

Approaching the central platform. No idea what it was for. 

Notice the white covering between the central platform and the Pyramid. Recently, a group of archaeologists dug straight down and tunneled under the Feathered-Serpent Pyramid, in order to access the structure and burial pits. All of the people working here, mostly, stay in this same compound that I do so hopefully I will get to meet all of them!

So, interesting thing about the Feathered Serpent Pyramid; it has a facade built in front of it and the facade entirely obscures the pyramid. It is thought that the Feathered Serpent cult fell out of favor at some point during the occupation of Teotihuacan, so it was covered up, at least from a viewer's standpoint. We were able to climb the facade and then look at the pyramid behind it.

Right side of the Feathered Serpent Pyramid. The "faces" are feathered serpents, or Tlalocs.

Left side!

Close up of one of the Tlalocs. Tlaloc is the god of rain, storms, and fields. He is best known for his goggle-eyes and moustache.

Feathered serpent head.

Some Tlalocs are losing their moustaches, hence the bars supporting them.

From the Feathered Serpent Pyramid, we headed down the Avenue of the Dead. It's amazing how long it is, but even more amazing is how much empty, unexcavated space their is withing the precinct. Its absolutely nuts how much work there is yet to be done on this site.
See the lumps in the grass? Probably walls. Un-excavated household lots. 

So, eventually the pavement ends and we come to these open fields that are surrounded by walls and staircases. There is some argument as to what these are, mostly split down the lines of whether or not these spaces are ball courts. The archaeologists in the house are split on this, but there is some evidence in the murals found that they are probably ball courts, though no rubber balls or outright symbolism has been found.

Maybe a ball court, maybe just a small plaza. 

Along the walk to the pyramids, we stopped and looked at some of the household compounds that abut the Avenue of the dead. Some had remnants of the red-painted plaster that would have covered the walls. It was amazing to see.


Bogeyman in the basement; feathered serpents under the floor of a house.

Remnants of house pillars.

A shot of three of the courts and a rock thing that has not been restored.

Finally, we got to the sacred precinct, beginning with the pyramid of the Sun, which you can climb to the very top of.

Send in that sunshiiiineeee.....

Lemme say something. I hike. Not a lot, but quite a bit. I'm also a very active person with a significant athletic pedigree. Nothing that I have done could have prepared me for the effort of all the climbing I did, not even close. Not only are the stair steep, but the altitude is such that it gets very difficult to catch your breath, unless you are used to living in the Basin of Mexico. But, you do climb it in tiers, so there are these sort of viewing decks where you can take a breather.

Literal stairway to heaven, I kid you not.


First tier. We were dressed much more appropriately than most gringos.

Panorama from first tier.

Second tier. Notice the people crawling up. I was one of them.

Second tier panorama.

Cool bit of trivia. See the picture directly below? See the weird rock formation with a cleft on the horizon?

I see said the blind man, as he picked up his hammer and saw.

That's where rock to build the pyramids was quarried! We could see it in both the original stonework and in the renovations! Its this reddish basalt/pumicey stuff! Super cool!

Weird red volcanic building stone.

What was best is that we could see out from where we came from the Pyramid of the sun, all the way almost to where we lived in San Juan Teotihuacan.

La Ciudadela and the Feathered Serpent Pyramid, in the distance, to the left.

Pyramid of the Moon, to the right.

Of course, we climbed to the very top. The view was spectacular, as was the fit being thrown by the children whose parents realized that they shouldn't have dragged their kinders up a massive pyramid with no safety rails.

Pyramid of the Moon

I can see Russia from my house! (Jk, its only San Juan)

La Ciudadela again.

We climbed back down (dangerous, do with caution unless you are a pro at pyramids) and then headed to the end of the causeway at the pyramid of the Moon. Saw some cool frescoes, though most of the frescoes have been brought into the Museum of Murals.

Luna, plus tourists.

Jaguar Frescoe

Panorama of the Avenue of the Dead

We limbed the Pyramid of the Moon, which was like climbing a ladder. I'm serious, it was that steep. I almost crawled into some poor girl's lap because I wasn't looking up. Unfortunately we were not able to climb to the top of this pyramid, as it is a bit unsound farther up the stairs.

View back from where we came. Gorgeous.

Excavations in the plaza.

Wow. Look at all the tiny people.

Girl whose lap I almost crawled into. Super sorry.

Even in the sacred precinct, there are still platforms that need excavating. This one is just to the right of the Pyramid of the Moon.

From the platform to the left of the pyramid of the Moon

All in all, it was amazing and I am so lucky to be working in such a beautiful place with so many amazing things to see. I hope that I have a chance to bring you here one day, love. You've shown me your mountains; allow me to return the favor.

I will hopefully be posting more regularly this coming week. Look forward to more obsidian tidbits, facts about technology, and stunning observations from yours truly.

Take care, Everyone, and all my love to my darling spouse.

Cheers,
Cas