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More
commonly known as the Lost Village, Ceren was a Classic
Period village. Around
595 AD, the Loma Caldera volcano in north central El
Salvador erupted with violence.
The result was a mass of fiery ash and debris being
spewed up to 16 feet deep and almost two miles long.
The people living in Ceren, which was only one
quarter of a mile from the center of the volcano, ran for
their lives, leaving food on the dinner table as homes and
fields were destroyed.
For
over 1,400 years, this city lay forgotten, thus the name.
However, in 1978, excavation was underway when a
bulldozer accidentally opened the city, exposing everything
perfectly preserved, as if people had simply walked away
from the table. Experts
are unable to determine the size of Ceren prior to the
volcano eruption but through archaeological studies and
excavations performed by the University of Colorado, we do
know more about this civilization.
To
date, excavations have shown that there was a civic
building, sanctuary, four households, one sweat bath, and
several agricultural fields.
Interestingly, the very flash heat that preserved
images at Herculaneum and Pompeii also left negative
impressions of the agricultural crops.
What these images show is that there were eight,
16-rows of corn, squash, manioc, beans, agave, and cotton.
In addition, images also showed guava, cacao, and
avocado orchids.
Many
wonderful and interesting artifacts have been found to
include wares used for cooking, storing food, and drinking
chocolate. There
has also been evidence uncovered relating to ceremonial and
civic functions of the sweat bath, feast hall, and
sanctuary. However,
while all of these discovers are incredible, the people of
Ceren are by far the most interesting.
For instance, in one of the households, a number of
things were discovered to include a cluster of four
buildings, garden, and midden.
Of these buildings, one was a home, two were made of
daub and wattle construction, the roof was thatched, and the
columns for supporting the roof at the four corners were
adobe.
Inside
one of the rooms, a raised bench was found along with two
storage jars. In
one of the jars, seeds were found and in the other jar,
cotton fibers. Other
finds included a spindle whorl, which suggested a spinning
kit for thread. Another structure found in Ceren was a ramada with a roof but
without walls. Then,
a storehouse, which interestingly, was still full of storage
jars, incensories, metates, hammer stones, and other tools
that would have been used during that era, was still in
tact. This
storehouse still contained shelving, which was stocked with
beans and other foods while chili peppers still hung from
the rafters.
Although
the people from Ceren, the lost village are long gone and
the site has been abandoned for centuries, all of these
findings have opened the door of opportunity, making this an
excavators dream. Now
being able to see this site with new technology has made
Ceren one of the most incredible discoveries of our time.
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