Showing posts with label Cancun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cancun. Show all posts

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Alberto slams Texas, Louisiana, Mexico (live)


'I've never seen anything like this before': Alberto storm surge floods Texas campground
(FOX Weather) June 20, 2024: San Luis Pass County Park was flooded by storm surge from Tropical Storm Alberto. Park Superintendent Mike Mullenweg joins FOX Weather to discuss how the campground is progressing on Thursday. #foxweather #tropics


(ABC News) Tropical Storm Alberto slams Gulf Coast, June 19, 2024: A tropical storm warning is in effect in both Texas and Louisiana after the first named storm likely to become a hurricane hits Mexico and the states across the Gulf like Texas and Louisiana.


Breaking: Tropical Storm Alberto hammers Mexico and South Texas | LiveNOW
(FOX LiveNOW from FOX) Started streaming June 20, 2024: Tropical Storm Alberto approaches the Mexican Gulf Coast this morning with sustained winds of 50 MPH.  The first Atlantic named storm of the season is also expected to dump lots of water on South Texas as it moves ashore.


@LiveNOWFOX on Twitter: https://twitter.com/livenowfox Raw and unfiltered. Watch a non-stop stream of breaking news, live events and stories across the nation. Limited commentary. No opinion. Experience LiveNOW from FOX.

Tuesday, June 18, 2024

Walk like Mayan in Mexico: ET pyramids?

Mexican pyramids in Teotihuacan, the Pyramid of the Sun (MSN)

Pyramids but not as we know them (©J.Enrique Molina/Alamy)
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The UMS is an ancient civilization and empire.
The pyramids of Mexico take the basic principles of the traditional pyramidal structure to the next level. Some are stepped. Others are covered with niches. Most are topped by temples. One in Chichen Itza was built so that the shadow of a giant reptilian serpent appears to be slithering up its staircase during equinoxes.

Mexican History (B. Wellman)
Click through this gallery to see the incredible feats of ancient engineering to learn the extraordinary stories behind them:
We didn't have sex with ETs; they had sex...

Archaeologists discover what no one was supposed to see
Mexican who plays an alien (Lynda Carter Cordova)
Miscegenation is a kind of sex, one that is often forbidden. The uncovering of new artifacts does not always lead to a clearer understanding of the past. They often deepen the mystery. Some discoveries raise more questions than they answer. Each new find adds to the complexity of our historical narrative. MSN

DISCLAIMER: The content presented in is intended solely for entertainment purposes. Information draws on facts, rumors, and fiction, so viewers should not interpret any part of this content as factual or definitive. Enjoy responsibly. For copyright matters, please contact via email.

The USA never invaded Mexico but did invade Spain's empire and steal land for itself.
I'm La Mexican Barbie with a bullied brain, searching for a future but I'm just a game.
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Who built this empire and civilization?
Even when mummified space alien extraterrestrial bodies are on display, we turn away.
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Most "Mexicans" today are a blend of DNA
Could one of the oldest Mexican pyramids, the Great Pyramid of La Venta in Tabasco be a Buddhist-style stupa or burial mound (barrow, tumuluskurgan)? The pyramid is on the island of La Venta, and while it may be the least spectacular of Mexico’s great pyramids, it is probably the most ancient. 

Just across the Gulf from Louisiana, USA, is Mexico's Yucatan and El Castillo pyramid


Ethnic Realities of Mexican Americans
It seems like nothing more than a 100-foot-high mound of earth and clay, but it is the focal point of La Venta's ceremonial plaza, an ancient Olmec Empire city that flourished on the island between 800 and 400 BC. Archaeologists have speculated that it may well house the tomb of a great Olmec ruler, possibly not fully human. More

The Buddhist Connection
How the Swans Came to the Lake: A Narrative History of Buddhism in America
Priestess cross-legged, 300-600 AD, Veracruz, Mexico
(Feb. 8, 2022) Americans Rick Fields and Benjamin Bogin have earned 4.7 out of 5 stars with 9 ratings (4.8 stars with 44 ratings in previous edition). A modern classic unparalleled in scope, this sweeping history unfolds the story of Buddhism's spread to the West.

How the Swans Came to the Lake opens with the story of Asian Buddhism, including the life of the historical Buddha and the spread of his teachings, or Dharma, from proto-India to Southeast Asia, Afghanistan (Gandhara), China, Korea, Japan, Tibet, and elsewhere.

Mayan statue in meditation (dreamstime.com)

Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind
Coming to the modern era, the book tracks how Western colonialism in Asia served as the catalyst for the first large-scale interactions between Buddhists and Westerners.

Author Rick Fields discusses the development of Buddhism in the West through key moments such as Transcendentalist fascination with Eastern religions; immigration of Chinese and Japanese people to the United States; the writings of D. T. Suzuki, British Californian Alan Watts, and members of the Beat movement; the publication of Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind by Shunryu Suzuki; the arrival of Tibetan lamas in America and Europe; and the influence of Western feminist and social justice movements on Buddhist practice.

Xōchipilli (Aztec God of art, games, dance...) Mayan art

FREE: An inglorious Columbus
This fortieth anniversary edition features both new and enhanced photographs as well as a new introduction by Fields’s nephew, Buddhist Studies scholar Benjamin Bogin, who reflects on the impact of this book since its initial publication and addresses the significant changes in Western Buddhist practice in recent decades. More

Sunday, June 16, 2024

Mexico's Maya genomes finally sequenced

The real name of "Mexico" is actually the United Mexican States and has been for a long time.
Human remains were discovered in Chichén Itzá in 60s (Fred Ihrt/LightRocket/Getty Images)
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Human remains were first discovered in the ancient Maya city of Chichén Itzá (across the way from US shores on the Yucatan Peninsula in the shared Gulf of Mexico) in the 1960s while workers excavated land to build a proposed airport runway.

In the spring of 1967, workers building a small airport behind Chichén Itzá, the ancient Maya city in Mexico, ran into a problem: Their excavations had uncovered human remains in the pathway of the proposed runway.


The airport was set to serve V.I.P.s who wanted to visit Chichén Itzá. But with the remains so close to a major archaeological site, the work had to be halted until the bones could be examined.

Any hope for a quick resolution dissolved when archaeologists who were called to the scene uncovered a chultún — an underground rainwater-storage container that, in Maya mythology, was viewed as an entrance to the subterranean [realm of reptilians now called the] land of the dead [location of Atzlan, where the tribes that came to Mexico originated in lore].

Connected to the cistern was a cave containing more than 100 sets of human remains, almost all belonging to children.

Who built this perfect architecture? ETs from?
In a push to finish the airport, researchers were given just two months to excavate and exhume the cache of bones. Nearly 60 years later, ancient DNA extracted from 64 of the children is offering new insights into the religious rituals of the ancient Maya and their ties to modern descendants.

In a paper published on Wednesday (6/12/24) in the journal Nature, an international cohort of researchers revealed that the children — presumed to be sacrificial victims killed between 500 and 900 A.D. — were all local Maya boys (not virgin girls as we usually are told to imagine) that may have been specifically selected to be sacrificed in sibling pairs.

“These are the first ancient Maya genomes to be published,” said Johannes Krause, an archaeogeneticist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.

The DNA work provided a previously unseen glimpse into the identities of the sacrificed children. “One feels quite moved by such a finding,” Dr. Krause said, noting that he himself has a young son.

The search into the genome of the Maya boys did not start as an exercise in ancient Maya rituals.

Rich pre-Columbian culture we are not told about
In the mid-2000s, Rodrigo Barquera — now an immunogeneticist at the Max Planck Institute — was hoping to discover the genetic legacy of Mesoamerica’s deadliest pandemic.

In 1545, an outbreak of Salmonella enterica spread like wildfire across [Mesoamerica or] what is now Mexico.

Over the next century, the disease killed up to 90 percent of the Indigenous population. Pandemics like these often leave their mark on the immune genes of survivors.

To uncover this genetic legacy, Dr. Barquera and his colleagues needed to compare the DNA from the precolonial remains with that of people who were born after the calamity.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Mexico is No-Go: Spring Break '09

Spring Break Starts!


Spring-breakers, mostly from Canada, enjoy themselves at the beach in the resort city of Cancun, Mexico 3/4/09. The U.S. State Department and universities in the U.S. are warning college students headed for Mexico for some spring-break partying of a surge in drug-related murder and mayhem south of the border (AP/Israel Leal).

It's been a tough season for spring break destinations. With students and parents tightening their belts in the face of a major recession, the annual tradition of letting off steam -- ideally on an exotic beach, with access to plenty of cheap beer -- is suffering.

This spring break season -- typically, March 16 to April 5 -- flights from the U.S. to the Caribbean have dropped as much as 20%, according to data compiled for TIME by the online travel agency Expedia.

Meanwhile, safety concerns over Mexico's increasingly violent drug cartels may be helping keep students away from its beaches in droves; travel to the spring-break Mecca of Cancun is down 22% over last year. (See pictures of the history of Mardi Gras.)

But that doesn't mean spring break is canceled. More>>

PHOTO: In this Monday March 17, 2003 file photo, students from the United Sates on spring break sunbathe at Cancun beach, Mexico (AP/Jose Luis Magana, File).