Subterranean river discovered under Mexico's Mayan ruins

1Rene Chavez, right, researcher at the Institute of Geophysics of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, (UNAM), speaks next to Arturo Iglesias, director of the Institute, during a press conference in Mexico City, Thursday, Aug. 13, 2015.
2Researchers at the UNAM found that the Kukulcan pyramid in the archaeological site of Chichen Itza is built on a cenote or a water filled sinkhole.
3MEXICO CITY -- Mexican experts have discovered that the main pyramid at Mexico's Mayan ruins of Chichen Itza was at least partially built atop a subterranean river.
4Experts from Mexico's National Autonomous University say they found a subterranean cavity about 20 metres (yards) deep below the pyramid of Kukulkan, also known as El Castillo.
5Geophysics expert Rene Chavez said Thursday the underground river chamber is naturally covered by rock.
6Such underground rivers often connect the open "cenotes," or sinkhole lakes, that dot Mexico's Yucatan peninsula.
7The discovery was made using a kind electrical resistance survey, not by excavating.
8Chavez said one corner of the pyramid rested on the underground chamber, so it was in danger of collapsing.
9Archaeologist Guillermo de Anda said the discovery was important.
10De Anda, who did not participate in the study, said it may confirm that the Mayas included symbolic maps of their cosmology in their temples and sacred sites.
11The cenotes that surround the pyramid could represent the four points of the compass.
12The river at the centre might represent the centre of the Maya's universe, which they thought of as a tree with roots reaching below ground.
13Also Thursday, the National Institute of Anthropology and History said research at another Mayan site, Uxmal, found an usually high number of medicinal plants growing nearing the structure known as the governor's palace.
14Uxmal site director Jose Huchim Herrera said the concentration of such plants was so much higher in the sacred area than in surrounding fields, that it indicates the Mayas planted them there intentionally as a sort of medicinal garden.