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All Mexico Champa Yaxchilan

Yaxchilan

The ruins of an ancient Mayan city, beautifully preserved and only accessible by boat.

Champa, Mexico

Added By
Monica Petrus
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Ballcourt - no Mayan site is complete without one   Monica Petrus
around the site   jennavee / Atlas Obscura User
around the site   jennavee / Atlas Obscura User
details at the site   jennavee / Atlas Obscura User
Croc on the shore at Yaxchilan   jennavee / Atlas Obscura User
howler monkey at the site   jennavee / Atlas Obscura User
they sound SO menacing   jennavee / Atlas Obscura User
Free to explore and let your imagination run wild   Monica Petrus
The lancha ride to the site   Monica Petrus
Plaza   Monica Petrus
Replica of a lintel - the original (along with others from the site) now resides at the British Museum   Monica Petrus
The top of structure 33   Monica Petrus
Stela carving   Monica Petrus
Long, sweaty climb to the top of Structure 33   Monica Petrus
Grand Plaza   Monica Petrus
Petén style roof comb as seen in Palenque, Tikal and others in the Petén region   Monica Petrus
  Mathias Van de Velde / Atlas Obscura User
Prerequisite boat ride to Yaxchilan site. Guatemala on the right bank, Mexico on left.   rachaelcosta / Atlas Obscura User
  Mathias Van de Velde / Atlas Obscura User
  Mathias Van de Velde / Atlas Obscura User
  Mathias Van de Velde / Atlas Obscura User
  Mathias Van de Velde / Atlas Obscura User
Intricate Stela carving   Monica Petrus
tailless whip scorpion (harmless) inside a building   jennavee / Atlas Obscura User
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About

Serious fans of the film Raiders of the Lost Ark can fulfill every unmet fantasy of reenacting the opening scene here at Yaxchilan.

Set along the Usumacinta River with Guatemala just on the other side, this archaic city will ignite the dullest of imaginations. The site itself is not huge, but it's everything you could ask for; dense jungle, towering trees, incessant calls of howler monkeys and cavernous ruins ripe for exploring.

The fact that this site is only accessible by boat makes getting there half the fun, and once you arrive at the boat dock, you know you're somewhere special. After paying entry, you're free to roam the well-preserved sculptured stone lintels and extensive hieroglyphics. There are several well preserved structures you can explore, their interiors dark and filled with an eerie silence. You might suddenly feel the urge to dash across the grassy, shaded courtyard and pretend you're being chased by blow dart wielding, loincloth wearing tribesmen.

A grueling schlep to the top of the site’s largest structure, Structure 33, will reward you with a dizzying sense of aloneness. It is possible to be the only visitor at the site at any given time, something that cannot be said of tourist saturated Chichen Itza.

All adventure archaeologist fantasies aside, Yaxchilan is an impressive site. The numerous and wonderfully preserved carved lintels and stelae found here contributed greatly to the deciphering of Mayan hieroglyphs. Carved scenes depicting ritual self-sacrifice and blood-letting helped archaeologists to understand the intricacies of ancestor worship. 

Related Tags

Mayan Ruins Archaeology

Know Before You Go

Bring a flashlight (the one on your phone is fine) because you have to enter through a building, and it is dark inside

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Added By

Monica Petrus

Edited By

Rachel, jennavee, rachaelcosta, Mathias Van de Velde

  • Rachel
  • jennavee
  • rachaelcosta
  • Mathias Van de Velde

Published

November 19, 2013

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Yaxchilan
Champa
Mexico
16.895641, -90.966024

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