Hostname: page-component-cb9f654ff-nr592 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-09-07T08:25:06.528Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

AMS 14C dating of an Ancestral Maya boomtown: Bayesian analysis of settlement development, occupation, and abandonment in East-Central Belize

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2025

Matthew S. Longstaffe*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology and Archaeology, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, AB, T2N 1N4, Canada
Meaghan M. Peuramaki-Brown
Affiliation:
Anthropology Program, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Athabasca University, 1 University Drive, Athabasca, AB, T9S 3A3, Canada
*
Corresponding author: Matthew S. Longstaffe; Email: matthew.longstaffe@ucalgary.ca
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Understanding the developmental and occupational histories of Ancestral Maya settlements is crucial for interpreting their roles in broader social, political, and economic dynamics. This article presents 62 new accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) 14C dates from residential groups in the outlying settlement zone at Alabama, a major inland Ancestral Maya center in East-Central Belize. Alabama is a rare example of a “boomtown” in the Maya lowlands, experiencing rapid development primarily during the 8th and 9th century CE, corresponding to the Late to Terminal Classic periods. Using Bayesian stratigraphic sequence models, we construct detailed developmental and occupational histories for the townsite, clarifying the timing of its development, occupation, and abandonment. Our analysis reveals complex residential histories, confirming a rapid tempo of Late and Terminal Classic settlement growth and indicating continuities in occupation into the 10th century CE and beyond. Furthermore, we identify two separate periods of occupation during the Early Classic (cal AD 345–545) and the Late Postclassic (cal AD 1325–1475), demonstrating that parts of the settlement were inhabited at different intervals over many centuries. These results offer the first detailed deep-history perspective for the East-Central Belize region, establishing a framework that addresses challenges in chronology-building posed by poor pottery preservation and the complexities of earthen-core architecture at the site and enabling future chronological modeling in this lesser-known frontier of the eastern Maya lowlands.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Arizona

1. Introduction

Bayesian chronological modeling has significantly advanced our understanding of the dynamics of settlement development, growth, and decline across the Maya World (Arroyo et al. Reference Arroyo, Inomata, Ajú, Estrada, Nasu and Aoyama2020; Culleton et al. Reference Culleton, Prufer and Kennett2012; Ebert et al., Reference Ebert, Culleton, Awe and Kennett2016; Hanna et al. Reference Hanna, Graham, Pendergast, Hoggarth, Lentz and Kennett2016; Hoggarth et al. Reference Hoggarth, Culleton, Awe, Helmke, Lonaker, Davis and Kennett2021; Inomata et al. Reference Inomata, Triadan, MacLellan, Burham, Aoyama, Palomo, Yonenobu, Pinzón and Nasu2017; Prufer et al. Reference Prufer, Thompson, Meredith, Culleton, Jordan, Ebert, Winterhalder and Kennett2017; Tsukamoto et al. Reference Tsukamoto, Tokanai, Moriya and Nasu2020; Vadala and Walker Reference Vadala and Walker2020). Since 2014, the Stann Creek Regional Archaeology Project (SCRAP) has investigated such processes at Alabama, an Ancestral Maya townsite in East-Central BelizeFootnote 1 . Unlike many settlements that developed slowly over centuries or millennia, Alabama is a rare example of a “boomtown,” a rapid-growth community settled during the 8th and 9th century CE or the Late to Terminal Classic periods (Peuramaki-Brown Reference Peuramaki-Brown2017). Alabama’s sudden growth appears to coincide with the early decline and disintegration of many other Classic Maya polities, a phenomenon commonly referred to as the “Maya collapse” (Aimers Reference Aimers2007; Culbert Reference Culbert1973; Demarest et al. Reference Demarest, Rice and Rice2004; Dunning et al. Reference Dunning, Beach and Luzzadder-Beach2012; Iannone et al. Reference Iannone, Houk and Schwake2016; Lucero Reference Lucero2002; Webster Reference Webster2002). While the factors contributing to Alabama’s boom may never be fully understood, developing a more detailed understanding of where and when people settled at the townsite enables exploration of the relationship between patterns of settlement growth at local and regional scales and the broader sociopolitical, economic, ideological, and demographic shifts that characterized this period of Ancestral Maya history.

In this article, we present 62 new AMS 14C dates from three residential groups in Alabama’s outlying settlement zone. Using a Bayesian statistical framework, we model these radiocarbon data in stratigraphic sequence to generate detailed developmental and occupational histories for the townsite. This approach addresses challenges in chronology building at Alabama and comparable sites in East-Central Belize, including poor pottery preservation, obscured stratigraphic profiles due to earthen-core construction techniques, and difficulties constraining radiocarbon dates from the Late to Terminal Classic period (ca. 600–900 CE), many of which lie on a plateau/reversal in the 14C calibration curve. We describe our excavations of platform architecture at each residential group, highlighting distinct stratigraphic contexts and their associated AMS 14C dates. The results offer the first directly dated sequence models for East-Central Belize. They provide crucial chronological reference points for understanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of this rapid-growth community and its surrounding region. Insights from this study also offer methodological guidance for integrating excavations of earthen-core architecture with AMS 14C dating, informing future reconstructions of site development and occupational histories along the eastern frontier of the Maya lowlands and beyond.

2. Background

2.1. Archaeological investigations at Alabama, East-Central Belize

Alabama is a major inland Ancestral Maya center of East-Central Belize, a unique material culture sub-region of the eastern frontier of the Maya lowlands (Figure 1; Graham Reference Graham, Evans and Webster2001; Peuramaki-Brown Reference Peuramaki-Brown2017). The sub-region features diverse environmental zones accessible within a day’s walk or paddle, including high-canopy broadleaf forests along rivers and creeks, pine ridges and savannahs, coastal plains, lagoons, and coastal beaches and mangroves. Within this landscape, Alabama occupies the uppermost terrace of an alluvial pocket within the first range of the foothills along the eastern slopes of the Maya Mountains, approximately 20 km inland from the Caribbean coast. This economically and politically strategic position prompted both Graham (Reference Graham1994, 132) and MacKinnon (Reference MacKinnon, McKillop and PF1989a) to propose the site may have served as a “gateway community” (Burghardt Reference Burghardt1971). Indeed, the region has long captivated the attention of scholars interested in economic processes such as resource acquisition and use and the movement of resources and goods within the region and beyond (Dunham Reference Dunham and Fedick1996; Graham Reference Graham1987, Reference Graham1994; Jordan et al. Reference Jordan, Peuramaki-Brown, Chiac, Saqui and Tzib2021; MacKinnon Reference MacKinnon, McKillop and PF1989a, Reference MacKinnon1989b; Mackinnon and Kepecs Reference MacKinnon and Kepecs1989, Reference MacKinnon and Kepecs1991; MacKinnon and May Reference MacKinnon and May1990; Shipley Reference Shipley1978; Stomper et al. Reference Stomper, Brown and Pope2004; Tibbits et al., Reference Tibbits, Peuramaki-Brown, Brouwer Burg, Tibbits and Harrison-Buck2023). Alabama was strategically located not only in terms of its position at a nexus of resource zones and proximity to inland and coastal trade routes but also because of its vicinity to the inland site of Pearce, located ca. 10 km north along an upper tributary of the South Stann Creek and accessible via a gap in the foothills of the Maya Mountains (Peuramaki-Brown and Morton Reference Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2019a). The relationship between Alabama and Pearce is an anticipated focus of future SCRAP research.

Figure 1. Map of central Belize, showing the location of Alabama within the material culture subregion of East-Central Belize and other select archaeological sites.

For the past decade, SCRAP has worked to understand the tone and tempo of Alabama’s development and growth. Building on research by Graham (Reference Graham1994) and MacKinnon (Reference MacKinnon1987, Reference MacKinnon1988a, Reference MacKinnon1988b, Reference MacKinnon, McKillop and PF1989a, Reference MacKinnon1989b; MacKinnon et al. Reference MacKinnon, Olson and May1993), archaeological investigations in the monumental core and at various loci in the outlying settlement zone suggest rapid development at the townsite during the late facet of the Late Classic to Terminal Classic periods (ca. 700–900 CE). Although home to only around 1,000 people at its peak, the townsite exhibited many urban hallmarks typical of larger and longer-occupied settlements (Peuramaki-Brown and Morton Reference Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2019b). Located outside the limestone plains and karst landscapes that characterize much of the Maya lowlands, builders relied on locally available granite, slate, phyllite, quartzite, and various clays and alluvial sediments for constructing platforms and various surfaces (Graham Reference Graham, Evans and Webster2001, 684). Although investigations indicate human presence to some degree in the monumental core during the Early Classic period (ca. 250–600 CE), limited architectural evidence suggests that this settlement was small and relatively short-lived. Today, Alabama’s monumental core lies covered by tropical broadleaf forest, while the settlement zone sits amid an active, industrial-scale orange orchard.

Building chronologies at Alabama has presented several challenges (Peuramaki-Brown et al. Reference Peuramaki-Brown, Morton, Longstaffe and Jordan2023). First, the region’s clay-rich and highly acidic soils, which include alluvium from the valley bottom and hill-wash sediments and soils derived from granites and related rocks of the Cockscomb Granitic Complex (Kesler et al. Reference Kesler, Kienle and Batesom1974; Martens et al. Reference Martens, Weber and Valencia2010; Shipley Reference Shipley1978) coupled with above-average rainfall (Wright et al. Reference Wright, Romney, Arbuckle and Vial1959, 148), result in zero preservation of bone or shell, and exceptionally poor preserved and highly fragmentary pottery assemblages. Pottery sherds recovered from construction core contexts typically lack diagnostic attributes such as well-defined forms, rims and bases, and preserved slip or other surface treatment, limiting our ability to assign types or varieties within established lowland Maya ceramic typologies (e.g., Adams Reference Adams1971; Culbert Reference Culbert1993; Gifford Reference Gifford1976; Sabloff Reference Sabloff1975). While distinctive types, varieties, or, most often, wares are occasionally identified (Jordan et al. Reference Jordan, Peuramaki-Brown, Chiac, Saqui and Tzib2021, 5), these represent exceptions rather than the norm. Consequently, analyses of ceramic assemblages have focused instead on more durable modal attributes such as paste and fabric (Jordan et al. Reference Jordan, Peuramaki-Brown, Chiac, Saqui and Tzib2021).

Stratigraphy plays a crucial role in establishing chronological control over archaeological contexts (Harris Reference Harris2014), and proper interpretation is vital for constructing Bayesian sequences (Bayliss Reference Bayliss2015; Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009a; Dye and Buck Reference Dye and Buck2015). However, documenting and understanding stratigraphy at Alabama is challenging due to site formation processes related to the clay-rich earthen materials used in platform construction cores. Builders sourced platform construction materials from nearby borrow pits or local alluvial deposits (Jordan Reference Jordan, Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2019:226-232). Large borrow pits encircle the monumental core (Peuramaki-Brown and Morton Reference Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2019b, 5, Figure 3), and one sits adjacent to the largest outlying settlement site in the orchard, ALA-002. Post-depositional alterations, such as erosion, swelling, heaving, and bioturbation by burrowing animals and tree roots, can complicate distinguishing between stratigraphic layers without extended profile exposures. Variations in soil/sediment colour and texture, along with relative artifact frequencies, aid in distinguishing between construction and occupation contexts, though these boundaries often remain ambiguous. Determining whether changes in soil composition indicate discrete construction events or result from basket-load construction by different task units (Loten and Pendergast Reference Loten and Pendergast1984) proves challenging, except in rare cases where builders buried facing stones during architectural remodeling. In some instances, changes in material selection appear intentional, contributing to building stability or carrying cultural significance (Inomata et al. Reference Inomata, Triadan, Vázquez López, Fernandez-Diaz, Omori, Méndez Bauer, García Hernández, Beach, Cagnato, Aoyama and Nasu2020; Sherwood and Kidder Reference Sherwood and Kidder2011).

Charcoal samples from construction core contexts occasionally produce 14C determinations that are wildly improbable, sometimes dating thousands to tens of thousands of years too old (see Nolan Reference Nolan2012; Schilling Reference Schilling2013; Wallis et al. Reference Wallis, McFadden and Singleton2015 for similar challenges in the American Southeast). These extreme outlier examples almost certainly originate from deeply buried strata containing non-anthropogenic charcoal formed via natural fires. In addition to quarry sites, borrow pits may have also functioned as refuse disposal areas. Therefore, we presume that most cultural materials in construction cores, including pottery and charcoal, are secondary materials redeposited during platform construction (Schiffer Reference Schiffer1987). Radiocarbon data from these contexts remain valuable as they provide maximal ages, or termini post quos, to constrain 14C dates in overlying contexts in the sequence (Bayliss et al. Reference Bayliss, van der Plicht, Bronk Ramsey, McCormac, Healy, Whittle, Whittle, Healy and Bayliss2011; Manning and Birch Reference Manning and Birch2022). Furthermore, when coupled with other lines of evidence, information derived from outlier samples can offer insights into the timing of earlier settlement activity.

Even when calibrated radiocarbon dates align reasonably with known contextual information, they may indicate two or more discrete calendar periods due to wiggles, reversals, or plateaus in the 14C calibration curve (Culleton et al. Reference Culleton, Prufer and Kennett2012, 1585; Manning Reference Manning2024; Manning and Birch Reference Manning and Birch2022; Manning et al. Reference Manning, Birch, Conger and Sanft2020; Meadows et al. Reference Meadows, Rinne, Immel, Fuchs, Krause-Kyora and Drummer2020; Taylor et al. Reference Taylor, Stuiver and Reimer1996, 661-662). This issue is prevalent at Alabama, where the principal period of residential construction and occupation coincides with a minor reversal and plateau. This often results in ambiguous bi-modal Late Classic calendar probabilities or wide date ranges encompassing both the Late Classic and the Terminal Classic periods. These two cultural-historical periods exhibit markedly different dynamics: the former represents the apogee of the Classic period Maya city-states, while the latter signifies their disintegration and the accompanying political, social, economic, ideological, and demographic transformations.

3. Methods

3.1. Sample selection

We selected all samples for radiocarbon dating from excavations at three residential groups (ALA-002, ALA-045, and ALA-047) on the alluvial bottomlands of Alabama’s settlement zone, approximately 1 km to the southwest of the monumental core (Figures 2 and 3). These excavations occurred in 2016, 2018, 2019, 2022, and 2023. We chose samples from various stratigraphic contexts related to platform construction and occupation to estimate the timeframe of cultural activities associated with these settlement sites. We prioritized samples from contexts with clear natural or architectural stratigraphy wherever possible. We collected all samples in situ, recording three-dimensional information (depth, distances from excavation unit walls) along with lot numbers and assigned cultural contexts. We reviewed and, when necessary, adjusted context designations post hoc using our best judgment, informed by stratigraphy, associated material deposits, and other radiocarbon data.

Figure 2. GPS map of settlement zone of Alabama, showing location of settlement units discussed in the text.

Figure 3. Topographic maps of settlement units discussed in the text, indicating locations of excavation units: (top) ALA-002; (middle) ALA-045; and (bottom) ALA-047.

3.2. AMS 14 C dating

Radiocarbon samples were processed at Beta Analytic (USA) and the A.E. Lalonde AMS (Canada) laboratories, following the sample pretreatment and analytical procedures of each laboratory (see https://www.radiocarbon.com/beta-lab.htm and Crann et al. Reference Crann, Murseli, St-Jean, Zhao, Clark and Kieser2017, respectively). Samples analyzed by Beta Analytic are prefixed with “Beta,” while those by the AEL-AMS Laboratory are “UOC.” Most samples selected for dating were single pieces of charcoal, with priority given to small, and thus likely short-lived, pieces of wood (i.e., twigs) to help mitigate the potential for inbuilt age (Dee and Bronk Ramsey Reference Dee and Bronk Ramsey2014) and the “old wood” effect (Schiffer Reference Schiffer1986). Two samples (UOC-16316 and 16317) exhibited < 1 % carbon content, indicating they were not pure charcoal and were consequently analyzed as bulk sediment and may have averaging built into their dates (Ashmore Reference Ashmore1999).

We report all dates in Table 1, with radiocarbon ages calculated as -8033ln (F14C) and reported in 14C yr BP (BP=AD 1950; Stuiver and Polach Reference Stuiver and Polach1977; Reimer et al. Reference Reimer, Brown and Reimer2004). We corrected dates to calendar years (cal yr BP) using OxCal v.4.4 (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009a) and calibrated them using the IntCal 20 calibration curve (Reimer et al. Reference Reimer, Austin, Bard, Bayliss, Blackwell, Bronk Ramsey, Butzin, Cheng, Edwards and Friedrich2020). Discontinuous ranges are reported in Table 1 and are simplified in the text. Calibrated and modeled dates are 2-sigma calibrated ranges (95.4% probability) unless stated otherwise. Calibrated dates are expressed as “cal AD” or “cal BC,” while calendar and seriational dates (e.g., culture-history periods or ceramic periods) employ “CE” or “BCE.”

Table 1. AMS 14C dates from Alabama’s settlement zone

* Samples identified as outliers within their respective Sequence models were removed from analyses. See supplemental materials.

3.3. Bayesian modeling

Bayesian statistical analyses provide a powerful tool for constraining the probability distributions of calibrated radiocarbon dates and testing the extent to which dates fit interpretive expectations (Bayliss Reference Bayliss2009; Buck et al. Reference Buck, Cavanagh and Litton1996; Hamilton and Krus Reference Hamilton and Krus2018). We utilized Bayesian statistical tools in OxCal 4.4 (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009a) to model AMS 14C dates across six ordered stratigraphic sequence models. These tools allow analysts to incorporate “prior” information, such as stratigraphy, ceramic sequences, and culture-historical frameworks, to constrain sample date ranges. Our Bayesian models make prior information explicit by formalizing assumptions and utilize these constraints to generate narrower probabilistic ranges (Bayliss Reference Bayliss2015, 681; Buck and Meson Reference Buck and Meson2015, 571; Lulewicz Reference Lulewicz2018, 59–60). We use the default uniform prior distribution in OxCal, which assumes all dates within a specified range have equal probability. This reflects the assumption that, without additional constraints, an event (such as platform construction or deposition of refuse) could have occurred at any point within the range. OxCal codes used in the analysis are provided in Supplementary Material 1.

The graphical output of OxCal displays the effects of modeling in the generated histograms, where the original, unmodeled dates are greyed in the background, and constrained (posterior) ranges are darkened in the foreground. The models’ posterior estimates should be considered interpretive rather than absolute and may change as new excavations are carried out and dates from additional contexts are added to the models. Individual runs of models will have very slightly different results. The modeled output includes each date’s refined posterior probability distribution and indicators regarding their congruency with the model, enabling the investigation of problematic dates as potential outliers. Agreement indices (A) are generated for both the model (A-model) and the posterior distributions of each radiocarbon date, with a scale of approximately 0–120%, with a cutoff at 60% (A’c = 60) indicating a poor fit (analogous to 0.05 significance level in a χ2 test; Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009b). It is important to note that an agreement index above A’c does not necessarily confirm the model’s “correctness;” instead, it signifies a good fit between the model and the data, and it is up to the analyst to determine whether the agreement is significant (Culleton et al. Reference Culleton, Prufer and Kennett2012, 1577). Agreement indices aid in identifying outliers, which the analyst can manually eliminate based on expert knowledge of the depositional processes relevant to the archaeological context.

Formal outlier analysis methods are more sophisticated and entail assigning a prior probability to the likelihood that a given measurement, event timing, or sequence placement is incorrect. These models allow the analyst to determine appropriate revisions after considering all available information. Following Bronk Ramsey (Reference Bronk Ramsey2009b, 1024–1028), first, we manually rejected the most apparent outliers. To identify additional outliers using statistical methods, we applied a “General” temporal outlier model (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009b, 1028; Dee and Bronk Ramsey Reference Dee and Bronk Ramsey2014). This model uses a long-tail Student’s t distribution with 5 degrees of freedom to detect outliers by assigning a probability that a radiocarbon date is anomalous due to various issues such as contamination, redeposition, or incorrect contextual association. When the outlier model is applied, radiocarbon determinations identified as outliers—based on their consistency with all other available information, including other radiocarbon dates and model parameters—are down-weighted, reducing the influence of these dates on the overall chronology. If outliers are retained in the model, the results essentially represent a sort of “averaging” between a model that accepts the date and one that rejects it (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009b, 1024). We removed the identified outliers to avoid such averaging and reran the model. This was an iterative process; in some cases, removing one date from the sequence introduced new outliers. Once satisfied, we removed the outlier analysis code to generate the stratigraphic sequence models presented in this article. Results of each step of the outlier analysis are provided in Supplementary Material 2. Unsurprisingly, most outlier dates are associated with construction core contexts containing redeposited secondary materials or other contexts affected by site formation processes that moved samples out of their original context. While we assume that most, if not all, 14C determinations from construction core contexts stem from secondary materials and thus should be interpreted as termini post quos for platform construction, outliers were those dates that had the most detrimental effect on the overall model agreement.

Culleton and colleagues (Reference Culleton, Prufer and Kennett2012, 1577, their table 3) summarize the basic commands of OxCal and detail the relevant stratigraphic contexts to which these commands apply (see also Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009a; Hamilton and Krus Reference Hamilton and Krus2018). We used Sequences to establish the basic ordered stratigraphic structure for each model. We modeled strata separating directly dated contexts as Boundaries, estimating the probabilistic start and end times of events that are not directly dated. Our placement of boundaries relied on stratigraphic information, including changes in soil matrices, artifact density and composition, or clear examples of architectural modifications or additions. We grouped all radiocarbon dates belonging to the same stratigraphic deposit (e.g., construction core, occupation horizon, refuse deposit) within a Phase, providing a container for otherwise unordered dates within the ordered Sequence and giving each date equal weighting. OxCal allows users to choose among different types of relationships between groups coded as phases (contiguous, overlapping, or sequential), each of which treats the data differently (Bronk Ramsey Reference Bronk Ramsey2009a, 348). Contiguous phases refer to groups that follow one after another with a transition event and use the same boundary for the end of one phase and the start of the next. Sequential phases refer to cases where there is a hiatus between groups, but with the placement of an additional boundary to indicate the beginning of the second phase comes after the end of the first. Overlapping phases treat groups of dates within the sequence independently and allow for the modeling of contexts where one phase might start before the previous one has ended. In some instances, we applied the After command to define terminus post quos within models to incorporate prior ceramic data. We justify each instance below.

4. Results

4.1. Settlement Unit ALA-002

ALA-002 is one of Alabama’s largest outlying settlement units, featuring three platforms arranged around a 2,250 m2 raised boulder and cobble core plaza (Figure 3a). The two largest platforms, ALA-002A (2.5 m tall) and ALA-002B (2.75 m tall), are relatively well preserved, while orchard activities have partially disturbed ALA-002C, a 0.5 m tall L-shaped platform. We conducted horizontal and stratigraphic excavations at all three platforms and placed a 1 m × 1 m test unit in the plaza (Peuramaki-Brown et al. Reference Peuramaki-Brown, Blaine, Chiac, Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2022, forthcoming). Additionally, we carried out 258 shovel test excavations (0.5 m × 0.5 m) on a 5 m × 5 m grid across the plaza and to the sides and rears of the platforms (Longstaffe Reference Longstaffe, Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2022). These investigations identified three distinct occupation components: a buried occupation that dates to the Early Classic, a Late Classic to Early Postclassic occupation represented by the visible platform architecture, and a reoccupation of two platforms during the Late Postclassic period.

4.1.1. Early Classic occupation

Small quantities of Early Classic ceramics and outlier charcoal AMS 14C dates in the group’s Late Classic period platform construction cores suggest an earlier occupation near ALA-002. Although we have not identified Early Classic architecture in Alabama’s settlement zone, we documented cultural deposits that we posit date to this period in stratigraphic profile windows at each platform and below the plaza core, buried beneath 25–30 cm of sterile sediment. Compared to permanent survey monuments, the absolute depths of these spatially separated contexts show only a few centimetres of difference relative to the current ground level, indicating they likely represent a single, coherent, stratigraphic level. One deposit, a ca. 10 cm thick artifact-bearing layer of olive-yellow to yellowish-brown sediment behind ALA-002A, included an Early Classic basal flange with preserved red and black paint on an orange/cream slip. A similarly buried layer at ALA-002C contained artifacts, though it lacked diagnostic ceramics. Additionally, we documented eight blackened sand features buried beneath the plaza and Step 1 of ALA-002B, with the uppermost containing unidentifiable ceramics. No carbon was found in these features or floated sediment samples. Assuming the outlier charcoal samples in the construction cores resulted from human activity coeval with these deposits rather than natural processes, they may provide valuable insights into the timing of this earlier occupation. We modeled seven outlier dates as an unordered phase with boundaries marking the start and end of activity (Table 2). Using OxCal’s Date function, we estimate this activity between cal AD 345–545. An older age determination (UOC-23599: 1950 ± 20 BP, cal AD 15–125) from charcoal in terrace construction core at the back of ALA-002B was identified as an outlier at 79% probability and excluded from this analysis.

Table 2. Bayesian model of Early Classic radiocarbon ages and calibrated date ranges

Amodel = 110.2; Aindex = 111.9

4.1.2. ALA-002A

Excavations at ALA-002A revealed contexts associated with platform construction and ritual or ceremonial use of the structure (Table 3, Figure 4). The platform’s function is inferred from its location on the plaza’s east side, square base, a tall granite slab–potentially an uncarved stela–toppled at mid-stair level, and the relative scarcity of residential artifacts (Chase and Chase Reference Chase, AF and SD1998). Activity around the platform began between cal AD 530–765, but likely in the Late Classic, between cal AD 620–750 (1-sigma). Before constructing the platform, builders levelled an occupation horizon to create a stable surface, represented by a ca. 5 cm-thick layer of tamped olive-brown loamy sand, extending beneath the platform, as revealed by a 1 m-wide profile exposure (Figure 4b). A 3 cm-thick deposit of carbonized materials, possibly from a ritual burning event, was observed directly beneath the platform atop the occupation horizon and dated to cal AD 650–760 (UOC-12578). The ancient builders piled earthen material over this deposit to form the platform’s construction core. In the same profile, fallen stones and colluvium were removed, exposing the lowest, heavily slumped four-course high terrace of the platform’s rear façade.

Table 3. Modeled results for the ALA-002A stratigraphic sequence

Amodel = 77.9; Aindex = 76.7

Figure 4. (a) Bayesian model for ALA-002A. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profiles. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in Oxcal; (b) profile of east (rear) side of ALA-002A, showing locations of radiocarbon samples; (c) profile of west (front) side of ALA-002A, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. For both (b) and (c) outliers mentioned in the text are in red and labelled. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped.

Three AMS 14C dates from charcoal in the construction core indicate platform construction during the Late Classic. The stratigraphically highest sample, from just below a surface of small alluvial cobbles–possibly the base of a terrace surface at the level of the superior course of the lowest terrace of the rear platform face–dates to cal AD 680–770 (UOC-16274). The second sample, recovered behind the basal course of the same terrace, dates to cal AD 675–775 (UOC-16252). The third sample is from Feature 2, a dense deposit of carbon and fragmented ceramic sherds associated with three squared granite slabs within the construction core toward the platform’s top, dating to cal AD 680–770 (UOC-23596). This sample likely did not form in situ, as neither the ceramics nor the surrounding soil show signs of burning. The slabs associated with this feature are aligned north to south, perpendicular to the building’s central axis, and may serve as capstones for a yet-to-be-excavated primary deposit. A smashed Platon Punctated-incised tripod dish with rattle feet and preserved red slip was found on an adjacent granite slab, likely an offering still in its primary context. These standardized British Honduras Ash Ware vessels–simple outflaring or outcurving dishes with incised lines near their rims or bases–were produced in the Belize River Valley throughout the Late and Terminal Classic periods (Chase and Chase Reference Chase and Chase2015; Gifford Reference Gifford1976, 257; Jordan et al. Reference Jordan, Davenport, Goodwin, MacDonald, Ebert, Hoggarth and Awe2022; LeCount et al. Reference LeCount, Yaeger, Leventhal and Ashmore2002). At centers in the Toledo District to the south, British Honduras Ash Wares did not become common until after 780 CE, making them an important diacritical marker of the onset of the Terminal Classic (Braswell Reference Braswell and Braswell2022a, 88). As such, their presence in Late Classic contexts at Alabama suggests that residents may have had stronger or earlier trade ties to the Belize Valley than did contemporaneous settlements farther south.

Above Feature 2, excavators documented a pile of cobbles, designated as Feature 1, within the earthen construction core. The purpose of this feature remains to be determined; it could be a cluster of alluvial stone inclusions or a marker for the location of Feature 2, among other possibilities. Early facet Late Classic AMS 14C dates from this feature (UOC-23595: 1360 ± 20 BP, 93% probability of cal AD 645–680) and from the construction core just above the carbon layer atop the occupation horizon (UOC-16253: 1420 ± 30 BP, cal AD 590–660) were excluded from the model as outliers due to low agreement indices. Despite their exclusion, these outlier dates highlight the possibility of earlier activities elsewhere in the settlement unit during the Late Classic, prior to ALA-002A’s construction. We suspect that ALA-002B was the first platform constructed at the settlement site (see results below) and that ALA-002A was a later addition to the group.

A 1-m-wide profile exposure revealed that the platform’s lowest masonry courses were buried beneath the boulder and cobble core of the plaza pavement, indicating that the platform predates the formal plaza (Figure 4c). Initially, the natural ground surface between the group’s platforms functioned as the plaza. This is evidenced by an artifact-bearing, yellowish-brown sandy clay stratum just below the terminal plaza construction core. Pockets of habitation debris and several features were identified at various loci across this surface. A separate refuse deposit, directly associated with ALA-002A, formed a 35–40 cm thick stratified layer atop the occupation horizon, abutting the face of the lowest rear platform terrace. Notable differences were observed between the lower and upper sections of the matrix, with upper layers containing numerous carbon flecks, friable ceramics, and heat-exposed chert (pink/red with potlid scars), indicating a significant burning event toward the end of the structure’s use. Additional refuse was found in isolated deposits intermingled with fallen and slumped granite stones along the back and front of the platform.

Without a way to stratigraphically link these spatially separated contexts–specifically, the refuse dispersed across the penultimate plaza and the refuse associated with the platform–they were modeled as two independent overlapping phases. This approach allowed for independent estimates of the timing of refuse accumulation at ALA-002A relative to the refuse accumulation and features associated with the original plaza surface, as well as the subsequent construction of the cobble and boulder plaza, without making assumptions about the temporal sequence or stratigraphic relationship between these events.

The first of these phases incorporated AMS 14C dates associated with ALA-002A platform refuse, including a charcoal sample from between fallen architectural blocks on the front of the structure, dated to cal AD 710–825 (UOC-23598) and two others from the stratified refuse deposit. One sample from the deposit’s upper layer, just below the slumped third course of the exposed platform terrace (A4, stone C2), dates to cal AD 720–820 (UOC-12673), while another from the lower portion has a similar date range, at cal AD 715–820 (UOC-12684). Both dates extend from the late facet of the Late Classic into the Terminal Classic period. These dates are corroborated by temporally diagnostic ceramics recovered from the deposit, including Dolphin Head Red dishes and bowls, British Honduras Volcanic Ash Wares, Hondo Red, and other Late and Terminal Classic forms and modes, including a solid nubbin foot (Fauvelle et al. Reference Fauvelle, Pitcavage and Braswell2012; Gifford Reference Gifford1976; Hammond Reference Hammond1975; Jordan and Prufer Reference Jordan and Prufer2017; Jordan et al. Reference Jordan, Peuramaki-Brown, Chiac, Saqui and Tzib2021, 5). A broad boundary estimate suggests subsequent refuse deposition continued until some point between cal AD 720–840. Unlike other structures in the group, ALA-002A has no confirmed examples of Early Postclassic pottery. Combined with evidence of burning observed in the stratified refuse deposit, this suggests that the platform was abandoned or decommissioned during the Terminal Classic period while others in the group remained in use.

In parallel, the second overlapping phase utilized data from shovel test excavations across the formal raised boulder and cobble core plaza. Excavations identified three features containing datable carbon. Two of these features, clusters of habitation debris, date to cal AD 755–830 (UOC-16317) and cal AD 735–830 (UOC-12579), respectively (Figure 5). While this latter sample exhibits low agreement (A=53.6%), there is no justification for rejecting this date, as the context is secure beneath the plaza core. The sample likely represents a deposit formed just prior to plaza construction activities (94.9% probability of cal AD 755–830). Another feature, located near the plaza’s southern margin, consists of a large mass of daub surrounded by river cobbles with charcoal and dates to cal AD 775–825 (UOC-12576).

Figure 5. Plaza shovel test excavations: (a) STP69, possible posthole/daub feature, showing enclosure (left) and daub mass (right); (b) STP166, remains of artifact/carbon cluster after excavation; (c) examples of shovel test excavations, on plaza (top [STP197]) and off plaza (bottom [STP92]).

Isolated refuse deposits beneath the plaza core contained moulded-carved ceramics, which first appeared in this part of the Maya lowlands at the onset of the Terminal Classic, no earlier than 800 CE (Helmke and Reents-Budet Reference Helmke and Reents-Budet2008; Rice and Forsyth Reference Rice, Forsyth, Demarest, Rice and Rice2004; Ting and Helmke Reference Ting and Helmke2013, 43; Ting et al. Reference Ting, Martinón-Torres, Graham and Helmke2015). While incorporating ceramic priors into Bayesian models is generally discouraged unless the ceramics bear hieroglyphic dates, moulded-carved pottery is a highly diagnostic decorative style with well-documented temporal attributes. For instance, Ahk’utu’ Moulded-carved pottery, the most widely distributed type in the eastern Peten and central Belize, includes a patronage statement referencing Ixolom, or “Lady Olom,” an elite figure whose rise to power between 810 and 830 CE is recorded in stone inscriptions at Uaxactun, providing a temporal anchor for the earliest of these vessels (Helmke and Reents-Budet Reference Helmke and Reents-Budet2008, 43). Although the moulded-carved sherds in this context could not be identified to type, their secure stratigraphic placement beneath the plaza core, combined with known temporal attributes, strongly supports their inclusion as a terminus post quem in the model. However, we adopted a conservative approach, using a cut-off of 800 CE to represent the earliest probable appearance of moulded-carved ceramics in the region (Ting et al. Reference Ting, Martinón-Torres, Graham and Helmke2015). Incorporating this prior into the model constrains an AMS 14C date from the plaza ballast to cal AD 795–840 (UOC-16254). Plaza activity is estimated between cal AD 795–860, though it likely continued into the Early Postclassic associated with activity at ALA-002B and ALA-002C (discussed below). The overall ALA-002A sequence concludes with a boundary marking the latest probable activity at the structure, estimated to be between cal AD 795–915, but likely between cal AD 805–850 (1-sigma), based on data from both the structure and plaza.

4.1.3. ALA-002B

The sequence for ALA-002B includes platform construction events beginning in the Late Classic, occupation extending through the Early Postclassic, and reoccupation in the Late Postclassic (Table 4, Figures 6 and 7). Artifact assemblages and architectural features suggest the platform functioned as a domestic structure, likely serving as the group’s principal residence during the Late Classic to Early Postclassic occupation. The initial boundary estimate for the earliest possible activity is poorly constrained between 100 cal BC and cal AD 645, although a Late Classic period estimate is likely (cal AD 400–630, 1-sigma). A boundary representing an occupation horizon, marked by a ca. 5 cm-thick tamped, olive-brown, loamy sand layer extending from in front of the platform stair to beneath the bottom course of Step 1, is estimated between cal AD 435–650. Initial platform construction activity is estimated to be between cal AD 590–655, during the early facet of the Late Classic.

Table 4. Modeled results for the ALA-002B stratigraphic sequence

Amodel = 89.8; Aindex = 91.5

Figure 6. Bayesian model for ALA-002B. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profiles on Figure 7.

Figure 7. Profiles of excavations at ALA-002B showing locations of radiocarbon samples: (a) front face, stair, and adjacent plaza pavement; (b) top of mound; and (c) back of mound. On all profiles outliers are in red. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped.

A 1-m-wide profile exposure in the front stair suggests at least two phases of platform construction. The earliest architecture consists of two single-course high stone alignments (A2 and A4, visible in profile) atop the occupation horizon (Figure 7a). These alignments may be remnants of a step or low terrace from an earlier platform. The area between these alignments, at the level of the top of the physically lowest line of stones, yielded abundant pottery, including several large, well-preserved, horizontally laying sherds, suggestive of a refuse deposit. This assemblage includes Late or Terminal Classic diagnostic forms and types, including an example of a Benque Viejo Polychrome bowl or dish, a type that virtually disappeared by the Terminal Classic (LeCount Reference LeCount1999; LeCount et al. Reference LeCount, Yaeger, Leventhal and Ashmore2002). Carbon samples from this context could not be dated. Since it is unclear whether this deposit is linked to an earlier platform predating the stair or if it is simply a well-preserved pocket of secondary refuse within the construction core, we modeled the platform construction as a single, unordered phase. Eight AMS 14C samples from the construction core date to the early facet of the Late Classic or shortly thereafter (Table 4). A boundary estimates the onset of platform occupation between cal AD 685–760. Interestingly, OxCal’s Difference function calculates a 35 to 150-year gap between the boundary estimates for the onset of platform construction and platform occupation, supporting the hypothesis that the platform was constructed in two phases. Outlier dates from the construction core (UOC-23616: 1490 ± 20 BP, cal AD 550–640; UOC-23613: 1480 ± 20 BP, cal AD 560–640) provide additional evidence for earlier activities at the settlement unit, potentially related to the probable penultimate phase of occupation.

As at ALA-002A, much of the first riser of the front stair of the platform was covered by the boulder and cobble core of the plaza pavement, indicating that it predates the plaza (Figure 7a). Thus, we used the same modeling approach as ALA-002A (see above), treating platform habitation debris and spatially separated plaza contexts as separate but overlapping phases of activity. Using the same radiocarbon data and stratigraphic sequence for the plaza phase provides an independent check on the date estimates provided by the ALA-002A model. The results are similar, though they allow for the possibility of slightly earlier activity (compare Table 3), with features associated with the penultimate earthen plaza surface returning modeled dates of cal AD 735–830 (UOC-16317), cal AD 725–830 (UOC-12579) and cal AD 770–835 (UOC-12576). The estimated timing of plaza construction is also similar (cal AD 795–845; UOC-16254), as is the estimate for plaza activity, between cal AD 800–860.

We modeled three AMS 14C dates as an unordered phase representing refuse accumulation at the platform. These dates include a charcoal sample recovered from just below the plaza core immediately in front of the S1 riser, dated to cal AD 720–775 (UOC-12582), and two charcoal samples found in pockets of refuse on the back of the platform among fallen granite ashlars from the collapsed rear platform face, dated to cal AD 720–775 (UOC-23615) and cal AD 705–780 (UOC-23618), respectively. Ceramics associated with these refuse deposits comprise a mixture of Late or Terminal Classic types and forms. These include an example of McRae Impressed, a distinctive serving vessel with a notched apron that dates to the Terminal Classic (LeCount et al. Reference LeCount, Yaeger, Leventhal and Ashmore2002) and a sherd from a Fat Polychrome vessel, a type characterized by its distinctive P-shaped bolster rim and bold black-and-red painted designs, originating from regions further north during the Terminal Classic period (Masson and Mock Reference Masson, Mock, Demarest, Rice and Rice2004, 387; Mock Reference Mock1994, 106–107; see also Harrison-Buck Reference Harrison-Buck2024, 419, their fig 11c–f). We also recovered Early Postclassic forms, such as sherds from thumb-impressed fillet bowls, a tall ring base, and a scroll foot. These materials indicate that occupation continued into the early 10th century, supporting the final boundary estimate for the latest possible platform use between cal AD 815–1250. However, the 1-sigma estimate (cal AD 830–1060) is more likely.

We identified Late Postclassic reoccupation of the platform through a layer of near-surface ceramics and other artifacts stratigraphically separated from earlier habitation debris and surfaces by a thin lens of humus. The reoccupation assemblage is diverse, featuring well-preserved pottery resembling crude Postclassic and Historic period materials found to the south in the Toledo District and coastal sites to the north. It also includes notched ovoids or “date-seed” net sinkers (Graham Reference Graham1994, 47, 305, their fig 8.18v-w; see also MacKinnon Reference MacKinnon1989b, 501, 637), as well as numerous small side-notched projectile points made of recycled chert and obsidian (for comparison see Oland Reference Oland2013, 89, their fig 4; Simmons Reference Simmons1995, 139, their fig 6, 2002, 55, their fig 4). Eight AMS 14C dates from charcoal stratigraphically associated with this assemblage confirm a Late Postclassic reoccupation date, beginning between cal AD 1325–1385 and ending between cal AD 1430–1475 (Table 4). An additional AMS 14C date from this context excluded from the model as an outlier at 62% probability (UOC-23611: 335 ± 15, cal AD 1490–1635) may suggest continued habitation or visitation to ALA-002B after Spanish contact.

Figure 8. (a) Profile of excavation at ALA-002C, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profile. Outliers mentioned in the text are in red. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped; (b) Bayesian model for ALA-002C, modeled in OxCal. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal.

4.1.4. ALA-002C

The low, elongated L-shaped architectural form of ALA-002C and its domestic artifact assemblages suggest this platform may have been an ancillary building or secondary residence at the group, likely beginning in the Late Classic period. Due to a limited number of datable carbon samples from non-habitation debris contexts, stratigraphic models could only provide broad estimates for the timing of platform construction. An Early Classic date from the construction core (UOC-23621: 1710 ± 20 BP, cal AD 255–410) likely reflects redeposited secondary charcoal. The earliest pottery associated with platform activities dates to the Late or Terminal Classic and was recovered from a 25–30 cm-thick deposit of habitation debris adjacent to the exterior of the platform’s buried three-course-high north (rear) face (Figure 8a). This deposit contained diagnostic British Honduras Ash Wares, Hondo Red, and body sherds from an unidentified, imported, painted red-and-black-on-buff/cream thin-walled polychrome vessel.

We modeled five AMS 14C dates from this deposit in an unordered phase within a sequence (Table 5). Four of these dates stemmed from two samples physically large enough to be split into two samples each (UOC-23624 and UOC-23625, UOC-23622 and UOC-23623). We aggregated these groups of dates before calibration using Oxcal’s R_Combine function and verified their internal consistency with a chi-square test. This confirmed firm Late Classic dates of cal AD 670–775 (UOC-23622 and UOC-23623) and cal AD 655–775 (UOC-23624 and UOC-23625). The fifth sample dates much later, entirely within the Early Postclassic, between cal AD 1025–1155 (UOC-23619). As this sample was the stratigraphically lowest in the deposit, it likely reflects some mixing of contexts due to bioturbation or other disturbances. Early Postclassic ceramics recovered from mixed habitation debris and colluvium contexts near the platform surface suggest this sample was initially associated with these contexts. The initial and closing boundaries in the model are poorly constrained and uninformative when estimating the start and end of activity.

Table 5. Modeled results for the ALA-002C stratigraphic sequence

Amodel = 94; Aindex = 94

Similar to ALA-002B, a stratigraphically higher level separated from earlier habitation debris by a thin layer of humus at the rear of the ALA-002C platform yielded a dense deposit of Postclassic notched ceramic ovoids (n = 59). A charcoal sample from this layer returned a Historic period date (UOC-23626: 335 ± 15 BP, cal AD 1490–1635). While this date might accurately reflect the age of this deposit, additional data is needed to conclusively determine an association with the more securely dated Late Postclassic occupation context described for ALA-002B.

4.2. Settlement Unit ALA-045

ALA-045 is a small patio group consisting of three orthogonally arranged platforms: ALA-045A, ALA-045B and ALA-045C (Figure 3b). Excavations at this settlement site included both horizontal and stratigraphic investigations at ALA-045A (0.75 m tall) and ALA-045C (0.5 m tall; Morton and Delos Reyes Reference Morton, Delos Reyes, Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2018; Pennanen and Peuramaki-Brown Reference Pennanen, Peuramaki-Brown and Peuramaki-Brown2016). These investigations revealed the material remains of a commoner residential site featuring low granite-faced platforms and utilitarian objects such as chipped-stone tools and pottery, dating from the Late or Terminal Classic to the Early Postclassic period. ALA-045B remains unexcavated and is barely visible on the surface, primarily identified by concentrations of artifacts and architectural blocks. Only excavations at ALA-045A yielded sufficient AMS 14C dates to develop a stratigraphic sequence model.

4.2.1. ALA-045A

The ALA-045A model incorporates four AMS 14C dates and uses stratigraphic and contextual information to clarify the timing and nature of the platform’s construction and occupation (Table 6, Figure 9). Initial activity at the platform is estimated between cal AD 735–880. The construction process mirrors patterns observed at other sites in Alabama’s settlement zone, with builders first levelling and tamping the underlying occupation horizon. This layer consists of compact sandy clay loam with fine gravel inclusions, distinct from the surrounding construction core and visible in profile extending beneath the earliest platform construction. Ceramics from this context included a well-preserved Pabellon Moulded-Carved sherd, dating to no earlier than 800 CE, firmly within the Terminal Classic period (Helmke and Reents-Budet Reference Helmke and Reents-Budet2008, 43). This ceramic prior constrains a radiocarbon date from the occupation horizon to cal AD 795–870 (UOC-16251).

Table 6. Modeled results for the ALA-045A stratigraphic sequence

Amodel = 100; Aoverall = 99

Figure 9. (a) Profile of excavation at ALA-045A, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profile. Outliers mentioned in the text are in red. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped; (b) Bayesian model for ALA-045A, modeled in OxCal. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal.

ALA-045A underwent at least three distinct phases of construction and renovation. Initially, builders erected a small, low platform featuring a single course of unshaped granite boulders forming a southern face atop the occupation horizon between cal AD 805–875. Remnants of a coarse sand-like material suggest that this platform featured an exterior crushed granite surface, similar to one documented at Maintzunun in the northern end of the sub-region (Graham Reference Graham1994, 133). Subsequently, between cal AD 815–890, builders added a low, curved stone alignment of stacked unshaped cobbles and boulders adjacent to the south face of the original platform. The presence of Terminal Classic to probable Early Postclassic diagnostic ceramics within this construction suggests it was built toward the latter end of this posterior estimate. Initially thought to mark the edge of a platform or an uncapped burial cist, further excavation revealed its full areal extent, ruling out an interment function. The nature of this feature remains uncertain, although the arced line of cobbles may delineate a construction cell or stabilization feature for a larger, effaced platform. However, such configurations have yet to be documented at Alabama. Alternatively, it could represent the remnants of a small circular platform extension intended as a ritual node within the residential group. The platform construction core yielded two small, hardened nodules of copal resin and a whole quartz crystal, symbolically charged ritual objects (Brady et al. Reference Brady, Cobb, Garza, Espinosa, Burnett, Prufer and Brady2005; Brady and Prufer Reference Brady and Prufer1999). Circular structures dating to the Preclassic period (ca. 1000 BCE-300 CE) are known across the Maya lowlands (Aimers et al. Reference Aimers, Powis and Awe2000; Hendon Reference Hendon2000; MacLellan and Castillo Reference MacLellan and Castillo2022). However, circular shrine architecture also began appearing at sites near the Caribbean coast of Belize starting in the early 9th century CE, thought to reflect increasing interactions with Chontal-Itza groups of the northern Yucatan Peninsula (Harrison-Buck Reference Harrison-Buck2012, Reference Harrison-Buck2024; Harrison-Buck and McAnany Reference Harrison-Buck and McAnany2013; Ringle et al. Reference Ringle, Gallareta Negrón and Bey1998; Rosenswig and Masson Reference Rosenswig and Masson2002). If this feature represents an expression of Yucatec-influenced ritual architecture, it suggests that Alabama was part of this broader regional phenomenon. This interpretation is bolstered by recovered pottery that is stylistically and petrographically similar to that found in northern Belize during this period (Howie and Jordan Reference Howie, Jordan, Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2018, 81–82). This circular feature was buried within the terminal ALA-045A platform between cal AD 830–895 (UOC-16249). An additional radiocarbon date recovered from this construction core is an outlier stemming from old charcoal deposited with quarried earthen construction material (UOC-16250: 11600 ± 35 BP, 11,630–11,405 cal BC).

The occupation of the terminal platform began between cal AD 850–960, either in the Terminal Classic or the Early Postclassic. The final two AMS 14C dates from the sequence come from a terminal habitation debris deposit located off the southern edge of the platform. We modeled these samples in an unordered phase, yielding similar age determinations: cal AD 885–985 (Beta-457820) and cal AD 885–990 (Beta-457818). A boundary estimate for subsequent refuse deposition between cal AD 890–1045 is supported by Terminal Classic and Early Postclassic ceramics found in terminal habitation debris and post-abandonment fall contexts. The latest use of ALA-045A is estimated between cal AD 885–1240, though cal AD 900–1010 (1-sigma) is more likely.

4.3. Settlement Unit ALA-047

ALA-047 comprises four platforms, three of which are arranged orthogonally around a central patio: ALA-047A (ca. 2 m tall), ALA-047B (1 m tall), and ALA-047C (0.8 m tall). The fourth platform, ALA-047D (1.2 m tall), is a short distance to the south (Figure 3c). Despite disturbances from orchard activities, we conducted horizontal and stratigraphic excavations at each platform (Morton et al. Reference Morton, Oliveira, Williams and MM2016). These investigations yielded artifact assemblages, including everyday domestic items and implements such as mano and metate fragments and utilitarian pottery, as well as imported and exotic goods such as a jadeite pendant, large quantities of obsidian, fine chert bifaces, moulded-carved ceramics, and fragments of effigy censers. While ALA-047A was effaced, the granite facing stones of ALA-047C were noted for their excellent quality. These findings suggest a commoner household of greater than modest means active during the Late or Terminal Classic and into the Early Postclassic. We obtained sufficient AMS 14C data at ALA-047A and ALA-047B to produce stratigraphic sequence models. However, we could not create a model for ALA-045C, though charcoal associated with its habitation debris dates to the Late Classic period (Beta-457816: 1360 ± 30 BP, cal AD 650–775).

4.3.1. ALA-047A

The sequence for ALA-047A estimates the timing of platform construction and occupation (Table 7, Figure 10). Limited radiocarbon data result in poorly constrained initial and closing model boundaries, rendering them largely uninformative. A boundary estimate for the platform’s occupation horizon was not included in the final version of the model as it extended at least two millennia before any likely cultural activity at the settlement site. The boundary estimate for the onset of platform construction (cal AD 100–770) is similarly uninformative, though the 1-sigma estimate (cal AD 535–750) is plausible. Small quantities of pottery in the construction core can be stylistically dated anywhere from the Early Classic to the Terminal Classic. We modeled two AMS 14C dates from charcoal in the construction core as an unordered phase. The stratigraphically lowest sample dates to cal AD 665–830 (UOC-16248). The other sample (Beta-457817) dates to cal AD 615–775 and was recovered alongside a cluster of ceramics just below a concentration of cobbles at the junction of the construction core and the effaced south face of the platform. This deposit included two crude censer fragments, stylistically attributable to any time between the Early Classic and the Early Postclassic periods, and an Early Classic jar fragment with an outcurving rim and rounded lip.

Table 7. Modeled results for the ALA-047A stratigraphic sequence

Amodel = 92.4; Aindex = 91.9

Figure 10. (a) Profile of excavation at ALA-047A, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped; (b) Bayesian model for ALA-047A, modeled in OxCal. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profile. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal.

The model estimates occupation at ALA-047A between cal AD 680–1160. This broad timeframe is supported by pottery found in habitation debris contexts, which include types and forms from the Late Classic, Terminal Classic, and Early Postclassic, including a hand-modeled foot from a Postclassic effigy censer. An AMS 14C date from charcoal associated with slumped granite blocks near the top of the platform dates to cal AD 1040–1215, providing radiometric evidence for Early Postclassic activity.

4.3.2. ALA-047B

The sequence for ALA-047B includes four AMS 14C dates from various strata associated with platform construction and occupation (Table 8, Figure 11). The initial model boundary estimates the onset of activity between cal AD 575–820. We obtained two AMS 14C dates from the platform’s occupation horizon: a bulk sediment sample dated to cal AD 665–820 (UOC-16316) and a charcoal specimen dated to cal AD 670–820 (Beta-456254) from the juncture of the occupation horizon and the base of Feature 1 (discussed below). Diagnostic ceramics from the occupation horizon, stylistically dating to the Late or Terminal Classic, support these posterior probability distributions. A boundary estimates that the ALA-047B platform was constructed atop the occupation horizon between cal AD 680–880. Habitation debris subsequently accumulated off the platform’s edge, forming a ca. 25–30 cm thick layer of refuse between cal AD 735–990. This deposit included Terminal Classic pottery, including clear examples of Ahk’utu’ Moulded-Carved vase sherds (Helmke and Reents-Budet Reference Helmke and Reents-Budet2008; Ting Reference Ting2018; Ting et al. Reference Ting, Martinón-Torres, Graham and Helmke2015). These materials may have been pushed downwards by bioturbation from Feature 1, which overlies the habitation debris and features moulded-carved ceramics. A tap root hole containing cultural materials, visible in profile, tapers through sterile sediment, potentially indicating mixing (Figure 11a).

Table 8. Modeled results for the ALA-047B stratigraphic sequence

Amodel = 110.8; Aindex = 109.7

Figure 11. (a) Profile of excavation at ALA-047B, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped; (b) Bayesian model for ALA-045A. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profile. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal.

Feature 1 is a large (ca. 70 cm E-W, 50 cm N-S), amorphously shaped concentration of daub situated just off the westernmost platform face. This feature could represent a collapsed daub structure, such as a kiln or an oven, or a collection of refuse potentially linked to ritual activities. Excavators carefully removed this feature in four quadrants, revealing two distinct strata: a compact bottom layer of daub and an upper layer of loose daub and soil. The base of Feature 1 was distinct from the underlying occupation horizon and habitation debris. The initial construction or deposit of the compact base of this feature is estimated between cal AD 835–1030. An AMS 14C sample (UOC-16246) from the looser upper layer dates to cal AD 900–1035, firmly situating it within the Early Postclassic period. This upper layer yielded a dense deposit of artifacts, including nine obsidian prismatic blades and diagnostic pottery, such as a moulded-carved vase sherd, two hollow oven feet, and an Early Postclassic sherd with incised and excised “international style” geometric patterns. Habitation debris subsequently accumulated around the feature, suggesting that if this was a small daub construction, it was no longer used by cal AD 965–1130. The final AMS 14C date in the ALA-047B sequence, from charcoal associated with habitation debris near the western profile wall next to Feature 1, dates to cal AD 1020–1150 (UOC-16245). The final boundary estimates that activity at the platform concluded sometime between cal AD 1000–1290.

5. Discussion

Given the high demands on the quality of archaeological information to justify the placement of radiocarbon data within a Bayesian framework, developing stratigraphic sequence models at Alabama begins with a highly systematic approach to excavation and sampling. Alabama’s alluvial clay-core platforms are susceptible to post-depositional processes such as weathering, erosion, and heaving, which can cause discrete contexts to meld together (Peuramaki-Brown et al. Reference Peuramaki-Brown, Morton, Longstaffe and Jordan2023; see also Brouwer Burg et al. Reference Brouwer Burg, Runggaldier and Harrison-Buck2016). As such, a careful and methodical approach to excavation is needed to identify subtle differences between construction cores and other contexts, such as variations in the matrix and the character and density of artifact assemblages. Achieving a high degree of chronological resolution relies on obtaining radiocarbon dates from these various stratigraphically ordered contexts, beginning with excavation levels representative of the onset of occupation or events before platform construction. These contexts’ data are critical for constraining modeled AMS 14C probability distributions and boundary estimates for undated events earlier and later in the sequence. Moreover, these data offer crucial prior information to address challenges posed by secondary charcoal within overlaying construction cores and aid in constraining long or dual-peak probability distributions associated with the Late and Terminal Classic radiocarbon plateau/reversal. Although unsealed habitation debris contexts are usually the most disturbed, they nonetheless offer valuable insights into the timing of occupation when corroborated with other lines of evidence, such as ceramic data (Wylie Reference Wylie, Leonelli and Tempini2020; c.f. Webster et al. Reference Webster, Freter, Storey, Demarest, Rice and Rice2004).

Stratigraphic chronological modeling of residential groups in Alabama’s outlying settlement zone has given us a more nuanced picture of settlement development and occupation at the townsite. Overall, the results enhance the chronological resolution of boomtown development during the Late and Terminal Classic periods and confirm suspicions that parts of the settlement were occupied into the Early Postclassic. While our analysis primarily focuses on stratigraphic architectural contexts as they provide constraints for Bayesian modeling, the radiocarbon data presented in this article also illuminate the timing of earlier and later occupations in the Early Classic and Late Postclassic periods, respectively. These findings prompt further consideration of the complex social, political, and economic relationships between Alabama’s inhabitants and neighbouring regions during these dynamic cultural periods.

5.1. Situating the developmental history of Alabama’s settlement zone

Radiocarbon data suggest an Early Classic occupation was present at ALA-002 sometime between cal AD 345–545. Cultural deposits from this occupation lie buried beneath a thick layer of sterile sediment, suggesting a period of abandonment at the site before the onset of occupation in the Late Classic. Few artifacts were recovered from these deposits, limiting deeper analyses of the social, political, and economic relationships between Alabama and neighbouring settlements. Nevertheless, we improve our understanding of the regional chronology by merely identifying this occupation (Peuramaki-Brown et al. Reference Peuramaki-Brown, Morton and Jordan2020). Expanding our view northward, Mayflower and Maintzunun along Silk Grass Creek and the Colson Point sites in the North Stann Creek Valley provide evidence of a deeper history for the region, dating back to the Preclassic period (Graham Reference Graham1994, 133–134). Sites in these areas flourished during the Protoclassic and Early Classic (ca. 100–600 CE), evidenced by finds such as the famous jades at Pomona and Kendal (Kidder and Ekholm Reference Kidder and Ekholm1951; MacKie Reference MacKie1985) and more systematic excavations conducted by Elizabeth Graham (Reference Graham1994). Small-scale commercial shell-lime production thrived along the Placencia Peninsula adjacent to the Caribbean coast during this period (MacKinnon and May Reference MacKinnon and May1990), and populations were present at the Colson Point sites (Graham Reference Graham1994). Areas to the south in East-Central Belize lack substantial evidence of Early Classic activity. However, settled communities were established by this time further south in the Southern Belize Region (SBR) at Nim li Punit (Braswell Reference Braswell and Braswell2022b, 104–105; Irish and Braswell Reference Irish and Braswell2015; Prager et al. Reference Prager, Volta, Braswell and Braswell2014) and Uxbenka and its surrounding area (Culleton et al. Reference Culleton, Prufer and Kennett2012; Jordan and Prufer Reference Jordan and Prufer2017; Novotny Reference Novotny2015; Thompson and Prufer Reference Thompson and Prufer2019).

Activity in Alabama’s settlement zone began at ALA-002B during the early facet of the Late Classic, prior to cal AD 655. However, most platform construction, including at other structures in ALA-002 and ALA-047, appears to have begun in the latter half of the Late Classic, with renovations at these settlement units continuing into the Terminal Classic period. Initial activities at ALA-045 appear to have begun in the Terminal Classic, with the ALA-045A platform reaching its final configuration between cal AD 850–965. The extensive remodeling of ALA-002’s plaza during the Terminal Classic period indicates that its residents possessed the necessary resources and social capital to carry out such a significant construction project. The scale and nature of the group’s buildings relative to surrounding settlement units, coupled with the formal raised boulder-and-cobble-core plaza, may suggest that in addition to being a residential site, this group took on a more public function during the Terminal Classic, potentially as an integrative community “focal node” (Hutson Reference Hutson2016, 80; Ingalls and Yaeger Reference Ingalls and Yaeger2022; Peuramaki-Brown Reference Peuramaki-Brown2013).

Evidence from the monumental core, including recent and legacy radiocarbon and obsidian hydration dates, as well as excavation and ceramic data, suggests it was established and constructed rapidly around the same time that the settlement was developing (Peuramaki-Brown and Morton Reference Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2019b, 5–9). Late and Terminal Classic Alabama was integrated into a continuum of settlement types in East-Central Belize, comparable to other high-level civic-ceremonial towns with multiple formalized plazas and specialized architecture, such as Pearce-Huntal Mo’ (Dunham et al. Reference Dunham, Murray, Brooks, Reynolds, Cookro and Jacobs1995; Peuramaki-Brown and Morton Reference Peuramaki-Brown and Morton2019a). Slightly smaller, middle-level sites such as Pomona and Kendal were also present in the sociospatial landscape, along with numerous low-level sites comprising isolated monumental platforms and surrounding settlement units. Coastal sites remained necessary for resource procurement at this time (Graham Reference Graham1994; MacKinnon Reference MacKinnon, McKillop and PF1989a; Sills Reference Sills2016; see also McKillop and Sills 2021, Reference McKillop and Sills2022), and Placencia Caye may have been a node in a coastal canoe trade route, linking traffic to inland centres via the lagoon and rivers (MacKinnon Reference MacKinnon1986, Reference MacKinnon1989b, Reference MacKinnon1990). In the SBR, small autonomous kingdoms centred at Pusilha, Uxbenka, and Nim li Punit were important high-level centers throughout the Late Classic. However, they experienced pronounced declines during the Terminal Classic. Lubaantun, founded slightly later, likely by colonists from Uxbenka, was the last of these centers to be abandoned around 900 CE (Braswell Reference Braswell2017; Irish and Braswell Reference Irish and Braswell2015; Jordan and Prufer Reference Jordan and Prufer2017; Prager et al. Reference Prager, Volta, Braswell and Braswell2014; Prufer et al. Reference Prufer, Thompson, Meredith, Culleton, Jordan, Ebert, Winterhalder and Kennett2017; Thompson and Prufer Reference Thompson and Prufer2019, Reference Thompson, Prufer, Marken and Arnauld2023; see also Braswell Reference Braswell and Braswell2022b, Reference Braswell and Braswell2022c). The decline of these centers may have been exasperated by climatic volatility, which led to a severe drought beginning around 835 CE (Prufer et al. Reference Prufer, Thomspon, Wickert and Kennett2023).

While there is limited evidence for the continued occupation of Alabama’s monumental core beyond the Terminal Classic period, it is evident that the townsite’s outlying settlement zone remained inhabited into the Early Postclassic. This finding contributes to a broader pattern observed across the Maya lowlands, where commoner residences in the settlement zones of towns and cities continued to be inhabited for several generations after the cessation of urban core-focused construction following the collapse of Classic-period political institutions (e.g., Ashmore et al. Reference Ashmore, Yaeger, Robin, Demarest, Rice and Rice2004, 321–322; Iannone et al. Reference Iannone, Chase, Chase, Awe, Moyes, Brook, Polk, Webster, Conolly and Iannone2014; Longstaffe and Iannone Reference Longstaffe and Iannone2011, Reference Longstaffe and Iannone2022; Mixter Reference Mixter2017, Reference Mixter2020, 226; Palka Reference Palka1997, Reference Palka, Inomata and Webb2003, 132–136; Peuramaki-Brown Reference Peuramaki-Brown2012, 228–240; Thompson and Prufer Reference Thompson and Prufer2021). Elsewhere in East-Central Belize, Early Postclassic activity has been documented at both inland and coastal sites, implying widespread continuity of settlement in this region (Graham Reference Graham, Chase and Rice1985, Reference Graham1994; MacKinnon Reference MacKinnon, McKillop and PF1989a; MacKinnon and Kepecs Reference MacKinnon and Kepecs1989).

Following multiple generations of abandonment, people returned to Alabama during the Late Postclassic, at some point between cal AD 1325–1385 and 1430–1475, as evidenced by well-defined contexts at ALA-002. Additional Late Postclassic contexts can probably be found elsewhere in the settlement zone, although they have likely been disturbed by orchard activities. Late Postclassic activity has been documented elsewhere in East-Central Belize, including stelae re-erection and associated pottery deposits at Mayflower and Kendal (Graham Reference Graham1994, 134). While further analyses are needed to gain a deeper understanding of Alabama’s Late Postclassic occupation, it is evident that the site played a role in the cultural dynamics of the region in the centuries leading up to Spanish contact. During this period, substantial populations inhabited inland areas and the coastal margins of northern Belize (Badillo Reference Badillo2021; Masson Reference Masson1999; Masson and Rosenswig Reference Masson and Rosenswig2005; Rosenswig and Masson Reference Rosenswig and Masson2002; Simmons et al. Reference Simmons, Pendergast and Graham2009). It is plausible that some of these populations moved into East-Central Belize through the Hummingbird Gap, recognized as an essential trade corridor during the early Spanish contact period. Maritime traders, well documented in the SBR, also influenced the Late Postclassic dynamics of the region (McKillop Reference McKillop2005, Reference McKillop2024). However, by this time, coastal trade routes had shifted outwards from the coast, utilizing cayes of the outer reef edge (MacKinnon Reference MacKinnon1989b). Whether Late Postclassic activity in Alabama’s settlement zone represents a permanent occupation or the more periodic accumulation of material remains, perhaps suggestive of a waystation used by traders moving back and forth between northern and southern regions, requires further consideration beyond the scope of this article.

Conclusions

This article presented AMS 14C data for the settlement zone of the ancestral Maya townsite of Alabama, East-Central Belize. These data, modeled within Bayesian stratigraphic sequences, provide new insights into Alabama’s development, growth, and occupation and establish a framework for future chronological modeling of earthen core architecture in this region. Three distinct periods of occupation have been identified, beginning with Early Classic activity between cal AD 345–545. Following a period of abandonment, the townsite’s population boomed throughout the Late and Terminal Classic periods, evidenced by the construction of multiple platforms within residential groups across the settlement. Although activity in Alabama’s monumental core appears to have ceased in the Terminal Classic, occupation in the outlying settlement persisted well into the Early Postclassic period, indicating the resilience of this community amidst broader social, political, economic, and ideological transformations in the Maya lowlands. Late Postclassic reoccupation is evident in parts of the settlement, beginning as early as cal AD 1325 and extending potentially beyond cal AD 1475. Together, these findings offer the first detailed deep history perspective for East-Central Belize, with implications for understanding the evolving cultural dynamics of this poorly understood frontier region of the Maya lowlands.

Supplementary Material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2025.10116.

Acknowledgments

This work was funded by grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC; file numbers 430-2015-00193, 435-2018-0091), an Athabasca University Research Incentive Grant and Office Academic Research Fund Grant, and generous supporters through Experiment.com. In addition, this research was conducted with support from a SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship awarded to Matthew Longstaffe and various funding from the University of Calgary Department of Anthropology and Archaeology and Faculty of Graduate Studies. We thank the Belize Institute of Archaeology and Drs. John Morris and Melissa Badillo for permits to conduct archaeological research at Alabama and export carbon samples, the property owners for allowing us access to private lands where Alabama is located, and permissions from representatives of Maya Mopan Village. This research was only possible with the efforts of the SCRAP team, including many local collaborators from Maya Mopan Village. Additionally, we thank the Athabasca University Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences and Research Office, the Department of Anthropology & Archaeology at the University of Calgary, and the University of Calgary Study Abroad program. Finally, we thank Takeshi Inomata and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive feedback and comments on an earlier draft of this manuscript. Any mistakes are our own.

Data availability statement

The data for this paper are included as Supplemental Online Material and can be made available to the authors upon request.

Competing interests

The authors declare none.

Footnotes

1 Ancient name unknown (Govt. of Belize designation 33.183.002)

References

Adams, REW (1971) The Ceramics of Altar de Sacrificios. Cambridge: Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Aimers, JJ (2007) What Maya collapse? Terminal Classic variation in the Maya Lowlands. Journal of Archaeological Research 15(4), 329377. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10814-007-9015-x CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aimers, JJ, Powis, TG and Awe, JJ (2000) Preclassic round structures of the Upper Belize River Valley. Latin American Antiquity 11(1), 7186. https://doi.org/10.2307/1571671 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arroyo, B, Inomata, T, Ajú, G, Estrada, J, Nasu, H and Aoyama, K (2020) Refining Kaminaljuyu chronology: New radiocarbon dates, Bayesian analysis, and ceramics studies. Latin American Antiquity 31(3), 477497. https://doi.org/10.1017/laq.2020.49 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashmore, PJ (1999) Radiocarbon dating: Avoiding errors by avoiding mixed samples. Antiquity 73(279), 124130. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00087901 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashmore, W, Yaeger, J and Robin, C (2004) Commoner sense: Terminal Classic social strategies in the Xunantunich Area. In Demarest, AA, Rice, PM and Rice, DS (eds), The Terminal Classic in the Maya Lowlands: Collapse, Transition, and Transformation. Boulder: University of Colorado Press, 302323.Google Scholar
Badillo, MM (2021) Investigating Ancient Maya Late Postclassic Period Households and the Associated Function of the Buildings at Santa Rita Corozal, Belize. PhD dissertation, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Las Vegas.Google Scholar
Bayliss, A (2009) Rolling out revolution: Using radiocarbon dating in archaeology. Radiocarbon 51(1), 123147. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033822200033750 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayliss, A (2015) Quality in Bayesian chronological models in archaeology. World Archaeology 47(4), 677700. https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2015.1067640 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bayliss, A, van der Plicht, J, Bronk Ramsey, C, McCormac, G, Healy, F and Whittle, A (2011) Towards generational time-scales: The quantitative interpretation of archaeological chronologies. In Whittle, A, Healy, F and Bayliss, A (eds), Gathering Time: Dating the Early Neolithic Enclosures of Southern Britain and Ireland, Oxford: Oxbow Books, 1759.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brady, JE, Cobb, AB, Garza, S, Espinosa, C and Burnett, R (2005) An analysis of ancient Maya stalactite breakage at Balam Na Cave, Guatemala. In Prufer, KM and Brady, JE (eds), Stone Houses and Earth Lords: Maya Religion in the Cave Context. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 213224.Google Scholar
Brady, JE and Prufer, KM (1999) Caves and crystalmancy: Evidence for the use of crystals in ancient Maya religion. Journal of Anthropological Research 55(1), 129144. https://doi.org/10.1086/jar.55.1.3630980 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Braswell, GE (2017) Recent discoveries in the Classic Maya palace complex of Nim li Punit, Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 42(2), 6981. https://doi.org/10.1080/00934690.2017.1286723 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Braswell, GE (2022a) Southern Belize from Paleoindian to Preclassic times: Introduction to the region, early origins, and identity. In Braswell, GE (ed), 3000 Years of War and Peace in the Maya Lowlands. New York: Routledge, 7998.Google Scholar
Braswell, GE (2022b) The Southern Belize Region in Early to Late Classic Period Mesoamerica: First settlement, Nim li Punit, and Uxbenka. In Braswell, GE (ed), 3000 Years of War and Peace in the Maya Lowlands. New York: Routledge, 99135.Google Scholar
Braswell, GE (2022c) The Southern Belize Region in Late to Terminal Classic Period Mesoamerica: Pusilha, Lubaantun, and identity. In Braswell, GE (ed), 3000 Years of War and Peace in the Maya Lowlands. New York: Routledge, 136158.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C (2009a) Bayesian analysis of radiocarbon dates. Radiocarbon 51(1), 337360. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033822200033865 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C (2009b) Dealing with outliers and offsets in radiocarbon dating. Radiocarbon 51(3), 10231045. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033822200034093 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brouwer Burg, M, Runggaldier, A and Harrison-Buck, E (2016) The afterlife of earthen-core buildings: A taphonomic study of threatened and effaced architecture in Central Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 41(1), 1736. https://doi.org/10.1080/00934690.2015.1129255 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buck, CE, Cavanagh, WG and Litton, CD (1996) Bayesian Approach to Interpreting Archaeological Data. Toronto: Wiley Google Scholar
Buck, CE and Meson, B (2015) On being a good Bayesian. World Archaeology 47(4), 567584. https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2015.1053977 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burghardt, AF (1971) A hypothesis about gateway cities. Annals of the Association of American Geographers 61(2), 269285. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8306.1971.tb00782.x CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chase, AZ and Chase, AMZ (2015) Ceramic standardization and the domestic economy of the ancient Maya: Belize Red tripod plates at Caracol, Belize. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 12, 6576.Google Scholar
Chase, DZ and AF, Chase (1998) The architectural context of caches, burials, and other ritual activities for the Classic Period Maya (as reflected at Caracol, Belize). In SD, Houston (ed), Function and Meaning in Classic Maya Architecture. Washington: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 299332.Google Scholar
Crann, CA, Murseli, M, St-Jean, G, Zhao, X, Clark, ID and Kieser, WE (2017) First status report on radiocarbon sample preparation techniques at the A.E. Lalonde AMS Laboratory (Ottawa, Canada). Radiocarbon 59(3), 695704. https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2016.55 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Culbert, TP (ed) (1973) The Classic Maya Collapse. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Culbert, TP (1993) The Ceramics of Tikal–Vessels from the Burials, Caches and Problematical Deposits: Tikal Report 25A. Philadelphia: The University Museum, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Culleton, BJ, Prufer, KM and Kennett, DJ (2012) A Bayesian AMS 14C chronology of the Classic Maya center of Uxbenká, Belize. Journal of Archaeological Science 39(5), 15721586. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2011.12.015 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dee, MW and Bronk Ramsey, C (2014) High-precision Bayesian modeling of sample susceptible to inbuilt age. Radiocarbon 56(1), 8394. https://doi.org/10.2458/56.16685 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Demarest, AA, Rice, PM and Rice, DS (eds) (2004) The Terminal Classic in the Maya Lowlands. Collapse, Transition, and Transformation. Boulder: University Press of Colorado.Google Scholar
Dunham, PS (1996) Resource exploitation and exchange among the Classic Maya: Some initial findings of the Maya Mountains Archaeological Project. In Fedick, SL (ed), The Managed Mosaic: Ancient Maya Agriculture and Resource Use. Provo: University of Utah Press, 315334.Google Scholar
Dunham, PS, Murray, RC, Brooks, WE, Reynolds, RP, Cookro, TH and Jacobs, JF (1995) Field Report of the 1995 Season of the Maya Mountains Archaeology Project (MMAP). Report on file at the Institute of Archaeology, Belmopan, Belize.Google Scholar
Dunning, NP, Beach, TP and Luzzadder-Beach, S (2012) Kax and kol: Collapse and resilience in Lowland Maya Civilization. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109(10), 36523657. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1114838109 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dye, TS and Buck, CE (2015) Archaeological sequence diagrams and Bayesian chronological models. Journal of Archaeological Science 63, 8493. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2015.08.008 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ebert, CE, Culleton, BJ, Awe, JJ and Kennett, DJ (2016) AMS 14C dating of Preclassic to Classic period household construction in the ancient Maya community of Cahal Pech, Belize. Radiocarbon 58(1), 6987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fauvelle, MDH, Pitcavage, MR and Braswell, GE (2012) Dynastic capital, minor center, or both? Recent investigations at Nim Li Punit, Toledo District, Belize. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 9, 5159.Google Scholar
Gifford, JC (1976) Prehistoric Pottery Analysis and the Ceramics of Barton Ramie in the Belize Valley . Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 18 . Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Graham, E (1985) Facets of Terminal to Postclassic activity in the Stann Creek District, Belize. In Chase, AF and Rice, PM (eds), The Lowland Maya Postclassic. Austin: University of Texas Press, 215229.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graham, E (1987) Resource diversity in Belize and its implications for models of Lowland trade. American Antiquity 52(4), 753767. https://doi.org/10.2307/281383 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graham, E (1994) The Highlands of the Lowlands: Environment and Archaeology in the Stann Creek District, Belize, Central America . Monographs in World Archaeology 19 . Madison: Prehistory Press/Royal Ontario Museum.Google Scholar
Graham, E (2001) Stann Creek District (Belize). In Evans, ST and Webster, DL (eds), Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America: An Encyclopedia. New York and London: Garland Publishing Inc, 684686.Google Scholar
Hamilton, WD, Haselgrove, C and Gosden, C (2015) The impact of Bayesian chronologies on the British Iron Age. World Archaeology 47(4), 642660. https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.2015.1053976 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilton, WD and Krus, AM (2018) The myths and realities of Bayesian chronological modeling revealed. American Antiquity 83(2), 187203. https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2017.57 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hammond, N (1975) Lubaantun, a Classic Maya Realm. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Hanna, JA, Graham, E, Pendergast, DM, Hoggarth, JA, Lentz, DA and Kennett, DJ (2016) A new radiocarbon sequence from Lamanai, Belize: Two Bayesian models from one of Mesoamerica’s most enduring sites. Radiocarbon 58(4), 771794. https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2016.44 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, EC (2014) Principles of Archaeological Stratigraphy. New York: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Harrison-Buck, E (2012) Architecture as animate landscape: Circular shrines in the ancient Maya Lowlands. American Anthropologist 114(1), 6480. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1433.2011.01397.x CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harrison-Buck, E (2024) Establishing the Terminal Classic Ik’hubil ceramic sphere in the Eastern Maya Lowlands of Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 35(2), 401429. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536123000214 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harrison-Buck, E and McAnany, PA (2013) Terminal Classic circular architecture in the Sibun Valley, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 24(2), 295306. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536113000199 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helmke, C and Reents-Budet, D (2008) A Terminal Classic molded-carved ceramic type of the Eastern Maya Lowlands. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 5, 3749.Google Scholar
Hendon, JA (2000) Round structures, household identity, and public performance in Preclassic Maya society. Latin American Antiquity 11(3), 299301. https://doi.org/10.2307/972180 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoggarth, JA, Culleton, BJ, Awe, JJ, Helmke, C, Lonaker, S, Davis, JB and Kennett, DJ (2021) Building high-precision AMS 14C Bayesian models for the formation of peri-abandonment deposits at Baking Pot, Belize. Radiocarbon 63(3), 9771002. https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2021.30 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howie, L and Jordan, JM (2018) Preliminary report on the Alabama ceramic assemblage. In Peuramaki-Brown, MM and Morton, SG (eds), The Stann Creek Regional Archaeology Project: Report of the Fourth (2018) Field Season. Calgary: Faculty of the Humanities and Social Sciences, Athabasca University, 7586.Google Scholar
Hutson, SR (2016) The Ancient Urban Maya: Neighborhoods, Inequality, and Built Form. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.Google Scholar
Iannone, G, Chase, AF, Chase, DZ, Awe, JJ, Moyes, H, Brook, GA, Polk, J, Webster, JW and Conolly, J (2014) An archaeological consideration of long-term socioecological dynamics on the Vaca Plateau, Belize. In Iannone, G (ed), The Great Maya Droughts in Cultural Context: Case Studies in Resilience and Vulnerability. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 271300.Google Scholar
Iannone, G, Houk, BA and Schwake, SA (eds) (2016) Ritual, Violence, and the Fall of the Classic Maya Kings. Gainesville: University Press of Florida.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ingalls, V and Yaeger, J (2022) Focal nodes and ritual economy in ancient Maya hinterland communities: A case study from San Lorenzo, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 33(1), 116131. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536121000080 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inomata, T, Triadan, D, MacLellan, J, Burham, M, Aoyama, K, Palomo, JM, Yonenobu, H, Pinzón, F and Nasu, H (2017) High-precision radiocarbon dating of political collapse and dynastic origins at the Maya site of Ceibal, Guatemala. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114(6), 12931298. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1618022114 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Inomata, T, Triadan, D, Vázquez López, VA, Fernandez-Diaz, JC, Omori, T, Méndez Bauer, MB, García Hernández, M, Beach, B, Cagnato, C, Aoyama, K and Nasu, H (2020) Monumental architecture at Aguada Fénix and the rise of Maya civilization. Nature 582, 530533. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2343-4 CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Irish, MD and Braswell, GE (2015) Towards an archaeological chronology of Southern Belize. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 12, 271279.Google Scholar
Jordan, JM (2019) The Alabama ceramic assemblage, construction materials, and clay survey (Operation 8). In Peuramaki-Brown, MM and Morton, SG (eds), The Stann Creek Regional Archaeology Project: Report of the Fifth (2019) Field Season. Athabasca: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Athabasca University, 183237.Google Scholar
Jordan, JM, Davenport, JA, Goodwin, WA, MacDonald, BL, Ebert, CE, Hoggarth, JA and Awe, JJ (2022) Volcanic ash tempered pottery production in the Late to Terminal Classic Belize Valley, Belize. Latin American Antiquity 33(3), 556574. https://doi.org/10.1017/laq.2022.11 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, JM, Peuramaki-Brown, MM, Chiac, S, Saqui, A and Tzib, F (2021) It’s what’s inside that counts: Developing a paste group typology in Belize. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 37, 103019. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2021.103019 Google Scholar
Jordan, JM and Prufer, KM (2017) Identifying domestic ceramic production in the Maya Lowlands: A case study from Uxbenka, Belize. Latin American Antiquity 28(1), 6687. https://doi.org/10.1017/laq.2016.3 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, JM and KM, Prufer (2020) Pottery production in a limestone-poor region of the Maya Lowlands: Thin section petrography and scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectrometry (SEM-EDS) analysis on pottery from Uxbenká, Southern Belize. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 32, 102371. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2020.102371 Google Scholar
Kesler, SE, Kienle, CF and Batesom, JH (1974) Tectonic significance of intrusive rocks in the Maya Mountains, British Honduras. Geological Society of America Bulletin 85, 549552. https://doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(1974)85%3C549:TSOIRI%3E2.0.CO;22.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kidder, AV and Ekholm, GF (1951) Some archaeological specimens from Pomona, British Honduras. In Carnegie Institution of Washington Notes of Middle American Archaeology and Ethnology , Note 102. Washington: Carnegie Institution, 429–238.Google Scholar
LeCount, LJ (1999) Polychrome pottery and political strategies in Late and Terminal Classic Lowland Maya society. Latin American Antiquity 10(3), 239258. https://doi.org/10.2307/972029 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeCount, LJ, Yaeger, J, Leventhal, RM and Ashmore, A (2002) Dating the rise and fall of Xunantunich, Belize: A Late and Terminal Classic Lowland Maya regional center. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(1), 4163. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536102131117 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longstaffe, MS (2022) 2019 Settlement investigations: Shovel test pitting program in the off-mound space at ALA-002 (Operation 10). In Peuramaki-Brown, MM and Morton, SG (eds) The Stann Creek Regional Archaeology Project: Report of the Fifth (2019) Field Season. Athabasca: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Athabasca University, 121170.Google Scholar
Longstaffe, MS and Iannone, G (2011) Households and social trajectories: The site core community at Minanha, Belize. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 8, 4559.Google Scholar
Longstaffe, MS and Iannone, G (2022) Integration and disintegration at Minanha, a petty Maya kingdom in the North Vaca Plateau, Belize. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 68, 101453. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2022.101453 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loten, HS and Pendergast, DM (1984) A Lexicon for Maya Architecture. Toronto: Royal Ontario Museum.Google Scholar
Lucero, LJ (2002) The collapse of the Classic Maya: A case for the role of water control. American Anthropologist 104(3), 814826. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.2002.104.3.814 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lulewicz, J (2018) Radiocarbon data, Bayesian modeling, and alternative historical frameworks: A case study from the US Southeast. Advances in Archaeological Practice 6(1), 5871. https://doi.org/10.1017/aap.2017.29 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacKie, EW (1985) Excavations at Xunantunich and Pomona, Belize, in 1959-60: A Ceremonial Centre and an Earthen Mound of the Maya Classic Period. BAR International Series 251. Oxford: BAR Publishing.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ (1986) In search of the ancient maritime Maya. Wisconsin Academy Review June, 2226.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ (1987) Preliminary Report: Point Placencia Archaeological Project, December, 1986– January, 1987. Report on file with the Belize Institute of Archaeology, Belmopan, Belize.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ (1988a) C’hacben K’ax, 1985–1988: Excavations at Alabama, Stann Creek District, Belize. Report on file with the Belize Institute of Archaeology, Belmopan, Belize.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ (1988b) Point Placencia Archaeological Project, Belize, Central, America: Excavations at C’hacben K’ax, Alabama, Stann Creek District, Belize, 1986-88. Report on file with the Belize Institute of Archaeology, Belmopan, Belize.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ (1989a) Coastal Maya trade routes in Southern Belize. In McKillop, H and PF, Healy (eds), Coastal Maya Trade . Trent University Occasional Papers in Anthropology 8. Peterborough, Ontario: Trent University, 112122.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ (1989b) Spatial and Temporal Patterns of Prehistoric Maya Settlement, Procurement, and Exchange on the Coast and Cays of Southern Belize. PhD dissertation, University of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ (1990) Tobacco Range, South Water Cay, Placencia Cay and Maya sea trade routes in Belize. Mexicon 12(4), 7578.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ and Kepecs, SM (1989) Prehispanic saltmaking in Belize: New evidence. American Antiquity 54(3), 522533. https://doi.org/10.2307/280780 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ and Kepecs, SM (1991) Prehispanic saltmaking in Belize: A reply to Valdez and Mock and to Marcus. American Antiquity 56(3), 528530. https://doi.org/10.2307/280902 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ and May, EM (1990) Small-scale Maya lime making in Belize: Ancient and modern. Ancient Mesoamerica 1(2), 197203. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536100000213 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacKinnon, JJ, Olson, JM and May, EM (1993) “Megalithic” Maya architectural features at the site of Chacben Kax, Alabama, Stann Creek District, Belize, CA. Mexicon 15 (1), 14.Google Scholar
MacLellan, J and Castillo, V (2022) Between the patio group and the plaza: Round platforms as stages for supra-household rituals in early Maya society. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 66, 101417. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2022.101417 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manning, SW (2024) Problems of dating spread on radiocarbon calibration curve plateaus: The 1620–1540 BC example and the dating of the Therasia olive shrub samples and Thera volcanic eruption. Radiocarbon 66(2), 341370. https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2024.44 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manning, SE and Birch, J (2022) A centennial ambiguity: The challenge of resolving the date of the Jean-Baptiste Lainé (Mantle), Ontario, site—around AD 1500 or AD 1600?—and the case for wood-charcoal as a terminus post quem. Radiocarbon 64(2), 279308. https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2022.23 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manning, SW, Birch, J, Conger, MA and Sanft, S (2020) Resolving time among non-stratified short-duration contexts on a radiocarbon plateau: Possibilities and challenges from the AD 1480–1630 example and Northeastern North America. Radiocarbon 62(6), 17851807. https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2020.51 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martens, U, Weber, B and Valencia, VA (2010) U/Pb geochronology of Devonian and older Paleozoic beds in the southeastern Maya block, Central America: Its affinity with peri-Gondwanan terranes. Bulletin 122(5–6), 815829. https://doi.org/10.1130/B26405.1 Google Scholar
Masson, MA (1999) Postclassic Maya communities at Progresso Lagoon and Laguna Seca, Northern Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 26(3), 285306. https://doi.org/10.1179/jfa.1999.26.3.285 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Masson, MA and Mock, SB (2004) Ceramics and settlement patterns at Terminal Classic-Period lagoon sites in northeastern Belize. In Demarest, AA, Rice, PM and Rice, DS (eds), The Terminal Classic in the Maya Lowlands: Collapse, Transition, and Transformation. Boulder, University Press of Colorado, 367401.Google Scholar
Masson, MA and Rosenswig, RM (2005) Production characteristics of Postclassic Maya pottery from Caye Coco, Northern Belize. Latin American Antiquity 16(4), 355384. https://doi.org/10.2307/30042505 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKillop, H (2005) In Search of Maya Sea Traders. College Station: Texas A&M University Press.Google Scholar
McKillop, H (2024) Flooded mangrove landscapes hide ancient Maya coastal Sites in Belize. The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 19(3), 484504. https://doi.org/10.1080/15564894.2022.2163323 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKillop, H and Sills, EC (2022) Household salt production by the Late Classic Maya: Underwater excavations at Ta’ab Nuk Na. Antiquity 96 (389), 12321250. https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2022.106 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKillop, H and Sills, EC (2023) Briquetage and brine: Living and working at the Classic Maya salt works of Ek Way Nal, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 34(1), 2446. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536121000341 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meadows, J, Rinne, C, Immel, A, Fuchs, K, Krause-Kyora, B and Drummer, C (2020) High-precision Bayesian chronological modeling on a calibration plateau: The Niedertiefenbach gallery grave. Radiocarbon 62(5), 12611284. https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2020.76 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mixter, DW (2017) Collective remembering in archaeology: A relational approach to ancient Maya memory. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 24(1), 261302. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10816-017-9320-8 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mixter, DW (2020) Community resilience and urban planning during the ninth-century Maya collapse: A case study from Actuncan, Belize. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 30(2), 219237. https://doi.org/10.1017/S095977431900057X CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mock, SL (1994) The Northern River Lagoon Site (NRL): Late to Terminal Classic Maya Settlement, Saltmaking, and Survival on the Northern Belize Coast . PhD dissertation, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin.Google Scholar
Morton, SG and Delos Reyes, J (2018) 2018 settlement investigations: Continuing excavation in Operation 3 at ALA-045. In Peuramaki-Brown, MM and Morton, SG (eds), The Stann Creek Regional Archaeology Project: Report of the Fourth (2018) Field Season. Calgary: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Athabasca University, 6174.Google Scholar
Morton, SG, Oliveira, C and Williams, AM (2016) The 2016 settlement investigations: Operation 2 at ALA-047. In MM, Peuramaki-Brown (ed), The Stann Creek Regional Archaeology Project: Report of the Third (2016) Field Season. Calgary: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Athabasca University, 2768.Google Scholar
Nolan, KC (2012) Temporal hygiene: Problems in cultural chronology of the Late Prehistoric period of the Middle Ohio River Valley. Southeastern Archaeology 31(2), 185206. https://doi.org/10.1179/sea.2012.31.2.004 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Novotny, C (2015) Social Identity Across Landscapes: Ancient Lives and Modern Heritage in a Q’eqchi’Maya Village . PhD dissertation, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill.Google Scholar
Oland, M (2013) The fifteenth-seventeenth century lithic economy at Progresso Lagoon, Belize. Lithic Technology 38(2), 8196. https://doi.org/10.1179/0197726113Z.00000000011 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palka, JW (1997) Reconstructing Classic Maya socioeconomic differentiation and the collapse at Dos Pilas, Peten, Guatemala. Ancient Mesoamerica 8(2), 293306. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536100001747 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palka, JW (2003) Social status and differential processes of abandonment at the Classic Maya Center of Dos Pilas, Peten, Guatemala. In Inomata, T and Webb, RW (eds), The Archaeology of Settlement Abandonment in Middle America. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 121133.Google Scholar
Pennanen, K and Peuramaki-Brown, MM (2016) The 2016 settlement investigations: Operation 3 at ALA-045. In Peuramaki-Brown, MM (ed), The Stann Creek Regional Archaeology Project: Report of the Third (2016) Field Season. Calgary: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Athabasca University, 6990.Google Scholar
Peuramaki-Brown, MM (2012) The Integration and Disintegration of Ancient Maya Urban Centres: Charting Households and Community at Buenavista del Cayo, Belize . PhD dissertation, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta.Google Scholar
Peuramaki-Brown, MM (2013) Identifying integrative built environments in the archaeological record: An application of new urban design theory to ancient urban spaces. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 32(4), 577594. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2013.09.006 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peuramaki-Brown, MM (2017) Revisiting the ancient Maya of Alabama, Belize: Description, recent research, and future directions. Mexicon 39(3), 6472.Google Scholar
Peuramaki-Brown, MM, Blaine, D and Chiac, V (2022) The 2019 settlement investigations at Alabama: Operation 9 at ALA-002. In Peuramaki-Brown, MM and Morton, SG (eds), The Stann Creek Regional Archaeology Project: Report of the Fifth (2019) Field Season. Athabasca: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Athabasca University, 77120.Google Scholar
Peuramaki-Brown, MM and Morton, SG (2019a) Archaeological reconnaissance at the Pearce sites of the Cockscomb Basin, Stann Creek District. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 16, 283293.Google Scholar
Peuramaki-Brown, MM and Morton, SG (2019b) Maya monumental “Boom”: Rapid development, hybrid architecture, and “pretentiousness” in the fabrication of place at Alabama, East-Central Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 44(4), 250266. https://doi.org/10.1080/00934690.2019.1591093 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peuramaki-Brown, MM, Morton, SG and Jordan, JM (2020) Maya archaeology of the Stann Creek District, Belize: Early explorations to recent research. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 17, 221235.Google Scholar
Peuramaki-Brown, MM, Morton, SG and Longstaffe, MS (eds) (forthcoming) The Stann Creek Regional Archaeology Project: Report of the Seventh (2023) Field Season. Athabasca: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Athabasca University.Google Scholar
Peuramaki-Brown, MM, Morton, SG, Longstaffe, MS and Jordan, JM (2023) Challenges in building archaeological chronologies in the Stann Creek District. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 18, 337345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prager, CM, Volta, B and Braswell, GE (2014) The dynastic history and archaeology of Pusilha. In Braswell, GE (ed), The Maya and Their Central American Neighbors. London and New York: Routledge, 245307.Google Scholar
Prufer, KM, Thompson, AE, Meredith, CR, Culleton, BJ, Jordan, JM, Ebert, CE, Winterhalder, B and Kennett, DJ (2017) The Classic period Maya transition from an ideal free to an ideal despotic settlement system at the polity of Uxbenká. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 45, 5368. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2016.11.003 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prufer, KM, Thomspon, AE, Wickert, AD and Kennett, DJ (2023) The development and disintegration of a Classic Maya center and its climate context. Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment 47(2), 205226. https://doi.org/10.1177/03091333221112359 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, PJ, Austin, WE, Bard, E, Bayliss, A, Blackwell, PG, Bronk Ramsey, C, Butzin, M, Cheng, H, Edwards, RL and Friedrich, M (2020) The Intcal20 Northern Hemisphere radiocarbon age calibration curve (0–55 Cal Kbp). Radiocarbon 62(4), 725757. https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2020.41 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reimer, PJ, Brown, TA and Reimer, RW (2004) Discussion: Reporting and calibration of post-bomb 14C data. Radiocarbon 46(3), 12991304. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033822200033154 Google Scholar
Rice, PM and Forsyth, D (2004) Terminal Classic-Period Lowland Ceramics. In Demarest, AA, Rice, PM and Rice, DS (eds), The Terminal Classic in the Maya Lowlands: Collapse, Transition, and Transformation. Boulder: University Press of Colorado, 2859.Google Scholar
Ringle, WM, Gallareta Negrón, T and Bey, GL (1998) The return of Quetzalcoatl: Evidence for the spread of a world religion during the Epiclassic period. Ancient Mesoamerica 9(2), 183232. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536100001954 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenswig, RM and Masson, MA (2002) Transformation of the Terminal Classic to Postclassic architectural landscape at Caye Coco, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 13(2), 213235. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536102132123 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sabloff, JA (1975) Excavations at Seibal: The Ceramics. Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 12 (1 & 2). Cambridge: Harvard University.Google Scholar
Schiffer, MB (1986) Radiocarbon dating and the “old wood” problem: The case of the Hohokam chronology. Journal of Archaeological Science 13(1), 1330. https://doi.org/10.1016/0305-4403(86)90024-5 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schiffer, MB (1987) Formation Processes of the Archaeological Record. Provo: University of Utah Press.Google Scholar
Schilling, T (2013) The chronology of Monks Mound. Southeastern Archaeology 32(1), 1428. https://doi.org/10.1179/sea.2013.32.1.002 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sherwood, SC and Kidder, TK (2011). The Davincis of dirt: Geoarchaeological perspectives on Native American mound building in the Mississippi River Basin. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 30(1), 6987. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2010.11.001 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shipley, WE (1978) Geology, Petrology, and Geochemistry of the Mountain Pine Ridge Batholith, Belize, Central America . MS Thesis, Colorado School of Mines, Golden.Google Scholar
Sills, EC (2016) Re-evaluating the ancient Maya salt works at Placencia Lagoon, Belize. Mexicon 38(3), 6974.Google Scholar
Simmons, SE (1995) Maya resistance, Maya resolve: The tools of autonomy from Tipu, Belize. Ancient Mesoamerica 6, 135146. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0956536100002145 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simmons, SE (2002) Late Postclassic-Spanish colonial period stone tool technology in the Southern Maya Lowland area: The view from Lamanai and Tipu, Belize. Lithic Technology 27(1), 4772. https://doi.org/10.1080/01977261.2002.11720989 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simmons, SE, Pendergast, DM and Graham, E (2009) The context and significance of copper artifacts in Postclassic and Early Historic Lamanai, Belize. Journal of Field Archaeology 34(1), 5775. https://doi.org/10.1179/009346909791071050 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stomper, J, Brown, W and Pope, E (2004) Recent research at Mayflower, Stann Creek District, Belize. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 1, 324331.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M and Polach, HA (1977) Discussion reporting of 14C data. Radiocarbon 19(3), 355363. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033822200003672 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, RE, Stuiver, M and Reimer, PJ (1996) Development and extension of the calibration of the radiocarbon time scale: Archaeological applications. Quaternary Science Reviews 15(7), 655668. https://doi.org/10.1016/0277-3791(96)00024-8 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, AE and Prufer, KM (2019) Archaeological research in Southern Belize at Uxbenká and Ix Kuku’il. Research Reports in Belizean Archaeology 16, 311322.Google Scholar
Thompson, AE and Prufer, KM (2021) Household inequality, community formation, and land tenure in Classic Period Lowland Maya society. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 28, 138. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10816-020-09505-3 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, AE and Prufer, KM (2023) Classic Maya neighborhoods: Diversity and inequality in Southern Belize. In Marken, DB and Arnauld, MC (eds), Building an Archaeology of Maya Urbanism: Planning and Flexibility in the American Tropics. Denver: University Press of Colorado, 213248.Google Scholar
Tibbits, TLB, Peuramaki-Brown, MM, Brouwer Burg, M, Tibbits, MA and Harrison-Buck, E (2023) Using x-ray fluorescence to examine ancient Maya granite ground stone in Belize. Geoarchaeology 38(2), 156173. https://doi.org/10.1002/gea.21944 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ting, C (2018) Continuity and change in fine-ware production in the Eastern Maya Lowlands during the Classic to Postclassic transition (AD 800–1250). Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 10(8), 19131931. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-017-0506-5 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ting, C and Helmke, C (2013) Technology, production, and distribution of Terminal Classic molded-carved vases in the Central Maya Lowlands. Open Journal of Archaeometry 1(9), 4348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ting, C, Martinón-Torres, M, Graham, E and Helmke, C (2015) The production and exchange of moulded-carved ceramics and the “Maya Collapse.” Journal of Archaeological Science 62, 1526. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2015.06.013 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tsukamoto, K, Tokanai, F, Moriya, T and Nasu, H (2020) Building a high-resolution chronology at the Maya archaeological site of El Palmar, Mexico. Archaeometry 62(6), 12351266. https://doi.org/10.1111/arcm.12580 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vadala, JR and Walker, DS (2020) The rapid rise and fall of Cerros, Belize: A generational approach to chronology. Latin American Antiquity 31(1), 143162. https://doi.org/10.1017/laq.2019.102 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wallis, NJ, McFadden, PS and Singleton, HM (2015) Radiocarbon dating the pace of monument construction and village aggregation at Garden Patch: A ceremonial center on the Florida Gulf Coast. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 2, 507516. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2015.05.009 Google Scholar
Webster, D (2002) The Fall of the Ancient Maya: Solving the Mystery of the Maya Collapse. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Webster, DL, Freter, A and Storey, R (2004) Dating Copan culture history: Implications for the Terminal Classic and the collapse. In Demarest, AA, Rice, PM and Rice, DS (eds), The Terminal Classic in the Maya Lowlands: Collapse, Transition, and Transformation Boulder: University of Colorado Press, 231259.Google Scholar
Wright, ACS, Romney, DH, Arbuckle, RH and Vial, VE (1959) Land in British Honduras: Report of the British Honduras Land Use Survey Team . Colonial Research Publications 24 . London: Her Majesty’s Stationary Office.Google Scholar
Wylie, A (2020). Radiocarbon dating in archaeology: Triangulation and traceability. In Leonelli, S and Tempini, N (eds), Data Journeys in the Sciences, 285301. Cham: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Map of central Belize, showing the location of Alabama within the material culture subregion of East-Central Belize and other select archaeological sites.

Figure 1

Figure 2. GPS map of settlement zone of Alabama, showing location of settlement units discussed in the text.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Topographic maps of settlement units discussed in the text, indicating locations of excavation units: (top) ALA-002; (middle) ALA-045; and (bottom) ALA-047.

Figure 3

Table 1. AMS 14C dates from Alabama’s settlement zone

Figure 4

Table 2. Bayesian model of Early Classic radiocarbon ages and calibrated date ranges

Figure 5

Table 3. Modeled results for the ALA-002A stratigraphic sequence

Figure 6

Figure 4. (a) Bayesian model for ALA-002A. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profiles. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in Oxcal; (b) profile of east (rear) side of ALA-002A, showing locations of radiocarbon samples; (c) profile of west (front) side of ALA-002A, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. For both (b) and (c) outliers mentioned in the text are in red and labelled. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped.

Figure 7

Figure 5. Plaza shovel test excavations: (a) STP69, possible posthole/daub feature, showing enclosure (left) and daub mass (right); (b) STP166, remains of artifact/carbon cluster after excavation; (c) examples of shovel test excavations, on plaza (top [STP197]) and off plaza (bottom [STP92]).

Figure 8

Table 4. Modeled results for the ALA-002B stratigraphic sequence

Figure 9

Figure 6. Bayesian model for ALA-002B. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profiles on Figure 7.

Figure 10

Figure 7. Profiles of excavations at ALA-002B showing locations of radiocarbon samples: (a) front face, stair, and adjacent plaza pavement; (b) top of mound; and (c) back of mound. On all profiles outliers are in red. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped.

Figure 11

Figure 8. (a) Profile of excavation at ALA-002C, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profile. Outliers mentioned in the text are in red. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped; (b) Bayesian model for ALA-002C, modeled in OxCal. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal.

Figure 12

Table 5. Modeled results for the ALA-002C stratigraphic sequence

Figure 13

Table 6. Modeled results for the ALA-045A stratigraphic sequence

Figure 14

Figure 9. (a) Profile of excavation at ALA-045A, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profile. Outliers mentioned in the text are in red. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped; (b) Bayesian model for ALA-045A, modeled in OxCal. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal.

Figure 15

Table 7. Modeled results for the ALA-047A stratigraphic sequence

Figure 16

Figure 10. (a) Profile of excavation at ALA-047A, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped; (b) Bayesian model for ALA-047A, modeled in OxCal. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profile. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal.

Figure 17

Table 8. Modeled results for the ALA-047B stratigraphic sequence

Figure 18

Figure 11. (a) Profile of excavation at ALA-047B, showing locations of radiocarbon samples. Colored stones are in place or slightly slumped; (b) Bayesian model for ALA-045A. Letters correspond to radiocarbon samples plotted on profile. Blue shading shows commands used for Bayesian modeling in OxCal.

Supplementary material: File

Longstaffe and Peuramaki-Brown supplementary material

Longstaffe and Peuramaki-Brown supplementary material
Download Longstaffe and Peuramaki-Brown supplementary material(File)
File 2.6 MB