Earliest Evidence of Maya Calendar Found Inside Guatemalan Pyramid

Earliest Evidence of Maya Calendar Found Inside Guatemalan Pyramid
A mural fragment dating to about 200 BC to 300 BC from the San Bartolo Preclassic ancient Maya site in Guatemala, bearing evidence for the earliest use of the Maya calendar in an undated photo. Karl Taube/Courtesy of the Proyecto Regional Arqueologico San Bartolo/Handout via Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

WASHINGTON—A glyph representing a day called “7 Deer” on mural fragments dating from the third century BC found inside the ruins of a pyramid in Guatemala marks the earliest-known use of the Maya calendar, one of this ancient culture’s renowned achievements.

The fragments were found at the San Bartolo archeological site in the jungles of northern Guatemala, which gained fame with the 2001 discovery of a buried chamber with elaborate and colorful murals dating to about 100 BC depicting Maya ceremonial and mythological scenes, researchers said on Wednesday.