Denver, Colorado
Recently, I visited the Denver Museum of Nature and
Science’s exhibit entitled “Maya: Hidden Worlds Revealed.” The millennia-old
artifacts reminded me of the deep connections between the ancient inhabitants of
the Four Corners Region, whom the anthropologists call the Desert Archaic
People, and the pre-Columbian civilizations of Mexico.
At the exhibit, one piece that particularly seized my attention
was a reproduction of the Dresden Codex and its chart of the cycles of Venus.
There – in inks of red, blue, and black – were Mayan numbers made from lines
and dots, like I Ching hexagrams, and
the mysterious glyphs with their squat faces and elaborate curves.
This Venus chart resulted from the Mayan obsession with
time.
As Miguel León-Portilla states in Time and Reality in the Thought of the Maya (Beacon Press, 1973): “As
no other people in history, the Maya perceived and lived the mysteries posed by
a universe whose deepest substratum is time…. To harmonize with that reality
was the most precious aim in life” (112). Thus the mathematically brilliant Maya
invented the number zero, developed a calendar more accurate than any other for
a thousand years, and predicted the motions of the sun, moon, Venus, and Mars
with breathtaking precision across the many centuries.
As a coda to León-Portilla’s book, anthropologist Alfonso
Villa Rojas writes how time remains a central aspect of Mayan spirituality, and
he describes a cave in Chiapas dedicated to Itzananchqu,
the great reptilian deity whose body forms the earth and who gave birth to the
sun. He provides an illustration of Itzananchqu
based on a carving above the cave – a two headed serpent with a sinuous
body decorated by tufts of feathers. The two heads, as with the Roman god Janus,
suggest that Itzananchqu encompasses
both the past and the future.
This figure of Itzananchqu
connects the Maya with the Utah desert in a most intriguing way.
Black Dragon Wash |
Painted in red, pale blue, and white on the canyon’s lowest
strata, rust-red Wingate sandstone, these millennia-old pictographs depict mummy-shaped
shaman, sheaves of grain, and wild game. One panel consists of a series of
parallel dots, a simple precursor of the elaborate Mayan calendars to come.
The most mysterious of these pictographs is the Black Dragon
– a dark red figure shaped like a two-headed brontosaurus. No one really knows
what this figure is meant to represent, though many specialists and
non-specialists have made guesses.
Now I will add mine: to me, this figure bears a remarkable
resemblance to the Mayan carving of Itzananchqu.
The two figures have the same sinuous silhouette, the same two heads, the same
appendages. They both even appear on a high cliff wall. All that’s missing from
the Black Dragon are the fine details of eyes and glyphs. Perhaps the Archaic Black
Dragon is an early manifestation of the Mayan serpent-deity, and this canyon
was her abode, just as the cave below the Mayan figure is said to be the home
of Itzananchqu.
And this is not the only Archaic pictograph to antedate a
major Mesoamerican mythological figure. More are found in Barrier Canyon, which
cuts its way through the San Rafael Desert a mere 50 miles from Black Dragon
Wash.
James D. Farmer proposes in “Goggle Eyes and Crested
Serpents of Barrier Canyon,” published in The
Road to Aztlan (Los Angeles Museum of Art, 2001), that this canyon’s Archaic
pictographs of round-eyed shaman and horned serpents are identical to the Olmec
gods Tlaloc and Quetzalcoatl, the Plumed Serpent. Since these Olmec gods of
rain and resurrection first appear in 1500 B.C.E., Farmer argues that the
Barrier Canyon images are just as old, and that they two regions developed the worship
of these gods in parallel.
However, some scholars have made an even more daring assertion.
Barrier Canyon Shamanic Pictographs |
However, some scholars have made an even more daring assertion.
Because Archaic pictographs could go back nearly 8000 years,
Barrier Canyon may well be the birthplace of Quetzalcoatl and Tlaloc, as well
as their rituals. The late anthropologist Barry Michrina once described Barrier
Canyon to me as “the homeland of Quetzalcoatl, the origin place of the
Mesoamerican gods.”
And after finding the illustration of Itzananchqu and discovering its incredible likeness to the Black
Dragon of the San Rafael Reef, I have added the great serpent mother of the
earth and sun to the pantheon of Mesoamerican gods who I believe were born in
the mythological heartland of the American Southwest.
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