The Gran Acuifero Maya (GAM), a project
dedicated to the study and preservation of the subterranean
waters of the Yucatan peninsula, said the 347-km (216-mile) cave
was identified after months of exploring a maze of underwater
channels.
Near the beach resort of Tulum, the group found that the cave
system known as Sac Actun, once measured at 263 km, communicated
with the 83-km Dos Ojos system, the GAM said in a statement. For
that reason, Sac Actun now absorbs Dos Ojos.
GAM director and underwater archaeologist Guillermo de Anda said
the "amazing" find would help to understand the development of
the rich culture of the region, which was dominated by the Maya
civilization before the Spanish conquest.
"It allows us to appreciate much more clearly how the rituals,
the pilgrimage sites and ultimately the great pre-Hispanic
settlements that we know emerged," he told Reuters.
The Yucatan peninsula is studded with monumental relics of the
Maya people, whose cities drew upon an extensive network of
sinkholes linked to subterranean waters known as cenotes.
Some cenotes acquired particular religious significance to the
Maya, whose descendents continue to inhabit the region.
(Reporting by Rodolfo Penaroja; Editing by Paul Tait)
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