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Coba

Coba (Cobá in the Spanish language) is a large ruined city of the Pre-Columbian Maya civilization, located in the Quintana Roo state of Mexico. It is about 90 km east of Chichen Itza and about 40 km west of the Caribbean Sea.

Coba is located around 5 small lakes. A series of elevated stone and plaster roads radiate from the central site to various smaller sites near and far. Some of these causeways go east to the Caribbean coast, and the longest runs over 100 km to the west to the site of Yaxuna. The site contains several large temple pyramids, the tallest, known as Nohoch Mul, being 42 meters in height.

Coba is estimated to have had some 50,000 inhabitants (and possibly significantly more) at it's peak, and the built up area extends over some 80 km square. The bulk of Coba's major construction seems to have been made in the middle and late Classic period, about 500 to 900, with most of the dated heiroglyphic inscriptions from the 7th century. However Coba remained an important site in the Post-Classic era and new temples were built and old ones kept in repair until at least the 14th century, possibly as late as the arrival of the Spanish.

Knowledge of this very large site was never completely lost, but it was not examined by scholars until the 1920s. John Lloyd Stephens mentioned hearing reports of the site in 1841, but it was so distant from any known modern road or village that he decided the difficulty in trying to get there was too daunting. For much of the rest of the 19th century the area could not be visited by outsiders due to the Caste War (see: Yucatan). Teoberto Maler payed the sight a short visit in the 1890s and took at least one photograph, but unfortunately did not publish and the site remained unknown to the archeological community. Amateur explorer Dr. Thomas Gann was brought to the site by some local Maya hunters in 1926. Gann gave a short description to the archeologists of the Carnigie Institution[?] project at Chichen Itza, which sent out an expedition under J. Eric S. Thompson. Thompson's initial report of a surprisingly large site with many inscriptions prompted Sylvanus Morley to mount a more throrough examination of the site.

The site remained little visited due to its remoteness until the first modern road was opened up to Coba in the 1970s. The Mexican National Institute of Anthropology & History began some archeological excavations and consolidated a couple buildings. At the start of the 1980s another road to Coba was opened up and paved, regular bus service begun, and a small Villas Archeologicas Hotel was opened up (with its own electric generator, since the village at Coba was otherwise without electricity. Coba became a tourist destination, many visitors visiting the site on day trips from Cancun[?] and other resorts on the coast. Only a small portion of the site has been cleared from the jungle.



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