Middle Caye is one of four small
coral islands that rim Glover's Reef, one of Belize's three atolls.
The other atolls, Turneffe Island and Lighthouse Reef, lie off
the northern coast of Belize, whereas Glover's Reef is considered
to be part of the Stann Creek District in Belize's southern half.
Belize's barrier reef is dotted with coral islands both along
the edge of the reef and slightly to the leeward of the reef
edge; the atolls, however, lie 7 to 20 miles to the west of the
reef edge. The extent to which the ancient Maya utilized the
islands of Belize's atolls is unknown; a report was published
on some pottery found at Grand Bogue Point, on Turneffe Island
(Euan MacKie, "Some Maya Pottery from Grand Bogue Point,
Turneffe Islands, British Honduras," in Atoll Research
Bulletin No. 95, pp. 131-135, 1963), but none of the atolls
has yet been explored systematically.
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The laboratory on
Middle Caye. |
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The work I carried out on Ambergris
Caye with David Pendergast from 1990 to 1993 (Graham and Pendergast
1992) demonstrated that the Maya had a long history of occupation
and use of Belize's offshore islands going back to at least 300
B.C. As a result I was curious to know if the Maya had the seafaring
knowledge to make consistent and long-term use of the islands
of the atolls. The Wildlife Conservation Fund, formerly the New
York Zoological Society, had recently established a marine research
station which we were invited to use on Middle Caye. This
provided a good opportunity for us to carry out a preliminary
survey.
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Heidi Ritscher and Lisa Hilborn
formed the field team along with me, and for a week from July
9th to 16th we mapped the island and recorded the locations of
all identifiable cultural remains. Our survey extended only to
the shoreline and swamps; we have yet to conduct a systematic
underwater survey.
We recovered Maya pottery
that appears to be Late Classic in date from the island. Sherds
are unfortunately extremely worn and not unlike the poorly preserved
pottery that characterizes the Stann Creek District in general
(Graham 1983).
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Mapping the shoreline. |
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We also recovered a range
of Historic-period remains. Most of the material is 19th century
in date and British or local in origin, but there is a small
amount of late 18th century ceramic material as well as artifacts,
such as ceramic moulds for glass floats and other as yet unidentified
items, that are, not surprisingly, related to fishing and seafaring.
We did not carry out excavations
in 1997. Once we complete analysis of the recovered artifacts
we would like to return to Middle Caye to carry out test excavations
in the artifact-rich areas to determine whether any structural
or other features remain from the historic or Maya occupations.
The evidence from Grand Bogue Point and from Middle Caye together
suggests strongly that the Maya used the islands of the atolls
more than just casually, beginning quite early. We do not yet
know whether the atoll locations were important only as fishing
stations, or were used for longer-term occupation or even as
trade depots of some sort. The last possibility seems unlikely
given their distance from the mainland, but only future work
can provide the answer.
Our thanks to everyone on
Middle Caye who provided their help and support, to Buddy Howell
whom we did not meet but who helped with all our arrangements,
and to Jacque Carter who helped to establish the research station
and alerted us to its potential for increasing our archaeological
knowledge of the Maya. |

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©2002,
Elizabeth Graham |
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comments to: info@belizecubadigs.com