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ARCHEOLOGISTS FIND LOST CITY : CARIBBEAN SITE REMNANT OF CULTURE THAT MET COLUMBUS.


Byline: Matt Crenson Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

In the remote jungle of the Dominican Republic Dominican Republic (dəmĭn`ĭkən), republic (2005 est. pop. 8,950,000), 18,700 sq mi (48,442 sq km), West Indies, on the eastern two thirds of the island of Hispaniola. The capital and largest city is Santo Domingo. , archeologists have discovered a long-lost city once inhabited by the people who welcomed Christopher Columbus to the New World.

The Taino Indians were the first people Columbus encountered after landing on an island he called San Salvador San Salvador, city, El Salvador
San Salvador (sän sälväthōr`), city (1993 pop. 402,448), central El Salvador, capital and largest city of the country. It is the center of El Salvador's trade and communications.
 in 1492. They numbered in the millions and had developed a network of small cities ruled by chieftains.

Recently, archeologists found one of those cities in the easternmost part of the Dominican Republic. On March 20, researchers exploring around a sinkhole sinkhole
 or sink or doline

Depression formed as underlying limestone bedrock is dissolved by groundwater. Sinkholes vary greatly in area and depth and may be very large.
 in the country's East National Park found three large ceremonial plazas and the remains of a substantial settlement that appears to have been home to thousands of people.

There is a strong possibility that the city is the same one whose brutal destruction in 1503 is described in an account by the missionary Bartolome de Las Casas Las Ca·sas   , Bartolomé de Known as "Apostle of the Indies." 1474-1566.

Spanish missionary and historian who sought to abolish the oppression and enslavement of the native peoples in the Americas.
. The incident was one of the first conflicts in what would become the conquest of a continent.

``This is going to give us more insight into the Taino than has ever been known before,'' said Charles Beeker, director of the underwater science program at Indiana University Indiana University, main campus at Bloomington; state supported; coeducational; chartered 1820 as a seminary, opened 1824. It became a college in 1828 and a university in 1838. The medical center (run jointly with Purdue Univ. . The find was announced Friday at a meeting in Rohnert Park Rohn·ert Park  

A city of west-central California, a residential suburb of Santa Rosa. Population: 42,300.
, Calif., of the Society for California Archeology.

Beeker and several colleagues traveled to the site by helicopter last week to investigate the area around a cenote ce·no·te  
n.
A water-filled limestone sinkhole of the Yucatán.



[American Spanish, from Yucatec ts'onot.]
, or natural well, that the Indiana archeologist has been studying for several months. Last fall scuba divers retrieved carved wooden axes, baskets, ornate pottery and other artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 from the well that were probably dropped into the water as part of a sacrificial ceremony.

With Beeker were Geoff Conrad of Indiana University's Mathers Museum, California state archeologist John Foster and three East National Park consulting Archeologists.

``Nobody's ever going to encounter a whole new world again, not on the face of this Earth,'' Conrad said. ``That's just never going to happen again. And this is where it happened first.''

Though the Taino are all but forgotten today, certain aspects of their culture live on. The English word barbecue comes from the Taino term for the rock slabs they used to cook bread. The hammock hammock, suspended bed, usually of netting, canvas, or leather. The hammock and its name were introduced to Europeans by Christopher Columbus, who learned of them from Native Americans.  is also a Taino invention discovered by the Spanish upon their arrival in the New World.

At the site, known as La Aleta, the archeologists found three plazas lined by 5-foot-tall limestone blocks. The plazas were 75 yards long and 15 yards wide, and would have been used for ceremonies and the playing of a soccerlike game that was common in America.

They also found kitchen areas and stones used to break and grind oyster shells. Some of the stone depressions still had bits of shell left in them, looking as if the people who used them weren't long gone.

``They could have just walked off last week,'' Beeker said.

So far, the site is not the largest Taino city ever discovered. One site in Puerto Rico has seven plazas to La Aleta's three. But there's no telling how many more plazas archeologists will find when they return in July, Conrad said.

So far, the 115-foot-deep well is the most impressive find, said University of Texas archeologist Sam Wilson, because it is the first ceremonial cenote ever discovered at a Taino site.

Very little is known about the Taino Indians because they were nearly annihilated by 1515. The clash, one of the first conflicts between the Spanish and the Taino, may have happened at La Aleta, according to Wilson.

According to the missionary's account, it all began when the Taino were loading bread onto a Spanish ship. Under a treaty with the Spanish, the Indians supplied bread to the nearby colony of Santo Domingo. A Spanish officer standing nearby had an attack dog on a leash, and when the animal began acting up, another officer joked about setting the dog on the Indian chief.

``Tomalo,'' he said, meaning, ``Take him.''

The dog lunged, overpowered o·ver·pow·er  
tr.v. o·ver·pow·ered, o·ver·pow·er·ing, o·ver·pow·ers
1. To overcome or vanquish by superior force; subdue.

2. To affect so strongly as to make helpless or ineffective; overwhelm.

3.
 his handler and soon disemboweled the chief.

The Indians retaliated a few months later by killing a few Spaniards. That led the colony of Santo Domingo to lead an expedition against the city. One of the officers sent on the mission was Ponce de Leon Ponce de Le·ón   , Juan 1460-1521.

Spanish explorer who sailed with Columbus on his second voyage (1493-1494) and discovered Florida (1513) while looking for the legendary Fountain of Youth.

Noun 1.
, who would later roam Florida in search of the Fountain of Youth Fountain of Youth

legendary fountain of eternal youth. [World Legend: Brewer Dictionary, 432]

See : Unattainability
.

CAPTION(S):

Photo, Map

Photo: Indiana University's Charles Beeker examines some artifacts recovered from the La Aleta site in the Dominican Republic. Found there were the remains of a Taino city where thousands of Indians lived before the Spanish conquest of the island. The Taino, now extinct, were the first people Christopher Columbus met upon arriving in the Americas.

Associated Press

Map: Lost city

Associated Press
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Mar 30, 1997
Words:781
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