Carlos Rodriguez-Navarro et al. discuss the presence of calcite cement among the Maya.

Date
Apr 2023
Type
Academic / Technical Report
Source
Carlos Rodriguez-Navarro
Non-LDS
Hearsay
Secondary
Reference

Carlos Rodriguez-Navarro, Luis Monasterio-Guillot, Miguel Burgos-Ruiz, Encarnación Ruiz-Agudo, and Kerstin Elert, "Unveiling the secret of ancient Maya masons: Biomimetic lime plasters with plant extracts," Science Advances 9, no. 16 (April 2023): 1-15

Scribe/Publisher
Science Advances
People
Encarnación Ruiz-Agudo, Carlos Rodriguez-Navarro, Miguel Burgos-Ruiz, Luis Monasterio-Guillot, Kerstin Elert
Audience
Reading Public
PDF
Transcription

[Abstract]

Ancient Maya produced some of the most durable lime plasters on Earth, yet how this was achieved remains a secret. Here, we show that ancient Maya plasters from Copan (Honduras) include organics and have a calcite cement with meso-to-nanostructural features matching those of calcite biominerals (e.g., shells). To test the hypothesis that the organics could play a similar toughening role as (bio)macromolecules in calcium carbonate biominerals, we prepared plaster replicas adding polysaccharide-rich bark extracts from Copan’s local trees following an ancient Maya building tradition. We show that the replicas display similar features as the organics-containing ancient Maya plasters and demonstrate that, as in biominerals, in both cases, their calcite cement includes inter- and intracrystalline organics that impart a marked plastic behavior and enhanced toughness while increasing weathering resistance. Apparently, the lime technology developed by ancient Maya, and likely other ancient civilizations that used natural organic additives to prepare lime plasters, fortuitously exploited a biomimetic route for improving carbonate binders performance.

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