May 30, 2003
Picture Snapping Machine

Here's Rube Goldberg's contribution to photography:

Rube's Picture Snapping Machine

Posted by Dave at 04:26 PM
More Phone Cams, Moblogs

I'm usually the last to join the party these days, after too many years fighting with untested software full of bugs, first-generation hardware.

But I'm following the phone cam developments with interest.

Brainstorms and Raves weblog - Mobile Phones, Moblogs, and Technology

Brainstorms and Raves weblog - Camera Phones, Moblogging Continued, and Technology to Change the World

And of course

Smart Mobs - The Next Social Revolution by Howard Rheingold

Posted by Dave at 11:44 AM
Maya Massacre, 25 years later

Reuters | Maya Indians Mark Watershed Guatemala Massacre

Posted by Dave at 12:58 AM
iCal resources

I finally took the plunge and upgraded to Mac OS 10.2.6. Hadn't wanted to go to "Jaguar" until they worked it over a bit. And I had to in order to work on calendars for FEVA, using Apple's great collaborative calendar program, iCal.

iCalShare - Share Your iCalendars!

Posted by Dave at 12:53 AM
Muni Wi-Fi, Palm VoIP, Fiber

I just can't keep up with Sam Churchill. How does he do it? More great info and links from DailyWireless.

DailyWireless - 5G Municipal Wi-Fi
DailyWireless - Palm VoIP
DailyWireless - Fiber to the Premises

Posted by Dave at 12:43 AM
Okay, I'll keep the cable

Deconstructing all those formative hours watching cartoons in the early 60's. It wasn't time wasted. It was a pre-postmodern education!

Salon.com Arts & Entertainment | Pillaging the cartoon universe

Posted by Dave at 12:42 AM
May 27, 2003
My neighborhood wireless

Here's a map showing a closeup of the area around Tompkins Square Park. It shows only 4 open nodes, 2 of them associated with NYCwireless. There are many more not on the map, some of them leaking access. It's not enough! But don't get me started...

Welcome to NodeDB.com - The Wireless Node Database Project

Posted by Dave at 01:44 PM
Rural Broadband Loans

We'll have a farmers market this summer on the empty lot where the Girls Club will be built. But I doubt if the Lower East Side of Manhattan is what the U.S. Department of Agriculture has in mind for the first broadband community grants that start this summer.

For those in the country who are struggling with broadband issues, Sam Churchill has all the information on these grants:

DailyWireless - Rural Broadband Loans

Posted by Dave at 10:52 AM
Bass Station

Just back from the Adirondacks, I caught up with Doc Searls and Stephen Lewis at Alt Coffee, an internet cafe on Ave. A, then went with them to meet the designer of the Bass Station, Ahmi Wolf at Cafe Mogador. Lot of cafes in this neighborhood.

The Bass Station is a portable wireless hub that can function as an internet radio station or collaborative tool. And it is installed in a ghetto blaster. Cool. I'll be checking back with Ahmi when he returns from Amsterdam in August.

Bass Station - A Community-based Information Space

Posted by Dave at 02:14 AM
May 24, 2003
Rios Montt back in Guatemala

Gen. Efrain Rios Montt is currently president of the Guatemalan Congress. But in the 80's as President of the country, he led a genocidal war against indigenous groups in Guatemala.

Now the ruling party has nominated him as a presidential candidate for November elections.

Washington Squirms Over Guatemala Race

Posted by Dave at 08:32 PM
May 23, 2003
NYC Broadband Report getting coverage

The report just released by Nick Noe for the New York City Council is starting to percolate through the wireless sites on the web.

"802.11 Planet" picked it up:

NYC: Leverage Fiber, Offer Free Wi-Fi

Slashdot jumped in:

Slashdot | NYC: Leverage Fiber, Offer Free Wi-Fi

Sam Churchill commented on it, of course:

DailyWireless - NYC Considering Wireless

And he also had a great post that may be a preview of the battle we are in for with the incumbent telecommunications powers:

DailyWireless - Municipal Broadband Battles

Posted by Dave at 08:28 PM
May 22, 2003
Getting weblogs read

You know, I don't really care, but someday I might. Lots of good ideas from one of my new favorite weblogs.

Brainstorms and Raves - You Build the Blog, But Will They Come?

Posted by Dave at 06:47 PM
It can be done

DailyWireless - Community LAN Success Story

Posted by Dave at 03:25 PM
City Broadband Policy, Girls Club


Nick Noe with the City Council just released a report on the future of broadband and wireless in New York City.

NETWORK NYC - Building the Broadband City

He invited Lower Eastside Girls Club representatives to the press conference announcing the report (since we have been involved in lobbying for community broadband, we had seen and commented on a draft this week). Here are our representatives at City Hall. We'll keep working towards free wireless broadband for our community.

Posted by Dave at 02:45 PM
Howl Festival

howlginsberg.gifI'm a little late to the party, but last night I went to an organizing meeting by FEVA (Federation of East Village Artists) for the Howl Festival this summer. Named, of course, in honor of Allen Ginsberg's famous poem. The festival, like the poem, is huge, ambitious, wild. It will incorporate the Charlie Parker Festival, free outdoor jazz concert, that I taped for Sam Turvey for 3 summers. I'll try to help out on the festival website, maybe lauch a live weblog during the weeklong event. Best of the beatniks, reborn!

HOWL! Festival of East Village Arts

Posted by Dave at 02:14 PM
May 21, 2003
Outdoor Wi-Fi

As usual, from Sam Churchill at Daily Wireless:

DailyWireless - Outdoor Access Points

Posted by Dave at 11:47 AM
Boca del Cerro Dam Plans

We finally have in hand a CFE (federal electrical commission) report on the Boca del Cerro dam project on the Usumacinta River in Mexico. It includes drawings of the dam and spillways, a timeline for construction, and the customary assurances that everything environmental and archaeological will be studied and dealt with.

It will take some time to evaluate this report and other documents that Homero and Betty Aridjis have passed along to us, but here are two of the drawings. (Click for larger versions)

The quality is rescanned photocopies, so my apologies. But it is the most detailed information we have received so far.

Posted by Dave at 01:11 AM
May 20, 2003
The Maya didn't lie!

In 1999, scientists studying the bones of Pakal, king of Palenque, said that he was only 40 to 50 years old when he died. That contradicted the record in the glyphs, which said he was 80. New studies have confirmed that he did indeed live to an age almost unheard of in those days.

Tabasco Hoy || Rey maya Pakal habría muerto a edad avanzada

Thanks to Alfonso for this article. Google News is good, but it doesn't search local Mexican papers like Tabasco Hoy.

Posted by Dave at 04:43 PM
May 19, 2003
May 18, 2003
Truck of immigrants in Chiapas

Reuters | Mexico Police Find 92 Migrants in Cooler Truck

Posted by Dave at 11:36 AM
May 17, 2003
Creative Resistance

Adbusters: Jammer's Gallery

Find Weapons of Mass Destruction:

IndyMedia Center - U.S. Terrorist Infrastructure Map

Posted by Dave at 10:06 PM
Drazen Pantic

I met this past week with an Internet pioneer whose ideas are bubbling in my brain at the moment. I'll post a number of things on Drazen (no shortage on the web - just run a Google search) but here is his description of a wireless to cable television experiment he did this January.

NOEMA > IDEAS: Public WiFi Network 2 Public Cable Network

His streaming media organization:

Location One: Open Source Streaming Alliance

A brief bio:

Location One: Drazen Pantic

And his 1999 EFF Award

EFF 1999 Pioneer Awards

Posted by Dave at 07:32 PM
More I need to know - RSS

From Shirley Kaiser's Brainstorms and Raves weblog, links to explanations of RSS, something Moveable Type builds into the software I use for this site, but which I have never really understood. A way to include summaries of new posts from other sites in yours - is that right?

An Introduction to RSS for Educational Designers

Maricopa Learning Exchange: syndicating mlx

EdTech Post: RSS feeds from Learning Object Repositories - Known Examples

And more links on RSS than I know what to do with:

Brainstorms and Raves weblog - The World of RSS Feeds

Posted by Dave at 07:02 PM
Quicktime and Mobile Movies

quicktimelogo.gifIf I ever get some a college intern to help me someday, I'll have her figure all of this out for me. Some people swear that cell phones and mobile media are the way it's all going. Certainly almost everyone, except me, has a cell phone. Luckily folks like Russell Beattie are pulling together information on all the parts to make it happen.

Russell Beattie Notebook - Quicktime to Support 3GP Movies

Thanks to Daily Wireless for the link.

Posted by Dave at 05:33 PM
May 16, 2003
Site discovered in Honduras

Reuters AlertNet - Newly uncovered Honduran ruins predate Mayans

Posted by Dave at 11:03 AM
May 14, 2003
Weblog with Camera-Phones

Okay, I'm the last guy in New York without a cell phone. Just waiting for the right one. And a need. I'm a loner, or I'm gone. But someday, maybe, I could send photos to this weblog through a phone/PDA/gizmo. Sam Churchill has helpfully collected lots of links about hardware and software to do it.

Trouble is, the places I go are out of cell range. I'll stick with camera and laptop for now. Plug into the cybercafe in town and I'm all set.

DailyWireless - Cam-Phone Blogs

Posted by Dave at 04:42 PM
Vonnegut on Twain and our world

By way of Boing Boing, a speech by Kurt Vonnegut on Mark Twain, George Bush and the strange world we find ourselves in today.

In These Times | Strange Weather Lately

Posted by Dave at 02:05 PM
Chiapas border crossing

From the "Arizona Republic" newspaper.

This story covers the border with Guatemala at the Suchiate River, but the Usumacinta also had boatfuls of immigrants, mojados as they call them, when we traveled on it in March. On one beach we picked up hundreds of identical styrofoam "clamshells", takeout lunch trash that the coyotes gave their customers for the trip across and downriver. Someone told us that 300 people a week made the trip on that stretch of the Usumacinta.

Southern Mexico's trail of tears

Posted by Dave at 01:27 PM
May 13, 2003
Lessig at Cooper Union

Lawrence Lessig, Stanford Law professor, spoke last night at Cooper Union on copyright and the battle to keep enough in the public domain to foster continued creativity. Brilliant and inspiring, a reluctant politician in this campaign.

Lessig is trying to map a middle ground between absolute control of copyrights and absolute freedom to copy and reuse creative materials. You can see the results of his efforts at this website:

Creative Commons

Posted by Dave at 11:31 AM
CSS Zen Garden

I am a maniac with a hatchet when it comes to web design. That's how I ended up with this look on my site, when I fell over from exhaustion after hacking at the CSS, cascading style sheet.

But the folks who collaborated on this site have some lessons for us. If you are new to CSS or adopting Moveable Type for your weblog, it's worth a look.

css Zen Garden: The Beauty in CSS Design

Posted by Dave at 12:24 AM
Wireless Access Point Light Bulb

From the guys who brought you the Pringles can antenna, the wireless access point in a light bulb. Sort of.

O'Reilly Network: The NoCat Night Light [May 12, 2003]

Posted by Dave at 12:08 AM
May 12, 2003
Open GIS

This one is for Ed Barnhart, Palenque mapper extraordinaire. He'll understand it. I don't quite. It has to do with making geographic information systems interoperable between computer systems and on the web.

DailyWireless - Open GIS Magazine

Posted by Dave at 11:43 PM
Total Lunar Eclipse

There will be a total eclipse of the moon this week. Here is the page from the U.S. Naval Observatory that computes data for your location:

Lunar Eclipse Computer

Posted by Dave at 10:48 AM
May 11, 2003
Rural Last-Mile - Slashdot

We want to do it in New York, but the suggestions and comments to this Slashdot post have a lot of good ideas.

Slashdot | Last-Mile Solution For A Rural Land Co-op?

Posted by Dave at 08:08 PM
Oral History and Wireless

As we think about creating a local internet radio station in the new building, compilations like this one on Sam Churchill's site offer a wealth of ideas. Using handheld wireless devices to call up local oral histories is just one of them.

DailyWireless - Mapping Oral History

Posted by Dave at 07:33 PM
May 10, 2003
Fires in Chiapas

And throughout the region, including the Peten in Guatemala.

HoustonChronicle.com - WHEN FIRE REIGNS

Posted by Dave at 02:55 PM
May 09, 2003
Canter on Maya portages, Shaw intro


Here, with formatting that I will have to work on (apologies to Ron and Chris) is Ron Canter's study of possible Maya portage routes on the Usumacinta River. We will create a PDF version with maps at some point, but the report is important enough to our current efforts that making it available now seems to me to be a priority. (Full text with footnotes below - click MORE)

The Usumacinta River Portages from the Maya Classical Period to the Present
By Ronald L. Canter, cartographer, Federal Aviation Administration

Introduction

Ronald Canter and the Geography of Mesoamerican Canoe Culture
By Christopher Shaw

Ronald L. Canter, a cartographer for the Federal Aviation Administration, in
Washington DC, belongs to the tradition of so-called amateurs who have made
significant contributions to Maya studies, through their immersion in the
latest advances and the rich lore of the field, as well as their knowledge
of the geography and personal experience of the living Maya. Canter,
self-effacing, judicious, and cautious in the extreme (though hardly timid),
is the model of a serious, self-taught scholar from an earlier time. Indeed,
some of the most celebrated Mayanists began as "amateurs."

In the U.S. Canter's twenty-year, in-depth study of the ancient and colonial
canoe geography of
the northeastern United States has already culminated in the reopening of
750-miles of traditional canoe routes through northern New York and New
England, part of a once even more extensive system of inland waterways. Now
called the Northern Forest Canoe Trail, the route runs from Old Forge, New
York, in the Adirondack Mountains, to northern Maine, all of it legally and
continuously navigable for the first time in more than a century. Canter is
also an expert and intrepid canoe voyager himself.

Canter has likewise absorbed himself in contemporary Maya studies and the
geography of ancient and modern Mesoamerica, where the canoe--the dugout,
cayuco, or chem--served as the essential and daily means of trade,
transport, travel, war, diplomacy, and cultural dispersion over the entire
region.

This paper, best read along with the paper on Panhale by Armando Anaya
(FAMSI paper on Pomona and its Hinterland, referenced below) culminates
years of documentary research, experience, map and geological study. The
portages it describes bypassed the Usumacinta River's central, difficult,
and strategically significant canyons, just downstream from the last major
city of the uplands, Piedras Negras, and just upstream from Pomona, with its
satellites of Chinikiha--itself controlling portages between the Usumacinta
and the Rio Chacamax--and its defensive fortress, Panhale, located precisely
at the mouth of the canyon, Boca del Cerro. Here two major polities of the
Classical period, one controlling the rich upper delta and water access
inland, the other upstream access to the cities of upper drainage and the
rich resources of the distant Cuchumatan mountains, fought over one of the
most strategic junctures in the extensive network of rivers, lakes, and
bajos traversing the Maya region. When the two cities engaged in their
so-called "star wars" in the 8th century, the canyons and portages must have
been as heavily disputed as those separating lakes George and Champlain from
the upper Hudson River in North America's French and Indian War.

Until recently, however, river navigation, the properties of ancient
cayucos, and the practice of portaging, have remained obscure to many
archaeologists, obscuring in turn the geography of the Usumacinta and the
importance of the canoe. (Thompson, Schele, Freidel, Hopkins, Houston,
Aliphat, and Hammond are among those who have seen its importance.) The
portage itself, for instance, a poorly understood phenomenon to
non-canoeists, is a mere nuisance rather than the blockage to navigation it
is often assumed to be, especially in terms of long-distance travel and
trade.

In the time frame of voyages such as those undertaken by coastal and inland
traders from the Olmec to the post-Classic, portaging or even constructing
new boats amounted to no great loss of time. Those navigators surely
encountered dangers and uncertainties that held them up much longer. Like
whalers, however, they were unconstrained by the time-limits of a vacation
or a sabbatical. Gone for months at a time, or with no homes at all, they
had the time wait out sudden floods from unseasonable rains, to use any
number of strategies to get around difficult passages. They could portage
their cayucos over short distances using logs for rollers, for instance, as
cayuco builders still do. Over longer distances, they could carry their
goods and equipment in stages from one set of boats to another.

In Classical times, they would have portaged when possible, purchased or
hired new boats on the opposite side, or even built new ones. They might
carry only their cargo and run the boats down navigable rapids, or, in a
pinch, launch their empty boats down a rapid and pick them up on the
downstream side, a technique used by Wolfgang Cordan's vogas on the Jatate
in the 1960s, and a probable technique on the Usumacinta canyons. They might
"line" their craft from shore, using ropes, construct canals between low
lying waterways, or build dams with runnable sluiceways, such as Alfred
Siemens has described on the Rio Candelaria. All these methods are in the
documentary or archaeological record. When viewed this way marginal
landscapes and waters that once appeared land-bound now appear within the
navigation capabilities of canoe people The landings at the ends of portages
naturally became, as they did all over North America, places where travelers
congregated, where trade and cultural exchange happened, where cities grew.
Inevitably they also became points of
strategic control.

San Jose Canyon is the only extended stretch of questionable navigability on
the Usumacinta corridor, especially at certain water levels. For craft of
sufficient volume, with experienced crews, it is also navigable much of the
year. In sporting terms, it rates a Class III at average winter levels,
advanced-intermediate difficulty for canoes by the International Standard of
Whitewater Difficulty. It seems certain therefore that local and far-flung
teams of Maya in large canoes, such as those depicted in the art record,
sometimes ran it. (We also know monteros ran the canyons, often illegally,
in the nineteenth century.) But the Usumacinta is subject to enormous volume
differentials, and for long periods of the year the canyons are unnavigable.
At such times the only recourse, even for the most intrepid river runners,
is to portage.

Canter's research and experience uses colonial records and those of more
recent travelers, such as Maler and Morley, contemporary reports (including
this writer's), current scholarship, and his professional expertise with GIS
technology, to paint a detailed picture of the canyon geography from a canoe
navigator's point of view. It also uses one of the intangibles unavailable
to the desk-bound professional, a deep knowledge of "canoe behavior" as it
has been practiced all over the western hemisphere for a hundred centuries.
We know from expedition reports, ethnography, art, and our own experience,
how canoe people meet the challenges of specific geographies. It is a
remarkably consistent record over time and distance, and there is no reason
to suspect it was any different for the ancient canoe travelers of the
Usumacinta.

It is also essential to understanding the meaning of the Maya region's "deep
landscape," the subtle and not immediately visible interplay of its shapes,
features, idiosyncrasies. To ancient minds, at least those who lived near
water, the geography would have been a seamless continuity, as the Aegean
was to the children of Piraeus, or coastal New England to the wives of New
Bedford. To Classical travelers and citizens along the rivers, the region
would have been imprinted on mental maps by story and anecdote from Pomona
to Rio Azul, and from Cancuen and Tonina to Yaxchilan: place names,
"portals," battles, stories, hazards, available women, mythic overtones. A
young canoe trader from the delta may already have known to hug the left
shore when running San Jose Canyon before he even laid eyes on it.

Within this essential understanding lies the meaning of the relationships
connecting Pomona, Panhale, Piedras Negras and all the upstream cities;
ultimately of the entire Classical era. It is also this understanding, this
irreplaceable piece of the Maya puzzle, that would be obliterated forever by
an unnecessary and useless dam at Boca del Cerro.

Canter is currently preparing a detailed map of the portage routes. And
while the Usumacinta portages are only one small fragment of the region's
ancient and modern water routes, this description, likewise, is only the
first installment of a life-work that will describe the navigable waters of
the entire Maya region. It is already the only such guide in existence. When
complete it will be an invaluable multipurpose resource.

Christopher Shaw is author of Sacred Monkey River (Norton, 2000), and
co-founder of Rios Mayas.

***************************************************

The Usumacinta River Portages in the Maya Classical Period
By Ronald L. Canter

Distance: 47 km from El Porvenir to Boca del Cerro, with options ranging
from 26 to 65 km.

Portage Option #1: El Porvenir to Tenosique or Boca del Cerro, 46 or 47 km.

Many ancient portage routes in Mesoamerica can be tentatively reconstructed
by extrapolating from the ends of navigation upstream and down, examining
and understanding the controlling terrain features, and considering the
distribution of known Maya sites. [fn1] When this approach is applied to
finding the most likely carry past the Usumacinta canyons, between Piedras
Negras (Y'okib) and Boca Del Cerro, at the head of upstream navigation, the
logical route follows a linear karst valley in Guatemala and Mexico running
from El Porvenir, just downstream from Piedras Negras, to Corrigedora Ortiz
(Tres Champas), then over a low divide to Francisco Madero. The second half
of the route would work north through the limestone hills to reach the
lowlands, where the river emerges from the canyons into the broad estuary of
the delta.

Not only is this route the obvious choice topographically, it is indeed the
well-documented 19th-century portage trail. From Desempeño, the historical
trail at first worked through karst ridges (the expression of a transverse
arch crossing the La Linea Syncline), on which sit Piedras Negras and El
Porvenir. It then followed a karst valley the rest of the way. The valley,
which parallels the La Linea Syncline, is the only route that avoids high,
dry, and rugged karst ridges. It would have been the best route in any
period, from Preclassic to Postclassic. In the Classic, however, downstream
through-paddlers probably shortened it by starting from El Porvenir.

The ejido Francisco Madero lies on a calm pool 20 km downstream from El
Porvenir (33 km from Desempeño), one of the few places in the canyons where
a ferry crossing by canoe is practical. But it is not the end of the
portage. [fn2] The 19th-century trail continued north from there for 26 km,
first following the river, then winding between knobs and over ridges a few
kilometers east of San Jose Canyon. From Los Rieles the trail used the
valley of Arroyo Tepesquintla to drop down to the coastal plain, passing
Adolfo Lopez Mateos on the way. From the edge of the hills, the old trail
bee-lined through Rancho Grande, to Tenosique (Tanoche), 46 km from El
Porvenir and 59 km from Desempeño. It represented a good compromise between
a reasonable grade and directness, and probably reproduces a Postclassic
trail.

Using a digital terrain model, however, Armando Anaya calculated the line of
least effort between Piedras Negras and Pomona. The resulting trace closely
follows the known19th-century portage as far as Adolfo Lopez Mateos, in the
foothills. It then veers west-northwest along the front of the mountain,
past the Rojo Gomez site, to the Usumacinta near Panhale, 47 km downstream
from El Porvenir. Dr. Anaya's computer-generated trace is a very logical
compromise between effort and directness, and a very good candidate for a
well-used Classic Period portage trail.

Anaya refers to unconfirmed reports of a gravel causeway heading west from
Rancho de Herradura, 7 km downriver from Panhale, on the west shore of the
river at Arroyo Tacalate a mere 6 km east of Pomona [Pia], which may have
been Pomona's port on the Usumacinta. It would be interesting to see if a
corresponding port exists somewhere on the Rio Chacamax, north of Arroyo
Negro and 8 km west of Pomona. If so, then Pomona would have occupied the
height of land near the midpoint of a 14 km portage between the two rivers,
and controlled a port on a river approach to Palenque.

Option #2, El Porvenir to Chuncheje or Lindavista, 34 to 40 km.

The shortest valley route between definitely navigable sections of the
Usumacinta required ferrying across the river between canyons. By ferrying
the river at either Francisco Madero or San Jose Usumacinta, porters could
then follow a broad valley (the northern extension of the "Intermontane
Valley" along the La Linea Syncline) west to the Santa Margarita site, and
then northwest through Victorico Grajales. From the Las Delicias Maya site
and village, old trails once ran north between broken hills to the river
opposite Chuncheje, then northwest to Lindavista, 3.5 km upstream from the
Boca bridge. A portage from El Porvenir to the river between Chuncheje and
Lindavista would have passed directly to the head of navigation below San
Jose Canyon. This portage option would have cut 7 to 13 km from the 47-km
trail carry from El Porvenir to Panhale. (Chuncheje is 34 km from El
Porvenir and Lindavista is 40 km from El Porvenir.)

On his 1953 "La Selva Lacandona" map, Frans Blom marked the river as again
becoming navigable, at a point labeled Chuncheje, about 10 km upstream of
Boca del Cerro. In low water, Chuncheje appears to have been the head of
navigation. Lindavista may have been as high up as dugouts could reach in
high water. The rapids of Iguanas (Boca Del Cerro) Canyon are minor. Neither
variation was used in the 19th century because vogas and boatmen for the
monterias were simply forbidden to run any part of the canyons. (They
sometimes did anyway.) A chain of Maya sites marked on Blom's map between
Santo Tomas and Lindavista fits the most likely route nicely, and supports
the probability of an actual Classic period portage from El Porvenir to
Chuncheje and/or Lindavista. Between Las Delicias and Lindavista three Maya
sites are strung along a terrace 30 meters above the river: Ojo de Agua,
Camino a Las Delicias, and Chinikiha, where a bat mural, fine sculpture
[fn3], unusual Preclassic ceramics, and a ball court have been unearthed,
suggesting it was a site of some importance. The Lindavista (Boca de
Chiniquija) site sits beside the river and seems a likely port site. All
four would be inundated by a 40 meter dam at Boca del Cerro.

During the Classic Period, Pomona established a fortress at Panhale,
directly in the Boca Del Cerro gap, where the Usumacinta breaks out of the
mountains south of Tenosique. The site controlled river traffic through Boca
del Cerro and the most likely portage around all the canyons. According to
Anaya, steep slopes and "massive platforms and observation points" protect
its hilltop ruins. Panhale Acropolis 2, an eyrie perched 320 meters above
the coastal plain, caps the highest peak overlooking the north shore of the
Usu', making the site the Maya equivalent of a Rhine castle. [fn4]

Panhale was in the thick of the moves and countermoves of two great Maya
cities throughout the Classic. It may be a key to understanding the regional
conflicts and trade routes of the Classic period. Pomona and its outliers
were well sited to dominate the best land and water routes between the
lowlands and the upper Usumacinta basin. Most of Panhale would be torn apart
by construction of any dam placed in the mountain gap. Its destruction would
be an irreplaceable loss. In fact, the site's Group B has already been badly
damaged by quarrying and CFE exploratory work.

A broad pass at La Estrella, just 7 km south of Pomona, separates the
lowlands and the valley of the Rio Chiniquija (See discussion of Portage
Option #4), controlling traffic on and between the rios Usumacinta and
Chacamax. The valley of the Chacamax also provides a natural approach to
Palenque from the east. Therefore, Pomona and Panhale would have controlled
every reasonable route from Piedras Negras to the coastal plain. According
to Stephen Houston, "Pomona was the natural enemy of Piedras Negras: it
controlled a different ecological zone to the north and formed a bottleneck
through which Piedras Negras would naturally choke." Pomona's one weakness
was a lack of natural defenses, which Panhale may have partly alleviated.

Piedras Negras launched two "star wars" against Pomona, first in 792 and
then in 794 CE. The wars ended in a crushing defeat for Pomona. There are
three possible scenarios for Panhale's involvement. It may have turned a
blind eye to the second attack, i.e. double-crossed Pomona, since no army
could pass without notice. It may have been thinly garrisoned and overrun
before Pomona could send reinforcements. Or, the nobility and forces of
Pomona may have taken refuge in Panhale and eventually fallen to a
determined siege, Tolkein's "Helms Deep" scenario played out in real life to
a grimmer end. Dr. Anaya's continued research could solve the riddle, but
dam construction on the site would forever close the book.

Option #3: El Porvenir to Chuncheje via San Jose los Rieles ? 36 km.

Another short route from El Porvenir to navigable water at Chuncheje may
have followed the 19th century portage almost to San Marcos, then swung left
through the San Jose Los Rieles site, ferried across the river, and followed
a narrow linear valley west 4.5 km to the pool at Chuncheje. Such a route is
only 36 km long, vs 47 km from El Porvenir to Panhale. Only one small site
lies along it, so this route remains hypothetical.

Option #4: La Linea to Lindavista ? 26 km.

A theoretical portage, that may have passed from Rapidos La Linea west
through Morelos [Jose Maria Morelos y Pavo], then north through Vista
Hermosa to Lindavista, would have avoided all the canyon's rapids. At 26 km,
it would have been short. However, to get out of the canyon porters would
have had a steep climb of more than 200 meters in two km from La Linea to
Netzahualcoyotl. From there, a rough modern road through Nuevo Retiro and
Morelos crosses a high, rugged karst plateau. Between Morelos and Vista
Hermosa the road drops into the valley, descending 300 meters in five km.
The last leg to Lindavista would have been flat and easy. There are no sites
reported along most of the projected route. The climb and descent are both
greater and steeper than on any other possible portage, offsetting the
advantage of shorter distance. It is the only projected route that climbs up
and over the highest range of mountains. Overall, this portage option seems
unlikely to have been used much, if at all.

Option #5: El Porvenir to Rio Chacamax ? 65 km.

A last possible route could have made an end run around the Boca del Cerro
Ridge. By continuing west 11 km from Chinikiha 5 up the valley of Rio
Chiniquija to the Old Tenosique Road at La Estrella, travelers could reach
the lowlands at Coronel Gregorio Mendez Magana. [fn5] (Penjamo, the old
name, was more compact.) From the wide, low pass at La Estrella, Pomona is
only 7 km north, and the rios Usumacinta and Chacamax are both equally
accessible. In fact, travelers headed upstream from the coast in the wet
season would have found a route up the Chacamax, then overland for 65 km via
Chinikiha and Santa Margarita to El Porvenir, faster and less work than
other routes. The Rio Chacamax has less current and is 140 km shorter than
the comparable section of the Usumacinta. The Tierra Blanca site, on the
Usu' at the mouth of the Chacamax, shares an unusual daubed volcanic-glass
beaded Preclassic ceramic type with Chinikiha, suggesting long and direct
contact between the two via the Rio Chacamax. There are also suggestions of
Olmec-Chinikiha contacts, per Dr. Rands The directness and ease of upriver
travel on the Chacamax would more than offset a longer portage to El
Porvenir. The Rio Chacamax may have been a key part of long distance trade
networks in the region, and its shores merit more attention.

To summarize:
In the 19th Century the Usumacinta Portage ran north from Desempeño for 59
km to Tenosique on the Usumacinta below the canyons. A Classic Period
portage would have been constrained by topography to follow much the same
route, but probably started at El Porvenir and ran to Panhale, as Armando
Anaya has demonstrated. This probable Classic Period portage would have been
47 km long, 12 km shorter than the 19th century trail. A number of other
options were possible. Most involved ferrying across the Usumacinta and then
following the south shore, either to continue downriver by boat, or to
travel west through the valley of the Rio Chinikija to Pomona and the Rio
Chacamax. Coming up the Rio Chacamax, and then carrying 65 km south to El
Porvenir, would have avoided 140 km of current and meanders on the
Usumacinta. Since the region was not at all wild in the Classic, it is
possible that all portage options were used, as occasion demanded. A
proposed 40-meter dam at Boca del Cerro threatens to destroy at least five
known Maya sites, and possibly others not yet located. Of those, Panhale
and Chinikiha may hold keys to the puzzle of past trade and conquest routes.
Chinikiha is at the juncture of several portage options. The destruction of
Panhale, a Maya mountain fortress in the Boca del Cerro gap, could retard
understanding of the long running feud between the major cities of Piedras
Negras and Pomona.

Footnotes

1. Every portage discussed here would have been far too long to haul dugouts
across. The cargo would have been carried from one set of canoes to another.
2. Christopher Shaw, on his 1989 descent, saw a Chol cayuco workshop in
operation there.
3. Per rubbings done by Merle Greene Robertson of pieces looted from
Chinikiha.
4. A major function of castles along the Rhine River in Germany was to
"control" traffic, ie. extort tolls to enrich local barons. Tolls were
cumulatively so high that some overland routes, though arduous, were
competitive with upriver Rhine traffic, and not radically more expensive
than downriver. Today, regulated tolls levied by the communities along the
Usumacinta might be a reasonable alternative to violent and
counterproductive banditry.
5. Chiniquija means "Mouth of the Disappearing Water". The river sinks east
of Reforma Agraria, flows under a karst ridge, and reappears 2.5 km north.
The Old Tenosique Road connects Reforma Agraria to the lowlands, first
through a narrow pass in a karst ridge separating the upper and lower
valleys of Rio Chiniquija, and then via the pass at La Estrella.

Bibloigraphy

"Research takes you places you absolutely don't want to go, and rattles all
your preconceptions." Nicholas Clooney, 2002.

Books and Articles:

1. Routes of Communication in Mesoamerica: the Northern Guatemala Highlands
and the Peten, Richard E. W. Adams, 1978. In "Mesoamerican Communication
Routes and Cultural Contacts", New World Archaeological Foundation
2.Classic Maya Landscape in the Upper Usumacinta River Valley, Mario M.
Aliphat, 1994. University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
3. Site Interaction and Political Geography in the Upper Usumacinta Region
During the Late Classic: A GIS Approach, Ph.d. Dissertation by Armando Anaya
Hernandez, 1999
4. The Pomona Kingdom and its Hinterland, Armando Anaya Hernandez, 2002.
FAMSI Report
5. Letters from Mexico, The Fifth Letter, Hernan Cortez, 1525.
6. Long Distance Transport Costs in Pre-Hispanic Mesoamerica, Robert D
.Drennan, American Anthropologist Research Reports, 1984
7. River of Ruins, Louis Halle, 1941. Henry Holt & Co., New York, NY.
8. Classic Maya Canoes, Norman Hammond, 1981. International Journal of
Nautical Archaeology and Underwater Exploration, (10-3): 173-185
9. In the Land of the Turtle Lords, Stephen Houston, 2000. FAMSI Report
10 Among the River Kings, Stephen Houston, 1999. FAMSI Report
11. Between the Mountains and the Sea, Stephen Houston, 1998. FAMSI Report
12. The Piedras Negras Project, Stephen Houston and Hector Escobedo, 1997.
FAMSI Report
13. Commerce and Trade Routes of the Maya, Christopher Jones, 1990,
University Museum, UPA.
14. River of the Sacred Monkey, Dimitar Krustev, 1970.
15. Chronicle of the Maya Kings and Queens, Simon Martin & Nikolai Grube,
2000. Thames & Hudson, Ltd. London, UK.
16. Palenque and Selected Survey Sites in Chiapas and Tabasco, Robert L.
Rands, 2002. FAMSI Report
17. The Maya Chontal Indians of Acalan-Tixchel, France V. Scholes & Ralph L.
Roys, 1948.
18. Sacred Monkey River, Christopher Shaw, 2000. W.W Norton & Co.
19. Incidents in the Life of a Maya Archaeologist, Edwin M. Shook & Winifred
Veronda, 1998. Southwestern Academy Press, San Marino, CA
20. Incidents of Travel in Yucatan, John Lloyd Stephens, 1843. Republished
1963, Dover Publications, New York, NY.
21. Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan, John Lloyd
Stephens, 1841. Harper & Bros, New York, NY. Republished 1969, Dover
Publications, New York, NY.
22. Classic Maya Place Names, David Stuart & Stephen Houston, 1994. Studies
in Pre-Columbian Art & Archaeology, Dumbarton Oaks Research Library, Wash,
DC.
23. Canoes and Navigation of the Maya and their Neighbors, J. Eric S.
Thompson, 1951, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Society
24. Voices from the Rapids, Wheeler, Kenyon, Woolworth, & Birk, 1975.
Minnesota Historical Society
25. The Flowing Road, Caspar Whitney, 1912. J. B. Lippincott & Co,
Philadelphia, PA.>

Maps

1. The Ancient Maya World, Cartographic Division, NGS, 1989
2.Carta Fotogeologica Del Peten, series of reconnaissance geological maps at
1:100,000
3. La Selva Lacandona, y Tierras Colindantes, Frans Blom, 1953. Superb map.
4. Map of El Peten, Guatemala, and Bounding Regions of British Honduras and
Mexico, Carl Hubbs & Henry van der Schalie, 1937
5. Map of Tabasco, 1579, circle map attributed to Melchior de Alfaro Santa
Cruz.
6. Mapa Base de las Cuencas de los Rios, Mexico y Guatemala, 1:500,000,
1980.
7. Mapa de la Republica de Guatemala, Escala 1:1,000,000, Teodoro Paschke,
1889. Shows colonial trails, Peten, Escala 1:800,000, 1900. Rough schematic
of trails.
8. Sistema Fluvial Tabasqueno, 1946, map showing limits of navigability for
rivers of Tabasco, and over a dozen ruins.
9. Topographic Maps of Mexico, Guatemala, and Belize, 1:250,000 series and
partial coverage 1:50,000 series

Web Sites
http://www.famsi.org/reports/00082/index.html The Pomona Kingdom and its
Hinterland, Armando Anaya Hernandez, FAMSI Report, Dec 2002
http://www.archaeology.org/magazine.php?page=online/news/usumacinta
"Maya Sites Face Flooding", Jason McGahan, Archaeology Magazine, Feb 19,
2003

Posted by Dave at 09:46 PM
Got Wi-Fi?

This is how it should be - a conference on community broadband that has wireless in the hall. Instant, easy.

So I will try to post notes on the proceedings.

And before the sessions even start, I meet two inspiring people. Don Samuelson of DSSA (who is way out ahead of me in community broadband networks) and Tony Wilhelm of the Benton Foundation. The rest of the day might not match the pleasure and recognition of this first exchange.

(notes below - click MORE)

Welcome from Bruce Lincoln: digital divide not a bad word.

Now Terence Rogers - 2005 a new wave of technology, hundreds of net connected devices, net not browser, but communication. Question is: What do we do with this stuff? Free people from the unrealized boundaries of where they grew up. From families, neighborhood, media. Focus on Media - TV very passive. Next wave more interactive, proactive. Kids reaching out across the world to collaborate with others. Equalizer, levels playing field. "My stuff is on the web!" What sort of jobs will all this create?

Greg Rohde - We deal with world through language, maps, we create devices to help us. Internet use Asions highest blacks lowest, Cty highest, Ineer city lowest, lower than rural. Broadband only 20% of internet access in USA. 10% of society. Canada 20%. Korea over 50%.

Broadband Challenge: Infrastructure (last mile), Demand (applications), Financing

New York Broadband needs:
The Under-Served
Small Business development
Emergency Communications
Municipal Services
Homeland Security applications

NYC Broadband solution: CTC Bank, E Copernicus, Typhoon:
Typhoon Meshnetwork Infrastructure
CTC's - local
Emergency communications

Fixed and mobile
COntent and training
Aggregates demand

FIRST PANEL Planning for a CTC Wireless Broadband Network

Don Samuelson, DSSA: Distinction between schooling and education, fundamental tools vs lifelong learning 50, 000 housing projects, housing as wedge to serve communities, human capital building exercise, add technology - computers, smart buildings, bring broadband, Cat-6, Waps, Motorola Canopy for backhaul. His project in Englewood (near Chicago)
Robert Proulx, Xit telecom: from Canada, we are ruled by monopolies, 1997 they started own infrastructure, private fiber optic network between universities in Quebec, then school board 15,000 km of fiber, by 2004 all schools connected. Next step, how do we reach all residents?
Francois Menard, Xit: Looking to recreate same environment elsewhere - like NYC. Important - fiber backbone, utilize spare capacity, knowledge consumes knowledge, need for innovation to keep it all going, wireless an enabler for mobility, fiber to home the endgame
David Epstein, entrepreneur: ubiquity, affordability, like phone. Setup ISP in hill towns of Massachusetts in 1995. Provided 80,000 K-12 teachers free dial-up. Sold to RCN. Today Broadband dominated by cable, Bells. now 50 mbit over power lines possible, coming, will drive prices down - to $25-30 a month. Not about technology, but service. Explosive growth coming up.

(I'll take a break to save battery) Notes from discussion to come

Workshop: Community Programming, Ronen Mir, Director of Sci Tach Hands on Museum, Aurors, Ill in former Post Office

Grassroots development of museum

Shows outdoor area - important for kids - play
Science info - people get from TV Internet Science museums

(this is interesting enough, but not on topic?)

9 webcams, museum without walls, virtual reality experience - a test with U of Illinois

Outreach (interesting to me in early stage, introducing wireless to community) take it out to 30,000 people

Plus helped start first Palestinian science museum (Ronen is Israeli) with helped from US state dept and Israel

Outreach "very sexy to funders" - local, plus IBM, Lucent

Outdoor exhibits create awareness - visible from highway

Another break for battery

Posted by Dave at 09:48 AM
May 08, 2003
International Watershed Management

From the University of Virginia School of Law (via Chris Shaw's lawyer son, Noah):

A report on a symposium that addressed some of the issues we will deal with, in creating a binational reserve around the Usumacinta River.

Symposium on International Watershed Management Reveals Need for Public Participation

Posted by Dave at 11:46 PM
More Wi-Fi and VoIP

Good explanation of the current move towards voice over IP - phone service without the phone company.

Airshare.org - Learn - Editorial - Customer-Owned Networks, by Clay Shirky

Posted by Dave at 12:34 PM
May 07, 2003
Rick Shapiro

shapiro.jpg
New York doesn't get better than this. From a gala dinner with internet visionary educators, to the Bowery Poetry Club and Rick Shapiro. The funniest, scariest, most verbally gifted human I have ever seen. If I'm not in the jungle listening to archaeologist stories over beers, I want to be laughing (uneasily) at this guy. Guess I'm a New Yorker after all.

Posted by Dave at 12:31 AM
May 06, 2003
Wireless Libraries Listing

Thanks to Boing Boing:

Wireless Librarian: Libraries with Wireless Networks

Posted by Dave at 02:17 PM
Video Phones

Oh, just go read DailyWireless every day like I do.

Here' s a dense collection of information (Sam Churchill's specialty) that I will want to return to.

DailyWireless - Real Video Phones

Posted by Dave at 01:28 PM
May 05, 2003
Chinikiha, in Mesoweb

I was happy just to be the driver on the expeditions to Chinikiha in November and February. The photo above shows our group on the later trip (click on image for larger photo).

David Stuart and Alfonso Morales wrote a summary of the site and the dangers from the proposed dam. Joel Skidmore posted the story on Mesoweb:

Mesoweb Reports - Chinikiha: The Modern Threat to an Ancient Kingdom

Posted by Dave at 07:54 PM
Linux and Wireless

Doing some searching for Doc, I came across these pages. I'm strictly a Mac OS guy, but my bioengineer son is becoming the Linux expert in the family. Maybe I'll draft him.

Linux & Wireless LANs How-To

NYCwireless - Pebble

Posted by Dave at 04:24 PM
Dana Spiegel - SociableChat

Dana Spiegel, who is in charge of community applications at NYCwireless, has kindly offered to help us run some tests and demos this summer, towards the wireless ISP in the Lower East Side. He has developed an application that sounds perfect for community development using wireless networks. And it's a free download. Even better, it runs on PCs and Macs.

s o c i a b l e D E S I G N :: s o c i a b l e C H A T

Posted by Dave at 12:36 PM
May 04, 2003
Cantenna

A $19.95 ready-made yagi antenna for your Wi-Fi network. You can't make the Pringles can antenna this cheaply, so why bother? This one has the same DIY nerdy chic without the hassle.

I needed this in the jungle. I want it now. A fitting item for a silly milestone in this weblog: my 400th post.

Cantenna WiFi Booster Antenna

Posted by Dave at 11:48 PM
Thanks again, Doc!

Doc Searls posted a note about this site yesterday. Anyone new to the Glyph can read the New Welcome entry below for some background. Drop me an email if you like (see "Contact us" in left column).

And a word about the archives and categories of past posts (see right column):

NET has all technology posts, especially concerning wi-fi, since I am planning a free broadband ISP for the far east part of the East Village - the housing projects, still underserved and in need of economic development in the midst of the raucous and gentrified neighborhood. Can you help me in this?

WATERY WAY has all posts concerning the effort to protect Maya rivers such as the Usumacinta, in Mexico and Guatemala.

GLYPH holds the archaeological posts.

You get the idea. Browse as you like. Thanks for coming.

Posted by Dave at 09:03 AM
May 03, 2003
Real and Virtual Chiapas

I have tried to stay out of this debate. But I post Chiapas news on the web. I traveled on the Zapatista caravan from La Realidad to Mexico City in 2001, and produced one of the few television reports that actually made it to American viewers at the time. And I was appalled this spring at the invasion of Rancho Esmeralda by neighboring Zapatistas, and the justifications put forward for it.

Polemics among leftists are an old, old story. I call it the do-gooders versus the do-betters. And this particular academic debate is 3 years old.

But the debate surrounding online activism and real versus virtual social change is even more compelling today.

"...as internet users we enter discussion groups and chat rooms with "compañeros" with whom we will never really need to work out our differences as we once had to do in political groups. We are no longer required to encounter each other, nor to work to persuade others of our position. We can just log off when we tire of the terms of debate on a particular list. The anonymity that is provided to us in this form of political participation, the potential for instant withdrawal from the group, the small degree of effort that is required to express solidarity through these means constitute both the attraction and the limitation of internet activism."

Judith Adler Hellman's critique of electronic rebellion appeared in the 2000 issue of the Socialist Register:

Real and Virtual Chiapas: Magic Realism and the Left

Here's one critique of the critique, from Harry Cleaver:

Virtual & Real Chiapas Support Networks

Hellman's response to Cleaver is at the end of this page:

Hellman-Cleaver debate

Justin Paulson responded to Hellman in the 2001 Socialist Register;

Peasant Struggles and International Solidarity: the case of Chiapas

And Hellman answered:

A REPLY TO PAULSON

There it is for those who are interested. Now I'll go back to social change in my own neighborhood, for the time being. And keeping an eye on the Usumacinta River in Chiapas.

Posted by Dave at 11:28 AM
May 02, 2003
Big questions

Think I've turned the corner on this one. The author of this meditation is an ex-bond trader. Pobrecito!

Fast Company | What Should I Do With My Life?

Posted by Dave at 12:51 PM
New Welcome

For anyone checking this weblog for the first time, or puzzled by the content, a welcome and a word of explanation.

I am a 20-year veteran of the television networks, now dividing my time between New York's Lower East Side and the lower east side of Mexico, the mountains and jungles of Chiapas. I still edit TV documentaries some part of the year. But I also pitch Maya-related stories to broadcast and cable outlets, with mixed success, and have produced reports on the archaeology and culture of the region. In the last 8 months I have been working with a number of people here, in Mexico and Guatemala, to protect the Usumacinta River, its ecology and the Maya ruins on its banks, from a proposed hydroelectric dam.

And I am concentrating on one project to bridge the digital divide in my New York neighborhood - a plan to provide free wireless broadband to the housing projects on the East River, from the future home of the Lower Eastside Girls Club, on Avenue D.

First priority: finding a company that can donate or deeply discount a significant amount of bandwidth, through fiber or wireless links.

Anybody have any suggestions?

Posted by Dave at 11:09 AM
Mind-Expanding - Xpertweb

Before I forget, a site that Britt Blaser directed me to at Katz's. I've skimmed this on Doc's weblog, but now I have an incentive to dig in. Especially since I came away from the deli summit exhilarated but baffled.

The Xpertweb Talent Co-op

Posted by Dave at 12:54 AM
Blogging the bloggers

I had the pleasure of meeting a number of webloggers in the flesh this evening, at Katz's delicatessen a block east of my house. I met Doc Searls for the first time, and I discovered that the other Katz's fanatic, Dean Landsman, is a relative of mine by marriage. Don't ask me how - I have never gotten my wife's sprawling family clear in my mind.

Other bloggers and net thinkers present included Dan Gillmor, Britt Blaser, JP Rangaswami, Paul Boutin, Sebastian Delmont, and Dan Rosenbaum. Many had just come from a conference organized by Halley Suitt. Conversation ranged from the Yankees to Apple's new music service to the creation of a reputation-based microeconomy. Most of it was over my head (including the sports talk - I am missing that gene) but it was inspiring to meet some of the folks who are inventing the ways we will publish, communicate, and make our livings in this new century.

Posted by Dave at 12:28 AM
May 01, 2003
Rancho Esmeralda, Cuarto Poder

Finally, a good article in the local Mexican press about the Rancho Esmeralda invasion.

Cuarto Poder: Despojo, sin solución aún

Glen and Ellen have refused to leave Ocosingo. It's their home. And they have reopened in a lovely small hotel and restaurant in town, just off the zocalo.

On my last drive up to San Cristobal from Palenque last month, seven of us dropped in unannounced for lunch in the new place. Ellen was at their home in town, but Glen and the staff were there, happy to see us, and they served up a great lunch even though they had not yet officially opened.

Congratulations to Glen and Ellen, and continued admiration for their strength and perseverance.

Posted by Dave at 03:45 PM