Getting a read on early Maya writing
By Bruce Bower
Researchers excavating the ruins of an ancient pyramid in northeastern Guatemala have discovered examples of the earliest known Maya writing, produced between 300 B.C. and 200 B.C.
The discovery shows that the Maya developed a writing system at around the same time as script emerged in ancient societies of what is now Mexico, say William A. Saturno of the University of New Hampshire in Durham and his colleagues.
Saturno’s team found hieroglyphic symbols on painted walls and plaster fragments buried inside the remains of a pyramid at a Maya site called San Bartolo. Dating relied on radiocarbon measurements of bits of burned wood buried with the script samples.