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History Channel program probes Mayan presence in north Georgia

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Tonight at 10 p.m. on History Channel’s H2, “American Unearthed” will address the question on whether the Mayans established villages in north Georgia. The program keys on a site in Towns County known as Track Rock.

The Athens Banner-Herald reports that the show’s producer, geologist Scott Wolter of Minneapolis, heard about the sites in Georgia, but was told by several Georgia archaeologists “that there was nothing to the Track Rock site. They knew for a fact that no Mayan immigrants ever came to the Southeast,” he said in a press statement.

Contacted Wednesday, Wolter wouldn’t discuss what the program will disclose.

“I can’t tell you how the episode ends, but let’s say I was very, very surprised at what we found,” Wolter said. “This is not a matter of faith. It’s a matter of evidence.”

One Georgian that the History Channel producers interviewed is Richard Thornton, an architect and city planner, who has studied the Track Rock ruins, a large series of about 150 terraces. Thornton, a Dahlonega resident who is of Creek Indian ancestry, spent time in Mexico studying the ancient Indian cultures.

Thornton provided the show with information on what he has found at Track Rock, which he considers “an important archeological zone.”

The show producers were told about the site at Sandy Creek Park, but Thornton said he doesn’t know if they found time to visit.

“It looks very similar to Track Rock in many ways, but until you get archeologists in there doing radiocarbon dating and tests, we won’t know for sure if there is a Mayan presence,” Thornton said.

The program will also present DNA evidence gathered from people in the region, Thornton said. Some of the Creek Indians in the region of Track Rock provided DNA samples and tests revealed the presence of both Mayan DNA and DNA from people of South America.

Thornton’s published works on Track Rock opened Jones’ eyes to the possibility a Mayan connection to the Sandy Creek site.

Thornton’s illustrations “showed the mounds of rocks and terracing and it looks like what I’m seeing at Sandy Creek. I call it getting my eyes right,” said Jones, a graphic artist who lives in Athens.

Once Jones felt like the terraces and rock piles might have historical importance, he pondered what he should do. He contacted officials with the park and archeologists at the University of Georgia.

“Nobody was getting back in touch with me, so I wrote Thornton and he wrote me back,” Jones said. “I told him it was his illustrations that made me see this out here.”

According to Thornton, the show will have a surprising conclusion.

“They have absolute proof that the Mayans have been coming here for a long time,” he said. “It’s not just Track Rock.”

Read more about this story at onlineathens.com.

 


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