Sunday, December 7, 2025
ADVT 
Travel

Experts lead tours uncovering Mexico’s hidden ancient sites

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Oct, 2025 09:55 AM
  • Experts lead tours uncovering Mexico’s hidden ancient sites

Amid the constant blare of car horns in southern Mexico City, it's hard to imagine that Cuicuilco was once the heart of a thriving ancient civilization. Yet atop its circular pyramid, now surrounded by buildings and a shopping center, a pre-Hispanic fire god was revered.


“This is incredible,” said Evangelina Báez, who spent a recent morning at Cuicuilco with her daughters. “In the midst of so much urbanization, there’s still this haven of peace.”


Her visit was part of a monthly tour program crafted by the National Institute of Anthropology and History, known by its Spanish initials as INAH.


Aside from overseeing Mexico’s archaeological sites and museums, the institute safeguards the country’s cultural heritage, from restoring damaged monuments and artworks to reviewing construction projects to ensure they don’t harm archaeological remains.


Its historians and archeologists also lead excursions like the one in Cuicuilco. Each academic expert picks a location, proposes a walking itinerary to the INAH and, once approved, it’s offered to the public for about 260 pesos ($15).


“I joined these tours with the intention of sharing our living heritage,” said archaeologist Denisse Gómez after greeting guests in Cuicuilco. “Our content is always up to date.”


According to Mónica de Alba, who oversees the tours, the INAH excursions date back to 1957, when an archaeologist decided to share the institute’s research with colleagues and students.


“People are beginning to realize how much the city has to offer,” said De Alba, explaining that the INAH offers around 130 tours per year in downtown Mexico City alone. “There are even travel agents who pretend to be participants to copy our routes.”


María Luisa Maya, 77, often joins these tours as a solo visitor. Her favorite so far was one to an archaeological site in Guerrero, a southern Mexican state along the Pacific coast.


“I’ve been doing this for about eight years,” she said. “But that’s nothing. I’ve met people who have come for 20 or 25.”


Traces of a lost city

Cuicuilco means “the place where songs and dances are made” in the Nahua language.


Still, the precise name of its people is unknown, given that the city’s splendor dates back to the pre-Classic era from 400 to 200 B.C. and few clues are left to dig deeper into its history.


“The Nahuas gave them that name, which reveals that this area was never forgotten,” said archaeologist Pablo Martínez, who co-led the visit with Gómez. “It was always remembered, and even after its decline, the Teotihuacan people came here to make offerings.” 


The archaeological site is a quiet corner nestled between two of Mexico City’s busiest avenues. Yet according to Martínez, the settlements went far beyond the vicinity and Cuicuilco's population reached 40,000.


“What we see today is just a small part of the city,” he said. “Merely its pyramidal base.”


Now covered in grass and resembling a truncated cone, the pyramid was used for ritual purposes. The details of the ceremonies are unknown, but female figurines preserved at the site’s museum suggest that offerings were related to fertility.


“We think they offered perishable objects such as corn, flowers and seeds,” Gómez said. “They were feeding the gods.”


Echoes of living heritage


According to official records, Mexico’s most visited archaeological sites are Teotihuacán and Chichén Itzá. The first is a pre-Aztec city northeast of the capital known for its monumental Sun and Moon pyramids. The latter is a major Mayan site in the Southeast famed for its 12th-century Temple of Kukulkán.


The INAH oversees both. But its tours focus on shedding light on Mexico’s hidden gems.


During an excursion preceding Cuicuilco’s, visitors walked through a neighborhood in Ecatepec, on the outskirts of Mexico City, where open-air markets, street food and religious festivals keep local traditions alive. A few days prior, another tour focused on La Merced market, where flowers, prayers and music filled the aisles during the feast of Our Lady of Mercy.


October’s schedule takes into account Day of the Dead traditions. But tours will feature a variety of places like Xochimilco, where visitors can take a moonlit boat tour through its canals and chinampas, and Templo Mayor, the Aztec empire’s main religious and social center in ancient Tenochtitlán.


“These tours allow the general public to get closer to societies that are distant in time and space,” said historian Jesús López del Río, who will lead an upcoming tour on human sacrifices to deities in Mesoamérica.


“Approaching the pre-Hispanic past is not only about how the Maya used zero in their calculations or how the Mexica built a city on a lake,” he added. “It’s about understanding how those societies worked — their way of seeing and relating to the world.”

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Ginnette Riquelme

MORE Travel ARTICLES

More Indians opting to study in New Zealand: Official

More Indians opting to study in New Zealand: Official
There was an increase of over 80 percent in the number of student visas New Zealand issued to Indians between January and July, 2014 compared...

More Indians opting to study in New Zealand: Official

Travel Hong Kong

Travel Hong Kong
Asia's City that never sleeps

Travel Hong Kong

Namtso no longer Tibet's largest lake

Namtso no longer Tibet's largest lake
The Buddhist holy lake Namtso has lost its spot as Tibet's largest lake to Serling Tso, according to a new study....

Namtso no longer Tibet's largest lake

Experience infinity with nature for company in Western Ghats

Experience infinity with nature for company in Western Ghats
If you are longing for a serene and tranquil getaway and want to cosy up to the cuddle of Mother Nature, head for the unspoiled plantations on the foothills of Western Ghats in Tamil Nadu's Kanyakumari district, where lush green vegetation enjoins a clear blue lake with gentle mountain slopes for a picture perfect backdrop.

Experience infinity with nature for company in Western Ghats

London to be world's top tourist destination, finds survey

London to be world's top tourist destination, finds survey
London is likely to become world's top tourist city with the most international overnight visitors, according to a survey.

London to be world's top tourist destination, finds survey

A mountain named Mt. Sinha

A mountain named Mt. Sinha
Back in November, Akhouri Sinha, an Indian-American research scientist, was looking for some information to write a few words on the death of his team leader on an expedition to Antarctica in the seventies.

A mountain named Mt. Sinha