Quintana Roo is where Cancun is. Lots of people don’t know that Quintana Roo and Cancun did not even become a part of Mexico until 1974.
Although Quintana Roo was a territory of Mexico since 1905, it did not become an official state until October 8, 1974.
It is Mexico’s youngest state. Quintana Roo, like Yucatan, is a Mexican state in the Yucatan Peninsula, and is one of the states in Mexico where the Maya live.
Excerpted from the End of the World 2012 Book and End of the World 2012 EBook
Carol Chapman, director/producer of the End of the World 2012 Movie and the Yucatan Travel Movie
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With all the information on the End of the World 2012 Mayan Prophecies, many people don’t know where the Maya live.
They live in the Yucatan Peninsula, which looks like a thumb sticking out from the “hand” of Mexico.
The top of the thumb is the state of Yucatan. Then, on either side, in the middle of the thumb are the states of Campeche and Quintana Roo.
Excerpted from the End of the World 2012 EBook and the End of the World 2012 Book.
Carol Chapman director/producer of the End of the World 2012 Movie.
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My husband and I love travelling in Yucatan. It is in southern Mexico. We find it very safe and enjoyable.
We love to go to Yucatan in the depths of the winter, because it is so wonderfully warm there.
If you look at a map of Mexico, it’s like a hand and the Yucatan is like a thumb. So, that’s the whole Yucatan Peninsula.
Excerpted from the End of the World EBook and the End of the World Book.
~ Carol Chapman, director/producer of the End of the World 2012 Movie
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For travelers and armchair travelers alike, the Yucatan Travel Movie: Cancun to Chichen Itza is also superbly discounted on Amazon right now, from $16.95to $14.99.
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There’s a new page on Carol Chapman Live called, “Carol Chapman’s Videos.”
Our first feature is the Yucatan Travel Movie. For a full description including Bonus Features and About the Actor, Writers, and Director, please click here.
Available on Amazon.
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A page from the Dresden Codex showing images from Maya civilization. ~ from Wikipedia commons–this image is in the public domain because its copyright has expired.
The Maya, an indigenous people of the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico plus Guatemala, Belize, and Honduras, made folding books written on the inside bark of certain types of fig trees.
Called “codices” (codex in the singular), many were destroyed by the Spanish conquistadors and priests.
For example, in July of 1562, Bishop Diego de Landa ordered the destruction of all of the codices in the state of Yucatan.
De Landa also destroyed a Maya temple in Izamal, using the stones from the temple to make an elegant convent, which we visit in the Yucatan Travel Movie. Izamal is a gorgeous colonial city only about an hour and a half drive from Chichen Itza and well worth the visit.
The three codices that survived the Spanish conquest are named by the location of the museum where they presently reside.
Occasionally, hopelessly decayed codices are found in Maya ruins:
Continue readingGiven the rarity and importance of these books, rumors of finding new ones often develop interest. Archaeological excavations of Maya sites have turned up a number of rectangular lumps of plaster and paint flakes, most commonly in elite tombs. These lumps are the remains of codices where all the organic material has rotted away. A few of the more coherent of these lumps have been preserved, with the slim hope that some technique to be developed by future generations of archaeologists may be able to recover some information from these remains of ancient pages.
Here I’m filming footage to be used in a future movie on Yucatan. I’m perched at the rim of Cenote Zaci in Valladolid. A cenote is a sink hole down to underground water through the limestone shelf that makes the surface of northern Yucatan. Valladolid is one of my favorite places to visit in Yucatan.
In looking for information on Lemuria, I just came across the e-book of the 1926 book by James Churchward, The Lost Continent of Mu. I like that I can easily ready the book online. It even has links to the chapters of the books. Right away, I am interested because I see references to August and Alice LePlongeon who explored Mayan ruins in Yucatan.
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You may have noticed that I have written books on finding evidence of Atlanteans in Egypt and Yucatan. I’ve also made a movie, which is almost ready to be distributed, on Yucatan Travel. Atlantis and Yucatan Travel seem to be separate subjects. Here’s how it came about: It turned out that while I was doing research in Yucatan for the books, I couldn’t find DVDs to show me what to expect while traveling in Yucatan. As a result, I decided to videotape my experiences in Yucatan in the hopes of being helpful to other people who want to know what to expect. That’s how the Yucatan Travel Movie came about.
Continue readingFirst, I took a photo of John sitting at the table. Then John took a photo of me sitting at the table. Then, I kinda, sorta put the two photos together in PhotoShop so it kinda, sorta looks like we’re both sitting at the table together at the same time. We actually were sitting at the table at the same time except when we took the photos of each other. This is where we had breakfast every morning outside at Natura Restaurant on Boulevard Kukulcan while in Cancun. They had marvelous omelets and fantastic service. Our corn tortillas are keeping warm in the woven basket with the colorful lid in the foreground. John’s favorite omelet was a Chihuahua omelet. Before you think that means a little dog rolled up in cooked eggs, let me assure you that the Chihuahua is actually Chihuahua cheese, which is similar to Monterey Jack cheese, and comes from the Mexican state of Chihuahua, just like the little dog. John also liked slices of nopal cactus (prickly pear cactus) accompanying his Chihuahua in his omelet. Not surprisingly, since it’s the city most people fly into when visiting Yucatan, Cancun is in the Yucatan Travel Movie. Continue reading