PALENQUE, Mexico (AP) - There is a legend that the ancient Maya
possessed 13 crystal skulls which, when united, hold the power of
saving the Earth - a tale so strange and fantastic that it inspired
the latest Indiana Jones movie.
Experts dismiss the hundreds of existing crystal skulls as fakes
that were probably made by colorful antiquities traders in the 19th
century. But Mayan priests worship the skulls, even today, and
real-life skull hunters still search for them.
The true story of the skulls stretches over continents and
hundreds of years, and may be even more extraordinary than the tale
portrayed in this fourth installment of the Harrison Ford
franchise.
It's unclear what version of the tale will appear in "Indiana
Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull," which opens in U.S.
theaters on May 22.
The plot of the film - the first Indiana Jones movie since "The
Last Crusade" came out in 1989 - revolves around a race against
the Soviets to find the skulls.
Pre-release publicity from Paramount Pictures, the film's
distributor, mentions the legend of the 13 skulls.
While much of the film's action occurs in Peru, the Paramount
release also mentions a skull purportedly found at a Mayan ruin in
1924. Known as "The Skull of Doom," its provenance cannot be
proved.
In fact, few of today's crystal skulls can be documented any
further back than the 1860s, when Europe was swept by a rage for
pre-Hispanic "relics." Frenchman Eugene Boban, a colorful
antiquities dealer with a checkered past and murky political ties,
set up a store here to supply the trade after the French invaded
Mexico. Eventually he carted skulls around between New York, Paris
and Mexico City, selling them to private collectors.
Buyers were often told that the skulls were made by the Mayas,
whose civilization peaked between 300 and 900 A.D. But no crystal
skull has ever been excavated from a documented archaeological
site.
Some believe the skulls can emit and focus light, project
visions and even influence terrestrial forces. Today, these beliefs
persist in the jungles of southern Mexico among the Lacandon, the
last unassimilated Mayas, some of whom still worship the skulls.
In the shadow of the Palenque ruins, Lacandon priest K'in Garcia
fans copal incense and holds a heavy crystal skull above his head
during ceremonies for Hacha'kyum, the Mayan god of creation.
Garcia, son of the Lancandon's most respected elder, Chan Kin,
believes the skull has special powers, including the ability to
stave off sickness and deforestation in the rain forest where the
last Lacandon still live.
"When I am alone at night, at about 2 a.m., it starts to glow,
it emits light, and it stays like that for about a minute," said
Garcia.
Garcia says the skull was given to him by a local man - and
while he believes it is very old, he doesn't know where it came
from.
Thousands of miles away in Washington, Jane MacLaren Walsh keeps
one of the skulls in her office at the Smithsonian Institution. She
doubts the ancient Mayans ever had any such skulls.
An anthropologist and antiquities sleuth, she has spent more
than a decade studying the best-known skulls, like the ones
acquired by the British Museum and Paris' Quai Branly museum over a
century ago, as well as the Smithsonian's own skull.
She says they are stylistically unlike pre-Hispanic depictions
of death's heads, and often show microscopic marks from cutting
tools unavailable in pre-Hispanic times.
"None of them is ancient," Walsh said. About the purported
powers, she notes wryly: "I've been sitting in fairly close
proximity to one of the skulls for about 16 years, and I have not
witnessed anything like what people say."
The British Museum keeps a skull in its collections largely as a
curiosity, listing its provenance as "probably European, 19th
century."
It's possible that the near-human sized fakes may have been
inspired by two real crystal skulls now on display at Mexico City's
respected National Anthropology Museum. Much smaller and less
perfectly carved than the ones held at the museums in Europe, these
jewelry-sized trinkets, about an inch in height, are in the Aztec
and Oaxaca collections, where the museum classifies them as either
late pre-Hispanic or early colonial.
The skulls' legend has spawned a new breed of followers.
New-agers have associated the skulls with the belief that the
Mayan "Long Count" calendar runs out on Dec. 21, 2012, when it
reaches the end of a 5,126-year cycle. According to this theory,
all 13 skulls must be reunited and lined up together to prevent the
world from falling off its axis.
"I personally feel that (the skulls) are coming out now because
humanity needs the information, their energy and they have probably
their own purpose why they're coming out: to help us to create
world peace," said Joshua "Illinois" Shapiro, 53, a
self-described Crystal Skull Explorer who makes a living touring
and giving lectures.
Shapiro has traveled the world seeking out skulls, and believes
they link us to knowledge of past worlds like the Mayas, the lost
civilization of Atlantis, or even extraterrestrials.
"I was wearing the Indiana Jones hat for a very long time," he
claims, "far before they ever thought about putting a crystal
skull in an Indiana Jones movie."
(This version CORRECTS the dateline to Mexico sted Chiapas.)
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