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1) "The burial chamber of the last Aztec king to have completed his rule prior to the Spanish invasion in 1521 may have been discovered today underneath a stone monolith of the goddess Tlaltechutli. The king is believed to be Ahuizotl (ah-WEE-zoh-tuhl), who led the Mexica people to the very pinnacle of their greatness up until his death in 1502. No Aztec king's tomb has ever been found, so the enormous potential of what was buried with him, and what it will reveal about those pre-Conquest times is simply staggering." Source and further information: http://www.aztecreconstructionism.com/2007/08/pre-conquest-tomb-of-aztec-king.html 2) "After nearly 30 years in the field, archaeologist Leonardo López Luján may be on the verge of the discovery of a lifetime: the only known tomb of an Aztec king. An air of excitement has been thickening around Mexico's Templo Mayor (Great Temple) since 2006, when excavations near the temple revealed a stone monolith with a carving of an Aztec goddess. Recently the anticipation intensified with the discovery of a richly decorated canine skeleton near a sealed entrance. The animal was found wearing wooden earflaps mounted with turquoise mosaic, a collar of greenstone beads, and golden bells around its four feet. But López Luján, a senior researcher at the Templo Mayor Museum in Mexico City, remains cool and cautious." Source and further information: http://www.palenews.net/2009/07/untouched-tomb-of-aztec-king-on-verge.html
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