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Description
Weather the storm with ancient planners, deciphering the slopes and subterranean drains that protected Mayan metropolises from catastrophic tropical flash floods. The dense jungles of Central America are routinely subjected to violent, unpredictable monsoon seasons. For massive Mayan urban centers like Copán or Caracol, an unexpected deluge could wash away vital topsoil, severely undermine temple foundations, and spawn devastating waterborne diseases in stagnant pools. Surviving these storms required highly proactive, city-wide hydrological defense systems.Mayan architects designed entire plazas with imperceptible slopes, effectively turning public squares into massive, paved rainwater catchments. During a monsoon, kinetic surface runoff was quickly directed into a network of plastered, subterranean overflow drains that safely channeled the massive surge away from residential zones and directly into agricultural holding tanks. The city itself operated as a calibrated machine designed to slow down, capture, and pacify torrential weather.Weather the storm with ancient urban planners. Decipher the precise architectural slopes and hidden drainage networks that shielded Mayan metropolises from the catastrophic impact of tropical flash floods.



