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  1. In this article we analyze the content and form of 58 stone monuments at the archaeological site of Lacanjá Tzeltal, Chiapas, Mexico, which recent research confirms was a capital of the Classic Maya polity Sak Tz'i' (“White Dog”). Sak Tz'i' kings carried the title ajaw (“lord”) rather than the epithet k'uhul ajaw (“holy lord”) claimed by regional powers, implying that Sak Tz'i' was a lesser kingdom in terms of political authority. Lacanjá Tzeltal's corpus of sculptured stone, however, is explicitly divergent and indicates the community's marked cultural autonomy from other western Maya kingdoms. The sculptures demonstrate similarities with their neighbors in terms of form and iconographic and hieroglyphic content, underscoring Lacanjá Tzeltal artisans’ participation in the region's broader culture of monumental production. Nevertheless, sculptural experimentations demonstrate not only that lesser courts like Lacanjá Tzeltal were centers of innovation, but that the lords of Sak Tz'i' may have fostered such cultural distinction to underscore their independent political character. This study has broader implications for understanding interactions between major and secondary polities, artistic innovation, and the development of community identity in the Classic Maya world. 
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  2. Maya conflict left many images. With a few exceptions, however, they reveal limited numbers of victors and captives In contrast, glyphic accounts point to broader convulsions, and the challenge remains of linking such conflicts to the infrastructure of concerted attack and defense. Lidar, a technology using laser pulses to record and model surfaces, does so with aplomb. By now, most Mayanists accept that, in the late 4th century A.D., Classic Maya kingdoms became entangled with the distant polity of Teotihuacan, Mexico. Tikal refers to that encounter in precise detail, identifying an enigmatic, victorious belligerent, Sihyaj K’ahk’, and possible ruptures in the local dynasty. To unexpected extent, lidar shows that the western entry to Tikal bristled with numerous citadels, surveillance platforms, moats with protected settlement, and ramps for rapid ascent and descent on high ridges and hilltops. Current evidence places these features in the general time of Sihyaj K’ahk’, underscoring that the threat and actuality of violence enmeshed regions, at systemic scale. 
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  3. Lowland Maya civilization flourished in the tropical region of the Yucatan peninsula and environs for more than 2500 years (~1000 BCE to 1500 CE). Known for its sophistication in writing, art, architecture, astronomy, and mathematics, Maya civilization still poses questions about the nature of its cities and surrounding populations because of its location in an inaccessible forest. In 2016, an aerial lidar survey across 2144 square kilometers of northern Guatemala mapped natural terrain and archaeological features over several distinct areas. We present results from these data, revealing interconnected urban settlement and landscapes with extensive infrastructural development. Studied through a joint international effort of interdisciplinary teams sharing protocols, this lidar survey compels a reevaluation of Maya demography, agriculture, and political economy and suggests future avenues of field research. 
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