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UNH Students Participate
in Unique Study Abroad Experience
Contact: Erika Mantz
603-862-1567
UNH Media Relations
January 14, 2004

DURHAM, N.H. -- Six University of New Hampshire students will travel
to Guatemala this month for a study abroad program of a lifetime.
They will participate in the excavation and preservation of what
is being called the “Sistine Chapel” of the pre-Classic
Maya world with UNH archaeologist William Saturno.
“As one of the premier archaeological projects in the Maya
world, San Bartolo offers students an unparalleled opportunity to
participate alongside the world's foremost authorities assisting
in the investigation and conservation of this unique masterpiece,”
Saturno says.
This is a unique opportunity for undergraduate students, Saturno
says, noting that the Guatemalan government granted the San Bartolo
Project special permission to allow their participation.
Saturno's discovery of the oldest known intact wall painting of
Maya mythology has been documented in National Geographic. The mural
is the first known portrayal of the corn God's journey from the
underworld to Earth, and it completely reshapes how researchers
look at later mythology.
The undergraduates will spend the first month in Guatemala's former
colonial capital, Antigua, where they will study Spanish and get
acquainted with the culture, and then in mid- February they will
move with Saturno to his research camp in San Bartolo to continue
excavation work on the mural. The students will spend the entire
spring semester in Guatemala, returning to the United States in
May.
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