Unveiling the secret of ancient Maya masons: Biomimetic lime plasters with plant extracts
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Rodríguez Navarro, Carlos Manuel; Monasterio Guillot, Luis; Burgos Ruiz, Miguel; Ruiz Agudo, Encarnación; Elert, KerstinEditorial
American Association for the Advancement of Science(AAAS)
Fecha
2023-04-21Referencia bibliográfica
Rodriguez-Navarro, C., Monasterio-Guillot, L., Burgos-Ruiz, M., Ruiz-Agudo, E., & Elert, K. (2023). Unveiling the secret of ancient Maya masons: Biomimetic lime plasters with plant extracts. Science Advances, 9(16), eadf6138.[DOI10.1126/sciadv.adf6138]
Patrocinador
Santander Program for the Research and Conservation of Maya Sculpture, at the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies(DRCLAS), Harvard University; Spanish Government RTI2018-099565-B-I00 PID2021.125305NB; MCIN/AEI; ERDF Away of making Europe; Junta de Andalucia; University of Granada; Unidad Cientifica de Excelencia UCE PP2016-05; Horizon 2020; Marie Sklodowska-Curie Action European Training network-Innovative Training Network (ETN-ITN), SUBlime 955986Resumen
Ancient Maya produced some of the most durable lime plasters on Earth, yet how this was achieved remains a
secret. Here, we show that ancient Maya plasters from Copan (Honduras) include organics and have a calcite
cement with meso-to-nanostructural features matching those of calcite biominerals (e.g., shells). To test the
hypothesis that the organics could play a similar toughening role as (bio)macromolecules in calcium carbonate
biominerals, we prepared plaster replicas adding polysaccharide-rich bark extracts from Copan’s local trees following
an ancient Maya building tradition. We show that the replicas display similar features as the organicscontaining
ancient Maya plasters and demonstrate that, as in biominerals, in both cases, their calcite cement
includes inter- and intracrystalline organics that impart a marked plastic behavior and enhanced toughness
while increasing weathering resistance. Apparently, the lime technology developed by ancient Maya, and
likely other ancient civilizations that used natural organic additives to prepare lime plasters, fortuitously exploited
a biomimetic route for improving carbonate binders performance