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One very important point to understand is that the lower Grijalva has changed course, moving eastward many times since the Book of Mormon era. When the Mulekites settled Zarahemla, the river that today we call the Grijalva actually flowed into the Tonala, past the famous Olmec site of La Venta, and emptied into the Gulf of Mexico at Barra de Tonala which is about 160 kilometers west of its current mouth at Frontera. This is a case where one cannot simply consult a contemporary map and begin drawing inferences because the lower Grijalva river as shown on modern maps is in a very different location than it was anciently. The image below is a screen capture from Google Earth. Click on the image to expand it to full size (the same holds true for all images in this blog).
Grijalva River with major tributary, the Selegua and Usumacinta River with major tributaries, the Chixoy/Negro, the Salinas and the Teapa as they appear on modern maps. |
Mezcalapa-Grijalva, Original Grijalva, and Usumacinta Rivers as they flowed at the time of Spanish Conquest (1518). |
Google Maps image of Rio Seco, Cardenas and Nueva Zealandia, Tabasco. |
Google Earth image showing the Mezcalapa-Grijalva, Original Grijalva, and Usumacinta Rivers as they flowed ca. 200 AD. |
Mezcalapa-Grijalva, Original Grijalva and Usumacinta Rivers as they flowed in late Jaredite, early Mulekite times (ca. 500 BC). |
Evidences of large changes in the course of the Mezcalapa-Grijalva river abound in the Tabascan coastal plain from the Tonala River on the west to the Rio Seco on the east. Ancient meanders in particular show up well in Google Earth's satellite imagery.
Sources for the changing course of the ancient lower Grijalva include interviews with Mexican scholars Maximo Carrera Sosa, Judith Guadalupe Ramos Hernandez, and Augustin Somellara Pulido in Villahermosa and Christopher L. von Nagy, "Making Milpa Amid Meandering Streams: Olmec Settlement in the Ancient Grijalva Delta," paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology 61st Annual Meeting, New Orleans, 1996 and von Nagy's 2003 Tulane PhD dissertation entitled "Of Meandering Rivers and Shifting Towns: Landscape Evolution and Community with the Grijalva Delta."
And what of the Usumacinta? Has it changed course by dozens of kilometers in the last 2,500 years as the Mezcalapa-Grijalva has? Somewhat. Hydrologists consider the Usumacinta a mature river where erosion and sediment deposition are more or less in equilibrium. In wet years, new distributaries sometimes form near the mouth, and the river sometimes cuts through the narrow neck of an oxbow meander, but in general the course of the Usumacinta has remained largely unchanged from Book of Mormon times until now. Ca. AD 1,050 an avulsion caused the apex flow to move westward from the San Pedro y San Pablo to join the original Grijalva at Tres Brazos. Eariler, the major western tributaries of the Usumacinta, the Sierra and the Chilapa, used to flow where the Rio Gonzalez is today, discharging at Barra Chiltepec. So there has been streamflow movement westward in the drainage basin delta among Usumacinta distributaries, but the effect has been less dramatic than in the Mezcapala-Grijalva basin. See Kees Noreen, et al., "The Usumacinta-Grijalva beach ridge plain in southern Mexico: a high-resolution archive of river discharge and precipitation." in Earth Surface Dynamics, 5 (2017) pp. 529-556.
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Rivers as large as the Mezcalapa-Grijalva and Usumacinta (the Usumacinta is the largest river in Mexico or Central America, and among the 100 largest in the world measured by cubic meters of water discharged annually) have a handful of major tributaries and hundreds of smaller streams feeding into them. They will also frequently have multiple distributaries near their mouth. It is often useful, therefore, to visualize a river's entire drainage basin because natural ecosystems and human cultures tend to develop within drainage basins.
So, we finally have a map we can use to compare and contrast the two viable candidates for the only New World river mentioned by name in the Book of Mormon - the Sidon. Will it be the fiesty Mezcalapa-Grijalva or the more staid Usumacinta? Stay tuned. The water fight on the river is about to begin.
Article last updated April 20, 2000.
Google Earth placemarks show locations of ancient meanders where the Mezcalapa-Grijalva River flowed in previous millennia. |
Zoomed in view of 2 ancient Mezcalapa-Grijalva meanders. Click to enlarge. |
And what of the Usumacinta? Has it changed course by dozens of kilometers in the last 2,500 years as the Mezcalapa-Grijalva has? Somewhat. Hydrologists consider the Usumacinta a mature river where erosion and sediment deposition are more or less in equilibrium. In wet years, new distributaries sometimes form near the mouth, and the river sometimes cuts through the narrow neck of an oxbow meander, but in general the course of the Usumacinta has remained largely unchanged from Book of Mormon times until now. Ca. AD 1,050 an avulsion caused the apex flow to move westward from the San Pedro y San Pablo to join the original Grijalva at Tres Brazos. Eariler, the major western tributaries of the Usumacinta, the Sierra and the Chilapa, used to flow where the Rio Gonzalez is today, discharging at Barra Chiltepec. So there has been streamflow movement westward in the drainage basin delta among Usumacinta distributaries, but the effect has been less dramatic than in the Mezcapala-Grijalva basin. See Kees Noreen, et al., "The Usumacinta-Grijalva beach ridge plain in southern Mexico: a high-resolution archive of river discharge and precipitation." in Earth Surface Dynamics, 5 (2017) pp. 529-556.
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Rivers as large as the Mezcalapa-Grijalva and Usumacinta (the Usumacinta is the largest river in Mexico or Central America, and among the 100 largest in the world measured by cubic meters of water discharged annually) have a handful of major tributaries and hundreds of smaller streams feeding into them. They will also frequently have multiple distributaries near their mouth. It is often useful, therefore, to visualize a river's entire drainage basin because natural ecosystems and human cultures tend to develop within drainage basins.
Mezcalapa-Grijalva (blue) and Usumacinta (red) Rivers shown as they were in Book of Mormon times with tributaries, distributaries and drainage basins (white). |
Article last updated April 20, 2000.