They continuously find ancient artifacts buried below Mexico City, including pottery, ancient buildings made of stone and other cultural relics.
Those artifacts are buried because when the Spanish conquistadors conquered the Aztecs, they razed the city of Tenochtitlan, building their homes and buildings above the ancient city's ruins. However, not all of Tenochtitlan was destroyed by them: many buildings were simply buried under the new city.
They were making a series of excavations to expand the subway or "metro" system; specifically the Line 2 which runs under the Mexico City cathedral and National Palace. During the excavations, civil engineers found several Aztec monuments and foundations of several buildings such as the main temple (Templo Mayor).
By looking and digging for clues
Modern Europeans discovered Mexico on 1519.
The ancient Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan was located on an island in Lake Texcoco, where modern-day Mexico City now stands. When the Spanish conquistadors arrived in the 16th century, they destroyed much of the city and built Mexico City on top of the ruins, using the stones from the Aztec temples and buildings for their own construction. This is why archaeologists find evidence of the ancient Aztec capital in the center of Mexico City today.
Modern archaeologists are more careful to withhold interpretation of their findings by relying on empirical evidence and multiple lines of data to support their conclusions. They also engage in peer reviews and collaborations to ensure the accuracy and validity of their interpretations before making them public. Additionally, they prioritize transparency about the limitations and uncertainties of their findings.
Hernan Cortes, a Spanish conquistador, is best known for leading the expedition that resulted in the fall of the Aztec Empire in Mexico in 1521. He discovered and conquered the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan, which is now modern-day Mexico City, and claimed the land for Spain.
Clocks were not discovered they were invented.
The ancient Greek historian Herodotus who lived over 2000 years after the Great Pyramid was built by 100,000 workers. Modern archaeologists put the figure at 10-20,000.
Archaeologists have confirmed that Africa, specifically the East African region, is the birthplace of humankind. Fossil discoveries, such as those in Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania and the Rift Valley in Kenya, provide evidence of early human ancestors living in this region millions of years ago. These findings support the "Out of Africa" theory, which suggests that modern humans originated in Africa and migrated to populate the rest of the world.
Another answer from our community:Modern archaelogists have selected a chronology which makes the evidence not fit the Bible. They know there is evidence there, such as the gates that Solomon built in three different cities, all identical and all discovered. Then there is King Solomon's mines etc etc. The evidence is there. They just can't have the Bible be right. Anything but that. So they shift the chronology so the bible looks out of place in time. What is actually out of place is their chronology.
Mexico City, Monterrey.
At one time Mexico was a colony of Spain.
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The Mayan originally occupied central modern day Mexico.