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Archaeologists make chilling discovery inside Mayan ‘Blood Cave’

Home> News> World News

Published 17:30 25 May 2025 GMT+1

Archaeologists make chilling discovery inside Mayan ‘Blood Cave’

The discovery was made at Dos Pilas in Guatemala's Petén archaeological site

Brenna Cooper

Brenna Cooper

Featured Image Credit: Getty Stock Images

Topics: Environment, History, Science, World News, Religion

Brenna Cooper
Brenna Cooper

Brenna Cooper is a journalist at LADbible. She graduated from the University of Sheffield with a degree in History, followed by an NCTJ accredited masters in Journalism. She began her career as a freelance writer for Digital Spy, where she wrote about all things TV, film and showbiz. Her favourite topics to cover are music, travel and any bizarre pop culture.

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Archaeologists researching an ancient Mayan 'Blood Cave' have made a chilling discovery about the rituals which may have taken place there.

Located underneath the Dos Pilas in Petén archaeological site in Guatemala, the cave - also known as Cueva de Sangre - is one of many caves in the region which have revealed further details about ancient Mesoamerican cultures.

The caves were originally discovered in the 1990s, with surveys of the area uncovering large amounts of human bones, with the condition of the remains providing us with a greater insight into ancient practices.

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Dating back to 400 BC and AD 250, the caves have been linked to the Maya people, who were Indigenous to regions now part of Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras and El Salvador.

Perhaps the most interesting part of the discovery is the condition of the bones, which show evidence of traumatic injuries and suggest the cave was used for ritualistic killing around 2000 years ago.

An entrance to one of the caves at the archaeological site (Wikimedia Commons/Noche de la pena CC BY-SA 3.0)
An entrance to one of the caves at the archaeological site (Wikimedia Commons/Noche de la pena CC BY-SA 3.0)

Recovered fragments include parts of human skulls stacked together and hip bones, with researchers noting the remains had been arranged in a specific manner.

Marks found on some of the bones also suggested that someone had used a tool similar to a hatchet at the time of death.

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Obsidian weapons were also recovered in the cave alongside red ochre, providing further evidence of that ritualistic sacrifice took place.

"The emerging pattern that we're seeing is that there are body parts and not bodies," Michele Bleuze, a bioarchaeologist at California State University, Los Angeles explained to Live Science.

“In Maya ritual, body parts are just as valuable as the whole body.”

Although with a nickname such as 'blood cave' you were probably already aware the place had a pretty dark history.

Bones recovered in the cave show signs of traumatic injuries (Michele Bleuze)
Bones recovered in the cave show signs of traumatic injuries (Michele Bleuze)

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This argument is backed up by Ellen Fricano, a forensic anthropologist at Western University of Health, who also examined the bones.

She explained how the location and arrangement of the fragments pointed to ritual dismemberment.

But how exactly did these ancient people die – and why were their bodies, or parts of their bodies, sacrificed?

According to the outlet, the most likely scenario is the body parts were offering to ancient gods made to appease a rain god during a drought.

This argument is backed up by the location of the cave, with researchers noting that Cueva de Sangre would only be accessible during the dry season of March and May. This would've been the same during Mayan times, leading the team to believe they were offerings Chaac, the Maya rain god.

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