Reservoirs within the coronary heart of an historical Maya metropolis had been so polluted with mercury and algae that the water seemingly was undrinkable. Researchers discovered poisonous ranges of air pollution in two central reservoirs in Tikal, an historical Maya metropolis that dates again to the third century B.C. in what’s now northern Guatemala. New findings recommend droughts within the ninth century seemingly contributed to the depopulation and eventual abandonment of town.
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