NatGeo: UC discoveries featured in new series on ancient Maya

UC archaeologists talk about ingenuity of Maya in Tikal in National Geographic series

National Geographic's new series “The Rise and Fall of the Maya” features discoveries made in Tikal and other sites by researchers at the University of Cincinnati.

In the series' third episode titled “Collapse,” UC College of Arts and Sciences Professor David Lentz discusses their findings about ancient Maya water filtration in the city.

The ancient Maya in Central America were known for ingenious engineering, sophisticated writing and astronomy.

“All of these things are hallmarks of a great society,” Lentz said.

A team of UC researchers has been applying new scientific techniques to unlock the secrets of the ancient civilization. They discovered sophisticated water filtration systems that used a mineral called zeolite to provide clean drinking water. Paradoxically, some reservoirs in the city center also contained toxic levels of mercury and cyanobacteria.

More recently, UC has been using the latest molecular tools to examine environmental DNA from archaeological sites at Tikal and other ancient Mayan cities.

Lentz, an archaeobotanist in UC's Department of Biology, has been working with longtime collaborators, including UC Professors Emeritus Vernon Scarborough and Nicholas Dunning and UC College of Medicine Professor Emerita Alison Weiss.

Researchers spoke to Lentz at the ancient city of Calakmul in Mexico. The National Geographic episode documented the team's analysis of samples taken from Tikal in a biology lab back on UC's campus.

“This is the exciting moment. We get to see if all of that work has resulted in DNA in our samples. I have high hopes,” Lentz says on the show as botanist and UC Associate Professor Eric Tepe brings up the results on a machine.

“The remarkable thing is that in these two microliters we measured, there can be DNA from hundreds and hundreds of plant species,” Tepe told National Geographic.

Watch the National Geographic episode.

Featured image at top: UC's archaeology at Tikal and other ancient Mayan sites is featured in National Geographic's new series. Photo/Jimmy Baum

Researchers begin to set up equipment in a rainforest clearing.

UC researchers Nicholas Dunning, Vernon Scarborough and David Lentz take sediment samples at the ancient Maya city of Tikal. Photo/Liwy Grazioso Sierra

Related Stories

1

Taking a second look at surgery eligibility for patients with lung cancer who smoke

June 11, 2026

Researchers at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine have found that patients who continue to smoke ahead of lung cancer surgery have a higher risk of pulmonary complications, but their short-term mortality rate is similar to patients who were able to stop smoking before surgery.. Their findings were published recently in the Journal of. American College of Surgeons

2

Pocket-sized population threat

June 10, 2026

The Financial Times took a deep dive into why populations around the world continue to be on the decline. The publication cited new University of Cincinnati research as part of the investigation that looks at the fall of fertility in the digital era.