San Miguel de Allende’s Pyramid

2016

Fifteen miles west of San Miguel de Allende, situated on a small mesa surrounded by canyons, the Canada de La Virgen Pyramid was occupied between 500 and 1000 a.d. by the Otomi people, one of the many indigenous ethnic groups of the Middle American Indian population that inhabited the central plateau region of central Mexico.

The House of the Thirteen Heavens — which served as a horizon clock, an observatory, and a burial ground for the elite — was in perfect alignment with the sun, the moon, and all but one of the planets in our solar system at sunset during the Otomi New Year’s Eve, March 4, 2011, while the missing planet, Saturn, was situated precisely 180 degrees from the setting sun, just at the visual beginning of the ritual causeway to the site.

The interplay of the pyramid’s various-sized wall stones reflects the meticulous layout and care of the construction of this pyramid complex begun more than 1,000 years ago.

San Miguel Pyramid<br>San Miguel de Allende’s Pyramid — 2016 San Miguel Pyramid II<br>San Miguel de Allende’s Pyramid — 2016 San Miguel Pyramid III<br>San Miguel de Allende’s Pyramid — 2016 San Miguel Pyramid IV<br>San Miguel de Allende’s Pyramid — 2016 San Miguel Pyramid V<br>San Miguel de Allende’s Pyramid — 2016

 

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