Episode

  • S3 E1 The Fanged Deity

    The Fanged Deity of ancient South America

  • S2 E5 Ma’ax Na Part 2 and Other Tales

    Part 2 of the Ma’ax Na story. My 3rd and 4th seasons of mapping adventures at the site, plus other stories about what happened in my early archaeology career in […]

  • S2 E4 How I Discovered Ma’ax Na

    In 1995, I discovered a lost ancient Maya City in the jungles of Northwestern Belize and named it Ma’ax Na. This podcast is the story of how I did it.

  • S2 E3 New World Contact Epidemics

    The moment of contact between Europe and the Americas in the 15th century brought with it a host of infectious diseases.  The result was the spread of epidemics at a […]

  • S2 E2 The Inca Khipu

    The Inca Khipu – knotted string records of the Inca Empire.  The amazingly organized Inca civilization of over 10 million people was kept running smoothly through the use of the […]

  • S2 E1 Chaco Canyon

    Chaco Canyon is without doubt the finest ancient architecture within the modern United States.  The Ancestral Pueblo built it over a 300 year period between 850-1150 CE, but the strange […]

  • S1 E6 De Soto was a Psycho

    From 1539 to 1542, Hernando de Soto led an army of Spanish conquistadors through what is now the southeastern United States.  What his men saw and documented during those three […]

  • S1 E5 Easter Island

    Easter Island, or as its known to its inhabitants Rapa Nui, is one of the most remote places on the planet.  In this episode, I’ll discuss how the first people […]

  • S1 E4 Tulum

    Tulum was an ancient Maya port city on Yucatan’s eastern coast and still populated when the Spanish first arrived. But strangely, the conquistadors never securely identified or occupied it.  Why?  […]

  • S1 E2 Palenque

    Palenque is an ancient Maya city nestled into a mountainside in the rainforests of Chiapas, Mexico.  This episode will talk about its dynasty, their incredible achievements in mathematics and science, […]

About This Site

“ArchaeoEd” stands for archaeology education, but its also Ed talking about his 30+ years as an archaeologist