a0b7112eab ^ Lee, Jr., Thomas A. 498. Testing[edit]. Be the first one to write a review. ^ a b Coe 1973a, p. It first appeared in a private collection in the 20th century and was displayed at the Grolier Club in New York, hence its name.[2] The codex consists of a fragment of a Maya book, containing almanacs of Venus represented in a simplistic fashion.[3] The Grolier Codex would be only the fourth surviving pre-Columbian Maya book if genuine.[4] The codex is said to have been recovered from a cave in the Mexican state of Chiapas in the 1960s, together with a mosaic mask and some blank pages of pre-Columbian fig-bark paper.[5] It was displayed at the Grolier Club from April 20 to June 5, 1971,[6] and is now held in Mexico City.[3] In 1973, Michael D. Traxler (2006). His rendition of the figure in the upper right corner of page 3 of the Paris is better than that of the 1887 Rosny (and therefore the later Graz and Chiapas) editions, where much of the figure is missing (though present in photographs).
OCLC423659624. (48.2 MB). ^ a b Baudez 2002, p. Eric S. I do not have an exact date for these ektachromes, but since ektachromes were not produced until 1942 or later, the Bibliothque nationale ektachromes could not have been made before that, and probably were not made before 1950 or so. Andreas Fuls has made available a CD (for $20 as of April, 2002) of Frstemann's personal copy of the Frstemann, that is now housed in the Ibero-American Institute of Berlin. 299.
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