Indiana University Mesoamerican Digital Archive features a digital archive of video, research notes, audio interviews, photographs and other digital sources stored at physical archives in Mexico, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua and Honduras with the explicit goal of preserving and disseminating sources related to minority languages and cultures.
FAMSI: Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc. The Foundation (FAMSI) was created in 1993 to foster increased understanding of ancient Mesoamerican cultures. A large number of resources are available on this site including photographs, bibliographies, and maps.
LANIC: Latin American Network Information Center LANIC's mission is to facilitate access to Internet-based information to, from, or on Latin America. Our target audience includes people living in Latin America, as well as those around the world who have an interest in this region. While many of our resources are designed to facilitate research and academic endeavors, our site has also become an important gateway to Latin America for primary and secondary school teachers and students, private and public sector professionals, and just about anyone looking for information about this important region.
MESOWEB: An Exploration of Mesoamerican Cultures Mesoweb is devoted to the ancient cultures of Mexico and adjacent Central America, including the Olmec, Zapotec, Mixtec, Teotihuacan, Toltec, Aztec, and Maya.
Archive of Indigenous Languages of Latin America (AILLA) AILLA is a digital archive of recordings and texts in and about the indigenous languages of Latin America. Access to AILLA and its resources is always free of charge. Most of the resources in the collection are available to the public, but some have special access restrictions. You must Register and Login to open or download any media file.
Diccionario Etnolinguistico y Guia Biblographica de los Pueblos Indigenas Sudamericanos
Maya Epigraphic Database Project Information on hieroglyphs, glyph files, numbers and phonetic values.
Nahuatl Grammar - D. K. Jordan
Dictionnaire de la Langue Nahuatl Classique
The Maya Hieroglyphic Codices This site features a translation and analysis of four codices (screenfold books) painted by Maya scribes before the Spanish conquest in the early 16th century. The codices contain information about Maya beliefs and rituals, as well as activities associated with daily life, which are framed within an astronomical and calendrical context.
The Mapas Project - Meosamerican Manuscripts The Mapas Project has as its focus the digitization and study of colonial Mesoamerican pictorial manuscripts. The term "mapa" was used loosely in New Spain to refer to pictorials that may or may not have had a cartographic dimension, but often showed the territories or landscapes of indigenous communities.
Paris Codex at Northwestern University This site contains a digital version of an ancient Maya hieroglyphic book called the Paris Codex. The images were taken from a photograhic record of the ancient book, created by Theodore A. Willard in 1933. The original is still preserved today at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, France. It is one of only four pre-Columbian Maya hieroglyphic manuscripts that have survived the book burnings of the Spanish Conquest.
Caracol Archaeological Project Caracol is the largest Maya archaeological site in Belize, Central America. In AD 650, the urban area of Caracol had a radius of approximately 10 kilometers around the site's epicenter.
The BRASS/ El Pilar Project El Pilar is a Living Museum and Laboratory drawing from Ancient Cultural Practices to create a Conservation Model for the Future of Civilization.
Exploring Chavin de Huantar (Peru) A virtual reality introduction the site of Chavin de Huantar
Holmul Archaeological Project Holmul, Peten, Guatemala
La Milpa Archaeological Project Offers archaeological and environmental GIS data, photographs, a flight simulator, and also maps and images of an ancient Maya city.
Orinoco A site dedicated to preserving the legacy of the indigenous societies of the Venezuelan Amazon.
ASU Teotihuacan Research Laboratory The ASU-managed facility at Teotihuacan is part of the School of Human Evolution and Social Change in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Unaahil B'aak: The Temples of Palenque Unaahil B’aak (the houses of Palenque) brings together multiple lines of data to focus on the ancient city of Palenque, particularly on the Temples of the Cross Group, named after the cruciform iconography of the central tablet of the Temple of the Cross.
The Mesoamerican Cave Archaeology Research Program Offered through the research efforts of California State University, Los Angeles
Go Dig A Hole is a podcast that explores all things related to archaeology, with a mission to make better archaeologists and build a more inclusive archaeology.
Archaeology Podcast Network hosts several podcasts by archaeologists covering CRM, fieldwork, politics, and civilizations.