Science · Technology · The Future
Advertisement
← Back
🔬 Science

The Trait That Let Ancient Mesoamerican Cities Survive

One ancient city lasted 1,300 years. A near-identical neighbour died in 200. New research finds the difference was not luck, but how power was shared.

A steep stone pyramid temple rises above the forest, the kind of monumental building that marked Mesoamerica's early cities. Researchers say it was not grand temples alone, but how power and labour were shared, that decided which cities endured. Image: Unsplash.
Fig. 1 — A towering stone temple of the ancient Mesoamerican world
A steep stone pyramid temple rises above the forest, the kind of monumental building that marked Mesoamerica's early cities. Researchers say it was not grand temples alone, but how power and labour were shared, that decided which cities endured. Image: Unsplash.

In This Article

  1. The Collapse Story We Got Wrong
  2. One Boss, or a Shared Table?
  3. Why Did Two Twin Cities End So Differently?
  4. What These Old Cities Teach Us Today
  5. The Questions Still Buried in the Soil

Picture two cities built on two hills, with the same stone, the same farms, the same gods. One stays alive and busy for more than a thousand years. The other is silent in just two centuries. That real puzzle sits at the heart of a new study of ancient Mesoamerican cities, and the answer is not war, weather, or luck. It is something far simpler, and it still shapes how towns and teams hold together today.

The Collapse Story We Got Wrong

Most of us think of ancient American cities as places that rose, then crashed. The famous fall of the Maya cities feeds that picture. But a team led by archaeologist Gary Feinman of the Field Museum says this "always collapse" story is misleading.

The researchers studied 24 early cities in western Mexico, all founded between 1000 and 300 BCE. They measured one thing: how long each city stayed the main center of its region. Most were not fragile at all. The average city held its top spot for about 600 years, far longer than many cities last today.

Advertisement
WHAT THE STUDY ACTUALLY MEASURED The team did not just count years of life. They tracked the "apogee" of each city, the stretch of time it stayed the biggest and most important place in its region, before it was abandoned or lost control. A long apogee meant a city that truly endured.

So if collapse was not the rule, a sharper question appears. Why did some of these cities last five times longer than others built right beside them?

One Boss, or a Shared Table?

Think of two ways to run a household. In one, a single person controls all the money and makes every choice. In the other, family members share the work, the cash, and the decisions. The study found ancient cities ran on these same two patterns.

Some cities were built around one powerful ruler. They had grand palaces, fancy royal tombs, and art that praised one person. Other cities used collective governance, meaning power was shared through councils and offices instead of held by a single king. These cities had open plazas, public temples, and few signs of a single boss.

24
Early cities studied in western Mexico
~600 yrs
Average time a city stayed on top
1,300 yrs
Lifespan of the longest-lasting city

The pattern was clear, even if it was not perfect. Cities that shared power tended to last longer than cities ruled by one strong figure. But sharing power alone did not promise a long life, so the team kept digging for the missing pieces.

Why Did Two Twin Cities End So Differently?

Here is the part that surprised the researchers. Monte Alban and Monte Negro were almost twins. Both sat on hilltops. Both had stone terraces for homes. Both shared power instead of bowing to one king. Yet Monte Alban thrived for about 1,300 years, while Monte Negro faded after only 200.

Three differences explain the gap. First, Monte Alban had one large, open central plaza where everyone could gather. Monte Negro had scattered separate complexes, hinting at split, rival groups. Second, Monte Alban was ringed by many small farming villages that fed it during dry years. Monte Negro had few neighbours to lean on. Third, Monte Alban stood far from any rival city, while Monte Negro sat close to competitors.

"How people respond to environmental shocks is in large part a consequence of how well they were organized both before and during the challenge."

— Feinman et al., Field Museum · Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 2023

The lesson is quiet but powerful. A city's fate was not sealed by one bad harvest or one earthquake. It was shaped by how its people were organized long before trouble ever arrived.

What These Old Cities Teach Us Today

The strongest cities shared a recipe. Their people worked together closely, household by household, to build homes, terraces, and water channels. These shared projects, what scholars call sustainability through teamwork, gave families a real reason to stay instead of leave.

They also invested early. A city that built open plazas, shared temples, and farmland in its first decades set a path that lasted for centuries, an idea known as path dependence. Once people had poured years of labour into a shared place, walking away meant losing everything they had built.

700+ yrs
Lifespan of cities with no near rival
200+ yrs
Extra life for cities far from rivals
1000 BCE
When larger cities began to spread
A TELLING EXAMPLE The city of Cuicuilco shared power, had close teamwork, and one focal center. It lasted 700 years. Its end did not come from weak organization but from two huge shocks at once: volcanic eruptions that buried the city, and the fast rise of a giant rival, Teotihuacan.

The message reaches well past archaeology. Whether it is a city, a company, or a community group, the way people share power and effort early on quietly decides how much hardship they can survive later.

The Questions Still Buried in the Soil

The researchers are honest about the limits of their work. No single factor decided a city's fate. Shared power, teamwork, smart layout, and distance from rivals all mattered together, and even strong cities sometimes fell. The team also warns that this pattern, drawn from western Mexico, may not fit every region or every century.

There are real gaps too. Detailed climate records for many of these places are still missing, so some questions stay open. But the core finding is steady: cities that built cooperation into their bones from day one were the ones that lasted.

  • Collapse was not the rule — Most early Mesoamerican cities were tough, lasting roughly 600 years on average.
  • Shared power helped — Cities run by councils and shared offices tended to outlast those ruled by one strong leader.
  • Early choices echo for centuries — Teamwork and shared spaces built at the start shaped how long a city could endure.

"How people were organized, and their practices and institutions at the very foundation, underpinned their relative resilience to the shocks that followed." — Feinman et al., Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 2023.

The ruins on these Mexican hills are not just a story about stone and time. They are proof of a truth we still live by: the strength to survive a hard future is built, brick by shared brick, long before the hard times come. [INTERNAL LINK: how ancient cities managed water]


📄 Source & Citation

Primary Source: Feinman GM, Carballo DM, Nicholas LM, Kowalewski SA (2023). Sustainability and duration of early central places in prehispanic Mesoamerica. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 11:1076740. https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2023.1076740

Authors & Affiliations: Gary M. Feinman and Linda M. Nicholas (Field Museum of Natural History), David M. Carballo (Boston University), Stephen A. Kowalewski (University of Georgia).

Data & Code: Supporting data are included in the article and its Supplementary material. Open access under the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).

Key Themes: Ancient Mesoamerican cities · Collective governance · City sustainability · Path dependence · Cooperative labor

Supporting References:

[1] Blanton RE, Fargher LF (2008). Collective action in the formation of pre-modern states. Springer.

[2] Feinman GM, Carballo DM (2018). Collaborative and competitive strategies in the resilience of large-scale societies in Mesoamerica. Economic Anthropology, 5:7–19.

[3] Carballo DM, Feinman GM, Lopez Corral A (2022). Mesoamerican urbanism: indigenous institutions, infrastructure, and resilience. Urban Studies.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long did ancient Mesoamerican cities last?
In a study of 24 early cities in western Mexico, the average city stayed its region's main center for about 600 years. The longest, Monte Alban, lasted around 1,300 years.
Why did some ancient cities survive much longer than others?
Research links long survival to shared power, strong teamwork between households, and early investment in shared buildings and farmland, rather than rule by a single powerful person.
What is collective governance?
Collective governance is when power is spread among councils and offices instead of held by one ruler or royal family. The study found it helped ancient cities last longer.
Did Mesoamerican cities always collapse?
No. The popular idea that these cities always collapsed is misleading. Most of the cities studied were fairly tough and long-lived, not fragile.
👁58 views
6 min read
💬0 comments

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.

Leave a Comment

⏳ Comments are reviewed before publishing. Please keep discussion respectful and on-topic.