Pilar Luna

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Luna and the second or maternal family name is Erreguerena.
Pilar Luna
Born Pilar Luna Erreguerena
1944
Tampico, Tamaulipas, Mexico
Nationality Mexican
Occupation archaeology
Known for founding INAH's underwater archaeology division and co-authoring the UNESCO Convention on Underwater Heritage

Pilar Luna Erreguerena (born 1944) is a Mexican archaeologist, who founded the Division of Underwater Archaeology of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH). She worked with an international team of aquatic archaeologists to help develop, gain ratification and implement the Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage in 2001 and was honored for her work on the accord with her co-authors in 2016 by the Society for Historical Archaeology and Advisory Council on Underwater Archaeology. She was the first Latin American woman and only second underwater archeologist to receive the J. C. Harrington Medal and is considered as the pioneer of aquatic archaeology in Mexico.

Early life

Pilar Luna Erreguerena was born in 1944 in Tampico, Tamaulipas, Mexico.[1] Her father had immigrated to Mexico from Sahagún of the Tierra de Campos district of Spain and worked his way up to owning a jewelry store. Luna was the youngest of five children.[2] When she was six, her family moved to Mexico City and by the age of eight, she had completed lifeguard training with the Red Cross.[3]

Career

Luna began her career working as a secretary in the family business and then worked as a teacher in a sport center. She spent twelve years teaching children with disabilities how to swim. At the age of 27, while still working as a swimming instructor, she decided to return to school.[2] Originally an anthropology major,[1] Luna, who was taking classes at the National Institute of Anthropology and History (Spanish: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia) took a class on general archaeology[4] given by the National Museum of Anthropology.[3] In a lecture about the Abu Simbel temples, re-discovered during the construction of the Aswan Dam, she began to question the fate of Mexico's underwater legacy.[1] Searching for information, Luna discovered the book Archaeology Under Water by George F. Bass and decided she wanted to become an aquatic archaeologist. Then near the end of her studies, Luna, who had gone to a cave in to study some chultuns near Acapulco, contracted histoplasmosis.[3][2] Her recovery was a slow process, which took more than a year.[1]

Because she was barred from underwater activities, due to the histoplasmosis, Luna began working at the Templo Mayor in Tenochtitlan, where the disk of Coyolxauhqui had just been found. She was approached by Manuel Gandara, head of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (Spanish: Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH)) to organize a course on undersea archaeology. She contacted Bass to help with lectures and curricula and he agreed to come with one of his students, Donald H. Keith. As part of the course, students excavated at Media Luna, a spring in San Luis Potosí, discovering 20,000-year-old mammoth skulls. At the end of the course, Bass asked her to accompany him on a dive to explore the Turkish Mediterranean. Receiving clearance from her doctor, Luna agreed to the trip, which included dives on a boat from the Byzantine period and a Greek boat dating to the Christian era.[3]

In 1978,[1] immediately upon her return from Turkey, Luna got a message from Keith, who was working at the Institute of Nautical Archaeology in Texas. He alerted her that sports divers had located some guns in the Gulf of Mexico. The tip led to the recovery of two cannon and a bronze plate which were dated to 1552 and were later housed in the Museo de San José el Alto, in Campeche.[3] Shortly thereafter, Luna first heard of the shipwreck Nuestra Señora del Juncal, when Burt Webber, a diver and treasure hunter who had made other finds in the Caribbean, applied for a permit to recover relics. After an 18-month battle, Mexico refused to offer permits to commercial enterprises,[1][5][6][7] and in February 1980, Luna founded the Division of Underwater Archaeology (Spanish: Subdirección de Arqueología Subacuática (SAS)) under the direction of INAH.[3] She is considered the founder of underwater archaeology in Latin America.[8]

In 1990, a team of subaquatic archaeologists, including U.S. researchers James P. Delgado and Larry Nordby, worked with Luna to excavate the wreck of the USS Somers, which had been discovered in 1986 by George Belcher. Belcher had been hired to look for artifacts for a new state museum in Xalapa in the coastal waters of Veracruz. Upon locating the vessel, Belcher reported the find to the National Park Service, because of its significance in U.S. History for the "Somers Affair", upon which Herman Melville based his novella, Billy Budd. The venture was one of the few undersea archeological projects jointly conducted by two governments. The team confirmed the ship identity, which had sunk during the Mexican–American War, and documented numerous intact features in their bilateral inspection of the wreck, which has since become a protected site.[9]

Soon after, Luna gained wide notice for standing up to the treasure hunters working for Odyssey Marine Exploration. Odyssey executives tried many methods of influence to gain a foothold into Mexican waters, and while Luna considered resigning, she held firm in her refusal to allow commercial excavation. Recognizing that having the site designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site would help protect it, in 1995, Luna drafted a proposal to protect the entire Fleet of New Spain from 1630 to 1631. With help from archivists in Spain[5] and fishermen, Luna began researching the entire fleet, recognizing that there had to be more losses than just the flagship. They were able to tag many wrecks without the use of modern technology, though only a few were from the 16th and 17th centuries.[1]

Luna has been involved in many projects, including the Manila Galleon off the coast of Baja California, Nevado de Toluca near Edomex's coastline, and Banco Chinchorro, of Quintana Roo. She has spearheaded an atlas and registry for the study and preservation of the caves and cenotes of the Yucatán Peninsula, working on projects to conserve and protect Mexico's underwater and submerged heritage.[10] Luna worked with UNESCO in the development of the Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage, which was adopted in 2001 and signed the same year by Mexico. The treaty was ratified in 2005 and entered into force in 2009.[3] In 2014, Mexico and Spain signed a collaboration agreement to jointly develop their undersea heritage, the first two countries to sign such and agreement, and one of the few in which a colony and colonizer have worked together to preserve their shared cultural patrimony. [2] Luna was hopeful that the agreement might finally lead to the location and excavation of the Juncal.[1]

Recognition and honors

Luna was the first Latin American to receive the J. C. Harrington Award from the Society for Historical Archaeology, in 2011, only the fourth woman from throughout the world, and second aquatic archaeologist, the other was her mentor Bass, to be so honored.[2][10] In 2016, Luna was awarded the Research Prize of the Spanish Geographical Society for her work in studying and preserving submerged cultural heritage. The award was presented at the Mutua Madrileña auditorium in Madrid in March.[11] That same year, she was honored with Toni Carrell, Dolores Elkin and Margaret Leshikar-Denton receiving the Society for Historical Archaeology's Award of Merit. The award, given in conjunction with the Advisory Council on Underwater Archaeology, recognized the four women for their role in the ratification and implementation of the UNESCO Convention for underwater archaeology.[12][13]

References

Citations

Bibliography

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