<p>A well-preserved Mayan canoe, estimated to be about 1,000 years old, has been found in Mexico during construction work on a major rail link, the country's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) said.</p>.<p>A team of INAH underwater archaeologists found the pre-Hispanic vessel between the southern states of Yucatan and Quintana Roo in a cenote -- underground rivers that are common in the Yucatan Peninsula and sacred to the Maya people.</p>.<p>It was found during work on the "Maya Train", President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's controversial tourism project which is intended to link Caribbean resorts with ancient archaeological sites.</p>.<p>"The small boat could have been used for the extraction of water from the cenote or for the deposit of offerings during rituals," INAH said in a statement Friday.</p>.<p>It is the first canoe of this type so well preserved from the Mayan region, researchers said.</p>.<p>Previously, only fragments of these boats have been found in Guatemala and Belize.</p>.<p>The canoe has been initially dated to between 830 and 950 AD, but a November analysis, with the support of the University of Paris, will seek to determine its age and wood type, INAH said.</p>.<p>In Mexico, where several pre-Hispanic societies such as the Aztecs and the Maya flourished, archaeological finds are common.</p>.<p>In September, the remains of a staircase were found in a pyramid in the Xochitecatl Archaeological Zone.</p>.<p>In January this year, authorities said that more than 8,000 archaeological objects had been found in the first four sections of the Maya Train's construction.</p>
<p>A well-preserved Mayan canoe, estimated to be about 1,000 years old, has been found in Mexico during construction work on a major rail link, the country's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) said.</p>.<p>A team of INAH underwater archaeologists found the pre-Hispanic vessel between the southern states of Yucatan and Quintana Roo in a cenote -- underground rivers that are common in the Yucatan Peninsula and sacred to the Maya people.</p>.<p>It was found during work on the "Maya Train", President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's controversial tourism project which is intended to link Caribbean resorts with ancient archaeological sites.</p>.<p>"The small boat could have been used for the extraction of water from the cenote or for the deposit of offerings during rituals," INAH said in a statement Friday.</p>.<p>It is the first canoe of this type so well preserved from the Mayan region, researchers said.</p>.<p>Previously, only fragments of these boats have been found in Guatemala and Belize.</p>.<p>The canoe has been initially dated to between 830 and 950 AD, but a November analysis, with the support of the University of Paris, will seek to determine its age and wood type, INAH said.</p>.<p>In Mexico, where several pre-Hispanic societies such as the Aztecs and the Maya flourished, archaeological finds are common.</p>.<p>In September, the remains of a staircase were found in a pyramid in the Xochitecatl Archaeological Zone.</p>.<p>In January this year, authorities said that more than 8,000 archaeological objects had been found in the first four sections of the Maya Train's construction.</p>