“This is clearly the most undisturbed rain forest in Central America. The importance of this place can’t be overestimated,” (Mark Poltkin). Mark Plotkin said this in a National Geographic article. He is an ethnobotanist, a scientific researcher that studies the relationship between plants and peoples; he was on a recent expedition to Honduran rain forest to search for the lost White City of the Monkey God, also known as La Ciudad Blanca. The expedition found a different lost city in a valley recently named T1. Plotkin clearly believes that the T1 area is important because of how ecologically unharmed it is because most land within a dozen mile radius is already deforested. Archeologists now believe that there is not just one city, but instead an entire White Civilization because of the amount of ruins that have been found. In 1939, an archeologist named …show more content…
Stewart, Sylvanus G. Morley, and Charles C. Mann. Christopher S. Stewart is currently a writer and an editor at the Wall Street Journal and his articles and writings have been published in a variety of magazines and newspapers. His arguments about the White City are in his book, Jungleland: A Mysterious Lost City, A WWII Spy, and a True Story of Deadly Adventure. Sylvanus G. Morley was “the most celebrated Mayanist of his day” (Mann 246), he majorly contributed to the fields of anthropology, epigraphy, and archeology. His arguments pertaining to the White City are in his book, The Ancient Maya. Charles C. Mann is an influential and scientifically-acclaimed writer, currently writing for Science and The Atlantic Monthly. Mann’s arguments about to the White City are in his book, 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus. Although there is very little research into the White City, but Stewart’s, Morley’s, and Mann’s arguments are very influential to whether Morde discovered a lost