Arturo Montero Explained

Arturo Montero
Birth Date:December 15, 1961
Birth Place:Mexico City, Mexico
Alma Mater:Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia
Occupation:Archaeologist
Employer:Food and Agriculture Organization
Awards:National Forest Merit Award, 2002State Award for Conservation, 2008Medal of Merit for the Conservation and Strengthening of the Integral Heritage of Humanity, 2021
Website:www.montero.org.mx

Ismael Arturo Montero García (Mexico City, December 15, 1961) Mexican archaeologist, who has discovered 53 sites with pre-Hispanic evidence in the high mountains of Mesoamerica, for which he obtained the National Award for Forestry Merit, by the Government of Mexico in the year 2002, International Year of Mountains, declared by Unesco. In 2009, he led the expedition that discovered the highest site in the world on the path of the terrestrial equator, he has published scientific articles and books that have earned him the recognition of the Encyclopedia "Wielka Encyklopedia Gór i Alpinizmu"[1] for his contribution to the mountaineering field.

He collaborated as a speleologist in the Great Mayan Aquifer project, a project that in 2018 received public recognition from the Congress of the Union, by agreement of the LXIII Legislature of the Chamber of Deputies. He currently serves as director of the organization Ipan tepeme ihuan oztome (ITIO), has taught for 30 years in different public and private universities and recently at the University of the Army and the Air Force, he is director of the Science Research and Dissemination Center at the University of Tepeyac. After completing his academic stay as a national researcher at the National Council of Science and Technology, he has chosen to dedicate his efforts to the conservation of natural and cultural heritage at the National Commission of Natural Protected Areas, in the office of biocultural affairs as a Consultant to the United Nations (UN).

Biography

Arturo Montero, descends from a family of several generations of soldiers, his father the artillery major Alfonso Montero and his mother the lieutenant nurse Luz Lidia García,[2] is an only child. He begins his studies at the Salesian College. Later, from a different educational perspective, he attended high school at the College of Sciences and Humanities of the UNAM, at this stage of his life, at age 17, he was discharged as a lifeguard in the ambulance and emergency service of the Mexican Red Cross. Afterwards, he entered the bachelor's degree in archeology at the National School of Anthropology and History where he graduated in 1988 with the thesis Iztaccihuatl, arqueología en alta montaña,[3] with honorable mention. In the year 2000, he continues with the master's degree in Mexican history at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters of the UNAM where he attends the field of archeology in caves, with the thesis Las formaciones subterráneas naturales en la historia de México,[4] with mention honorific. In 2005, he began his doctorate in Symbolic Anthropology from the National School of Anthropology and History and graduated with honorable mention with the thesis: Los símbolos de las alturas.[5] For the year 2010, he received a scholarship from Conacyt with a postdoctoral stay in the Universidad Iberoamericana, in the research line Environment, society and culture in rural societies.Recently, he has carried out research in the field of archaeoastronomy, proposing orientation models that have been published in academic and broadcast media such as National Geographic magazine. He is the author of eleven books, has coordinated six more and has written 70 research articles published in the country and abroad.[6] He currently serves as director of the Center for Research and Dissemination of Science at the University of Tepeyac.

Period in the Mexican Red Cross

Before beginning his studies in archeology, he joined the Mexican Red Cross as a lifeguard in the ambulance and emergency service at the age of 17. He specialized from the beginning in high mountain rescue techniques and in underground rescue (caves). In 1988, he graduated as a paramedic from the Superior School of Medicine of the National Polytechnic Institute. At the age of 28, in 1989, he reached the rank of Commander when he was appointed director of the National School of Speleology. By 1995, he was certified as a rescue diver by the National Aquatic School. In 1999, he was appointed Head of the High Mountain Rescue Section. In 2000, with his closest collaborators, he founded the National Rough Land Rescue Unit, dedicated above all to helping vulnerable communities in remote regions during disasters. His last operation in charge of a rescue section was carried out in 2005. Currently, when a catastrophe occurs in the country, he is occasionally required by the Mexican Red Cross to carry out damage assessment and needs analysis during a disaster event. disaster or major emergency.

Exploration period: mountains and caves

The trajectory of Arturo Montero in the archaeological and historical research of high mountains and speleology began in 1985 with the excavation of the highest archaeological site in North America, on the summit of the Iztaccíhuatl volcano at 5,260 meters above sea level, since then he has mainly developed in these fields, including wilderness exploration, diving, and river navigation.

He has led expeditions to the main chasms and peaks of Mexico, the Amazon, the Andes, Polynesia, the Alps, Cuba, the Cascade Range, the Atacama Desert, and the Galapagos Islands. Given his experience in research and documentation, he has been a research professor at the Meritorious Autonomous University of Puebla. He has taught at the universities of Tepeyac, the Valley of Mexico, Ibero-American and the National School of Anthropology and History. He also served as visiting professor at the National University of Salta in Argentina, and was vice president of the Mexican Union of Speleological Groups (2002-2004). In 2007, he was co-director of the Nevado de Toluca Underwater Archeology Project. In addition, he collaborated as an honorary member of the Advisory Committee for the Conservation of Archaeological Materials of High-Altitude Inca Sanctuaries in Argentina and was a current member of the Conacyt register of evaluators until 2021. He is currently an occasional reviewer of scientific articles for the National Institute of Anthropology and History and the Meritorious Autonomous University of Puebla.The activities of research, documentation and conservation of cultural and natural heritage have led it to be part of: the Mexican Society of Geography and Statistics; the Mexican Association of Mammalogy; the Mexican Society for the History of Science and Technology; the National Cave Rescue Commission of the National Speleological Society; and the Society for American Archaeology.

Ipan tepeme ihuan oztome period

Since 2005, he coordinates the Ipan tepeme ihuan oztome organization, which is dedicated to the dissemination of scientific culture, oriented to archeology, astronomy, history and anthropology, all linked to the care of cultural and natural heritage. that seeks to promote the value of scientific culture. This organization is made up of a group of professionals dedicated to research from various areas of knowledge.

As part of this organization, in 2009, Arturo Montero led the 0°φ / 0 °C Expedition[7] that discovered the highest point in the world where the equatorial line crosses. In 2012, during the expedition to the Holtún cenote, archaeoastronomical observations were made on El Castillo, the main pyramid of Chichén Itzá, finding that it is oriented towards the zenith passage of the Sun, to serve as an astronomical marker with which the Mayans adjusted their calendar.[8] In August 2013 the National Geographic magazine published this astronomical geometric model of orientation.[9]

Divulgation of scientific culture

Astronomy, mathematics, geometry and architecture were the greatest achievements of indigenous science. Dr. Arturo Montero's objective is to reach a wide public to share the scope of pre-Hispanic knowledge that surprised Europe and the world since the 16th century, and that currently attracts millions of tourists who are amazed when visiting the archaeological sites of Mexico.

The objective is to use new technologies such as the LiDAR scanner and digital photogrammetry to create 3D models, produce television programs using animations and multimedia resources, as well as presentations and publications on social networks to promote knowledge outside the academic redoubts that exclude to all those who are not specialists, it is an inclusive project that allows knowledge to reach everyone to forge a "popular scientific culture".

He has recently ventured into the media as a television and radio host, and also a collaborator with cultural reports for the country's written press.

Prizes and awards

Expeditions and scouting

Publicaciones

He is the author of eleven books, has coordinated six more and has written more than 70 research articles published in the country and abroad, this is his most relevant work:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wielka Encyklopedia Gór I Alpinizmu. 2013. Accessed February 10, 2019. .
  2. Web site: Tte. Enf. Ret. Luz Lidia García Castrejón . .
  3. Iztaccíhuatl, arqueología en alta montaña . Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Inah . January 1988 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  4. Iztaccíhuatl, arqueología en alta montaña . Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Inah . January 1988 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  5. Los símbolos de las alturas . Escuela Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Inah . January 2005 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  6. Web site: List of all Dr. Montero's publications in .
  7. Web site: 0°φ / 0 °C Expedition .
  8. UNESCO publication of Arturo Montero's research on El Castillo . Isbn: 978-92-3-300039-1 . January 2016 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  9. Web site: Alma Guillermoprieto "Secrets of the Maya Otherworld", National Geographic Magazine, August 2013 . . August 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210410141142/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/article/sacred-cenotes. dead. April 10, 2021.
  10. Web site: Parliamentary Gazette, year XXI, number 4961-IV, Thursday, February 8, 2018 .
  11. Web site: Registry of recipients of the Forestry Merit Award .
  12. Web site: El Universal newspaper publishes discovery . 12 March 2018 .
  13. Web site: Salvador Álvarez, "En el país del Sol", Channel 22 News Agency . .
  14. Web site: Check online .
  15. La astronomía en Mesoamérica . Itio Ediciones . January 2021 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  16. García . Ismael Arturo Montero . January 2022 . El Lago de Texcoco y México Tenochtitlán: 1519-1521 . Universidad del Tepeyac - Semarnat - Conanp.
  17. Web site: El Santuario del Fuego .
  18. Cocotzin: Nuestra Señora de Los Remedios . Itio Ediciones . January 2020 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  19. Web site: Explorando Tlaxcala .
  20. Chichén Itzá. Arquitectura, geometría y astronomí . Libro Digital . January 2015 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  21. El sello del Sol en Chichén Itzá . Isbn: 978-607-8187-34-8 . January 2013 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  22. Matlalcueye. El volcán del alma tlaxcalteca . Isbn: 978-607-515-022-2 . January 2012 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  23. Nuestro patrimonio subterráneo . Isbn: 978-607-484-270-8 . January 2011 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  24. En el vértice del Ecuador . Isbn: 978-607-00-3447-3 . January 2010 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  25. Web site: Las aguas celestiales. Nevado de Toluca .
  26. Web site: La montaña en el paisaje ritual .
  27. Web site: Mapa de Cuauhtínchan II. Entre la ciencia y lo sagrado .
  28. Atlas arqueológico de la alta montaña mexicana . Isbn: 968-6021-14-0 . January 2004 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  29. Taller básico de rescate agreste . Isbn: 970-92604 . January 2000 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .
  30. Web site: Huizachtepetl. Geografía sagrada de Iztapalapa .
  31. Web site: Tepeyac. Estudios históricos .
  32. Los Volcanes, símbolo de México . Isbn: 970-91159-0-1 . January 1992 . García . Ismael Arturo Montero .