- John E. Teeple
John Edgar Teeple (1874-1931) was a
chemical engineer who received thePerkin Medal in 1927 for his work onpotash during World War I. [ [http://ecommons.library.cornell.edu/bitstream/1813/3544/36/029_05.pdf Cornell Alumni News, Volume 29, Number 5, October 28, 1926, p. 28] ] He was also an American researcher and contributor to the field ofMesoamerica n studies during the first half of the 20th century. He published several papers on theepigraphy andastronomy of thepre-Columbian Maya civilization , and he is most noted for being the first to decipher the nature and meaning of the series ofglyph s in the Maya writing system known as the "Supplementary Series", proving they referred to the position of a given day in thelunar cycle .The mathematically-adept Teeple was encouraged into the field of Maya studies by his friend, the Mesoamerican scholar Sylvanus G. Morley, one of the foremost
Mayanist researchers of his day. [See Coe (1992), p.130.] By this time (the mid-1920s), although a few details relating to the functioning of theMaya calendar system and some astronomical notation had been worked out, the great majority of ancient Maya inscriptions and glyphs remained mysterious and undeciphered.Notes
References
*cite book | first=Michael D. | last=Coe | authorlink=Michael D. Coe | year=1992 | title=Breaking the Maya Code | publisher =Thames & Hudson |location=London | id=ISBN 0-500-05061-9
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