Chojolom

The site features a number of sculpted stones that are presumed to belong to the Kʼicheʼ Maya culture of the Postclassic Period (approximately AD 900–1520).

[7] Local historian Mariano Cornejo has speculated that the depositing of the stone heads and the naming of the hill may be linked.

[8] As of September 2010 three sculpted stone heads have been found at the site; one of an armadillo, one human and one representing a deity.

[21] The Altar measures 25 by 50 centimetres (9.8 by 19.7 in) and bears designs that include circles, hills, human figures and a deer.

[22] The combination of six human figures with the deer has been interpreted as a Maya calendrical date by Guatemalan anthropologist Lina Barrios.