In the Late Classic a nine-room palace was built on top of the pyramid, supporting a roof comb that had painted stucco bas-relief decoration.
A back mirror is represented on Late Classic Stela 11 from Yaxchilan on the Mexican bank of the Usumacinta River.
It was originally constructed at the end of the Late Preclassic, and only in the Late Classic was its height raised.
The city experienced a period of intensive construction lasting from the Late Classic through to the Terminal Classic.
During the Late Classic, Ixkun and Ixtutz both developed sufficiently to rival Ixtonton, but this did not last and Ixtonton continued as the most prominent site in the region.
"Teotihuacan-inspired ideologies" and motifs persisted at Maya centers into the Late Classic, long after Teotihuacan itself had declined.
Ceramic remains dated to the Late Classic have been found in all levels of the Acropolis.
In general, the elite burials at Altun Ha during the Late Classic can be characterized by large amounts of jade.
In the Late Classic a series of defensive ditches were excavated across the base of this peninsula in order to fortify the site.
Dramatically reflecting the changes which occurred in the Late Classic is the Str.