found: His La Victoria, an early site on the Pacific Coast of Guatemala, 1961.
found: Atlas of ancient America, 1986:CIP t.p. (Michael Coe)
found: BL auth. file, Sept. 20, 2002(hdg.: Coe, Michael D. (Michael Douglas))
found: Info. converted from 678, 2012-10-27(b. 1929)
found: The Maya, 2015:page 4 of cover (Michael D. Coe; professor emeritus of anthropology at Yale University)
found: Contemporary authors, volumes 1-4, first revision, 1967:(Michael Douglas Coe, b. May 14, 1929)
found: Washington post WWW site, viewed Oct. 1, 2019(in obituary dated Sept. 30, 2019: Michael Coe; Michael D. Coe, an archaeologist and anthropologist who shined a light on ancient Mesoamerican civilizations, leading excavations in Guatemala and Mexico, helping decode Maya writing and art, and writing best-selling books that galvanized public interest in his field, died Sept. 25 in New Haven, Conn. He was 90. Dr. Coe worked as a CIA officer in Taiwan before beginning his archaeological career in Guatemala in the mid-1950s. Based at Yale University for 34 years before retiring in 1994, his work ranged far beyond the Maya: He was a scholar of Angkor Wat and the Khmer civilization in Southeast Asia, excavated a colonial-era fort near a farm he owned in the Berkshires of Massachusetts, and became a historian of fly-fishing. Michael Douglas Coe was born in Manhattan on May 14, 1929. Dr. Coe joined the Yale faculty in 1960. He later chaired the anthropology department and was a curator at the school's Peabody Museum of Natural History)