The area that makes up present-day Quintana Roo was long part of Yucatán, sharing its history. With the
Caste War of Yucatán, which started in the 1840s, all non-natives were driven from the region. The independent
Maya nation of
Chan Santa Cruz was based on what is now the town of
Felipe Carrillo Puerto. For decades, it maintained considerable independence, having separate trade and treaty relationships with British Honduras, now
Belize. The
Territory of Quintana Roo was created by decree of President
Porfirio Díaz on November 24, 1902. It was named after an early patriot of the Mexican Republic,
Andrés Quintana Roo. The Mexican
Federal Army succeeded in subjugating most of the indigenous Maya population of the region during the 1910s. In 1913, the area was again declared to be legally part of the state of Yucatán, but was again declared a separate territory in 1915. The territory of Quintana Roo was granted statehood within the United Mexican States on October 8, 1974. In the last quarter of the 20th century and continuing into the 21st, Quintana Roo developed rapidly, with tourism being a driving force, notably with the development of
Cancún. As result of this development, the northern part of Quintana Roo has been increasingly
touristified. By contrast the south has continued with a traditional economy of
forestry and wood extraction. According to study lead researcher Wolfgang Stinnesbeck, "It really looks as if this woman had a very hard time and an extremely unhappy end of her life. Obviously, this is speculative, but given the traumas and the pathological deformations on her skull, it appears a likely scenario that she may have been expelled from her group and was killed in the cave, or was left in the cave to die there". The skeleton found by the 2016 exploration was away from a site where a previous expedition found human remains known as Chan Hol 2. Although archaeologists assumed the 2016 expedition had rediscovered Chan Hol 2, Stinnesbeck concluded that the two skeletons represent different individuals. Due to their distinctive features, study co-researcher Samuel Rennie suggested the existence of at least two morphologically diverse groups of people living separately in
Mexico during the transition from
Pleistocene to
Holocene. is a major tourist resort in Quintana Roo, especially the
Hotel Zone. ==Geography==