Late on the night of Feb. 21, 1978, at the corner of Uruguay Street behind the Cathedral of the Plaza de la Constitución in Mexico City, a group of workers from the electric utility company wielded picks and shovels as they dug an earthen trench for buried cables. Suddenly one of the workers unearthed a head carved out of stone, which the workers reported to the Institute of History and Anthropology early the next morning. Experts rushed to the site and after seven days of careful excavation, they finally unearthed a semi-elliptical stone carving of a goddess, but with her head separated and her limbs broken. The goddess wore a large top feathered crown, a long serpentine belt around her waist, and a string of small bells dangling from her skull. Identified by archaeologists, this is the Aztec myth of the moon goddess Coyol Sauki statue.