TL;DR: A.F. Aveni et al. as mentioned in this paper published a survey of pre-Columbian astronomy in Meso-america, including the Aztecs and their calendar.
Abstract: JRASC April / avril 2010 Promoting Astronomy In Canada of Texas Press. Coe, Michael D. (1975). Native Astronomy in Mesoamerica. In A.F. Aveni (Ed.) Archaeoastronomy in Pre-Columbian America. Austin, Texas, and London, England: University of Texas Press. Duran, Fray Diego (1579). Book of the Gods and Rites and the Ancient Calendar. Translated by F. Horcasitas & D. Heyden (1971). Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. Frazer, James George (1922). The Golden Bough. New York, New York: MacMillan. McDowell, B. (1980). The Aztecs. National Geographic, Dec. 1980, 158 (6). McIvor, R.S. (2000). Star Patterns on the Aztec Calendar Stone. JRASC, 94 (2). Nuttall, Zelia (1901). The Fundamental Principles of Old and New World Civilizations. Figure 56. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. Sahagun, Fray Bernardino de (1569). The Florentine Codex, General History of the Things of New Spain: Book 7: The Sun, Moon, and Stars, and the Binding of the Years. Translated by A.J. Anderson & C.E. Dibble (1953). Santa Fe, New Mexico: The School of American Research & The University of Utah.
TL;DR: The single species of Opsozelia, O. discalis Townsend, 1919, is redescribed as Zelia discalis, comb.
Abstract: The monotypic tachinid genus Opsozelia Townsend, 1919 (Diptera: Tachinidae) is synonymized with ZeliaRobineau-Desvoidy 1830, syn. nov. The single species of Opsozelia, O. discalis Townsend, 1919, is redescribed as Zelia discalis, comb. nov., based on examination of the holotype from Guyana and additional material from Suriname, Brazil and Paraguay. Three new species of Zelia similar to Z. discalis are described from Brazil: Z. magnasp. nov., Z. guimaraesisp. nov. and Z. formosasp. nov. These four species are treated informally as the Zelia discalis species group. An identification key to the species of this species group is provided based on male specimens. Descriptions and illustrations are provided for the male terminalia of all species and for the female terminalia of one species, Z. guimaraesi.
TL;DR: The authors examined the experiences of Zelia Nuttall and Isabel Ramirez Castaneda in Mexican archaeology, their relation with the International School of American Ethnology and Archaeology (1910-1914), and their distinct ways to participate in archaeology in a particular moment of professionalization.
Abstract: Drawing upon archival records, this article examines the experiences of Zelia Nuttall and Isabel Ramirez Castaneda in Mexican archaeology, their relation with the International School of American Ethnology and Archaeology (1910-1914), and their distinct ways to participate in archaeology in a particular moment of professionalization. This article offers institutional, social, and biographical information that broadens our understanding of the experiences of pioneer women anthropologists.