by  Carl de Borhegyi
 Above is a close up of a Late Classic (600-900 C.E.)  Maya vase painting K5857, that depicts
 the hunting of the sacred deer.  It is well known that many 
psychotropic mushrooms, such as the Psilocybe and Panaeolus genera 
mushroom, grow in the dung of certain quadrupeds.  If you look closely
 "hidden in plain sight,"  I believe there are tiny mushrooms encoded 
above the deer's antlers. Mushrooms found growing in the dung of deer 
were easy to find, and safe to consume. They were also very easy to 
cultivate for the purpose of trade. 
 
 While I may be the first 
to call attention to this encoded mushroom imagery, these images can be 
viewed and studied with ease on such internet sites as Justin Kerr's 
Maya Vase Data Base and F.A.M.S.I. ( Foundation for the Advancement of 
Mesoamerican Studies, Inc).                              
 
 According to ethno-archaeologist Peter Furst....  
 
 "The discovery, by early migrants into Mexico, of a functional 
deer-mushroom relationship could, conceivably, have served to reinforce 
whatever ancient Asian traditions might then still have remained alive 
concerning the deer as source of supernatural power, and especially the 
visionary gifts of shamans."
 
   According to Peter Furst, among 
the tribes of Siberia the deer is the spirit animal that carries the 
shaman in his ecstatic state, to the realm of the sky deities. The 
Siberian shamans costume is typically adorned with deer symbolism, and 
the shaman's headdress is frequently adorned with antlers, without which
 he cannot properly shamanize, for it is the deers antlers that embody 
the concept of supernatural power and eternal renewal (Furst 1976, p. 
170). 
 
    "It happens that not only Siberian shamans but their 
reindeer as well were involved with the sacred mushrooms. Several early 
writers on Siberian customs reported that reindeer shared with man a 
passion for the inebriating mushroom, and further, that at times the 
animals urgently sought out human urine, a peculiarity that greatly 
facilitated the work of the herders in rounding them up—and that might 
just possibly have assisted their reindeer-hunting ancestors in early 
efforts at domestication:
 
  . . these animals (reindeer) have 
frequently eaten that mushroom, which they like very much. Whereupon 
they have behaved like drunken animals, and then have fallen into a deep
 slumber. When the Koryak encounter an intoxicated reindeer, they tie 
his legs until the mushroom has lost its strength and effect. Then they 
kill the reindeer. If they kill the animal while it is drunk or asleep 
and eat of its flesh, then everybody who has tasted it becomes 
intoxicated as if he had eaten the actual fly agaric. (Georg Wilhelm 
Steller, 1774, in Wasson, 1968: 239-240)