A Change of Guard

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Friday 22 February 2008

BRIEFING: Cambodia relics vulnerable to further ruin


Mitch Hendrickson, a Canadian archaeologist, speaks at an excavation site at a jungle-covered temple north of Siem Reap province, Cambodia, on Tuesday Jan. 22, 2008. An international research group is now trying to dig up answers to the question about the Angkorian hydraulic network as part of its quest to shed more light on the puzzles left since the demise of the Angkor city centuries ago.(AP Photo/Heng Sinith)


By Ker Munthit

February 22, 2008

A Cambodian worker collected soil samples from part of ancient Angkor's hydraulic reservoir near the town of Siem Reap. Scientists suspect the hydraulic system was too vast to manage.
SIEM REAP, Cambodia (AP) By destroying vast tracts of forest to enlarge their farmland, inhabit- ants of the wondrous city of Angkor ignited the fuse to an ecological time bomb that spelled doom for what was once the world's largest urban area.
So theorize archaeologists engaged in groundbreaking research into the ancient civilization of Angkor.
They are warning that history could repeat itself through reckless, headlong pursuit of dollars from tourists flocking to see Angkor's fabled monuments.
"It's just a weird cycle. It seems like Angkor is self-repeating itself," said Mitch Hendrickson, who recently led an excavation as part of research into Angkor as a human settlement.
Conservationists have long expressed concerns about the state of the monuments, especially the stress from the tourist invasion. They also say the uncontrolled pumping of underground water to meet rising demand of hotels, guesthouses and residents in the adjoining town of Siem Reap might be destabilizing the earth beneath the centuries-old temples so much that they might sink and collapse.
"There's just so much building going on without any concern about the long term. Things are moving so fast in Siem Reap today that it's going to chew itself up very quickly and become unsustainable," said Mr. Hendrickson, an archaeologist from the University of Sydney in Australia.
From their city, Angkorian kings ruled over most of Southeast Asia during their pinnacle between the ninth and 14th centuries, overseeing the stone constructions, including Angkor Wat, regarded as a marvel of religious architecture.
Although the 1431 invasion from what is now Thailand has long been regarded as a major cause of Angkor's fall, archaeologists from the Australian university's Greater Angkor Project suspect earlier ecological forces led to the city's demise.

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