Climate Change Helped Trigger Ancient Angkor’s Fall
Posted on Mar 4, 2016
By Kieran Cooke / Climate News Network
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| A temple site at the ancient city of Angkor overrun by jungle. (Kieran Cooke / Climate News Network) |
This piece first appeared at Climate News Network.
ANGKOR, Cambodia—At its peak, the ancient city of Angkor —with its innumerable temples and its complex system of canals and fortifications—was the largest pre-industrial city in the world, centre of a vast empire and home to three-quarters of a million people.
Then, over a period of just a few decades in the early 14th century, the site was abandoned, its temples left to be eaten up by the jungle, and its hundreds of kilometres of water channels blocked by tons of sand and earth.
Wars between the Khmer—builders of Angkor between the 9th and 13th centuries—and neighbouring empires in Southeast Asia, plus internal strife and intrigues between rival rulers, are thought to have been among the reasons for the city’s relatively sudden decline.
But a series of studies over recent years suggest that climate change could also have been a decisive factor in the abandonment of the complex, one of the most important archaeological sites in Southeast Asia, and now a huge tourist attraction
Sophisticated system
Rainfall patterns are highly seasonal in Southeast Asia. Angkor’s builders constructed a vast and highly sophisticated system of canals and reservoirs to harness and store the waters brought by the summer monsoon—which generally lasts from May to October and supplies about 90% of the region’s annual rainfall.
The ability to capture and store water—and use it to build up a highly-productive agricultural system—was a key foundation of Khmer power.
Periods of severe drought, sometimes lasting decades, in the 14th and 15th centuries were interspersed with years of intense monsoon rains.
A study of tree rings in the region—based on the rare and threatened cypress species Fokienia hodginsii—shows that periods of severe drought, sometimes lasting decades, in the 14th and 15th centuries were interspersed with years of intense monsoon rains.
This, the researchers conclude, could have wrecked Angkor’s delicate hydrological system and led to the demise of the Khmer empire.
Other studies, based on analysis of sediments around Angkor, also point to drought as a major factor in the downfall of what was, over several centuries, the region’s major power.
Undiscovered areas
A project led by scientists at the University of Sydney, Australia, has used remote sensing techniques to map hitherto undiscovered areas of the Angkor complex. Again, one of the main conclusions of their studies is that unstable weather was a vital contributing factor in Angkor’s decline.
The Khmer rulers were eventually forced to move south to Phnom Penh, the capital of modern-day Cambodia, and take up trading, instead of agricultural production.
Archaeologists say the collapse of other civilisations and ancient centres of power can, in large part, be attributed to changes in climate.
The city of Tikal, in modern Guatemala, central America, was one of the main centres of Mayan civilisation for a number of centuries until it was suddenly abandoned in the mid-9th century.
Studies suggest that a main factor leading to the city’s collapse—and the eventual demise of the Maya —was a severe drought, plus the effects of deforestation in the region.
Kieran Cooke, a founding editor of Climate News Network, is a former foreign correspondent for the BBC and Financial Times. He now focuses on environmental issues.

2 comments:
So the drift of this article is....human civilization causes climate change? Being smart causes climate change? Or self reliance causes climate change? True Capitalism causes climate change? Having a powerful Empire causes climate change? Using renewable energy [cutting down trees] causes climate change?
OK, I confess, I only have DpH degree! I suggest Cambodians stay poor as not to contribute to climate change that is so earth shaking dreaded who knows what could snuff the life out of her.
Solutions, let the IMF and World Banks run this world, only they have the know how to sustain life and prosperity for the betterment of humanity and to curb climate change.
Mayan should have human sacrifices again to make their civilization great once more. Who says that their beliefs are wrong when the World Rulers are doing this to the masses unknowingly?
Once upon a time the Babylonian Empire thought she was impregnable. Until one night when the king was having a party for all his lords and a hand appears writing on a wall. [judgment] That night the Empire fell, because of a climate change. The river that supply the city water [canal] was cut off. This was how the enemy came in - through river dried bed. Babylon the great fell under the effect of sudden climate change.
So what is my point? God, who rules over all the affairs of men is judge overall. He uses the Kasdims to punish Israel and afterwards, he punishes Babylon. How? by using the Medes and Persians. They were the ones that cut off the water entered the city.
Unraveling the New World Disorder
if you think that's bad right now [ climate change -- human NOT ''fully responsible '' as they claim , the wealthy release more CO2 in the air than all of us add together but you will never hear them blaming themselves, private jet planes , private yachts, big mansions ... etc..];Truth is: the magnetic north and south poles [ not the same as geographical north pole or south for that matter ]are shifting exposing artic ice more toward the sun [ melting in some part , not all ] and antartic ice away from the sun thus ice in south pole is actually growing -- but the media which try to push the global warming agenda will never publish such reports.. gov will never be able to pass the carbon tax law to extort more money from us , the middle and poor class.
Back to the subject of collapse of civilization from climate change , well nobody knows what is going to happen as far as the weather or nature is going to do when the new magnetic north pole and south pole are settled-- cambodia might be in hotter zone than now or could be in temperate zone which might see snow in the distant future... hope and pray for the best is about all we could do.
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