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Using ground penetrating radar to understand the failure of the Koh Ker Reservoir, Northern Cambodia

5 November 2019
in Cambodia
Tags: Angkor (kingdom)geoarchaeology/geology/geosciencesKoh Ker (site)lateritePreah Vihear (province)research paperswater management
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via Geoarchaeology, 29 August 2019: A new paper in Geoarchaeology suggests that the reason for Koh Ker’s short term as the capital for the Khmer empire was its inadequate water management system which led to a failed reservoir system.

Ground penetrating radar, probing, and excavation were used to create a contour map of the topography of a buried laterite pavement forming the spillway of a large abandoned reservoir at the Angkorian‐period city of Koh Ker in Cambodia. Calculations of the flow velocity of water through the spillway, based on the topography of the laterite surface, demonstrate that this outlet was even less adequate for passing the flow of water from the Stung Rongea catchment than had been estimated previously by Lustig, Klassen, Evans, French, & Moffat (2018). We argue that this design flaw contributed substantially to the failure of the reservoir’s dike, possibly during the first rainy season after construction, which may have contributed to Koh Ker’s remarkably short‐lived tenure as the political center of the Khmer Empire

Source: Using ground penetrating radar to understand the failure of the Koh Ker Reservoir, Northern Cambodia – Moffat – – Geoarchaeology – Wiley Online Library

See also:

  • Ground penetrating radar reveals why ancient Cambodian capital was moved to Angkor | Eureka Alerts, 31 October 2019

  • New Radar Study Reveals The Failure That Forced The Khmer Empire to Move Its Capital | Science Alert, 1 November 2019

  • Ground-Penetrating RADAR Reveals Why Ancient Cambodian Capital Was Moved | Forbes, 26 November 2019

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