• This week in Southeast Asian archaeology:⠀
We honor Dr. Eusebio Dizon’s enduring legacy, confront the auction of sacred Buddha relics, and celebrate Cambodia’s dazzling Angkor bronzes shining in Paris.⠀
Heritage, healing, and hard questions await.⠀
https://bit.ly/42Zz5ep
  • 🧱 This week in #SEAsiaArchaeology:⠀
🎨 4,000-year-old rock art in Mukdahan⠀
🪨 Sacred stele vandalized in Hội An⠀
📚 Miriam Stark on James Scott’s legacy⠀
From ochre to ontology—read the latest!⠀
 ⠀
https://bit.ly/3GgTjYh⠀
  • From Taiwan’s ocean floor to Myanmar’s quake-shaken soil—this week’s newsletter features Denisovan jawbones and newly unearthed Inwa-era ruins. Ancient stories resurface in the most unexpected ways. #southeastasianarchaeology⠀
⠀
https://bit.ly/4i7ZcUJ
  • Skulls under Bangkok, shattered temples in Myanmar, and AI mapping Angkor’s ancient waterscapes—just another week in Southeast Asian archaeology.⠀
⠀
https://bit.ly/4cpHZVJ
  • Eid Mubarak! 🌙 This week’s newsletter covers the powerful Myanmar quake felt as far as Bangkok, the return of looted Khmer artefacts to Cambodia, and more archaeological updates from across Southeast Asia. #southeastasianarchaeology⠀
⠀
https://bit.ly/3FOUqy3
  • Sunken ships in Vietnam, a hidden city beneath Thailand, and a newly protected stupa in Laos—this week’s Southeast Asian archaeology newsletter uncovers layers of history just beneath the surface. #southeastasianarchaeology⠀
⠀
https://bit.ly/4iW4T9n
  • Cebu Governor Garcia calls for the return of all looted church artifacts to restore the province
  • This week: Equinox at Angkor Wat lights up the skies, but shadows fall elsewhere—Boljoon’s stolen panels return, Bali battles temple theft, and a deep dive into the murky world of antiquities trafficking. #southeastasianarchaeology #freenewsletter

https://bit.ly/3Dy8paX
  • Cambodia restores Beng Mealea Temple
  • Tamil Nadu announces deep-sea excavation between Poompuhar and Nagapattinam to explore ancient Chola maritime heritage. #southeastasianarchaeology #India #CholaDynasty

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Angkor "killed by climate change"

14 March 2007
in Cambodia
Tags: Angkor (kingdom)Climate ChangeKhmer (people)Roland Fletcher (person)sustainabilityUniversity of Sydney
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14 March 2007 (News.com.au) – This isn’t exactly new news, because I posted something about this last year. Nonetheless, the story seems timely over the recent hype of climate change from Al Gore’s movie, An Inconvenient Truth.

City ‘killed by climate change’

Climate change was a key factor in the abandonment of Cambodia’s ancient city of Angkor, Australian archaeologists said today.

The city, home to more than 700,000 people and capital of the Khmer empire from about 900AD, was mysteriously abandoned about 500 years ago.

It has long been believed the Khmers deserted the city after a Thai army ransacked it, but University of Sydney archaeologists working at the site say a water crisis was the real reason it was left to crumble.

“It now appears the city was abandoned during the transition from the medieval warm period to the little ice age,” Associate Professor of Archaeology Roland Fletcher said.

Prof Fletcher said that to sustain a population of 750,000, the Khmers had a meticulously organised water management system.

But blockages found in two large structures that controlled the water system in central Angkor suggested the network had begun to break down late in the city’s history.

Prof Fletcher said the discoveries complemented previous field work that had led his team to conclude the city was abandoned when new monsoon patterns, brought about by climate change, had made the site unsustainable.


Related Books:
– Uncovering Southeast Asia’s Past: Selected Papers from the 10th International Conference of the European Association of Southeast Asian Archaeologists by E. A. Bacus, I. Glover and V. C. Pigott (Eds)

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Comments 1

  1. Dacnet says:
    16 years ago

    Climate Change made the typhoons in the south pacific very destructive. Typhoon Ketsana made a lot of mess in Philippines and Vietnam *

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