Saturday, August 18, 2007

CHICAGO — Archaeologists using radar imagery have shown that an ancient Cambodian settlement cen-tered on the celebrated temple of Angkor Wat was far more extensive than previously thought.

The medieval settlement surrounding Angkor, one-time capital of the illustrious Khmer empire, which flourished between the ninth and 14th centuries, covered a 1,158-square-mile area, according to a study released Monday.

The urban complex was at least three times larger than archaeologists previously had suspected and easily was the largest pre-industrial urban area of its kind, eclipsing comparable developments such as Tikal, a Classic-era Maya “city” on the Yucatan peninsula in Mexico.

Archaeologists have been trying to map the boundaries of the sprawling agricultural environs of Angkor in Siem Reap province since the 1950s, but the ancient remains have been subsumed by modern residential and agricultural developments, complicating the task.

So in 2000, a group of archaeologists from Australia, France and Cambodia who were working on the project turned to the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

The agency obliged, providing radar images of the terrain that distinguished the contours of the landscape under the surface of the earth, identifying the location of roads, canals and ponds surrounding temples.

When the researchers combined the data with aerial photography and ground surveys, they were able to identify several thousand ponds and 74 long-lost temples.

The researchers concluded that the complex irrigation network that provided the basis for the settlement’s rice agriculture extended eight to 10 miles out from Angkor city to the north and south to the border of Lake Tonle Sap.

The roads and canals, the defining features of the area, demonstrated that the urban settlement extended far beyond the walls of Angkor — a World Heritage Site home to Angkor Wat and other renowned temples.

The settlement could have supported a population of up to half a million people, although there are signs that some of the terrain was sparsely populated, says Damian Evans, a graduate student in the archaeology department at Sydney University and author of the paper.

The study also yielded clues to support the theory that environmental disaster was the cause of the civilization’s collapse in the 14th century, Mr. Evans says.

“We saw signs that embankments had been breached and of ad-hoc repairs to bridges and dams, suggesting that the system became unmanageable over time. Angkor was extensive enough, and the agricultural exploitation intensive enough, to have created a number of very serious environmental problems,” he says.

Deforestation, overpopulation, topsoil erosion and degradation with subsequent sedimentation or flooding could have been disastrous for the medieval population, he says.

The paper appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

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