Scientists find evidence in Belize’s Blue Hole of a severe draught occurring
long ago and suggest it may explain what happen to Mayan civilization.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Scuba
divers from around the world are familiar with the Blue Hole, a stunning
geological feature off the coast of Belize. Divers and tourists flock in droves
each year to visit the oceanic cave. Another kind of visitor has also taken
interest in the formation.
Researchers
recently took core samples from drillings around the region and examined
sediments collected from within. What they found suggests that a massive
drought hit the area right around the same time as the estimates for when the
Mayan civilization collapsed. Two new scholarly reports detail the latest
efforts to explain what happened to the Mayans, one in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of
“When you
have major droughts, you start to get famines and unrest,” André Droxler of
Rice University, lead investigator of the study, said.
For
thousands of years, the Mayan civilization flourished in Mesoamerica, a region
which now consists of Mexico and Central America. Mayans developed their own
hieroglyphics and mathematics, both of which were advanced for their time
period. The Mayans are perhaps best known for the calendar they developed,
which mapped out time some ten centuries into the future. The calendar ended in
2012, causing many to anticipate with trepidation the end of the world.
Experts
estimate that the Mayan civilization collapsed during the period between 800
and 900 C.E. In 700, the city populations began to decline, and wars became
frequent. The city dwellers are thought to have ultimately dispersed, and
scattered remnants appeared in the larger surrounding area after rains began
falling at normal levels around 1,100 years ago.
By 900
C.E., most of the Mayan cities sat completely empty. Since archaeologists have
been unable to find any evidence of a large-scale extinction from war or
natural disaster, large-scale drought has become a popular explanation for the
mass exodus from the cities. This latest research supports the drought hypothesis.
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