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Maya Civilization Collapsed Amidst Mild Drought, New Study Suggests

Mayans

  First Posted: 02/26/2012 10:16 am Updated: 02/26/2012 12:49 pm

For more than 500 years, the Maya kings ruled the New World's richest and most advanced civilization. But then, around 800 C.E., the Maya empire began to collapse and its kings soon disappeared; by 1000 C.E., most of its great cities and temples lay in ruins. What happened? In recent years, scientists have increasingly blamed a series of droughts for the calamity, but the evidence has been ambiguous. A new study concludes that drought did indeed play an important role, but the actual decrease in rainfall was relatively modest.

At its height, Maya civilization occupied much of Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula and Central America, including modern-day Guatemala, Belize, and Honduras. Archaeologists have dated the first settlements as far back as 2000 B.C.E., but the rise of kings and dynasties occurred during the so-called Classic period, beginning about 250 C.E. At sites like Tikal in Guatemala, monarchs decked out in jade jewelry ruled as many as 100,000 people, including artists, scribes, and the farmers who worked the surrounding cornfields. But by 830 C.E., more than 80% of Tikal's population was gone, and population losses at many other Maya sites were even greater.

Archaeologists had considered numerous factors for the collapse, including internal political rivalries and warfare between neighboring kings. Drought was also considered a possibility, but until about 10 years ago there were few data that allowed correlation of dry periods with the archaeological evidence. Over the past decade, however, researchers have been looking at so-called climate proxy records—such as lake and coastal sediments—to detect ancient rainfall levels. Those studies have strengthened the case that drought played an important role, because the driest periods do appear to coincide with the collapse; but just how big a role drought played is still in question.

The latest study, published in the 24 February issue of Science and carried out by two paleoclimatologists at the University of Southampton in the United Kingdom, claims to be the highest resolution look yet at the role of drought in the Maya collapse. Martin Medina-Elizalde and Eelco Rohling created a climate model using the four best-dated paleoclimate records from the Mexican part of the Yucatán Peninsula: stalagmites from Tecoh Cave, remains of gastropods (slugs and snails) from Lake Chichancanab, remains of ostracods (tiny crustaceans) from Lake Punta Laguna, and sediments from Lake Chichancanab.

For the stalagmite, gastropod, and ostracod records, the team plugged data into the model for the ratio of the heavier oxygen isotope oxygen-18 to the lighter oxygen isotope oxygen-16; rainfall is depleted in oxygen-18 because it is the result of water that has evaporated into the atmosphere. The sediments from Lake Chichancanab provided a measure of how saturated the lake had become from precipitation.

Media-Elizalde and Rohling calculated that during the two longest and most-severe droughts previously identified by researchers—centered around 830 and 928 C.E., in the middle of the Maya collapse—the water levels of Lake Chichancanab dropped by about 30% and overall annual precipitation in the Yucatán area decreased by about 40% during drought periods. The researchers point out that this decrease is not as severe as that found in some previous estimates and suggest that the water table of the peninsula, which is mostly made up of limestone, is "critically sensitive" to even small decreases in rainfall.

Keith Prufer, a Maya archaeologist at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, who has worked closely with paleoclimatologists, says the new paper is a "solid contribution" to increasing evidence that the Maya "had to contend with changing climate conditions during their period of peak populations," which put significant pressure on their "rainfall-dependent agricultural systems." And climate geologist Gerald Haug of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich, Switzerland, says the paper is a "fine piece of work" that adds to the "compelling" evidence that climate change is implicated in the Maya collapse. However, Haug cautions that researchers should not ignore other factors, such as social and political developments, which could have been just as important.

Indeed, archaeologist Lisa Lucero, a Maya expert at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, says that "monocausal explanations" for the Maya collapse, such as drought, should be considered "passé," even if drought may have "set in motion" a series of social and political events that led to the disappearance of the kings and the fall of their civilization.

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For more than 500 years, the Maya kings ruled the New World's richest and most advanced civilization. But then, around 800 C.E., the Maya empire began to collapse and its kings soon disappeared; by 10...
For more than 500 years, the Maya kings ruled the New World's richest and most advanced civilization. But then, around 800 C.E., the Maya empire began to collapse and its kings soon disappeared; by 10...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
smmrselysummers
Be the parent your children can be proud of
12:01 PM on 08/23/2012
I've always thought that this was probably the reason they left, as well as the Anasazi and others.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
secondcoming
01:04 PM on 07/16/2012
what would be interesting to find out is " where these people, or that drought was in that 11 year cycle?" _ the suns 11 year cycle and how the solar weather change may have played a role? I don't think it is coincidental that all civilizations that were based on agriculture developed religions that revolved and evolved around "Sun worship" The Aztec were really into it but it played a huge role in the Maya culture as well. enough so that they would have known that the sun moves through 11 year or even 13 year cycles.. they viewed Venus transits, and eclipses, so they must have to some extent been able to view sun spots, either by reflections or through stones, stone _jade_ masks, or even glasses made from jade or obsidian..
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
secondcoming
12:48 PM on 07/16/2012
are the dates of the "Maya demise" fact or political, politicians attempt to whitewash over what the Spanish did to this and other civilizations. regardless extremely important information was lost, then and later by the Spanish soldiers and priests who razed and burned thousands of intricate documents that recorded centuries of information about the climate of this area... and possibly mainstay America as well. Even though the Sun probably played a huge role in their demise, population was the greatest factor, as their civilizations prospered so did their need for new places to cultivate, and they simply ran out of space, prime real estate and resources, the waters they fished for food were depleted, game in the forests depleted and over use from planting taxed the land, in the past if the land no longer yielded what was needed to sustain their culture (corn) they'd just moved, the entire empire would relocate, so when they say there was a demise it could have been they just moving.. but still by 800 C.E. there were far fewer places to go without having to compete, go to war, or assimilate into neighboring communities.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Czechster
Enough is enough
09:12 PM on 02/28/2012
Shortly after their first expeditions to the region, the Spanish initiated a number of attempts to destroy the Maya who were hostile towards the Spanish crown and establish a colonial presence in the Maya territories of the Yucatán Peninsula and the Guatemalan highlands. This campaign, sometimes termed "The Spanish Conquest of Yucatán", would prove to be a lengthy and dangerous exercise for the conquistadores from the outset, and it would take some 170 years and tens of thousands of Indian auxiliaries before the Spanish established substantive control over all Maya lands.
Ironies of Ironies tells a story of how the Spaniards (aka Hispanics, Latinos, etc.) are responsible for the demise of the greatest civilization on the Earth. Now they are going after the United States.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BachmannPalinOverdrive
Supplying xenophobes with facts.
08:05 AM on 03/27/2012
You're sense of history works only as a storyline in a Mad Max movie.
04:43 PM on 05/29/2012
Try again...But then, around 800 C.E., the Maya empire began to collapse and its kings soon disappeared; by 1000 C.E., most of its great cities and temples lay in ruins....Balboa arrived in 1513...Cortez in 1519...Coronado in 1540...that's 500 years after the Mayan empire was in ruins...
07:51 PM on 02/28/2012
Any chance there could have been a plague?
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
R.W. Sanders
Numerous questions, too little expertise
12:05 AM on 02/28/2012
In questioning such a huge population decrease, I would first look at some kind of epidemic. Something viral that attacked a population with no natural immunity, perhaps? The Mayans traveled on the sea. Surely if life became unlivable in one place, they were capable of relocating. But not if they were too ill.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tg7357
The Gov no longer fights crime: it monopolizes it.
05:14 PM on 02/27/2012
archeologists and anthropoligists have been inside buildings in Mayan cities where dishes and serving plates are still sitting on tables, and family possesions were not even attempted to be taken with their owners when they left. For some reason a lot of people in these cities just up and decamped very suddenly, leaving a lot behind. Makes you wonder why.
07:26 PM on 02/27/2012
Why? It was a famine! There were bands of people running around trying to eat all the food and all the family!

In very ancient Mayan society, the Kings ruled with the help of a little cannibalism. Things got soft and there was no big drought for too long, when it came, the ruling classes no longer had it in them to turn around and eat some of their excess population (tip: 100,000 is too many to eat) so they ended up on the menu themselves.
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TexasTreader
Fluffy, the yard dog
12:07 PM on 02/27/2012
A drought in the tropics isn't the same as droughts elsewhere. I think somebody's looking for more funding.
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TexasTreader
Fluffy, the yard dog
12:02 PM on 02/27/2012
When we get through 2012 without a hitch, can we finally take a more realistic look at Mayan culture? "Advanced" in the New World wasn't exactly ADVANCED.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jonathan Lawson
01:50 PM on 02/27/2012
While the ability to predict the future may be a stretch, I still think your statement is a little nieve. We've found prove that they were doing brain surgery, at least to the point of opening the skull to relief bleeding and pressure. There architectural ability was impressive. The massive courtyards of the cities were sloped with drainage gutters running through the temples that surrounded the square so that water that fell on the square was taking out of the city instead of it collecting in the square. More over they've found mechanical saws in places like ancient egypt. Early man may have not had access to super conductors and things that we do today but calling them primative is a stretch. One last example, Rome had running water a feat that was not completed again by man for close to 500 years after their fall, so there may still be things that they had and lost that we haven't re-discovered.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maverick9808
klaatu barada necktie
04:24 PM on 02/28/2012
Unfortunately it was those very same water channels that lead to their down fall, lead sure seemed wonderful before that whole science thing got in the way
03:23 PM on 02/27/2012
1) They were quite advanced for their time
2) They never predicted that the world will come to an end in 2012
11:47 AM on 02/27/2012
If only that well's enviromental study was completed earlier :)
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
J0E1
Don't blame me, I'm not a republicrat.
11:22 AM on 02/27/2012
There couldn't have been climate change back then.  Everyone knows it's ONLY a modern phenomenon and created by Hummers and other large SUV's.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
messy
artist, writer, adventurer
08:41 AM on 02/27/2012
"around 800 C.E., the Maya empire began to collapse and its kings soon disappeared; "

Interestingly, there was NEVER a Maya empire. There were many small states that were generally at each others' throats. None of them ever unified the area.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
In Financial Theocracy we Trust
09:08 AM on 02/27/2012
But it's a good conclusion. Due to the climate steadily becoming more human friendly from the extreme ice period that brought them from Siberia there was a rush of population growth, includes the Pueblo cultures in the Southwest. Culture swelling brought on governing of the populations who were gathering for cooperative survival and that is what I think they mean with "empire".

It is thought that VERY few (much less than 100 total) of the crowd who made it to North America survived to settle south of the ice. All of the native population of North and South America came from that small stout crowd only about 15,000 years ago and that is quite a feat. There was clearly governance going on, so those small states traded among themselves just the same. Then the droughts came, according to the article. It fits.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
In Financial Theocracy we Trust
08:44 PM on 02/27/2012
But to be completely accurate (or closer to it anyway), there are 5 known native mitochondrial haplogroups in north and South America. That indicates there were 5 migrations that created the population. Now, one of them didn't seem to make it farther south than the eastern North America so they didn't participate in populating South America. Still, the first group was only a handful of survivors. How the other 4 did isn't known by me anyway (not to worry, there are those who do if you want to look it up).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vrano
Your sexual freedom is not my financial worry
08:31 AM on 02/27/2012
HuffPost should have sensationalized this:
"Current Man-Made Global Warming kills off Mayan Civilization 1000 Years Ago."
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TexasTreader
Fluffy, the yard dog
12:05 PM on 02/27/2012
That's pretty powerful! European capitalists and adventurers were so evil that our evilness could reach back in time.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jason Christensen
Incompetentcy is the new norm
08:28 AM on 02/27/2012
Clickable headline: "Maya Civilization Said Done In By Climate Change"

Quote from within same article: "but just how big a role drought played is still in question"

Does HP actually read the articles they post?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Shuey37
Federalism is the answer
08:27 AM on 02/27/2012
NEWS FLASH: The global climate has been changing and going through various cycles since the beginning of time. Even 500 years ago... before libs walked the earth.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roadrun
In Financial Theocracy we Trust
09:10 AM on 02/27/2012
Just keep "thinking" what they tell you to think and you'll be just fine.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Shuey37
Federalism is the answer
09:21 AM on 02/27/2012
Nope. I refuse to do as you have done.
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Publicola
Reality has a scientific bias
02:37 PM on 02/27/2012
Shuey37's papa a generation ago, during the Smoking-Causes-Cancer "debate":

"NEWS FLASH: The cancer has been changing and going through various cycles since the beginning of time. Even 500 years ago... before cigarette smokers walked the earth."

Science denier rhetoric is stupefying,

-------------------------------------------------------

Q. Why can't science deniers understand the very basic concept of multiple causality?

A. Because they are science deniers, of course.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Milks
Ecologist
10:18 AM on 02/27/2012
Then please explain what natural cycle is behind the current rise in global temperatures.
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KEBLAAB
No armor is so resistant as ignorance & bias.
11:41 AM on 02/27/2012
That would be an area for science to explain, of course they don't care about facts and truth, just as the "Climategate" incident at East Anglia University so clearly demonstrated a couple years ago. Read Gregg Braden's "Deep Truth" unless you are a bigot and can't be influenced by science and logic.