Sediment analysis of Belize's Blue Hole indicates that a first-millennium drought may have led to Mayan decline
(CNN) -- To scuba divers and tourists, Belize's famous "Blue Hole" underwater cave is a wonder, one of the "10 most amazing places on Earth," according to the Discovery Channel.
To scientists, it's
something more: evidence of the drought that is suspected to have led to
the demise of the Mayan civilization.
New research reinforces that theory, Rice University Earth scientist Andre Droxler told LiveScience.
The team drilled cores
from the Blue Hole sinkhole and a nearby lagoon. They found that the
ratio of titanium to aluminum changed in the ninth and 10th centuries, a
period when the Mayan civilization in the Yucatan Peninsula went into
decline. More titanium means that heavier rains were affecting the
region, since the runoff from the area's volcanic rock is rich in the
element.
But from about A.D. 800
to 1000, the ratio between the two elements was much smaller, indicating
that there was much less rainfall.
"When you have major droughts, you start to get famines and unrest," Droxler said.
The Mayan civilization, noted for its advances in astronomy and agriculture (not to mention that calendar system that some believed prophesied world devastation on December 21, 2012),
dominated the Yucatan in the first half of the first millennium A.D.
But by 900, most of the civilization's cities, located in present-day
Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and southern Mexico, had been
abandoned.
The question of why this happened has tantalized scientists and historians for decades.
The drought theory isn't
new, but the findings of Droxler and his colleagues buttress other
studies. In 2012, samples from a 2,000-year-old stalagmite also showed
that drought had afflicted the region in the latter half of the first
millennium A.D.
"The main finding was
that a prolonged drought contributed to the collapse of Classic Mayan
civilization," environmental archaeologist Douglas Kennett told LiveScience two years ago.
Droxler and his colleagues published their findings in Scientific Reports.
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