Using high-tech lasers to scan the Cambodian jungle, Damian Evans and colleagues say they found traces of extensive networks surrounding the monumental stone temple complex at Angkor Wat.
Evans said their findings could further our understanding of Khmer culture and throw into question traditional assumptions about the 15th-century decline of the empire. The research was published today in the Journal of Archaeological Science.
Evans said a laser technology known as lidar was used to create precise maps of ancient networks that left only vague traces invisible to the naked eye in the landscape surrounding the temples.
"But they might actually be evidence of old excavated ponds or built-up roadways," he explained. "All of these things left traces in the surface of the landscape that wouldn't make sense to you without a more detailed picture."
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To obtain such details, Evans said his colleagues spent 90 hours in a helicopter directing laser scans into the jungle surrounding Angkor Wat. He said that the resulting images are so intricate "you can see objects lying next to a tiny anthill."
But Evans said their laser maps showed no evidence of relocated, dense cities in the south and that it wasn't clear there was any such mass migration.
Chanratana Chen, a Cambodian academic at the University of Sorbonne in Paris, said the new findings had changed his own perception of the Angkor Wat temple complex, which the Cambodian people commonly refer to as "the small city." Chen was not involved in the new research.