The Mind of James Donahue A Lesson For Today |
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The Fall Of By James Donahue Deep in the jungles of
But a team of archaeologists
working on The Greater Angkor Project, is finding evidence that the old city collapsed for another reason that sends a stark
lesson from the distant past that the modern world should pay attention to. The discovery is that
it was ecological failure and a breakdown of the city’s elaborate system of waterways and travel routes that destroyed
The team is working on
a theory that “They created ecological
problems for themselves and they either didn’t see it until it was too late or they couldn’t solve it when they
could see it,” said archaeologist Roland Fletcher in an Associated Press report. Another team member,
Damian Evans, said he compares the canals to today’s freeways, and the old elephant paths to our modern telephone lines.
Angkor flourished as
a Hindu empire with kings ruling over a large area in The Greater Angkor Project
is a unique archaeological study by the University of Sydney, Australia, the Ecole Francaise d’Extreme-Orient and Instead of looking at
buildings, the team is excavating waterways, travel routes, evidence of food sources and other remnants of the city’s
infrastructure. Modern technology, including radar ground images provided by NASA and ultralight photographs from the air
are being used to map things like ancient rice paddies, locations of the canals, homes and other remnants of the city. They have discovered
that the metropolitan area extended far beyond the ancient walled city of The He said the elaborate
water system directed the water from the north into a central storage area, then dispersed water to the south. The city’s
ancient engineers also created a manmade river that joined two natural ones. The team believes that
the city got too large, and that its elaborate infrastructure eventually collapsed. “The more modifications they made,
the more problems they ran into and the harder it became to implement solutions,” Evans said. Another interesting discovery;
the growing population drove people into the nearby hills where they cut down trees for fuel and cleared land for agriculture.
This resulted in rain runoff that carries sediment down into the canals. Eventually they became plugged. And there, in a microcosm,
is a picture of what is occurring throughout the entire world today. The water and sewer systems
in our major cities are old, cracking and wearing down after up to a hundred years of service. Our elaborate system of roads,
highways and bridges is crumbling. Governments are crying for more tax dollars to make billions of dollars in repairs. An overpopulated world
is cutting down its trees to grow more food for more and more people. Our water, our air and our land is so polluted we cannot
sustain our numbers. But unlike the people of ancient We have no place left
to run. |
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