No Cataclysm Brought Down Maya
New Research Suggests 200-Year Dry Spell and Drought Had Big Role in 'Collapse'
By Guy Gugliotta
Washington Post Staff Writer
Beginning in the 8th century and continuing for 150 years, the great
Mayan civilization of the Petén rain forest in present-day Guatemala
fell apart. Cities were
abandoned, people fled and wars raged across the encroaching wilderness.
This prolonged event -- known traditionally as the Maya "collapse" --
is one of the enduring mysteries of pre-Columbian America and a subject
of continued debate.
How did it happen?
In research reported yesterday, a German-led team of earth scientists
offered new evidence that a 200-year dry spell, punctuated by three periods
of serious
drought, may have played an important role.
"There's competition for food, there are wars, there's deforestation,
and the climate is drier," said paleo-oceanographer Gerald Haug of Potsdam's
Geoscience
Center. "These were problems you could cope with to a certain degree
-- but then you had the extremes. It's a subtle catalyst."
By measuring the undisturbed sediments of Venezuela's Cariaco Basin
on the Caribbean coast, Haug's team was able to identify a significant
decline in regional
rainfall beginning around A.D. 750, with drought spikes starting at
810, 860 and 910.
The sequence corresponds fairly closely to protracted Maya upheavals
that began in the western Petén in the late 7th century, and in
the central Petén lowlands in
the 9th century. By A.D. 930, some archaeologists calculate that the
Maya heartland had lost 95 percent of its population.
For more than a century, this diaspora bewildered archaeologists even
as it cemented the popular vision of a "lost civilization" of spectacular
pyramids and
monuments overtaken by jungle in a trackless tropical wilderness.
Much more is known today, and archaeologists are much less likely to
accept overarching theories for the "collapse," a term that is losing cachet
as evidence
accumulates that the Maya did not "disappear," but simply moved: north
to Yucatan in Mexico, eastward to Belize and to highland settlements on
the edges of the
rain forest.
"It's not a question of whether there was a drought or an invasion.
There wasn't some big, single anything that happened at some big, single
time," said Vanderbilt
University archaeologist Arthur A. Demarest, who is editing a book
on the period. "This kind of theory doesn't have a place anymore, given
the detail of cultural
history we have."
More sympathetic was the University of Pennsylvania's Robert J. Sharer,
author of a classic text on the Maya, who noted that "climate changes,
including drought,
have always been part of the mix," and "the argument has been strengthened"
over the last 10 years. "But what everybody wants is a pat answer," Sharer
continued,
"and we're still not at that point, and probably never will be."
The new research, reported yesterday in the journal Science, was sponsored
by the Ocean Drilling Program, a multinational initiative led by the National
Science
Foundation. Haug's team studied the topmost layers of a 170-meter Cariaco
Basin core sample.
The basin in Venezuela is about 1,800 miles east of the Petén,
but both places lie on the "Intertropical Convergence Zone," also known
as the doldrums, a band that
encircles the Earth where the northern and southern trade winds meet
to create a region of almost perpetual thunderstorms. When it rains in
the basin, it is raining in
the Petén.
"The Cariaco Basin is the best climatological archive in the tropics, and since the
Maya region is clearly affected by the same climate, it was perfect for us," Haug said.
Just as important, the deeper waters of the Cariaco Basin have been
oxygen-free for 14,600 years, since rising sea levels breached natural
barriers and filled what
had been a lake, displacing fresh water, which subsequently returned
to cover the surface like a suffocating blanket. The sterile environment
allows sediment to fall
unimpeded to the bottom of the basin, where it rests undisturbed.
During the rainy season, runoff from the surrounding area deposits dark
sediments on the basin bottom. When the convergence zone migrates, the
dry season sets in,
and the sediments are lighter, composed principally of plankton from
the basin's oxygenated top layer.
Each year has a dark and a light layer, and Haug's team found that the
dark layers beginning around A.D. 750 became thinner, and then became much
thinner during
the three spiking periods of three to 10 years each.
"No one archaeological model is likely to capture completely a phenomenon
as complex as the Maya decline," the authors wrote in Science. "Nevertheless,
the
Cariaco Basin sediment record provides support for the hypothesis that
regional drought played an important role."
Demarest said, however, that the western Petén was receiving
100 inches of rainfall per year during the latter half of the 8th century,
when warfare ravaged the
region and destroyed the culture. "It's a very varied picture," Demarest
said, and no single theory fits everywhere.
Besides drought and war, scholars over the years have placed varying
degrees of blame for the Maya decline on pestilence, overpopulation, environmental
degradation and class warfare, with varying degrees of evidence.
"But that kind of theory doesn't work anymore, because we have too many
details," Demarest said. "The only approach that works is to look at it
in detail, region by
region, and hook up the cultural histories, and we are just doing that
now. These changes in the Maya took a long time -- like the decline and
fall of the Roman
Empire."
© 2003