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Mayan Empire collapse cause discovered


guy

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Researchers (pictured below) now believe, after examining stalagmites from a cave in the Yucatán, that the collapse of the Mayan Empire may have resulted from a series of droughts. Studies show there were eight wet-season droughts lasting at least three years each, including one that persisted for 13 consecutive years between 871 AD and 1021 AD. Deforestation was worsened by drought and extensive logging.

 

🌧️ Key Findings

Researchers from the University of Cambridge and collaborators analyzed stalagmites from caves in the Yucatán Peninsula to reconstruct detailed rainfall patterns between 871 and 1100 CE—during the Terminal Classic period of Maya history. Their findings reveal:

At least eight multi-year droughts, including one lasting 13 consecutive years.

44 years of severe drought during the last two centuries of the Maya civilization

These droughts coincided with significant societal disruptions, including city abandonments, halted monument building, and dynastic collapses.

🧪 Methodology

Scientists conducted oxygen isotope analysis on stalagmites from the Grutas Tzabnah cave system.

Unlike lake sediments, stalagmites enable season-by-season climate reconstruction, revealing precise timing and severity of droughts.

The stalagmite layers functioned like tree rings, recording rainfall data nearly month by month, which is essential for understanding agricultural impacts..

🏛️ Historical Implications

The droughts coincided with gaps in monument inscriptions and political activity, especially at sites like Chichén Itzá, Labna, and Uxmal.

While some cities like Chichén Itzá may have prospered temporarily because of trade networks and centralized governance, others were abandoned or declined.

The longest drought (929–942 CE) probably overwhelmed even the Maya’s sophisticated water management systems.

🌽 Agricultural Impact

The Maya relied heavily on maize, which is sensitive to rainfall during the wet season.

Extreme droughts could cut crop yields to only 10% of usual levels, risking food security.

Some scholars suggest the Maya might have used drought-resistant perennial plants, but the study highlights the vulnerability of their staple crops.

🧩 Broader Significance

This research provides a detailed climate-historical framework for understanding how environmental stress can destabilize complex societies.

It also provides opportunities to study tropical storm frequency and other climate phenomena through cave formations.

 

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Quote

Portion of the stalagmite studied. The image has been flipped horizontally to make it easier to see the successive calcite layers. The variations also indicate changes in rainfall patterns.

 

 

https://www.cam.ac.uk/stories/mexico-cave-maya-drought

 

https://thedebrief.org/new-clues-to-the-mysterious-fall-of-the-mayan-civilization-have-been-unearthed-deep-within-a-yucatan-cave/

 

https://english.elpais.com/science-tech/2025-08-13/the-mayan-civilization-experienced-44-years-of-drought-in-its-last-two-centuries.html

Edited by guy
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Ancients, the Egyptians and Sumerians, for example, knew about the cyclic nature of weather, and they planned for it, the general rule was to store seven yr's worth of grain for the inevitable dry yrs. When a society is accustomed to a certain level of ag yield each year, it's population grows to match that food supply (it reaches its carrying capacity)...If that yield suddenly falls &/or it remains lower for an extended stretch, the population will fall to match the new carrying capacity.....That population collapse can get ugly.

Remember the bjg, round Aztec calendar that predicted the End of the World in 2012?....There was a cartoon that pictured that calender sitting before the king on his throne and a guy with a hammer & chisel behind the stone saying "It only goes up to 2012 because I ran out of stone."

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On 8/18/2025 at 6:19 AM, guidoLaMoto said:

Remember the bjg, round Aztec calendar that predicted the End of the World in 2012?.


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