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Unearthing an Atlantean myth in Angkor: geoarchaeological investigation of the ‘underwater road’ crossing the Tonle Sap Lake,Cambodia
Authors:C Pottier  D Penny  M Hendrickson  EA Carter
Institution:1. École française d''Extrême-Orient, 22 av. Pdt Wilson, 75116 Paris, France;2. School of Geosciences, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia;3. Department of Archaeology, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia;4. Vibrational Spectroscopy Facility, School of Chemistry, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
Abstract:Of the many myths surrounding the medieval city of Angkor, Cambodia, one of the most obscure but pervasive is the existence of a road built across the Tonle Sap Lake. This road supposedly ran from the Angkorian ‘port’ at Phnom Krom to the temples situated in the Battambang district some 70 km southwest of capital. New geoarchaeological information demonstrates that the ‘road’ is actually a series of localised occurrences of authegenic calcite, which probably formed approximately 5500 years Before Present. Our results demystify this intractable Cambodian legend expand on the dynamic history of this important water body in mainland Southeast Asia.
Keywords:Archaeology  Geoarchaeology  Myth  Road  Transport system  Angkor  Tonle Sap Lake  Cambodia
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