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Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumLawrence Livermore research finds early Mesoamericans affected by climate change
https://www.llnl.gov/news/lawrence-livermore-research-finds-early-mesoamericans-affected-climate-change[font face=Serif]
Cantona was one of the largest cities in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, with a population of 90,000 inhabitants at its peak. Scientists believe climate change was part of the reason the city was eventually abandoned.
[font size=5]Lawrence Livermore research finds early Mesoamericans affected by climate change[/font]
[font size=3]Scientists have reconstructed the past climate for the region around Cantona, a large fortified city in highland Mexico, and found the population drastically declined in the past, at least in part because of climate change.
The research appears in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences for the week of Jan. 26.
Lawrence Livermore researcher Susan Zimmerman and colleagues analyzed pollen, stable isotopes and elemental concentrations, which serve as proxies of past climatic and environmental conditions, from lake sediments in the region and found evidence of a regional drought between 500 and 1150 AD, about the time Cantona was abandoned.
Using Lawrence Livermores Center for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry, the team -- consisting of the University of California, Berkeley; Universidad Nacional Autonóma de Mexico; and the GFZ German Research Center for Geosciences -- dated terrestrial organic material from 12-meter-long sediment cores from the lake to establish the age control for this study. Radiocarbon dating and an age model showed that the centennial-scale arid interval between 500 and 1150 was overlaid on a long-term drying trend. The cores cover the last 6,200 years; however, the team focused on the last 3,800 years.
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Cantona was one of the largest cities in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, with a population of 90,000 inhabitants at its peak. Scientists believe climate change was part of the reason the city was eventually abandoned.
[font size=5]Lawrence Livermore research finds early Mesoamericans affected by climate change[/font]
[font size=3]Scientists have reconstructed the past climate for the region around Cantona, a large fortified city in highland Mexico, and found the population drastically declined in the past, at least in part because of climate change.
The research appears in the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences for the week of Jan. 26.
Lawrence Livermore researcher Susan Zimmerman and colleagues analyzed pollen, stable isotopes and elemental concentrations, which serve as proxies of past climatic and environmental conditions, from lake sediments in the region and found evidence of a regional drought between 500 and 1150 AD, about the time Cantona was abandoned.
Using Lawrence Livermores Center for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry, the team -- consisting of the University of California, Berkeley; Universidad Nacional Autonóma de Mexico; and the GFZ German Research Center for Geosciences -- dated terrestrial organic material from 12-meter-long sediment cores from the lake to establish the age control for this study. Radiocarbon dating and an age model showed that the centennial-scale arid interval between 500 and 1150 was overlaid on a long-term drying trend. The cores cover the last 6,200 years; however, the team focused on the last 3,800 years.
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Lawrence Livermore research finds early Mesoamericans affected by climate change (Original Post)
OKIsItJustMe
Jan 2015
OP
Climate change probably helped to hasten the end of Classic Mayan civilization...
friendly_iconoclast
Jan 2015
#1
friendly_iconoclast
(15,333 posts)1. Climate change probably helped to hasten the end of Classic Mayan civilization...
...if not actually causing it
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classic_Maya_collapse
eppur_se_muova
(36,290 posts)2. "... again." Preindustrial societies were at the mercy of climate.
Postindustrial societies are as well, but have the temporary, comfortable illusion of being able to ignore it.