Science Smart
Mysterious Mayan collapse solved by Texas professor? New study quashes myths
Belize's Great Blue Hole, a large submarine sinkhole touted as one of the world's best snorkeling and scuba diving locations by the late undersea explorer Jacques Cousteau, may hold the defining evidence that a 100-year-drought triggered the ancient Mayan civilization's collapse in that Central American country. That's the analysis of a buzzy new study with Rice University ties.
André Droxler, earth science professor and director of the Center for the Study of Environment and Society at the Houston university, co-authored the study with a Louisiana State University instructor. Live Science shined a light on the research results.
Through a study of minerals taken from an underwater cave in the Blue Hole, the findings show that an extreme drought between A.D. 800 and A.D. 900 coincided with the Mayans' first collapse there. The Mayans moved further north to reestablish themselves, the study continues, but another major drought hit the region between 1000 and 1100 A.D., when the Mayan city of Chichen Itza (located in modern Mexico) is believed to have fallen.
Many scientists have already suggested that during the Mayan decline, shifts in the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) became the driving force behind the droughts. This monsoon weather system that generally dumps water on tropical regions of the world while drying out the subtropics may have missed the Yucatan peninsula altogether during the named time periods.
The Mayan civilization in the Yucatan peninsula had flourished from A.D. 300 to A.D. 700, as discovered through the pyramids, hieroglyphic writing system and the Mesoamerican calendar that is now infamous for its prediction the world would end in 2012. But in the following centuries, the culture fell into warfare and anarchy.
"When you have major droughts, you start to get famines and unrest," Droxler told Live Science.