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Yappofloyd
17-08-07, 02:25 PM
Some interesting theories here. No doubt that with the explosion in tourists there is a real danger of "the past repeating itself".

Angkor complex was too big to manage, research suggests The Associated Press Thursday, August 16, 2007 IHT

PHNOM PENH: Excavations are planned at Angkor to scour for more clues about ecological problems that led to the demise of Cambodia's great ancient city, an Australian archaeologist said Thursday. "We have clear evidence now that Angkor was big enough to have caused environmental problems," Damian Evans said. "But we need finer-grained detail to determine for sure how severe those problems were, and whether or not the local population was able to deal with them or not," said Evans, deputy director of the Greater Angkor Project at the University of Sydney.

His group published its findings in this week's online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

They reveal that Angkor, during its zenith between the 9th and 14th centuries, was "the world's most extensive preindustrial low-density complex" and far larger than previously thought. It included an elaborate water management network encompassing nearly 1,000 square kilometers, or 385 square miles. Research found that the complex was too vast to manage. Extending rice fields to support a population of more than one million resulted in serious ecological problems, including deforestation, topsoil degradation and erosion.

The study's conclusions supported a theory proposed in the early 1950s by Bernard Philippe Groslier, a prominent French archaeologist, that the collapse of Angkor stemmed from overexploitation of the environment. The study produced a comprehensive digital mapping database detailing tens of thousands of individual features across nearly 3,000 square kilometers. Previously, around 800 temple sites were known in the mapped area, Evans said via e-mail, adding that the number would probably be between 950 and 1,000 once results from the excavations have been verified on the ground.

In a separate statement posted on his group's Web site, he said some of those sites and other delicate traces of great archaeological significance are under serious threat from uncontrolled development in Siem Reap Province to meet rising tourist demand. He said that the development was good for Cambodia but that proper heritage management systems must be in place so that "small local temple sites and so on can be properly excavated and studied by archaeologists before they are destroyed for modern development."

He said he also hoped that the study would give a "stimulus for greater recognition of the need to stop the illicit international trade" in Cambodian antiquities. The Angkor temples have suffered extensive destruction by nature and pillaging by looters during three decades of warfare and revolution in Cambodia. The impoverished country is now at peace, and the monuments, including the famed Angkor Wat, are the country's main tourist attractions, earning much-needed hard currency.

But in recent years, conservationists have expressed concerns about stress to the monuments from tourist traffic. Evans's study should lead to more vigilance in Cambodia's efforts to conserve its centuries-old heritage, an official of the Apsara Authority, the government agency managing the site, said Wednesday. The official, Soeung Kong, said what happened to ancient Angkor in the past "appears to be repeating itself now" and thus highlights current challenges in managing and conserving the temples. "Since we are aware of this, we have to take measures to prevent it from worsening or to minimize the impact as much as possible," he said.

GWR
10-11-07, 07:38 PM
I guess this is part of the present initiative to prevent the wholesale looting of Angkor Wat:

November 10, 2007 17:44 PM
Cambodia To Open National Museum In Siem Reap

PHNOM PENH, Nov 10 (Bernama) -- A national museum designed to display the Khmer culture will be opened next Monday in the capital town of Cambodia's Siem Reap Province, China's Xinhua news agency reported quoting a government statement released on Saturday.

The Angkor National Museum, covering 20,000 square metres and built with the Khmer architecture style, will highlight the cultural heritage of the Khmer nationality through a rich collection of artifacts and multimedia exhibition, said the statement.

Siem Reap province, where the world-renowned Angkor Wat temples are situated, is the kingdom's top tourism destination. The museum is expected to become another cultural landmark for the province, the release said.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen is scheduled to preside over the museum's inauguration ceremony.

It will function as a complete tourism facility and education site for future generations to know about the kingdom's history, the statement added.

-- BERNAMA
http://www.bernama.com.my/

GWR
03-01-08, 12:57 PM
http://www.mekongexpress.com/cambodia/general/maps/map_siemreap.jpg
[Map: http://www.mekongexpress.com/cambodia/general/maps]

This 1:50,000 American military map scan from 1965 shows the course of an abandoned railway heading South towards Tonle Sap lake. The lake port at Chong Khneas is about 20 kms. distant to the South, so this line was probably just used to move lake barge cargo to-and-from the town.

I'll look to see if it turns up on 1:250,000 maps of that era.

OK! Take a look at this crop of a 1:250,000 American military map of the 1950s:

http://img162.imageshack.us/my.php?image=txuoclc6535632nd48102ndfk2.jpg

The narrow gauge (Less than meter gauge!) line is now about 20 Kms. long and extends North into a military base (see also top map). Going South, it appears to stop short of the lake at a hill. Unless, of course, it runs so close to the lake road, or even down the middle of it, that the cartographer decided to omit the line. So what is it? Is there a rock quarry at the hill which is used for renovation stone for Angkor Wat (also shown). Is it cargo transport from the lake to the city? Or is it a military line from the base to an arsenal buried in the hill?

Am I missing something here? The following weblink makes several references to Siem Reap Railway Station, but as far as I know the nearest station lies south of Tonle Sap lake:

Location of Bopha Angkor Hotel in Siem Reap is strategically at the center of the city. Siem Reap Railway station and the airport is easily accessible. The station is also nearby for your convenience. Bopha Angkor Hotel in Siem Reap is ideal for business tourists and leisure tourists.
http://www.asiarooms.com/cambodia/siem_reap/bopha_angkor-hotel.html

GWR
30-01-08, 03:49 PM
Thailand to provide electricity for Angkor Wat

The Export-Import Bank of Thailand and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) have agreed to provide 14 million dollars to finance the construction of transmission lines across the Thai-Cambodian border, EXIM Thailand announced Wednesday.

"The construction undertaken by (Cambodia) Power Transmission Lines Company Limited aims to supply electricity for the growing industrial and tourism sectors in Cambodia," bank president Apichai Boontherawara.

The banks have joined with Advisors/Arco Capital Management Family of Funds (Arco) and Cambodia's Foreign Trade Bank (FTB) to provide a total of 20 million dollars to finance the power transmission lines construction for electricity imports from Thailand.

The total package, with 7 million from EXIM Thailand and ADB, 4 million from Arco and 2 million from FTB, will finance the construction of 115-kilovolt double-circuit transmission lines running approximately 221 kilometers from Thailand's Aranyaprathet district in Sa Kaeo province to Banteay Meanchey, Battambang and Siem Reap in Cambodia, home to the famed Angkor Wat temple complex. dpa

Link may expire:
http://www.bangkokpost.com/breaking_news/breakingnews.php?id=125583

GWR
08-07-08, 01:00 PM
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Cambodian artefacts to fatten the pocket of a Siamese company
Cambodians criticise Angkor National Museum for Thai influence and cultural mire
Tuesday, 8 July 2008
e-Travel Blackboard

The lack of remaining artefacts at Cambodia’s archaeological treasure, Angkor, has often been blamed for diminishing the overall experience, which explains why a Thai company, Vilailuck, has opened the Angkor National Museum.

The loss of artefacts is partly attributed to looting over the centuries, appropriation by the colonial ruler for French museums, or mere relocation to the National Museum in Cambodia.

Though the treasures may remain within the country, the National Museum is over 185 miles from Angkor, which encouraged Vilailuck to rectify the issue by opening the nearby Angkor National Museum.

The Angkor National Museum has borrowed almost 1000 Buddhas from the national Museum, but has been the object of significant criticism since its unveiling in October.

Whilst some find fault with the aesthetic appeal of the museum, and its commercial retail area, others query its historical relevance, as hundreds of featured Buddhas are no older than the past century.

A significant condemnation arises from the Thai involvement, as Cambodians are fiercely protective of Angkor since it was once under Thai control, according to the New York Times.

Wall images were once looted from the 12th century Banteay Chhmar temple which neighbours the Thai border, and returned to Cambodia by Thai police in 1999. Anti-Thai riots followed in 2003, when a Thai actress claimed her home country still owned Angkor.

These issues, as well as the fact that Vilailuck is “primarily interested in turning a profit,” according to historian Darryl Collins, have heightened the displeasure with the museum in Cambodia.

However, this criticism has impacted the Thai company, who spent US$15 million on the project. The managing director of the museum, Sunaree Wongpiyabovom, pointed out that Vilailuck tripled their initial investment in the project, and did not anticipate any earnings for a decade.

Wongpiyabovom claims “We want to educate Cambodian people about their own history.”

It is especially for those “who know little about its monuments, and even less of the progress of Buddhism and what led up to it.”

The contract between Vilailuck and the Cambodian government transfers control of the museum to the government after 30 years, in exchange for the right to borrow artefacts from the National Museum and the Conservation d’Angkor.

However, the original plan loaned almost 1000 artefacts during the 30 years, when Khun Samen was the director of the National Museum, whereas his successor, Hab Touch, will only permit 23 major pieces to be shared.

His explanation claims “I am not going to surrender important pieces that should be permanently displayed here for the integrity of the collection.”

UNESCO have been generally supportive of the museum which accompanies one of their World Heritage sites, but one of the advisers to UNESCO, Azedine Beschaouch, concurs with the criticism of the retail area.

Vilailuck promoted the area as a ‘cultural mall’, but Beschaouch believes “this seems to have been foremost in the mind of the designers, while the collection came second.”

The museum has rallied against criticism, claiming that it requires further time to develop itself. The Cambodian curator, Chann Charouen, has instigated plans to rotate artefacts and introduce new displays from provincial museums within the nation.

It is hoped that the criticism amongst scholars and the like will influence the museum to embrace its mandate as a National Museum to compliment the wonders of Angkor, instead of remaining little more than a commercialised tourist experience.
http://ki-media.blogspot.com/2008/07/cambodian-artefacts-to-fatten-pocket-of.html