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The water management network of Angkor, Cambodia
126
Citations
8
References
2008
Year
Environmental FlowHydrogeologySurplus WaterRiver Basin ManagementTonle SapEngineeringWater ResourcesWatershed ManagementEnvironmental EngineeringWater NetworkWater ManagementWater QualityHydrologyWater ReallocationWater SustainabilityWater Management Network
Meticulous survey of the banks, channels and reservoirs at Angkor shows them to have been part of a large scale water management network instigated in the ninth century AD. Water collected from the hills was stored and could have been distributed for a wide variety of purposes including flood control, agriculture and ritual while a system of overflows and bypasses carried surplus water away to the lake, the Tonle Sap, to the south. The network had a history of numerous additions and modifications. Earlier channels both distributed and disposed of water. From the twelfth century onwards the large new channels primarily disposed of water to the lake. The authors here present and document the latest definitive map of the water network of Angkor.
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