The mysterious collapse of the Maya civilization may not have been driven solely by drought after all. New evidence from lake sediments in Guatemala reveals that one key city, Itzan, enjoyed a stable climate even as its population abruptly vanished. Instead of environmental collapse, the findings point to something more complex: a tightly interconnected network of cities unraveling under pressure. As drought struck neighboring regions, wars, migration, and economic breakdown likely rippled outward, dragging even stable communities into decline.
The Verdict
ClassificationUnsure
ConfidenceMedium confidence
Analyzedtext, image
ImageLikely AI
Community Verdict
Sign in to vote
Be the first to vote on this assessment.
Embed Badge
Add this badge to your site to show the AI classification for this content.
[](https://real.press/content/1ec1035c-7e27-4cfc-8158-570d0a6300a7)