Circular Earthwork Krek 52/62: Recent Research on the Prehistory of Cambodia
2000
Since 1996 research on circular earthworks in the red soil region of eastern Cambodia
and adjacent Vietnam has intensiAEed. Several as yet undocumented Mimotien
sites have broadened the knowledge about the regional distribution, location, and
the layout of this site group. Within the scope of a German teaching program at the
Royal University of Fine Arts, Phnom Penh, intensive AEeldwork at Krek 52/62 and
soundings at Phoum Beng, Phoum Kampoan, and the Groslier site yielded more
detailed information on the function and the dating of circular earthworks. Typically,
the structures are situated on the top of a slight slope and are composed of an
outer wall, an inner trench, and an inner central platform lower than the surrounding
surface. The rampart could not be used as a water storage system. The elevation
at the edge of the inner plateau can no longer be interpreted as intentional construction,
but now is explained as the accumulation of an occupational layer. The
circular earthworks possess one or two entrances that are constructed either as simple
pathways or as complicated bridged systems. Both the proAEle of the sites (a steep
inner side of the outer wall and a shallow inner ditch) and the absence of artifacts
usable as weapons argue against the former interpretation as fortiAEcations. Rather,
the artifact assemblages of the sites supply evidence for villages of rice farmers.
Fragments of lithophones belong to the archaeological assemblages of two circular
earthworks. The dating of the sites to the Neolithic is questioned. First attempts of
radiocarbon dating of the organic temper of the pottery did not yield clear results.
However, a glass bracelet fragment found in situ well within the occupational layer
of Krek 52/62 gives evidence for the AErst millennium B.C. date.
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