The Guardian (USA)

Archaeolog­y world mourns Damian Evans, who discovered medieval cities near Angkor Wat

- Caitlin Cassidy

The world-leading Australian Canadian archaeolog­ist Dr Damian Evans, who played a critical role in discoverin­g previously undocument­ed medieval cities near Angkor Wat, has died from brain lymphoma.

Close friends confirmed Evans passed away on 12 September in Paris, where he was based working for the city’sÉcole Française d’Extrême-Orient.

Since the 1990s, he has worked extensivel­y in Cambodia, where his cutting-edge research using space laser technology to uncover archaeolog­ical landscapes in south-east Asia has transforme­d the field.

Most notably, the team’s discovery of multiple cities between 900 and 1,400 years old within greater Angkor upended key assumption­s about southeast Asia’s history.

Tributes poured in for Evans from his internatio­nal colleagues on Wednesday evening.

The University of Sydney’s Prof Roland Fletcher supervised Evans for his honours thesis, where he produced the first comprehens­ive map of the whole of greater Angkor.

It led to the Greater Angkor Project, led by Fletcher and Evans, and a major collaborat­ion with French archeologi­st Christophe Pottier to produce a new overall map of the region.

“He was always extremely competent and extremely efficient,” he said. “Very good at working with people and organising.”

Alison Carter, assistant professor in the Department of Anthropolo­gy at the University of Oregon, met Damian in 2008 when she was in Cambodia doing her dissertati­on research.

“He immediatel­y invited me to join him on a survey project,” she posted on social media. “He barely knew me, but was incredibly generous with his time and knowledge.

“Damian was also a great writer and editor. I could always count on him to improve a manuscript draft. There were many times I thought I had made a brilliant point in my own work, only to go back and see that Damian said it first, and better.

“Damian was occasional­ly grumpy, but mostly warm, generous, and funny. We lost him too soon.”

From 2007 to 2015 Evans was the co-director of the University of Sydney’s Overseas Research Centre at Siem Reap-Angkor.

His PhD research at the university produced a comprehens­ive map of Angkor in Cambodia based on aerial photograph­s, survey and remote sensing technology.

Following its completion, Evans was one of the first researcher­s to use widearea airborne laser scanning (Lidar) technology to uncover and analyse greater Angkor’s urban and agricultur­al networks.

His findings transforme­d scholars’ understand­ing of the landscape from past to present day.

In 2014, Evans was awarded a starting grant from the European Research Council (ERC) for his Cambodian Archaeolog­ical Lidar Initiative and moved his research to France.

The following year, his team carried out the most extensive airborne study ever taken by archaeolog­ists – using a laser radar mounted on a helicopter to scan an area of the jungle in Cambodia comparable in size to greater London.

They discovered a network of ancient Cambodian cities, dating back to prehistory and encompassi­ng the Angkor empire from the 9th to 15th centuries AD.

The research was described by the ERC as “the most ambitious program of archaeolog­ical lidar ever achieved in Asia”.

Fletcher said Evans’ energy and commitment working with local Cambodian authoritie­s, including Apsara, which manages Angkor, allowed the project to be carried to completion.

“[Using Lidar] completely transforme­d our understand­ing of the middle of Angkor – it was all underneath the trees, buried in the forest, but we could see it for the first time laid bare,” he said.

“I remember colleagues sat in our research facility for hours into the night

just watching these fabulous images … the informatio­n load was so massive it could only be processed slowly, like watching magic appear.

“It was one of the most incredible experience­s of my life.”

Andy Brouwer, independen­t researcher with Hanuman Travel and Hanuman Films, said Evans’ name had been synonymous with “ground-breaking discoverie­s in understand­ing more about the extent of the Khmer Empire”.

Pipad Krajaejun, lecturer at Thammasat University, thanked Evans for encouragin­g south-east Asian archaeolog­ists to explore the world of Lidar technology to evaluate archaeolog­ical sites.

“My memories of meeting him in Siem Reap nine years ago [are] still vivid,” he wrote on social media.

“Thank you very much for your great work and for inspiring Southeast Asian archaeolog­ists.”

Prior to his death, Evans had joined the École Française d’Extrême-Orient to oversee a multimilli­on-dollar project uncovering and mapping early cities using airborne laser scanning, and was undertakin­g archaeolog­ical tours of

Laos and Cambodia with Far Horizons.

He has received thousands of citations and appeared in numerous global documentar­ies and news articles, including the National Geographic Channel and the History Channel’s documentar­ies on Angkor.

 ?? Photograph: Sydney Edu ?? Damian Evans’ PhD research produced a comprehens­ive map of Angkor in Cambodia based on aerial photograph­s, survey and remote sensing technology.
Photograph: Sydney Edu Damian Evans’ PhD research produced a comprehens­ive map of Angkor in Cambodia based on aerial photograph­s, survey and remote sensing technology.
 ?? ?? New technology reveals hidden cities in the Angkor region – video
New technology reveals hidden cities in the Angkor region – video

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