Gunung Padang Megalithic Site

Gunung Padang site.
Gunung Padang site

Gunung Padang is a megalithic site located in Karyamukti village, Cianjur regency, West Java Province of Indonesia, 50 km southwest of the city of Cianjur or 6 kilometers from Lampegan station. It has been called the largest megalithic site in all of Southeastern Asia, and has produced carbon dating results which, if confirmed, suggest it is extraordinarily old.[1] The survey believes that Gunung Padang was built in four different eras.[2]

History

The existence of the site was mentioned in Rapporten van de Oudheidkundige Dienst (ROD, "Report of the Department of Antiquities") in 1914. The Dutch historian N. J. Krom also mentioned it in 1949. Employees of the National Archeology Research Centre visited the site in 1979 for a study of its archaeology, history, and geology.

Located at 885 metres above sea level, the site covers a hill in a series of terraces bordered by retaining walls of stone that are accessed by about 400 successive andesite steps rising about 95 metres. It is covered with massive rectangular stones of volcanic origin. The Sundanese people consider the site sacred and believe it was the result of King Siliwangi's attempt to build a palace in one night. The asymmetric Punden Berundak faces northwest, to Mount Gede[3] and was constructed for the purpose of worship. Based on various dating techniques, the site was completed by 5000 BC and quite likely much earlier.[4]

The villages closest to the site are Cimanggu, Ciwangun and Cipanggulakan. Two possible routes to access the site are

At the end of June 2014, the Education and Culture Ministry stated that Gunung Padang Megalithic Site as National Site Area with 29 hectares area.[5]

On October 1, 2014, surveyors halted excavation activities temporarily due to these facts and recommendations:[6]

The 2014 excavation has been criticized for being improperly conducted.[7]

2012 survey

A survey conducted in 2012 showed the following:[8][9]

Criticism

Thirty-four Indonesian scientists signed a petition questioning the motives and methods of the Hilman-Arif team.[1] Vulcanologist Sutikno Bronto states that the site is the neck of an ancient volcano and not a man-made pyramid.[1] An unnamed archaeologist suggests that the Hilman-Arif team has "created a civilisation around the period to explain their finding".[1]

Although there is undisputed evidence of human activities at the top of Ganung Padang in the form of rearranging of natural basalt lava columns, some of the more astounding claims [1] regarding the site, namely (1) That the 20,000-year-old carbon dates prove that there was a very ancient civilization, (2) That the "pyramid" has internal chambers, and (3) That the whole mountain/hill was constructed by people, actually have non-anthropogenic explanations. First, the carbon dates (derived from drilled core samples), if accurate, could be dating material associated with an older lava flow at depth and not necessarily the timing of human presence or activities. Second, the internal chambers, presumably inferred from ground penetrating radar and seismic tomography, could be lava tubes, fractured basalt, or even possibly variation in groundwater. Finally, the argument that the whole hill was constructed is not consistent with the overall geomorphology of the area. The hill is probably a lava-capped hill, similar to the geomorphology of the surrounding area. The fact that there are terraces on the sides of the hill do not necessarily imply that the whole hill was constructed. Man-made terraces exist in many places on natural hills and mountains.

Local concerns

In September 2013, some local people who were upset by the tomography research physically assaulted three researchers, apparently out of concern that soil coring would injure the site or even contribute to risks of a landslide.[10]

References

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Coordinates: 6°59′36.5″S 107°03′22.96″E / 6.993472°S 107.0563778°E / -6.993472; 107.0563778

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