All about the ancient tribes
Around the same time that the Maya started to go extinct, a severe drought hit the area. And around the time of their collapse, the Maya had chopped down the majority of the trees across wide swathes of land in order to create fields for growing maize in order to feed their rapidly expanding population. This was done in order to sustain their culture.
In a study that was published on Monday (August 20) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, this group writes that the collapse and abandonment of the Central Maya Lowlands in the Yucatán peninsular region in the ninth century were the result of complex human–environment interactions. This study was published.
And around the time of their collapse, the Maya had chopped down the majority of the trees across wide swathes of land in order to create fields for growing maize in order to feed their rapidly expanding population. This was done in order to sustain their culture. In addition to that, they cut down trees to use for building materials and firewood.