SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA—The Khmer Times reports that a team of archaeologists led by Chea Socheat of Cambodia’s Apsara National Authority discovered a large turtle sculpted from sandstone at the Kandal Srah Srang temple of Siem Reap province’s Angkor Archaeological Park. Socheat said the statue, which measures approximately 22 by 37 inches, is estimated to be about 1,000 years old, and may have been used in the preparation of offerings to the Hindu god Vishnu associated with the Sea of Milk churning ceremony. A rectangular mark on the turtle’s shell resembles a lid, suggesting something may have been kept inside it. “The turtle is known as one of the avatars of the Hindu god Vishnu," said Socheat. "Sometimes, turtles are placed as a votive object in a temple’s foundations or at its center." A white crystal stone also thought to have been used in Vishnu rituals, two metal tridents, and a carved head of a naga, a part human, part-serpentine being, were also found. To read about a bodhisattva statue recently unearthed at Angkor, go to "Around the World: Cambodia."
Turtle Statue Discovered in Cambodia
News May 7, 2020
Recommended Articles
Letter From Cambodia January/February 2015
Storied Landscape
Through centuries—and perhaps even millennia—of cultural, political, and environmental change, Phnom Kulen has retained its central role in the spiritual life of a people
Letter From Cambodia March/April 2013
The Battle Over Preah Vihear
A territorial dispute involving a 1,100-year-old Khmer temple on the Thai-Cambodian border turns violent
Digs & Discoveries May/June 2012
Drought Doomed Angkor?
in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a sediment core taken from the West Baray reveals evidence of an extended drought in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
-
Features March/April 2020
Remembering the Shark Hunters
Unique burials show how ancient Peruvians celebrated dangerous deep-sea expeditions
(Courtesy Gabriel Prieto) -
Letter from the Four Corners March/April 2020
In Search of Prehistoric Potatoes
Native peoples of the American Southwest dined on a little-known spud at least 10,000 years ago
(©2020/Jerry Redfern) -
Artifacts March/April 2020
Gravettian "Venus" Figure
(Courtesy INRAP) -
Digs & Discoveries March/April 2020
Ancient Academia
(© The Trustees of the British Museum)