“…Significant sub‐millennial IOM variability has been highlighted for Late Holocene South Asia (Moy et al, 2002; Ponton et al, 2012), and may have led to increasing aridity and unpredictability of rainfall in southern India (Fuller et al, 2007; Roberts et al, 2015), as well as the northern dry zone in Sri Lanka (Gilliland et al, 2013). While some palaeoenvironmental records exist for Sri Lanka, tracing the changes in monsoon intensity (Premathilake and Risberg, 2003; Premathilake and Gunatilaka, 2013; Gayantha et al, 2017; Ratnayake et al, 2017), they are poorly dated, analysed using a few palaeoenvironmental proxies, or represent environmentally and spatially isolated sites far from key centres of past and present human agriculture or urban centres. The paucity of sedimentary archives is, in part, a consequence of the fact that intense erosional surfaces are a product of the steep geomorphological setting in Sri Lanka, which limits the formation of sedimentary repositories such as natural lakes.…”