Kimpulan (; also known as Pustakasala temple) is a 9th to 10th century Hindu temple located in the area of Islamic University of Indonesia (UII) library in Kaliurang road, Sleman Regency, Special Region of Yogyakarta, Indonesia. The temple was buried about underground. Parts of the temple have been excavated to reveal square andesite stone walls and statues of Ganesha, Nandi, and Lingam-Yoni.
Kimpulan (; also known as Pustakasala temple) is a 9th to 10th century Hindu temple located in the area of Islamic University of Indonesia (UII) library in Kaliurang road, Sleman Regency, Special Region of Yogyakarta, Indonesia. The temple was buried about underground. Parts of the temple have been excavated to reveal square andesite stone walls and statues of Ganesha, Nandi, and Lingam-Yoni.
==Discovery== thumb|250px|The Pustakasala Hindu temple excavation site in 2010, nearby is the UII's Ulil Albab Mosque. The temple was accidentally discovered on 11 December 2009 during land excavations to lay foundations for the construction of a new university library. The discovery drew public attention and sparked excitement and curiosity. The news instantly drew many visitors to the site. The Archaeology office (BP3) in Yogyakarta feared that large numbers of curious visitors would harm the excavation site, and feared looting might take place. So to prevent harm to the site, the area was surrounded with tin fences and closed; it is off-limits for visitors.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).