From Ruins to Ancient Farming, Lidar Technology Helps Reveal Ancient Societies

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From Ruins to Ancient Farming, Lidar Technology Helps Reveal Ancient Societies
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Archaeologists are using lidar technology to map out sites in South America, revealing more insight to ancient cultures.

And now, using light detection and ranging, lidar for short, developed for NASA, archaeologists are mapping more hidden ruins than ever before.In 1929, Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh assisted Carnegie Institute archaeologists with an aerial expedition over Central America. As they flew a Sikorsky S38 over Mayan ruins, thetheir sites of interest from above for the first time and search for new ones in a matter of hours.

With the applications of lidar at the Belize city of Caracol, researchers mapped some 500,000 acres. Perceptions of tropical forests as completely wild jungles, devoid of complex civilizations – or even the possibility of creating one in its landscape – have shaped the field’s questions for generations. The Chases’ map revealed the tallest man-made building in Belize, as well as monuments, houses, terraces, roads, causeways and highways.

of human-modified landscapes of the Casarabe culture that represent what he calls “tropical low-density urbanism” previously not known.about shared connections across equatorial forests going back some 50,000 years. He has found evidence in the Amazon and Southeast Asia that nomadic people were manipulating the forest. Fossilized pollen and seeds change through time, showing evidence of controlled burns.

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