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By Chris Baraniuk
Inaccessible or easily missed on
the ground, ancient Maya ruins are increasingly spotted with the help of
satellite imagery – but the process isn’t always fool-proof.
Some of the most magnificent Maya
murals ever found – dating to 100BC – were discovered deep in the jungle of San Bartolo,
It was obvious that San Bartolo
had more to offer – but the jungle was thick.
“It’s really dangerous walking
through the jungle to find sites – it’s really humid, there are snakes,”
explains Diane Davies, Honorary Research Associate at the
“Honestly, you can be literally
seven or eight metres away from a pyramid and in the jungle you can’t see it
because [the vegetation is] so thick,” says Davies. However, through the
analysis of satellite imagery, previously hidden archaeological sites can be
found.
Davies recalls the assistance of
Nasa scientist Thomas Sever who was later able to identify all sorts of
fascinating features – including a lost Maya pyramid – from satellite images. Because many Maya
buildings were constructed with limestone, the chemical composition around
ruins has been altered over time – this shows up in some imagery.
When scanning areas for
archaeological remains, different wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum
can be used to reveal patterns on the ground, says Geoffrey Braswell, at the
Light detection and ranging
(Lidar), which uses lasers, may also be deployed to measure the topography.
“If you are flying over a canopy
most of those beams going down get reflected off leaves and other things and
don’t reach the ground – but some of them do,” says Braswell. “That allows us
to see unique features on the ground.”
But Lidar is expensive and, for
many years, was an inaccessible technology only used by the military. Braswell
would love to use it to scan entire regions of
There are other issues too. Most
Maya scholars agree that sites detected by remote sensing should definitely be
confirmed by expeditions on the ground.
This is because a lot of apparent
discoveries often turn out to be nothing of interest – a field rather than the
outline or a building, or something manmade much more recently than an ancient
ruin.
“In the northern part of the Maya
area in
However, most agree that the
benefits such technologies have made to archaeology are stunning. Some fabulous
sites have been uncovered that could otherwise have gone unnoticed – and in
some cases years have potentially been shaved off the effort to explore dense
forest regions.