Sunday, May 30, 2010



This is a bit random and irrelevant to gladiators, although I thought it was really cool!! They have used LiDAR lasers to reveal unknow buildings and roads of the Maya City of Caracol. You can see the road through the image above and what is very likely to be buildings in clusters.



Airborne lasers have "stripped" away thick rain forests to reveal new images of an ancient Maya metropolis that's far bigger than anyone had thought.

An April 2009 flyover of the Maya city of Caracol used Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) equipment—which bounces laser beams off the ground—to help scientists construct a 3-D map of the settlement in western Belize. The survey revealed previously unknown buildings, roads, and other features in just four days, scientists announced earlier this month at the International Symposium on Archaeometry in Tampa, Florida. (Read about the rise and fall of the Maya in National Geographic magazine.)

University of Central Florida anthropologists Arlen and Diane Chase have spent decades hacking through the tangled undergrowth that has engulfed the powerful city—which thrived between A.D. 550 and 900. So far they've uncovered only a tiny fraction of the ruins.

"It's like literally removing all of the plant growth, so that we can see down below," Arlen Chase said.

The Chases direct the University of Central Florida Caracol Archaeological Project, a collaborative effort with the Belize Institute of Archaeology. NASA funded the 2009 LiDAR survey, which was carried out by the National Center for Airborne Laser Mapping.

The LiDAR images also exposed clusters of buildings, industrial sites, markets, and plazas, as well as roadways that linked these areas. Some known ancient sites not previously thought to be part of Caracol are actually integrated with the massive city, the LiDAR data have revealed.
"The LiDAR is the most effective way for us to see how dense the population was, how dense the agricultural terracing was and its relationship to the housing, and just how much these ancient people modified the landscape," said team member Arlen Chase.

—Brian Handwerk

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