'Game Changer': Maya Cities Unearthed In Guatemala Forest Using Lasers
By raining down laser pulses on some 770 square miles of dense forest in northern Guatemala, archaeologists have discovered 60,000 Maya structures that make up full sprawling cities.
And the new technology provides them with an unprecedented view into how the ancient civilization worked, revealing almost industrial agricultural infrastructure and new insights into Maya warfare.
"This is a game changer," says Thomas Garrison, an archaeologist at Ithaca College who is one of the leaders of the project. It changes "the base level at which we do Maya archaeology."
The data reveals that the area was three or four times more densely populated than originally thought. "I mean, we're talking about millions of people, conservatively," says Garrison. "Probably more than 10 million people."
(Score: 2) by Spamalope on Saturday February 03 2018, @07:49PM
Masters hording knowledge for competitive advantage and then dying before passing the secrets on (disease and conquest are killers) caused the same things to be discovered and lost over and over. The lack of sharing limited the scope of knowledge. The social structures that allowed sharing and preserving learning to flourish triggered the (in ecological terms) recent explosion of advancement that still seems to be accelerating. Everyone building on the best of the past is the trick that's made everything different.