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above The spectacular pyramids at Tikal rising above the Guatemalan rainforest. For centuries, such dense foliage has kept the Maya secrets well, but an extensive LiDAR survey has revealed just how much lies shrouded under the canopy.
reveal subtle features barely visible to the human eye. Given the Maya presence, and the challenges that rainforests pose to traditional survey methods, it seemed certain that PACUNAM’s project would pay off, but even measured against these high hopes the results have been extraordinary. From a survey area of 2,144km2, split into ten blocks, over 60,000 new structures have been detected, including entire previously unknown settlements, as well as 105km of causeways and 59km of fortifications. Even at a well-known, and well-visited, site like Tikal, two new pyramids – previously thought to be natural features – were identified. In the years since receiving this data bonanza, archaeologists have been energetically testing what it all means.
In the jungle The difficulty spotting on the ground some of the features documented by the LiDAR survey, even when their exact position is known, testifies to how effective the method is. ‘Things like roads, earthworks, and agricultural features are all elements that are very hard to pick out because they are long linear structures that run out of your field of vision,’ explains Tom Garrison, Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Ithaca College. ‘They are simply bigger features than you can make out in the jungle. In that sense, there is no way to equal the perspective that LiDAR provides. Since 2012, I have been directing a project examining a city called El Zotz, which is 22km from Tikal. I went out to look at a newly discovered causeway nearby, and took a very high-resolution GPS that contained all of the data. Even then, when I was standing on the causeway, it was a case of thinking, “Well, I guess I’m on it.” Once I had got myself grounded and looked around carefully, I could see that there was a very slight rise. But if I had been out there doing regular mapping methods, I never would have spotted it.’
‘We were confident that there would be something special in the LiDAR data, but nothing prepared us for the sheer density of Maya activity that showed up. Because of the scale of the survey, we’re not just looking at individual sites anymore: we’re looking at patterns across an entire landscape. One element of this is the causeways. We use this term to define roads within sites, say www.world-archaeology.com
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