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‘Game Changer’: Maya Cities Unearthed In Guatemala Forest Using Lasers

February 3, 2018 by  
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A LiDAR image from Tikal, the most important Maya city.

PACUNAM/Marcello Canuto Luke Auld-Thomas


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PACUNAM/Marcello Canuto Luke Auld-Thomas

A LiDAR image from Tikal, the most important Maya city.

PACUNAM/Marcello Canuto Luke Auld-Thomas

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.”

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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.”

The researchers fired LiDAR technology, short for “Light Detection and Ranging,” down at the dense forest from an airplane. This research was organized by the PACUNAM LiDAR Initiative, and Garrison says the area’s size is “more than double any other survey that’s been done with this technology.”

“As it flies the laser pulses hundreds of thousands of times per second,” Garrison adds. “And every time one of those lasers hits a point of resistance it stops and sends back a measurement to the plane.”

Some of these pulses make it all the way down to the forest floor. The data is then used to visually strip away trees and plants, ultimately mapping only the structures that have been hidden by jungle. You can think of it as digital deforestation.

Visualization of separate LiDAR layers of the forest cover and of vegetation-free ground surface of the site of El Zotz.

PACUNAM/Thomas Garrison


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PACUNAM/Thomas Garrison

LiDAR allows scientists to accomplish years or even decades worth of mapping in a single afternoon. For example, Garrison says he was part of a team that worked for some eight years to map less than a square mile at a site called El Zotz. The plane using LiDAR took data for 67 square miles in a matter of hours.

“It’s very humbling,” says Garrison. “For those of us that spent our lives mapping and slogging around this area … you just sort of have to bow before the LiDAR and accept the fact that it’s better than you are.”

The team surveyed 10 separate areas. It took months to process the data. As the picture became clearer, Garrison said he would sent emails to his colleagues expressing surprise at the magnitude.

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He recalls seeing an initial image of one area in northern Guatemala. “I saw this image and I said, the whole area is covered in Maya settlement. You won’t believe it,” he adds. “And then once we got the actual data and saw the whole scope of it. We said, ‘Wow, we’re going to be able to really do something with this.’”

Together, they are able to weave together a picture of individual city-states and their vast support network.

“Everything is amplified and made much clearer for us and we see how it all fits together in a way that we have not seen before,” he says. “We’re seeing it all laid bare, and saying, ‘OK, this is how all of this was connected and came together.’”

Archeologists, for example, knew that the Maya had agricultural fields. But he says this data show “huge, huge expanses of these irrigated field systems in these low lying swamps.”

And they knew that the Maya fought, often with each other, because defensive walls had been previously spotted. But this new information reveals “Maya fortresses and systems of interconnected watchtowers,” raising the possibility of more sophisticated and large-scale warfare.

The civilization had a network of raised causeways stretching “many, many kilometers.” They also were “channeling water for hundreds of meters or modifying hilltops so they become these impregnable areas.”

The picture this paints, he says, is one that is to some extent more advanced than previously thought: “This is like landscape engineering. They have molded the world around them to serve their purposes and survive.”

A 3D view of Tikal, the major Maya city.

PACUNAM/Marcello Canuto Luke Auld-Thomas


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PACUNAM/Marcello Canuto Luke Auld-Thomas

The most important Maya city, Tikal, was found to be three or four times larger than the scientists had thought, with a previously undiscovered pyramid in its center. And Garrison adds that they’re not totally sure they’ve surveyed the entire extent of that city.

Suddenly having a broad view allows archaeologists to ask many new questions, he says. And there’s plenty of forest to still explore — the study area is a fraction of the total area where the Maya lived.

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Pentagon unveils new nuclear weapons strategy, ending Obama-era push to reduce US arsenal

February 3, 2018 by  
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The Pentagon released a new nuclear arms policy Friday that calls for the introduction of two new types of weapons, effectively ending Obama-era efforts to reduce the size and scope of the U.S. arsenal and minimize the role of nuclear weapons in defense planning. 

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said in an introductory note to the new policy — the first update to the military’s nuclear strategy since 2010 — that the changes reflect a need to “look reality in the eye” and “see the world as it is, not as we wish it to be.”

 The previous administration’s policy hinged on what President Barack Obama called a moral obligation for the United States to lead by example in ridding the world of nuclear weapons. Officials in the Trump administration and the U.S. military argue that Obama’s approach proved overly idealistic, particularly as relations with Moscow soured. Russia, China and North Korea, they say, all advanced their nuclear weapons capabilities instead of following suit.

“Over the past decade, while the United States has led the world in these reductions, every one of our potential nuclear adversaries has been pursuing the exact opposite strategy,” Deputy Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette said at a Pentagon news conference, explaining why the United States is changing course. “These powers are increasing the numbers and types of nuclear weapons in their arsenal.”

The new nuclear weapons policy follows on Donald Trump’s promise before taking office to expand and strengthen U.S. nuclear capabilities. President Trump also vowed during his State of the Union address Tuesday to build a nuclear arsenal “so strong and powerful that it will deter any acts of aggression.” 

The threats have changed dramatically since the last time the Pentagon updated its nuclear weapons policy, with Russia reemerging as a geopolitical foe. North Korea, meanwhile, has edged closer to possessing a missile capable of striking the U.S. mainland with a nuclear warhead, bringing the prospect of nuclear war back to the forefront of the American psyche for the first time since the Cold War. 

Trump’s perceived volatility has raised more concerns among Americans about the president’s exclusive authority to order a nuclear attack. His warning last summer that he would unleash “fire and fury like the world has never seen” on North Korea marked a rare public threat by a U.S. president to use nuclear weapons.

The policy unveiled Friday envisions the introduction of “low-yield nukes” on submarine-launched ballistic missiles. Despite being called “low yield,” such weapons could cause roughly as much damage as the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan, depending on their size.

Russia possesses a wide variety of small nuclear weapons that the United States mostly lacks. The Pentagon worries Moscow could seize part or all of a U.S. ally state and then detonate one in a “limited nuclear attack” to prevent American troops from coming to the rescue. Washington would be forced to choose between launching a much larger-scale nuclear attack on Russia or responding with less substantial conventional arms. The Pentagon says it wants a proportionate weapon to match.

John C. Rood, undersecretary of defense for policy, said the United States would not be increasing the number of warheads in its stockpile, which has contained other low-yield weapons for years.

In a veiled reference to Russia, Rood said the new low-yield missiles would ensure that adversaries “do not come to the mistaken impression” they can use small battlefield nuclear weapons because “we don’t have credible response options.”

The new Pentagon policy also outlines longer-term plans to reintroduce a nuclear submarine-launched cruise missile called an SLCM (or “slick-em”), which the administration of President George H.W. Bush stopped deploying and the Obama administration ordered removed from the arsenal.

Officials say the SLCM would reassure Japan and South Korea in the face of threats from North Korea and put pressure on Russia to stop violating the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty. Unlike with the low-yield weapon, which the Pentagon plans to develop quickly, the SLCM’s reintroduction could be many years away.

The Pentagon confirmed its commitment to the modernization of the U.S. nuclear force that Obama approved in 2010 in exchange for Senate ratification of the New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or New START. The military will introduce new bombers, submarines and intercontinental ballistic missiles, as well as a new cruise missile for the bomber. The Congressional Budget Office estimates the plan will cost about $1.2 trillion over 30 years.

After a draft of the new policy leaked in mid-January, disarmament advocates assailed the Trump administration for pursuing what they described as unnecessary new nuclear weapons that could start an arms race and increase the likelihood of nuclear war.

Critics also accused the Defense Department of lowering the threshold for what might provoke a U.S. nuclear strike by mentioning cyberattacks in the list of non-nuclear strategic threats. 

At the Pentagon, officials denied those accusations. They said the new policy, if anything, raises the threshold for nuclear strikes. They reiterated the Pentagon’s long-standing policy that says nuclear weapons can be used only in “extreme circumstances.”

The return of “great power competition” with Russia and threats from China, North Korea and Iran render progress toward any weapons reductions at this time “extremely challenging,” the new policy says.  

Alex Bell, an Obama administration official and disarmament advocate at the Arms Control Association, criticized the Pentagon for effectively abandoning the quest for nuclear reductions, saying it is treating the goal of eliminating nuclear weapons that Obama heralded in a 2009 speech in Prague as “an afterthought.”

“You have a clear message to the world that this administration is not interested in leading global efforts to reduce nuclear threats,” Bell said. She warned that Trump’s boasting about an expanding U.S. nuclear arsenal could set off “a new nuclear arms race.” 

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