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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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APNewsBreak: Man who sold ammo to Las Vegas shooter charged

February 3, 2018 by  
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An Arizona man who sold ammunition to the gunman in the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history was charged Friday with manufacturing armor-piercing bullets, according to court documents obtained by The Associated Press.

Unfired armor-piercing bullets found inside the Las Vegas hotel room where the attack was launched on Oct. 1 contained the fingerprints of ammunition dealer Douglas Haig of Arizona, according to the complaint filed in federal court in Phoenix. It says Haig didn’t have a license to manufacture armor-piercing ammunition.

The records don’t say if the ammunition was used in the attack. Haig was charged shortly before holding a news conference Friday where he said he didn’t notice anything suspicious when he sold 720 rounds of ammunition to Stephen Paddock in the weeks before the attack that killed 58 people.

Haig, a 55-year-old aerospace engineer who sold ammunition as a hobby for about 25 years, said he met Paddock at a Phoenix gun show in the weeks before the shooting and he was well-dressed and polite.

He didn’t have the quantity of tracer ammunition on hand that Paddock was seeking, so Paddock contacted him a few days later and lined up a sale at Haig’s home in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa. Tracer bullets contain a pyrotechnic charge that illuminates the path of fired bullets so shooters can see whether their aim is correct.

Haig said he was shocked and sickened when a federal agent informed him of the massacre 11 hours after it unfolded.

“I had no contribution to what Paddock did,” Haig said, adding that there was nothing unusual about the type or quantity of ammunition Paddock bought. “I had no way to see into his mind.”

Haig’s lawyer said they held the news conference in a bid to protect his reputation after he was revealed earlier this week to be a “person of interest” in the investigation. Haig’s identity emerged by mistake after his name was not redacted in court documents.

Haig arose in the investigation when a box with his name and address was found in the Mandalay Bay hotel suite where Paddock launched the attack on a music festival below.

He gave the box to Paddock to carry the 720 rounds of tracer ammunition from the sale.

Haig said Paddock told him that “he was going to go out to the desert to put on a light show, either with or for his friends. I can’t remember whether he used the word ‘with’ or ‘for.’ But he said that he was going out at night to shoot it with friends.”

He said he has received unwanted media attention and death threats since his name was released. Still, Haig, who has closed his ammunition business, said he doesn’t expect to take any legal action as a result of his name being publicly revealed.

The Las Vegas Police Department and U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives declined to comment when contacted earlier Friday.

The FBI and U.S. attorney’s office in Nevada didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

———

Follow Jacques Billeaud at www.twitter.com/jacquesbilleaud . His work can be found at https://www.apnews.com/search/jacques%20billeaud .

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