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Judi Lynn

(160,527 posts)
Fri Apr 30, 2021, 06:59 PM Apr 2021

Details of stunning Maya acropolises and sophisticated civilization revealed by laser scans


By Laura Geggel - Editor about 9 hours ago

This is the first evidence of terracing in the Puuc region.



A 3D digital image of Labna, an ancient Maya structure in the Puuc region. (Image credit: Courtesy of the Proyecto Arqueológico Regional de Bolonchén)


By shooting billions of lasers at the ground, scientists have uncovered evidence of a sophisticated civilization left by the ancient Maya who lived in the northern Yucatán Peninsula in what is now Mexico, a new study finds.

The laser survey revealed that in a region of the hilly northern Yucatán, known as the Puuc (pronounced "Pook&quot , the Maya built remarkable structures, including artificial reservoirs, more than 1,200 ovens, a handful of terraces for farming and nearly 8,000 platforms where houses were built. The ancient Maya also quarried the rock there, the laser scan revealed.

"It seems to have been a very prosperous area because we have all these masonry [stone] houses," study lead researcher William Ringle, a professor emeritus of anthropology at Davidson College in North Carolina, told Live Science. "It seems like people had access to what they needed."

Moreover, the Maya in the Puuc built four large acropolises dating to the Middle Formative period (700 B.C. to 450 B.C.) and civic centers dating to A.D. 600 to 750, during the Late Classic. While these structures were already documented, an analysis of the laser data revealed that these Puuc communities had a distinct city layout that isn't seen in other Maya regions.

More:
https://www.livescience.com/lidar-maya-yucatan.html
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Details of stunning Maya acropolises and sophisticated civilization revealed by laser scans (Original Post) Judi Lynn Apr 2021 OP
messed up post MuseRider Apr 2021 #1
I love how they are finding areas like this. MuseRider Apr 2021 #2
You picked some powerful places to visit! I have poured over the images of both areas so many times. Judi Lynn May 2021 #3

MuseRider

(34,108 posts)
2. I love how they are finding areas like this.
Fri Apr 30, 2021, 07:20 PM
Apr 2021

I love how they use the lasers in the jungles too to find ancient civilization areas. I have not been to many areas like this. Mexico City and the surrounding areas I have seen. The only other was Copan in Honduras and that was right after they opened it up partially. There was nobody there but the scientists and my little dive group. They also were still digging out burial areas so we were not allowed in that space. It was a breathtaking day in many ways. To stand there and see the football stadium (I think that is what they call those areas) and the stone steps/seats and think about all I have read and what our person told us I get chills.

It is wonderful to see this. Discoveries of the past are fascinating. Thank you once again for your wonderful posts.

I just went to a site to see what it looks like now. We were there in the late 1980's it is now huge and beautiful, oh how I would love to go back! Again Judy Lunn, thanks.

Judi Lynn

(160,527 posts)
3. You picked some powerful places to visit! I have poured over the images of both areas so many times.
Tue May 4, 2021, 03:16 AM
May 2021

They are incredibly moving, and they do provoke deep wonder, unbearable curiosity, and astonishment for the civilizations which had to have been in place when they were constructed. They were absolutely NOT primitive technologically.

It almost appears now that LIDAR is available and so many structures are being discovered with ground-penetrating equipment, that we are actually only aware of a trace of the actual buildings, canals, roads, etc. which have been there for many centuries.

The ball courts are chilling, aren't they? The "game" was more than simple entertainment, considering some of the players lost their lives. Bloody serious, just like the Roman coliseum. All for the benefit of the elites. That has a familiar right, unfortunately. Apparently it was a fast game, as they were using a hard rubber ball which was supposed to fly through the stone rings on the sides.

It does make you ponder how humans can actually sacrifice their lives, their health while those in control suffer no real risk at all.









Here's a 360 degree Youtube reconstruction of the Copan site, which is interesting. Following, a link to a page of many thumbnails of other reconstructions of the area, really interesting:



Copan reconstruction illustrations:

https://tinyurl.com/42yjmy22



Pyramid of the Sun in Teotihuacán.
Modeled in collaboration with:
- Andrés Armesto

Reconstruction illustration taken from this link:
https://www.artstation.com/artwork/k4BYl0

Artists' reconstruction illustrations and photos of the Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, etc.
in Mexico City, formerly Teotihuacán

https://tinyurl.com/yu283nf4

I hope you get the time to return to these sites, or any of the many other pyramids. It seems like a far more interesting trip than most people seem driven to take. Like what a waste it would be simply going somewhere to work on your tan, anyway? Lying on the beach, shopping?

Thank you for your comments!
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