Gobeckli Tepe is very curious. Amazing how humans gathered together to form centers of civilization and we've only been around for the blink of an eye geologically speaking
Gobeckli Tepe is very curious. Amazing how humans gathered together to form centers of civilization and we've only been around for the blink of an eye geologically speaking
These ancient civilizations are amazing. How much did we loose throughout history when these civilations were unable or didn't want to share inventions.
http://www.antikythera-mechanism.com/
This ancient computer always blew my mind
Antikythera Mechanism
The antikythera mechanism is currently housed in the Greek National Archaeological Museum in Athens and is thought to be one of the most complicated antiques in existence. At the beginning of the 20th century, divers off the island of Antikythera came across this clocklike mechanism, which is thought to be at least 2,000 years old, in the wreckage of a cargo ship. The device was very thin and made of bronze. It was mounted in a wooden frame and had more than 2,000 characters inscribed all over it. Though nearly 95 percent of these have been deciphered by experts, there as not been a publication of the full text of the inscription.
An aerial photo of one of the structures uncovered in a recent study of pre-Columbian archaeological sites in the Amazon. (University of Exeter).
The settlement looked like*little more than 11 mounds*of earth surrounded by a sunken ditch. But if Jonas Gregorio de Souza closed his eyes, he could imagine*the*Boa Vista site as it would have*appeared*800 years ago. Perhaps, the archaeologist said, those mounds were houses circling a central square. Outside the defensive ditch, gardens and fruit trees might have flourished. The mile-long road leading to the enclosure may have had a ritual purpose, its surface hardened by countless ceremonial processions. Or maybe it linked the village to others, forming a chain*of communities that crisscrossed the whole southern Amazon basin.
There was a time when no archaeologist expected to discover such an elaborate settlement in this relatively resource-poor part of the rain forest.*But in a paper published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications, de Souza and his colleagues describe*the mound village and 80 other newly discovered*archaeological sites*from the years 1250 to 1500.
They predict that the region hides hundreds more undiscovered sites, and that as many as a million people might have carefully managed the*rain forest long before Europeans arrived.
“It's an important paper,” said Dolores Piperno, an archaeobotanist at the National Museum of Natural History who has worked extensively in the Amazon but was not involved in the new study.*Though she wasn’t quite convinced*by de Souza’s conclusions about*the size of the region’s pre-Columbian population, the discoveries add to a growing body of evidence that large communities flourished in one of the world’s most diverse landscapes.
A researcher stands in one of the ditches discovered during the new study. (José Iriarte)
Fifty years ago, she said, “prominent*scholars thought that little of cultural*significance had ever*happened in a tropical forest. It was supposed*to be too highly vegetated, too moist. And the corollary*to those*views was that people never cut down the forests; they were supposed to have been sort of ‘noble savages,’*” she said.
“But those views have been overturned,” Piperno continued. “A lot of importance*happened in tropical forests, including agricultural*origins.”
Collaborating with scientists*from Britain and Brazil, de Souza, a research fellow at the University of Exeter in England, identified the new
archaeological sites by looking at satellite images of the*Upper Tapajós Basin, on Brazil’s border with Bolivia. This area is considered a “transitional zone,” where rainfall is more sparse and seasonal and the rain forest shifts into a savanna-like ecosystem. Since the basin is far from the floodplains that*enrich other landscapes, researchers*have long overlooked it, de Souza said, assuming that it couldn’t sustain*large groups of people.
But the aerial surveys revealed dozens of geoglyphs —*geometric-shaped trenches carved into the earth. Though the sites range in shape and size — the smallest is just 30 meters across, the largest almost 400 meters — many were like Boa Vista, harboring villages inside*or nearby.
The Amazon rain forest, bordered by deforested land prepared for the planting of soybeans, is seen in a 2015*aerial photo taken over Brazil's Mato Grosso state. (Paulo Whitaker/Reuters)
De Souza and his collaborators spent a month conducting on-the-ground surveys of 24 of those sites. All of them contained evidence that they*had been inhabited: abandoned stone tools and broken ceramics, buried trash heaps, an enriched soil called terra preta*that is characteristic of indigenous land management through burning and adding fertilizer.*By measuring how much of samples’ radioactive carbon had decayed over the years, the researchers dated*wood charcoal found at the sites to*the early and mid-1400s.
Since the 1970s, scientists have identified large, elaborate geoglyphs across other*parts of the Amazon. Some*have estimated there*is about 60,000 square miles of terra preta*in the basin. Others’ research shows that*entire regions of the rain forest are dominated by tree*species*once*cultivated for food by indigenous people.*And*highly planned networks of villages have been identified on either side of the region de Souza studied.
The latest discovery, de Souza said, suggests there was a continuous string of settlements across the entire southern rim of the Amazon basin.
“It seems that it was a mosaic of cultures,” he*continued. The villages shared*some practices — enriching the soil, cultivating Brazil nut and cocoa trees, encircling their*homes with protective ditches —*but spoke a diverse array of languages.
Plugging their findings into models that predict population densities, de Souza and his colleagues estimate that between 500,000 and a million people lived in this part of the Amazon,*building between 1,000 and 1,500*enclosures.
Piperno*was skeptical that the region’s pre-Columbian population was really so large, pointing to studies showing that fewer people were*needed to construct these earthworks than was previously believed.
De Souza agreed that*there is plenty more work to be done. He and his colleagues plan to excavate the Boa Vista site and to conduct surveys seeking more settlements.
“It’s probably the case that some areas of the*Amazon were sustaining large populations and others were not,” he said. “Because*there is so little research, we are slowly discovering what was happening in each.”
These discoveries don’t affect just our understanding of the past; they have implications for the future. Huge swaths of the Amazon*are being lost to logging, clear-cutting for agriculture, wildfires, dams, mining and other forms of habitat degradation. The rain forest’s ability to act as “the lungs of the world” by inhaling carbon dioxide is declining.
Though conservationists often speak of this region as having been a “pristine” landscape, studies*by de Souza and others suggest that indigenous people influenced and enriched the rain forest for hundreds of years. If we want to preserve the Amazon, researchers say, we need to take those impacts into account.
“The forest is an artifact of modification,” de Souza said. He quickly added: “It has nothing to do with the kind of practice we are seeing nowadays — large-scale, clearing monoculture.*These people were combining small-scale*agriculture with*management of useful tree species. So*it was more a sustainable kind*of land use.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world...cid=spartanntp
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
Peru: Why you should visit Kuelap instead of Machu Picchu
The air is thin and misty up here, hanging in droplets from the hood of my raincoat. Edging forward to the sparse barrier of the mountaintop it feels as though I am standing right above the clouds – and, at an elevation of 3,000m, I suppose I am. Peering over the edge, the foggy nothing completely surrounds me and the world below is unknown and forgotten.*
More than 5,000 people lived protected and secluded up here on a mountaintop in northern Peru over 1,500 years ago. They were known as the Chachapoyas or “Cloud Warriors”. I walk slowly around the 400 or so stone house ruins that remain from their settlement, stopping in the centre of one to take it all in. The walls are crumbled and broken in places and the roofs are long gone, yet enough remains that if I close my eyes I can imagine what it once must have looked like.
Narrow channels run around the perimeters of the sleeping quarters; I am amazed to hear from my guide, Carlo, that these were used to house the families’ cuy (guinea pigs). These furry little rodents acted as a living, moving central heating system and were also kept as livestock, and cuy remains to this day a popular traditional food in Peru.*
Although nature has reclaimed the site over centuries of limited visitation, beautiful and fascinating details can still be seen. Along the walls of the round houses, jaguar and snake designs have been carved into the rock, symbolising the power and strength of the warriors who lived here.
Life changed irrevocably for the Chachapoyas in 1470 when they were conquered by their southern neighbours, the Incas, who themselves fell to Spanish invaders just 60 years later.
Although the Incas attempted to decimate the cloud warriors, recent scientific evidence shows that the Chachapoyas people were not completely wiped out. A 2017 study published in Scientific Reports found that indigenous DNA originating from the Chachapoyas lives on in descendants living in the same area today.
Their homeland, the fortress of Kuelap, was built between 600 and 900 years before Machu Picchu. It’s on a higher mountain and is a larger site than Peru’s most famous attraction in the south, yet until recently it’s been difficult to visit this 5th Century citadel. Just 30 years ago the trek from Kuelap to the nearest road took a staggering two months to complete; up until last year, the journey still required a four-hour hike or an hour and a half car ride up a windy, nail-biting mountain road. But in March 2017, a cable car was installed at an estimated cost of $20 million, which covers 4km of the journey in just 20 minutes.
There’s still enough of a hike left to give visitors a bit of a challenge to enjoy as they make their way from the gondola along paved steps that wind through to the entrance of the great walled city. Horses are available to hire for those who need a little extra help.
Just outside the entrance my guide stops us and produces leaves from the muña plant, sometimes called Andean mint. Passing the fresh, fragrant leaves from hand to hand, their aroma is released with each warm touch. Carlo instructs us to inhale the scent, believed to counter altitude sickness and act as an offering to the ancestors.
To get to the very top of the*settlement, I climb up precarious, jagged stone steps covered in slippery moss. I gingerly make my way up the slope, searching for any tiny foothold and holding onto the sparse lengths of railing to haul myself up to safety. I press myself against the damp, cold stone to let other, more confident, climbers pass.*
Carlo notices my absence by his side and hops expertly from step to step, helping other visitors scale the slope as he makes his way back down to the platform where I’ve hung back. With an encouraging grin, he beckons me to continue. This is the final ascent, the trickiest part – I am so close to the Kuelap settlements and the chance to look out from this cloud fortress; I can’t give up now.
With Carlo’s help and advice – “Step there, no, on this one” – the ancient steps are navigated in a few minutes and we emerge into the open, green space at the very top of the mountain.
I can feel my pulse in my neck as I take a moment to collect myself. A disinterested brown llama looks on, dew collected on his long eyelashes as he chews on some grass. Here, at the top of the world, I feel peaceful, contented – the only sound comes from my own ragged breath, and the humming of the llamas.
Machu Picchu is indeed a wondrous marvel that deserves its reputation. But with an over saturation of tourists which often threatens the ruins, it might be worth looking further north for your dose of history – especially when it’s this magnificent.*
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/lifestyle/...cid=spartandhp
Do not let success go to your head and do not let failure get to your heart.
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