Hunting for Perus lost civilizations with satellites Sarah Parcak

In July of 1911,

a 35-year-old Yale graduate and professor
set out from his rainforest camp

with his team.

After climbing a steep hill

and wiping the sweat from his brow,

he described what he saw beneath him.

He saw rising from
the dense rainforest foliage

this incredible interlocking
maze of structures

built of granite,

beautifully put together.

What’s amazing about this project

is that it was the first funded
by National Geographic,

and it graced the front cover
of its magazine in 1912.

This professor used state-of-the-art
photography equipment

to record the site,

forever changing the face of exploration.

The site was Machu Picchu,

discovered and explored by Hiram Bingham.

When he saw the site, he asked,

“This is an impossible dream.

What could it be?”

So today,

100 years later,

I invite you all
on an incredible journey with me,

a 37-year-old Yale graduate and professor.

(Cheers)

We will do nothing less
than use state-of-the-art technology

to map an entire country.

This is a dream started by Hiram Bingham,

but we are expanding it to the world,

making archaeological exploration
more open, inclusive,

and at a scale simply
not previously possible.

This is why I am so excited

to share with you all today

that we will begin
the 2016 TED Prize platform

in Latin America,

more specifically Peru.

(Applause)

Thank you.

We will be taking
Hiram Bingham’s impossible dream

and turning it into an amazing future

that we can all share in together.

So Peru doesn’t just have Machu Picchu.

It has absolutely stunning jewelry,

like what you can see here.

It has amazing Moche pottery
of human figures.

It has the Nazca Lines

and amazing textiles.

So as part of the TED Prize platform,

we are going to partnering
with some incredible organizations,

first of all with DigitalGlobe,
the world’s largest provider

of high-resolution
commercial satellite imagery.

They’re going to be helping us build out

this amazing crowdsourcing
platform they have.

Maybe some of you used it

with the MH370 crash
and search for the airplane.

Of course, they’ll also be providing us
with the satellite imagery.

National Geographic will be helping us
with education and of course exploration.

As well, they’ll be providing us
with rich content for the platform,

including some of the archival imagery
like you saw at the beginning of this talk

and some of their documentary footage.

We’ve already begun
to build and plan the platform,

and I’m just so excited.

So here’s the cool part.

My team, headed up by Chase Childs,

is already beginning to look
at some of the satellite imagery.

Of course, what you can see here
is 0.3-meter data.

This is site called Chan Chan
in northern Peru.

It dates to 850 AD.

It’s a really amazing city,
but let’s zoom in.

This is the type and quality of data
that you all will get to see.

You can see individual structures,
individual buildings.

And we’ve already begun
to find previously unknown sites.

What we can say already
is that as part of the platform,

you will all help discover
thousands of previously unknown sites,

like this one here,

and this potentially large one here.

Unfortunately, we’ve also begun
to uncover large-scale looting at sites,

like what you see here.

So many sites in Peru are threatened,

but the great part
is that all of this data

is going to be shared
with archaeologists on the front lines

of protecting these sites.

So I was just in Peru,
meeting with their Minister of Culture

as well as UNESCO.

We’ll be collaborating closely with them.

Just so you all know,

the site is going to be
in both English and Spanish,

which is absolutely essential to make sure

that people in Peru and across
Latin America can participate.

Our main project coprincipal investigator
is the gentleman you see here,

Dr. Luis Jaime Castillo,

professor at Catholic University.

As a respected Peruvian archaeologist
and former vice-minister,

Dr. Castillo will be helping us coordinate
and share the data with archaeologists

so they can explore
these sites on the ground.

He also runs this amazing
drone mapping program,

some of the images of which
you can see behind me here and here.

And this data will be incorporated
into the platform,

and also he’ll be helping to image
some of the new sites you help find.

Our on-the-ground partner

who will be helping us
with education, outreach,

as well as site preservation components,

is the Sustainable
Preservation Initiative,

led by Dr. Larry Coben.

Some of you may not be aware

that some of the world’s
poorest communities

coexist with some of the world’s
most well-known archaeological sites.

What SPI does

is it helps to empower these communities,

in particular women,

with new economic approaches
and business training.

So it helps to teach them
to create beautiful handicrafts

which are then sold on to tourists.

This empowers the women
to treasure their cultural heritage

and take ownership of it.

I had the opportunity to spend some time
with 24 of these women

at a well-known archaeological site
called Pachacamac, just outside Lima.

These women were unbelievably inspiring,

and what’s great is that SPI
will help us transform communities

near some of the sites
that you help to discover.

Peru is just the beginning.

We’re going to be expanding
this platform to the world,

but already I’ve gotten
thousands of emails

from people all across the world –
professors, educators, students,

and other archaeologists –
who are so excited to help participate.

In fact, they’re already suggesting
amazing places for us to help discover,

including Atlantis.

I don’t know if we’re going
to be looking for Atlantis,

but you never know.

So I’m just so excited
to launch this platform.

It’s going to be launched formally
by the end of the year.

And I have to say,

if what my team has already discovered
in the past few weeks are any indication,

what the world discovers
is just going to be beyond imagination.

Make sure to hold on to your alpacas.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)

Thank you.

(Applause)

1911 年 7 月,

一位 35 岁的耶鲁大学毕业生和
教授与他的团队从热带雨林营地出发

爬上一座陡峭的山坡

,擦了擦额头上的汗水,

他描述了自己在脚下看到的景象。

他看到
从茂密的雨林树叶中升起,

这个由花岗岩建造的令人难以置信的互锁
迷宫结构

精美地组合在一起。

这个项目的神奇之处

在于它是第一个
由国家地理资助的项目,


于 1912 年登上了该杂志的封面。

这位教授使用最先进的
摄影

设备记录了现场,

永远改变了国家地理的面貌。 勘探。

该地点是马丘比丘,

由 Hiram Bingham 发现和探索。

当他看到现场时,他问道:

“这是一个不可能的梦想。

它会是什么?”

所以,

100 年后的今天,

我邀请你们
和我一起踏上一段不可思议的旅程,我是

一名 37 岁的耶鲁大学毕业生和教授。

(欢呼声)

我们将
使用最先进的

技术绘制整个国家的地图。

这是一个由 Hiram Bingham 开创的梦想,

但我们正在将其扩展到世界各地,

使考古探索
更加开放、包容,

而且规模
前所未有。

这就是为什么我今天很高兴

与大家分享

我们将在拉丁美洲,尤其是秘鲁
开始 2016 年 TED Prize 平台的原因

(掌声)

谢谢。

我们将把
Hiram Bingham 的不可能实现的

梦想变成

一个我们可以共同分享的美好未来。

所以秘鲁不仅有马丘比丘。

它有绝对令人惊叹的珠宝,

就像你在这里看到的一样。

它有令人惊叹的莫切
陶器人物形象。

它有纳斯卡线条

和令人惊叹的纺织品。

因此,作为 TED Prize 平台的一部分,

我们将
与一些令人难以置信的组织合作,

首先是与
全球最大

的高分辨率
商业卫星图像提供商 DigitalGlobe。

他们将帮助我们建立他们拥有的

这个令人惊叹的众包
平台。

也许你们中的一些人将它

用于 MH370 坠毁
并搜索飞机。

当然,他们也会向我们
提供卫星图像。

国家地理将帮助我们
进行教育,当然还有探索。

此外,他们还将为我们
提供丰富的平台内容,

包括
您在本次演讲开始时看到

的一些档案图像以及他们的一些纪录片镜头。

我们已经
开始构建和规划平台

,我很兴奋。

所以这是很酷的部分。

我的团队,由 Chase Childs 领导

,已经开始
研究一些卫星图像。

当然,你在这里看到的
是0.3米的数据。

这是
位于秘鲁北部的名为 Chan Chan 的站点。

它可以追溯到公元 850 年。

这是一个非常了不起的城市,
但让我们放大一下。

这是你们所有人都会看到的数据类型和质量

你可以看到单独的结构,
单独的建筑物。

我们已经
开始寻找以前不为人知的网站。

我们已经可以说的
是,作为平台的一部分,

你们都将帮助发现
数千个以前不为人知的网站,

比如这里的

这个,以及这里的这个潜在的大网站。

不幸的是,我们也开始
在现场发现大规模抢劫,

就像你在这里看到的那样。

秘鲁有这么多遗址受到威胁,

但最重要的
是,所有这些数据

都将
与保护这些遗址的第一线的考古学家共享

所以我只是在秘鲁,
会见他们的文化部长

以及联合国教科文组织。

我们将与他们密切合作。

众所周知,

该网站
将同时使用英语和西班牙语,

这对于

确保秘鲁和
拉丁美洲的人们能够参与是绝对必要的。

我们的主要项目副研究员
是您在这里看到的绅士,天主教大学教授

Luis Jaime Castillo 博士

作为一位受人尊敬的秘鲁考古学家
和前副部长,

卡斯蒂略博士将帮助我们
与考古学家协调和共享数据,

以便他们能够
实地探索这些遗址。

他还运行这个惊人的
无人机测绘程序,

你可以在这里和这里看到我身后的一些图像。

这些数据将被整合
到平台中

,他还将帮助您拍摄
一些您帮助找到的新网站。

我们的实地合作

伙伴将在
教育、外

展和遗址保护方面帮助我们,

由拉里·科本博士领导的可持续保护倡议。

你们中的一些人可能不知道

,世界上一些
最贫穷的社区

与一些世界上
最著名的考古遗址共存。

SPI 所做的

通过新的经济方法
和商业培训帮助这些社区,特别是女性。

因此,它有助于教
他们制作精美的手工艺品

,然后卖给游客。

这使妇女
能够珍惜自己的文化遗产

并拥有它。

我有机会

在利马郊外一个名为帕查卡马克的著名考古遗址与其中 24 位女性共度时光。

这些女性令人难以置信的鼓舞人心

,最棒的是 SPI
将帮助我们改造

您帮助发现的一些站点附近的社区。

秘鲁只是一个开始。

我们将把
这个平台扩展到全世界,

但我已经收到

来自世界各地的数千封电子邮件——
教授、教育工作者、学生

和其他考古学家——
他们很高兴能参与其中。

事实上,他们已经在
为我们推荐令人惊叹的地方来帮助我们发现,

包括亚特兰蒂斯。

我不知道我们是否
会寻找亚特兰蒂斯,

但你永远不知道。

所以我很
高兴推出这个平台。

将于年底正式上线

我不得不说,

如果我的团队
在过去几周的发现有任何迹象,

那么世界的
发现将超出想象。

确保抓住你的羊驼。

非常感谢你。

(掌声)

谢谢。

(掌声)