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Signals
Yes, we should clear all of it, the quicker the better.
The future of our civilization and humanity itself may depend on what we find...
MysteriousHusky
"Finnish archaeologist digs up ancient civilization in Brazil"
Source
The clearing of the Amazon rainforest has revealed mysterious patterns in the earth. The large-scale patterns are best visible from the air, where Finnish archaeologist Martti Pärssinen takes pictures of them.
Following a recent news event quoted above I was left pondering the following question. Is it worth clearing more of the Amazon forest to bring further hidden clues of past civilization(s) to light or does the environmental damage outweigh the research benefit?
In recent years you may have seen similar headlines, they seem to be on the rise. Yet as the snapshot from a Discovery article in 2010 reveals these discoveries tend to happen after environmental degradation.
Who would've thought deforestation had an upside?
- Snapshot from 2010 Discovery articleedit on 23-9-2013 by MysteriousHusky because: (no reason given)
mysterioustranger
Look into LIDAR friends...as I suggested. They are already surveying areas with it. It sees right through dense forestation...and was developed for this. To NOT have to cut trees down!
They have begun surveying with this last year for archeology in Central America...
"The Archaeology News Network: LiDAR survey 'finds' lost Honduran ...
archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/.../lidar-survey-finds-lost-hondu...Cached May 14, 2013 - The Google Map of eastern Honduras is almost blank. A vast and virtually unexplored rainforest region known as the Mosquitia covers around ..."
edit on 09-22-2013 by mysterioustranger because: (no reason given)
LiDAR results dwarf what was possible before, even through long-term archaeological projects, such as those at Tikal in Guatemala and Calakmul in Mexico, but the technology has drawbacks. It may not record the remains of completely perishable structures, which may leave only a few lines of stone, though our results suggest it can distinguish features less than a foot high. On-the-ground confirmation, traditional mapping, and excavation are still necessary to add information about how buildings were used, details, and dating.
tadaman
I thought we solved this one already....
Didn't NASA turn one of its deep space telescopes around on earth and with its array of sensors and filters they were able to map out artificial structures in the dense rain Forrest almost spot on?
I am pretty sure that is the road to go down. This way you don't waste time and resources bumbling around and instead go exactly where past civilizations have left their foot prints....
EDIT:
never mind, I see it was already mentioned ......edit on 9 24 2013 by tadaman because: (no reason given)
MysteriousHusky
Signals
Yes, we should clear all of it, the quicker the better.
The future of our civilization and humanity itself may depend on what we find...
"You want the truth... you can't handle the truth!"
Think about this way. It's like a gameshow, you can take the certain prize aka the Amazon as it is forest and all, or you can throw it away for "what's in the box" or in this case "what's hiding in the Amazon" ooh the possibilities! Risk going bust however and you bankrupt the planet of a key ecological and environmental resource.