Stefan Milo vid …. Cities in the Amazon .. .. cancel everything else… Must watch immediately!
@MrBukkakebandit
7 ай бұрын
Hey big dog great channel you got there.
@ruththinkingoutside.707
7 ай бұрын
Fancy seeing you here! Lol
@erinmac4750
7 ай бұрын
So happy to see my favorite creators are connected! 🍀🦋
@deadflee
7 ай бұрын
From which channel.. there are a lot video with the same name
@DarinNiday
7 ай бұрын
Found this channel from yours...both are epic! Thank you fellas!
@drivernephi1002
7 ай бұрын
Travelling one way down an unknown river that seems to be never ending is both fascinating and horrifying.
@erinmac4750
7 ай бұрын
I'm not fond of the conquistadors, but you have to respect their boldness.
@theflamingone8729
7 ай бұрын
There's a movie about the expedition of Don Lope de Aguirre. Is some respects it's a boring as batshit, but that in itself conveys what it would've been like floating down a river as you die from starvation, disease, insect bites and hostile locals.
@MarcosElMalo2
7 ай бұрын
@@theflamingone8729 Directed by Werner Herzog.
@Algrenion
7 ай бұрын
@@MarcosElMalo2 and starring Klaus Kinski, the most insane human being to ever grace a film set am i right in remembering that he was so bad to work with, half the crew offered to kill him? 😭
@theflamingone8729
7 ай бұрын
@@MarcosElMalo2 don't get me wrong, it's worth watching.
@VERYEXCITED
7 ай бұрын
I wish there were more channels like yours for other academic subjects, where a host breaks down recent papers and explains them for laypeople.
@msergio0293
7 ай бұрын
There a few, there is one about a woman working in physics and she shares advances and papers about cosmology and news about the JWSP
@finesse49
7 ай бұрын
@@msergio0293Dr.Becky?
@erinmac4750
7 ай бұрын
Anton Petrov does this, too. He's also very relatable in his own unique way, just like Stefan. 🍀
@rdklkje13
7 ай бұрын
There's a great weekly radio programme that does this for earth systems sciences: Radio EcoShock. An hour a week with two or three interviews with authors of the studies in question. Archive goes back about a decade and a half, everything is available on the website. Paul Beckwith makes frequent videos here on YT in which he breaks down new climate science studies for lay people. He does these for the content, not the presentation, i.e. they're very informative, not flashy. Anton Petrov, of course, natural science videos every day pretty much, mostly about new research. If you want something more niche, Russell Barkley, a retired psychiatrist specialising in ADHD, does a brief research update every Friday, also here on YT. There are also some Religious Studies scholars with great academic YT channels for lay people. They don't necessarily focus on recent papers, but do present much up-to-date information from their field for the rest of us: Religion for Breakfast, Let's Talk Religion, Esoterica and Angela's Symposium. Plus some specialised ones = Bart Ehrman on the New Testament and Al Muqqadimah on the (secular) history of Islam. The latter guy isn't a scholar himself but he does produce academically informed content of great quality.
@rdklkje13
7 ай бұрын
Hmm, my reply seems to have disappeared. Let's hope it works this time. There's a great weekly radio programme that does this for earth systems sciences: Radio EcoShock. An hour a week with two or three interviews with authors of the studies in question. Archive goes back about a decade and a half, everything is available on the website. Paul Beckwith makes frequent videos here on YT in which he breaks down new climate science studies for lay people. He does these for the content, not the presentation, i.e. they're very informative, not flashy. Anton Petrov, of course, natural science videos every day pretty much, mostly about new research. If you want something more niche, Russell Barkley, a retired psychiatrist specialising in ADHD, does a brief research update every Friday, also here on YT. There are also some Religious Studies scholars with great academic YT channels for lay people. They don't necessarily focus on recent papers, but do present much up-to-date information from their field for the rest of us: Religion for Breakfast, Let's Talk Religion, Esoterica and Angela's Symposium. Plus some specialised ones = Bart Ehrman on the New Testament and Al Muqqadimah on the (secular) history of Islam. The latter guy isn't a scholar himself but he does produce academically informed content of great quality.
@caseyhartnett4894
7 ай бұрын
LIDAR used to require a plane equiped with a very expensive equipment. I used some of this in my research in Mathematics and Biology. We could never pay for one because it was in the 50-100k range for basic work in the 2010s. Drones and cheaper electronics are making it much easier. I looked into it as a side business lots of options for work including the simplest of a person with land wanting to monitor its contours closely.
@00CooG00
7 ай бұрын
Im in the “business” so to speak and there’s for sure a revolution in the field going on right now. Laser scanning is being used heavily to create what is called digital twins. This is something that came from aerospace engineering that is now being applied to cities. The lasers/sensors themselves have gotten a lot better, a lot lighter, and a lot cheaper. Same things have happen ld with drones. Also we have better software for error correction of gnss signals. The result is that you get high quality and very dense point clouds, Much much denser than what is possible from an airplane, at way less cost and complexity.
@gmw3083
7 ай бұрын
@@00CooG00Is this stuff available to regular people at a reasonable price?
@bookman7409
6 ай бұрын
And there you have it, the answer to why things changed comes down to economics driven by technological advances, as you and Coo have correctly noted. I'll add that for the most part, the answer to 'why did/didn't They do that' is almost always money, and the majority of the exceptions to that involve gov't actors. 'Follow the money', sure, but be careful not to stop digging down when you reach a convenient conclusion. It's never that simple.
@heitormaiarodrigues8493
7 ай бұрын
Hi there. I am brazilian and lived for about 1 year deep in the amazonian jungle while serving in the army (frontier with colombia and Venezuel). Lots of weird tales are told over there by the original habitants… Nice to see some recognizement out here!!!
@XCILE625
7 ай бұрын
Cool man please share some of these stories
@thiagolaguna4991
7 ай бұрын
Pessoal zuou o Bolsonaro por causa dessas pesquisas, vai entender
@racudo1898
7 ай бұрын
@@thiagolaguna4991 fica difícil confiar em um sujeito que esculhambou com o financiamento da ciência no brasil
@tengen2251
7 ай бұрын
@@thiagolaguna4991o pessoal zoou ele por conta de ratanabá, que é algo absurdo. Nos ja sabemos da existencia de cidades na amazonia muito antes disso. Ibclusive uma cidade bo araguaia que tinha fazenda de peixes. Tido feito pelas universidades daqui e nao pela galera do et bilu.
@GabrielUlisses-y8m
6 ай бұрын
@@tengen2251 Ratanaba a cidade mais do que velha que os vertebrados terrestres 😂😂😂 A educação e a ciência falhou quando tantas pessoas acham isso razoável ou verídico
@LimeyLassen
7 ай бұрын
What's amazing to me is how quickly the forest reclaimed the land. Just a few centuries and a bustling metropolis is reduced to mounds of earth that can only be seen by a computer.
@refindoazhar1507
7 ай бұрын
In wet tropical climate, it takes less than a decade for structures to be completely swallowed by the jungle. And while stone and earthen component will leave its mark for a very long time, wooden structure quickly disappear like it had never existed at all.
@orangeyewglad
7 ай бұрын
But actually rainforests are some of the most difficult ecosystems to restore when they have been clear cut because the tree roots hold so much of the nutrients and soil from erosion, that once they are removed it can take hundreds of years for the land to be reclaimed. In contrast, temperate forests are more easily regenerated because the soil is much more rich even when trees are removed, and therefore the rewilding process is much more rapid when left to restore itself.@@refindoazhar1507
@mrbaab5932
7 ай бұрын
Lidar
@patavinity1262
7 ай бұрын
Nature abhors a vacuum.
@fabianojota
7 ай бұрын
We shouldn't be so excited with mounds. No structure remains? Maybe just a city of huts
@kore_persephone_
7 ай бұрын
„BABE, new Stefan video just dropped!” „hell yeah! Let’s watch it on the TV!” You are a legend sir!
@mathewhex7045
7 ай бұрын
These kind of comments make me barf a little everytime. It's a declaration of creative bankruptcy.
@Dumbledore6969x
7 ай бұрын
@@mathewhex7045I was about to say the same thing about your comment
@ShapeshiftedCow
5 ай бұрын
@@mathewhex7045 what are you even on about
@asesinaotacus
7 ай бұрын
Here in the Andes, we look to the south, not to the north, because our guiding constellation is the CHAKANA or South Cross, and it has a directly relation with U-Temples. In the Formative peruvian period, there are many of these U-temples like Chavin, Cardal, Manchay, etc., a it's amazing that in bolivian amazonas we have this same archeo-astronomic architecture practice. Gracias por tu contenido y saludos desde Perú, maestro
@levitatingoctahedron922
7 ай бұрын
I strongly recommend reading "The Discovery of the Amazon" by Gaspar de Carvajal to anyone interested in this subject. It's one of my favorite reads, full of adventure and is rich with anthropological material. I believed the account even before it was popular to do so, and I'm glad that it's been vindicated in the last decade.
@flamencoprof
7 ай бұрын
Ooh! ooh! Have you read Adventures in the Unknown Interior of America By Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca? It's available as a free e-book if you search.
@chacmool2581
7 ай бұрын
@@flamencoprof No. But I watched the movie.
@flamencoprof
7 ай бұрын
@@chacmool2581 I couldn't believe there was a movie of such an obscure book. I just looked it up, it seems a long way from the book. I'd suggest the book above it.
@stephenbrand5661
7 ай бұрын
There's so much funny hipsterishness going on here! 😂
@chacmool2581
7 ай бұрын
@@flamencoprof Que te hace pensar eso?
@WilliamCarterII
7 ай бұрын
We were just talking about this in an anthropology class last week. I might actually go here to do research with them
@MarcosElMalo2
7 ай бұрын
That might be the greatest experience of your life (and congratulations to future you if you have experiences even greater). I wonder how remote the site is. It could be quite a challenge if it’s way up river in the hinterlands. You don’t want to get eaten by a wild hinter, let me tell you!
@BSWVI
7 ай бұрын
Do it!! You have decades ahead to try other things, this is spectacular! Hinters be dam'd!!
@NikoMoraKamu
7 ай бұрын
be careful with the monkeys they look cute but they are evil
@WilliamCarterII
7 ай бұрын
@@NikoMoraKamu Believe me, I have had plenty of experience with monkeys in Brazil. I know their true intention 😂😭
@MarcosElMalo2
7 ай бұрын
@@NikoMoraKamu Just don’t touch the monkeys. Maybe they wouldn’t be so evil if you people weren’t always trying to touch them, or worse yet trying to spank the monkeys. Look, I get it. Spanking the monkey is very pleasurable. But please try and control yourself.
@kathrynschwing8943
7 ай бұрын
About 20 years ago I had an internship where I was given the state's lidar data to play around with - it was brought over to my office in several briefcase-sized storage drives with about 1 terabyte of data each. I can definitely see how this data is much easier to work with these days :).
@joelvburke
7 ай бұрын
@StefanMilo your enthusiasm for these topics is freaking adorable!
@RobespierreThePoof
3 ай бұрын
Just a heads up ... "Adorable" in British English isn't traditionally received as a compliment when directed at adults. Same goes for "cute."
@roberto24hn
7 ай бұрын
The Mayas have two calendar systems; the agricultural calendar based on 365 days (20 days in a month x 18 months = 360 + 5 day resting month = 365) and the spiritual calendar based on 260 days (20 days in a month x 13 months = 260). Mayan math is base 20 because we have 20 fingers so a finger per day gives 20 days. The agricultural calendar is based on astronomy and the spiritual is based on our bodies. They chose 13 months because there are 13 main joints in the body; two feet, two knees, two hips, two hands, two elbows, two shoulder joints and the final joint being the neck giving a total of 13 joints. When you convert 260 days to modern months you get 8.6 months which is approximately the amount of time we have to be in the womb and for this reason it is considered spiritual. Most Mesoamerican civilizations were descendent from the Olmecs so no surprise in the similarities with the cultures. The buildings have 20 structures because they were used to keep track of two calendars both based on 20 day months.
@athought3060
7 ай бұрын
Thank you for your concise presentation of the calendar and the metaphysical underpinnings that make them culturally meaningful. Excellent contribution to this discussion.
@brawndothethirstmutilator9848
7 ай бұрын
You have 20 fingers? What species are you?
@eslnoob191
7 ай бұрын
@@brawndothethirstmutilator9848Digits. The original poster obviously meant we have 20 digits, which is inclusive of fingers and toes. In a lot of languages, there is not a clear distinction between the word finger or toe and you need to say something like "hand fingers" or "foot fingers" to distinguish them.
@susanwestern6434
7 ай бұрын
@@eslnoob191 Russian has a word for digets. Having to specify hand or foot ones.
@patavinity1262
7 ай бұрын
@@eslnoob191 Yeah, that was the joke buddy.
@Dragons_Armory
7 ай бұрын
It's insane to think about cities- ancient cities in this part of the Amazons PLEASE MORE TO KEEP US UPDATED!!!
@lurkst3r
7 ай бұрын
The Olmec are so fascinating with their massive statues. It's so great to see Lidar bringing these old cultures back to life with its surveying. Great vod, please make more. Thank you!
@kekero540
7 ай бұрын
People really underestimate just how fast the rainforest can reclaim itself from cities.
@bubarowe
7 ай бұрын
So fascinating. Slightly tragic to consider that in the '20's Percy Fawcett searching for his lost city of Z was viewed as a bit of a crackpot but was essentially correct. I wonder if he was just lucky and it's coincidental of if he was actually that inciteful? I remember from reading the book about him he talked about "black soil" that was obviously enriched by humans.
@Madferreiro
7 ай бұрын
*insightful?
@cal2127
7 ай бұрын
terra praeta?
@Madferreiro
7 ай бұрын
Yes, terra preta. Its a marvel of bioengineering. Extremely advanced for its time, something equivalent to roman cement in terms of how ahead of its time it was.
@SamAronow
7 ай бұрын
Fawcett’s observations were correct but his conclusion (theosophical race-spiritualism) were indeed crackpot. For obvious reasons that stuff wasn’t in the movie and I’d venture it dissuaded a lot of people from listening (while attracting a smaller number of people).
@bubarowe
7 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow I've not seen the film and it's quite a few years since I read the book so I must admit I'd forgotten about that stuff. I mean he was quite potty, but then that sort of spiritual nonsense wasn't uncommon then and many respectable upper class types were into mediums and seances and suchlike.
@jackdelvo2702
7 ай бұрын
For a long time it was thought that a large scale civilization in the Amazon was not possible due to the poor soil for agriculture. A few years back I saw an article that while typical slash and burn techniques and normal ways of fertilizing the soil did not work in the rainforest which erosion would wash away they found a pre Colombian settlement that used charcoal to enrich the soil which resisted erosion in the rainforest.
@flamencoprof
7 ай бұрын
These fertile “dark earths”, or terra preta, may cover 150,000 square kilometres, much of it now reclaimed by rainforests.
@jackdelvo2702
7 ай бұрын
@@flamencoprof Thank you for your response, It’s been quite awhile since I read that article and obviously there has been much more research. I’ll have to look into the subject again. Thank you once more.
@flamencoprof
7 ай бұрын
@@jackdelvo2702 You could start with where I got that info: New Scientist website page: - Myth of pristine Amazon rainforest busted as old cities reappear By Fred Pearce 23 July 2015 The article mentions Gaspar de Carvajal. It has links as well.
@jackdelvo2702
7 ай бұрын
Thanks again, read up on the current findings and it seams they added broken pottery, kitchen garbage and human waste to the porous charcoal along with the porous pottery which absorbed the nutrients and over time slowly released them into the soil. Sounds like they dumped all the settlement waste along with left over charcoal into one spot, let it “stew” for a while then spread it onto the fields. By simple observation they saw the area around their dumps had become fertile and used the mix on their fields. Kind of like observing the grass is always greener over the septic field. The addition of charcoal was the magic that made the rainforest furtile.
@flamencoprof
7 ай бұрын
@@jackdelvo2702 Well researched, I didn't know about the waste and pottery aspect. We humans are nothing if not observant. IIRC they think that's how agriculture could have arisen, by observing the growth of gathered plants along the route back to camp, or some such.
@BSWVI
7 ай бұрын
LIDAR is revolutionary, disruptive, and - especially - vindication of oral traditions. It's so exciting!!! Thank you always for your curiosity, openness, and inclusiveness.
@pcom9209
7 ай бұрын
WONDER since when Archaeologists started believing Scientific theories or accepting what is scientific ? According to them Humans got brains only 12000 yrs ago & Anything earlier than that , is conspiracy theory, be it science or mythology.
@bendover9813
7 ай бұрын
*some* oral tradition that was already plausible, it just lacking evidence. Let’s be fair lol, It won’t be able to prove the Inuit sun/moon incest myths, or the story of Anansi from the Ashanti, or jotün in Scandinavia.
@terraflow__bryanburdo4547
7 ай бұрын
Everything is political today. Simple appreciation or curiosity is not enough...it must be "stunning and brave!".
@telebubba5527
7 ай бұрын
What do you mean by 'disruptive'? Because Lidar doesn't touch anything. It just hover over the ground and leaves everything as it was. So maybe you mean exactly the opposite: non-disruptive.
@Nippleless_Cage
6 ай бұрын
@@telebubba5527 You must have trouble with non-literal concepts. He clearly means it's disruptive to old conventions of thought in archaeology and similar fields.
@frankrivera4625
7 ай бұрын
I’m glad you’re doing more of these Amazon series since most archeologists have shown very little lately. Keep up the good work.
@DougGarant
7 ай бұрын
MesoAmericans used both a 365-day solar calendar [18 months of 20 days each plus a 5-day-long 19th 'month'] and the 260-day 'ritual' calendar you described [called Tzolk’n in Yucatec Maya], running them concurrently, as if one calendar weren't enough to keep track of. The solar calendar has obvious utility, but most people don't realize that 260 days is roughly a human gestation period, so that a child born on 7 Deer was also considered to have been conceived on 7 Deer, so the 'ritual' calendar day might not just be part of a person's name but might lend a kind of 'astrological' significance to their life. Moreover, the solar & 'ritual' calendars realign & begin repeating [like hands on a clock] every 52 solar years, meaning a person who reaches this age has completed a full Calendar Round becoming a certain kind of elder. It is these 52-year periods which are tabulated in Long Count dates. It's also apparent from your video how deeply ingrained Base 20 counting is in MesoAmerica. Interesting stuff indeed!
@8ahau279
7 ай бұрын
17:16 It's not an error. The second dot is just broken off. When there is just one dot, it is placed in the center, if there are two dots, they are placed on the left and right extremes. The left side is missing, but the position of the dot we see tells us there was another one.
@StefanMilo
7 ай бұрын
Oh thank you for that! I was wondering what had happened
@gmw3083
7 ай бұрын
Two suns vs. One sun? 260 day years. 20 day moonths. That's still 13 moonths. Exactly 13. With no imbalances in the clockwork. The shortened moonth period creates a more powerfully luminous moon. A second sun. The great return is at hand.
@hazenoki628
7 ай бұрын
Was about to comment this myself.
@fleetskipper1810
5 ай бұрын
10 fingers +10 toes equals 20. Perhaps that’s why 20 seemed to be a logical way to break time into predictable segments. Also, 13 of those “months “does equal 260 exactly. What I would like to know more about is how those time periods corresponded with the local seasons.
@chrisva4268
7 ай бұрын
Been binging your videos and love your enthusiasm for past peoples who for so long have gone forgotten. LiDAR seems like an incredible tool, I watched a documentary that showed how they used it to discover Nan Madol, the ancient Micronesian city was much much larger than the temple remnants indicate
@dananorth895
7 ай бұрын
It's certainly a surprize out of nowhere. The early laser spectrograph analysis could analyse plants and soil/rock. They found some plant life had a diferent color due to limestone, but limestone wasn't natural part of the soil. That's when they started finding structures/temples all over the place. They might have just as easily thrown a rock in any random direction. Lol When Lidar came out it didn't seem nearly so funtional. Great for landslide analysis/traces/history and tracking/prediction. And for ancient/current floods as well. The resolution is amazing. The space shuttle did penetrating radar scans around the earth from around 50° north to 50° south that are availible in the image files online. They've located ancient rivers, settlements even underground structures and caverns. I'd like to find the Labyrinth area in egypt to see if anything shows up. There appear to be underground rift from tomb/cavern of birds in nw. cliffs to n. side of central pyramid on Giza platou.
@Hubbard61
7 ай бұрын
Your enthusiasm and excitement is so authentic and makes the content more enthralling. Knowing you are just as excited as us, and not just repeating info that you think will get clicks.
@MTreatVO
7 ай бұрын
I have been waiting with baited breath for updates on the cities in the amazon. The fact that one of my favorite youtubers posted a video about it is just, *kisses fingers* Brilliant.
@MarcosElMalo2
7 ай бұрын
*bated breath sorry, I can’t help myself. Ignore it you wish. No criticism was implied.
@JohnKSedor
Ай бұрын
What amazed me is how fast and thoroughly the population spread globally. Like this particular series shows, some of these settlements are still being discovered. And they all carry elements of the same basic story line of their past.
@williamfischer4917
7 ай бұрын
Great video as always! One note: Gaspar de Carvajal departed with Gonzalo Pizarro from Quito, which is now Ecuador, not Peru. This may seem like a tiny point but it has actually been quite large in Ecuadorian history. This was a big part of the basis for Ecuador’s claim to Amazonian territory in the 19th and 20th century, and there was a very prolonged conflict with Peru over it, that actually involved three separate wars, the last one in 1995 (still the last time that two South American nations have fought one another).
@carsonthething4519
7 ай бұрын
the chapter in 1491 about this topic blew my mind!
@Margrreet
7 ай бұрын
Mine too!
@franug
7 ай бұрын
Mine too! It's crazy to realize the Amazon is no pristine land; it is a managed forest!
@benmcreynolds8581
7 ай бұрын
I find LIDAR, Satellite archeology, & UV-IR aerial imaging so fascinating to see the advancements and evolution it's helping progress in archeology as a whole.
@marjus89
7 ай бұрын
What a banger of a treat this Friday evening! :)))
@carlosalbuquerque22
7 ай бұрын
Please use your station to recommend the use of LIDAR in Australia. Early settlers describe large Aboriginal settlements and I just know a city awaits discovery.
@brooksy5744
7 ай бұрын
We need Stefan Milo on the JRE ASAP
@atomdent
7 ай бұрын
Absolute blast watching you get so excited, Stephan! Makes for an awesome learning experience, your enthusiasm is 100% contagious!!Thank you!!
@esamujermejia
5 ай бұрын
Pete Kelly + Stefan Milo = SO MUCH YES!!!
@kacperwoch4368
7 ай бұрын
7:10 I saw this LIDAR image and I immediately recognized the city as Łódź, Poland. The image is mirrored but if anyone's curious the coordinates are: 51°45'34.7"N 19°27'33.6"E
@angelamoran1479
Ай бұрын
I’m not sure if it’s your accent, your voice or the enthusiasm and fun you impart when talking about archeology, but I could listen to you all day 😊
@MarcoS-yp9qf
7 ай бұрын
absolutely fabulous production and information. Kudos.
@matthewsheeran
7 ай бұрын
There are very many more incredible doscoveries buried underwater. If they can ever build the tech for that, then all the history textbooks would have to be rewritten!
@DarenDuke
7 ай бұрын
Can you give Hancock a woop woop now?
@HistoryDose
7 ай бұрын
Fascinating video. I'd kill to see what those cities and monuments looked like.
@MartinUToob
7 ай бұрын
An archeologist viewing this video 4,000 years in the future: "We still are unable to decipher or understand most of the text, but it is clear that these peoples worshipped LIDAR. Given the number of mentions in the archeological record, it is unmistakable that LIDAR was central to these peopls existence. From bits and pieces, we can ascertain that the rising of the Sun & Moon, the movements of the stars, the very basis for the existence of life itself was attributed to LIDAR.....whatever that might be."
@brawndothethirstmutilator9848
7 ай бұрын
If they’re examining online content, by quantity I’m pretty sure they would have to conclude that we followed some type of fertility cult with all the pr0n.
@Nippleless_Cage
6 ай бұрын
😂 @@brawndothethirstmutilator9848
@riteshyeddu
4 ай бұрын
@@brawndothethirstmutilator9848 lmaooo true!!!
@patrickday4206
25 күн бұрын
Yes and the dildo definitely for religious use probably for ceremonial purposes 😂😂😂
@wabisabi6875
7 ай бұрын
Bravo, Stefan, you outdo yourself every time!
@robertbissett
7 ай бұрын
Great video! Way back, seven decades ago and more, we were told by the experts the Amazon was virgin forest, pristine, untouched, old growth. And it must be preserved in that state. Now we find out they didn't know what they were talking about, but had no doubts. A lesson in there for today somewhere. 😁
@chillpillology
7 ай бұрын
it is the flood plain … not forest. quoting: The area covered by lidar represented just 0.08% of the Amazon rainforest, which spans approximately 2.6 million square miles (6.7 million square kilometers). But since the extent of the Amazon is so big, we can't just fly lidar over everything.
@llanitedave
7 ай бұрын
Those urban cultures disappeared long enough ago that the Amazon forest had been given plenty of time to return to an old-growth state. And whatever lesson we take from that, the lesson is NOT that it's ok to ravage the landscape today.
@MarcosElMalo2
7 ай бұрын
Most of it was. The Amazon River Basin is immense. The evidence points to arboriculture being the dominant method of food production, not agriculture. And the agriculture that was practiced was not tilled earth row-crops.
@dananorth895
7 ай бұрын
Most of the populations appeared to be wiped out by contagious desease in the very earliest days of exploration. Many of what were considered to be natural growth trees and plants were in fact cultured food forest crops that went wild and spread across vast territory.
@sergpie
7 ай бұрын
@@dananorth895 Disease likely played a massive role in the disappearance of these peoples, but I also hypothesize that, like several mesoamerican cultures/settlements, abandonment may be due also to excessive soil erosion due to the felling of trees in a localized areas with sensitive microclimates/biomes. The site of the great pyramids of Teotihuacan, are believed to have been abandoned for this very reason, as the vast forests that once surrounded the region, were cut down and turned to ash for mortar or used as lumber for support structures. Along with soil erosion during precipitation events, one of the side effects of this was a severe aridity subsequent to the razing of these forests.
@pietervoogt
7 ай бұрын
Great video. I love your style, you always cheer me up. Also as a European I'm so relieved to get kilometers and meters instead of feet and miles.
@KatherineHugs
7 ай бұрын
You present these videos in such a fascinating way. Keep it up!
@danv8718
7 ай бұрын
My man, long time follower here. You should do some research before taking betterhelp's money.
@bertolaci9509
3 ай бұрын
What's the problem with them?
@danv8718
3 ай бұрын
@@bertolaci9509They are basically a scam. They didn't hesitate to trade private patient information for money. After a couple years laying low, they're back sponsoring every KZitem channel and podcast out there willing to take their money, which, unfortunately, are most of them. It's a shame to see so many decent channels looking the other way.
@bentucker2301
7 ай бұрын
Your enthusiasm is infectious
@MrUnimagenable
7 ай бұрын
Boycott better help, it doesn't help they sell your medical info
@Cocoanutty0
6 ай бұрын
I wish more KZitemrs would do their due diligence
@B_Machine
6 ай бұрын
Seems like every sponsorship is bad in one way or another. There's been so many.
@stephanieyee9784
7 ай бұрын
Stefan, This video is amazing. The lost cities, villages and peoples of the Amazon are so enigmatic and interesting. The U-shaped platforms could possibly have looked like thatched family longhouses. The huge number of settlements and therefore people living in what is now dense jungle is incredible. The Calendar buildings are absolutely amazing. The discovery of so many forgotten cities and cultures of the Americas is so interesting. You're correct in saying the Mexican archaeologists will be kept busy for centuries studying their new finds. LIDAR is a fantastic tool for archaeologists, historians and other scientists. Have you watched Josh Gates' Expedition Unknown episode about an Amazon city? Its very interesting. Thank you for using Roman Londinium as a reference for the size of the huge village the Spanish sailed by. It helps me get a sense of the size of what was obviously not a village but a town. And thanks for highlighting mental health issues and services. Cheers. ❤🇦🇺
@MufasaTomato
7 ай бұрын
Love your channel Stefan! Thank you!
@SprokkereefNederlands
6 ай бұрын
Graham Hancock enters the chat
@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765
7 ай бұрын
another good one. love how consistently you echo my own enthusiasm and delight, in my case for what I call 'bumps in fields'... can't beat a good bump
@Sereneis
7 ай бұрын
Tired of Better help
@patrick_on_here9914
5 ай бұрын
If you double tap the right-hand side of the screen it fast forward 10 seconds. Doing this repeatedly you can skip through the advertisement rather quickly. Or if you’d prefer you can drag the red dot along the red stripe at the bottom of the video. The advertisement is even represented by its own segment, for your convenience
@veliborb
7 ай бұрын
Another fantastic video, i was always fascinated about South America indigenous cultures, thanks a lot, Stefan ! Best regards from Montenegro!
@sandraschick1916
5 ай бұрын
Your enthusiasm is so wonderful, honest, and refreshing! I love history as well. No one ever seems to appreciates my enthusiasm. So I wanted you to know that you are appreciated!! 💖😊💖
@jim.pearsall
5 ай бұрын
Your excitement makes me excited about this topic. Thank you so much. 🙏🏻😃
@FrauWNiemand
6 ай бұрын
I can physically feel the excitement. More, please.
@pmboston
7 ай бұрын
6:42 laser interferometer is the l.i. Part of lidar. Like your Roomba uses it to get around. It is a fantastic tool for studying the Amazon basin from above. I am in my 70s and have loved archaeology most of those years. Between gobekli tepe, the discovery of actual other planets, and now the Amazonian civilizations… wow.
@houseofsolomon2440
4 ай бұрын
Those LIDAR studies in the western Mayan lowlands are fascinating. The scale of these sites is becoming more clear with LIDAR. God bless it!
@beaumontbyrom5009
7 ай бұрын
I know that this is pedantic, but apparently, there is an even larger river underneath the Amazon called the Rio Hamza. Pretty cool.
@Looshington
7 ай бұрын
Excellently done my friend! Appreciate the coverage and thoughtful analysis as always :)
@shzarmai
7 ай бұрын
Awesome 👌 I like the houses being calendars, a "calendar house" seems quite fascinating
@Aliskandr
7 ай бұрын
Awesome developments Stefan🤗 I saw a documentary about this on KZitem about 10 years ago. It was following a period of deforestation where the denuded terrain exposed “geoglyphs” as they were referred to then. The Brazilian farmers despaired how they were unable to have sustainable agriculture on account of the rainfall washing away the weak soils of the forest floor. They did notice the areas around the platforms were not only extremely fertile with nutrient rich soil but the Landsat satellite was able to identify these areas as having intense biodiversity. The idea was that these farmers spread out through the forest and spit out/poo’ed the seeds around their living areas and in effect were the reason for the biodiversity of the rain forest. Satellite imagery that was able to detect the network of biodiversity in the plant life became a predictor for the location of these cities and it seemed then that as populations grew they were able to distribute the demand on their environment through the road system similar to how the Romans were able to calculate how much population a future city could accommodate. In this way cities were evenly distributed as opposed to the cancerous “all roads lead to the capitol “ model we have now. It would be awesome if you could do a part two of this subject🙌🏻🤩
@AndrewCavaletto
7 ай бұрын
Stefan, thank you for sharing your insights and research with us! You are a beautiful human ❤️
@Beau-qk4vp
7 ай бұрын
My face lights up everytime i see you've posted i love your vids keep it up stefan
@billbarcher549
7 ай бұрын
love the beard stefan. Thinking about majoring in anthropology and your content is amazing!
@philhobs1
7 ай бұрын
Love your passion and enthusiasm, thank you for sharing these pieces of history that would be forgotten for many!
@Petty_Mason
7 ай бұрын
I’d like to thank you for the vast improvements to your sound. I have severe misophonia and had to watch some of the older videos on mute w the cc on. I can watch on regular volume now and enjoy these much more. I’m curious about a misophonia and Neanderthal connection - love your channel
@helenhassan4956
6 ай бұрын
I remember watching Ancient America's video on the Amazon and was entranced. Then I watched Aguirre, the Weath of God and loved the scale of the visuals. The fact that new research is coming out about this is astounding!
@therob4371
7 ай бұрын
The day is always better when one of your videos drops
@Thrainite
7 ай бұрын
Remember when the Amazon movie 'Lost City of Z' came out. I've been fascinated with the possibility ever since. Such an intriguing thing that captures the imagination. Not unlike Indiana Jones. lol
@Madferreiro
7 ай бұрын
Amazing content. Thank you sir!
@zachjohnson6672
7 ай бұрын
Your excitement about the topic at hand in every video you make is so genuine and so endearing. Your channel is my only subscription that I watch every new video that you put out. I really love your content. Thanks so much.
@A808K
7 ай бұрын
Whoa who knew the LIDAR in my car can do so much more than just go around curved roads by it's own steering ⁉ Thanks Stephan for another great post.
@A808K
7 ай бұрын
Oops...Stefan. sorry.
@sameli1183
4 ай бұрын
Awesome! We use lidar for tracking changes in coastal morphology. It's so cool to see another application.
@welcometonebalia
7 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@danielballard3364
6 ай бұрын
Stefan, i love how you now also cover archaeological findings in areas not related to the origins of homo sapiens (at least not that directly this time) but just something different for a chance.. and to present it to us in laymans terms.. please keep up that good work
@ellen4956
6 ай бұрын
This is amazing! I've seen some imaging with LYDAR but to use it in the Forests of South America is a fantastic idea. I think they used this to see where the rivers used to flow near Harrapa and looking for places that have disappeared in the Sahara. They've found where lakes and rivers used to be before it turned to desert. Fascinating!
@steveclark5357
7 ай бұрын
I love hearing the same exciting tone in your voice as when I learn something new, and you are humble , a true compliment to you, you are quite relatable stefan , thank you for your work , good stuff sir
@Alph413
7 ай бұрын
This is what Graham Hancock been asking for…first Lidar then discoveries of this kind…
@christianbrandel7437
7 ай бұрын
It always seems to me that he's asking for much more... 🤣
@alyssamartinez1430
7 ай бұрын
I love your videos and always enjoy listening to your calm, intelligent voice. Just one thing: I noticed you seem to have a few more new freckles so I hope you are wearing sunblock and a hat every time you go hiking. I make my husband do the same thing. Don't forget about your ears! Thank you for sharing your passion with us ❤
@SASHASTRAYY
4 ай бұрын
Back in 2006, I was on a Lufthansa flight from Frankfurt to Atlanta. Everything was going smoothly until, out of nowhere, the plane started experiencing severe turbulence. Before we knew it, we were making an emergency descent and ended up crashing somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean. Miraculously, many of us survived the crash and were floating in the ocean, waiting for rescue. As we were drifting, I saw what looked like ancient ruins beneath the water-a city with towering structures and statues. It was Atlantis, just like the legends! Rescue teams arrived pretty quickly and picked us up. As soon as we were on the rescue boats, government officials started debriefing us. They were dead serious, telling us we could never mention what we saw down there. They made us sign all sorts of confidentiality agreements. I've kept it to myself all these years, but I figured it’s finally time to share my story.
@ozmosize
4 ай бұрын
I really enjoy your content Stefan, please keep it coming
@moscowcowboy_13
7 ай бұрын
First video, subscribed. I liked you right away, Stefan. You are such a nice and super smart guy, it is really enjoyable seeing you walk us through this amazing history.
@alst4817
7 ай бұрын
I’m beginning to understand, through stuff like these Amazonian civilisations and Indus Valley and many others: civilisations can just end, collapse and the descendants live a completely different life, give up farming and large scale societies. After a couple hundred years no one would ever know they existed. Kind of astonishing, actually, I always assumed that human technological progress was linear.
@orangeyewglad
7 ай бұрын
Well it's probably for the best because the Amazon being cultivated by humans in any large scale would be a ecological tragedy.
@pzuliomaccavellion9711
7 ай бұрын
I love Stefan's videos! Unashamedly! Up to date information, from the video release date! Open minded and thoughtful interpretation of finds and evidence! When combined with a personable UK demeanor!..... I'd love to have a pint or two with Stefan! Thanks
@comfortablynumb9342
7 ай бұрын
I really appreciate this video. Your content is always interesting and well done. Hopefully we'll get to learn more about the people of South America who were there before Small Pox came with the Spanish. It would be fascinating to see what's buried around those old roads and on the platforms.
@cinemaipswich4636
7 ай бұрын
I remember a doco from decades ago, where scientists had found "charcoal" patches in the Amazon. It was thought that there were tribes who cleared a block, made charcoal and farmed for a while, before moving on. The ground is not generally fertile, and this method helped the tribes to sustain themselves. Regrowth would happen, and so cover up past farming practices. The Amazon river itself was discovered but not seen, by Magellan on his way down the coast. He was off-shore travelling south. They found fresh water, and fresh water fish 150 Km out to sea. They were pushed eastward for another 100 Km by the river current.
@nickjunes
4 ай бұрын
What’s crazy is that one journey down the Amazon also was the first to bring the disease that ultimately wiped all these people out. He document the his own destruction of the civilization.
@semiramis47
7 ай бұрын
Love this post - great discoveries and no talk of alien landing strips
@-Hari-03
7 ай бұрын
hey stefan :) love your vids so much man, keep it up :)
@lilykatmoon4508
7 ай бұрын
This was absolutely fascinating, especially the calendar stuff at the end! I’m always a bit saddened though to contemplate how much we’ll never know or understand because the Europeans who came over to colonize, didn’t value the achievements and complexity of the societies of the natives, and in fact destroyed a lot of what they saw as pagan idolatry.
@Chochothepimp
7 ай бұрын
My 8 month old daughter prefers your videos to Ms Rachel’s, you sir are a true educator
@CoiaItaly
7 ай бұрын
Thanks Milo. From a soulmate in Aotearoa / New Zealand.
@KCreading-Writing
7 ай бұрын
Another stellar video. As another commenter noted, LIDAR has slowly come down to Earth in technology and cost. I remember old Space Shuttle radar topography imagining and the early LIDAR runs. Then, as the other commenter points out, LIDAR was aircraft-borne sensors and still pricey. Now, we see "pocket LIDAR" in the form of drone technology, and that has really opened up the field. Finally, thank you for spending time on Mesoamerican and pre-Columbian archaeology!
@susanjane4784
7 ай бұрын
Besides the cost of Lidar, the technology was largely restricted to the military. In addition, there were plenty of militants, dictators, and drug lords who did not want planes making low altitude passes over and over a region. But it is the digital part of this that makes Lidar possible. In the geography lab, I spent time in in the 80s, they had a few expensive low-quality photographs... pre-computer, pre-printers, pre-large format plotters, folks.
@drokroksit2601
7 ай бұрын
Wow that's exactly why i came to your video for a therapy commercial
@kinenan8942
18 күн бұрын
LIDAR + Amazon = So Exciting
@djpenton779
7 ай бұрын
Great stuff. Your enthusiasm is infectious, Stefan. I usually catch your videos on nebula. Keep up the good work.
@andykaufman7620
3 ай бұрын
I believe that is the same civilization as one of my friends who is what you'd call an 'indigenous person' of that area. He told me the Spanish never truly conquered his people as they faded into the jungle and used tree frog poison and tactics which ultimately allowed them to live independently. In fact, if you look this up the Mayan's last city wasn't absorbed/conquered until the late 1600s which like 200 years later. The idea the Spanish Empire ruled Latin America like a vast monolithic empire ignores the complex reality. Those cities are the, as the second paper shoes, and something I already knew go back a couple thousand years or more.
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