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Hunting for Peru's lost civilizations -- with satellites

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    In July of 1911,
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    a 35-year-old Yale graduate and professor
    set out from his rainforest camp
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    with his team.
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    After climbing a steep hill
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    and wiping the sweat from his brow,
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    he described what he saw beneath him.
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    He saw rising from
    the dense rainforest foliage
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    this incredible interlocking
    maze of structures
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    built of granite,
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    beautifully put together.
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    What's amazing about this project
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    is that it was the first funded
    by National Geographic,
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    and it graced the front cover
    of its magazine in 1912.
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    This professor used state-of-the-art
    photography equipment
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    to record the site,
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    forever changing the face of exploration.
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    The site was Machu Picchu,
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    discovered and explored by Hiram Bingham.
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    When he saw the site, he asked,
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    "This is an impossible dream.
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    What could it be?"
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    So today,
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    100 years later,
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    I invite you all
    on an incredible journey with me,
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    a 37-year-old Yale graduate and professor.
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    (Cheers)
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    We will do nothing less
    than use state-of-the-art technology
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    to map an entire country.
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    This is a dream started by Hiram Bingham,
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    but we are expanding it to the world,
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    making archaeological exploration
    more open, inclusive,
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    and at a scale simply
    not previously possible.
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    This is why I am so excited
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    to share with you all today
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    that we will begin
    the 2016 TED Prize platform
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    in Latin America,
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    more specifically Peru.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    We will be taking
    Hiram Bingham's impossible dream
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    and turning it into an amazing future
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    that we can all share in together.
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    So Peru doesn't just have Machu Picchu.
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    It has absolutely stunning jewelry,
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    like what you can see here.
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    It has amazing Moche pottery
    of human figures.
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    It has the Nazca Lines,
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    and amazing textiles.
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    So as part of the TED Prize platform,
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    we are going to partnering
    with some incredible organizations,
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    first of all with DigitalGlobe,
    the world's largest provider
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    of high-resolution
    commercial satellite imagery.
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    They're going to be helping us build out
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    this amazing crowdsourcing
    platform they have.
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    Maybe some of you used it
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    with the MH370 crash
    and search for the airplane.
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    Of course, they'll also be providing us
    with the satellite imagery.
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    National Geographic will be helping us
    with education and of course exploration.
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    As well, they'll be providing us
    with rich content for the platform,
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    including some of the archival imagery
    like you saw at the beginning of this talk
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    and some of their documentary footage.
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    We've already begun
    to build and plan the platform,
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    and I'm just so excited.
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    So here's the cool part.
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    My team, headed up by Chase Childs,
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    is already beginning to look
    at some of the satellite imagery.
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    Of course, what you can see here
    is 0.3-meter data.
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    This is site called Chan Chan
    in northern Peru.
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    It dates to 850 AD.
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    It's a really amazing city,
    but let's zoom in.
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    This is the type and quality of data
    that you all will get to see.
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    You can see individual structures,
    individual buildings.
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    And we've already begun
    to find previously unknown sites.
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    What we can say already
    is that as part of the platform,
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    you will all help discover
    thousands of previously unknown sites,
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    like this one here,
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    and this potentially large one here.
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    Unfortunately, we've also begun
    to uncover large-scale looting at sites,
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    like what you see here.
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    So many sites in Peru are threatened,
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    but the great part
    is that all of this data
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    is going to be shared
    with archaeologists on the front lines
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    of protecting these sites.
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    So I was just in Peru
    meeting with their Minister of Culture,
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    as well as UNESCO.
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    We'll be collaborating closely with them.
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    Just so you all know,
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    the site is going to be
    in both English and Spanish,
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    which is absolutely essential to make sure
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    that people in Peru and across
    Latin America can participate.
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    Our main project coprincipal investigator
    is the gentleman you see here,
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    Dr. Luis Jaime Castillo,
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    professor at Catholic University.
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    As a respected Peruvian archaeologist
    and former vice-minister,
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    Dr. Castillo will be helping us coordinate
    and share the data with archaeologists
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    so they can explore
    these sites on the ground.
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    He also runs this amazing
    drone mapping program,
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    some of the images of which
    you can see behind me here and here.
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    And this data will be incorporated
    into the platform,
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    and also he'll be helping to image
    some of the new sites you help find.
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    Our on-the-ground partner
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    who will be helping us
    with education, outreach,
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    as well as site preservation components,
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    is the Sustainable
    Preservation Initiative,
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    led by Dr. Larry Coben.
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    Some of you may not be aware
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    that some of the world's
    poorest communities
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    coexist with some of the world's
    most well-known archaeological sites.
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    What SPI does
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    is it helps to empower these communities,
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    in particular women,
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    with new economic approaches
    and business training.
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    So it helps to teach them
    to create beautiful handicrafts
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    which are then sold on to tourists.
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    This empowers the women
    to treasure their cultural heritage
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    and take ownership of it.
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    I had the opportunity to spend some time
    with 24 of these women
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    at a well-known archaeological site
    called Pachacamac, just outside Lima.
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    These women were unbelievably inspiring,
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    and what's great is that SPI
    will help us transform communities
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    near some of the sites
    that you help to discover.
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    Peru is just the beginning.
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    We're going to be expanding
    this platform to the world,
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    but already I've gotten
    thousands of emails
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    from people all across the world --
    professors, educators, students,
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    and other archaeologists --
    who are so excited to help participate.
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    In fact, they're already suggesting
    amazing places for us to help discover,
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    including Atlantis.
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    I don't know if we're going
    to be looking for Atlantis,
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    but you never know.
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    So I'm just so excited
    to launch this platform.
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    It's going to be launched formally
    by the end of the year.
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    And I have to say,
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    if what my team has already discovered
    in the past few weeks are any indication,
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    what the world discovers
    is just going to be beyond imagination.
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    Make sure to hold on to your alpacas.
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    Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Hunting for Peru's lost civilizations -- with satellites
Speaker:
Sarah Parcak
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
06:59

English subtitles

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