Archeology from space | Sarah Parcak

110,780 views ・ 2012-06-14

TED


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Translator: Jenny Zurawell
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When I was a child growing up in Maine,
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one of my favorite things to do
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was to look for sand dollars on the seashores of Maine,
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because my parents told me it would bring me luck.
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But you know, these shells, they're hard to find.
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They're covered in sand, they're difficult to see.
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However, over time, I got used to looking for them.
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I started seeing shapes
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and patterns that helped me to collect them.
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This grew into a passion for finding things,
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a love for the past and archaeology.
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And eventually, when I started studying Egyptology,
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I realized that seeing with my naked eyes alone wasn't enough.
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Because all of the sudden, in Egypt,
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my beach had grown from a tiny beach in Maine
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to one eight hundred miles long,
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next to the Nile.
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And my sand dollars had grown to the size of cities.
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This is really what brought me to using satellite imagery.
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For trying to map the past, I knew that I had to see differently.
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So I want to show you an example of how we see differently
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using the infrared.
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This is a site located in the eastern Egyptian delta
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called Mendes.
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And the site visibly appears brown,
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but when we use the infrared
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and we process it, all of the sudden,
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using false color,
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the site appears as bright pink.
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What you are seeing
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are the actual chemical changes to the landscape
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caused by the building materials and activities
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of the ancient Egyptians.
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What I want to share with you today
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is how we've used satellite data
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to find an ancient Egyptian city,
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called Itjtawy,
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missing for thousands of years.
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Itjtawy was ancient Egypt's capital
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for over four hundred years,
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at a period of time called the Middle Kingdom,
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about four thousand years ago.
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The site is located in the Faiyum of Egypt,
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and the site is really important,
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because in the Middle Kingdom there was this great renaissance
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for ancient Egyptian art, architecture and religion.
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Egyptologists have always known the site of Itjtawy
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was located somewhere near the pyramids of the two kings who built it,
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indicated within the red circles here,
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but somewhere within this massive flood plain.
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This area is huge --
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it's four miles by three miles in size.
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The Nile used to flow right next to the city of Itjtawy,
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and as it shifted and changed and moved over time to the east,
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it covered over the city.
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So, how do you find a buried city
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in a vast landscape?
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Finding it randomly would be the equivalent
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of locating a needle in a haystack,
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blindfolded, wearing baseball mitts.
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(Laughter)
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So what we did is we used NASA topography data
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to map out the landscape, very subtle changes.
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We started to be able to see where the Nile used to flow.
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But you can see in more detail, and even more interesting,
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this very slight raised area
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seen within the circle up here
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which we thought could possibly be the location of the city of Itjtawy.
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So we collaborated with Egyptian scientists
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to do coring work, which you see here.
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When I say coring, it's like ice coring,
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but instead of layers of climate change,
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you're looking for layers of human occupation.
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And, five meters down,
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underneath a thick layer of mud,
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we found a dense layer of pottery.
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What this shows is that at this possible location of Itjtawy,
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five meters down,
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we have a layer of occupation for several hundred years,
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dating to the Middle Kingdom,
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dating to the exact period of time we think Itjtawy is.
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We also found work stone --
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carnelian, quartz and agate
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that shows that there was a jeweler's workshop here.
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These might not look like much,
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but when you think about the most common stones
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used in jewelry from the Middle Kingdom,
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these are the stones that were used.
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So, we have a dense layer of occupation
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dating to the Middle Kingdom at this site.
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We also have evidence of an elite jeweler's workshop,
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showing that whatever was there was a very important city.
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No Itjtawy was here yet,
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but we're going to be returning to the site
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in the near future to map it out.
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And even more importantly,
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we have funding to train young Egyptians in the use of satellite technology
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so they can be the ones making great discoveries as well.
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So I wanted to end with my favorite quote from the Middle Kingdom --
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it was probably written at the city of Itjtawy
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four thousand years ago.
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"Sharing knowledge is the greatest of all callings.
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There's nothing like it in the land."
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So as it turns out, TED was not founded in 1984 AD.
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(Laughter)
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Making ideas actually started in 1984 BC
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at a not-lost-for-long city, found from above.
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It certainly puts finding seashells by the seashore in perspective.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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