ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sarah Parcak - Satellite archaeologist + TED Prize winner
Like a modern-day Indiana Jones, Sarah Parcak uses satellite images to locate lost ancient sites. The winner of the 2016 TED Prize, her wish is to protect the world’s shared cultural heritage.

Why you should listen

There may be hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of undiscovered ancient sites across the globe. Sarah Parcak wants to locate them. As a space archaeologist, she analyzes high-resolution imagery collected by satellites in order to identify subtle changes to the Earth’s surface that might signal man-made features hidden from view. A TED Senior Fellow and a National Geographic Explorer, Parcak wrote the textbook on satellite archaeology and founded the Laboratory for Global Observation at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Her goal: to make the world's invisible history visible once again.

In Egypt, Parcak's techniques have helped locate 17 potential pyramids, and more than 3,100 potential forgotten settlements. She's also made discoveries in the Viking world (as seen in the PBS Nova special, Vikings Unearthed) and across the Roman Empire (as shown in the BBC documentary, Rome’s Lost Empire). Her methods also offer a new way to understand how ancient sites are being affected by looting and urban development. By satellite-mapping Egypt and comparing sites over time, Parcak has noted a 1,000 percent increase in looting since 2009. It’s likely that millions of dollars worth of artifacts are stolen each year. Parcak hopes that, through her work, unknown sites can be protected to preserve our rich, vibrant history.

As the winner of the 2016 TED Prize, Parcak asked the world to help in this important work. By building a citizen science platform for archaeology, GlobalXplorer.org, Parcak invites anyone with an internet connection to help find the next potential looting pit or unknown tomb. GlobalXplorer launched on January 30, 2017, with volunteers working together to map Peru. Other countries will follow, as the platform democratizes discovery and makes satellite-mapping rapid and cost-effective. 

 

More profile about the speaker
Sarah Parcak | Speaker | TED.com
TED2016

Sarah Parcak: Help discover ancient ruins -- before it's too late

Filmed:
1,003,508 views

Sarah Parcak uses satellites orbiting hundreds of miles above Earth to uncover hidden ancient treasures buried beneath our feet. There's a lot to discover; in the Egyptian Delta alone, Parcak estimates we've excavated less than a thousandth of one percent of what's out there. Now, with the 2016 TED Prize and an infectious enthusiasm for archaeology, she's developed an online platform called GlobalXplorer that enables anyone with an internet connection to discover unknown sites and protect what remains of our shared human inheritance.
- Satellite archaeologist + TED Prize winner
Like a modern-day Indiana Jones, Sarah Parcak uses satellite images to locate lost ancient sites. The winner of the 2016 TED Prize, her wish is to protect the world’s shared cultural heritage. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:13
As an archaeologist,
0
1059
1483
00:14
I'm most often asked
what my favorite discovery is.
1
2566
3098
00:18
The answer's easy:
2
6601
1185
00:20
my husband, Greg.
3
8829
1534
00:22
(Laughter)
4
10387
1371
00:23
We met in Egypt on my first dig.
5
11782
1762
00:26
It was my first lesson in finding
unexpected, wonderful things.
6
14149
4523
00:31
This began an incredible
archaeological partnership.
7
19941
3149
00:36
Years later, I proposed to him
in front of our favorite pair statue
8
24442
5143
00:41
of the Prince and Princess
Rahotep and Nofret,
9
29609
3161
00:44
in the Cairo Museum,
10
32794
1241
00:46
dating to 4,600 years ago.
11
34059
2095
00:48
I thought if I was going to ask Greg
to spend the rest of this life with me,
12
36615
5024
00:53
then I should ask him
in front of two people
13
41663
2777
00:56
who had pledged
to be together for eternity.
14
44464
3081
01:01
These symbols endure
because when we look at them,
15
49182
2876
01:04
we're looking at mirrors.
16
52082
1441
01:05
They are powerful reminders
17
53960
2018
01:08
that our common humanity has not changed.
18
56002
2809
01:11
The thrill of archaeological discovery
is as powerful as love,
19
59807
5380
01:17
because ancient history is the most
seductive mistress imaginable.
20
65211
5047
01:23
Many archaeologists
have devoted their lives
21
71116
2303
01:25
to unraveling the mysteries of the past
22
73443
2429
01:27
under hot suns
23
75896
1656
01:30
and Arctic winds
24
78585
1454
01:32
and in dense rainforests.
25
80550
1878
01:35
Many seek.
26
83518
1478
01:37
Some discover.
27
85020
1151
01:38
All worship at the temple of possibility
28
86195
2818
01:41
that one discovery might change history.
29
89037
2820
01:45
On my first day in Egypt,
I worked at a site
30
93620
2505
01:48
in the Northeast Egyptian Delta
called Mendes, dating to 4,200 years ago,
31
96149
5640
01:53
in a cemetery.
32
101813
1151
01:54
That's a picture of me --
33
102988
1200
01:56
I'm just in my bliss.
34
104212
1201
01:57
On the dig, surrounded
by emerald green rice paddies,
35
105888
4013
02:01
I discovered an intact pot.
36
109925
2488
02:05
Flipping it over,
37
113772
1626
02:07
I discovered a human thumbprint
left by whoever made the vessel.
38
115422
4483
02:12
For a moment, time stood still.
39
120734
2224
02:16
I didn't know where I was.
40
124068
1346
02:17
It was because at that moment I realized,
41
125955
2957
02:20
when we dig,
42
128936
1378
02:22
we're digging for people,
43
130338
1657
02:24
not things.
44
132019
1211
02:26
Never are we so present as when
we are in the midst of the great past.
45
134664
4951
02:32
I can't tell you how many times I've stood
in front of the Pyramids of Giza,
46
140513
4818
02:37
and they leave me speechless.
47
145355
2265
02:39
I feel like the luckiest
person in the world.
48
147644
2977
02:43
They're a monument to our human brilliance
and everything that is possible.
49
151975
4966
02:49
Many cannot process
their brilliance as human --
50
157857
2969
02:52
they think aliens built them.
51
160850
1601
02:55
But this is ridiculous.
52
163250
1190
02:57
All you need to do
is get up close and personal,
53
165252
3324
03:00
and see the hidden hand of man
54
168600
2472
03:03
in the chisel marks left
by the tools that built them.
55
171096
3577
03:08
The Great Pyramid of Giza
was built one stone at a time
56
176204
3752
03:11
with 2.3 million blocks,
57
179980
3168
03:15
with incredible bureaucratic efficiency.
58
183172
2698
03:19
It is not the pyramids
that stand the test of time;
59
187304
2965
03:22
it is human ingenuity.
60
190293
1762
03:24
That is our shared human brilliance.
61
192556
3906
03:29
History may be cyclical,
62
197523
2526
03:32
but we are singular.
63
200757
2155
03:35
I love what I do,
64
203768
1576
03:37
because I learn that we haven't changed.
65
205368
2665
03:41
I get to read about mother-in-law
jokes from Mesopotamia
66
209486
4184
03:45
from 3,500 years ago.
67
213694
1552
03:47
(Laughter)
68
215270
1531
03:49
I get to hear about neighbors
cursing each other
69
217975
3404
03:53
from 4,600 years ago in Egypt.
70
221403
2498
03:55
And my absolute favorite,
from 3,300 years ago in Luxor:
71
223925
4603
04:00
an inscription that describes schoolboys
who cut class to go drinking.
72
228552
5508
04:06
(Laughter)
73
234084
1970
04:08
Kids these days.
74
236078
1968
04:10
(Laughter)
75
238070
1324
04:11
I get to see the most
incredible architecture,
76
239882
3360
04:16
see stunning sculptures --
77
244044
2130
04:18
I mean, this is basically
a selfie in stone --
78
246198
2843
04:21
and see that we've always
rocked serious bling.
79
249065
2957
04:25
And also, we've been posting on walls
80
253217
2970
04:28
and obsessing about cats --
81
256211
2079
04:30
(Laughter)
82
258314
1007
04:31
for thousands of years.
83
259345
1513
04:32
(Laughter)
84
260882
1007
04:33
(Applause)
85
261913
2336
04:38
Archaeologists are the cultural
memory preservers
86
266786
3350
04:42
and the spokespeople
87
270160
1641
04:43
for the billions of people
and the thousands of cultures
88
271825
3332
04:47
that came before us.
89
275181
1334
04:49
Good science, imagination
and a leap of faith
90
277136
3095
04:52
are the trifecta we use to raise the dead.
91
280255
3440
04:56
In the last year,
92
284993
1171
04:58
archaeologists have made
incredible discoveries, including:
93
286188
3176
05:02
new human ancestors from South Africa;
94
290194
2322
05:05
tools from 3.3 million years ago --
95
293560
3018
05:08
these are the oldest tools
ever discovered --
96
296602
2236
05:10
in Kenya.
97
298862
1348
05:12
And this, from a series
of medical implements found
98
300234
3644
05:15
from Blackbeard's ship from 1718.
99
303902
2818
05:19
What you're looking at is a medical tool
used to treat syphilis.
100
307145
5093
05:25
Ouch!
101
313419
1220
05:26
(Laughter)
102
314663
1360
05:28
For each of these,
103
316047
1344
05:29
there are thousands of other
incredibly important discoveries
104
317415
3443
05:32
made by my colleagues,
105
320882
1472
05:34
that do not make headlines.
106
322378
1450
05:36
However, I believe that the most
important thing we do as archaeologists
107
324724
6174
05:42
is acknowledge that past people existed
108
330922
3691
05:46
and lived lives worth learning about.
109
334637
1874
05:49
Can you even imagine
what the world would be like today
110
337773
3562
05:53
if we acknowledged all
human beings in this way?
111
341359
3242
05:58
So, on a dig, we have a challenge:
112
346720
3116
06:02
it often looks like this.
113
350813
1739
06:04
You can't see anything.
114
352576
1834
06:06
Where are we going to start digging?
115
354434
1749
06:08
This is from a site south of Cairo.
116
356207
1711
06:09
Let's have a look from space.
117
357942
1733
06:12
Again, you can't really see much.
118
360589
1938
06:14
What you're looking at
is a WorldView-3 satellite image,
119
362551
3787
06:18
which has a .3 meter resolution.
120
366362
3059
06:21
That's 10 inches.
121
369445
1378
06:22
This means that you can zoom in
from 400 miles in space
122
370847
4274
06:27
and see your tablets.
123
375145
1437
06:29
How do I know about this?
124
377631
1376
06:31
It's because I'm a space archaeologist.
125
379864
3124
06:36
Let me repeat that.
126
384206
1365
06:38
I am a space archaeologist.
127
386043
2769
06:40
This means --
128
388836
1152
06:42
(Applause)
129
390012
1246
06:43
Thank you.
130
391282
1286
06:44
This means I use satellite images
and process them using algorithms,
131
392956
4471
06:49
and look at subtle differences
in the light spectrum
132
397451
2636
06:52
that indicate buried things
under the ground
133
400111
2314
06:54
that I get to go excavate and survey.
134
402449
2469
06:57
By the way --
135
405497
1160
06:58
NASA has a Space Archaeology program,
136
406681
2577
07:01
so it's a real job.
137
409282
1486
07:02
(Laughter)
138
410792
1150
07:04
So, let's have a look again.
139
412551
1464
07:06
We're back at the site
just south of Cairo.
140
414039
2085
07:08
You can't see anything.
141
416148
1683
07:09
Keep your eye on the red rectangle.
142
417855
3378
07:13
When we process the image
using algorithms --
143
421257
2627
07:15
think like a space-based CAT scan --
144
423908
2405
07:19
this is what you see.
145
427451
2034
07:22
This rectilinear form is an ancient tomb
146
430074
3709
07:25
that is previously unknown
and unexcavated,
147
433807
2601
07:28
and you all are the first people
to see it in thousands of years.
148
436432
4761
07:33
(Applause)
149
441842
5457
07:39
I believe we have barely
scratched the surface
150
447323
2827
07:42
in terms of what's left to discover.
151
450174
2080
07:45
In the Egyptian Delta alone,
152
453098
1998
07:47
we've excavated less
than one-1000th of one percent
153
455120
3818
07:50
of the total volume of Egyptian sites.
154
458962
2713
07:54
When you add to that
the thousands of other sites
155
462316
2338
07:56
my team and I have discovered,
156
464678
2032
07:58
what we thought we knew
pales in comparison
157
466734
3755
08:02
to what we have left to discover.
158
470513
1898
08:05
When you look at the incredible work
159
473118
1803
08:06
that my colleagues are doing
all around the world
160
474945
2421
08:09
and what they're finding,
161
477390
1807
08:11
I believe that there are millions
of undiscovered archaeological sites
162
479221
5598
08:16
left to find.
163
484843
1160
08:18
Discovering them will do nothing less
164
486574
2615
08:21
than unlock the full potential
of our existence.
165
489213
3714
08:26
But we have a challenge.
166
494414
2315
08:29
Over the last year,
167
497323
1587
08:30
we've seen horrible headlines
168
498934
2624
08:33
of incredible destruction going on
to archaeological sites,
169
501582
4322
08:37
and massive looting by people like ISIL.
170
505928
2805
08:41
ISIL has destroyed temples at Palmyra.
171
509594
3622
08:45
Who blows up a temple?
172
513240
1615
08:47
They've destroyed the Tomb of Jonah.
173
515437
2079
08:50
And we've seen looting
at sites so rampant,
174
518200
4811
08:55
it looks like craters of the moon.
175
523035
2820
08:59
Knowing ISIL's desire to destroy
modern human lives,
176
527180
4280
09:03
it's a natural extension for them
to destroy cultural identity as well.
177
531484
4388
09:07
Countless invading armies
have done the same throughout history.
178
535896
3154
09:11
We know that ISIL is profiting
from the looting of sites,
179
539818
3859
09:15
but we don't know the scale.
180
543701
1541
09:18
This means that any object
purchased on the market today
181
546014
3921
09:21
from the Middle East
182
549959
1156
09:23
could potentially be funding terrorism.
183
551139
2634
09:26
When a site is looted,
184
554742
1847
09:28
it's as if a puzzle already missing
90 percent of it pieces
185
556613
5780
09:34
has had the rest obscured
beyond recognition.
186
562417
2762
09:37
This is ancient identity theft writ large.
187
565678
2530
09:40
We know that there are two kinds
of looting going on:
188
568734
2492
09:43
looting by criminal elements like ISIL,
189
571250
2686
09:45
and then more local looting
by those that are desperate for money.
190
573960
3866
09:50
We would all do the same
to feed our families;
191
578249
3242
09:53
I don't blame the local looters.
192
581515
2149
09:55
I blame the middlemen,
the unethical traffickers
193
583688
4678
10:00
and an international art market
194
588390
1984
10:02
that exploits often ambiguous
or even completely nonexistent laws.
195
590398
5391
10:08
We know looting is going on
on a global scale and it's increasing,
196
596938
4383
10:13
but presently we don't have
any tools to stop it.
197
601345
3084
10:17
This is beginning to change.
198
605122
1495
10:19
My team and I have just completed a study
looking at looting in Egypt.
199
607302
4438
10:23
We looked at open-source data
200
611764
2347
10:26
and mapped the entirety
of looting across Egypt
201
614135
2935
10:29
from 2002 to 2013.
202
617094
2543
10:32
We found evidence of looting
and site destruction at 267 sites,
203
620474
4556
10:37
and mapped over 200,000 looting pits.
204
625054
3977
10:41
It's astonishing.
205
629901
1173
10:43
And putting that data together --
206
631098
1673
10:44
you can see the looting pits marked here.
207
632795
2495
10:48
At one site, the looting got bad
from 2009, 2011, 2012 --
208
636442
5291
10:53
hundreds and hundreds of pits.
209
641757
1561
10:55
Putting all the data together,
210
643784
1431
10:57
what we found is that,
contrary to popular opinion,
211
645239
3051
11:00
looting did not start to get worse
in Egypt in 2011 after the Arab Spring,
212
648314
5061
11:05
but in 2009, after the global recession.
213
653399
3592
11:09
Thus, we've shown with big data
214
657531
2629
11:12
that looting is fundamentally
an economic issue.
215
660184
3463
11:16
If we do nothing to stop the problem,
216
664973
3176
11:20
all of Egypt's sites will be affected
by looting by 2040.
217
668173
4059
11:24
Thus, we are at a tipping point.
218
672684
3172
11:27
We are the generation with all the tools
and all the technologies
219
675880
3123
11:31
to stop looting,
220
679027
1210
11:32
but we're not working fast enough.
221
680261
2493
11:37
Sometimes an archaeological site
can surprise you with its resilience.
222
685968
4555
11:43
I am just back from the field,
223
691413
2356
11:45
where I co-led a joint mission
with Egypt's Ministry of Antiquities
224
693793
3579
11:49
at a site called Lisht.
225
697396
1812
11:51
This site dates to the Middle Kingdom
of Egypt between 2,000 and 1,750 BC.
226
699232
4822
11:56
The Middle Kingdom was Ancient
Egypt's Renaissance period.
227
704494
2755
11:59
After a time of intense internal strife
and environmental challenges,
228
707273
3904
12:03
Egypt rebounded
229
711201
1254
12:04
with an incredible resurgence
of art, architecture and literature.
230
712479
4957
12:09
It's a favorite period of time
to study in Egypt,
231
717460
2398
12:11
because it teaches us so much
about how we can survive and thrive
232
719882
4206
12:16
after great disasters.
233
724112
1215
12:17
Now at this site, we had already mapped
countless looting pits.
234
725791
4665
12:22
Lisht is a royal site;
235
730480
1163
12:23
there would have been thousands
of people buried there
236
731667
2674
12:26
who lived and worked
at the court of Pharaoh.
237
734365
2114
12:28
You can see this before and after;
you see dozens of looting pits.
238
736503
3168
12:31
North Lisht.
239
739695
1172
12:32
This is in South Lisht, before and after.
240
740891
2463
12:36
When we first visited the site,
241
744967
1505
12:38
we could see the tombs
of many high-ranking officials
242
746496
2604
12:41
that had been looted.
243
749124
1340
12:43
Let me put into perspective
for you what was taken.
244
751030
2442
12:45
Imagine a two meter by two meter area
full of coffins, jewelry
245
753890
5285
12:51
and incredible statuary.
246
759199
1510
12:53
Multiply that times over a thousand.
247
761235
2828
12:57
That's what was taken.
248
765302
1467
12:59
So, when we started work,
249
767690
1218
13:00
my Egyptian co-director, Mohamed Youssef,
approached me and said,
250
768932
3152
13:04
"We must work at this one particular tomb.
251
772108
2261
13:06
It's been attacked by looters.
252
774943
1759
13:08
If we don't do anything, they'll be back."
253
776726
2016
13:10
Of course I agreed,
but I didn't think we'd find anything.
254
778766
3396
13:14
I thought the looters
had stolen everything.
255
782186
2122
13:16
What we started to find
were the most incredible reliefs.
256
784332
2997
13:19
Look at this painting --
it's just stunning.
257
787353
2166
13:21
We started finding engraved inscriptions.
258
789543
2655
13:24
And even the titles of the tomb owner --
259
792222
2071
13:26
he had titles like,
"Overseer of the Army,"
260
794317
2311
13:28
"Overseer of the Treasury."
261
796652
1427
13:30
I began to have hope.
262
798103
1190
13:31
Maybe, just maybe we would find his name.
263
799701
3603
13:35
For the ancient Egyptians, having
their name last for eternity
264
803328
2987
13:38
was their goal.
265
806339
1218
13:40
And then one day,
266
808396
1573
13:41
this appeared.
267
809993
1181
13:43
This is the name of the tomb owner: Intef.
268
811768
3889
13:48
You can see it written out
here, in hieroglyphs.
269
816202
2633
13:50
Working together with my Egyptian team,
270
818859
2756
13:53
we had restored someone's name
from 3,900 years ago.
271
821639
3962
13:57
(Applause)
272
825942
6873
14:05
Working together
with my Egyptian colleagues,
273
833764
2154
14:07
we celebrated this moment
of shared discovery.
274
835942
2278
14:10
What we were doing together
was right and true.
275
838244
2538
14:13
We found this incredible
false door, mostly intact.
276
841570
2479
14:16
On it we read about Intef
and his inscriptions.
277
844073
3124
14:19
You can actually even see him seated here.
278
847221
2610
14:23
What I realized is that everything
I had assumed about looted sites
279
851272
4593
14:27
had been proven wrong.
280
855889
1212
14:29
Every day on site we worked
together with 70 Egyptians
281
857580
3325
14:32
as colleagues and friends.
282
860929
2080
14:35
In the face of so much
hatred and ignorance
283
863870
2655
14:38
against those in the Middle East,
284
866549
2000
14:40
every moment on site felt like
a protest for peace.
285
868573
3719
14:45
When you work with those
that don't look like you,
286
873326
2351
14:47
or think like you, or speak like you,
287
875701
2092
14:49
your shared mission
of archaeological discovery
288
877817
2880
14:52
erases all superficial differences.
289
880721
2936
14:57
What I learned this season
290
885068
1540
14:58
is that archaeology
isn't about what you find.
291
886632
2616
15:01
It's about what you can prove possible.
292
889809
2683
15:05
Sometimes when you travel,
you end up finding long-lost family --
293
893373
3137
15:08
not those with whom you share genes,
294
896534
2507
15:11
but a shared entry in the book of life.
295
899065
1991
15:13
This is Omer Farrouk, my brother.
296
901584
2624
15:16
Omer's a Gufti from a village
just North of Luxor, called Guft.
297
904949
4608
15:21
Guftis are part of a celebrated
tradition in Egyptology.
298
909581
2621
15:24
They help with digging
and work crew organization.
299
912226
2769
15:27
Omer is my COO and CFO.
300
915499
2432
15:29
I simply couldn't do work without him.
301
917955
2025
15:33
One day many years ago,
when I was a young graduate student
302
921146
3398
15:36
and Omer was a young Gufti
who couldn't speak much English,
303
924568
4083
15:40
we learned, completely randomly,
304
928675
1976
15:42
that we were born in the same year,
305
930675
2446
15:45
the same month
306
933989
1601
15:47
and the same day, six hours apart.
307
935614
3640
15:52
Twins.
308
940618
1151
15:53
(Laughter)
309
941793
1394
15:56
Separated by an ocean,
but forever connected
310
944036
2298
15:58
for Ancient Egypt is our mother.
311
946358
2073
16:01
I knew then we'd always work together --
312
949047
2193
16:03
not in my brain,
313
951264
1357
16:05
but in the part of your soul that knows
not everything can be explained.
314
953517
4497
16:11
(Arabic) Omer by brother,
315
959530
2347
16:14
I will always love you.
316
962743
2919
16:18
(English) Omer my brother,
I will always love you.
317
966347
3540
16:23
So, just before my first dig in Egypt,
318
971252
2227
16:25
my mentor, the very famous Egyptologist
Professor William Kelley Simpson,
319
973503
3694
16:29
called me into his office.
320
977221
1295
16:31
He handed me a check for $2,000,
321
979049
3357
16:34
and said, "This is to cover your expenses.
322
982430
2674
16:37
Have a glorious adventure this summer.
323
985128
2104
16:39
Someday you will do this
for someone else."
324
987728
3409
16:44
Thus, my TED Prize wish
is partial payback, plus interest --
325
992161
4111
16:48
(Laughter)
326
996296
1254
16:49
for a great human being's
generosity and kindness.
327
997574
4157
16:55
So, my wish.
328
1003771
1205
16:57
I wish for us to discover the millions
of unknown archaeological sites
329
1005835
5667
17:03
around the world.
330
1011526
1611
17:05
By creating a 21st-century army
of global explorers,
331
1013161
4438
17:09
we'll find and protect
the world's hidden heritage,
332
1017623
3020
17:12
which contains clues
to humankind's collective resilience
333
1020667
4611
17:17
and creativity.
334
1025302
1310
17:19
(Applause)
335
1027464
1666
17:21
Thank you.
336
1029154
1190
17:22
(Applause)
337
1030368
2972
17:30
So how are we going to do this?
338
1038434
1881
17:33
We are going to build
with the TED Prize money
339
1041079
3392
17:36
an online, crowdsource,
citizen science platform
340
1044495
4058
17:40
to allow anyone in the world
to engage with discovering
341
1048577
4286
17:44
archaeological sites.
342
1052887
1427
17:47
There are only a couple hundred of us
space archaeologists around the world.
343
1055843
3626
17:51
It is my dream to engage the world
344
1059493
2671
17:54
with helping to find sites
and protect them.
345
1062188
2518
17:57
What you'll do is sign in,
create a username --
346
1065672
3131
18:00
note that this particular username
is already taken.
347
1068827
2661
18:03
(Laughter)
348
1071512
1858
18:05
You'll take a tutorial
and you'll start work.
349
1073394
2161
18:07
I want to note at the outset
350
1075579
1415
18:09
that in no way will be sharing
GPS data or mapping data for sites.
351
1077018
4095
18:13
We want to treat them
like human patient data,
352
1081137
2503
18:15
and not reveal their locations.
353
1083664
1763
18:17
You'll then be dealt a card from a deck --
20 x 20 meters or 30 x 30 meters,
354
1085997
4222
18:22
and you'll be looking for features.
355
1090243
2222
18:24
My team and I will have batch-processed
356
1092489
1970
18:26
large amounts of satellite data
using algorithms
357
1094483
2503
18:29
in order for you to find things,
358
1097010
1543
18:30
so you'll be doing really good science.
359
1098577
1875
18:32
You'll then be starting to look.
360
1100476
1566
18:34
What do you see? Do you see a temple?
361
1102066
1922
18:36
Do you see a tomb? Do you see a pyramid?
362
1104012
2936
18:38
Do you see any potential
site damage or site looting?
363
1106972
3532
18:42
You'll then begin to mark what's there.
364
1110528
2106
18:44
And off to the side are always
going to be rich examples
365
1112658
3494
18:48
of exactly what you're seeing,
to help guide you.
366
1116176
2945
18:51
All the data that you help us collect
will be shared with vetted authorities,
367
1119145
4447
18:55
and will help create
a new global alarm system
368
1123616
3196
18:58
to help protect sites.
369
1126836
1779
19:01
But it's not just going to stop there.
370
1129552
1924
19:04
All the archaeologists with whom
we share your discoveries
371
1132668
2994
19:07
will take you with them
as they begin to excavate them,
372
1135686
3730
19:11
by using Periscope, Google Plus
and social media.
373
1139440
4162
19:17
A hundred years ago,
archaeology was for the rich.
374
1145398
3054
19:21
Fifty years ago,
375
1149469
1711
19:23
it was for men.
376
1151204
1178
19:24
Now it's primarily for academics.
377
1152855
2273
19:27
Our goal is to democratize the process
of archaeological discovery,
378
1155859
4651
19:32
and allow anyone to participate.
379
1160534
2561
19:36
Ninety-four years ago,
380
1164070
1993
19:38
Howard Carter discovered
the tomb of King Tut.
381
1166087
2790
19:42
Who is the next Howard Carter?
382
1170090
1946
19:45
It might be you.
383
1173723
1352
19:50
By creating this platform,
384
1178098
1608
19:51
we will find the millions of places
occupied by the billions of people
385
1179730
4725
19:56
that came before us.
386
1184479
1426
19:58
If we want to answer
the big questions about who we are
387
1186710
3202
20:01
and where we've come from,
388
1189936
1261
20:03
the answers to those questions
do not lie in pyramids or palaces,
389
1191221
4439
20:07
but in the cities and villages
of those that came before us.
390
1195684
4048
20:12
If we want to learn about the past,
391
1200561
2591
20:15
it's time we inverted the pyramids.
392
1203176
2418
20:19
Acknowledging that the past
is worth saving
393
1207278
3520
20:22
means so much more.
394
1210822
1540
20:25
It means that we're worth saving, too.
395
1213712
3567
20:30
And the greatest story ever told
396
1218386
3612
20:34
is the story of our shared human journey.
397
1222950
3130
20:39
But the only way we're going
to be able to write it
398
1227532
3293
20:42
is if we do it together.
399
1230849
2871
20:47
Come with me.
400
1235270
1213
20:48
Thank you.
401
1236958
1152
20:50
(Applause)
402
1238134
3700

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sarah Parcak - Satellite archaeologist + TED Prize winner
Like a modern-day Indiana Jones, Sarah Parcak uses satellite images to locate lost ancient sites. The winner of the 2016 TED Prize, her wish is to protect the world’s shared cultural heritage.

Why you should listen

There may be hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of undiscovered ancient sites across the globe. Sarah Parcak wants to locate them. As a space archaeologist, she analyzes high-resolution imagery collected by satellites in order to identify subtle changes to the Earth’s surface that might signal man-made features hidden from view. A TED Senior Fellow and a National Geographic Explorer, Parcak wrote the textbook on satellite archaeology and founded the Laboratory for Global Observation at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Her goal: to make the world's invisible history visible once again.

In Egypt, Parcak's techniques have helped locate 17 potential pyramids, and more than 3,100 potential forgotten settlements. She's also made discoveries in the Viking world (as seen in the PBS Nova special, Vikings Unearthed) and across the Roman Empire (as shown in the BBC documentary, Rome’s Lost Empire). Her methods also offer a new way to understand how ancient sites are being affected by looting and urban development. By satellite-mapping Egypt and comparing sites over time, Parcak has noted a 1,000 percent increase in looting since 2009. It’s likely that millions of dollars worth of artifacts are stolen each year. Parcak hopes that, through her work, unknown sites can be protected to preserve our rich, vibrant history.

As the winner of the 2016 TED Prize, Parcak asked the world to help in this important work. By building a citizen science platform for archaeology, GlobalXplorer.org, Parcak invites anyone with an internet connection to help find the next potential looting pit or unknown tomb. GlobalXplorer launched on January 30, 2017, with volunteers working together to map Peru. Other countries will follow, as the platform democratizes discovery and makes satellite-mapping rapid and cost-effective. 

 

More profile about the speaker
Sarah Parcak | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee