Sarah Parcak: Hunting for Peru's lost civilizations -- with satellites
Sarah Parcak: 用衛星追尋秘魯失落嘅文化
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.
set out from his rainforest camp
the dense rainforest foliage
maze of structures
不可思議嘅迷宮結構
by National Geographic,
of its magazine in 1912.
photography equipment
去記錄呢個遺址
on an incredible journey with me,
than use state-of-the-art technology
Hiram Bingham 開始嘅
more open, inclusive,
not previously possible.
今日我會咁興奮同你哋分享
the 2016 TED Prize platform
Hiram Bingham's impossible dream
不可能嘅夢
我哋可以共同擔當嘅工作
of human figures.
with some incredible organizations,
the world's largest provider
commercial satellite imagery.
商用衛星圖像供應商
platform they have.
and search for the airplane.
幫手搵 MH370 嘅飛機
with the satellite imagery.
教育同課程開發方面嘅幫助
with education and of course exploration.
with rich content for the platform,
like you saw at the beginning of this talk
to build and plan the platform,
at some of the satellite imagery.
is 0.3-meter data.
長 0.3 米嘅地面
in northern Peru.
稱為 Chan Chan 嘅遺跡
but let's zoom in.
that you all will get to see.
都係咁嘅類型同埋質素
individual buildings.
to find previously unknown sites.
is that as part of the platform,
thousands of previously unknown sites,
to uncover large-scale looting at sites,
is that all of this data
保護呢啲遺跡嘅考古學家分享
with archaeologists on the front lines
meeting with their Minister of Culture
in both English and Spanish,
都能夠參與
Latin America can participate.
is the gentleman you see here,
Luis Jaime Castillo 教授
and former vice-minister,
同前任文化副部長
and share the data with archaeologists
these sites on the ground.
drone mapping program,
you can see behind me here and here.
into the platform,
some of the new sites you help find.
會幫手做教育、外展
with education, outreach,
Preservation Initiative,
可持續保護行動計劃
poorest communities
most well-known archaeological sites.
and business training.
to create beautiful handicrafts
to treasure their cultural heritage
with 24 of these women
called Pachacamac, just outside Lima.
著名考古遺跡 Pachacamac
will help us transform communities
一啲喺遺跡隔籬嘅社區
that you help to discover.
this platform to the world,
thousands of emails
professors, educators, students,
who are so excited to help participate.
amazing places for us to help discover,
to be looking for Atlantis,
to launch this platform.
by the end of the year.
in the past few weeks are any indication,
已經發現到一啲跡象
is just going to be beyond imagination.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sarah Parcak - Satellite archaeologist + TED Prize winnerLike 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.
Sarah Parcak | Speaker | TED.com