Sarah Parcak: Archaeology from space
Sarah Parcak: 上太空考古
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.
就係到海邊執海錢
我已經識點樣搵到佢哋
變成一條八百英哩長嘅尼羅河沙灘
同活動對地表造成嘅化學影響
我哋點樣利用衛星資料
埃及古城伊塔威
古埃及中王國時期
金字塔附近
長同闊有成四英哩乘三英哩
搵一座埋喺地底嘅城市?
繪製出地形同細微嘅變化
呢個微微拱起嘅地方
在於搵出氣候變化
搵唔同時代人類嘅活動
嘅五米深地方
幾百年人類活動痕跡嘅岩層
光玉隨、石英同瑪瑙
製造珠寶時最常用嘅石材
好多人類活動痕跡嘅岩層
追溯到中王國時期
一間大師級嘅珠寶工坊
利用衛星科技去探索古蹟
古埃及中王國時代名言收結
莫過於同他人分享知識」
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