This is the story of how he did it. And how did Tulane University graduate student Luke Auld-Thomas find it? The answer lies ...
The ancient Maya city was named "Valeriana" after a nearby freshwater lagoon and built before 150 AD, researchers said.
Tulane researchers uncovered over 6,500 Maya structures in Mexico using lidar, revealing a complex settlement landscape and ...
The technique, using thousands of laser pulses sent from a plane, can detect variations in topography that are not evident to the naked eye.
A city with temple pyramids not far from the road and a site with a Maya complex built alongside a sinkhole lend to evidence ...
An American student analysing publicly available data found a sprawling Mayan city with thousands of undiscovered structures, including pyramids, under a Mexican forest.The data came from laser scans ...
Lidar survey data reveals ancient Maya buildings clustered on a hilltop. Picture: Luke Auld-Thomas/Antiquity The enormous hidden complex was found using the laser mapping technology Lidar ...