Hundreds More Nazca Lines Emerge in Peru's Desert

(nytimes.com)

20 points | by morninj 5 hours ago ago

13 comments

  • gnabgib 4 hours ago

    Discussion (91 points, 2 months ago, 32 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41661673

  • pluc 2 hours ago
  • Always42 4 hours ago

    Looks like a lot of work to make those

  • dudeinjapan 3 hours ago

    Clearly they had Zonai technology

  • andrewstuart 4 hours ago

    Chariots of The Gods.

    • DonHopkins 4 hours ago

      FYI, Erich von Däniken's book "Chariots of the Gods?" is racist pseudo-scientific claptrap. My Archaeoastronomy professor at the University of Maryland, John B. Carlson, despises it.

      It attributes the achievements of ancient non-European civilizations to extraterrestrial visitors, undermining their intelligence and capabilities, promotes speculative theories without empirical evidence, misinterprets artifacts, ignores scientific consensus, perpetuates harmful cultural stereotypes, and plagiarizes French author Robert Charroux's "The Morning of the Magicians".

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chariots_of_the_Gods%3F

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeoastronomy

      >Archaeoastronomy (also spelled archeoastronomy) is the interdisciplinary[1] or multidisciplinary[2] study of how people in the past "have understood the phenomena in the sky, how they used these phenomena and what role the sky played in their cultures".[3] Clive Ruggles argues it is misleading to consider archaeoastronomy to be the study of ancient astronomy, as modern astronomy is a scientific discipline, while archaeoastronomy considers symbolically rich cultural interpretations of phenomena in the sky by other cultures.[4][5] It is often twinned with ethnoastronomy, the anthropological study of skywatching in contemporary societies. Archaeoastronomy is also closely associated with historical astronomy, the use of historical records of heavenly events to answer astronomical problems and the history of astronomy, which uses written records to evaluate past astronomical practice.[6]

      A Brief History of the Center for Archaeoastronomy

      https://terpconnect.umd.edu/~tlaloc/archastro/cfaintro.html

      • ipaddr 3 hours ago

        In fairness the same group believes many of the white man's (specifically US) achievements are from reversed alien technology.

        • dyauspitr 2 hours ago

          The bar is so much higher for what white man’s technologies is considered alien technology. For other groups, building a basic building with lined up bricks seems to be too much to be attributed to them.

      • andrewstuart 4 hours ago

        I just remember it as part of the craze in the 1970's for "Mysteries of the Unexplained" type stuff. Pyramid Power, UFOs, Sasquatch, etc etc

        • mykowebhn 27 minutes ago

          Does anyone remember the 70s TV show "In Search of..." hosted by Leonard Nimoy?

          I loved that show and I ate up all the literature I could find about the paranormal back then. Kids will believe anything!

        • DonHopkins 3 hours ago

          Archaeoastronomy was one of the most interesting courses I took at uni, and professor Carlson was extremely enthusiastic about it. It really opened my mind to how smart and motivated ancient people were, not at all like our stereotypes from "The Flintstones" and "Chariots of the Gods?".

          For example, The Anasazi Indians made significant astronomical observations that they integrated into their architecture and cultural practices. They tracked solar and lunar cycles, aligning their buildings and ceremonial sites with celestial events like solstices and equinoxes. A fascinating example is the "Sun Dagger" at Fajada Butte in Chaco Canyon, where they used sunlight and shadow patterns on petroglyphs to mark important times of the year.

          They deserve an enormous about of credit for what they achieved without all our received technology, and left behind for us to reverse engineer.

          https://spaceshipearth1.wordpress.com/tag/anasazi-indians-as...

          https://www2.hao.ucar.edu/education/prehistoric-southwest/su...

          It's disappointing when people reflexively attribute ancient achievements like that to religion (or aliens), when it's actually hard objective observation based science that deserves credit!

  • indulona 2 hours ago

    paywalled