Star pupil finds lost Mayan city by studying ancient charts of the night sky from h

doc-d

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Star pupil finds lost Mayan city by studying ancient charts of the night sky from his bedroom


Star pupil finds lost Mayan city by studying ancient charts of the night sky from his bedroom
The Descending God's Temple which is on the Mayan site of Tulum, built on the eastern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico
The Descending God's Temple which is on the Mayan site of Tulum. It is located on the eastern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico. CREDIT: AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Telegraph Reporters
10 MAY 2016 • 8:49AM
A Canadian schoolboy appears to have discovered a lost Mayan city hidden deep in the jungles of Mexico using a new method of matching stars to the location of temples on earth.

William Gadoury, 15, was fascinated by the ancient Central American civilization and spent hours poring over diagrams of constellations and maps of known Mayan cities.

And then he made a startling realisation: the two appeared to be linked.

William took to Google Maps and projected that there must be another city hidden deep in the thick jungles of the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico
William took to Google Maps and found that there must be another city hidden in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico CREDIT: CANADIAN SPACE AGENCY
“I was really surprised and excited when I realised that the most brilliant stars of the constellations matched the largest Maya cities,” he told the Journal de Montréal.

In hundreds of years of scholarship, no other scientist had ever found such a correlation.

Studying 22 different constellations, William found that they matched the location of 117 Mayan cities scattered throughout Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador.

I was really surprised and excited when I realised that the most brilliant stars of the constellations matched the largest Maya cities
William Gadoury
When he applied his theory to a 23rd constellation, he found that two of the stars already had cities linked to them but that the third star was unmatched.

William took to Google Maps and projected that there must be another city hidden deep in the thick jungles of the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico.

The Canadian Space Agency agreed to train its satellite telescopes on the spot and returned with striking pictures: what appears to be an ancient Mayan pyramid and dozens of smaller structures around it.

If the satellite photographs are verified, the city would be among the largest Mayan population centers ever discovered.

It fell to William to christen the new city and he chose the name K’aak Chi, meaning Fire Mouth, and the teenager said he hoped to one day see the ruins with his own eyes.

“It would be the culmination of my three years of work and the dream of my life,” he said. He became interested in the Mayans after reading about their predictions that the world would end in 2012.

William has named the new city K’aak Chi
William has named the new city K’aak Chi CREDIT: CANADIAN SPACE AGENCY
Reaching the city will not be easy. It is in one of the most remote and inaccessible areas of Mexico and an archaeological mission would be costly.

"It's always about money. Expedition costs are horribly expensive,” said Dr. Armand LaRocque, a specialist at the University of New Brunswick.

Scientists said they were astonished by the discovery and that it had been made by someone so young.

“What is fascinating about the project of William, is the depth of his research,” said Daniel de Lisle.

“Linking the position of stars and the location of a lost city and the use of satellite images on a tiny territory to identify the remains buried under dense vegetation, is quite exceptional.”
 

kcm

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Something tells me that kid is goin' places! :thumbsup:
 

piegrande

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That tells me the Mayas had excellent mapping and surveying talents. At least that's how I see it.
 

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:laughing7: My pertner and I Did once for 6 months living in / on the jungle, only found a small
overgrown Pyramid which was duly reported to the proper officiales, I don't think that they ever did anything with it.Would need the kiddie's star chart to relocate it again. That was back in the 50's :coffee2::coffee2:

My partner hamming it up after 3 days of no water.

.Third.jpg
 

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piegrande

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Where I live, there are so many ancient sites the government won't even accept more registrations. A half hour away for years was an ancient mound. Last year I lost track where it was. I kept looking for it. Finally a cousin told me they bulldozed it down and built a small pole barn for a factory. Think how much ancient stuff was bulldozed away!
 

Peyton Manning

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please tell me it wasn't beieber
 

piegrande

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I do not expect any progress unless something new comes up. For example, a new book with more historical information which might change my opinion, as I have said a number of times. Such as another probable candidate location with similar characteristics and history.

An earthquake would be nice, if it opened the ground right there so I could get pictures of whatever is there, then run like the wind. :D

It would even be interesting if the government figured out from my postings and came in with GPR to see what is there.

If the avaricious son inherited and decided to excavate. He is greedy and dumb enough to do something that lethal.

I am sure if I had time I could brainstorm other possiblities. Otherwise, just as in your case, things are frozen solid.
 

piegrande

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When people ask me my shoe size, I tell them 32, which is what US 13 is in Mexico, they inevitably gasp!
 

piegrande

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A student who lived with us in 1994 and 1995 came to visit us this weekend with her husband and kids. Their own student daughter came from Oaxaca to join us for the weekend. What a lovely reunion !

The girl from Oaxaca said the blockade was on again, came on while she was here. She said Mexicans can go through the blockade. simply take their luggage off the transport vehicle and walk about 45 minutes, then take a taxi on.

She left her Mary Kay cleanser in my bathroom. I am not going to use it. :D

Also, my 1/4 acre of corn, grown in cooperation with an old neighbor who plows it with his burro, is taller than my head and very dark green. The soil here is pretty much useless, but with a dump truck of chicken manure from a chicken ranch 15 minutes away it grows very well. Also, we have had some really good rains since it was planted.

That corn field is about 100 or 150 feet from the treasure.

Oh, forgive me, I don't know what came over me there for a minute. I mean it's about 100 or 150 feet from the alleged hypothetical location of the alleged hypothetical treasure.
 

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