
But evidence was scant; artefacts were scattered, and there were too few people on the ground to fully assess the magnitude of what lay in the dense forest. Then they found a shortcut – lidar.
Lidar (light detection and ranging) uses pulses of light to create a 3D map of terrain in a fraction of the time it would take to survey from the ground. One of those making the most of the technology is Vinicius Peripato, an analyst with the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research. By combining lidar datasets, he and his team are discovering traces of a lost world: evidence that between 10,000 and 24,000 pre-Columbian "earthworks" exist across the Amazon river basin.
While the remote scans still need to be verified on-site, Peripato says the findings so far make a compelling case that ancestral Amazonians systematically built up large urban centres and engineered their habitat to their needs and appetites, with composted gardens, fisheries, and forests groomed into orchards, in complex, sustainably run systems – which could offer lessons for modern cities.
The discovery challenges historical ideas of a pristine jungle too harsh to sustain human occupation. "It's really incredible. Our research ended up guiding the course of several others, and not just in archaeology," says Peripato. "Ecologists have been trying to understand the differences between forests that have been domesticated and virgin forests. I'm a geographer, and over time I've had to delve into archaeology and historical ecology to understand this pre-Columbian dynamic."
By the time Old World caravels (small Spanish or Portuguese sailing ships) dropped anchor off what would come to be known as South America, the habitat that Europeans had imagined to be a green blank page was in fact a hive of urban life. But waves of colonial occupiers, bearing guns, pathogens and the Bible, made short work of these ancient Amazonians, whose numbers and towns soon collapsed.
This story is from the February 08, 2025 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the February 08, 2025 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In

PM: Putin must not 'play games' over ceasefire
Keir Starmer has warned that Vladimir Putin cannot be allowed to \"play games\" with the possibility of a ceasefire in Ukraine, as he prepares to present proposals for a peace deal to a coalition of about 25 world leaders.

Little lens Spectacles are scaling down for face appeal
Jurassic World Rebirth may be the most anticipated film of the summer, but it's not the dinosaurs that are piquing our attention.

Chancellor urged to bend fiscal rules instead of cutting welfare
Leading economists are urging Rachel Reeves to bend her fiscal rules or raise taxes instead of cutting welfare when she responds to growing spending pressures in her spring statement later this month.

Duterte appears before Hague court accused of crimes against humanity over 'war on drugs'
Rodrigo Duterte yesterday became the first Asian former leader to appear before the international criminal court at The Hague.

But is it any good? How authors feel about new artificial 'creative writing'
How authors feel about new artificial 'creative writing'

Tate Case: Misogynist Influencer Irate Over Reception in Florida
It was a welcome to Florida that Andrew Tate was not expecting, far less the warm embrace he believed he was entitled to.

Chips, seal milk and moles - the weird diet of gulls revealed
Gulls are renowned for snatching chips from tourists' hands, but a new scientific project has revealed the birds also like to tuck into moles and quench their thirst with seal milk.

Coffee drinkers urged to try supermarket own brands as prices soar
It's a wake-up call for instant coffee drinkers - the price of some of the UK's best-known brands has soared by up to 40% in a year.

Beating a retreat Mixed emotions as Ukrainians give up territorial gains
Under constant attack from drones attached to fibre optic cables, the soldiers scrambled in groups of two or three along hidden tracks or through fields, often walking miles on foot to get back into Ukrainian territory.

Kittens are expensive, but grabbing baby wildlife could cost an arm and leg
To the people who parked their consciences and voted for Donald Trump because, they thought, he'd slash regulation, cut corporate taxes and eviscerate the federal government to send their stock holdings soaring, I'd like to ask: how's that working out for you?