LiDAR reveals Mayan mega city hidden in Guatemalan jungle

A vast Mayan megalopolis apparently lies hidden underneath all the trees, creepers and centuries of growth and soil in the Guatemalan forest — and we might never have found it if not for the wonders of laser technology. The PACUNAM Foundation , which champions the use of scientific research to preserve cultural heritage, has scanned the jungles in the country using Light Detection and Ranging ( LiDAR ) technology and found an interconnected network of ancient cities. They discovered 60, 000 previously unknown structures without having to cut down a single plant, and that discovery changes many things we thought we knew about the ancient civilization. The sheer size of the megalopolis suggests that Mayan populations were bigger than we thought. Previous estimates put the Mayan people’s population at around 5 million, but now it’s possible that there were 10 to 15 million of them. The fact that the team discovered houses, pyramids, palaces and elevated highways even though Mayans didn’t use wheels or relied on beasts on burden indicates that they had an organized workforce. Since the cities in the hidden megalopolis were connected by wide causeways, the Mayans likely interacted regularly and might’ve had established trade routes. Further, all the ramparts and fortresses found in the ruins show that “warfare, ” as team member and archaeologist Thomas Garrison explained, “wasn’t only happening toward the end of the civilization.” While we mostly talk about LiDAR as a system that helps self-driving cars and robots “see” their environments, scientists have also been using it to survey the environment without disturbing it. That’s why it’s the perfect tool for PACUNAM’s scientists — aside from the fact that physically looking for the ruins would’ve taken forever, Guatemala is already losing 10 percent of its forests every year to agriculture and human settlement. In fact, we’ll probably hear more discoveries in the future, since this is only the initiative’s first phase: the organization plans to use LiDAR to map over 5, 000 square miles of Guatemala’s lowlands in the future. Via: The Guardian Source: National Geographic

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LiDAR reveals Mayan mega city hidden in Guatemalan jungle

Feds say encryption to foil wiretaps is on the rise

“For the first time, encryption is thwarting government surveillance efforts through court-approved wiretaps,” reports David Kravetz at Wired.com , citing a report by the U.S. agency that oversees federal courts. This report also shows that authorities armed with wiretap orders are encountering increasingly more encryption.        

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Feds say encryption to foil wiretaps is on the rise

E. coli engineered into an analog computer

Synthetic biology researchers at MIT are creating simple analog computers in living cells, complete with fluorescent “displays.” Rahul Sarpeshkar and Timothy K. Lu engineered genetic circuits in E. coli so that the bacteria glows with a brightness determined by the amount of certain chemicals surrounding it. From Science News: By making bacteria glow more or less brightly depending on the number of different chemicals around, the new circuit can compute answers to math problems, Lu’s team reports May 15 in Nature. To add 1 plus 1, for example, the circuit would detect two chemicals and crank up the bacteria’s glow to “2.” ” Analog circuits boost power in living computers ” (Science News) ” Cell-Based Computing Goes Analog ” (The Scientist) ” Synthetic analog computation in living cells ” (Nature)        

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E. coli engineered into an analog computer

Big pictures of small change

Artist Martin John Callanan and the Advanced Engineered Materials Group at the UK’s National Physical Laboratory used an infinite 3D optical microscope to capture 400 million pixel images of the lowest denomination coin from many currencies. ” The Fundamental Units ”        

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Big pictures of small change

Guatemala Judge Orders McAfee Released

An anonymous reader points out an AP report which says a judge in Guatemala has ordered the release of John McAfee from a detention center. “Lawyer Telesforo Guerra said the judge notified him verbally of the ruling, but added that it may take a day for formal written notification to win McAfee’s release, possibly as soon as Wednesday.” McAfee, on the run from Belizean police, was arrested in Guatemala several days ago after making himself known to authorities. He did so because a pair of reporters who were interviewing him posted a photo which included metadata on the photo’s location. In a live broadcast on Sunday, McAfee expressed a desire to return to the U.S. “I simply would like to live comfortably day by day, fish, swim, enjoy my declining years. My long-term plan was simply to get away from Belize, think, and decide what to do.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Guatemala Judge Orders McAfee Released