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Canadian teen William Gadoury finds ancient Mayan city using stars and satellites
Canadian teen finds ancient Mayan city using stars and satellites

Canadian teen William Gadoury finds ancient Mayan city using stars and satellites

A 15-year-old boy from Quebec used Mayan star charts and satellite imagery to find an abandoned Mayan city in Belize.

William Gadoury has been passionate about the Maya since 2012, when there was a big kerfuffle over the Mayan calendar announcing the end of the world, according to Le Journal de Montréal. He’s been eagerly studying them ever since, and recently he made a connection that no other scientist over the past few centuries ever has: He linked the arrangement of the biggest cities of the Maya to the stars.

“I did not understand why the Mayan built their cities away from rivers, on infertile lands and in the mountains,” Gadoury told the Journal de Montréal. “[They] had to have another reason, and as they worshiped the stars, the idea came to me to verify my hypothesis. I was really surprised and excited when I realized that the most brilliant stars of the constellations matched the largest Mayan cities.”

After discovering that his hypothesis was correct, the teen found that 117 Mayan cities have a direct correlation to the stars in over 20 constellations. However, he soon realized that one city appeared to be missing and deduced that the uncovered city is in Belize, a country located on the eastern coast of Central America.

With the help of satellite imagery from the Canadian Space Agency, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and NASA, the teenager identified one of the “five largest Mayan cities” ever discovered, according to the Journal de Montréal.

No one has visited the newly discovered site yet because these expeditions can be costly, according to Armand LaRocque, a remote sensing expert based out of the University of New Brunswick. “It’s always a question of money. An expedition is horribly expensive.” he told the Journal. But the plan is to bring Gadoury with them on a trip to the location one day.

“That would be the culmination of my three years of work and my life’s dream,” the young explorer told the Journal. Gadoury plans on attending the 2017 International Science Fair to showcase his findings, according to BBC News.

Agencies/Canadajournal




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