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Modern Technology Reveals
Ancient Footpaths Buried in
2,500 Years Worth of Volcanic
Ash
Washington, D.C. - infoZine -
More than 20 years ago, volcano
scientists Payson Sheets and Tom
Sever teamed up to solve a
mystery.
While flying over the active
Arenal volcano in the mountains
of Costa Rica, infrared imaging
technology on board their
research plane picked up a
steady trail--one with a
beginning and an
ending--concealed deep within
the earth.
The trail showed a clear path
away from what Sheets and Sever
knew to be ancient villages in
Arenal's foothills. Then, the
trail just disappeared.
One of the most active volcanoes
in the world, Arenal is located
near the city of La Fortuna,
about 93 miles northwest of San
José, and rises above Arenal
Lake. The volcano last erupted
in 1968, killing 78 people,
after it had been dormant for
400 years. The tracks Sheets and
Sever saw had been covered by
more than 2,500 years of
volcanic ash and erosion.
Sheets, an anthropologist at the
University of Colorado, wanted
to learn more about the
villagers who had inhabited the
area 2,000 years ago and why had
they traversed the trail so
vigorously. Why had the
villagers continued to return to
their native village time after
time, even after at least four
devastating Arenal eruptions?
What made these people so
resilient, so persistent? Could
the trail picked up by infrared
provide the answers?
With funding from the National
Science Foundation (NSF), Sheets
and Sever, a NASA archaeologist,
collaborated for the next 20
years to learn more about the
region, its history and its
people.
Fast forward to 2004.
Sheets and Sever learned that
technology used for video games
might be useful in digging
deeper, virtually, into the
past. Using TerraBuilder,
provided for free by the company
that created it, Sever used
3-dimensional technology to
input layers over the trail and
then look through them to
discern what they signified and
where they went. Without an
airplane, Sheets could "fly
over" the land using the
technology and, without
physically disturbing the
ground, "unearth" the
surroundings and practices of a
people long gone. Sheets could
see how wide the path was
between the residential center
and the cemetery, and he could
see the extent of erosion over
the centuries.
Thanks to the video game
technology, work that once took
years was plotted in minutes.
Soon, Sheets realized he was
looking at the worn footpaths
created by ancient villagers
between 500 B.C. and 600 A.D.
Constant traffic wore the path
to a depth between 7 and 13 feet
deep. Over time, ancient
villagers marched along the path
from their homes, creating a
tunnel-like trench that became
symbolic and sacred. After about
10 miles of single-file walking,
the villagers stepped into an
open area, which served as the
village cemetery. Sheets
discovered ancient stones that
were used to mark grave sites as
well as springs that were used
as part of ritual funereal
feasts. Before that time, the
Arenal people buried their kin
simply and without ceremony,
alongside family homes.
"When I visited the site in
person, it was extraordinary to
know that I was following the
footsteps of an ancient people,
walking on a path that was
invisible to the average person
in modern times," Sheets said.
"The trail wasn't the easiest
path to walk, and the people
intended it to be difficult, out
of respect for their dead. After
a steep incline, I suddenly
entered a wide-open area. It was
peaceful and serene."
Sheets' and Sever's findings,
released in December 2006,
reveal much about the changing
cultural practices of the
peoples in the Arenal region.
The scientists were struck by
the highly sophisticated way the
villagers honored their dead,
which, based on their research,
was a new concept. Despite the
persistent rumblings and
explosions of the volcano, the
Arenal people treasured their
rituals and placed high
importance on returning to the
land of their forebears where
they could reconnect with the
dead.
Sheets says the Arenal peoples
were more resilient than the
Maya and Aztecs. Their diet came
from the rich biodiversity of
the rainforest and only a small
amount from domesticated food.
Arenal peoples could survive the
devastating volcanic eruptions
because they knew how to find
food in the wild.
Because of their resilience,
Sheets believes the Arenal
people returned to the village
over the centuries, despite the
violent eruptions. "Our earlier
analyses of artifacts and
architecture could not answer
the question of whether the
Arenal occupants were the direct
descendants of the ones who had
to abandon the village. But more
recently, when we realized the
occupants of the village went
right back to their previous
practice of using the same path
to the same distant cemetery, we
became convinced they were the
direct descendants," Sheets
said. "Now we think the
reestablishment of the ritual
path to the cemetery, to revere
their dead as well as reconnect
with the spirits of the
deceased, was at least as
important as reestablishing the
village itself. As the tail wags
the dog, so does the trail
resettle the village."
NSF's Division of Behavioral and
Cognitive Sciences, which funded
Sheets' work, supports research
to develop and advance
scientific knowledge on human
cognition, language, social
behavior and culture, as well as
research on the interactions
between human societies and the
physical environment.
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