For all I know you might be standing on a fossil right now.

in steemstem •  6 years ago  (edited)

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UNESCO

Hey how is everybody doing? I didn't post in the last few days as I stayed offline reading books on UNESCO and they are really really good. Did you know that they preserve over a 1000 ancient sites all over the world? It is now my goal to visit each one of these marvellous sites across the globe.

Cultural-Landscape-and-Archaeological-Remains-of-the-Bamiyan-Valley-4.jpg

UNESCO

I worship UNESCO after reading about them so much. They fight for what's right and that is all that matters right? I am thankful to those people who are restoring all these ancient sites. Each piece of history we find, we get a step closer to know our true history. So many unexplained voids will be soon uncovered. In the past 73 years archaeologists and historians have worked side by side to preserve these historical sites. All I am saying is expect to see a 1000 more. Why you ask?

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The number of discoveries made in the past few decades tells us that we don't know so much about our planet and we are yet to discover. Forget knowing everything about the planet, we haven't even seen it all . Forget the mariana trench and forget the KHALISH mountain these will remain a mystery for at least a few centuries. We don't even know what's in 3/4th of the waters yet. Okay there's nothing there you say. ( I do not agree with that) but let's just mark that as Unexplored territory.

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Link

Now Lets go based on the surface area of the planet. Earth has a total surface area of 510.1 million km² including the rain forests, the Antarctic, the mountain ranges and the untouched parts of land with absolutely no inhibition.

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Wikipedia

The water bodies constitutes to over 362 million km² which is 71% of the total surface area of the planet. If you consider all water bodies uninhabitable by human beings, it doesn't mean it was the same thousands of years ago. We know about the slow rising water level.

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Link

In the remaining 29% of the land mass (148 million km²) we got :

LandmassArea in (km²)
The mountain ranges constitute to over16.3 million km²
The Amazon forest with5.5 million km²
and the East siberian taiga forest with3.9 million km²
Other forests add up to36 million km²
Deserts cover over3.5 million km²

The leftover 82.8 million km² are occupied by humans, ranging from densely populated areas to agricultural lands.

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Link

Our population has Increased from 0.8 Billion to 7.6 Billion. That is 9 times in just 200 years, covering over 13 times the initial inhibited land due to cultivation, industrialization, urbanization and population explosion.
If you consider the entire 82.8 million km² and subtract the industrial area which is 17 Million km² it gives you 65 Million km². This is the area we know about the most.
(Not keeping in mind the undiscovered tunnels and cities)

fossil-excavation-site.jpg

Wikipedia

Fossils and ancient sites are usually buried under the soil and only 3% of the land has been excavated for mostly construction and archeological purposes. That means most of the land has not been scanned thoroughly and what lies underneath them will remain a mystery.

Fortunately In over a decade archeologists have started using Hi-tech machinery like the Ground Penetrating Radar to look for what's beneath the surface without any haste by excavation.

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Link

A Ground Penetrating Radar transmitter emits high intensity electromagnetic waves into the ground. When the waves encounter a buried object or a boundary between materials having different permittivities, it will be reflected or refracted or scattered back to the surface. A receiving antenna can then record the variations in the return signal.Consider it to be like a sonar for the ground.

gpr-how-it-sees1.gif
Link
Interestingly a lot of mind boggling discoveries were made answering so many of our questions but also gave birth to so many new questions regarding our timeline. Discoveries like Gobeklitepe just shatters the way we think about our history. I am expecting to see at least a 100 more by 2050. After all we still got 97% of the land untouched under the soil.

dea87265116af94752baee1384a2f6f6-gobekli-tepe.jpg
Link

"What we today call as mere Mythology will soon be considered as Ancient History and what we call as magic will be called science. "


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More links:
An Impossible Ancient Hindu Temple


A Devil's Shrine worshipped in Inida


Scanning for hidden secrets at the Pyrimid of Giza

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You are right we might be standing on a fossil, but realizing that will be difficult since all the modern constructions we already.

But it is interesting to know the actual statistic of "97% of the land untouched under the soil". I didn't knew it was that high.

People think space is where the unknown lies, I agree, but bruh the land we live in, we don't seem to even know 3/4th of it. Everyday a new specie is being discovered in the amazon, every year archaeologists are finding tons of historic sites . We still have so much to learn just on this planet and only that curiosity can uncover the truth!

We still have so much to learn just on this planet

That is right, the fact we are able to keep having new discoveries on a constant basis proves we are advancing as a species.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

I hope you achieve your goal and visit every Unesco site on earth! There are over 18 UNESCO sites in Greece where I live.

UNESCO-Delphi .jpg
Ancient Delphi
source: http://greece.greekreporter.com/2018/01/20/unesco-world-heritage-sites-to-visit-in-greece-photos/

Thanks a lot mate Ancient Delphi looks spectacular even now! Ill definitely visit this place and document it probably by 2019 :) Have you visited them all?

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Out of the 18 monuments, I have visited 10. Delphi really is spectacular and I hope you visit soon enough! If you ever come, visit the monasteries of Meteora (also UNESCO)...

μετεορα.jpg

Your post has been personally reviewed and was considered to be a well written article.
You received a 10.0% upvote since you are not yet a member of geopolis and wrote in the category of "archeology".

To read more about us and what we do, click here.
https://steemit.com/geopolis/@geopolis/geopolis-the-community-for-global-sciences-update-4

Hey thank you! I shall join :)

I think that you need to add attributions for the photos and charts you have used in your post.

Hey thanks for the vote, It helped me reach a lot of them :)
Yes I gave them the credits, It gets so messy to write on markdown with ref links

WOW what an amazing post @awakeninartist!!!
How many things we have no idea about? It is magnificent though!

Thank you for this wonderful article :)!

Ikr? If you consider what we will know 1000 years from now, we prolly know very very less today!

such a great view it is

Awesome picture. I hope I can travel to all of those sites in the future too.

Both you and I will!!

Wow! Great Read buddy!

Thanks a lot :)

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