1 00:00:01,007 --> 00:00:03,142 When I was a child growing up in Maine, 2 00:00:03,166 --> 00:00:05,166 one of my favorite things to do 3 00:00:05,190 --> 00:00:08,214 was to look for sand dollars on the seashores of Maine, 4 00:00:08,238 --> 00:00:10,944 because my parents told me it would bring me luck. 5 00:00:10,968 --> 00:00:13,646 But you know, these shells, they're hard to find. 6 00:00:13,670 --> 00:00:16,166 They're covered in sand, they're difficult to see. 7 00:00:16,729 --> 00:00:20,173 However, over time, I got used to looking for them. 8 00:00:20,197 --> 00:00:21,800 I started seeing shapes 9 00:00:21,824 --> 00:00:24,546 and patterns that helped me to collect them. 10 00:00:25,855 --> 00:00:29,156 This grew into a passion for finding things, 11 00:00:29,180 --> 00:00:31,220 a love for the past and archaeology. 12 00:00:31,545 --> 00:00:34,854 And eventually, when I started studying Egyptology, 13 00:00:34,878 --> 00:00:39,267 I realized that seeing with my naked eyes alone wasn't enough. 14 00:00:39,291 --> 00:00:42,140 Because all of the sudden, in Egypt, 15 00:00:42,164 --> 00:00:45,759 my beach had grown from a tiny beach in Maine 16 00:00:45,783 --> 00:00:47,870 to one eight hundred miles long, 17 00:00:47,894 --> 00:00:49,044 next to the Nile. 18 00:00:49,469 --> 00:00:53,199 And my sand dollars had grown to the size of cities. 19 00:00:54,254 --> 00:00:57,373 This is really what brought me to using satellite imagery. 20 00:00:57,397 --> 00:01:01,427 For trying to map the past, I knew that I had to see differently. 21 00:01:01,880 --> 00:01:05,238 So I want to show you an example of how we see differently 22 00:01:05,262 --> 00:01:06,506 using the infrared. 23 00:01:06,903 --> 00:01:09,856 This is a site located in the eastern Egyptian delta 24 00:01:09,880 --> 00:01:11,077 called Mendes. 25 00:01:11,101 --> 00:01:14,077 And the site visibly appears brown, 26 00:01:14,101 --> 00:01:16,307 but when we use the infrared 27 00:01:16,331 --> 00:01:18,981 and we process it, all of the sudden, 28 00:01:19,005 --> 00:01:20,521 using false color, 29 00:01:20,545 --> 00:01:22,331 the site appears as bright pink. 30 00:01:22,664 --> 00:01:24,076 What you are seeing 31 00:01:24,100 --> 00:01:27,401 are the actual chemical changes to the landscape 32 00:01:27,425 --> 00:01:30,917 caused by the building materials and activities 33 00:01:30,941 --> 00:01:32,306 of the ancient Egyptians. 34 00:01:33,385 --> 00:01:35,496 What I want to share with you today 35 00:01:35,520 --> 00:01:38,321 is how we've used satellite data 36 00:01:38,345 --> 00:01:40,800 to find an ancient Egyptian city, 37 00:01:40,824 --> 00:01:42,442 called Itjtawy, 38 00:01:42,466 --> 00:01:44,197 missing for thousands of years. 39 00:01:44,705 --> 00:01:47,776 Itjtawy was ancient Egypt's capital 40 00:01:47,800 --> 00:01:49,323 for over four hundred years, 41 00:01:49,347 --> 00:01:51,665 at a period of time called the Middle Kingdom, 42 00:01:51,689 --> 00:01:53,283 about four thousand years ago. 43 00:01:53,624 --> 00:01:56,529 The site is located in the Faiyum of Egypt, 44 00:01:56,553 --> 00:01:58,152 and the site is really important, 45 00:01:58,176 --> 00:02:01,174 because in the Middle Kingdom there was this great renaissance 46 00:02:01,198 --> 00:02:04,069 for ancient Egyptian art, architecture and religion. 47 00:02:04,784 --> 00:02:07,537 Egyptologists have always known the site of Itjtawy 48 00:02:07,561 --> 00:02:11,991 was located somewhere near the pyramids of the two kings who built it, 49 00:02:12,015 --> 00:02:14,529 indicated within the red circles here, 50 00:02:14,553 --> 00:02:16,847 but somewhere within this massive flood plain. 51 00:02:16,871 --> 00:02:18,155 This area is huge -- 52 00:02:18,179 --> 00:02:20,773 it's four miles by three miles in size. 53 00:02:21,299 --> 00:02:24,148 The Nile used to flow right next to the city of Itjtawy, 54 00:02:24,172 --> 00:02:27,585 and as it shifted and changed and moved over time to the east, 55 00:02:27,609 --> 00:02:29,069 it covered over the city. 56 00:02:29,466 --> 00:02:33,307 So, how do you find a buried city 57 00:02:33,331 --> 00:02:34,735 in a vast landscape? 58 00:02:35,473 --> 00:02:37,934 Finding it randomly would be the equivalent 59 00:02:37,958 --> 00:02:39,656 of locating a needle in a haystack, 60 00:02:39,680 --> 00:02:41,530 blindfolded, wearing baseball mitts. 61 00:02:41,554 --> 00:02:42,782 (Laughter) 62 00:02:42,806 --> 00:02:46,068 So what we did is we used NASA topography data 63 00:02:46,092 --> 00:02:48,853 to map out the landscape, very subtle changes. 64 00:02:49,218 --> 00:02:52,242 We started to be able to see where the Nile used to flow. 65 00:02:52,933 --> 00:02:55,718 But you can see in more detail, and even more interesting, 66 00:02:55,742 --> 00:02:57,789 this very slight raised area 67 00:02:57,813 --> 00:02:59,250 seen within the circle up here 68 00:02:59,274 --> 00:03:02,693 which we thought could possibly be the location of the city of Itjtawy. 69 00:03:03,233 --> 00:03:06,248 So we collaborated with Egyptian scientists 70 00:03:06,272 --> 00:03:08,398 to do coring work, which you see here. 71 00:03:08,422 --> 00:03:10,590 When I say coring, it's like ice coring, 72 00:03:10,614 --> 00:03:12,549 but instead of layers of climate change, 73 00:03:12,573 --> 00:03:14,905 you're looking for layers of human occupation. 74 00:03:14,929 --> 00:03:16,666 And, five meters down, 75 00:03:16,690 --> 00:03:18,817 underneath a thick layer of mud, 76 00:03:18,841 --> 00:03:22,269 we found a dense layer of pottery. 77 00:03:22,293 --> 00:03:25,167 What this shows is that at this possible location of Itjtawy, 78 00:03:25,191 --> 00:03:26,428 five meters down, 79 00:03:26,452 --> 00:03:29,277 we have a layer of occupation for several hundred years, 80 00:03:29,301 --> 00:03:30,698 dating to the Middle Kingdom, 81 00:03:30,722 --> 00:03:33,681 dating to the exact period of time we think Itjtawy is. 82 00:03:34,126 --> 00:03:36,714 We also found work stone -- 83 00:03:36,738 --> 00:03:38,872 carnelian, quartz and agate 84 00:03:38,896 --> 00:03:41,333 that shows that there was a jeweler's workshop here. 85 00:03:41,357 --> 00:03:42,842 These might not look like much, 86 00:03:42,866 --> 00:03:45,515 but when you think about the most common stones 87 00:03:45,539 --> 00:03:48,909 used in jewelry from the Middle Kingdom, 88 00:03:48,933 --> 00:03:50,718 these are the stones that were used. 89 00:03:50,742 --> 00:03:52,926 So, we have a dense layer of occupation 90 00:03:52,950 --> 00:03:54,951 dating to the Middle Kingdom at this site. 91 00:03:54,975 --> 00:03:57,776 We also have evidence of an elite jeweler's workshop, 92 00:03:57,800 --> 00:04:01,530 showing that whatever was there was a very important city. 93 00:04:01,554 --> 00:04:03,474 No Itjtawy was here yet, 94 00:04:03,498 --> 00:04:05,499 but we're going to be returning to the site 95 00:04:05,523 --> 00:04:07,577 in the near future to map it out. 96 00:04:07,601 --> 00:04:09,252 And even more importantly, 97 00:04:09,276 --> 00:04:13,799 we have funding to train young Egyptians in the use of satellite technology 98 00:04:13,823 --> 00:04:16,759 so they can be the ones making great discoveries as well. 99 00:04:17,524 --> 00:04:22,362 So I wanted to end with my favorite quote from the Middle Kingdom -- 100 00:04:22,386 --> 00:04:24,927 it was probably written at the city of Itjtawy 101 00:04:24,951 --> 00:04:26,623 four thousand years ago. 102 00:04:27,419 --> 00:04:29,894 "Sharing knowledge is the greatest of all callings. 103 00:04:29,918 --> 00:04:31,681 There's nothing like it in the land." 104 00:04:31,705 --> 00:04:37,189 So as it turns out, TED was not founded in 1984 AD. 105 00:04:37,213 --> 00:04:39,308 (Laughter) 106 00:04:40,109 --> 00:04:45,863 Making ideas actually started in 1984 BC 107 00:04:45,887 --> 00:04:49,141 at a not-lost-for-long city, found from above. 108 00:04:49,165 --> 00:04:52,999 It certainly puts finding seashells by the seashore in perspective. 109 00:04:53,023 --> 00:04:54,175 Thank you very much. 110 00:04:54,199 --> 00:04:56,629 (Applause) 111 00:04:56,653 --> 00:04:57,810 Thank you. 112 00:04:57,834 --> 00:04:59,873 (Applause)