نگاشته شده توسط: سعید | آگوست 12, 2008

عکس های ماهواره ایی از مکان های باستانی


Angkor Wat — Cambodia


Angkor Wat, Cambodia

Angkor Wat
Click for full size Image

GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of Angkor Wat
on April 12, 2004.
Photo credit: GeoEye

Created as a constant reminder of a greater cosmic order, Angkor Wat shows several apparent solar alignments with a nearby mountaintop shrine. A person standing at Pre Rup, six kilometers away, could watch the sun set over Angkor Wat at winter solstice. A person standing in the southwestern corner of the temple could watch a rising sun through the eastern gate during the summer solstice.

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Casa Rinconada — New Mexico, United States


Casa Rinconada, New Mexico,
United States

Casa Rinconada
Click for full size Image

GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of Casa Rinconada in Chaco Canyon on September 7, 2004. Photo credit: GeoEye

Casa Rinconada, built between 1070 and 1110 AD, sits on an isolated hill about one-half mile across the canyon from Pueblo Bonito. One of the six great community kivas in the area, the structure is about 20 meters across and four to five meters deep. A 1970s survey of the area found this site to have precise solstice and equinox alignments. The main axis of the kiva is aligned through doorways on both the north and south sides. Modeled on a perfect circle, niches in the interior form an east-west line. Scientists who measured the alignments of these features found the accuracy of the north-south alignment to be within 45 arc-seconds or three-quarter of a degree while the error in the east-west alignment is only eight arc-seconds. Solar alignments occur on the winter and summer solstices when sunlight entering the kiva falls upon one of six irregular niches. From a given niche, the sun framed in the narrow window could be seen.

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Chichen Itza — Mexico


Chichen Itza, Mexico

Chichen Itza
Click for full size Image

GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of Chichen Itza on
March 5, 2001.
Photo credit: GeoEye

In a spectacular show of shadow and light, a shadow representing the Feathered Serpent god Kukulkan slides down the northern stairway of Chichen Itza during sunset of the equinoxes and then vanishes. The square, stepped pyramid, built by Mayans in about 1000 to 1200 AD also has axes that orient with the rising point of the sun at the summer solstice and setting point during the winter solstice. Many think the pyramid also serves as a calendar. Each of the four faces of the pyramid has a stairway with 91 steps. With the addition of a shared step forming a platform at the top, this totals 365, the number of days in a year. The stairways also divide the nine terraces on each side into 18 segments, representing the 18 months of the Mayan calendar.

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Dzibilchaltun — Mexico


Dzibilchaltun, Mexico

Dzibilchaltun
Click for full size Image

GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of Dzibilchaltun on
February 17, 2001.
Photo credit: GeoEye

The highlight of Dzibilchaltun, or “Place of Stone Writing,” is watching the equinox sunrise through a door of the Temple of Seven Dolls. The Mayan city, first built in 300 BC, was occupied when Spaniards discovered the city.

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Easter Island — Chile


Easter Island,
Chile

Easter Island
Click for full size Image

GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of eastern Easter Island on December 6, 2003.
Photo credit: GeoEye

Called the Navel of the World, Easter Island is home to over a half-dozen volcanoes and more than 880 statues called moai (pronounced mo-eye). Ranging from just a few feet to more than 30 feet tall, the enigmatic statues weigh up to 150 tons. They were hewn from volcanic material from quarries on the slopes of the Rano Raraku volcano sometime after 300 AD. While nearly all of the moai face toward the interior of the island, seven moai at Aku Akivi, not shown in the image, face towards the ocean and a point on the horizon where the sun sets during the equinox. Explorer, Captain James Cook gave the island its modern name in 1774.

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Machu Picchu — Peru


Machu Picchu,
Peru

Machu Picchu
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GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of Machu Picchu on September 8, 2003.
Photo credit: GeoEye

One of the most famous Incan cities in the world, sun alignments are found throughout Machu Picchu. Many features, including the Sacred Plaza, The Temple of Three Windows and The Intihuatana platform, align with the summer solstice azimuth of 65-245 degrees. Scientists believe these alignments were primary considerations in the construction of the shrines. A shaft of light, shining through an east-facing window, reportedly illuminates The Torreon, or Temple of the Sun, during the summer solstice. The city was built between 1460 and 1470 AD at an altitude of 8,000 feet.

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Mayapan — Mexico


Mayapan,
Mexico

Mayapan
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GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of Mayapan on
September 19, 2001.
Photo credit: GeoEye

Mayapan, reaching its zenith around 1200 AD, represents one of the largest assemblages of Mayan ruins in the Yucatan and is one of the few walled Mayan cities. The largest pyramid is the Castle of Kukulkan, made as a smaller replica of the Castle of Chichen Itza. Mayapan also is home to many circular buildings, or observatories. The Mayas astronomical knowledge helped them predict the exact time of solar and planetary events and aided in the creation of precise calendars.

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Stonehenge — United Kingdom

Stonehenge
Stonehenge,
United Kingdom

Stonehenge
Click for full size Image

GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of Stonehenge on
March 27, 2002.
Photo credit: GeoEye

Possibly the world’s most recognized ancient observatory, Stonehenge’s ring of stones was built more than 5000 years ago on a wind-swept hill near Salisbury, United Kingdom. Recent theories support construction in about 2000 BC by a late Neolithic people known as the Beakers. Their addition to the project included adding a double ring of stones inside the original earthen henge. More than 80 “bluestones,” some weighing up to four tons, were transported several hundred miles from quarries in Wales. Controversy surrounds some of the possible stellar alignments at Stonehenge, but on the longest day of the year, the summer solstice, the rising sun does appear behind the “Heel Stone.” As the sun rises, the shadow cast by the Heel Stone creeps up the length of rock and into the heart of the five interior “sarsen” pillar stones.

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Teotihuacan — Mexico


Teotihuacan,
Mexico

Teotihuacan
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GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of Teotihuacan on
October 12, 2001.
Photo credit: GeoEye

Rising 20 stories above the central Mexican highlands, the pyramids of Teotihuacan (pronounced tay-oh-tee-wah-con) were central to Toltec learning and culture. The city, about the size of ancient Athens and Rome, was abandoned about 1500 years ago. Using an advanced understanding of mathematics, geometry and astronomy, the Toltecs built the largest pyramid, “The Pyramid of the Sun,” with an alignment to coincide with the two days (May 19th and July 25th) when the sun would be directly over the top of the pyramid at noon. This would also create an alignment to the east toward the rising sun and to the west for the setting sun. This pyramid has a base only 10 feet shorter on each side than the Great Pyramid of Cheops in Egypt.

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Uxmal — Mexico


Uxmal,
Mexico

Uxmal
Click for full size Image

GeoEye’s IKONOS satellite took this image of Uxmal on August 8, 2002. Photo credit: GeoEye

Founded in about 500 AD, Uxmal (pronounced “oosh-mahl”) was the most powerful site in western Yucatan. Many of the buildings rely simply on well-cut stones with no mortar. Astronomical alignments at Uxmal surround the planet Venus. The orientation of the long Palace of the Governor acts as a sighting with other buildings at Uxmal pointing to the southernmost rise location of Venus, which occurs once every eight years.

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Petra – Jordan

Petra Treasury
Petra, Jordan

Petra
IKONOS – Petra, Jordan

Petra, Jordan meaning “Rock” in Greek is an archaeological site in Jordan, lying in a basin among the mountains which form the eastern flank of Arabah (Wadi Araba), the large valley running from the Dead Sea to the Gulf of Aqaba. It is famous for having many stone structures carved into the rock. The long-hidden site was revealed to the Western world by the Swiss explorer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt in 1812. The city was the principal city of ancient Nabataea and was famous above all for two things: its trade and its hydraulic engineering systems. It was locally autonomous until the reign of Trajan, but it flourished under Roman rule.

Satellite Image: Copyright © 2007 Goeye. All Rights Reserved.


Machu, Picchu – Peru

Machu Picchu
Machu Picchu, Peru

Machu Picchu
IKONOS – Machu Picchu, Peru

One of the most famous Incan cities in the world, sun alignments are found throughout Machu Picchu. Many features, including the Sacred Plaza, The Temple of Three Windows and The Intihuatana platform, align with the summer solstice azimuth of 65-245 degrees. Scientists believe these alignments were primary considerations in the construction of the shrines. A shaft of light, shining through an east-facing window, reportedly illuminates The Torreon, or Temple of the Sun, during the summer solstice. The city was built between 1460 and 1470 AD at an altitude of 8,000 feet.

Satellite Image: Copyright © 2007 Goeye. All Rights Reserved.


Christ the Redeemer – Brazil

Christ the Redeemer
Christ the Redeemer

Christ the Redeemer
QuickBird – Christ the Redeemer, Brazil

Christ the Redeemer, a statue of Jesus Christ in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The statue stands 38 m (105 feet) tall, weighs 700 tons and is located at the peak of the 700-m (2296-foot) Corcovado mountain in the Tijuca Forest National Park at WGS84 Latitude: 22°57′5″S and Longitude: 43°12′39″W, overlooking the city. As well as being a potent symbol of the Roman Catholic Church, the statue has become an icon of Rio and Brazil.

Satellite Image: Copyright © 2007 Goeye.  All Rights Reserved.


Great Wall of China

Great Wall of China
Great Wall of China

Great Wall of China
ASTER –  Great Wall of China

The Great Wall started as earth works thrown up for protection by different States. The individual sections weren’t connected until the Qin dynasty (221-206 B.C.). It was during the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) that the Wall took on its present form. The brick and granite work was enlarged and sophisticated designs were added. The Ming Emperors, having overthrown the Hun dominance and expelled their Mongol rulers of the North devoted large portions of available material and manpower to making sure that they didn’t return. The Great Wall is the world’s longest human-made structure, stretching over approximately 6,400 km from Shanhai Pass in the east to Lop Nur in the west, along an arc that roughly delineates the southern edge of Inner Mongolia. It is also the largest human-made structure ever built in terms of surface area and mass.

Satellite Image: NASA/Japanese Space Team


Chichen Itza – Mexico

Chichen Itza
Chichen Itza, Mexico

Chichen Itza
IKONOS – Chichen Itza, Mexico

In a spectacular show of shadow and light, a shadow representing the Feathered Serpent god Kukulkan slides down the northern stairway of Chichen Itza during sunset of the equinoxes and then vanishes. The square, stepped pyramid, built by Mayans in about 1000 to 1200 AD also has axes that orient with the rising point of the sun at the summer solstice and setting point during the winter solstice. Many think the pyramid also serves as a calendar. Each of the four faces of the pyramid has a stairway with 91 steps. With the addition of a shared step forming a platform at the top, this totals 365, the number of days in a year. The stairways also divide the nine terraces on each side into 18 segments, representing the 18 months of the Mayan calendar.

Satellite Image: Copyright © 2007 Geoeye. All Rights Reserved.


Taj Mahal – India

Taj Mahal
Taj Mahal, India

Taj Mahal
IKONOS – Taj Mahal, India

Located at the city of Agra in the State of Uttar Pradesh, the Taj Mahal is one of the most beautiful masterpieces of architecture in the world a style that combines elements of Persian, Turkish, Indian, and Islamic architectural styles. While the white domed marble mausoleum is the most familiar part of the monument, the Taj Mahal is actually an integrated complex of structures. Taj Mahal was built by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan in memory of his favorite wife.

Satellite Image: Copyright © 2007 Goeye. All Rights Reserved.


Colosseum, Rome – Italy

Colosseum
Colosseum, Italy
Colosseum
IKONOS – Colosseum, Italy

The Colosseum/Coliseum, Rome, Italy was built from 72-80 A.D., the large, elliptical arena seats 50,000 spectators and represents one of the ancient Rome’s greatest architectural achievements. Completed in 81 AD, it is called the Coloseum after a colossal statue of Nero that once stood nearby. It was used for staged battles, sometimes between lions and Christians and other heretics, among other spectacles, and is one of the most famous pieces of architecture in the world. The structure covers about 6 acres (188m by 156m or 615 ft by 510 ft) and stands 48.5 m (158 ft) tall or about 15 stories and took ten years to build. Two of the remaining entrances were used by Emperor Titus and two for the gladiators.

Satellite Image: Copyright © 2007 Geoeye. All Rights Reserved

www.world-mysteries.com


پاسخ‌ها

  1. سلام
    سايت مفيى وجالبيه و بهتر ميشه وقتي مطالب تصاوير ماهواره اي فارسي باشه
    موفق باشيد

    سلام
    ممنون / اگر فرصت کنم به روی چشم


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