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Forgotten Mayan city 'discovered' in Central America by 15-year-old

William Gadoury made a link between the location of Mayan cities and the civilization's major constellations

Samuel Osborne
Thursday 01 March 2018 13:33 EST
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View of the ancient 'Valley of the Warriors' in Chiapas, Southern Mexico, which has recently been shown to be the largest pyramidal acropolis in Mesoamerica
View of the ancient 'Valley of the Warriors' in Chiapas, Southern Mexico, which has recently been shown to be the largest pyramidal acropolis in Mesoamerica (JANET SCHWARTZ/AFP/Getty Images)

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A 15-year-old boy believes he has discovered a forgotten Mayan city using satellite photos and Mayan astronomy.

William Gadoury, from Quebec, came up with the theory that the Maya civilization chose the location of its towns and cities according to its star constellations.

He found Mayan cities lined up exactly with stars in the civilization's major constellations.

Studying the star map further, he discovered one city was missing from a constellation of three stars.

Using satellite images provided by the Canadian Space Agency and then mapped on to Google Earth, he discovered the city where the third star of the constellation suggested it would be.

Dr Armand La Rocque said satellite images showed a man made structure beneath the canopy
Dr Armand La Rocque said satellite images showed a man made structure beneath the canopy

William has named the yet-to-be explored city in the Yucatan jungle K'aak Chi, or Mouth of Fire.

Daniel De Lisle, from the Canadian Space Agency, said the area had been difficult to study because of its dense vegetation.

Teenager discovers planet

However, satellite scans of the area from the RADARSAT-2 satellite found linear features which "stuck out".

"There are linear features that would suggest there is something underneath that big canopy," he told The Independent.

"There are enough items to suggest it could be a man made structure."

Dr Armand La Rocque, of the Remote Sensing Laboratory at the University of New Brunswick, said one image showed a street network and a large square which could possibly be a pyramid.

He told The Independent: "A square is not natural, it is mostly artificial and can hardly be attributed to natural phenomena.

"If we add these together, we have a lot of indication there might be a Mayan city in the area."

Dr La Rocque said William's discovery could lead archaeologists to find other Mayan cities using similar techniques.

William's discovery will be published in a scientific journal and he will present his findings at Brazil's International Science fair in 2017.

The story was originally published with different pictures, which have now been changed because it appears although William analaysed them he did not use them as the basis of his claims.

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