Astrum Space - What's Hidden Under the Amazon Rainforest? | Astrum Earth
Episode Date: May 26, 2026The Amazon was one of the least explored frontiers on Earth… until now. Scientists are scanning the rainforest with advanced LiDAR technology to reveal lost structures hidden below the canopy for ce...nturies. Could they finally uncover the legendary lost city of El Dorado?▀▀▀▀▀▀🔒Remove your personal information from the web at https://joindeleteme.com/ASTRUMEARTH and use code ASTRUMEARTH for 20% off DeleteMe international Plans.▀▀▀▀▀▀Astrum's newsletter has launched! Want to know what's happening in space? Sign up here: https://astrumspace.kit.comA huge thanks to our Patreons who help make these videos possible. Sign-up here: https://bit.ly/4aiJZNF
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The Amazon was one of the least.
explored places in modern history. But beneath its towering trees and twisting vines
lies the memory of a hidden cityscape, a web of buildings, gardens, roads and canals,
centuries old, swallowed by the wilderness itself and for a while lost completely.
But what was once forgotten is now being rediscovered.
Satellite imagery and laser scanning techniques have combined
to bring a new version of the Amazon to life.
A rainforest that's been shaped by humans for thousands of years,
not only through spectacular buildings,
but by manipulating entire ecosystems.
Networks of creatures that were only just beginning to untangle.
Those creatures make up 10% of the world's wildlife species,
and a new plant or animal species is discovered every other day in this great forest.
But these are the only treasures hidden in the Amazon, whatever came of the lost city of El Dorado.
I'm James Stewart and you're watching Astrom Earth.
Join me in this video as we venture beneath the canopy to find a different story of the Amazon,
from the early explorers that left clues centuries ago, to the modern science finally deciphering the code to uncover the true secrets hidden in the rainforest.
in the rainforest. And we'll be answering one big question. What still might be waiting to be
found? With 6 million square kilometres of continuous green canopy, the Amazon comprises more
than half of Earth's total remaining rainforest. For centuries, European explorers spread rumours
amongst themselves that there was a legendary, wealthy city deep in the Amazon. They called it El Dorado,
the city of gold. In 1542, Spanish conquistador Francisco de Oriana reported traveling down the Amazon
and finding vast rich lands, with farms, villages, and even large walled settlements. But when others
later followed his route, they found only impenetrable jungle and small groups of hunter-gatherer
tribes. Scientists assumed that Oriana's story was just that, a story. A story. A story.
Nothing but the fanciful dreamings of a gold-hungry conquistador.
But the search for El Dorado did not stop there, and actually it lasted for more than a century.
Established explorers like Gonzalo Pizarro, Philip von Hutt, and even Sir Walter Riley, all led separate expeditions from 1541 to 1617.
The result? Well, nothing but disaster, death and the further conquests of the indigenous people.
But the allure of finding the unfindable endured well into the 20th century too,
when British explorer Percy Fawcett became obsessed with finding the riches Oriana had described centuries earlier,
fueled by the fire of one main objective, to find what remained on a lost city he called Zed.
He focused on the Western Amazon in Bolivia and the southern Amazon in Brazil, but found nothing.
Along the way, he did encounter indigenous people but found them living in small villages.
A far cry from the huge cities the rumours had promised.
Rather than deter him, this seemed to spur him on even more.
He even wrote to his wife in a letter that she need have no fear of failure.
Yet on the 29th of May 1925, on his eighth Amazonian expedition,
Forcet headed into the jungle from a place somewhere in the Mato Grosso region of Brazil,
dead horse camp, never to be seen again.
For decades after this last hurrah, really, scientists concluded that this place was simply
too hostile, too inhospitable for humans to thrive, and was largely just an expanse
filled with exotic flora and fauna.
Feedback among the scientific community was that the rainforest soil was so poor it simply
could not sustain large-scale farming and therefore cities were impossible.
But they were all missing something, something that actually force it, have been onto.
Because it turns out he was looking roughly in the right places, but maybe he was looking for the wrong things.
Now, up until this point, the rainforests had done a pretty phenomenal job of camouflaging its secrets.
But just five years ago, everything changed.
Scientists finally found the lost cities of the Amazon, because this time, they had something these expectations.
didn't. They had lasers. Yeah, I know, not what I was expecting to say either, but this is pretty amazing.
In the end, the tool that cracked open this mystery is LIDAR, light detection and ranging. Oh yeah,
essentially, lasers. LIDAR works by sending pulses of laser light out towards objects and measuring
the time it takes for the reflected laser beams to return. And with a bit of maths, as speed is
distance over time and we know the speed of light, we can then work out the exact distance to
those objects. Over vast areas, taking lots of measurements, that means we can generate precise
3D information about Earth's surface. And in rainforests archaeology, that becomes something
almost magical. You can scan the canopy and then remove it digitally and then see the ground,
like the forest isn't even there. And what it revealed was astounding.
Now, I should quickly say, LIDAR doesn't show us ancient civilizations on its own, but it does show us shapes,
microtopography, geometry, the fingerprints of organized earth moving.
Then the archaeologists go in and do their bit.
They excavate, they date stuff, they test the story the terrain is telling.
But as a first step, LIDAR is like looking into your attic with X-ray vision and finding that family heirloom you've thought you'd lost without opening a single box.
And in the Amazon, it did not disappoint.
In 2022, using this new airborne technology, archaeologists Haiko Pumas and his colleagues
mapped settlements associated with the Kasserabe culture, which thrived around AD 500 to 1400
in the Janos de Mojos region of Bolivia. But this wasn't just a splattering of small villages.
It was an entire system. They had found a hierarchy, a landscape engineered for humans.
Two main sites stood out from the LIDAR imaging data, enormous in area, 147 hectares and 315 hectares, respectively, the size of nearly 400 soccer fields.
The sites were embedded in a four-tier settlement system with incredibly advanced architecture, including platform mounds and conical pyramid-like structures.
Straight causeways ran for kilometres, and canals and reservoirs formed a water management network across the.
landscape. What this was was a tropical form of urbanism, a way of living and a city built from
the rainforest itself. And if one hidden city had finally been uncovered, then the question was
unavoidable. What else was hiding? The answer lay in Ecuador. In early 2024, a science
study using the same LIDAR techniques revealed a dense settlement network in the Upano Valley
of Ecuador along the eastern foothills of the Andes Mountains. The work led by archaeologist
Stephen Rostain and his colleagues integrated decades of field research with LIDAR mapping,
and with this combined knowledge, they uncovered the unthinkable. Within a 300-square
kilometer survey area, they found more than 6,000 anthropogenic rectangular earthen platforms and
plaza structures, connected by footpaths and roads, some 30,000,
meters wide and surrounded by expansive agricultural landscapes and even drainage features.
In other words, what they were looking at was not just a single lost city.
This was a patterned regional network.
They were looking at a hidden metropolis.
The sheer scale of this discovery meant it was likely home to at least 10,000, possibly 30,000 inhabitants in around 500 BCE,
with a settlement lasting roughly a thousand years.
And if you're wondering, by the way, how on earth we know that this was happening that far back?
Well, science has another trick up its sleeve to answer that question too.
Enter Oxford's Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit.
This team applied radiocarbon dating to organic materials to find out just how old this civilization was.
To quickly explain how this works, every living thing absorbs carbon from the atmosphere,
whether that's through photosynthesis or eating stuff that photosynthesizes.
Now most of that is your regular carbon 12, which has six protons and six neutrons.
But a tiny percentage about one in a trillion particles of carbon is carbon 14,
which still has six protons, but has eight neutrons, so it's slightly heavier.
Now, living things aren't very picky about this, and we'll take in either type of carbon, really,
but crucially, carbon 14 is radioactive, and so breaks down naturally,
over time. And what this means is the moment a plant or animal dies, the clock starts effectively.
It stops taking in carbon 14 and as it decays, the amount of carbon 14 in the organism decreases.
Its half life, therefore, that's the time taken for, half of the carbon 14 in a sample to decay,
is around 5,700 years. As such, scientists can measure what percentage of the carbon in a sample
is still carbon 14, and from that, can calculate how many years,
surpass since that organism died, which is pretty clever.
When used in tandem, these two techniques reveal incredible things.
Think of LIDAR as finding the where and the radiocarbon dating determining the when.
As amazing as all these discoveries undoubtedly are, they are just zoomed in examples of the
mysteries the canopies hid and their hints of something far larger.
Really, Bolivia and Ecuador were just the close-ups.
The next step is the war.
wide shot and here, here's where things get wild.
In 2023, Brazilian geographer and remote sensing specialist, Venetius Peripato, did something
pretty bonkers.
He applied this same concept, but on a far larger scale, taking an Amazon-wide approach
to hidden archaeology.
He and his team used LIDAR data originally collected for forest biomass work and scanned
5,315 square kilometres across the basin, which yes, might sound impressive, but remember this is the
Amazon. That's roughly 0.08% of the whole thing. But here's where it gets interesting, because even in that
tiny slice of this monstrous green pie, they identified 24 previously undetected earthworks
beneath the closed canopy. Now, if you were to apply those same numbers to the unscan parts of the
rainforest. They estimated there are between 10,272 and 23,648 large-scale earthworks still waiting to be
discovered, with many likely concentrated in southwestern Amazonia. What? Perry Patto's team also found
statistical links between earthwork probability and dozens of domesticated tree species, 53,
to be precise. Now, what this means in real terms is that ancient Peioteau's
people shaped the forest. The species that increased near earthworks were very likely planted,
protected and even encouraged. This part of the Amazon shows huge long-term human influence.
If, if these predictions hold true, it just goes to show that hidden doesn't necessarily mean
mythical. It means not yet measured at the right resolution, in the right dimension, and by the right method.
And speaking of, there is still one place that so far alluded all of these scientists.
El Dorado.
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Maybe they're using LIDAR too, come to think of it.
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if you want your digital life a bit more private, as we head back to El Dorado.
Yeah, we touched on this place right at the start of the video,
and it turns out the reason we cannot see it is because it never existed.
Yeah, sadly if all of those would be treasure hunters,
the gold one was actually not a place, but a person.
The name comes from the Moesca people who lived high in the Andes of modern-day Columbia
from AD 500 and still due to this day, actually.
the Moiska, gold wasn't a symbol of wealth or private treasure. It had a deeper meaning. It was sacred.
During rite of passage ceremonies, a new ruler, known by the Spanish as El Dorado or the Golden One,
would undergo a dramatic ritual. His body would be covered head to toe in gold dust,
and he would set out on a raft into the centre of a sacred lake, most famously Lake Guata Vita,
75 kilometres north-east of what is now the capital, Bogota.
Once in the centre, priests and attendants would cast gold and precious other things into the lake as offerings.
Then covered in gold, the ruler might submerge himself into the water and return to shore,
with the remaining dust wash off his skin and remaining in the water.
When Spanish chroniclers, like one Rodriguez Freelais in the 16th century,
shared the second-hand stories,
Over many centuries, stories of immense gold offerings and dazzling ceremonies became more than just decorated leaders.
They turned into a whole city full of treasure that Europeans just sort of reimagined.
Soon the idea had taken on a life of its own, and just as cartographers redrew maps to include lost cities like Atlantis, the name Eldorado also started to appear.
Fortunately, though, science eventually intervened, and remarkably eight.
gold raft depicted the exact scene we've just described was found in 1969 by three villages.
It was hidden away in a small cave in the hills, showing the man covered in gold going out into
a sacred lake, the real story of El Dorado. So yeah, in the end, scientists weren't able to
uncover a city of gold, but they did find something arguably way more valuable. Now we go deeper,
literally because one of the Amazon's strangest secrets isn't in a wall or a road but instead is its soil.
Bear with me here, I know that doesn't sound as exciting but trust me it is because if humans lived in all those amazing sites we've showcased in this video which does seem very likely, how did they exist in spite of the rainforest naturally poor and nutrient depleted soil?
How did they grow stuff? It's impossible, right?
Remember at the start of the video when we said all of those expeditions,
right from the 1500s to poor old Percy Fawcett in 1925.
All of those had scientists saying part of the reason the cities couldn't be found
was because the soil was too infertile to support human life.
Remember that?
Well, modern day science has since shown that to be wrong too, actually,
but in the most shockingly brilliant way.
New research shows something surprising.
Ancient Amazonians intentionally created patches of rich,
dark soil, known as Terra Preta or Amazonian dark earth, to make farming possible. And this was no
accident. In fact, they're still doing it today. Modern indigenous communities like the Kuikuru
still make dark fertile soil by firstly piling up food scraps and organic waste, then spreading
charcoal and ash around fields before finally creating these compost middens. Over time, these
Practices produce carbon-rich soil that thrives with nutrients, even in a region where
untouched soils are typically infertile.
Try and get your head around this.
Ancient Amazonians weren't just passive forest dwellers.
They actively managed landscapes.
They created fertile ground to grow crops and support large populations, and there's another bonus
too.
Because Dark Earth holds huge amounts of carbon, these practices incidentally locked carbon into
the ground for centuries, or even millennia.
That makes terra pretta not just fertile soil, but a potentially powerful example of long-term carbon sequestration.
And that soil does way more than just help provide food.
Woveen into all of this is the fact that in almost every example we've talked about in this video,
the forest itself is part of the construction.
In an article published in science in 2017,
Levis and colleagues compare distributions of domesticated woody seed.
species with archaeological sites and environmental data, and the link they established between them was mind-blowing.
They reported that domesticated tree species are far more likely to be hyperdominant,
where a small subset of species makes up a disproportionately large percentage of the total individuals or biomass in an ecosystem,
and that the richness and abundance of domesticated species increases near archaeological sites.
Now, this doesn't mean every single hectare of the Amazon forest was,
designed, but it does mean the old binary of pristine versus human is too simple.
The Amazon can be wild and historical at the same time.
And in a cruel twist of irony, all of that carbon that the soil locks in is the very thing
that's most under threat.
The Amazon holds roughly 150 to 200 billion metric tons of carbon in its forest and in
its soils, an amount comparable to the last four to five years worth of global CO2 emissions.
intact Amazon forests work as carbon sinks, helping reduce the impact of emissions on our atmosphere.
But that sink has weakened.
And in 2019, parts of the Amazon actually release more carbon than they absorbed.
This means that if the Amazon continues to shrink or indeed was lost entirely, the impact would be catastrophic.
Essentially releasing in the order of hundreds of billions of tonnes of carbon into the atmosphere,
and dramatically altering regional and international climates.
Recent data shows Amazon deforestation
soared to more than 10,000 kilometers squared per year
between 2019 and 2021,
before in force efforts to drive it down again in 2023 to 2025.
Severe wildfires in drought years have also released large amounts of carbon.
For example, satellite-based measurements found
Amazonia emitted between 28 and 62 billion,
million kilograms of carbon monoxide in 2024 from wildfires alone, approximately four times the average.
These trends underline that the Amazon's carbon bank account is being depleted, increasing risks of future climate impacts, if not urgently addressed.
Which raises one big question, doesn't it? What does the future look like?
So far, we've only really covered the ancient hidden human elements in this gargantuan rainforest.
But what about what else might live there?
The Amazon's biodiversity is so rich it feels almost endless.
One in ten known species on Earth lives here.
But how many more species are out there that no one's catalogued yet?
I wish I could give you a nice round number to go off and continue your day with,
but the answer is actually way more exciting.
Well, at least to me anyway.
Even the best estimate suggests that only 20% of Earth species
have been documented by Western science.
in science, with potentially millions more unknown and unnamed.
Even in the last few years, new species are being uncovered every single day.
The Royal Botanic Gardens in Q reported that 172 new plant and fungus species were described
globally in 2024 alone, many of them in tropical regions.
The same applies to animals, too.
A WWF survey found 441 new species within the Amazon rainforests over the span of
just four years. That's roughly one new species every three days. It's staggering.
In 2024 alone, scientists found a blob-headed catfish, a new marsupial in Peru,
three new amphibians, and even a new species of anaconda, the northern green anaconda,
casually the largest and heaviest snake in the world, all in parts of the Amazon rainforests.
And not for the first time, science is supercharging this process.
because we now have ways to sample the jungle without ever having to see the animal.
A cutting edge advancement in environmental DNA called EDNA means all we have to do is simply
filter water when looking for genetic animal traces. A landmark 2016 study found that rivers
act like conveyor belts of biodiversity information. In real terms, water samples essentially
contain trace amounts of DNA from fish, frogs, even land mammals, from us.
So scientists can vacuum river water through a filter and then do DNA sequencing or PCR.
This is called environmental DNA or eDNA.
It's like fishing for genes.
You pull up the filter and see whose DNA is there.
And in 2026 they put this theory to the test.
Caitlin Ramosa, an aquatic ecology and conservation scientist at Texas A&M University and her colleagues,
developed a portable E-DNA protocol
protocol to map Amazonian manatees. Now these creatures were known to inhabit the region
but were very hard to observe directly due to the murky water and their elusive
behaviour, making them perfect for this study. So what she and her team did was filter
water along the Amazon for 13 days taking samples about even using a freezer by the
way, these are a special preservative and amazingly they still recovered manatee
DNA. They found manate genetic material at multiple sites in the
the central Amazon. What this means in short is you can essentially sit there on a riverbank,
collect a couple of water samples and later find out what elusive animals live upstream. It's a game
changer. As we reflect on all the amazing things we've just talked about, the word of caution
as we come to the end of the story here, as the picture of what's hiding becomes more and more
clear. We must still protect what is vulnerable. The Amazon includes territories of indigenous
people's involuntary isolation, some of which
have never come into contact with the outside world.
As such, you might have noticed when we reference the LIDAR articles, we do not name precise
coordinates of sensitive sites.
We must treat indigenous communities as living homelands, not just adventure backdrops for us
to sit here and make videos about.
So to wrap things up, what's hiding in the Amazon?
The question I posed at the start.
Not a single lost metropolis, not a single myth, but a layered reality.
of ancient cities that only lasers can see, soils that store human history for hundreds
of years, forests shaped by past cultivation, and species that remain invisible until we sample a river.
To be honest, part of the reason I wanted to make this video was to challenge misconceptions.
I've seen all over social media that 60% of the Amazon remains unexplored and loads of stuff as to
why that might be. But ultimately, and hopefully as we've shown, these landscapes weren't lost to everybody.
Local communities and indigenous oral histories often remembered them in the stories of their ancestors or practices handed down over generations.
Our modern scientific methods are just a flashlight, really.
To shine a light on the whole picture, we must look at all the evidence around us.
And then, well, we might find something truly incredible, like the city of El Dorado or not.
Let me know in the comments below what you think or even hope might still be waiting to be discovered in the Amazon Or.
Or maybe you don't like the idea of finding stuff,
and sometimes the unknown, the hidden,
remains the most exciting thing.
