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Finding Genius Podcast

Scanning this Big Blue Marble: Laser Mapping Technology Applied to our Earth with Christopher Fisher

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 18 October 2020

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is a story about how studying a buried city in the jungle led to an urgent call to utilize a new technology to map our earth.

Archaeologist Christopher Fisher was astounded by LiDAR technology when he used it to map an ancient city covered by sense forest canopy in Honduras.

This podcast explores what happened next. Listen and learn

  • How he was able to use LiDAR to digitally strip away jungle and forest to create a 3D image of an ancient city,
  • Why he thinks there's an urgent need to use this same technology to create significant laser mapping of the earth, and
  • What campaign, timeline, and project goals his group, The Earth Archive, is currently working on and how listeners can participate.

Christopher Fisher is an archaeologist and professor of anthropology at the Colorado State University. He's also the director of The Earth Archive, a group working for our future human society and environment by scanning and curating LiDAR data of planet Earth. After seeing its potential in archaeological discoveries, he says it "really opened my eyes to see how we could use this to map our earth, to create a 3D digital twin of the planet that we can study today and curate for future generations." It has several other applications scientists can now use, from cultural anthropology to biology and geography, but he's looking to the future. His enthusiasm lead him to create a nonprofit to engineer just that, and tells listeners about his efforts to move forward. 

He describes how helpful archeologists have found it, but his long-term perspective into the past gives him a similar long-term perspective towards mapping information for future generations. Because of climate change, future human societies and environments may benefit from views of what our earth looks like right now. He says there's a limited time we have to scan the earth and map what it looks like to pass this information to our grandchildren, to help them reconstruct the earth and address the changes.

He explains how the technology itself works: basically, from some sort of airborne platform, they fire down a very dense grid of infrared beams. When one strikes an object, it returns to the aircraft and provides a measure of distance. A cloud of points provides a 3D map. He says their first goal is to map the entire amazon basin starting in the spring of 2021. Interested listeners can sign up for their newsletter and find more information on their website:
The Earth Archive.

Available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/2Os0myK

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Forget frequently asked questions common sense common knowledge or Google how about advice from a real genius

0:06.8

95% of people in any profession are good enough to be qualified and licensed 5% go and beyond. They become very good at what they do.

0:15.1

But only 0.1% are real Jesus.

0:18.3

Richard Jacobs has made it his life's mission to find them for you.

0:22.4

He hunts down and interviews geniuses in every field, sleep science, cancer, stem cells,

0:27.2

ketogenic diets, and more.

0:28.8

Here come the geniuses.

0:30.4

This is the Finding Genius Podcast.

0:33.0

That is Richard Jacobs.

0:35.0

Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Finding Genius Podcast.

0:41.0

I have Christopher Fisher.

0:42.0

He's an archaeologist and the director of the Earth. the So, Chris, thanks for coming. Hey, thank you so much for having me.

0:53.2

I really appreciate it.

0:54.2

And I love the opportunity to participate in the podcast

0:57.7

and talk about all the exciting things that we're doing.

1:01.6

Yeah, if you want to tell me, what are you working on?

1:03.6

So I have this crazy, you know,

1:06.7

this crazy sort of entry into this topic,

1:11.9

and that is I was, you you know I'm an archaeologist and I was trained as a traditional

1:16.2

archaeologist so using methodologies that have been around some of them since the turn of the last

1:22.4

century most of them non the turn of the last century.

1:23.2

Most of them non-digital.

...

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