Continuing to spot what appears to be manmade geoglyphs in the Nazca Area.
Posted by c tito young on 9 July 2024 in English.I am finding shapes and believing that I have discovered a very important pattern not completely mentioned earlier. Using those principals in those pattern shapes many geoglyphs are appearing over and over. Some are of animals and others of what appears to be humans. Most see to use the natural hillsides and valleys and then some modifications to the terrain to bring out the features with the figures. These are not easy to spot, as I have been trying to spot some for quite a while, only recently appearing of which I can’t unsee.
At some point I’ll make some kind of formal presentation but for now I am continuing to lay shapes down.
Incidentally, I am not using any AI or Google Earth enhancers of any kind. Most shapes are not indicated, and some may be part of a previously discovered shape. If I see shapes over shapes, I’ll try to add a second line type.
Discussion
Comment from SomeoneElse on 9 July 2024 at 12:53
Please don’t get too creative. To take a recent example, I can’t see anything underneath way/1300140005 at all.
Perhaps other people should try going to https://api06.dev.openstreetmap.org/edit?editor=id#map=19/-14.74891/-75.07396 (after creating an account on the api06 dev server) and seeing if they can see anything in the underlying imagery there?
Comment from c tito young on 9 July 2024 at 16:38
Thanks for the feedback. I promise to not get “too” creative. :)
Most my traces of shapes are presented to get a second opinion. Some are then shown in front of a group of individuals, a peanut gallery as sorts.
Assist in viewing: Decreasing the brightness and increasing the contrast/sharpness can assist in viewing the shapes. Also, minor modifications to what hill might be then becomes a geoglyph shape because what appears to resemble an “eye” or “mouth” on a hill bluff that then makes it looks like a head. At the time of this writing, there are other nearby figures that seem fictional, and of course those are omitted and later cross referenced when updated maps may reveal more or less.
Lastly, trapezoidal shapes (which are typically easier to see) tend to accompany hillside figurative geoglyphs.
Comment from PizzaTreeIsland on 10 July 2024 at 12:44
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareidolia?wprov=sfla1