National Geographic/Disney/Rocio Lila
national geographic explorer albert lin is like a modern-day Indiana Jones, traveling to remote locations around the world to participate in various archaeological missions. His recent expeditions are documented in his new NatGeo documentary series. The lost city revealed with Albert Lin, which will premiere on Thanksgiving Day. In this episode (“The Warrior King”), Rin traverses a sacred mountain and flooded tombs beneath pyramids in the Sudanese desert in search of the lost capital. Kingdom of Kush.
Lynn from California have a Ph.D. in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering from the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). He then founded UCSD’s Human Frontier Center, which focuses on leveraging technology to advance human potential. Therefore, in his 2009 he searched for the missing Genghis Khan’s tomb by combining satellite, airborne remote sensing (drones), lidar his mapping and more traditional ground exploration. No wonder he first made a name for himself.
The Valley of Caen project also leverages crowdsourcing (via over 10,000 online volunteers) to analyze the resulting satellite and aerial imagery to look for unusual features across a vast landscape. Succeeded.This identified 55 archaeological sites in the area, his 2011 NatGeo documentary, and Scientific papers of 2014 It details the benefits of so-called “collective reasoning” for archeology.
In 2016, a personal tragedy occurred. Ms Lin was seriously injured when the open-top four-wheel-drive vehicle she was traveling in with her friend overturned, trapping her right leg under the roll bar. Doctors amputated his leg below the knee, but Lin suffered severe phantom pain that couldn’t be controlled with standard painkillers.he credit A single dose of psilocybin (in a carefully controlled environment) helped “remap” his brain. “I was in a safe and good environment with a partner who helped me rewrite my story in a way that focused on positivity,” Lin says. told GQ However, “psilocybin is not a purely positive source; it has a lot to do with setting, intent, and community.”
Even after losing part of her leg, a high-tech prosthetic leg allowed Lynn to continue pursuing an active and exciting life. He is still out in the field looking for answers, all the while continuing to host numerous television documentaries detailing his various expeditions on National Geographic. Mayan Lost Treasure in 2018 and 2019 hidden secrets of the bible. lost city of albert lin Debuted in 2019The show explores Lin’s efforts to locate the former headquarters of the Knights Templar in Acre, Israel, and the legendary city of El Dorado in the Colombian jungle, as well as ruins in the Peruvian Andes and Blackmead near Stonehenge. It features explorations of Mesolithic ruins.
In addition to searching for the lost capital of Kush, this latest installment lost city Document Lin as she explores an ancient lost Mayan city that was once home to the people who built the great pyramid cities. palenque; visits the mountains of Peru to search for missing people chachapoya Kingdom before the Incas. Visit Scotland to learn more about the lost kingdom of barbarian rebels known as photographSearch for lost Canaanite cities in Israel; and the forgotten Bronze Age Arabian civilization ( land of white-fronted geese) in Oman.
“In this final season, we were brought to the brink of life and death many times, but it still felt like there was a deeper purpose,” Lin told Ars. “Every time we discover something, every time we discover a body on a cliff or the ruins of an ancient city buried in the sand, we are carrying out an important mission to unlock the secrets of who we are. I really felt like, “This is more than just a TV show to me.”
Ars spoke to Lin to find out more.