Posted on 05/20/2025 2:11:11 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
You’ll put your eye out with that Harbor Freight tool! Don’t say I didn’t warn you!
We had satellites in WWII?
Actual quote from archeology.org:
“Half the archaeological sites discovered in Britain over the last 70 years were found via aerial photography. Archaeologists continue to dig through World War II reconnaissance and recently declassified U.S. surveillance satellite photographs to uncover new ones.”
That one got by their editor, and I didn’t read it closely.
The first photo from space was taken in 1946 by the US using a souped up V2.
I began to get really interested that we had satellites and remote sensing back then. If only we had, the world might be different.
Spying the Past from the Sky | Nikhil SwaminathanHalf the archaeological sites discovered in Britain over the last 70 years were found via aerial photography. Archaeologists continue to dig through World War II reconnaissance and recently declassified U.S. surveillance satellite photographs to uncover new ones.
Digs & Discoveries | Archaeology Magazine | November/December 2013
William Hanson of the University of Glasgow and Ioana Oltean of the University of Exeter have brought this technique to the eastern Romanian region of Dobrogea, studying 1960s photographs of the area. They noticed three distinct, overlapping fortifications stretching over 38 miles -- two of earthwork and one of stone -- with more than 30 forts attached. The structure of the barriers is similar to that of Hadrian’s Wall in England. The team suggests the fortifications could date to the second century A.D., when they might have been the Roman Empire’s easternmost frontier defenses.
"This photography shows the landscape as it was before the destructive impact of later twentieth-century development," Hanson explains, adding that such photography of the Middle East is also available. "The potential to change our understanding of the historical landscape in such areas is considerable."Photo: Stanley Guenter, Courtesy U.S. Geological Survey
He never came back for them because he got lost on the way to the can.
BTW, this guy’s nickname was Chip.
When I was in high school I saw a ground pic of a pretty cool aerial photo test using a rapid strobe for nighttime spy missions. The test was a perfectly illuminated Stonehenge.
Oh, no ****:
[Brave AI]
Stonehenge Strobe Photo
During World War II, Harold Edgerton, a famous photographer and MIT professor, was asked to develop a new photographic technique for the British military. This technique involved using a high-power strobe light attached to a bomber to illuminate Stonehenge from above, similar to the drone techniques used by modern photographers like Reuben Wu.
Edgerton’s work was crucial for aerial reconnaissance at night, and he tested his system in the area around Stonehenge a few weeks before D-Day to ensure that the timing for the Normandy landings was correct.
The images captured confirmed that the Germans had not amassed extra forces in Normandy at night, which was vital for the success of the operation.
Additionally, a collection of aerial photographs taken during World War II by the US Army Air Forces Photographic Reconnaissance units has been made available to the public. These images include a photo taken on Christmas Eve in 1943 of Stonehenge, which shows markings highlighting the location of a First World War aerodrome and camp.
AI-generated answer. Please verify critical facts.
https://ru.pinterest.com/pin/536209899357611868/
No problem, I bought a bag of replacement eyes over from aisle six.
Dacian stonemason toolkit found at quarry in Romania
May 9, 2025
https://www.thehistoryblog.com/archives/73103
F-ing Mario Maxamus Rossi, never returns tools he borrows...
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