FROM LITTLE ACORNS LARGE OAK TREES GROW.
I remember so well the 22nd October 1974. I had been looking at a small black and white photograph in a populus book of the moment that someone had begged me to read. Sci - Fi really was not my kind literary pleasure any more.
"Part of the Atacama Desert known as the Pampa Colorado showing a view of the world famous Nasca Lines" blazed the title. At that moment in time it meant absolutely nothing - but something in the depths of the sub-conscience was awakened. Call it curiosity, inquisitiveness, - a mind that always asked; What is that, How does it work and Why ? Who knows, perhaps that something is the basis of divine inspiration, however, that little picture proved irrisistible.
On that very day I "discovered" the first image - well, to be truthfull - it looked like the figure of an animal drawn in a large whitish coloured triangular space amongst a myriad of lines - then immediately the question sprang into my mind,why so many lines, all going nowhere ?
Thirty years on and nearly twenty Copyrights registered : locating the very first ancient inscription ever found on the Nasca Lines <link: http://nascodex.com/1.2.html>, discovery of a unknown Sun Temple within the famous Cauhachi ruins <link: http://nascodex.com/8.2.html>, previously unknown human and animal images including the World's largest ever Rock sculptures <link: http://cibercentre.cat/SacredLamb/Home.html>, Zig - Zag <link: http://nascodex.com/3.2.html> shaped drawings on the desert and clusters of small buildings in certain areas designed to be astronomical observatories, and perhaps one of the most important : discovery of the Units of Measurement used to plan the whole Nasca Lines palimpsest.
Now to the present: on the 14th October we left for the Southern Andes to photograph and record on film two major archaeological sites; one involving massive human head imagery and inscriptive material; the other which may well prove now to be the oldest linear astronomical observatory in the World. Chankillo <link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chankillo>, Linear Observatory, in northern Peru, is around 2300 years old. At the same time we are also filming and carrying out an analysis of the most ancient of the 'agricultural' terracing.
In view of the extremely high charges now demanded for helicopter 'overfly' filming we have had to utilise a virtually untried - well, certainly in the high winds of the Southern Andes Mountains - system of overhead photography . A D90 Nikon DSLR with excellent High Definition video capability is slung atop a stabilised 7 metre (24 feet) high mast . All functions of the camera are controlled via an interconnected Macbook laptop.


