The economist discovers the

These strange giant stone structures may give us another look at the tribes of people tens of thousands of years ago.

Looking down from Kazakhstan, we discover a mystery that even leading scientists cannot explain: a huge mystery from the old days still lying on the ground.

Photos taken from satellites to a remote area, an arid, untouched steppe in northern Kazakhstan show us mounds lining up in a certain shape, obviously artificial. Those are circles, those are straight, the cross is as big as a few stadiums. They were named Steppe Geoglyphs - Steppe Geoglyphs .

These structures can only be seen from above, and the oldest areas estimated to be more than 8,000 years old, the largest area is a giant square made up of 101 small mounds. , covering a total area larger than the Great Pyramid of Cheops.

Picture 1 of The economist discovers the
Ushtogaysky squares.

For the first time, these strange stone structures were discovered in 2007 thanks to the Google Earth tool, by an economist who was an avid archaeologist, Dimitriy Dey. So far, they are still an unanswered mystery.

'I have never seen anything like that; It is a remarkable finding , ' says Compton J. Tucker, an aging biosphere scientist at NASA. And he added that NASA is currently working on 'redrawing the entire area map' , adding it to the list of missions that need astronauts present on the International Space Station. ISS implementation.

'I don't think these images were made to look down from the sky,' said Mr. Dey, who discovered mysterious figures on the Kazakhstan ground, refusing to do much. The one who thinks this is an alien picture. He hypothesized that those figures were just the way the ancient people watched the path of the rising Sun.

Picture 2 of The economist discovers the
Big Ashutastinsky cross.

'I was afraid that this was duck news,' LaPorte said epidemiology professor after reading the report. At that time, he was studying the disease right away in Kazakhstan. With the help of James Jubilee, another science and technology expert, Professor LaPorte went to Mr. Dey to confirm the images. After he was persuaded that these thousands of years old traces were true, he quickly contacted the local government with the desire to bring UNESCO into the country, protecting those areas.

This vast steppe was once the destination of the Stone Age tribes to hunt. According to Mr. Dey's study, it may be the Mahandzhar culture, which flourished around 7,000 BC to 5,000 BC, perhaps the author of those strange shapes. But what surprised the scientists was not any culture, but that the culture had to be crowded and live long enough in that land to create such great works.

Perhaps, these discoveries will change the way we view the old nomadic nomads . Could it be that people from that time lived into a large organization, even an early culture?

Picture 3 of The economist discovers the
Swastika Turgai.

This discovery by Mr. Dey is also completely random.

According to his account, in March 2007, after watching the 'Pyramid, Mummy and Tombs' program on the Discovery Channel, he realized that there are pyramids everywhere in the world. Kazkhstan must have it too! And he used Google Earth to conduct research.

No pyramid could be seen, but he had another discovery, something that caught Dey's attention: it was a large square with an edge of about 274 meters, in the middle was an X-shaped cross. , he thought it was some old farming area, until he met a 3 pronged swastika, about 90 meters in diameter.

By the end of 2007, Mr. Dey had discovered nine different squares, circles and diagonal shapes. In 2012, he found 19 pictures and the current figure is 260. In August 2007, he led an exploration team to the largest square for fieldwork, now known as the Ushtogaysky Square, named after the nearby village.

Picture 4 of The economist discovers the
Bestamskoe ring.

'It is extremely difficult to understand what it is when standing from the ground,' Dey recalls. 'Straight lines stretch to the horizon. You will not imagine what it can be. ' They dug down those mounds, but found nothing, however, in nearby areas, the field team found artifacts about 6,000 to 10,000 years old.

Currently, Mr. Dey is planning to build a research station near these areas. 'We can't dig all these mounds,' he said. 'We need modern technologies, like Western scientists are.'

Both LaPore, Dey and their team are considering using drones for research purposes, just as the Peruvian Ministry of Culture is doing to redraw and preserve the archaeological sites of they.

But time did not take their side, Mr. Dey said bitterly. One such area named Koga Cross - Koga Cross was destroyed by road diggers in 2015. And even, 'that is after we announced this issue to the authorities. '. Destroying a large structure, an unexplained mystery would probably be a great loss to archeology.

Just hope the authorities and NASA will enter, don't let this human mystery go into the past.