Scientists have discovered 168 new geoglyphs in the soil of Peru’s desert — known as the Nazca lines.
Peruvian and Japanese researchers from Yamagata University spent two years scanning the UNESCO World Heritage site on Peru’s southern Pacific coast using aerial photos, drones and field surveys.
The drawings portray humans, camelids, birds, killer whales, felines, snakes and more. About 50 of the large-scale drawings are of human-like figures — with one even looking like Homer Simpson.
While it’s hard to know exactly when the geoglyphs were made, clay pots found near the lines point to a time between 100 BC and AD 300 — about 1,700 to 2,100 years ago.
The Nazca lines can only be seen from the air, and have mystified scientists for years. But the new figures are smaller, averaging between 6 and 19 feet in length, and can be seen from the ground, Masato Sakai, a professor from Yamagata University who led the study, told Reuters.
“These geoglyphs were created by removing black stones from the surface of the earth to expose a white sandy surface below,” a statement from Yamagata University said.
Some information currently being gathered by the researchers will be analyzed by artificial intelligence (AI) programs, which will be able to depict patterns more quickly and effectively than the human eye and inform the lines’ preservation.
By 2019, archaeologists discovered nearly 200 geoglyphs total in the area. These new drawings bring the official number of known Nazca lines to 358.
An archaeologist previously told The Guardian that he believed scientists had only found 5% of all the Nazca lines out there.
The scientists at Yamagata have been granted permission from the Peruvian Ministry of Culture to tally as many of the geoglyphs as possible, planning to map out the entire length and width of the desert canvas.
An archeological park to protect the geoglyphs was established in the Aja area near the downtown of Nasca City in 2017.
“As many as 36 of these geoglyphs were discovered in the Aja area, near the city of Nasca. The discovery of 41 geoglyphs in this area was previously announced by Yamagata University in 2014 and 2015, which led to the creation of an archaeological park in 2017 in collaboration with the Peruvian Ministry of Culture to protect them. With this discovery, a total of 77 geoglyphs are now known to be concentrated in this archaeological park,” the statement from Yamagata University said.
The purpose of the Nazca lines still remains unknown, according to Nazca Lines research program’s head archaeologist, Jorge Olano. Despite being mysterious, they have been interpreted in many ways, including that they’re meant for gods in the sky or that they’re supposed to reflect the stars for astronomical purposes.