Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

A helicopter-mounted lidar system let archaeologists map an ancient Cambodian city

Add as a preferred source on Google

Lasers, helicopters, hidden jungle cities, and ancient religions — it sounds like the synopsis to a Michael Crichton novel, but believe it or not, these things are actually the key components of some astonishing new archaeological research happening right here in the real world. With the help of an airborne lidar system, scientists recently managed to create a map of a long-lost city hidden beneath the jungle in Cambodia

With the special laser mounted on the underside of a helicopter, archeologists working on the project were able to compose maps revealing the massive scale of religious temples and other buildings belonging to the Khmer Empire, which was dominant in Southeast Asia from 802 AD until the 15th century. These maps were shown off for the first time this week at the Royal Geographic Society in London.

Recommended Videos

Laser scanning mapRelated: This is what London looks like through a self-driving car’s eyes

Incredibly, the lidar system makes it possible to “look through” obstructing features such as trees and vegetation to map the ground underneath.

“Lidar is a revolutionary tool for archaeological survey on a landscape scale,” Dr. Mitch Hendrickson, Assistant Professor, Department of Archaeology at the University of Illinois at Chicago and a key partner in this project, told Digital Trends.

“The real impact of lidar is that it gives a detailed, accurate map of the ground that reveals features not clearly visible due to forest cover, or the archaeological features that leave only slight traces on the ground. It allows us to see the footprints of buildings, settlements and other infrastructure and how they intersect and change. This is the foundation for understanding community organization in the past.”

In short, lidar hits the “warp speed” button on painstaking archaeological work. A few hours of coverage with the groundbreaking tech achieves what literally decades of on-the-ground surveys would have been able to — and with far more accuracy to boot.

While it doesn’t carry out the actual excavation work itself, this is one piece of kit archaeologists are unlikely to want to leave home without from now on.

Luke Dormehl
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
Gemini Intelligence has strict requirements, and your phone may not qualify
Gemini Intelligence

Google’s new Gemini Intelligence platform is quickly becoming one of the biggest talking points in the Android world right now. After being highlighted during this week’s Android Show, the feature is already being tied to several upcoming premium foldables and flagship phones. But there’s a catch: not every high-end Android device will be able to run it. And surprisingly, even some of Google and Samsung’s latest foldables may miss out.

According to Google’s requirements, Gemini Intelligence isn’t just another software update you can casually push to older devices. The company appears to be building this around a much stricter hardware and long-term software support system. To qualify, a phone needs a flagship-grade chipset, at least 12GB RAM, support for AI Core, and Gemini Nano v3 or newer. That immediately creates a problem for several current-generation phones.

Read more
Asus ROG and Xreal just built the AR glasses gamers have been waiting for, at a price that stings
At $849 and 240Hz, ASUS and Xreal's R1 is either the most exciting gaming peripheral of 2026 or the most expensive leap of faith, possibly both.
Accessories, Sunglasses, Glasses

AR Glasses have promised a lot over the years but delivered considerably less. Asus ROG and Xreal are making a serious case that time is different. The companies have announced the ROG Xreal R1, the world’s first 240Hz micro-OLED gaming AR glasses.

Pre-orders for the device are live on Best Buy for $849. Worldwide shipping begins on June 1, 2026.

Read more
Gemini is about to get wings on your phone with agentic skills
Logo, Disk, Symbol

Google I/O is almost here, and now that Google has already wrapped up The Android Show, all eyes are shifting toward the company’s AI ambitions — especially Gemini. While nothing has been officially announced yet, a new leak gives us an early glimpse of what Google could be preparing behind the scenes.

Your inbox might soon fear Gemini more than spam

Read more