Space imagery has revealed more than 260 shapes – including a swastika and cross – etched into a barren northern steppe of Kazakhstan.
These mystery patterns are believed to be at least 8,000 years old and range in size from 300 to 1300ft (90 to 400 metres).Known as geoglyphs, researchers believe they could reveal details about ancient rituals in the area, but so far, progress in trying to decipher the shapes has been slow.
Now Nasa has released clear satellites photographs of some of the shapes from 430 miles (692 km) above Earth’s surface in the hopes of speeding up the effort.
Pictured is the swastika symbol seen from space in Turgai, Khazakstan. While the symbol may now be associated with Nazis, it was in fact an ancient symbol used for more than 12,000 years to depict prosperity and power.
he earliest known object with swastika-motifs is a bird made from mammoth tusk from the paleolithic settlement of Mezine, Ukraine dated to 10,000 BCE
The earthworks, in Turgai, Kazakhstan, were first spotted in Google Earth in 2007 by Kazakh economist, Dmitriy Dey, according to an in-depth report in the New York Times.
They are created from mounds of dirt only three feet high and roughly 30 feet wide (0.9 metres high and 9 metres wide).
‘I don’t think they were meant to be seen from the air,’ Dey told the paper, dismissing radical theories that they were created by aliens or Nazis.
He believes that the some of the figures were built along straight lines were used as ‘horizontal observatories to track the movements of the rising sun’ in a similar way to Stonehenge.
One of the biggest of these structures is a square of 101 raised mounds, with its corners connected by a diagonal cross.
Another structure appeared to be a swastika. While the symbol may now be associated with Nazis, it was in fact an ancient symbol used for more than 3,000 years to depict prosperity and power.
The Bestamskoe Ring is among the so-called Steppe Geoglyphs in Kazakhstan. Nasa’s involvement in studying these figure could spur more research in this area, and finally uncover the true meaning behind these unusual shapes
The Ashsutastinsky cross is seen here. The shapes were first spotted in Google Earth in 2007 by Kazakh economist, Dmitriy Dey. They are created from mounds of dirt only three feet high and roughly 30 feet wide (0.9 metres high and 9 metres wide).
The largest of these is a square of 101 raised mounds, with its corners connected by a diagonal cross. Dey believes that the some of the figures were built along straight lines were used as ‘horizontal observatories to track the movements of the rising sun’
For example, in Indo-European culture a swastika was a mark made on people to give them good luck. The word itself is derived from the Sanskrit ‘svastika’ and means ‘good to be’.
This isn’t the oldest swastika symbol found. The earliest known object with swastika-motifs is a bird made from mammoth tusk from the paleolithic settlement of Mezine, Ukraine dated to 10,000 BCE.
After finding the geoglyphs on Google Earth, archaeologists from Kostanay University in Kazakhstan and Vilnius University in Lithuania have been using radar to better understand the structure.
The team excavated the sites and found remnants of ancient structures and fireplaces, suggesting the locations were used for rituals.
HISTORY OF THE SWASTIKA: RELIGIOUS SYMBOL WHOSE MEANING WAS PERVERTED BY NAZI EVIL
Many Hindus traditionally painted the swastika symbol over their doors during festivals in order to welcome the gods inside
While the symbol may now be associated with Nazis, it was in fact an ancient symbol used for more than 12,000 years to depict prosperity and power.
The swastika is an ancient symbol whose history stretched back for millennia before its meaning was perverted by Nazi ideology.
It is used to represent luck in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism, and takes its name – meaning ‘it is good’ from the Sanskrit language in which the Hindu religious texts were written.
Many Hindus traditionally painted the swastika symbol over their doors during festivals in order to welcome the gods inside.
As well as Asian religions, the swastika has been a popular decorative motif in Greek, Rom an, Celtic and Byzantine art, making it one of the most common symbols in human history.
However, in 1920 Adolf Hitler declared that the swastika – tilted 45 degrees – should be the official logo of his nascent Nazi Party.
When he came to power, he replaced the German flag with a swastika in a white circle on a red background, making the emblem a feared symbol of his murderous regime.
After the Second World War the Nazi swastika was outlawed in Germany, Poland, Hungary and Lithuania, although it is still permitted in a religious or scholarly context.
The earliest known object with swastika-motifs is a bird made from mammoth tusk from the paleolithic settlement of Mezine, Ukraine dated to 10,000 BCE.
Most of the shapes were created by creating mounds in the earth, but the swastika was arranged using wood.
‘As of today, we can only say one thing – the geoglyphs were built by ancient people. By whom and for what purpose, remains a mystery,’ Kostanay archaeologists Irina Shevnina and Andrew Logvin told Owen Jarus at LiveScience.
Nasa has this week asked the astronauts on the International Space Station to take more images of the region in the hopes of deciphering the geoglyphs.
Dey and his team are also also looking into using drones to map the area.
They may gain insights from geoglyphs elsewhere, including the most famous example in Peru’s Nazca Lines.
Another view of the swastika.The swastika is an ancient symbol whose history stretched back for millennia before its meaning was perverted by Nazi ideology. It is used to represent luck in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism, and takes its name – meaning ‘it is good’ from the Sanskrit language in which the Hindu religious texts were written
Another view of the swastika.The swastika is an ancient symbol whose history stretched back for millennia before its meaning was perverted by Nazi ideology. It is used to represent luck in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism, and takes its name – meaning ‘it is good’ from the Sanskrit language in which the Hindu religious texts were written
‘As of today, we can only say one thing – the geoglyphs were built by ancient people. By whom and for what purpose, remains a mystery,’ Kostanay archaeologists Irina Shevnina and Andrew Logvin told Owen Jarus at LiveScience
Last year, the mysteries of the Nazca Lines intensified after gales and sandstorms revealed previously unseen ancient designs.
A pilot discovered a geoglyph of what appears to be a 196ft-long (60 metre) snake, as well as a type of camelid – such as a llama – above an unidentified bird.
These new lines join existing geoglyphs of a dog, hummingbird, condor and a monkey, thought to have been drawn by the ancient Nazca people between the first and sixth centuries.
Experts believe the Nazca used to dance along the lines of the geoglyphs when they prayed for rain – and many of the same images appear on Nazca pottery.
An animal-shaped stone structure that may predate Peru’s Nazca Lines have also been discovered in Russia, near Lake Zjuratkul in the Ural Mountains, north of Kazakhstan.
As well as Peru’s Nazca Lines and the strange shapes in Khazakstan, archaeologists have found thousands of wheel-shaped geoglyphs in the Middle East.