The 'Curse' of the White City
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About this listen
In 2015, LiDAR scans of the Honduran Mosquitia revealed plazas, earthworks, and ruins long linked to the “White City” or Ciudad Blanca. A joint team of scientists, archaeologists, and filmmakers went in—and came back with a parasitic disease that tabloids called a curse. This episode traces Indigenous origins of the legend, the expeditions and tech that finally pierced the canopy, and how archaeology, ecology, and sensational headlines now collide in one fragile corner of the Honduran jungle.
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Sources:
- Fisher, C. T., et al. “Identifying ancient settlement patterns through LIDAR in the Mosquitia region of Honduras.” PLOS ONE (2016). (peer-reviewed LIDAR + settlement analysis)
- National Geographic Adventure coverage of the 2015/2016 field confirmations and finds. (ground verification; object cache; valley scale)
- National Geographic: “Pernicious Parasite Strikes Explorers…” (2015). (post-expedition leishmaniasis cases)
- CDC Clinical Care of Leishmaniasis (updated 2024). (current U.S. clinical guidance)
- DNDi/PAHO 2022 recommendations. (Americas—liposomal amphotericin B adoption; access improvements)
- The New Yorker (Douglas Preston), “An Ancient City Emerges in a Remote Rain Forest” (2017). (popular overview; expedition narrative)
- The Guardian (2015), “Archaeologists condemn National Geographic over claims…” (open letter; “lost city” critique and clarifications)
- Archaeology Southwest (2015), “Reporting Archaeology: Lost and Found” (round-up of scholarly objections; citation of Rosemary Joyce’s critiques on sensational framing and Indigenous erasure).
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