41°49′42″N 21°57′24″E / 41.82833°N 21.95667°E / 41.82833; 21.95667

The Kanda Geoglyph is a geoglyph located in the central parts of North Macedonia, near the town of Sveti Nikole in the Ovce Pole area.[citation needed] Aerial photography has shown that the geoglyph is an oval-shaped hill and can only be seen perfectly from above.[1] An aerial analysis using an infrared camera revealed a different composition of the soil in the hill compared to the surrounding soil.[1]

In 2014 international researchers investigating the geoglyph concluded that the variance corresponds to the presence of a cavity inside the hill, presumed to be a few tens of meters beneath the surface.[1] It is believed[by whom?] that the hill at Kanda is a cairn with an inner chamber or that the hill was raised on top of an existing hill to form the cairn, thus increasing its original height.[1]

Further analysis

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Researchers, using an instrument to measure infrasound vibrations, realized there was the possibility of the existence of an underground water stream, deeper than the cavities of the tumulus.[1] This hypothesis has not yet been confirmed through the use of geophysical survey techniques such as ground-penetrating radar.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Debertolis, Paolo; Nikolić, Domagoj; Tarabella, Natalia (December 2016). "Archaeoastronomy at Kanda geoglyph, Macedonia". Journal of Anthropology and Archaeology. 4 (2): 59–71. doi:10.15640/jaa.v4n2a3 (inactive 12 July 2025). S2CID 55433555.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of July 2025 (link)