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Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #159
Saturday, August 4, 2007


Longer Perspectives
Beyond Mesopotamia: A Radical New View Of Human Civilization Reported In Science
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/02/2007 5:55:22 PM EDT · 39 replies · 854+ views


Eureka Alert | 8-2-2007 | American Association For Advancement Of Science/Andrew Lawler
Public release date: 2-Aug-2007 Contact: Natasha Pinol [email address removed] 202-326-7088 American Association for the Advancement of Science Beyond Mesopotamia: A radical new view of human civilization reported in ScienceMany urban centers crossed arc of Middle Asia 5,000 years ago A radically expanded view of the origin of civilization, extending far beyond Mesopotamia, is reported by journalist Andrew Lawler in the 3 August issue of Science. Mesopotamia is widely believed to be the cradle of civilization, but a growing body of evidence suggests that in addition to Mesopotamia, many civilized urban areas existed at the same time -- about 5,000 years ago...
 

Navigation
[Viking ship replica] Sea Stallion arrives in Inverie, Scotland
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 07/31/2007 2:54:23 PM EDT · 19 replies · 213+ views


Sail World | Saturday, July 28, 2007 | Tinna Damgard-Sorensen
The Sea Stallion right before arrival to the Orkney Islands Pastime and cosy atmosphere. Sea Stallion taken from the support vessel 'Cable One' by the Viking ship And the further on, 4 hours of rowing in between the Orkney - Sea Stallion.
 

The Vikings
New Viking Graves Discovered
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/30/2007 11:30:52 PM EDT · 12 replies · 548+ views


Aftenposten | 7-30-32007
Arial photo of what could be traces of Viking graves. PHOTO: NORD-TRONDELAG LOCAL AUTHORITIES New Viking graves discovered 120 graves and traces of Viking houses discovered near the city of Trondheim.Traces of what could be a Viking Chief's hall. PHOTO: Orn E. Borgen A reconstructed Viking Chief's hall in the cultural monuments park near the town of Honefoss. What may be a Viking Chief's hall is among the new findings. PHOTO: Orn E. Borgen A total of 145 antiquities have been found at 32 different places around Stiklestad in the county of Nord-Trondelag. PHOTO: JON A. FOSSEIE While most parts...
 

Helix, Make Mine a Double
Ancient DNA May Be Misleading Scientists
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/30/2007 2:04:32 AM EDT · 22 replies · 825+ views


ABC Science News | 2-18-2003
Ancient DNA may be misleading scientists Tuesday, 18 February 2003 Dating skeletal material with DNA may not be as acurate as thought Ancient DNA in skeletons has a tendency to show damage in a particular region, resulting in misleading genetic data and mistaken conclusions about the origin of the skeleton, British scientists said. A group of researchers at the Henry Wellcome Ancient Biomolecules Centre of the University of Oxford, in Britain, made the finding while studying Viking specimens. They found that about half of the specimens had DNA that suggested they were of Middle Eastern origin. But more detailed analysis...
 

Epidemics, Pandemics, Plagues
Black Death Casts A genetic Shadow Over England
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/01/2007 5:00:38 PM EDT · 82 replies · 1,854+ views


New Scientist | Colin Barras
Black Death casts a genetic shadow over England 12:26 01 August 2007 NewScientist.com news service Colin BarrasBlack Death as illustrated in a 15th century bible The Black Death continues to cast a shadow across England. Although the modern English population is more cosmopolitan than ever, the plagues known as the Black Death killed so many people in the Middle Ages that, to this day, genetic diversity is lower in England than it was in the 11th century, according to a new analysis. Rus Hoelzel at the University of Durham, UK and his colleagues looked at the mitochondrial DNA from human...
 

Anatolia
Major Find At Sagalassos (Colossal Statue - Hadrian)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/03/2007 2:26:56 PM EDT · 28 replies · 1,057+ views


Archaeology Magazine | 8-3-2007
Major Find at Sagalassos August 2, 2007 Colossal statue of the emperor Hadrian discovered A huge, exquisitely carved marble statue of the Roman emperor Hadrian is the latest find from Sagalassos, an ancient Greco-Roman city in south-central Turkey. Archaeologists estimate that the figure was originally between 13 and 16 feet in height (four to five meters). It is, says excavation director Marc Waelkens, one of the most beautiful portraits of Hadrian ever found. The discovery was made by archaeologists from the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium), who, under Waelkens' direction, have been investigating the site since 1990. Last month a new...
 

Ancient Art
Shop Assistant Wore Ancient Necklace
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/02/2007 1:53:21 PM EDT · 44 replies · 2,220+ views


Ananova | 7-31-2007
Shop assistant wore ancient necklace Archaeologists have found a valuable ancient gold necklace being worn by a cashier in a Bulgarian grocery after it was dug up by her husband. Boris Todorov, 43, from Karlovo in Bulgaria dug up hundreds of fine gold rings from a field on his farm and put them together to make a gift for his wife. But it was spotted by a group of archaeologists from the Bulgarian National Museum of History who were passing through - and went into her shop to buy provisions. They immediately identified the necklace as extremely valuable and now...
 

Ancient Europe
Ice Age Cave Art Preserved
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/30/2007 1:24:22 AM EDT · 22 replies · 556+ views


BBC | 7-29-2007 | BBC
Ice Age cave art site preserved The art was probably made by Ice Age hunter-gatherers Work to protect and preserve an Ice Age site in Derbyshire has been completed. The project at the Ice Age cave art centre at Creswell Crags was funded by the East Midlands Development Agency and the county council. It included building new scree banks to show how the gorge would have looked about 10 to 50,000 years ago. A county council spokesperson said archaeologists were consulted during the preservation project to ensure the site's natural beauty was not spoiled. 'Unique site' A £200,000 bridleway, which...
 

Epigraphy and Language
Discovery Of The Second Persian Geometrical Inscription
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/30/2007 1:41:52 AM EDT · 12 replies · 550+ views


CHN Press | 7-25-2007 | Soudabeh Sadigh
Discovery of the Second Persian Geometrical Inscription Kaftarlou inscriptionThe second Persian rock inscription in geometrical script has been discovered in Kaftarlou hill in Kurdistan province. Tehran, 25 July 2007 (CHN Foreign Desk) -- The second Persian geometrical inscription which was carved in Kaftarlou hill have been discovered in Akhtarabad region in Shahryar plain located in Iranian western province of Kurdistan. Due to the similarity of this geometrical writing with those previously found in Susa clay stamps and Jiroft's inscription, experts estimate that this newly discovered geometrical inscription must have dated back to at least 5000 years ago. After Kan Charmee...
 

Elam, Persia, Parthia, Iran
100,000-Year Old Knife Discovered In Iran
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/30/2007 1:18:09 AM EDT · 37 replies · 1,145+ views


Press TV | 7-29-2007
100,000-year old knife discovered in Iran Sun, 29 Jul 2007 10:04:58 Iranian and Korean archeologists have discovered a 100,000-year-old civilization in the city of Roudbar, located in the north of Iran. Six Iranian archeologists in cooperation with nine Korean archeologists undertook a discovery project in the northern province of Iran around 10 days ago. The archeologists could unearth a stone tool comparable to a knife made of stone. The experts estimated the stone knife must date back at least 100 thousand years. According expert finding a knife in an archeological site is a sign of existence of a civilization in...
 

Scrolls Out the Barrels
Reference Libraries of the Persian Empire
  Posted by freedom44
On News/Activism 07/30/2007 2:40:39 AM EDT · 11 replies · 328+ views


Persian Journal | 7/30/07
In ancient Iran, many libraries were established by the Zoroastrian elites and the Persian Kings. They were possibly one of the first Bibliophilists (more informally Bookworms) of the world. According to reliable documents the oldest library of Iran was possibly the Royal Library of Kohan Dej or Jay in Isfahan, which was founded during Achaemenids (550 BC-330 BC). In the north-eastern Iran there was a Royal Library in Nisa, one of the capital cities of Persian Empire during the Parthian Dynasty (248 BC-224 AD). Nisa is now one of the historical places in present day Republic of Turkmenistan. In the...
 

Australia and the Pacific
Scientists excited by Indonesian-caught coelacanth
  Posted by jsh3180
On General/Chat 07/30/2007 6:10:18 AM EDT · 9 replies · 296+ views


AFP | Sat. Jul. 28, 2007 | Ronan Bourhis
MANADO, Indonesia (AFP) - Two months ago Indonesian fisherman Justinus Lahama caught a fish so exceptional that an international team of scientists rushed here to investigate. French experts equipped with sonar and GPS asked Lahama to reconstruct, in his dugout canoe, exactly what it was he did that enabled him to catch a rare coelacanth fish, an awkward-swimming species among the world's oldest. Last May 19, Lahama and his son Delvy manoevred their frail canoe into the Malalayang river, on the outskirts of Manado, on northern Sulawesi island. Like any other morning, they rowed out to sea and fished within...
 

Paleontology
Rare fossilized cypress trees found in Hungary
  Posted by Fred Nerks
On News/Activism 08/02/2007 11:29:50 PM EDT · 27 replies · 378+ views


Reuters | Tue Jul 31, 9:19 AM ET | U/A
BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Hungarian scientists said on Tuesday they have discovered a group of fossilized swamp cypress trees preserved from 8 million years ago which could provide clues about the climate of pre-historic times. Instead of petrifying -- turning to stone -- the wood of 16 Taxodium trees was preserved in an open-cast coal mine allowing geologists to study samples as if they were sections cut from a piece of living wood. "The importance of the findings is that so many trees got preserved in their original position in one place," Alfred Dulai, geologist at the Hungarian Natural History Museum...
 

Central Asia
One Million-Years-Old (Human) Footprints Found At Margalla Hills (Pakistan)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/28/2007 9:00:30 PM EDT · 434 replies · 5,651+ views


Dawn | 7-27-2007 | Sher Baz Khan
1m-years-old footprints found at Margalla Hills By Sher Baz Khan ISLAMABAD, July 27: In what appears to be a major discovery, archaeologists have found two over one million years old human footprints preserved on a sandstone at the Margalla Hills. The Indusians Research Cell, which is working under the supervision of world renowned archaeologist and historian Dr Ahmad Hassan Dani of Taxila Institute of Asian Civilisations, Quaid-i-Azam University, Islamabad, has made the discovery, which is likely to add a new chapter to the archaeological history and heritage of the federal capital and attract visitors. A footprint of 1 feet is...
 

Meet the Flintstones
Dinosaur Bones: The Latest Status Symbol
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/29/2007 12:03:12 PM EDT · 9 replies · 322+ views


The Telegraph (UK) | 7-29-2007 | Philip Sherwell
Dinosaur bones: the latest status symbol By Philip Sherwell, Sunday Telegraph in Hulett, Wyoming, Sunday Telegraph Last Updated: 4:29pm BST 29/07/2007 The bidding war between the two Hollywood stars was intense as the price soared for the 67 million-year-old dinosaur skull. The Black Hills Institute of Geological Research has unearthed a jumble of dinosaur remains Only when it reached $276,000 did Leonardo DiCaprio blink - and Nicolas Cage walked away from the Beverley Hills auction with a ferocious-looking addition to his fossil collection. As this recent battle of the celebrities for the head of a tyrannosauras bataar -- the Asian...
 

Rome and Italy
Mussolini home Jewish graves opened [ Jewish catacombs ]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 07/30/2007 12:32:19 PM EDT · 3 replies · 43+ views


ANSA News in English | July 26, 2007 | unattributed
The Jewish catacombs under Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini's Rome villa are being restored and readied for visitors. "It's going to take several months to prepare the site and make it safe," said the head of Italy's Jewish Cultural Heritage Foundation, Bruno Orvieto. "We have to be very careful because there are delicate wall paintings down there that date back some 1,800 years," he stressed... However, a sneak preview of the 3rd and 4th century AD catacombs will be possible on September 2, when the European Day of Jewish Culture will be celebrated in 30 countries, including 55 sites around Italy....
 

British Isles
Roman holiday!
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 08/03/2007 9:16:44 AM EDT · 7 replies · 41+ views


Huddersfield Daily Examiner | August 2, 2007 | Sam Casey
Top Roman officials and well-to-do travellers could well have stopped off at Slack while out and about on vital business. And another exciting discover[y] during the project near Outlane was the remains of what could be an aqueduct... Project co-ordinator Granville Clay said... "It looks as though we have discovered the foundations of walls that would have formed the basis of a mansio -- effectively a Roman hotel or motel. The most exciting thing to emerge was what we believe to be the water supply to the Roman fort. All previous excavations have failed to uncover a well or water...
 

Greece
Greek experts to excavate Alexander's colony in Kuwait
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 08/03/2007 9:23:12 AM EDT · 9 replies · 134+ views


Middle East Times | August 1, 2007 | unattributed
Greek archaeologists plan to excavate an ancient colony founded by Alexander the Great in the Gulf of Kuwait in the fourth century BC, officials said Wednesday. "The site on Failaka Island is of particular importance to [Greece] as it was founded by Macedonians and other Greeks on Alexander the Great's expeditionary force," said culture ministry general secretary Christos Zahopoulos. The agreement between Greece and Kuwait signed in July will enable the Greek team to excavate the ancient town of Icarus on the island, organize the site, and restore its finds, the ministry said in a statement... Prior excavation on Failaka...
 

Egypt
Scientist stars in mummies film
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 08/02/2007 1:48:07 AM EDT · 5 replies · 88+ views


Manchester Evening News | August 2, 2007 | Paul T Taylor
A Manchester scientist is the star of a documentary that unwraps the secrets of Egyptian mummies. Dr Angelique Corthals, a lecturer at Manchester Univeristy, has just returned from the New York premiere of Mummies: Secrets of the Pharaohs. The film, narrated by The Lord Of The Rings star Christopher Lee, was shown on the giant 88ft-diameter IMAX screen at the Liberty Science Centre. It will be released here in September... Dr Corthals, 34, a lecturer in biomedical and forensic studies in Egyptology, said: "It was a strange experience seeing myself on a screen the size of a three-story building. I'd...
 

Mummy Told Me There'd Be Days Like This
Researchers Divulge Details About Mummy (Red-Headed Egyptian?)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/30/2007 1:11:04 AM EDT · 18 replies · 625+ views


NPLA.com | 7-28-2007 | AP
Researchers divulge details about mummy 7/28/2007, 4:13 p.m. CDT The Associated Press BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -- He was probably a redhead, tall and in good shape when he died of an unidentified cause by age 30. That's according to researchers, who used X-rays and a computerized topography scan to learn more about the 2,300-year-old mummy housed at the Louisiana Art and Science Museum. The release of their findings coincided with the unveiling of a major renovation of the museum's ancient Egypt gallery. The research also provided answers to questions left unresolved after X-rays done in the 1980s, and more...
 

Prehistory and Origins
Odd Skull Boosts Human, Neandertal Interbreeding Theory
  Posted by Renfield
On News/Activism 08/04/2007 12:42:20 PM EDT · 28 replies · 655+ views


National Geographic | 8-2-07 | Brian Handwerk
A human skull from a Romanian bear cave is shaking up ideas about ancient sex. The Homo sapiens skull has a distinctive feature previously found only in Neandertals, providing further evidence of interbreeding between the two species, according to a new study. The human cranium was found during World War II mining operations in 1942, in a cave littered with Ice Age cave bear remains. Recently the fossil was radiocarbon dated to 33,000 years ago and thoroughly examined, revealing the controversial anatomical feature. The otherwise human skull has a groove at the base of the back of the skull, just...
 

Climate
A 30,000-year Record Of Sea Surface Temperatures Off South Australia
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/03/2007 2:57:24 PM EDT · 35 replies · 1,060+ views


Science Daily | 8-3-2007 | American Geophysical Union
Source: American Geophysical Union Date: August 3, 2007 A 30,000-year Record Of Sea Surface Temperatures Off South Australia Science Daily -- Continental glaciers originating at both poles reached their farthest extent about 20,000 years ago, marking a time known as the Last Glacial Maximum. Comparisons of ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica show that as these glaciers melted, warming occurred in asynchronous stages at the poles. While many northern hemisphere climate records match ice core records from Greenland, few southern hemisphere records exist to compare with ice core data from Antarctica. Calvo et al. analyze a marine core collected off...
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
Comet Theory Collides With Clovis Research, May Explain Disappearance of Ancient People
  Posted by ForGod'sSake
On News/Activism 08/04/2007 2:29:34 AM EDT · 50 replies · 899+ views


University of South Carolina(USC News) | June 28, 2007 | Staff
June 28, 2007 Comet theory collides with Clovis research, may explain disappearance of ancient people A theory put forth by a group of 25 geo-scientists suggests that a massive comet exploded over Canada, possibly wiping out both beast and man around 12,900 years ago, and pushing the earth into another ice age. University of South Carolina archaeologist Dr. Albert Goodyear said the theory may not be such "out-of-this-world" thinking based on his study of ancient stone-tool artifacts he and his team have excavated from the Topper dig site in Allendale, as well as ones found in Georgia, North Carolina and...
 

She Turned Me Into Aleut
Whalebone Mask May Rewrite Aleut History
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/28/2007 9:18:44 PM EDT · 10 replies · 532+ views


Anchorage Daily News | 7-28-2007 | Alex deMarban
Whalebone mask may rewrite Aleut history By ALEX deMARBAN ademarban@adn.com Published: July 28, 2007 Last Modified: July 28, 2007 at 04:08 AMED ARTHUR / Cultural Resource Consultants LLCArchaeologists excavating on Amaknak Island in the Aleutians have discovered what may be a piece of the oldest-known Unangam whalebone mask. Archaeologists unearthing an ancient village from an Unalaska hillside believe they've found the remains of the oldest-known Aleut whalebone mask. Much of the mask is missing -- it's mostly intact above where the cheekbones would sit -- but archaeologists are pretty sure it's about 3,000 years old, said Mike Yarborough, lead archaeologist...
 

PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis
Aztec pyramid ruins found in Mexico City
  Posted by BGHater
On News/Activism 08/02/2007 12:57:27 PM EDT · 41 replies · 734+ views


Reuters | 02 Aug 2007 | Reuters
Archaeologists have discovered what they think are ruins of an Aztec pyramid razed by vengeful Spanish conquerors in what is now one of Mexico City's most crime-ridden districts. Construction workers unearthed ancient walls in the busy Iztapalapa neighbourhood in June, and government archaeologists said on Wednesday they believe they may be part of the main pyramid of the Aztec city, destroyed by conquistador Hernan Cortes in the 16th century. Iztapalapa, now infamous for violent crime and drug dealing, has grown into a sprawling, poor district of the capital, obscuring the ruins. "We knew the general location but couldn't explore because...
 

Arts and Literature for 1492, Alex
AP Exclusive: Aztec leader's tomb found (emperor Ahuizotl)
  Posted by TigerLikesRooster
On News/Activism 08/04/2007 6:26:13 AM EDT · 15 replies · 622+ views


AP | 08/04/07 | MARK STEVENSON
AP Exclusive: Aztec leader's tomb found By MARK STEVENSON, Associated Press Writer Sat Aug 4, 3:23 AM ET He was emperor at the apogee of the Aztec civilization, the last to complete his rule before the Spanish Conquest. But Ahuizotl's tomb has never been found. No Aztec ruler's funeral chamber ever has. But Mexican archaeologists believe that has finally changed. Using ground-penetrating radar, they have detected underground chambers that could contain the remains of Ahuizotl, who ruled the Aztecs when Columbus landed in the New World. The find could provide an extraordinary window into Aztec civilization at its peak. Ahuizotl...
 

Unexplained (The Meat Puppets)
OOPARTS (Out of Place Artifacts)
  Posted by 2ndDivisionVet
On Bloggers & Personal 08/01/2007 6:28:51 AM EDT · 40 replies · 522+ views


What If? | Unknown
Ooparts ? What are Ooparts? That stands for Out of Place Artifacts. Things that show up where they shouldn't, a piece of gold chain found in a coal seam, what appears to be a sparkplug embedded in rock that is thousands of years old and what appears to be a bullet hole in the skull of a mastodon. These things are ooparts. A Gold Thread Workmen quarrying stone near the River Tweed below Rutherford, Scotland in 1844, found a piece of gold thread embedded in the rock of the quarry eight feet below ground level. A small piece of the...
 

Oh So Mysteriouso
Robbing the Cradle of Civilization [Page 6; bin Laden and the Face on Mars]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 08/03/2007 9:06:51 PM EDT · 6 replies · 52+ views


Anomaly Hunters | last updated on 1/24/2003 | The Hero Twins
By 1997, with the word out that NASA planned to land on Mars, bin Laden called for all Americans and Jews, including children, to be killed. That summer three of his operatives living in Yemen launched a little known threat against NASA, via the judicial system. They warn both NASA and the USA that the Yemeni people (of which bin Laden is a member and believes he can trace his blood line back to the time of Queen Sheba) own Mars and they have 3,000-year-old (Sumerian?) tablets to prove it. On July 24th of 1997 the Al-Thawn weekly newspaper reported...
 

Let's Have Jerusalem
Revealing Jerusalem
  Posted by Squidpup
On News/Activism 07/30/2007 5:42:23 PM EDT · 2 replies · 177+ views


The Jerusalem Post | Updated Jul. 29, 2007 13:24 | By LEAH ABRAMOWITZ
There is a huge hole at each end of the Western Wall Plaza, one of which is expanding by the day. Both are significant archeological excavations now in progress under the auspices of the Israel Antiquities Authority, but they differ in their scope and implications for the area. The Mughrabi Gate excavation site and that where the police station once stood are both considered "rescue digs" - that is, important construction was about to take place in the area, but first the government wanted to check what was "going on underneath." As is typical in the Old City, excavators were...
 

Faith and Philosophy
Archaeologist Uncover Possible Medieval Mosque In Sicily
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/30/2007 11:41:07 PM EDT · 50 replies · 775+ views


Physorg.com | 7-30-2007 | North Illinois University
Archaeologist uncover possible medieval mosque in Sicily The Normans are believed to have built the medieval castle of Salemi. It fell into ruin during the mid-20th century and was closed after a devastating earthquake in 1968. The castle is shown here prior to recent exterior renovations. Photo by Michael Kolb" Earlier this summer, while standing in an archaeological pit adjacent to an ancient hilltop castle in west-central Sicily, Northern Illinois University graduate student Bill Balco could literally reach out and touch the centuries -- even the millennia. The dig site, about 7-by-10 meters near the castle entrance, reveals a crossroads of cultures...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
Mass Grave Sheds Light On Europe's Bloody History (1636 Battle)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 07/31/2007 5:48:21 PM EDT · 63 replies · 1,703+ views


Spiegel | 7-31-2007 | David Crossland
Mass Grave Sheds Light on Europe's Bloody History By David Crossland in Berlin Europe's soil is blood-soaked from centuries of fighting but rarely yields mass graves from battles that took place before the two world wars. One such grave has now been found near Berlin with over 100 soldiers who died in the 1636 Battle of Wittstock. Archaeologists say they can learn much from the skeletons which show terrible wounds. An archaeologist gently uncovering a row of skeletons in the mass grave found in Wittstock near Berlin. Archaeologists in Germany are examining a mass grave containing the skeletons of more...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Aging Jersey farmer now tends to his memories of the land
  Posted by Coleus
On General/Chat 07/29/2007 12:14:05 AM EDT · 3 replies · 127+ views


Star Ledger | Mark Di Ionno | 07.28.07
The tree, like the man who planted it, is still here. The 200-year-old house is gone, the old southern Somerset County farm has been turned into some 200 new houses. But the sugar maple tree Charlie Grayson planted on Arbor Day when he was 8 is right where he put it. A little stooped and creaky, like Charlie Grayson himself, but still here. Charlie Grayson's tree has weathered nearly nine decades of change in the landscape. Once the smallest tree in a clump of mature shade trees in front of a Colonial- era farmhouse (circa 1700s), it's now the old-timer...
 

end of digest #159 20070804

587 posted on 08/05/2007 7:55:57 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Profile updated Thursday, August 2, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 585 | View Replies ]


To: 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; Androcles; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #159 20070804
· Saturday, August 4, 2007 · 32 topics · 1876240 to 1873120 · 650 members ·

 
Saturday
August 4
2007
v 4
n 03

view this issue
Welcome to the issue 159 of the Gods, Graves, Glyphs ping list Digest. We've had still more join, and even had someone join the weekly digest version of the ping list. Welcome to all new members.

This issue is a day late due to a power outage the previous week. That power outage occurred while the eMac was on, and scrambled the b-tree on the hard drive, making it unbootable and appearing to be unformatted. I swung by the Apple Store and was advised on which software would do the job of data recovery. Will tell you how it goes. The stuff I had is older, and wouldn't quite get 'er done.

I've made up for it by plastering in more ridiculous category names than usual, so that's a break for you.

The Freep-a-Thon went well and seemed shorter than usual. Congratulations to JimRob and thanks to all.

Visit the Free Republic Memorial Wall -- a history-related feature of FR.
 

· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic ·


588 posted on 08/05/2007 8:00:01 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Profile updated Thursday, August 2, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 587 | View Replies ]


Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #160
Saturday, August 11, 2007


Prehistory and Origins
First Europeans Came From Asia, Not Africa, Tooth Study Suggests
  Posted by BGHater
On News/Activism 08/08/2007 12:17:01 PM EDT · 35 replies · 699+ views


National Geographic News | 06 Aug 2007 | Kate Ravilious
Europe's first early human colonizers were from Asia, not Africa, a new analysis of more than 5,000 ancient teeth suggests. Researchers had traditionally assumed that Europe was settled in waves starting around two million years ago, as our ancient ancestors -- collectively known as hominids -- came over from Africa. But the shapes of teeth from a number of hominid species suggest that arrivals from Asia played a greater role in colonizing Europe than hominids direct from Africa. These Asian hominids may have originally come from Africa, the scientists note, but had evolved independently for some time. (Related: "Did Early Humans First Arise in...
 

Study points to larger role of Asian ancestors in evolution (challenging "Out of Africa" theory)
  Posted by GeorgeKant
On News/Activism 08/07/2007 11:51:06 AM EDT · 21 replies · 634+ views


AFP (Yahoo!) | Tue Aug 7, 8:10 AM
CHICAGO (AFP) - A new analysis of the dental fossils of human ancestors suggests that Asian populations played a larger role than Africans in colonizing Europe millions of years ago, said a study released Monday. The findings challenge the prevailing "Out of Africa" theory, which holds that anatomically modern man first arose from one point in Africa and fanned out to conquer the globe, and bolsters the notion that Homo sapiens evolved from different populations in different parts of the globe. The "Out of Africa" scenario has been underpinned since 1987 by genetic studies based mainly on the rate of...
 

Early Humans In China One Million Years Ago
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/06/2007 1:27:06 PM EDT · 32 replies · 693+ views


Science Daily | 8-2-2007 | American Geophysical Union
Source: American Geophysical Union Date: August 2, 2007 Early Humans In China One Million Years Ago Science Daily -- Chronology and adaptability of early humans in different paleoclimatic and paleoenvironmental settings are important topics in the study of human evolution. China houses several early-human (Paleolithic) archaeological sites along the Nihewan Basin near Mongolia, some with artifacts that date back about 1 million years ago. Deng et al. analyze one specific locality in the Nihewan Basin, called the Feiliang Paleolithic Site, where several stone artifacts and mammalian bone fragments have been found buried in basin silts. By analyzing remnant magnetizations of...
 

Africa
Finds test human origins theory
  Posted by Domandred
On News/Activism 08/08/2007 1:58:39 PM EDT · 97 replies · 1,219+ views


BBC News | James Urquhart
Two hominid fossils discovered in Kenya are challenging a long-held view of human evolution. The broken upper jaw-bone and intact skull from humanlike creatures, or hominids, are described in Nature. Previously, the hominid Homo habilis was thought to have evolved into the more advanced Homo erectus, which evolved into us. Now, habilis and erectus are now thought to be sister species that overlapped in time. The new fossil evidence reveals an overlap of about 500,000 years during which Homo habilis and Homo erectus must have co-existed in the Turkana basin area, the region of East Africa where the fossils were...
 

Fossils paint new picture of human evolution
  Posted by Brujo
On News/Activism 08/08/2007 2:23:07 PM EDT · 37 replies · 641+ views


AP via Yahoo | 2007-Aug-08 | Julie Steenhuysen
An ancient skull and upper jawbone from two early branches of the human family tree -- Homo erectus and Homo habilis -- suggest the early human ancestors may have lived close together for half a million years, researchers said on Wednesday. The fossils, discovered in eastern Africa, challenge the understanding that humans evolved one after another like a line of dominoes, from ancient Homo habilis to Homo erectus and eventually to Homo sapiens, or modern people. "There has been a view that has suggested habilis very slowly evolved into erectus," said Susan Anton, a professor of anthropology at New York...
 

Kenyan Fossils May Add New Branch to Human Family Tree
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/08/2007 6:50:18 PM EDT · 24 replies · 476+ views


National Geographic | 8-8-2007 | John Roach
Kenyan Fossils May Add New Branch to Human Family Tree John Roach for National Geographic News August 8, 2007 A pair of fossils recently discovered in Kenya is challenging the straight-line story of human evolution. Traditional evolutionary theories of the genus Homo suggest a successive progression: Homo habilis gave rise to Homo erectus, which then begat modern humans, Homo sapiens. H. erectus is commonly seen as the most similar ancestor to modern humans, differing mostly by having a brain about three-quarters the size. But the newly found upper jawbone and skull, which come from two separate skeletons, suggest that H....
 

Skull Suggests Two Early Humans Lived at Same Time
  Posted by RDTF
On News/Activism 08/08/2007 11:36:16 PM EDT · 40 replies · 688+ views


Foxnews.com | August 8, 2007 | AP
WASHINGTON -- Surprising fossils dug up in Africa are creating messy kinks in the iconic straight line of human evolution with its knuckle-dragging ape and briefcase-carrying man. The new research by famed paleontologist Meave Leakey in Kenya shows our family tree is more like a wayward bush with stubby branches, calling into question the evolution of our ancestors. The old theory was that the first and oldest species in our family tree, Homo habilis, evolved into Homo erectus, which then became us, Homo sapiens. But those two earlier species lived side-by-side about 1.5 million years ago in parts of Kenya...
 

Meet the Flintstones
Ancient Human Fossils Show Women Much Smaller
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/09/2007 4:18:21 PM EDT · 29 replies · 651+ views


Reuters | 8-9-2007
Ancient human fossils show women much smaller Thu Aug 9, 2007 10:18AM EDT NAIROBI (Reuters) - Homo erectus, long viewed as a crucial evolutionary link between modern humans and their tree-dwelling ancestors, may have been more ape-like than previously thought, scientists unveiling new-found fossils said on Thursday. Revealing an ancient skull and a jawbone from two early branches of the human family tree -- Homo erectus and Homo habilis -- a team of Kenyan scientists said they were surprised to find that early female hominids were much smaller than males. The skull was the first discovery of a female Homo...
 

Lucy, No Ricky
Famous fossil Lucy leaves Ethiopia (on a U.S. tour)
  Posted by NormsRevenge
On News/Activism 08/06/2007 10:10:14 PM EDT · 57 replies · 649+ views


AP on Yahoo | 8/6/07 | Anita Powell - ap
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia - After 3.2 million years in East Africa, one of the world's most famous set of fossils was quietly flown out of Ethiopia overnight for a U.S. tour that some experts say is a dangerous gamble with an irreplaceable relic. Although the fossil known as Lucy had been expected to leave the Ethiopian Natural History Museum this month, some in the nation's capital were surprised the departure took place under cover of darkness with no fanfare Sunday. "This is a national treasure," said Kine Arega, a 29-year-old attorney in Addis Ababa. "How come the public has no...
 

Rome and Italy
Fire Damages Rome's Famed Film Studios
  Posted by JACKRUSSELL
On News/Activism 08/10/2007 9:46:38 PM EDT · 5 replies · 167+ views


ABC News | August 10, 2007 | The Associated Press
(ROME) -- A fire on the set of "Rome," a completed HBO series on the ancient empire, has damaged part of the famed Cinecitta film studios. No one was reported injured. The blaze, which started late Thursday, burned through about 32,000 square feet, firefighters said. The sprawling complex on the outskirts of Rome covers more than 715,000 square yards, including buildings, gardens, movie sets and offices. Officials said the site where the fire broke out contained a large amount of highly flammable, synthetic material. The cause of the fire wasn't clear, but officials ruled out arson. The main set of "Rome," which...
 

Ancient Art
Vandals destroy 8,000-year-old artwork
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 08/08/2007 11:34:41 AM EDT · 13 replies · 233+ views


thinkSPAINtoday | Tuesday, August 7, 2007 | Samantha Kett
Fluorescent yellow paint was sprayed over carvings, thought to be around 8,000 years old, inside the Cova de la Clau in Palma de Gandia, last week. However, they left a 16,000-year-old engraving of a horse in the Cova del Parpallo untouched... Some of the carvings, which were discovered in 2001, have been removed and are held in various museums throughout the province, but those that remain have been declared UNESCO heritage sites. This is not the first time prehistoric engravings in La Safor caves have been under threat from vandals. Three years ago, graffiti was found in the Cova del...
 

British Isles
Stone Age Site Surfaces After 8,000 Years
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/06/2007 2:28:14 PM EDT · 30 replies · 969+ views


Science Daily | 8-5-2007
Source: University of Southampton Date: August 5, 2007 Stone Age Site Surfaces After 8000 Years Science Daily -- Excavations of an underwater Stone Age archaeological settlement dating back 8000 years took place at the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton between 30 July ñ 3 August 2007. A diver working at the site just off the Isle of Wight coast. (Credit: Copyright Simon Brown 2007) Maritime archaeologists from the Hampshire and Wight Trust for Maritime Archaeology (HWTMA) have been working at the site just off the Isle of Wight coast. Divers working at depths of 11 metres have raised sections of the...
 

Remains of 8000 year old Stone Age settlement found under English Channel
  Posted by neverdem
On News/Activism 08/10/2007 2:53:32 PM EDT · 55 replies · 1,382+ views


news.yahoo.com | August 10, 2007 | NA
Washington, Aug 10 (ANI): Archaeologists have found the remains of a busy Stone Age settlement dating back 8000 years on the floor of the English Channel. The site, just off the Isle of Wight, dates back to the time when Europe and Britain were still linked by land. Garry Momber, director of the Hampshire and Wight Trust for Maritime Archaeology, which led the recent excavations, said melting glaciers probably filled in the Channel, driving the settlement's last occupants north to higher ground. "This is the only site of its kind in the United Kingdom," said Momber. "It is important because...
 

Megaliths and Archaeoastronomy
Perthshire Rock Art Sheds Light On Scotland's Prehistoric Past
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/05/2007 7:00:40 PM EDT · 16 replies · 361+ views


24 Hour Museum | 8-3-2007 | Graham Spicer
PERTHSHIRE ROCK ART SHEDS LIGHT ON SCOTLAND'S PREHISTORIC PAST By Graham Spicer 03/08/2007 Archaeologists have discovered a large group of ancient rock art in Perthshire, which they hope will shed more light on the area's prehistoric inhabitants. A team working on National Trust for Scotland (NTS) land as part of the Ben Lawers Historic Landscape Project found the previously undiscovered ëcup-and-ring' style markings on a hillside overlooking Loch Tay and Kenmore. The carvings could date back to Neolithic times and be up to 5,000 years old. Cup-and-ring rock art features abstract symbols of circles and cups, chipped out of the...
 

Ancient Europe
Scientists say 'Iceman' died from arrow
  Posted by presidio9
On General/Chat 06/07/2007 1:57:15 PM EDT · 54 replies · 1,481+ views


Associated Press | 6/6/7 | FRANK JORDANS
A prehistoric hunter known as Oetzi whose well-preserved body was found on a snow-covered mountain in the Alps died more than 5,000 years ago after being struck in the back by an arrow, scientists said in an article published Wednesday. Researchers from Switzerland and Italy used newly developed medical scanners to examine the hunter's frozen corpse to determine that the arrow had torn a hole in an artery beneath his left collarbone, leading to a massive loss of blood. That, in turn, caused Oetzi to go into shock and suffer a heart attack, according to the article published online in...
 

Central Asia
Russia: Ancient Uyghur Fortress on a Tuvan Lake to Turn into a Recreation and Tourist Centre
  Posted by TigerLikesRooster
On News/Activism 08/09/2007 1:38:16 AM EDT · 12 replies · 249+ views


Tuva-onlines | 01/19/07 | Dina Oyun
Ancient Uyghur Fortress on a Tuvan Lake to Turn into a Recreation and Tourist Centre An ancient Uigur Fortress (Por-Bazhyn) on a Tere-Khol lake in the eastern part of Tuva (near Kungurtuk village) can become a 'Russian Shaolin' as Sergei Shoigu, native Tuvan and currently Russian minister for Extraordinary Situations (second in popularity after President Putin Russian) put it in today's Rossiiskaya Gazeta daily. A research expedition to the ruined fortress of Por-Bazhyn will take place this summer with an archeological team numbering over 200 people. 'We shall build there a Russian Shaolin and invite everybody to come there. And...
 

Navigation
Marco Polo discovered America 200 years before Colombus, according to map
  Posted by HAL9000
On News/Activism 08/09/2007 6:28:45 AM EDT · 89 replies · 2,149+ views


AFP via translation | August 9, 2007
Possible discovered of America by Marco Polo before Colomb: account in VSD 'America - its West coast - would have been discovered by Marco Polo some 200 years before Christophe Colomb, according to a chart of the Library of the Congress in Washington examined since 1943 by the FBI and whose history is told in published review VSD Wednesday. This document, brought to the Library in 1933 by Marcian Rossi, an American naturalized citizen originating in Italy, "represents a boat beside a chart showing part of India, China, Japan, the Eastern Indies and North America", indicates the report/ratio of...
 

Panspermia
Rutgers scientists debunk a life-origin theory
  Posted by Bladerunnuh
On News/Activism 08/09/2007 6:23:00 PM EDT · 26 replies · 574+ views


North Jersey Media | 8-7-07 | BOB GROVES
For the first time, there are solid data to refute a popular theory that life came to the Earth aboard a comet, Rutgers researchers said Monday. Deteriorated DNA from microbes, frozen for millions of years in the Antarctic ice, shows that organisms could not have survived the bombardment of cosmic radiation during deep space travel from outside the solar system, said Paul Falkowski, a Rutgers biologist and oceanographer. "It's almost an impossibility for comets to seed other planets with life after they've been in space for millions of years," Falkowski said. That's because genetic material is severely damaged or destroyed...
 

Greece
Alexander's Gulf outpost uncovered
  Posted by fishhound
On News/Activism 08/07/2007 1:22:58 PM EDT · 15 replies · 476+ views


BBC | Tuesday, 7 August 2007, | Neil Arun
Alexander the Great's awe-inspiring conquest of Asia is drawing archaeologists to a desert island off the shores of Iraq. Failaka ruins (pic: Greek Ministry of Culture) The Greek and Kuwaiti governments are co-operating at the site Greek government experts are going to Failaka - a Gulf outpost of Alexander's army, now governed by Kuwait. The island's bullet-holed buildings tell of a conflict still fresh in people's memories - Saddam Hussein's brief occupation of Kuwait in the early 1990s. Beneath the sun-baked sands of Failaka, archaeologists hope to unearth the secrets of an earlier conquest - a settlement established by Alexander's...
 

Egypt
Queen Nefertiti: More Than A Pretty Face
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/08/2007 11:02:53 PM EDT · 35 replies · 1,280+ views


Expatica | 8-8-2007
Queen Nefertiti: More than a pretty face German scientists have discovered that the world's most beautiful woman allowed herself to be sculpted with wrinkles to appear more beautiful. Maybe wrinkles are not so bad, after all, some German scientists have discovered. In ancient times, such laugh lines and wrinkles around the mouth improved the face of Nefertiti, the Egyptian queen acclaimed as the world's most beautiful woman. X-ray pictures of the bust by a computer tomography machine at the nearby Charite Hospital in Berlin revealed that the sculpture is a piece of limestone with details added using four outer layers...
 

Epigraphy and Language
Timbuktu Hopes Ancient Texts Spark a Revival
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 08/07/2007 1:47:24 PM EDT · 13 replies · 173+ views


NY Times | August 7, 2007 | Lydia Polgreen
Ismael Diadie Haidara held a treasure in his slender fingers that has somehow endured through 11 generations -- a square of battered leather enclosing a history of the two branches of his family, one side reaching back to the Visigoths in Spain and the other to the ancient origins of the Songhai emperors who ruled this city at its zenith. [Candace Feit for The New York Times]
 

Faith and Philosophy
In Afghanistan, 900-Foot Sleeping Buddha Eludes Archaeologists
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/07/2007 6:24:52 PM EDT · 30 replies · 896+ views


CS Monitor | 8-7-2007 | Mark Sappenfield
In Afghanistan, 900-foot Sleeping Buddha eludes archaeologistsBut researchers are finding and preserving other ancient riches. By Mark Sappenfield | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor from the August 7, 2007 edition BAMIYAN, AFGHANISTAN - After the Taliban fell, France sent Zemaryalai Tarzi to this Afghan valley on a quest bordering on the mythological. His goal: to find Sleeping Buddha, the reclining sculpture that, at 900 feet long, would be nearly 10 times the size of the Buddhas destroyed by the Taliban in 2001. He brought the ultimate treasure map -- the journal of a 7th- century Chinese pilgrim who...
 

Climate
Ancient Glacier Creatures Brought Back To Life (8-Million-Years-Old)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/06/2007 7:14:01 PM EDT · 39 replies · 1,000+ views


The Telegraph (UK) | 8-6-2007 | Roger Highfield
Ancient glacier creatures brought back to life By Roger Highfield, Science Editor Last Updated: 8:35pm BST 06/08/2007 Creatures that once lived eight million years ago have been successfully thawed from the ice of an Antarctic glacier, in an experiment that sounds like a scene from a science fiction film. The feat of revival was managed with as yet unidentified single-celled microbes and should pose no health issues, say the scientists. However, it does show that evolution of simpler organisms is complicated by thawing glaciers which allow ancient bugs to contribute their old genes to modern populations. The finding is significant,...
 

Sunken Civilizations
Underwater Stone Formation at Bimini: Ancient Harbor Evidence (Uncovering the Bimini Hoax)
  Posted by Renfield
On General/Chat 08/06/2007 8:27:45 PM EDT · 25 replies · 431+ views


Mysterious America | 11/2005 | Greg Little
In 1968 a 1600-foot long J-shaped formation of stone blocks was reportedly discovered about one mile off the west coast of North Bimini, Bahamas by a Miami-based biologist, Dr. J. Manson Valentine. The formation was initially thought to resemble a collapsed wall or a road and the unfortunate name "Bimini Road" was attached to it. Media coverage speculated that the site was associated with Atlantis and sensationalized reports about the formation were widely disseminated. Shortly thereafter, four geologists asserted that the formation was nothing but natural limestone. Most archaeologists and geologists have accepted the four geologists' claims without question. However,...
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
Mammoth Discovery
  Posted by dynachrome
On News/Activism 07/11/2007 7:17:12 PM EDT · 55 replies · 1,408+ views


cnn.com | 7-11-07 | Cnn
A mammoth that died 10,000 years ago was unearthed in Siberia.
 

Paleontology
Archaeologists discover 8-million-year-old forest in Hungary
  Posted by DaveLoneRanger
On News/Activism 08/08/2007 6:09:13 PM EDT · 91 replies · 1,442+ views


BreitBart | August 6, 2007 | Staff
Archaeologists have found an eight-million-year old forest of cypresses, well preserved and not fossilised, in Bukkabrany in north eastern Hungary. "The discovery is exceptional as the trees kept their wooden structure, they neither turned into coal nor were petrified," Tamas Pusztai, the deputy director and head of the archaeological department at the local Otto Herman museum who oversaw the excavation, told AFP. Archaelogists announced the find last week after uncovering the mysterious forest of taxodiums, a kind of swamp cypress, after a few days of digging. Miners working in a brown coal mine had first uncovered several tree trunks that...
 

PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis
Ancient Ruler's Tomb, Gold Trove Found in Bolivia Pyramid
  Posted by BGHater
On News/Activism 08/07/2007 12:22:59 PM EDT · 9 replies · 613+ views


National Geographic News | 06 Aug 2007 | Kelly Hearn
A 1,300-year-old skeleton buried with a cache of gold artifacts has been found in a Bolivian pyramid, archaeologists say. The remains are believed to belong to an elite member of the ancient Tiwanaku culture, which thrived on the shores of Lake Titicaca from about A.D. 400 to 1200 (see Bolivia map). Scientists found the bones and offerings this spring in the upper reaches of the Akapana pyramid, a heavily looted temple experts say is one of the largest pre-Hispanic structures in South America. The condition of the artifacts and the skeleton's location inside the pyramid lead researchers to believe the...
 

Let's Have Jerusalem
Archaeologists discover sixth-century mosaic floor near Palmahim
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 08/08/2007 11:44:09 AM EDT · 10 replies · 127+ views


Haaretz | Wednesday, August 8, 2007 | Ofri Ilani
A floor mosaic dating back to the sixth century, depicting trees and fruit baskets, was uncovered this week at the Yavneh-Yam archaeological site near Kibbutz Palmahim. The floor, discovered during excavations by Tel Aviv University's Institute of Archaeology, decorated the dining room of a Byzantine villa, containing unbroken pottery... The numerous artifacts uncovered at the site point to extensive cultural and trade ties with Egypt, Lebanon, Cyprus and the Greek Isles. At the end of the fifth century, it was home to a monk known as Peter the Iberian - a charismatic bishop of Georgian origin who gathered around him...
 

Helix, Make Mine a Double
Researchers re-identify Titanic child
  Posted by DancesWithCats
On General/Chat 08/05/2007 10:38:26 PM EDT · 21 replies · 392+ views


Yahoo News | august 6 2007 | DancesWithCats
Wed Aug 1, 7:54 PM OTTAWA (AFP) - Canadian researchers on Wednesday said they positively identified the remains of a young child who died when the RMS Titanic sank in 1912. (Advertisement) The remains belong to a 19-month-old English boy named Sidney Leslie Goodwin who died with his family as they were setting out for a new life in Niagara Falls, New York, researchers said. Goodwin's body was found floating in the waters of the North Atlantic six days after the luxury liner sank on April 15,9 1912, killing 1,503 passengers and crew. Many of the Titanic victims are buried...
 

Longer Perspectives
The 2007 FreeRepublic Lexicon (Lingo, Dictionary, Lore Handbook)
  Posted by batter
On News/Activism 08/06/2007 5:06:00 PM EDT · 107 replies · 1,747+ views


FReepers | 6 August 2007 | FReepers (batter)
The 2007 FreeRepublic LexiconAKA "The Freepism, Freepology, Lingo, Dictionary, Terminology, Lore Handbook" A revised and condensed version of The Lexicon of FreeRepublic, culled from Lexicon of FreeRepublic - 4th Edition and Freeper Lingo Thread (the history and meening of 'Freepisms' including pictures). Thanks to the many Freepers who contributed! (see also The 2006 FreeRepublic LexiconI have attempted to include all definitions and histories provided to me and give credit to those who provided me the information. I apologize, in advance to those I failed to credit, but please understand that it was very difficult to keep up with all the...
 

Early America
Mesa State accepts donated journals of trailblazers of West, Lewis and Clark
  Posted by george76
On News/Activism 08/08/2007 11:29:18 AM EDT · 16 replies · 177+ views


The Daily Sentinel | August 08, 2007 | KYLENE KIANG
The foundation marked Gormley's achievement with a donation of books -- seven volumes of the journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition -- to the Tomlinson Library at Mesa State College. The journals of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark... were edited by Gary Moulton and published by the University of Nebraska Press. They are known among today's historians as the best and most current version of the duo's journey through the American West. Mesa State College Library Director Elizabeth Brodak said the fact that the books are forms of primary source material... "Anyone who wishes to get that flavor for...
 

Sifting Through History (Acadia)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 08/06/2007 1:55:47 PM EDT · 12 replies · 273+ views


The Chronicle Herald | 8-5-2007 | Tom McCoag
Sifting through historyLong-lost Acadian settlement reveals itself layer by layer in new excavation By TOM MCCOAG Amherst Bureau | 6:08 AM Gilbert Losier, of Dieppe, N.B., holds up a metal object he unearthed while participating in the dig at Beaubassin. A shard of glass and a piece of a pipe, two of the artifacts dug from the earth at the site of what was once an Acadian village.Amateur archeologists work pits and trenches that dot the field where the Acadian village of Beaubassin once stood. They were participating in a public dig sponsored by Parks Canada."Archeologist Clarice Valotaire leans into...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Edmund Fitzgerald life ring found
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On News/Activism 08/08/2007 1:24:07 AM EDT · 58 replies · 2,502+ views


WOOD TV 8 (Grand Rapids) | Tuesday, August 7, 2007 | Rachael Ruiz
Joe Rasch and his two daughters, Emily and Elizabeth, were looking for agates on the Lake Superior coastline last Friday. Instead, they found a piece of history - a life ring from the Edmund Fitzgerald. Rasch admits he didn't realize what he found when he first saw the orange ring lying under a with pine tree that had fallen. Only when his daughter Emily read the words on the ring, it hit him. "It was pretty hard to read," Emily said. "I saw the Ed pretty good, then Fitz, so." They made the discovery near the Keweenau Peninsula, about 200 miles...
 

end of digest #160 20070811

593 posted on 08/10/2007 11:19:32 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Profile updated Thursday, August 9, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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