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Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #191
Saturday, March 15, 2008


Let's Have Jerusalem
First-Ever: First-Temple Building Remains Found Near Temple Mt. 
 
03/13/2008 6:58:08 PM EDT · by SmithL · 8 replies · 195+ views
Arutz Sheva - IsraelNationalNews | 3/13/8 | Hillel Fendel
(IsraelNN.com) The Israel Antiquities Authority announces the first time in the history of the archaeological research of Jerusalem that building remains from the First Temple period have been exposed so close to the Temple Mount -- on the eastern slopes of the Upper City. A rich layer of finds from the latter part of the First Temple period (8th-6th centuries B.C.E.) has been discovered in archaeological rescue excavations near the Western Wall plaza.† The dig is being carried out in the northwestern part of the Western Wall plaza, near the staircase leading up towards the Jaffa Gate. The Israel Antiquties...
 

Megaliths and Archaeoastronomy
Ancient Architectural Acoustic Resonance Patterns and Regional Brain Activity 
 
03/11/2008 1:21:49 PM EDT · by blam · 30 replies · 570+ views
Ingenta Connect | 3-2008 | Cook, Ian A.; Pajot, Sarah K.; Leuchter, Andrew F.
Abstract: Previous archaeoacoustic investigations of prehistoric, megalithic structures have identified acoustic resonances at frequencies of 95-120 Hz, particularly near 110-12 Hz, all representing pitches in the human vocal range. These chambers may have served as centers for social or spiritual events, and the resonances of the chamber cavities might have been intended to support human ritual chanting. We evaluated the possibility that tones at these frequencies might...
 

Scotland Yet
AD 200 - Valtos: Brochs And Wheelhouses 
 
03/14/2008 10:56:11 PM EDT · by blam · 5 replies · 257+ views
Current Archaeology | 3-14-2008
AD 200 - Valtos: brochs and wheelhouses While the Romans were civilising England, life was very different story in Northern Scotland, and particularly in the outer isles, Orkney and the Hebrides. Here we are faced with something entirely different, with a completely new vocabulary of brochs and duns and wheelhouses. The most exotic are the brochs - tall, defensive towers built of stone - very different to the hillforts of southern Britain. These huge circular towers are one of the greatest monuments of British archaeology, but in the Western Isles they have been little studied in modern times. What was...
 

British Isles
Irish And Dutch Vessels Found In Scottish Graves (2500-2280BC) 
 
03/12/2008 8:04:06 PM EDT · by blam · 15 replies · 308+ views
Current Archaeology | 3-12-2008
Evidence that some of our prehistoric ancestors travelled considerable distances has come from two graves in Upper Largie, near Kilmartin in Argyll and Bute. One grave contained three distinctive beakers which Alison Sheridan, of the National Museums Scotland, describes as belonging to an early, international style, best paralleled by finds from the lower Rhine region of the modern-day Netherlands. Radiocarbon dates of 2500-2280 BC from hazel charcoal from within the grave confirms an early Bronze Age date. Though no bone was found because of the acidic nature of the local soils, the...
 

I Seen Ye
Silver Of The Iceni 
 
03/13/2008 5:23:59 PM EDT · by blam · 21 replies · 543+ views
Current Archaeology | 3-13-2008 | Megan Dennis
The traditional image is of backward, hostile, bluepainted hordes led by a red-haired fury. Unlike the Celtic sophisticates of the South East, with their wheel-thrown tablewares and imported wines, the Norfolk Iceni were rural primitives. Or were they? Megan Dennis, specialist min Late Iron Age metalwork, pays tribute to the high culture of Boudica's people. The Iceni are famous forn two things -- Boudica and gold. Little else is known of this society that existed in the shadow-lands between the Iron Age and the Roman periods in Norfolk, Suffolk, and north-east Cambridgeshire. Archaeological evidence seems to...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
Ancient (Anglo-Saxon) Grave Markers Found At The Cathedral 
 
03/06/2008 5:26:57 PM EST · by blam · 5 replies · 48+ views
Peterborough Today | 3-5-2008 | Jackie Hall
Archaeologist Dr Jackie Hall with a rare find of Anglo-Saxon grave markers discovered during repairs to a wall in the cathedral precincts. Picture: PAUL FRANKS EIGHT Anglo-Saxon grave markers belonging to ordinary folk have been uncovered in Peterborough Cathedral's grounds during restoration work. Workers at the site, who are repairing ancient stone walls in the precincts, alerted the cathedral's archaeologist to the find, which was discovered in the same wall as a medieval fireplace. Archaeologist Dr Jackie Hall analysed the pieces, and discovered they were 11th century grave markings which are believed to...
 

Prehistory and Origins
Paleolithic Handaxes From The North Sea (Neanderthals) 
 
03/10/2008 6:20:24 PM EDT · by blam · 31 replies · 472+ views
Wesssex Archaeology | 3-10-2008
What are handaxes? Handaxes are stone tools that were used in the Ice Age. They were multi purpose tools, a bit like a modern Swiss army knife. Twenty-eight handaxes and some smaller pieces of flint (known as flakes) were found. The remains of mammoth, including tusk fragments and teeth, and fragments of deer antler were discovered at the same time. The discovery of the handaxes was reported through a scheme set up to report archaeological finds from the sea; the BMAPA Protocol. How old are they? We know that handaxes date to the Ice...
 

Climate
Beetles, Lentils and Anchovies 
 
03/14/2008 10:32:05 PM EDT · by blam · 14 replies · 241+ views
Current Archaeology | 3-14-2008
No, not some new dieting fad - what beetles, lentils and anchovies have in common is their value as indicators of ancient climate change. In a special issue of the journal Fisheries Research (Volume 87, November 2007), an international group of ecologists and historians have drawn upon archaeological material, tax accounts, church registers and monastic account books to present a picture of marine life in the North Sea from 7000 BC to the present. They found that warm-water species, including anchovy and black sea bream, once thrived around Britain's shores -- notably during the warm Atlantic...
 

Flood, Here Comes the Flood
Making Waves Over Noah's Flood. 
 
01/14/2003 9:32:06 PM EST · by vannrox · 81 replies · 1,082+ views
Newsday | January 14, 2003 | By Robert Cooke
Scientists are seriously challenging a recent, fascinating proposal that Noah's epic story - setting sail with an ark jam-full of animal couples - was based on an actual catastrophic flood that suddenly filled the Black Sea 7,500 years ago, forcing people to flee. In a detailed new look at the rocks, sediments, currents and seashells in and around the Black Sea, an international research team pooh-poohs the Noah flood idea, arguing that all the geologic, hydrologic and biologic signs are wrong. Little that the earth can tell us seems to fit the Noah story, they say.
 

Wave of the Antefuture
Tsunami that devastated the ancient world could return 
 
03/09/2008 10:17:08 PM EDT · by NormsRevenge · 55 replies · 1,825+ views
AFP on Yahoo | 3/9/08 | AFP
PARIS (AFP) - "The sea was driven back, and its waters flowed away to such an extent that the deep sea bed was laid bare and many kinds of sea creatures could be seen," wrote Roman historian Ammianus Marcellus, awed at a tsunami that struck the then-thriving port of Alexandria in 365 AD. "Huge masses of water flowed back when least expected, and now overwhelmed and killed many thousands of people... Some great ships were hurled by the fury of the waves onto the rooftops, and others were thrown up to two miles (three kilometres) from the shore." Ancient documents...
 

It's Not My Fault
Earthquake Activity Is Frozen By Ice Sheets 
 
03/11/2008 6:19:18 PM EDT · by blam · 20 replies · 459+ views
New Scientist | 3-11-2008
Can you put a freeze on earthquakes? It seems so, according to a computer model showing that earthquakes happen less often in areas covered by ice caps. Trouble is, quakes come back with a vengeance when the ice melts. Andrea Hampel at Ruhr University in Bochum, Germany, and colleagues wondered why Scandinavia experienced a surge in tectonic activity around 9000 years ago, whereas few earthquakes occur there today. They realised that the earthquake flurry coincided with the melting of the Fennoscandian ice sheet, which blanketed the area...
 

Mammoth Told Me
The Mystery Of Mammoth Tusks With Iron Fillings 
 
03/08/2008 5:03:28 PM EST · by blam · 99 replies · 2,091+ views
Alaska Report News | 3-5-2008 | Ned Rozell
The mystery of mammoth tusks with iron fillings By By Ned RozellMarch 5, 2008 A giant meteor may have exploded over Alaska thousands of years ago, shooting out metal fragments like buckshot, some of which embedded in the tusks of woolly mammoths and the horns of bison. Simultaneously, a large chunk of the meteor hit Alaska south of Allakaket, sending up a dust cloud that blacked out the sun over the entire state and surrounding areas, killing most of the life in the area. Embedded iron particles surrounded by carbonized rings in the outer layer of a mammoth tusk from...
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
How The Peruvian Meteorite Made It To Earth 
 
03/12/2008 4:00:08 PM EDT · by blam · 22 replies · 975+ views
Science Daily | 3-12-2008 | Brown University
The Carancas Fireball. Planetary geologists had thought that stony meteorites would be destroyed when they passed through Earth's atmosphere. This one struck ground near Carancas, Peru, at about 15,000 miles per hour. Brown University geologists have advanced a new theory that would upend current thinking about stony meteorites. (Credit: Peter Schultz, Brown University) ScienceDaily (Mar. 12, 2008) -- It made news around the world: On Sept. 15, 2007, an object hurtled through the sky and crashed into the Peruvian countryside. Scientists dispatched to the site near the village of Carancas found a gaping...
 

Helix, Make Mine a Double
Indian DNA Links To 6 'Founding Mothers' 
 
03/13/2008 5:04:39 PM EDT · by blam · 70 replies · 1,102+ views
Yahoo News/AP | 3-13-2008 | Malcolm Ritter
NEW YORK - Nearly all of today's Native Americans in North, Central and South America can trace part of their ancestry to six women whose descendants immigrated around 20,000 years ago, a DNA study suggests. Those women left a particular DNA legacy that persists to today in about 95 percent of Native Americans, researchers said. The finding does not mean that only these six women gave rise to the migrants who crossed into North America from Asia in the initial populating of the continent, said study co-author...
 

PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis
Americas Settled 15,000 Years Ago, Study Says 
 
03/13/2008 5:12:58 PM EDT · by blam · 37 replies · 957+ views
National Geographic News | 3-13-2008 | Stefan Lovgren
A consensus is emerging in the highly contentious debate over the colonization of the Americas, according to a study that says the bulk of the region wasn't settled until as late as 15,000 years ago. Researchers analyzed both archaeological and genetic evidence from several dozen sites throughout the Americas and eastern Asia for the paper. "In the past archaeologists haven't paid too much attention to molecular genetic evidence," said lead author Ted Goebel, an archaeologist at Texas A&M University in College Station. "We have brought...
 

Peru
Pre Inca Temple Discovered in Peru 
 
03/14/2008 9:36:35 PM EDT · by cardinal4 · 8 replies · 69+ views
News Vine
LIMA -- Archaeologists have discovered the ruins of an ancient temple, roadway and irrigation systems at a famed fortress overlooking the Inca capital of Cuzco, according to officials involved with the dig. The temple on the periphery of the Sacsayhuaman fortress casts added light on pre-Inca cultures of Peru, showing that the site had religious as well as military aims, according to researchers. It includes 11 rooms thought to have held mummies and idols, lead archaeologist Oscar Rodriguez told The Associated Press. The team of archaeologists that made the discoveries believes the structures predated the Inca empire but were then...
 

Hobbits
Ancient Bones Of Small Humans Discovered In Palau (Not 'Hobbits') 
 
03/11/2008 11:21:01 AM EDT · by blam · 15 replies · 526+ views
National Geographic News | 3-11-2008 | John Roach
Thousands of human bones belonging to numerous individuals have been discovered in the Pacific island nation of Palau. Some of the bones are ancient and indicate inhabitants of particularly small size, scientists announced today. The remains are between 900 and 2,900 years old and align with Homo sapiens, according to a paper on the discovery. However, the older bones are tiny and exhibit several traits considered primitive, or archaic, for the human lineage. "They weren't very typical, very small in fact," said Lee Berger,...
 

Asia
Rare Cave Inscriptions 
 
03/08/2008 10:27:51 PM EST · by blam · 27 replies · 482+ views
The Sunday Times | 3-8-2008 | Gamini Mahadura
A cave with rare ancient inscriptions dating back to more than 10000 years has reportedly been discovered at Badungala in the PS division of Yakkalamulla in Galle. Archaeology officials say that the inscriptions date back to the Endera yugaya or the era when animals were domesticated. They say similar cave inscriptions had been so far discovered in Alauwa, Ambilikanda and Mawanella. This is the first time that such a find has been reported from the South.
 

Epigraphy and Language
Iran makes cuneiform writing software 
 
03/10/2008 3:39:15 PM EDT · by SunkenCiv · 12 replies · 155+ views
Press TV Iran | Thursday, March 6, 2008 | unattributed (FBA/PA)
An original new software that enables users to type in Persian cuneiform writing is to be released into Iran's market in the near future. Cuneiform is a pictographic writing system used by many languages over several empires in ancient Mesopotamia and Persia and inspired the old Persian national alphabet. With this unique software enthusiasts will be able to write inscriptions in cuneiform and see their phonetic equivalents. The cuneiform script is the earliest known form of written expression, created by the Sumerians in 3000 BC. Cuneiform writing began as a system of pictographs. Over time, the pictorial representations became simplified...
 

Elam, Persia, Parthia, Iran
A masterpiece told in a language that is lush, sensual and highly inventive [Persian Literature] 
 
03/04/2008 10:05:20 PM EST · by BlackVeil · 5 replies · 2+ views
Iranian.com | 20 Feb 2008 | Anon
Vis & Ramin by Fakhraddin Gorgani Translated by Dick Davis 2008, Mage Publishers About the book, the author, and the translator Vis & Ramin is one of the world's great love stories. It was the first major Persian romance, written between 1050 and 1055 in rhyming couplets. This remarkable work has now been superbly translated into heroic couplets (the closest metrical equivalent of the Persian) by the poet and scholar Dick Davis and published by Mage Publishers. Vis and Ramin had immense influence on later Persian poetry and is very probably also the source for the tale of Tristan and...
 

Greece
Ancient graves found in Greece (Thessaloniki) 
 
03/10/2008 8:53:39 PM EDT · by decimon · 21 replies · 392+ views
Associated Press | March 10, 2008 | Unknown
ATHENS, Greece - Greek workers discovered around 1,000 graves, some filled with ancient treasures, while excavating for a subway system in the historic city of Thessaloniki, the state archaeological authority said Monday. Some of the graves, which dated from the first century B.C. to the 5th century A.D., contained jewelry, coins and various pieces of art, the Greek archaeological service said in a statement. Thessaloniki was founded around 315 B.C. and flourished during the Roman and Byzantine eras. Today it is the Mediterranean country's second largest city. Most of the graves -- 886 -- were just east of the city...
 

Ancient graves found in Greece 
 
03/10/2008 9:30:00 PM EDT · by Pharmboy · 18 replies · 400+ views
AP via Yahoo | 3-10-08 | ANON
Greek workers discovered around 1,000 graves, some filled with ancient treasures, while excavating for a subway system in the historic city of Thessaloniki, the state archaeological authority said Monday. Some of the graves, which dated from the first century B.C. to the 5th century A.D., contained jewelry, coins and various pieces of art, the Greek archaeological service said in a statement. Thessaloniki was founded around 315 B.C. and flourished during the Roman and Byzantine eras. Today it is the Mediterranean country's second largest city. Most of the graves -- 886 -- were just east of the city center in what...
 

Mycenaeans
FSU classics professor exploring a 'lost' city of the Mycenaeans 
 
03/11/2008 5:14:10 PM EDT · by decimon · 8 replies · 462+ views
Florida State University | March 11, 2008 | Unknown
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Along an isolated, rocky stretch of Greek shoreline, a Florida State University researcher and his students are unlocking the secrets of a partially submerged, "lost" harbor town believed to have been built by the ancient Mycenaeans nearly 3,500 years ago. "This is really a remarkable find," said Professor Daniel J. Pullen, chairman of FSU's Department of Classics. "It is rare indeed to locate an entire town built during the Late Bronze Age that shows this level of preservation." Pullen and a colleague, Assistant Professor of Classical Studies Thomas F. Tartaron of the University of Pennsylvania, led students...
 

Back-Alley Trepanning
Skeleton May Show Ancient Brain Surgery 
 
03/12/2008 1:17:14 PM EDT · by blam · 28 replies · 556+ views
Physorg | 3-11-2008 | Ap
The skeleton of a young woman from a 3rd century A.D. grave in Veria, northern Greece, is seen in this undated handout photo provided by the Greek Culture Ministry on Tuesday, March 11, 2008. Archaeologists believe a large hole on the front of the skull, above the eyes, was caused by -- apparently failed -- brain surgery nearly 1,800 years ago. Although references to such delicate operations abound in ancient writings, discoveries of surgically perforated skulls are uncommon in Greece. (AP Photo/Greek Culture Ministry) (AP) -- Greek archaeologists said Tuesday they have unearthed rare...
 

Rome and Italy
House of Augustus opens to public 
 
03/10/2008 3:36:27 PM EDT · by SunkenCiv · 5 replies · 123+ views
BBC | Sunday, March 9, 2008 | Christian Fraser
Almost 50 years ago, archaeologists searching for the ruined house of Augustus found a... single fragment of painted plaster, discovered in masonry-filled rooms... On Sunday following decades of painstaking restoration, the frescoes in vivid shades of blue, red and ochre went on public show for the first time since they were painted in about 30BC. One large room boasts a theatrical theme, its walls painted to resemble a stage with narrow side-doors. High on the wall a comic mask peers through a small window. Other trompe l'oeil designs include an elegant garden vista, yellow columns and even a meticulously sketched...
 

Ancient Art
Statue of Egypt pharaoh rolls to new home 
 
08/25/2006 4:05:25 PM EDT · by NormsRevenge · 13 replies · 361+ views
Reuters on Yahoo | 8/25/06 | Summer Said
CAIRO (Reuters) - A massive statue of one of Egypt's greatest pharaohs, Ramses II, rolled through the streets of Cairo to a new home near the Pyramids on Friday to escape the corrosive pollution of its former spot in a crowded transit hub. Tens of thousands of people lined the streets to bid farewell to the 3,200-year-old red granite statue, which weighs 83 tons and was wrapped in plastic and thick padding for the painstakingly slow 35 km (21 mile) journey, which took 10 hours. Only the face was visible. "We are going to miss you. Cairo will never be...
 

Ancient Autopsies
Egyptian Mummy Exhibit Is Son Of Ramesses II 
 
03/15/2008 12:01:05 AM EDT · by blam · 8 replies · 214+ views
The Telegraph (UK) | 3-15-2008 | Lucy Cockcroft
An Egyptian mummy kept on display in a provincial museum for nearly 80 years has been identified as a son of the powerful pharaoh Ramesses II. The 3,000-year-old relic was thought to have been a female temple dancer, but a hospital CT scan showed features so reminiscent of the Egyptian royal family that experts are 90 per cent sure it is one of the 110 children Ramesses is thought to have fathered. The Bolton Museum mummy was thought for many years to have been...
 

Buried with a Donkey
Tutankhamun was not black: Egypt antiquities chief 
 
09/26/2007 2:58:41 PM EDT · by presidio9 · 124 replies · 413+ views
AFP | September 25, 2007
Egyptian antiquities supremo Zahi Hawass insisted Tuesday that Tutankhamun was not black despite calls by US black activists to recognise the boy king's dark skin colour. "Tutankhamun was not black, and the portrayal of ancient Egyptian civilisation as black has no element of truth to it," Hawass told reporters. "Egyptians are not Arabs and are not Africans despite the fact that Egypt is in Africa," he said, quoted by the official MENA news agency. Hawass said he was responding to several demonstrations in Philadelphia after a lecture he gave there on September 6 where he defended his theory. Protestors also...
 

Egypt
How Wild Asses Became Donkeys Of The Pharaohs 
 
03/10/2008 7:55:47 PM EDT · by blam · 24 replies · 394+ views
New Scientist | 3-10-2008 | Andy Coghlan
The ancient Egyptian state was built on the backs of tamed wild asses. Ten skeletons excavated from burial sites of the first Egyptian kings are the best evidence yet that modern-day donkeys emerged through domestication of African wild asses. The 5000-year-old bones also provide the earliest indications that asses were used for transport. The skeletons suggest that the smaller frames of today's donkeys hadn't yet evolved. Instead, the bones resemble those of modern-day Nubian and Somali wild asses, which are much larger than...
 

Agriculture and Animal Husbandry
Domestication Of The Donkey May Have Taken A Long Time 
 
03/13/2008 9:36:00 PM EDT · by blam · 32 replies · 510+ views
Science Daily | 3-13-2008 | Washington University in St. Louis
An international group of researchers has found evidence for the earliest transport use of the donkey and the early phases of donkey domestication, suggesting the process of domestication may have been slower and less linear than previously thought. (Credit: iStockphoto/Andrea Laurita) ScienceDaily (Mar. 13, 2008) -- An international group of researchers has found evidence for the earliest transport use of the donkey and the early phases of donkey domestication, suggesting the process of domestication may have been slower and less linear than previously thought. Based on a study of 10 donkey...
 

Puss and Roots
Cat Joins Exclusive Genome Club (Abyssinian Cat Cinnamon Has DNA Decoded Alert) 
 
11/01/2007 6:36:43 PM EDT · by goldstategop · 13 replies · 100+ views
news.bbc.co.uk | 11/01/2007 | BBC News
A pedigree cat called Cinnamon has made scientific history by becoming the first feline to have its DNA decoded. The domestic cat now joins the select club of mammals whose genome has been deciphered - including dogs, chimps, rats, mice, cows and people. The genome map is expected to shed light on both feline and human disease. Cats get hundreds of illnesses similar to human ones, including a feline version of HIV, known as FIV, and a hereditary form of blindness. Cinnamon, a four-year-old Abyssinian cat, is descended from lab cats bred to develop retinitis pigmentosa, a degenerative eye disease,...
 

Paleontology
Ancient Flying Reptiles Likely Had Sex As Youths 
 
03/13/2008 7:54:07 AM EDT · by Renfield · 33 replies · 394+ views
National Geographic News | 3/12/2008 | John Roach
Pterosaurs, like their dinosaur relatives, didn't wait until they were fully grown to have sex, a new study suggests. Researchers examined microscopic tree ring-like growth markings in hundreds of bones from a species of the extinct flying reptiles discovered in central Argentina in the 1990s. The Pterodaustro guioazui bones came from multiple individuals, including an embryo inside an egg and adults with wingspans between 1 to 8 feet (0.3 to 2.5 meters). P. guiÃ’azui lived during the mid-Cretaceous, about a hundred million years ago. "It is quite amazing that even after millions of years, the microscopic structure of the bone...
 

Toil and Trouble
Mysterious Pits Shed Light On Forgotten Witches Of The West 
 
03/10/2008 7:05:05 PM EDT · by blam · 16 replies · 501+ views
Times Online | 3-10-2008 | Simon de Bruxelles
Evidence of pagan rituals involving swans and other birds in the Cornish countryside in the 17th century has been uncovered by archaeologists. Since 2003, 35 pits at the site in a valley near Truro have been excavated containing swan pelts, dead magpies, unhatched eggs, quartz pebbles, human hair, fingernails and part of an iron cauldron. The finds have been dated to the 1640s, a period of turmoil in England when Cromwellian Puritans destroyed any links to pre-Christian pagan England. It was also a period when witchcraft attracted...
 

Oh So Mysterioso
Rennes le-Chateau researcher dies 
 
03/15/2008 12:39:30 AM EDT · by BlackVeil · 1 reply · 29+ views
The Daily Grail | 13 March 2008 | n/c
The world of Rennes-Le-Chateau has lost a great friend; it has lost Jean-Luc Robin. Jean-Luc was my friend and gave me my first tour of Rennes-Le-Chateau. His knowledge was broad and deep, and his conclusions sensible, sceptical and measured. He lived and breathed Rennes-le-Chateau, having once served as caretaker of the Villa Bethania. In recent years he managed a restaurant in the Villa's garden where he sponsored summer lectures that drew crowds from all over France. Jean-Luc created an organization for the preservation of Rennes-Le-Chateau and his passion for the integrity of the village -- and the mystery - was...
 

Early America
'John Adams' (HBO Sunday Hight Reminder) 
 
03/12/2008 9:07:31 PM EDT · by devane617 · 37 replies · 737+ views
Pittsburg Tribune-Review | 02/24/2008 | Bill Steigerwald
When Hollywood's movie-makers and docu-dramatists get their hands on American history, accuracy, reality and truth often are tortured beyond recognition. But starting at 8 p.m. Sunday, March 16, HBO Films will be delivering the seven-part, nine-hour mini-series "John Adams."
 

World War Eleven
His Cup Runneth Over: a Warrior's Thanks 
 
03/08/2008 4:24:56 PM EST · by kiriath_jearim · 10 replies · 146+ views
Breitbart | 3/8/08 | CHARLES J. HANLEY
BIALLA, Papua New Guinea (AP) - The Japanese fighter caught the American pilot from behind, riddling his plane with machine-gun rounds. The left engine burst into flames. It was time to bail out. He yanked on the release lever but the cockpit canopy only half- opened. He unbuckled his seat belt, rose to shake the canopy loose and was instantly sucked out. Swinging beneath his opened parachute, he plunged toward a Pacific island jungle of thick, towering eucalyptus trees, of crocodile rivers and headhunters, into enemy territory, and into an unimagined future as a hero, "Suara Auru," Chief Warrior, to...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Da Vinci's works on exhibit in Saxony 
 
03/10/2008 2:46:25 AM EDT · by SunkenCiv · 7 replies · 77+ views
PressTV Iran | Monday, March 10, 2008 | unattributed
A Leonardo Da Vinci exhibition focusing on his fascination with machines opens in the Museum of Industry in the German city of Saxony. The exhibition which opened on Sunday includes more than 40 wooden models of his inventions, including Archimedes screws, lifting devices, pulleys and flywheels. The exhibition will be open until June 15. One of the advantages of this particular exhibition is that the visitors are permitted to touch many of the exhibits and try them out for themselves, DPA reported. Da Vinci was a superb painter as well as designer of buildings and machinery and produced studies on...
 

end of digest #191 20080315

688 posted on 03/15/2008 12:54:38 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/______________________Profile updated Saturday, March 1, 2008)
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To: 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; Androcles; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #191 20080315
· Saturday, March 15, 2008 · 37 topics · 1986005 to 1980528 · 677 members ·

 
Saturday
Mar 15
2008
v 4
n 35

view this issue
Welcome to the 191st issue. Welcome to the ping list to all new members.

A couple of weeks ago the digest was replete with genetic research. The one from this week which comes to mind pertains to the peopling of the Americas, but IMHO it's more GIGO. While looking for something unrelated, I stumbled across an earlier topic, same source, different article, different author (apparently), pretty much the same title.

I need a new job, and my thanks to the FReeper who FReepmailed me with interest. :')

While I'm spreading my affairs all over your retinas, I'd like to beg once again for Amazon review "yes" votes. A good FRiend volunteered to use my newly-compiled list of Permalinks (a nice change over past practice by Amazon) to give me bunches of "yes" votes, then noted to me that instead of moving up, I've moved down ten spots. Not sure why that happened, but I'd guess that the powers that be realized that the votes were all coming from the same IP number. Ah well.

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

Defeat Hillary -- first for the White House, then for reelection to the Senate. Pretty soon now I'll have to add Defeat Obama.
 

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689 posted on 03/15/2008 12:56:07 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/______________________Profile updated Saturday, March 1, 2008)
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Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #192
Saturday, March 22, 2008


Ancient Autopsies
Skull Changes Show Time Of Human-Neandertal Split
 
03/18/2008 10:11:34 AM EDT · by blam · 41 replies · 857+ views
National Geographic News | 3-17-2008 | Scott Morris
Gradual changes in human skull size and shape suggest a split between humans and Neandertals (often spelled Neanderthals) about 300,000 to 400,000 years ago, according to a new study. The work provides the first estimate a divergence date for modern humans and Neandertals based on the rate of change of physical characteristics. Genetic Drift Just as DNA changes accumulate over time and provide a kind of "molecular clock" by which the separation of closely related species can be dated, evolved differences in physical form can...
 

Skulls Of Modern Humans And Ancient Neanderthals... Not Natural Selection
 
03/20/2008 1:58:20 PM EDT · by blam · 24 replies · 270+ views
Science Daily | 3-20-2008 | University of California, Davis.
The approximate locations of the cranial measurements used in the analyses are superimposed as red lines on lateral (A), anterior (B), and inferior (C) views of a human cranium. (Credit: National Academy of Sciences, PNAS (Copyright 2008)) ScienceDaily (Mar. 20, 2008) -- New research led by UC Davis anthropologist Tim Weaver adds to the evidence that chance, rather than natural selection, best explains why the skulls of modern humans and ancient Neanderthals evolved differently. The findings may alter how anthropologists think about human evolution. Weaver's study...
 

Prehistory and Origins
Upright Walking Began 6 Million Years Ago
 
03/20/2008 5:54:39 PM EDT · by blam · 142 replies · 1,226+ views
Newswise | Stony Brook University Medical Center
A shape comparison of the most complete fossil femur (thigh bone) of one of the earliest known pre-humans, or hominins, with the femora of living apes, modern humans and other fossils, indicates the earliest form of bipedalism occurred at least six million years ago and persisted for at least four million years. William Jungers, Ph.D., of Stony Brook University, and Brian Richmond, Ph.D., of George Washington University, say their finding indicates that the fossil belongs to very early human ancestors, and that upright walking is one of the first human characteristics...
 

Africa
Out of Africa, Not Once But Twice
 
03/17/2008 11:35:50 AM EDT · by blam · 15 replies · 512+ views
Discovery News | 3-14-2008 | Jennifer Viegas
Modern humans are known to have left Africa in a wave of migration around 50,000 years ago, but another, smaller group -- possibly a different subspecies -- left the continent 50,000 years earlier, suggests a new study. While all humans today are related to the second "out of Africa" group, it's likely that some populations native to Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Australia, New Zealand and Indonesia retain genetic vestiges of the earlier migrants, according to the paper's author, Michael Schillaci. Schillaci, an...
 

PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis
Study unlocks Latin American past
 
03/21/2008 8:08:17 AM EDT · by decimon · 16 replies · 334+ views
BBC | March 21, 2008 | Unknown
European colonisation of South America resulted in a dramatic shift from a native American population to a largely mixed one, a genetic study has shown. It suggests male European settlers mated with native and African women, and slaughtered the men. But it adds that areas like Mexico City "still preserve the genetic heritage" because these areas had a high number of natives at the time of colonisation. The findings appear in the journal Public Library of Science Genetics. The international team of researchers wrote: "The history of Latin America has entailed a complex process of population mixture between natives and...
 

Biology and Cryptobiology
Clovis Overkill Didn't Wipe Out California's Sea Duck
 
03/17/2008 5:18:53 PM EDT · by blam · 29 replies · 410+ views
Newswise | 3-17-2008 | University Of Oregob
Clovis-age natives, often noted for overhunting during their brief dominance in a primitive North America, deserve clemency in the case of California's flightless sea duck. New evidence says it took thousands of years for the duck to die out. A team of six scientists, including Jon M. Erlandson of the University of Oregon, pronounced their verdict in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (online, March 13) after holding court on thousands of years of archaeological testimony taken from bones of the extinct sea duck uncovered from 14 sites...
 

Agriculture and Animal Husbandry
Cultivated Rice Kernel 12,000 Years Ago Discovered In Hunan
 
03/15/2008 8:17:27 PM EDT · by blam · 19 replies · 408+ views
China.org - Xinhua News | 2-6-2005
The rice kernel discovered in the Yuchanyan cultural relics in Central China's Hunan Province may be the earliest cultivated rice specimen yet discovered, said archaeologists. During the excavation at the Yuchanyan cultural relics in Daoxian County at the end of 2004, six rice kernels were discovered. The age of one was confirmed at 12,000 years ago, a transitional period from the Paleolithic Age to the Neolithic Age (10,000 years ago), or even earlier, said Yuan Jiarong, director of the provincial archaeological research institute. The ages of other five grains, which were...
 

Climate
Is Jawbone The Ancient Souvenir Ancestor Of The Humble Snow Globe
 
03/19/2008 10:31:41 AM EDT · by blam · 12 replies · 358+ views
IC Wales - Western Mail | 3-19-2008 | Sally Williams
It is the 14,000-year-old version of a snow dome. Travellers during the late Ice Age would pick up an etched horse jawbone as a souvenir of their time in Europe. Arriving in Wales they would then display the trinket in their cave as a memento of their time abroad. And now experts believe this 11,500BC example is the "oldest ever piece of Welsh artwork". With an intricate zig-zag pattern the keepsake could also signal an important evolutionary step in communication, they...
 

British Isles
Gold Cup Find Led To (Anglo-Saxon) Graves Discovery
 
03/21/2008 1:59:33 PM EDT · by blam · 18 replies · 541+ views
Kent Online | 3-21-2008 | Nick Evans
An important archaeological find by Broadstairs man Cliff Bradshaw prompted further excavations which uncovered centuries- old Anglo-Saxon graves. These later finds, thought to be the graves of women from the fifth and sixth centuries, were the subject of an inquest held last week by coroner Rebecca Cobb to decide if the finds should be declared treasure. She heard the excavations followed the discovery in 2001 by Cliff Bradshaw of what has since become known as the Ringlemere Cup, which was later declared a national treasure and is on show in...
 

Celts
Bronze Age Burial 'With Beer Mug'
 
03/17/2008 4:56:56 PM EDT · by blam · 45 replies · 792+ views
BBC | 3-17-2008
The skeleton was "crouched" which was typical of the time -- A 4,000-year-old Bronze Age skeleton has been unearthed by archaeologists working on a site in east Kent. Canterbury Archaeological Trust said the curled-up skeleton was an example of a "Beaker" burial because of the pottery vessel placed at its feet. Education officer Marion Green said the "beautifully decorated" pot could have been "a type of beer mug". She said tests on beakers from other sites suggested Bronze Age man was brewing a type of beer from grain. The body was in a "crouched" position...
 

Central Asia
New Tomb For 'Altai Princess' To Be Built In Siberia
 
03/21/2008 2:12:35 PM EDT · by blam · 4 replies · 468+ views
Novosti | 3-20-2008
A tomb to house the remains of a woman found after being preserved in ice for 2,500 years will be built in Siberia's Altai Republic, the director of a local museum said on Thursday. The well-preserved remains of the woman dubbed the Altai Princess were discovered in the region by a team led by a Novosibirsk archeologist in 1993 near the Mongolian border, and have been studied at the Archaeology and Ethnography Institute in Novosibirsk. Residents of Altai, where...
 

Epigraphy and Language
Priceless Gold Coins Found[UK][Roman]
 
03/16/2008 2:22:06 PM EDT · by BGHater · 24 replies · 1,130+ views
This Is Derbyshire | 15 Mar 2008 | Martin Naylor
Rare Roman gold coins regarded as "priceless" by experts have been unearthed in Derbyshire. The coins, which date back to AD 286, were discovered by Derrick Fretwell while he was out digging near Ashbourne. After an internet search failed to shed any light on his discovery, he turned to Derby Museum who, in turn, sought help from experts at the British Museum in London. Their studies have revealed that one of the coins has never been classified before and the other is the first example to be found since 1975. The museum's Sam Moorhead, an expert in Roman antiquities, said:...
 

Rome and Italy
Ancient Rome's Earliest Temple Reconstructed
 
03/15/2008 8:26:40 PM EDT · by blam · 25 replies · 796+ views
National Geographic News | Ancient Rome's Earliest Temple Reconstructed
Experts have digitally reconstructed Rome's earliest major temple, the Temple of Apollo, built by the first Roman emperor, Augustus. The temple dates to 28 B.C., and its ruins stand adjacent to the emperor's imperial palaces on the city's famous Palatine Hill. Until now the original design of the temple had not been well understood, partly due to the ruins' poor state of preservation. Also, previous efforts to model the temple had been based on outdated historical assessments rather than on the ruins themselves. Stephan Zink, a graduate...
 

India
Wari-Bateshwar One Of Earliest Kingdoms
 
03/19/2008 6:01:13 PM EDT · by blam · 9 replies · 217+ views
The Daily Star | 3-19-2008 | Emran Hossain
Suggests find of pre-Mauryan silver coins in the area -- The coin hoard, unearthed by excavators from Wari-Bateshwar, containing silver punch-marked coin of Pre-Mauryan (right) and Mauryan (left) periods reveals that Wari-Batehswar was one of the Mahajanapadas in the Indian sub-continent. The discovery of silver punch-marked coins of the pre-Mauryan period dating back to 600 BC to 400 BC in Wari-Bateshwar reveals that the place was a Mahajanapada, one of the earliest kingdoms or states in the Indian subcontinent. The silver coins and artefacts unearthed and collected so far and geographical positioning...
 

Near East
Middle East Map of War
 
03/19/2008 11:51:08 AM EDT · by yooling · 9 replies · 250+ views
Mapsofwar.com | 3/18/08 | Maps of War
I found this really cool map/flash movie. It has a moving timeline that corresponds with the changing map. Click on the link.Maps of War
 

Let's Have Jerusalem
Silver Coin Used To Pay Half Shekel Head-Temple Tax Found In Main Drainage Channel Of Jerusalem
 
03/19/2008 6:08:03 PM EDT · by SJackson · 18 replies · 669+ views
IMRA | 3-19-08
A Silver Coin That Was Used To Pay The Half Shekel Head-Tax To The Temple Was Found In The Main Drainage Channel Of Jerusalem From The Second Temple Period "A reminder of the half shekel" is also paid today as a donation to the poor, before reading the Scroll of Esther at Purim This coming Thursday, before reading the Scroll of Esther, all devote Jews will contribute a sum of money - "a reminder of...
 

Flood, Here Comes the Flood
Forecasting Tsunami Threats Through Layers of Sand and Time
 
03/19/2008 5:45:31 PM EDT · by blam · 27 replies · 312+ views
Newswise | 3-19-2008 | Dalhousie University
The catastrophic Indian Ocean event in December 2004 that killed 230,000 people in a dozen countries -- including 15,000 in India -- was hardly a one freak occurrence. It could happen again. Newswise -- Azhii peralai: from the deep - large waves. This is the expression for "tsunami' in Tamil, the oldest language in southern India. For an ancient dialect to have its own phrase for destructive waves triggered by earthquakes, the people of Tamil Nadu likely experienced tsunamis periodically through the centuries, says Halifax...
 

Did A Comet Cause The Great Flood?
 
11/21/2007 5:17:23 PM EST · by blam · 119 replies · 14+ views
Discover Magazine | 11-15-2007 | Scott Carney
The Fenambosy chevrons at the tip of Madagascar. Image courtesy of Dallas Abbott The serpent's tails coil together menacingly. A horn juts sharply from its head. The creature looks as if it might be swimming through a sea of stars. Or is it making its way up a sheer basalt cliff? For Bruce Masse, an environmental archaeologist at Los Alamos National Laboratory, there is no confusion as he looks at this ancient petroglyph, scratched into a rock by a...
 

Did an Asteroid Impact Cause an Ancient Tsunami?
 
11/15/2006 11:00:40 PM EST · by djf · 54 replies · 1,388+ views
NYT | Nov 14 2006 | SANDRA BLAKESLEE
At the southern end of Madagascar lie four enormous wedge-shaped sediment deposits, called chevrons, that are composed of material from the ocean floor. Each covers twice the area of Manhattan with sediment as deep as the Chrysler Building is high. On close inspection, the chevron deposits contain deep ocean microfossils that are fused with a medley of metals typically formed by cosmic impacts. And all of them point in the same direction -- toward the middle of the Indian Ocean where a newly discovered crater, 18 miles in diameter, lies 12,500 feet below the surface. The explanation is obvious to...
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
Web surfer spots mysterious crater
 
03/15/2008 11:12:40 AM EDT · by Renfield · 28 replies · 811+ views
Concord Monitor (NH) | 3/14/08 | ETHAN WILENSKY-LANFORD
A Pembroke man was playing with Google Earth - an online digital map of the planet - when he came across something that seemed out of this world: an apparent meteorite crater in Pawtuckaway State Park in Nottingham. "I was just searching around on Google, looking at lakes, because I'm a sailor," said Stephen Dupuis, 52. "As I was panning down through the landscape, it kind of caught my eye." Dupuis, a multimedia artist, has been fascinated with astronomy and outer space since his father, a former engineer, built the heat shields used for the Apollo spacecraft in the 1960s....
 

Crater to Grave
Ancient Global Dimming Linked to Volcanic Eruption (The Dark Ages)
 
03/19/2008 5:36:03 PM EDT · by blam · 58 replies · 973+ views
National Geographic News | 3-19-2008 | Ker Than
A "dry fog" that muted the sun's rays in A.D. 536 and plunged half the world into a famine-inducing chill was triggered by the eruption of a supervolcano, a new study says. The cause of the sixth-century global dimming has long been a matter of debate, but a team of international researchers recently discovered acidic sulphate molecules, which are signs of an eruption, in Greenland ice. This is the first physical evidence for the A.D. 536 event, which according to ancient texts from Mesoamerica, Europe,...
 

Draining the Lizard
Gas-belching volcanoes may have killed dinosaurs
 
03/20/2008 4:49:58 PM EDT · by NormsRevenge · 44 replies · 442+ views
Reuters on Yahoo | 3/20/08 | Ben Hirschler
Gas-belching volcanoes may be to blame for a series of mass extinctions over the last 545 million years, including that of the dinosaurs, new evidence suggested on Thursday. A series of eruptions that formed the Deccan Traps in what is now India pumped huge amounts of sulfur into the atmosphere 65 million years ago, with likely devastating repercussions for the Earth's climate, scientists said. Gigantic eruptions, forming so-called "flood basalts," are one of two leading explanations for a series of mass extinctions that have killed off species periodically throughout history. The other theory involves asteroid impacts --...
 

Shirts and Skins
Workers Uncovering Mummified Dinosaur
 
03/18/2008 8:26:16 AM EDT · by Jet Jaguar · 39 replies · 615+ views
AP via brietbart | Mar 18, 2008 | BLAKE NICHOLSON
Using tiny brushes and chisels, workers picking at a big greenish- black rock in the basement of North Dakota's state museum are meticulously uncovering something amazing: a nearly complete dinosaur, skin and all. Unlike almost every other dinosaur fossil ever found, the Edmontosaurus named Dakota, a duckbilled dinosaur unearthed in southwestern North Dakota in 2004, is covered by fossilized skin that is hard as iron. It's among just a few mummified dinosaurs in the world, say the researchers who are slowly freeing it from a 65- million-year-old rock tomb. "This is the closest many people will...
 

Workers Uncovering Mummified Dinosaur (skin and all)
 
03/19/2008 12:01:10 AM EDT · by bruinbirdman · 116 replies · 2,511+ views
AP | 3/18/2008 | BLAKE NICHOLSON
Using tiny brushes and chisels, workers picking at a big greenish-black rock in the basement of North Dakota's state museum are meticulously uncovering something amazing: a nearly complete dinosaur, skin and all. Unlike almost every other dinosaur fossil ever found, the Edmontosaurus named Dakota, a duckbilled dinosaur unearthed in southwestern North Dakota in 2004, is covered by fossilized skin that is hard as iron. It's among just a few mummified dinosaurs in the world, say the researchers who are slowly freeing it from a 65-million-year-old rock tomb. "This is the closest many people will ever get to seeing what large...
 

Paleontology
Early life on Earth - no predators, plenty of sex
 
03/20/2008 5:10:20 PM EDT · by NormsRevenge · 14 replies · 180+ views
Reuters on Yahoo | 3/20/08 | Reuters
Sexual reproduction may be nearly as old as animal life itself, according to researchers who discovered a new species of organism that lived 540 million years ago. The tube-like creatures called Funisia dorothea anchored themselves in abundant flocks onto the shallow, sandy seabed of what is now the Australian outback. Nothing appears to have evolved yet to eat them, so they lived peaceful lives, reproducing sexually at times and by asexual methods such as budding at other times, Mary Droser of the University of California Riverside and colleagues reported in the journal Science. They behaved very much...
 

Windmill Tilting
The last charge (Knights Templar are back...)
 
03/19/2008 11:30:19 AM EDT · by Renfield · 33 replies · 387+ views
The Guardian (U.K.) | 3-19-08 | Patrick Barkham
Almost 700 years after the Pope burned their leader at the stake, the Knights Templar are back. Or are they? Patrick Barkham tries to find out why the long-vanished order of Crusaders might suddenly be in the press.... ~~~snip~~~ Apart from the odd misplaced apostrophe and various arcane references to "annulling the bull", the advert gravely announced that the Knights Templar would petition the Pope to "restore the Order with the duties, rights and privileges appropriate to the 21st century and beyond". It called on all Templar groups and "brothers in arms" around the world to get in touch,...
 

Oh So Mysterioso
Archaeologists Uncover Unique Cremation Graves (Moravia)
 
03/20/2008 5:35:01 PM EDT · by blam · 13 replies · 103+ views
Prague Monitor | 3-20-2008 | CTK
Czech archaeologists have uncovered unique cremation graves in Prostejov that date back to the Neolithic period of the Linear Pottery culture and that indicate that people believed in human soul's existence 7,000 years ago already, daily Mlada fronta Dnes wrote Wednesday. The graves were uncovered during construction of a new industrial zone on the eastern edge of the town. "This is the first cremation burial site of the Linear-Pottery-culture to be uncovered on Czech soil. Below it there are skeleton graves...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
Russian Archaeologists Find 15th Century Griffin Jug Piece
 
03/19/2008 6:16:02 PM EDT · by blam · 18 replies · 513+ views
Irish Sun | 3-19-2008
Archaeologists near the city of Veliky Novgorod in northwest Russia have discovered part of a centuries-old ceramic jug decorated with a mysterious griffin symbol. 'On the fragment of ceramic, most likely part of a broken jug, we saw an image of an animal with open jaws and wings, like a griffin,' the head of the archaeology team, Oleg Oleynikov, said. The griffin, portrayed as a gigantic bird with the head of an eagle and the body of a lion, first appeared...
 

Early America
George Washington stopped coup d' etat
 
03/21/2008 7:35:56 PM EDT · by Pharmboy · 56 replies · 526+ views
Contra Costa Times | 03/21/2008 | Martin Snapp
One of the most important dates in American history passed unnoticed last weekend. It was the 225th anniversary of the day we didn't become a banana republic. It ought to be a national holiday, right up there with July Fourth. But hardly anybody remembers it any more. The date was March 15, 1783. The Revolutionary War had just been won. Trouble was, the army hadn't been paid during the war. They were promised that they'd get their money when the war was over; but now that the time had come, Congress was reneging on that pledge. Resentment rippled through the...
 

A rare opening for Mount Vernon's cellar
 
03/17/2008 7:40:45 PM EDT · by Coleus · 1 reply · 21+ views
NorthJersey.com | Sunday, January 27, 2008 | TRACY GRANT
Getting there: Route 95 south to Washington, D.C., cross the Potomac River on the Woodrow Wilson Bridge, move to the far right lane. After crossing the bridge, take the exit for Route 1 north, marked Alexandria. Once on Route 1, make the first right turn, onto Franklin Street. Turn right again at Washington Street, which is marked for Mount Vernon. Washington Street becomes the George Washington Parkway as you leave Alexandria, and Mount Vernon is 8 miles south, at the large traffic circle at the end of the parkway. Info: 703-780-2000 or mountvernon.org. Hours: Basement is open weekends from 9...
 

Epidemics, Pandemics, Plagues, the Sniffles
BARBARIC SCENE ACCURATE ["John Adams" miniseries]
 
03/19/2008 6:31:09 PM EDT · by Pharmboy · 33 replies · 726+ views
Fredericksburg.com | 3-19-08 | JIM HALL
HBO miniseries on "John Adams" demonstrates early form of vaccination for smallpox For many who watched Sunday night's airing of "John Adams," the new HBO series, one scene seemed almost barbaric: A doctor makes incisions with a lancet in the arms of Abigail Adams and her children and places smallpox material directly into the wounds. Abigail Adams believed that you could protect healthy people by injecting them with a deadly disease. Wouldn't that be just as dangerous as hanging around with the infected soldiers shown in the movie? No, Abigail knew what she was doing when she insisted that her...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Investigator: Antiquities fund Iraqi extremists
 
03/19/2008 5:37:03 PM EDT · by BGHater · 4 replies · 80+ views
AP | 18 Mar 2008 | ELENA BECATOROS
The smuggling of stolen antiquities from Iraq's rich cultural heritage is helping finance Iraqi extremist groups, says the U.S. investigator who led the initial probe into the looting of Baghdad's National Museum. Marine Reserve Col. Matthew Bogdanos claimed both Sunni insurgents such as al-Qaida in Iraq and Shiite militias are receiving funding from the trafficking. Bogdanos, a New York assistant district attorney, noted that kidnappings and extortion remain the insurgents' main source of funds. But he said the link between extremist groups and antiquities smuggling in Iraq was "undeniable." "The Taliban are using opium to finance their activities in Afghanistan,"...
 

end of digest #192 20080322

690 posted on 03/22/2008 10:21:55 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/______________________Profile updated Saturday, March 1, 2008)
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