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Keyword: bones

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  • Incan bones found in Østfold[Norway]

    06/28/2007 5:56:39 AM PDT · by BGHater · 42 replies · 1,414+ views
    Aftenposten ^ | 26 June 2007 | Aftenposten
    Archeologists in Sarpsborg have found one thousand year old skeletal remains that appear to be Incan. The skeletal remains were found during conservations work at St. Nicolas church in Sarpsborg, a city 73 kilometers (45 miles) southeast of Oslo, NRK (Norwegian Broadcasting) reports. When archeologists were to move some rose bushes they made the surprising discovery of the remains of two older men and a baby. "When we were about to take hold under the rose bush the skeletal remains slid out. It was quite surprising," Mona Beate Buckholm, archeologist at the Borgarsyssel Museum, told NRK. One of the skulls...
  • Bones could allow data swaps via handshake (Spammers will have to touch you?)

    06/14/2007 3:36:45 PM PDT · by Bladerunnuh · 6 replies · 373+ views
    New Scientist Tech ^ | 06-13-07 | Paul Marks
    So the Rice team decided to investigate using sound instead of radio waves. Bone is known to be a great conductor of sound, but so far it has only been used to transmit analogue signals in applications such as checking how bone is healing after a fracture, and in hearing aids that transmit sound from outside the skull to the auditory nerve. To see if bone could transmit digital signals over longer distances - to a headset, say, from a sensor worn on the wrist - the team applied a small vibrator to various parts of the body. When they...
  • Golf Course Crew Finds Skull in Fairway

    03/24/2007 8:55:18 PM PDT · by atomic conspiracy · 58 replies · 1,454+ views
    (03-20) 04:42 PDT Mundelein, Ill. (AP) -- Golf course workers uncovering the tees for the season discovered a human skull at a suburban Chicago club and found bones nearby in the fairway, authorities said. The skull was spotted Monday near the 14th tee of the Prairie Course, one of two 18-hole courses at the Countryside Golf Club in Mundelein, according to Lake County Forest Preserve Police Chief John Galford. "It was laying there, right in the middle of the fairway," Galford said. He said the identity and gender of the person had not been determined, but the skull had some...
  • Bones Found Near Indian Beach (Sarasota, Fl)

    03/10/2007 3:27:25 PM PST · by blam · 15 replies · 657+ views
    Herald Tribune ^ | 3-10-2007 | Latisha R Gray
    Bones found near Indian BeachBuilders unearth remains, but excavation of site is unlikely By LATISHA R. GRAY 3-10-2007 latisha.gray@heraldtribune.comSTAFF PHOTO / DAN WAGNER Construction was halted on this waterfront property in Sarasota after human remains were found. SARASOTA -- The remains of what appears to be an American Indian have at least one local archeologist both excited and dismayed. Palmetto archaeologist Bill Burger said the rib, femur and vertebrae unearthed this month by construction workers building a luxury home along the bayfront could offer clues of a tribe from long gone. But it is impossible to determine just what else...
  • Lucy's ancient bones to tour US

    10/25/2006 7:01:56 PM PDT · by annie laurie · 23 replies · 1,059+ views
    BBC ^ | 25 October 2006 | Unattributed
    The skeleton of the fossilised, 3.2 million-year-old human ancestor known as Lucy, will go on display in the US, Ethiopian officials say. After four years of negotiations with the Houston Museum of Natural Science in Texas, Ethiopia agreed to lend the bones for scientific study until 2013. It is hoped Lucy's 11-leg tour will boost tourism and increase Ethiopia's profile as the "home of all humanity". She will leave her country of origin - and the origin of mankind - in June. As well as Lucy, the travelling exhibition will also include about 190 other Ethiopian artefacts including humankind's earliest...
  • More bones found at world trade-center site

    10/23/2006 7:31:04 AM PDT · by XR7 · 8 replies · 841+ views
    The Seattle Times ^ | 10/23/06 | SARA KUGLER
    NEW YORK — Searchers found more bones believed to belong to Sept. 11 World Trade Center attack victims Sunday in manholes and utility areas that apparently were overlooked years ago. Deputy Mayor Ed Skyler, who is overseeing the recovery effort, also said search officials had identified 12 additional underground areas that will be examined in coming days. Utility and city officials have excavated about five underground areas, yielding more than 100 pieces of human remains, since construction workers discovered bones earlier in the week in a manhole excavated as part of work on a transit hub. The medical examiner's office...
  • Human Remains Found by Workers at World Trade Center Site

    10/20/2006 6:20:52 PM PDT · by stm · 13 replies · 643+ views
    NEW YORK — More than five years after the World Trade Center came crashing down, human remains keep cropping up near the site, angering family members who lost loved ones in the terrorist attack.
  • Ancient Bones Belonged To A Man - - Probably (Arlington Springs Woman)

    09/24/2006 7:40:16 PM PDT · by blam · 14 replies · 895+ views
    LA Times ^ | 9-11-2006 | Steve Chawkins
    Ancient Bones Belonged to a Man -- Probably By Steve Chawkins, Times Staff Writer September 11, 2006 By the time you reach 13,000 or so, you'd figure that the people closest to you would know some fundamental personal details — like your sex. But consider the plight of the oldest person yet found in North America.All that remains of him — or is it her? — are a couple of thigh bones, which were discovered on Santa Rosa Island in 1959. At the time, scientists thought they belonged to a man of a certain age — perhaps 10,000. The bones...
  • Stem cells used to repair broken bones

    04/12/2006 5:12:01 PM PDT · by Coleus · 20 replies · 580+ views
    ABC News ^ | 04.06.06
    Australian scientists are using stem cells to repair fractures in patients whose bones won't heal. The hope is it will save patients having to undergo many painful operations. Jamie Stevens, 21, fell off his motor bike nine months ago, fracturing his thigh bone. It didn't heal, leaving a five-centimetre gap. The usual treatment would be to graft a new bone from his hip. Instead, he was chosen as the first Australian patient to get an injection of specially treated stem cells. "The benefits outweigh the old procedure which takes a big chunk out of your hip," Jamie Stevens said. "It's...
  • Gene silencing directs muscle-derived stem cells to become bone-forming cells

    06/01/2006 7:08:48 PM PDT · by Coleus · 6 replies · 321+ views
    Using a relatively new technology called RNA interference to turn off genes that regulate cell differentiation, University of Pittsburgh researchers have demonstrated they can increase the propensity of muscle-derived stem cells (MDSCs) to become bone-forming cells. Based on these results, the investigators believe that by turning off specific genetic factors they can control the capacity of MDSCs as a means of treating various musculoskeletal diseases and injuries. RNA interference is a simple yet powerful technique that uses short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) – small molecules that prevent a gene from being expressed – to turn off the production of specific proteins...
  • Boiled bones show Aztecs butchered, ate invaders

    08/23/2006 3:46:48 PM PDT · by WmShirerAdmirer · 109 replies · 2,220+ views
    Reuters via Yahoo News ^ | August 23, 2006 | Catherine Bremer
    CALPULALPAN, Mexico (Reuters) - Skeletons found at an unearthed site in Mexico show Aztecs captured, ritually sacrificed and partially ate several hundred people traveling with invading Spanish forces in 1520. Skulls and bones from the Tecuaque archaeological site near Mexico City show about 550 victims had their hearts ripped out by Aztec priests in ritual offerings, and were dismembered or had their bones boiled or scraped clean, experts say. The findings support accounts of Aztecs capturing and killing a caravan of Spanish conquistadors and local men, women and children traveling with them in revenge for the murder of Cacamatzin, king...
  • Boiled bones show Aztecs butchered, ate invaders

    08/23/2006 9:54:02 AM PDT · by Marius3188 · 87 replies · 2,463+ views
    Reuters ^ | 23 Aug 2006 | Catherine Bremer
    CALPULALPAN, Mexico (Reuters) - Skeletons found at an unearthed site in Mexico show Aztecs captured, ritually sacrificed and partially ate several hundred people travelling with invading Spanish forces in 1520. Skulls and bones from the Tecuaque archaeological site near Mexico City show about 550 victims had their hearts ripped out by Aztec priests in ritual offerings, and were dismembered or had their bones boiled or scraped clean, experts say. The findings support accounts of Aztecs capturing and killing a caravan of Spanish conquistadors and local men, women and children travelling with them in revenge for the murder of Cacamatzin, king...
  • Drug for Bones Is Newly Linked to Jaw Disease

    06/01/2006 11:11:57 PM PDT · by neverdem · 23 replies · 1,300+ views
    NY Times ^ | June 2, 2006 | GINA KOLATA
    In the last 10 years, millions of patients have taken a class of drugs that can prevent agonizing broken and deteriorating bones. The drugs once seemed perfectly safe and have transformed life for patients with cancer or osteoporosis. But recently there have been reports of a serious side effect: death of areas of bone in the jaw. Everyone agrees that the condition, osteonecrosis of the jaw, is an uncommon complication, but that its true incidence is not known. It is estimated that among the 500,000 American cancer patients who take the drugs because their disease is affecting their bones, 1...
  • Bones In Togas Puzzle Vatican Arhaeologists

    05/20/2006 7:30:15 PM PDT · by blam · 42 replies · 1,612+ views
    The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 5-21-2006 | Nick Pisa
    Bones in togas puzzle Vatican archaeologists By Nick Pisa in Rome (Filed: 21/05/2006) Archaeologists exploring one of Rome's oldest catacombs are baffled by neat piles of more than 1,000 skeletons dressed in elegant togas. The macabre find emerged as teams of historians slowly picked their way through the complex network of underground burial chambers, which stretch for miles under the city. They say the tomb, which has been dated to the first century AD, is the first known example of a "mass burial". The archaeologists are unable to explain why so many apparently upper-class Romans - who would normally have...
  • Some of Columbus' Bones Buried in Spain

    05/20/2006 2:47:22 PM PDT · by freepatriot32 · 10 replies · 564+ views
    http://www.comcast.net/ ^ | 5 20 06 | DANIEL WOOLLS
    MADRID, Spain - Scientists said Friday they have confirmed that at least some of Christopher Columbus' remains were buried inside a Spanish cathedral, a discovery that could help end a century-old debate over the explorer's final resting place. DNA samples from 500-year-old bone slivers could contradict the Dominican Republic's competing claim that the explorer was laid to rest in the New World, said Marcial Castro, a Seville-area historian and high school teacher who devised the study that began in 2002. However, some of Columbus' remains also could have been buried in the Dominican Republic, he said. The announcement came a...
  • 1918 Letter Claims Geronimo's Bones Found

    05/08/2006 6:50:13 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 44 replies · 1,161+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 5/8/06 | Stephen Singer - ap
    HARTFORD, Conn. - A Yale University historian discovered a 1918 letter that raises anew questions about a secretive Yale student society and the remains of the American Indian leader Geronimo. The letter, written by a member of Skull and Bones to another member of the society, purports that some of the Indian leader's remains were spirited from his burial plot in Fort Sill, Okla., to a stone tomb in New Haven that serves as the club's headquarters. A portion of the letter and an accompanying story were posted Monday on the Yale Alumni Magazine's Web site. At one of the...
  • Old Bones Are Telling New Tales (Son Of Kennewick Man)

    05/05/2006 12:01:01 PM PDT · by blam · 52 replies · 2,301+ views
    The State ^ | 5-5-2006 | Sandi Doughton
    Old bones are telling new tales BY SANDI DOUGHTONMay 5, 2006 The Seattle Times ELLENSBURG, Wash. - Behind two locked doors at Central Washington University, what might be called Son of Kennewick Man sits inside a cardboard box. The faceless skull dates back 9,000 years - just 400 years younger than the superstar skeleton unearthed from the banks of the Columbia River. While Kennewick Man ignited a legal battle over the control of ancient bones, the skull at CWU has barely raised a ripple. "It just misses the mark in terms of people's interest," said CWU anthropology professor Steven Hackenberger....
  • Fluoride Report Confirms EPA Union's 20-year-old Concerns

    03/23/2006 12:03:36 PM PST · by nyscof · 6 replies · 332+ views
    US Environmental Protection Agency National HQ Union Chapter 280 | 3-23-2006 | J. William Hirzy, PhD
    The NRC reports that adults drinking 2 liters of water fluoridated at 4 mg/L (or 8 milligrams of fluoride) daily risk broken bones and joint pain. EPA employees reported this years ago; but were ignored.
  • Japanese scientists discover fast-growing stem cell

    03/10/2006 10:12:44 PM PST · by Coleus · 6 replies · 823+ views
    A team of researchers has succeeded in engineering stem cells taken from tooth germ to quickly develop into liver or bone tissue, the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology's Research Institute (AIST) for Cell Engineering said. A joint team of scientists from the institute and Osaka University succeeded in repairing damaged liver and bones in rats using stem cells taken from wisdom tooth germ. The finding raises hopes of developing regenerative medicine using wisdom teeth germ taken from people during orthodontic treatments. Tooth germ disappears as a tooth is formed, but that of a wisdom tooth stays in...
  • Handling of bones angers relatives (defense attorney in murder case)

    03/09/2006 10:00:34 AM PST · by Born Conservative · 5 replies · 389+ views
    Times Leader ^ | 3/9/2006 | KEVIN AMERMAN
    WILKES-BARRE (PA)– Family members of two men allegedly gunned down by Hugo Selenski erupted in anger Wednesday after Selenski’s attorney handled the bones prosecutors say belonged to the slain men. The parents of Frank “Rudy” James and Adeiye “Redman” Keiler, the drug dealer suspects whom Hugo Selenski stands accused of killing, believe attorney Demetrius Fannick showed a lack of respect to their sons by dropping the bones onto the defense desk while questioning a witness about them. “How dare you throw our children’s bones,” said Keiler’s mother, Sharon Forrester, during an impromptu press conference during the lunch break. “How dare...