Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)
Gods, Graves, Glyphs ^ | 7/17/2004 | various

Posted on 07/16/2004 11:27:10 PM PDT by SunkenCiv


(Excerpt) Read more at freerepublic.com ...


TOPICS: Agriculture; Astronomy; Books/Literature; Education; History; Hobbies; Miscellaneous; Reference; Science; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: alphaorder; archaeology; catastrophism; dallasabbott; davidrohl; economic; emiliospedicato; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; history; impact; paleontology; rohl; science; spedicato
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 1,361-1,3801,381-1,4001,401-1,420 ... 1,581-1,598 next last
To: fanfan

No tomatoes. They had pizza, actually, just no tomato sauce, I think they used something like alfredo sauce, and whatever else would “sauce” the crust. :’)


1,381 posted on 02/25/2012 9:04:20 PM PST by SunkenCiv (FReep this FReepathon!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1379 | View Replies]

To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #397 · v 8 · n 32
Saturday, February 25, 2012
 
18 topics
2851188 to 2806860
808 members
view this issue

Freeper Profiles


 Antiquity Journal
 & archive
 Archaeologica
 Archaeology
 Archaeology Channel
 BAR
 Bronze Age Forum
 Discover
 Dogpile
 Eurekalert
 Google
 LiveScience
 Mirabilis.ca
 Nat Geographic
 PhysOrg
 Science Daily
 Science News
 Texas AM
 Yahoo
Somehow we wound up with 41 topics this week, issue #397, volume 8, issue 32. Looks like the topics got Medieval on my ass. And there were not a few topics of 20th century stuff, but that time seems like ancient history now. ;') And we're at 808 members, nice going everyone. · view this issue ·

Stuff that doesn't necessarily make it to GGG here on FR sometimes gets shared here, that's my story and I'm sticking with it:
"The issue of race could benefit from a period of benign neglect." -- Daniel P. Moynihan
"There is no worse tyranny than to force a man to pay for what he does not want merely because you think it would be good for him." -- Robert Heinlein
 
· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic ·

2012` Q1 FReepathon. Target: $94,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $41,318
43%  
Woo hoo!! Now over FORTY-THREE percent!! Thank you all very much!!

1,382 posted on 02/25/2012 9:07:27 PM PST by SunkenCiv (FReep this FReepathon!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1380 | View Replies]



This week's topic links, ordered added, newest to oldest:

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #398
Saturday, March 3, 2012

Neandertal / Neanderthal

 Neanderthals were ancient mariners

· 03/02/2012 10:22:47 AM PST ·
· Posted by presidio9 ·
· 11 replies ·
· New Scientist ·
· 29 February 2012 ·
· Michael Marshall ·

It looks like Neanderthals may have beaten modern humans to the seas. Growing evidence suggests our extinct cousins criss-crossed the Mediterranean in boats from 100,000 years ago -- though not everyone is convinced they weren't just good swimmers. Neanderthals lived around the Mediterranean from 300,000 years ago. Their distinctive "Mousterian" stone tools are found on the Greek mainland and, intriguingly, have also been found on the Greek islands of Lefkada, Kefalonia and Zakynthos. That could be explained in two ways: either the islands weren't islands at the time, or our distant cousins crossed the water somehow. Now, George Ferentinos of...

Navigation

 Seafaring in the Aegean: new dates

· 03/02/2012 6:23:34 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 5 replies ·
· Stone Pages ·
· January 21, 2012 ·
· Journal of Archaeological Science ·

Seafaring before the Neolithic -- circa 7th millennium BCE -- is a controversial issue in the Mediterranean. However, evidence from different parts of the Aegean is gradually changing this, revealing the importance of early coastal and island environments. The site of Ouriakos on the island of Lemnos (Greece) tentatively dates to the end of the Pleistocene and possibly the beginning of the Holocene, circa 12,000 BP... Obsidian, or 'volcanic glass', has been a preferred material for stone tools wherever it is found or traded. It also absorbs water vapour when exposed to air -- for instance, when it is shaped...

PreColumbian, Clovis & PreClovis

 America 'discovered by Stone Age hunters from Europe'

· 02/28/2012 7:44:29 PM PST ·
· Posted by Theoria ·
· 46 replies ·
· 5+ views ·
· Belfast Telegraph ·
· 28 Feb 2012 ·
· David Keys ·

New archaeological evidence suggests that America was first discovered by Stone Age people from Europe -- 10,000 years before the Siberian-originating ancestors of the American Indians set foot in the New World. A remarkable series of several dozen European-style stone tools, dating back between 19,000 and 26,000 years, have been discovered at six locations along the US east coast. Three of the sites are on the Delmarva Peninsular in Maryland, discovered by archaeologist Dr Darrin Lowery of the University of Delaware. One is in Pennsylvania and another in Virginia. A sixth was discovered by scallop-dredging fishermen on the seabed 60...


 Stone-age Europeans 'were the first to set foot on North America'

· 02/29/2012 3:25:50 PM PST ·
· Posted by Para-Ord.45 ·
· 54 replies ·
· 2+ views ·
· Telegraph UK ·
· February 28 2012 ·
· Matthew Day ·

In a discovery that could rewrite the history of the Americas, archaeologists have found a number of stone tools dating back between 19,000 and 26,000 years, and bearing remarkable similarities to those made in Europe. All of the ancient implements were discovered along the north-east coast of the USA. Adding to the weight of evidence is fresh analysis of stone knife unearthed in the US in 1971 that revealed it was made of French flint.


 USA Archeology Vanity

· 02/29/2012 1:17:02 PM PST ·
· Posted by zeestephen ·
· 28 replies ·
· 3+ views ·

Stone Age European tools found at six locations on America's eastern coast -- Tools date from 19,000 to 26,000 years ago -- 10,000 years before the Siberian migration -- Copyright issues -- Link in Comments

In a Cavern, In a Canyon

 Rock art discovery could shed light on when New World was settled

· 02/27/2012 4:15:29 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 56 replies ·
· 4+ views ·
· Telegraph UK ·
· February 23, 2012 ·
· Fiona Govan ·

The outline of a figure scratched into a cave in Lapa do Santo in central-eastern Brazil is believed to be between 10,000 and 12,000 years and has been dubbed "the horny little man" because of its oversized phallus. The team of archaeologists from the University of Sao Paulo in Brazil made the discovery during excavations in 2009 but unveiled their findings in this month's PLoS ONE scientific journal. "It shows that about 11,000 years ago, there was already a very diverse manifestation of rock art in South America, so man probably arrived in the Americas much earlier than normally is...

Megaliths & Archaeoastronomy

 Brazillian Moundbuilders

· 02/29/2012 6:19:40 AM PST ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 5 replies ·
· 2+ views ·
· Frontiers of Anthropology ·
· 2-26-2012 ·
· Dale Drinnon ·

...The statement I made that the ethnic groups of all the types at the Upper Cave does not mean they are adjacent on the chart: instead I was drawing attemtion to the fact that skull "B" of the robust series is one such out of the ethnic groups represented at the Upper cave Choukoudian, the (male) Capelinha skull separted out of the bottom row at right represents another group, represented by a (female) Upper Cave skull (The "Melanesian" one) and one of the CroMagnon-mixes is closest to the Upper Cave male skull (The skull C here is just a bit...

I'm Driftin', I'm Driftin'

 Hurricanes May Have Uncovered Treasures In Fla. Waters

· 03/01/2005 9:32:02 AM PST ·
· Posted by DaveLoneRanger ·
· 37 replies ·
· 3,636+ views ·
· Local6.com ·
· February 24, 2005 ·
· Staff ·

Orlando, Fla. -- The hurricanes of 2004 may have uncovered sunken treasure buried for centuries off Florida's east coast, according to a Local 6 News report. John Brandon, who has been hunting treasures since he was 16 years old, showed Local 6 News some of his found treasures. "I found this on my birthday one year," Brandon said. "We found 12 pounds of gold bars." Brandon believes Hurricanes Frances and Jeanne may have shaken loose lost Spanish treasure off Florida's coast "It's going to be a changed landscape, there's no doubt about it." Brandon said. Every discovery made in Florida...

Australia & the Pacific

 Woman finds ancient artifact in baby shark

· 02/27/2012 4:33:12 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 22 replies ·
· 3+ views ·
· The Star (Myanmar) ·
· Wednesday February 22, 2012 ·
· R.S.N. Murali ·

Malacca: A baby shark being prepared for lunch gave a family here a big surprise -- an ancient artifact believed to be dated long before the Portuguese conquest of Malacca. Housewife Suseela Menon, from Klebang, made the priceless discovery while filleting the fish for lunch. It is believed to be a medallion worn by the Portuguese soldiers, presumably as a divine protection, during their conquests in this part of the world in the 16th century. One side of the medallion is a profile of a woman's head with a crown and encircled by a halo and an inscription that is...

Greece

 Found: Ancient Warrior's Helmet, Owner Unknown (Greek Mercenary Helmet, Circa 600 B.C.)

· 02/28/2012 9:07:41 PM PST ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 21 replies ·
· 2+ views ·
· Live Science ·
· 28 February 2012 ·
· Owen Jarus ·

Found: Ancient Warrior's Helmet, Owner Unknown A Greek bronze helmet, covered with gold leaf and decorated with snakes, lions and a peacock's tail (or palmette), has been discovered in the waters of Haifa Bay in Israel. But how this helmet ended up at the bottom of the bay is a mystery. The helmet dates back around 2,600 years and likely belonged to a wealthy Greek mercenary who took part in a series of wars, immortalized in the Bible, which ravaged the region at that time. Archaeologists believe that he likely fought for an Egyptian pharaoh named Necho II. Dredging discovery...


 Mystery of incredibly ornate 2,600-year-old bronze Greek warrior helmet found on seabed

· 03/01/2012 6:27:57 AM PST ·
· Posted by C19fan ·
· 30 replies ·
· 13+ views ·
· UK Daily Mail ·
· February 29, 2012 ·
· Ted Thornhill ·

A bronze Greek warrior helmet dating back to the 6th or 5th century BC has been discovered on the seabed in Haifa Harbour, Israel -- but the owner remains a complete mystery. Jacob Sharvit, director of the Marine Archaeology Unit with the Israel Antiquities Authority, said: "The gilding and figural ornaments make this one of the most ornate pieces of early Greek armour discovered.' However, how it ended up on the seabed and who it belonged to remains unknown. One theory is that it belonged to a warrior stationed on one of the warships of the Greek fleet that fought...

Religion of Pieces

 Lebanese Columnist: Jewish Religion Is a Fairy Tale;
  The Jews Have No History and No Archaeological Remains in Jerusalem or in Egypt


· 02/23/2012 10:11:14 AM PST ·
· DeoVindiceSicSemperTyrannis ·
· 70 replies ·
· 18+ views ·
· MEMRI TV ·
· 1-1-12 ·
· CBC TV (Egypt) ·

Following are excerpts from an interview with Lebanese columnist Jihad Al-Khazen, which aired on CBC TV on January 1, 2012: Jihad Al-Khazen: In Jerusalem, there are no archeological remains of the Jews or any of their prophets. They have no history. People forget that during Yitzhak Rabin's first term in government, in the early 1980's [sic]Ö I was in America at the time, studying history at Georgetown University. Rabin excavated under the Haram Al-Sharif, and uncovered the remains of an Umayyad palace. There are no [Jewish] archeological remains. There is no Solomon's Temple or any other temple. They did not...

Let's Have Jerusalem

 Is Israel losing Temple Mount war?

· 02/25/2012 10:14:08 PM PST ·
· Posted by 2ndDivisionVet ·
· 39 replies ·
· 2+ views ·
· Ynet ·
· February 25, 2012 ·
· Amir Shoan ·

Ynetnews special: Why is Israeli government covering up Muslim effort to erase any trace of Jewish history on Temple Mount? Archeology expert: Excavations barbaric, a crime. Ira Pasternack couldn't believe his eyes. The tractor's huge blade was lifted high up and then brought down with great force, shattering the ancient floors on Temple Mount. The large clods of earth exposed by the work were cast aside by the mustachioed driver. Yet even an amateur archeologist could spot the priceless remnants of Jewish, Christian and Muslim history being cast away. A few hours earlier, on a steaming July day in 2007,...

Longer Perspectives

 Google Ancient Places digs into the past

· 03/02/2012 5:00:45 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 6 replies ·
· Past Horizons ·
· Tuesday, February 28, 2012 ·
· U of Southampton ·

An exciting new project exploring how people in the past viewed the geography of the ancient world, has been backed by $50,000 grant from Google, Inc. via its Digital Humanities Awards Program. Google Ancient Places (GAP) is developing a Web application which allows users to choose a classical text or book (from between 500BC -- 500AD) and then search for references to ancient places within it, presenting the results in a user-friendly interface.

Faith & Philosophy

 New exhibit reveals Vatican Secret Archive documents to public

· 03/01/2012 5:27:40 AM PST ·
· Posted by NYer ·
· 9 replies ·
· 19+ views ·
· cna ·
· February 29, 2012 ·
· David Kerr ·

Some of the 50 miles of bookshelves in the Vatican secret archive Rome, Italy, Feb 29, 2012 / 03:29 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- For the first time in history, the Vatican is making public over 100 historical documents from its Secret Archives. "They are revealed as a cultural context, as a fascinating appeal to the memory of our past, the past of the Church, of empires, kingdoms, duchies and republics," said Cardinal Raffaele Farina, Archivist and Librarian of the Holy Roman Church. The "Lux in Arcana" exhibit at Rome's Capitoline Museum was created to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the Vatican's Secret Archives and includes notable...


 Secret £14million Bible in which 'Jesus predicts coming of Prophet Muhammad'
  unearthed in Turkey


· 02/25/2012 11:40:31 AM PST ·
· Posted by Dallas59 ·
· 66 replies ·
· 2+ views ·
· Daily Mail ·
· 2/25/2012 ·
· Daily Mail ·

A secret Bible in which Jesus is believed to predict the coming of the Prophet Muhammad to Earth has sparked serious interest from the Vatican. Pope Benedict XVI is claimed to want to see the 1,500-year-old book, which many say is the Gospel of Barnabas, that has been hidden by the Turkish state for the last 12 years. The £14million handwritten gold lettered tome, penned in Jesus' native Aramaic language, is said to contain his early teachings and a prediction of the Prophet's coming.


 1st-century New Testament fragment: more details emerge

· 02/29/2012 11:27:27 AM PST ·
· Posted by SeekAndFind ·
· 22 replies ·
· 12+ views ·
· Baptist Press ·
· 02/29/2012 ·
· Michael Foust ·

Dallas (BP) -- The seminary professor who surprised the academic world by saying a first-century fragment of Mark's Gospel had been found has released new information along with two new claims -- an early sermon on Hebrews and the earliest-known manuscripts of Paul's letters also have been discovered. Details about the finds will be published in an academic book in 2013, says Dallas Theological Seminary's Daniel B. Wallace, a New Testament professor. Wallace started the buzz on Feb. 1 when, during a debate with author and skeptic Bart Ehrman, he made the claim about the Mark fragment, which would be...

Egypt

 Ancient barque to be reconstructed for museum

· 02/25/2012 5:36:15 PM PST ·
· Posted by Engraved-on-His-hands ·
· 8 replies ·
· 1+ views ·
· Sail World ·
· February 25, 2012 ·
· Renate Johns ·

A Japanese University has provided a $10million grant to help see the reconstruction of one of the oldest known boats in the world, and the process has begun this week in Egypt, near the Giza Pyramid. With the help of the grant from Waseda University archaeologists on Monday began restoration on the 4,500-year-old almost 140ft (43 metre) so-called 'solar barque', which has shown signs of being used during the life of its owner Khufu(King Cheops) but was apparently also meant to carry him into the afterlife. Its 'sister' boat has already been restored and is housed in a specially built...

Helix, Make Mine a Double

 Ötzi the ice mummy's secrets found in DNA

· 02/29/2012 5:28:47 AM PST ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 11 replies ·
· 3+ views ·
· NewScientist ·
· 2-26-2012 ·
· Andy Coghlan ·

Ötzi the ice mummy may have met his death in the Alps some 5300 years ago, but his descendants live on -- on the Mediterranean islands of Corsica and Sardinia. The finding comes from an analysis of Ötzi's DNA, which also reveals he had brown eyes and hair, and was lactose intolerant. The ice mummy was found in 1991 on an Alpine glacier between Austria and Italy, where he met a violent end in the Neolithic.....

Biology & Cryptobiology

 Ancient Penguin Weighed 130 Pounds

· 02/28/2012 7:26:26 PM PST ·
· Posted by EveningStar ·
· 23 replies ·
· 1+ views ·
· Discovery News ·
· February 27, 2012 ·
· Jennifer Viegas ·

The tallest and heaviest ever known penguin stood nearly 5 feet tall and tipped the scales at around 130 pounds, according to a 27-million-year-old fossil found in New Zealand.

Paleontology

 Dinosaurs had fleas too _ giant ones, fossils show

· 02/29/2012 11:22:44 AM PST ·
· Posted by null and void ·
· 16 replies ·
· 2+ views ·
· AP ·
· Feb 29, 1:16 PM EST ·
· Seth Borenstein ·

In the Jurassic era, even the flea was a beast, compared to its minuscule modern descendants. These pesky bloodsuckers were nearly an inch long. New fossils found in China are evidence of the oldest fleas -- from 125 million to 165 million years ago, said Diying Huang of the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology. Their disproportionately long proboscis, or straw-like mouth, had sharp weapon-like serrated edges that helped them bite and feed from their super-sized hosts. But Engel said it's not just the size that was impressive about the nine flea fossils. It was...


 Flea's giant leap for mankind

· 10/13/2005 11:58:35 PM PDT ·
· Posted by sourcery ·
· 11 replies ·
· 588+ views ·
· Sunday Morning Herald ·
· October 13, 2005 ·
· Richard Macey ·

Fleas use it to perform leaps that would make Olympic high jumpers green with envy. Bees use it to flap their wings without tiring. Now Australian scientists have achieved a world first by copying resilin, the "rubber" insects employ to accomplish such athletic feats. Future versions of the material could be used to make resilient spare parts, including spinal discs and artificial arteries. Chris Elvin, from CSIRO Livestock Industries in Brisbane, spent four years reproducing nature's "near perfect rubber". Dr Elvin said yesterday: "Nature had a couple of hundred million years of evolution do it. All insects have it. It...

Epigraphy & Language

 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue from 1811 becomes online hit

· 02/25/2012 7:40:35 AM PST ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 17 replies ·
· Daily Telegraph (UK) ·
· 2-25-2012 ·

It was first available when Britain was under threat from Napoleon but it has now been re-published for free at the Project Gutenberg online digital library. The book includes gems suchs as 'ace of spades' for a widow, 'all-a-mort' to be struck dumb, and 'angling for farthings', which means to beg out of a prison window with a cap or box. The dictionary has already become an online hit. A selection of words can be found here. Explaining the book in the preface at the time, the author writes "The merit of Captain Grose's Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue has...

Oh So Mysteriouso

 Great Riddles in Archaeology

· 02/26/2012 2:37:08 PM PST ·
· Posted by Theoria ·
· 14 replies ·
· Penn Museum ·
· Penn Museum ·

Wednesday Evenings, October 2011 through June 2012 From the knights of King Arthur's roundtable to the deepest depths of Atlantis, some of the world's greatest archaeological riddles have eluded us for centuries. Discover and explore these mind-boggling riddles in the next season of the Penn Museum's popular monthly lecture series presented by current archaeologists and scholars. Mark your calendars for Great Riddles in Archaeology, offered the first Wednesday of every month, October 2011 through June 2012. General Admission is $5 per event in advance or $10 at the door. Subscriptions to all nine events are available for...

The Great War

 Tourism Ireland's Titanic centenary event

· 02/24/2012 8:39:41 PM PST ·
· Posted by re_nortex ·
· 8 replies ·
· Travel Blackboard (Tourism Ireland) ·
· Friday, 24 February 2012 ·
· Anthony Valeriano ·

We are commemorating one of the most famous ships in the world in the lead up to the 100th anniversary of the demise of the Titanic said Orla Saul. To bring this special and unique story to life we are delighted to have Susie Miller over from Ireland. Miller runs Titanic Tours in Belfast and is here today to tell us the most intriguing, poignant and personal story about Titanic. The 100th anniversary coincides with the opening of the Titanic visitor centre on 31st March in Belfast. Some people don't know that the Titanic was built in Belfast said Ms....

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany

 Arizona man finds Lindbergh treasures in trunk

· 02/26/2012 9:33:31 PM PST ·
· Posted by nickcarraway ·
· 6 replies ·
· Arizona Daily Star ·
· Sunday, February 26, 2012 ·

Nova Hall was cleaning out his garage in Sedona 13 years ago when he discovered an old steamer trunk with his grandfather's initials on it. It was a treasure trove. The trunk contained blueprints drawn by his grandfather Donald A. Hall of the Spirit of St. Louis, the airplane in which legendary aviator Charles Lindbergh flew the first-ever solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean. Lindbergh flew from New York to Paris in 1927. To do that, he needed a special aircraft, one that would fit his 6-foot-3 frame. In the trunk were photographs of his grandfather and Lindbergh in their...

World War Eleven

 Looking Back At Iconic Iwo Jima (67 years ago today!)

· 02/23/2012 12:29:37 PM PST ·
· Posted by rottndog ·
· 12 replies ·
· 1+ views ·
· NPR ·
· February 23, 2012 ·
· Claire O'Neill ·

Sixty-seven years ago today, photographer Joe Rosenthal trekked up a mountain alongside U.S. Marines and snapped this indelible scene on the Japanese island of Iwo Jima. Oddly enough, he had been rejected from military service for his poor eyesight, but today his vision is iconic.


 7 Most Incredible Tank Graveyards on Earth

· 02/26/2012 4:27:11 PM PST ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 43 replies ·
· 1+ views ·
· Environmental Graffiti. ·
· Simone Preuss ·

In certain corners of the globe you'll find the strangest of military cemeteries -- places filled not with the bodies of fallen troops but littered with the carcasses of abandoned tanks. These once-formidable weapons of war no longer strike fear into the hearts of opposing forces; their days of rolling inexorably onwards on the teeth of steel tracks are over. Now, the armor of these behemoths is rusting and corroded, their hatches all but sealed from lack of use, and their controls never again to be manned by commanders in battle. WWII tank...

end of digest #398 20120303


1,383 posted on 03/03/2012 8:24:42 AM PST by SunkenCiv (FReep this FReepathon!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1380 | View Replies]

To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #398 · v 8 · n 34
Saturday, March 3, 2012
 
28 topics
2853805 to 2851204
808 members
view this issue

Freeper Profiles


 Antiquity Journal
 & archive
 Archaeologica
 Archaeology
 Archaeology Channel
 BAR
 Bronze Age Forum
 Discover
 Dogpile
 Eurekalert
 Google
 LiveScience
 Mirabilis.ca
 Nat Geographic
 PhysOrg
 Science Daily
 Science News
 Texas AM
 Yahoo
Last week I neglected to increment the issue count and update the number of topics in the header, so as punishment I'm going to go out into the snowy real world. Spring's in the air, I can tell, everyone seems to have that youthful twinkle in their eyes around here.

This issue #398 has a more nearly normal 28 topics. This week's focus is on prehistoric (and early historic) navigation as well as the PreColumbian Americas. · view this issue ·

Perhaps the most tantalizing article to appear this week is Woman finds ancient artifact in baby shark -- since this artifact doesn't seem likely to have been scooped up by the shark from where it lay on the bottom (and it would have to have been unexposed), it must have been already inside some prey of the shark -- and so forth back some indeterminable number of years and critters.

Stuff that doesn't necessarily make it to GGG here on FR sometimes gets shared here, that's my story and I'm sticking with it:
  • "Islam, this absurd theology of an immoral Bedouin, is a rotting corpse which poisons our lives." -- Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, cited by americanophile
 
· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic ·

2012` Q1 FReepathon. Target: $94,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $41,318
43%  
Woo hoo!! Now over FORTY-THREE percent!! Thank you all very much!!

1,384 posted on 03/03/2012 8:45:03 AM PST by SunkenCiv (FReep this FReepathon!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1383 | View Replies]



This week's topic links, order added, newest to oldest:

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #399
Saturday, March 10, 2012

Faith & Philosophy

 Rare Video of Israeli Rabbi in Iran, A rare video shows last year's visit to the tomb of Queen

· 03/07/2012 9:43:28 AM PST ·
· Posted by Nachum ·
· 7 replies ·
· inn ·
· 3/7/12 ·
· Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu ·

Rabbi Yisroel Gabbai's self-appointed mission is saving Jewish graves all over the world. A rare video shows his visit last year to Iran and the tomb of Queen Esther and Mordechai, the central Jewish figures iin the story of Purim, which Jews celebrate this week. A member of the Breslov stream of Chassidism and now living in Israel, Rabbi Gabbai travels with a passport from France, where he was born and married. He has visited Gaza and Lebanon during wars and also has been to Damascus. Rabbi Gabbai wears traditional hareidi religious black clothes and a black hat, with his...

Epigraphy & Language

 Date Set for James Ossuary Verdict

· 03/05/2012 10:19:32 AM PST ·
· Posted by STD ·
· 9 replies ·
· Biblical Archaeology ·
· 03/05/2012 ·
· Biblical Archaeology Society Staff ·

Date Set for James Ossuary Verdict Biblical Archaeology Society Staff ï 03/05/2012 The James Ossuary verdict will be announced on Wednesday, March 14th. As events unfold, check in with Bible History Daily for exclusive reporting and commentary.

Let's Have Jerusalem

 Christ's disciples' remains 'discovered'

· 03/04/2012 5:06:29 AM PST ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 24 replies ·
· Telegraph (UK) ·
· 3-4-2012 ·
· Adrian Blomfield ·

An amateur archaeologist and film maker claims to have identified what could be the remains of some of Christ's 12 disciples in a first century burial chamber buried beneath a block of flats in Jerusalem. A team led by Simcha Jacobovic, a Canadian documentary director, used a robot to photograph a number of limestone burial caskets, found below a block of flats, which may provide an unprecedented glimpse into Christianity's earliest days. But the potential significance of the discovery is almost certain to be overshadowed by controversy, with Mr Jacobovic using it as new evidence to bolster his widely disputed...

Neandertal / Neanderthal

 Starch grains found on Neandertal teeth debunks theory
  that dietary deficiencies caused their extinction


· 03/03/2012 2:32:00 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 29 replies ·
· Smithsonian Science ·
· 3 January 2011 ·
· unattributed ·

Researchers from George Washington University and the Smithsonian Institution have discovered evidence to debunk the theory that Neandertals' disappearance was caused in part by a deficient diet -- one that lacked variety and was overly reliant on meat. After discovering starch granules from plant food trapped in the dental calculus on 40-thousand-year-old Neandertal teeth, the scientists believe that Neandertals ate a wide variety of plants and included cooked grains as part of a more sophisticated, diverse diet similar to early modern humans... The discovery of starch granules in the calculus on Neandertal teeth provides direct evidence that they made sophisticated,...

Climate

 New Study Shows A Clear Millennial Solar Impact Throughout Holocene
  (The Sun is in Control)


· 03/04/2012 7:59:04 PM PST ·
· Posted by Ernest_at_the_Beach ·
· 28 replies ·
· watts up with that? ·
· March 4, 2012 ·
· Anthony Watts ·

Key Points High resolution SST and SSS reconstruction off Cape Hatteras; Low salinity anomaly (3.5-5.2 ka): absence of Labrador current influence; Millenial NAO pattern and solar variability; Emphatic Blow To CO2 Warmists -- (reposted from No Tricks Zone with permission) A new paper titled High-resolution sea surface reconstructions off Cape Hatteras over the last 10 ka appearing just recently in the AGU Paleoceanography Journal authored by Caroline Cléroux et al provides further, clear evidence of a major solar impact on climate during the Holocene. Hat/tip: http://kaltesonne.de/.According to the paper's abstract,...

Catastrophism & Astronomy

 Natural Disasters And Human History

· 03/03/2012 7:39:34 AM PST ·
· Posted by RichSr ·
· 10 replies ·
· sat march 3 2012 ·
· Richard D Gregory Sr ·

Storms; Tornadoes; Floods; Almost nationwide Fires; Earthquakes; Pollution worldwide; Corruption in High Places; Pestilences; Diseases that cannot be controlled; Ground Pollution from Oils and Gasoline; Government Run Amuck that Many will not try to correct; Rejection of GOD; AND Rejection of Israel by our people! I think Daniel called it Confusion of Face; when people are confused. You know; when people cannot make up their minds? Our political system is having a problem. This problem is also a national, or rather a Middle Eastern problem. We threw Israel under the bus, or rather, we are throwing Israel under, and God...

Egypt

 Gate found in Karnak Temple adds new name to ancient kings' list [ 17th dyn pharaoh ]

· 03/05/2012 6:42:09 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 25 replies ·
· Ahram Online ·
· Sunday, March 4, 2012 ·
· Nevine El-Aref ·

During routine excavations on the northern side of the Amun-Re Temple in Luxor's famous Karnak temple complex, a team from the French-Egyptian Centre for the Study of the Karnak Temples this week unearthed a gate that they say has led to a significant breakthrough in archaeologists' understanding of Egypt's enigmatic 17th Dynasty. It was this dynasty that launched the military campaign that eventually succeeded in ridding Egypt of the tribe of invaders known as the "Hyksos." The gate, carved out of limestone, is engraved with the name of a king called "Sen-Nakht-En-Re." Mansour Boreik, general supervisor of monuments in Luxor,...

Navigation

 World's oldest sea-going boat to sail again
  -- Dover team rebuilds Bronze Age boat with ancient tools


· 03/07/2012 8:44:22 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 13 replies ·
· Daily Mail ·
· Tuesday, March 6th, 2012 ·
· Rob Waugh ·

The world's oldest sea-going boat, the Dover Bronze Age Boat is to sail again 3500 years after it crossed the English Channel. A new project, 'Boat 1550 BC' aims to rebuild the boat, which had lain hidden under the centre of Dover for 3,500 years until it was rediscovered in 1992 during the construction of an underpass. The oak-built boat sailed across the Channel at a time when Stonehenge was still in use, and before Tutankhamun became ruler of Egypt. The project aims to understand how people were able to cross the Channel in 1550 BC, using ancient boatbuilding techniques...

Diet & Cuisine

 How a Ship Full of Fish Helped Recreate an Ancient Fish Sauce

· 03/06/2012 10:18:22 AM PST ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 20 replies ·
· Smithsonian Magazine ·
· 3-1-2012 ·
· Peter Smith ·

If you're like me, the last post on the convoluted origins of our favorite fermented condiment -- ketchup -- probably left you wondering: What is the difference between Roman garum than modern Thai fish sauce? What little I know comes from an experiment performed by Sally Grainger, author of Cooking Apicus, recounted in the book Cured, Fermented and Smoked Foods. Grainger is a British chef and an experimental archeologist. She looked at studies on fish sauce amphorae (ceramic vessels) from archeological sites in Spain and North Africa. One of her more fascinating sources comes from a 2,000-year-old shipwreck discovered off the coast of Grado,...

Helix, Make Mine a Double

 Humans and Gorillas Closer Than Thought, Genome Sequence Says

· 03/07/2012 1:49:57 PM PST ·
· Posted by Pharmboy ·
· 37 replies ·
· Bloomberg News via SFGate ·
· 3-7-12 ·
· Elizabeth Lopatto ·

March 7 (Bloomberg) -- Gorillas have been portrayed as militaristic bullies in the Planet of the Apes movies and as "highly social gentle giants" by researcher Dian Fossey. Now scientists say they're closer genetically to humans than they once thought.

Biology & Cryptobiology

 It turns out sawfish actually wield their snouts like chainsaw-toting madmen

· 03/06/2012 6:48:36 PM PST ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 10 replies ·
· IO9 ·
· Mar 5, 2012 ·
· Robert T. Gonzalez ·

It turns out sawfish actually wield their snouts like chainsaw-toting madmen On second thought, that's not entirely accurate. Comparing a sawfish to a "madman" might give you the impression that these cousins of stingrays are unruly or careless when it comes to dispatching prey with their serrated snouts, when, in actuality, recent evidence suggests the exact opposite to be the case. Truth be told, sawfish are a lot more like chainsaw-toting surgeons. This observation was made by University of Queensland Biologist Barbara Wueringer, who used chunks of mullet and tuna meat to observe the predatory behavior of juvenile Pristis microdon...

Paleontology

 Eel-like creature identified as 'earliest human ancestor'

· 03/06/2012 10:12:25 AM PST ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 48 replies ·
· Telegraph (UK) ·
· 3-5-2012 ·
· Nick Collins ·

A prehistoric eel-like creature discovered in a Canadian shale bed has been identified as the earliest known ancestor of man. Fossils dating back 505 million years preserve the relics of tiny, slithering animals which are the oldest life forms ever discovered with primitive spinal cords. As the precursor of vertebrates the species is also believed to be the direct ancestor of all members of the chordate family, which includes fish, birds, reptiles, amphibians and mammals. The finding means the 5cm long creatures, known as Pikaia gracilens, were the forerunners of animals as diverse as snakes, swans and humans, scientists said....

Dinosaurs

 An Absurdly Cool Behind-The-Scenes Look At The Jurassic Park Dinosaur Puppets

· 03/05/2012 6:24:58 PM PST ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 12 replies ·
· IO9 ·
· Mar 5, 2012 ·
· Cyriaque Lamar ·

An Absurdly Cool Behind-The-Scenes Look At The Jurassic Park Dinosaur Puppets The late great Stan Winston was one of the undisputed masters of cinematic effects. With his team of make-up artists and puppeteers, Winston gave such films as Aliens and Predator an otherworldly sheen that's been seared into the collective memory of moviegoers for decades. And on the Stan Winston School's YouTube account, there are tons of behind-the-scenes reels of the dinosaurs from the Jurassic Park films. Behold amazing footage of the velociraptors and Tyrannosaurus hanging out casually with their human puppet masters.

Early America

 An Afternoon at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

· 02/24/2012 12:02:52 PM PST ·
· Posted by ml/nj ·
· 21 replies ·
· 1+ views ·
· ·

On Wednesday I went into NYC and spent the entire afternoon at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I was most interested to visit the newly renovated "American Wing." I admit to being a bit frightened by the idea of a renovation because I always like the American Wing the way it was, which was a little bit unusual. Paintings covered most of the walls nearly up to the ceilings. The only other museum I can recall that was like this was the old Barnes Museum in (or near) Philadelphia. I couldn't find a picture of an old American Wing gallery...

Agriculture & Animal Husbandry

 World's Oldest Marijuana Stash Totally Busted

· 03/08/2012 5:11:16 AM PST ·
· Posted by AnTiw1 ·
· 37 replies ·
· MSNBC ·
· updated 12/3/2008 1:19:15 PM ET ·
· Jennifer Viegas ·

Nearly two pounds of still-green plant material found in a 2,700-year-old grave in the Gobi Desert has just been identified as the world's oldest marijuana stash, according to a paper in the latest issue of the Journal of Experimental Botany.

The Civil War

 Faces of Civil War sailors from sunken USS Monitor reconstructed in hopes of identifying them

· 03/04/2012 3:58:49 PM PST ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 29 replies ·
· AP ·
· Saturday Mar 3, 2012 ·
· Steve Szkotak ·

Faces of Civil War sailors from sunken USS Monitor reconstructed in hopes of identifying them Faces of 2 USS Monitor crewmembers reconstructed Recovery: The turret of the Civil War ironclad USS Monitor is lifted out of the ocean off the coast of Hatteras, N.C. on August 5, 2002 RICHMOND, Va. -- When the turret of the Civil War ironclad Monitor was raised from the ocean bottom, two skeletons and the tattered remnants of their uniforms were discovered in the rusted hulk of the Union Civil War ironclad, mute and nameless witnesses to the cost of war. A rubber comb was...

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany

 March 5, 1946: Winston Churchill Warns of Soviet "Iron Curtain"

· 03/05/2012 3:49:04 PM PST ·
· Posted by nickcarraway ·
· 1 replies ·
· New York Times ·
· March 5, 2012 ·

On March 5, 1946, Winston Churchill delivered his famous "Iron Curtain" speech, officially titled "Sinews of Peace," at Westminster College in Fulton, Mo. After being introduced by President Harry Truman, Churchill, the former prime minister of Britain and now the opposition leader, warned of the threat posed by the Soviet Union, a World War II ally of Britain and the United States. The New York Times reported that "Mr. Churchill painted a dark picture of post-war Europe, on which "an iron curtain has descended across the Continent' from Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic." "He strongly intimated...

end of digest #399 20120310


1,385 posted on 03/10/2012 6:25:44 AM PST by SunkenCiv (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1383 | View Replies]

To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #399 · v 8 · n 35
Saturday, March 10, 2012
 
17 topics
2855589 to 2853950
808 members
view this issue

Freeper Profiles


 Antiquity Journal
 & archive
 Archaeologica
 Archaeology
 Archaeology Channel
 BAR
 Bronze Age Forum
 Discover
 Dogpile
 Eurekalert
 Google
 LiveScience
 Mirabilis.ca
 Nat Geographic
 PhysOrg
 Science Daily
 Science News
 Texas AM
 Yahoo
This issue #399 has 17 topics, which is not surprising given the red-hot week we had for #398. My thanks again ring out to the FReepers who contributed the lion's share of the posting of them. Real life has been crowding in for some weeks, nothing I'll talk about in public, but I do indeed appreciate the help. GGG has always been a group effort, and the uptick in new members has been encouraging. I think the number went down by one because I discovered the list still carried a banned FReeper.
· view this issue ·
Imagine, next week marks the 400th GGG digest issue.

Stuff that doesn't necessarily make it to GGG here on FR sometimes gets shared here, that's my story and I'm sticking with it: Thanks again to my favorite FReeper quote source:
  • "When given the choice between a Republican, and a Democrat who acts like a Republican, the voters will choose the Republican every time." -- Harry Truman, cited by americanophile
 
· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic ·

2012` Q1 FReepathon. Target: $94,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $41,318
43%  
Woo hoo!! Now over FORTY-THREE percent!! Thank you all very much!!

1,386 posted on 03/10/2012 6:30:34 AM PST by SunkenCiv (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1385 | View Replies]



This week's topic links, order added, newest to oldest:

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #400
Saturday, March 17, 2012

Farty Shades of Green

 Irish language gains popularity among US students

· 03/17/2012 10:14:41 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 25 replies ·
· BBC News ·
· March 15, 2012 ·
· unattributed ·

St Patrick's Day has always been a time when Americans have acknowledged their Irish roots, whether real or desired, by celebrating Irish culture in a variety of ways. Some say there is no better window to understanding Irish culture than language. While the Irish language has struggled to survive alongside the more dominant English language, one man from Ireland is helping to lead a modest revival in the US. Through his efforts, a growing number of Irish Americans are forging stronger ties to their Hibernian ancestors. The BBC heard from Ronan Connolly who teaches Irish language classes at Catholic University...

Epigraphy & Language

 Did Stone Age cavemen talk to each other in symbols?

· 03/12/2012 9:25:34 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 37 replies ·
· The Observer ·
· Saturday, March 10, 2012 ·
· Robin McKie ·

Not surprisingly, these paintings attract tens of thousands of visitors every year. However, there is another aspect to this art that often escapes attention, but which is now providing scientists with fresh insights into our recent evolution. Instead of studying those magnificent galloping horses and bisons, researchers are investigating the symbols painted beside them. These signs are rarely mentioned in most studies of ancient cave art. Some are gathered in groups, some appear in ones or twos, while others are mixed in with the caves' images of animals. There are triangles, squares, full circles, semicircles, open angles, crosses and groups...

The Invisible Hand

 Tools May Have Been First Money

· 03/14/2012 7:30:14 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 27 replies ·
· LiveScience ·
· Wednesday, February 29, 2012 ·
· Jennifer Welsh ·

Hand axes, small handheld stone tools used by ancient humans, could have served as the first commodity in the human world thanks to their durability and utility. The axes may have been traded between human groups and would have served as a social cue to others, Mimi Lam, a researcher from the University of British Columbia, suggested in her talk at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting here on Feb. 18. "The Acheulean hand ax was standardized and shaped, became exchanged in social networks and took on a symbolic meaning," Lam said. "My suggestion was that...

Comparative Technology

 Why It Took So Long to Invent the Wheel [ s/b, why wheels haven't survived in strata ]

· 03/12/2012 9:01:18 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 58 replies ·
· Scientific American ·
· March 6, 2012 ·
· Natalie Wolchover ·

Wheels are the archetype of a primitive, caveman-level technology. But in fact, they're so ingenious that it took until 3500 B.C. for someone to invent them. By that time -- it was the Bronze Age -- humans were already casting metal alloys, constructing canals and sailboats, and even designing complex musical instruments such as harps. The tricky thing about the wheel is not conceiving of a cylinder rolling on its edge. It's figuring out how to connect a stable, stationary platform to that cylinder. "The stroke of brilliance was the wheel-and-axle concept," said David Anthony, a professor of anthropology at...

Prehistory & Origins

 Scientists Have Identified a Completely New Human Species from China

· 03/15/2012 8:14:19 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 53 replies ·
· Gizmodo ·
· Thursday, March 15, 2012 ·
· Jamie Condliffe ·

Your family tree just got wider. Scientists have analyzed fossils found in China, and deemed them to be from a new human species unlike any ever identified before; say hello to your long-lost cousin. The skull, originally unearthed in 1979 in the Guangxi Province of China, has only now been fully analyzed (talk about procrastination, right?). It turns out that it has thick bones, extremely prominent brow ridges, a very short, flat face, and also lacks our typically human chin. "In short, it is anatomically unique among all members of the human evolutionary tree," explains researcher Darren Curnoe to New...

British Isles

 Archaeologists Return to Excavate Major 3,300-Year-Old Bronze Age Site in England

· 03/17/2012 12:45:08 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 13 replies ·
· Popular Archaeology ·
· March 2012 ·
· unattributed ·

They had stumbled upon an archaeologist's gold mine. Dated to 1365-967 BC and now known as Flag Fen, excavations and research uncovered a monumental site which included a causeway composed of thousands of timber posts arranged in five 1-meter-long rows, and a small timber platform partway across the structure. Between the posts of the causeway, timbers had been built up horizontally in ancient times, providing a "bridge" or dry surface for transportation across the wet lowland upon which the timber structures were built, connecting a higher level land area on its east with a higher level area on its west....


 Ancient footprints found in peat at Borth beach

· 03/16/2012 9:19:06 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 8 replies ·
· BBC ·
· Thursday, March 15, 2012 ·
· unattributed ·

Human and animal fossilised footprints that may be from the Bronze Age have been exposed on a Ceredigion beach. Archaeologists are racing against changing tides to record and excavate the find in peat at Borth, which gives a snapshot of a time when the shore lay further west. The team believes the footprints could be 3,000 to 4,000 years old. Staff and students from the University of Wales Trinity St David are carrying out the work. A child's footprint and the cast taken of it in the peat at Borth As well as the footprints, a line of post holes...

Ancient Autopsies

 Worsley Man: Hospital scanner probes Iron Age bog death

· 03/11/2012 5:10:02 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 30 replies ·
· BBC News ·
· 3-8-2012 ·

Bryan Sitch, curator of archaeology at the museum, said it now appeared the man had been beaten about the head, garrotted and then beheaded The head of an Iron Age man who died almost 2,000 years ago has been scanned in a Manchester hospital to shed light on how he died. Worsley Man is thought to have lived around 100 AD when Romans occupied much of Britain. Since its discovery in a Salford peat bog in 1958, the head has been kept at Manchester Museum on Oxford Road. The scans at the Manchester Children's Hospital have now revealed more details...

Middle Ages & Renaissance

 Mystery of Anglo-Saxon teen buried in bed with gold cross

· 03/16/2012 11:46:01 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 30 replies ·
· Past Horizons Magazine ·
· Friday, March 16, 2012 ·
· unattributed ·

One of the earliest Anglo-Saxon Christian burial sites in Britain has been discovered in a village outside Cambridge. The grave of a teenage girl from the mid 7th century AD has an extraordinary combination of two extremely rare finds: a 'bed burial' and an early Christian artefact in the form of a stunning gold and garnet cross. The girl, aged around 16, was buried on an ornamental bed -- a very limited Anglo-Saxon practice of the mid to later 7th century -- with a pectoral Christian cross on her chest, that had probably been sewn onto her clothing. Fashioned from...

Faith & Philosophy

 'World's Oldest Temple' May Have Been Cosmopolitan Center

· 03/17/2012 10:44:00 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 18 replies ·
· LiveScience ·
· Thursday, March 15, 2012 ·
· Owen Jarus ·

Gobekli Tepe is located in southern Turkey near the modern-day city of Urfa. It contains at least 20 stone rings (circles within a circle) that date back more than 11,000 years. T-shaped limestone blocks line the circles and reliefs are carved on them. Long ago, people would fill in the outer circle with debris before building a new circle within... Ancient blades made of volcanic rock that were discovered at what may be the world's oldest temple suggest that the site in Turkey was the hub of a pilgrimage that attracted a cosmopolitan group of people some 11,000 years ago....

Agriculture & Animal Husbandry

 Artifacts Show Sophistication of Ancient Nomads

· 03/12/2012 3:50:08 PM PDT ·
· Posted by mojito ·
· 14 replies ·
· NYT ·
· 3/12/2012 ·
· John Noble Wilford ·

Ancient Greeks had a word for the people who lived on the wild, arid Eurasian steppes stretching from the Black Sea to the border of China. They were nomads, which meant "roaming about for pasture." They were wanderers and, not infrequently, fierce mounted warriors. Essentially, they were "the other" to the agricultural and increasingly urban civilizations that emerged in the first millennium B.C. As the nomads left no writing, no one knows what they called themselves. To their literate neighbors, they were the ubiquitous and mysterious Scythians or the Saka, perhaps one and the same people. In any case, these...

Near East

 Syrian Army Attacks Palmyra's Roman Ruins

· 03/12/2012 8:40:32 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 6 replies ·
· Popular Archaeology ·
· Wednesday, March 7, 2012 ·
· Heritage on the Wire ·

Ongoing hostilities in Syria are now placing the remarkable ancient monumental ruins of Palmyra in the line of fire. Since the violence that erupted in Syria nearly one year ago -- a war that has so far left thousands dead and become one of the world's biggest stories -- the damage to the country's ancient cities and cultural sites as a result of the conflict has remained largely unknown. One report to surface last week, however, tells the story of Palmyra, where residents say the Syrian Army has set up camp in a citadel that overlooks both the modern city...

Let's Have Jerusalem

 The Forgery Trial of the Century Ends

· 03/15/2012 12:04:58 PM PDT ·
· Posted by STD ·
· 4 replies ·
· Bib Arch ·
· 03/15/2012 ·
· Hershel Shanks ·

Oded Golan Speaks Out on Forgery Trial Verdict Asserts purchasers of looted antiquities preserve valuable information -- After being acquitted of all forgery charges, Oded Golan responded by noting the important role that licensed collectors play by keeping artifacts documented and in Israel.

Catastrophism & Astronomy

 New evidence supporting extraterrestrial impact at the start of the Younger Dryas

· 03/12/2012 4:54:07 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 33 replies ·
· Watts Up With That 'blog ·
· Monday, March 12, 2012 ·
· Anthony Watts ·

We report the discovery in Lake Cuitzeo in central Mexico of a black, carbon-rich, lacustrine layer, containing nanodiamonds, microspherules, and other unusual materials that date to the early Younger Dryas and are interpreted to result from an extraterrestrial impact. These proxies were found in a 27-m-long core as part of an interdisciplinary effort to extract a paleoclimate record back through the previous interglacial. Our attention focused early on an anomalous, 10-cm-thick, carbon-rich layer at a depth of 2.8 m that dates to 12.9 ka and coincides with a suite of anomalous coeval environmental and biotic changes independently recognized in other...

PreColumbian, Clovis & PreClovis

 Native American Oral traditions tell of tsunami's destruction hundreds of years ago

· 03/16/2012 2:06:22 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Theoria ·
· 23 replies ·
· Oregon Dep't of Geology
  & Mineral Industries ·

At 9PM on January 26, 1700 one of the world's largest earthquakes occurred along the west coast of North America. The undersea Cascadia thrust fault ruptured along a 680 mile length, from mid Vancouver Island to northern California in a great earthquake, producing tremendous shaking and a huge tsunami that swept across the Pacific. The Cascadia fault is the boundary between two of the Earth's tectonic plates: the smaller offshore Juan de Fuca plate that is sliding under the much larger North American plate. The earthquake also left unmistakable signatures in the geological record as the outer coastal regions subsided...

Amazonia

 Country Notes: Downtown In The Lost Cities of the Amazon

· 03/16/2012 3:11:41 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 10 replies ·
· Peruvian Times ·
· Friday, March 16, 2012 ·
· Nicholas Asheshov ·

...an article in The New York Times which reported on the discovery in Acre, only a few hours travel from the Madre de Dios Indians, of extensive, deep straight trenches, ridges and mounds dating back to pre-Columbian times, indicating a large, well-developed society. This was just the latest evidence that the Amazon, or at least parts of it, was heavily populated by well-organized societies in much the same way as the high Andes were remodeled by the Tiahuanuco, the Chavin, the Chachapoyas, the Huari, and the Incas. Over the past couple of decades the pre-history of the Americas has been...

Roman Empire

 Blue versus Green: Rocking the Byzantine Empire

· 03/05/2012 5:55:02 AM PST ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 11 replies ·
· Smithsonian Magazine ·
· 3-2-2012 ·

"Bread and circuses," the poet Juvenal wrote scathingly. "That's all the common people want." Food and entertainment. Or to put it another way, basic sustenance and bloodshed, because the most popular entertainments offered by the circuses of Rome were the gladiators and chariot racing, the latter often as deadly as the former. As many as 12 four-horse teams raced one another seven times around the confines of the greatest arenas -- the Circus Maximus in Rome was 2,000 feet long, but its track was not more than 150 feet wide -- and rules were few, collisions all but inevitable, and hideous injuries to the...

Longer Perspectives

 Dirty Tricks, Roman-Style

· 03/17/2012 4:52:12 PM PDT ·
· Posted by afraidfortherepublic ·
· 5 replies ·
· WSJ.com ·
· 3-16-12 ·
· Philip Freeman ·

Campaign tips from Cicero's brother sound awfully familiar It was a bitter and volatile campaign, with accusations of inconsistency, incompetence and scandal filling the air. Candidates competed to portray themselves as the true conservative choice, while voters fretted about the economy and war threatened in the Middle East. The year was 64 B.C., and Marcus Tullius Cicero was running for Roman consul. Cicero was a political outsider from a small town near Rome, but he was a brilliant man and gifted speaker, with a burning desire to gain the highest office in the ancient republic. As the campaign approached, his...


 Classics and War

· 03/12/2002 1:40:56 PM PST ·
· Posted by nicmarlo ·
· 30 replies ·
· 419+ views ·
· Imprimis, Hillsdale College ·
· February 2002 ·
· Victor Davis Hanson ·

The following is an abridged version of Dr. Hanson's lecture at a seminar on "Liberal Education, Liberty, and Education Today," delivered in Phillips Auditorium at Hillsdale College on November 11, 2001. -- The study of Classics -- of Greece and Rome -- can offer us moral lessons as well as a superb grounding in art, literature, history, and language. In our present crisis after September 11, it also offers practical guidance -- and the absence of familiarity with the foundations of Western culture in part may explain many of the disturbing reactions to the war that we have seen...


 Tensions in Early American Political Thought

· 08/17/2002 2:41:45 PM PDT ·
· Posted by aconservaguy ·
· 13 replies ·
· 202+ views ·
· The Freeman (via Libertyhaven.com) ·
· May 1999 ·
· Joseph Stromberg ·

Tensions in Early American Political Thought Joseph R. Stromberg According to the eminent historian of political thought J.G.A. Pocock, republican theory (or "civic humanism") was the most significant current of eighteenth-century English and American political philosophy. In the form of "country ideology," republicanism gave "left" and "right" critics of government policies a framework and believable rhetoric for their arguments. The so-called "radical Whiggism" of the American Revolution was itself, on this reading, merely an extreme and consistent version of the republican ideas of the English opposition. From 1656, when James Harrington published a definitive statement of English republicanism in Oceana,...


 Pericles' Ideal of Democracy

· 03/31/2003 7:25:35 PM PST ·
· Posted by Mihalis ·
· 24 replies ·
· 383+ views ·
· Thucydides ·
· "The Peloponnesian Wars" ·

Our political system does not compete with with institutions which are elsewhere in force. We do not copy our neighbors, but try to be an example. Our administration favors the many instead of the few: this is why it is called a democracy. The laws afford equal justice to all alike in their private disputes, but we do not ignore the claims of excellence. When a citizen distinguishes himself, then he will be called to serve the state, in preference to others, not as a matter of privilege, but as a reward of merit; and poverty is no bar. ......


 Robert Kaplan on Applying the Wisdom of the Ages to the Twenty-First Century

· 09/04/2003 9:13:06 PM PDT ·
· Posted by rdb3 ·
· 3 replies ·
· 1,488+ views ·
· FPRI ·
· April 4, 2K2 ·
· Robert Kaplan ·

The Fifth Annual Robert Strausz-HupÈ Lecture April 4, 2002 Summary by Trudy J. Kuehner Robert Kaplan delivered the Fifth Annual Strausz-HupÈ Lecture on January 17, 2002, drawing on his new book, Warrior Politics: Why Leadership Demands a Pagan Ethos (Random House, 2002). Author of such books as Balkan Ghosts and The Coming Anarchy, Kaplan is a contributing editor of The Atlantic, a fellow of the New America Foudation, and a former senior fellow of the Foreign Policy Research Institute. Warrior Politics is available to FPRI members at...


 History for Dollars (Humanities)

· 06/08/2010 8:25:03 AM PDT ·
· Posted by C19fan ·
· 7 replies ·
· 35+ views ·
· New York Times ·
· June 7, 2010 ·
· David Brooks ·

When the going gets tough, the tough take accounting. When the job market worsens, many students figure they can't indulge in an English or a history major. They have to study something that will lead directly to a job. So it is almost inevitable that over the next few years, as labor markets struggle, the humanities will continue their long slide. There already has been a nearly 50 percent drop in the portion of liberal arts majors over the past generation, and that trend is bound to accelerate. Once the stars of university life, humanities now play bit roles when...

Victor Davis Hanson

 The great Victor Davis Hanson now has a blog

· 03/09/2004 8:17:13 AM PST ·
· Posted by dennisw ·
· 25 replies ·
· 260+ views ·
· victorhanson ·
· march 2004 ·
· victorhanson ·

In a recent review of Donald Kagan's The Peloponnesian War, and my Autumn of War, ("Theatres of War: Why the battles over ancient Athens still rage" New Yorker Magazine, [January 12, 2004]), the classicist Daniel Mendelsohn says that I believe that it is immoral to suggest defeat can be seen as victory: "The play asks the very question that Victor Davis Hanson considers "immoral": whether abject defeat can yet somehow be a victory."


 The past as politics - (VDH on critics of Bush and the War on Terror)

· 07/28/2005 8:40:45 AM PDT ·
· Posted by CHARLITE ·
· 3 replies ·
· 593+ views ·
· Jewish World Review ·
· July 28, 2005 ·
· Victor Davis Hanson ·

So, the next time someone quotes philosopher George Santayana for the umpteenth time that "Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it," just assume that what follows will probably be wrong. Having a Rolodex of cocktail party quotes to beef-up an argument is not the same as the hard work of learning about the past. Thus, we are now warned that the war against terror is failing because it has lasted as long as World War II -- as if the length of war, not the cost, determines success. Yet the nearly 2,000 U.S. combat fatalities in...


 Why Did Athens Lose? (Victor Davis Hanson on Peloponnesian War)

· 11/11/2005 11:14:21 AM PST ·
· Posted by neverdem ·
· 15 replies ·
· 3,735+ views ·
· NRO ·
· November 11, 2005 ·
· Victor Davis Hanson ·

The misery of war. EDITOR'S NOTE: Victor Davis Hanson's latest book, A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War has recently been released by Random House. This week National Review Online has been excerpting Chapter 10 of the book. Below is the final installment; the first can be read here and the second here; the third here; the fourth here. Check back tomorrow for the final installment and click on Amazon to purchase A War...


 U.S. Has Gone Hog-Wild Like Athens Of Old

· 03/26/2009 5:58:22 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Kaslin ·
· 17 replies ·
· 1,274+ views ·
· IBD Editorials ·
· March 26, 2009 ·
· Victor Davis Hanson ·

In the last three months, we've been reduced to something like the ancient Athenian mob -- with opportunistic politicians sometimes inciting, sometimes catering to an already angry public. The Greek comic playwright Aristophanes once described how screaming politicians -- posing as men of the people -- would sway Athenian citizens by offering them all sort of perks and goodies that the government had no idea how to pay for. The historian Thucydides offers even more frightening accounts of bloodthirsty voters after they were aroused by demagogues ("leaders or drivers of the people"). One day in a bloodthirsty rage, voters demanded...

The Revolution

 Brooklyn hunt for spirit of 1776 soldiers

· 03/11/2012 7:05:35 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Pharmboy ·
· 24 replies ·
· NY Post ·
· March 11, 2012 ·
· Gary Buiso ·

Brooklyn civic groups are leading a charge to discover the exact burial place of over 200 Revolutionary War soldiers killed at the dawn of the United States and dumped near the Gowanus Canal. "These are the men who allowed America to come into existence -- it's a question that needs to be resolved," said Marlene Donnelly, a member of the Friends and Residents of Greater Gowanus,... "The Battle of Gettysburg has an entire field put aside to remember it -- and this one, we just don't remember,"... The grave concern is that development in and around the putrid canal, a...


 Your View: Remember Revolutionary War hero Peter Francisco

· 03/14/2012 6:04:30 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Pharmboy ·
· 21 replies ·
· South Coast Today ·
· 3-14-12 ·
· Jorge S. Medeiros ·

If you come to downtown New Bedford tomorrow and happen to see the flag of Portugal flying in front of City Hall, it is because March 15 is recognized in Massachusetts as Peter Francisco Day, commemorating the Hercules of the American Revolution immortalized by the U.S. Post Office in 1975 with an 18-cent commemorative stamp: "Contributors to the Cause ... Peter Francisco, fighter extraordinary." Peter Francisco lived in Virginia since age 5, when he was found abandoned at City Point, now Hopewell, on June 23, 1765. Left there by Moorish pirates, he was kidnapped from his parents' backyard on a...

Early America

 1692 Salem Witch Trial Document Sold at Auction

· 03/15/2012 3:14:31 PM PDT ·
· Posted by nickcarraway ·
· 15 replies ·
· CBS News ·
· March 15, 2012 ·

1692 Salem witch trial document sold at auction The original court indictment of Margaret Scott, an elderly Rowley woman, was hanged during the witchcraft hysteria in Salem in 1692. (Swann Auction Galleries) (CBS/AP) SALEM, Mass - A document from the Salem witch trials was sold at auction for $31,200 when it hit the auction block on Thursday. Pre-auction estimates put it between $25,000 to $35,000. The original court indictment of Margaret Scott, a widow from Rowley, Massachusetts in her 70s, and one of the last people hanged during the 1692 hysteria in colonial Massachusetts. It was part of a private...

Paleontology

 Bite marks reveal behavior of dinosaur-eating croc

· 03/15/2012 12:36:24 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 5 replies ·
· U of Wisconsin-Parkside ·
· Friday, March 2, 2012 ·
· unattributed ·

Research by Dr. Christopher Noto and a team of paleontologists published this week in the international journal Palaios describes recently discovered fossils from the Cretaceous Period (145-65 million years ago) of Texas that show evidence of attack by a new species of giant crocodyliform (croc-relative). Bite marks on fossil bones provide a rare glimpse of predatory behavior that indicate this animal was a top predator that regularly consumed turtles and even ate dinosaurs... For most extinct species, scientists can never directly observe such predatory behavior. Paleontologists must resort to other, indirect indicators. Bite marks on fossil bone are a great...

Dinosaurs

 Researchers Find Sauropod Dinosaur Skulls (big dinosaurs with little heads)

· 06/01/2005 9:15:35 PM PDT ·
· Posted by NormsRevenge ·
· 24 replies ·
· 3,236+ views ·
· Yahoo ·
· 6/1/05 ·
· Deseret Morning News ·

SALT LAKE CITY - The first known North American skulls of Cretaceous era sauropods -- big dinosaurs with little heads -- have been uncovered in recent years by Brigham Young University and Dinosaur National Monument researchers. About a dozen sauropod skulls are known from the earlier Jurassic era, but these are the first in North America for the Cretaceous, the final 80 million years of the dinosaur period. The four Cretaceous sauropod skulls or parts of skulls were found close to each other at the monument, which straddles the Utah-Colorado border. "We've really got a remarkable -- it's almost mind-boggling...

Diet & Cuisine

 What Did Velociraptor Have For Dinner? Raptor Skeleton Discovered With Bones In Its Gut

· 03/13/2012 7:17:13 PM PDT ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 21 replies ·
· IO9 ·
· Mar 4, 2012 9:30 AM ·
· Lauren Davis ·

What did Velociraptor have for dinner? Raptor skeleton discovered with bones in its gut If you lie awake at night wondering Velociraptor's favorite food was (and whether it tastes much like human flesh), you're in luck. For the first time, a Velociraptor skeleton has been observed with its last supper still filling its guts, and this little guy feasted on long-dead pterosaur. Paleontologist David Hone has published a new paper describing his findings in Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, but for those who don't want to breach the paywall, he's also explaining them on his blog. This especially well preserved specimen was...

Biology & Cryptobiology

 Meet Earth's earliest animal with a skeleton

· 03/09/2012 5:19:09 AM PST ·
· Posted by C19fan ·
· 9 replies ·
· MSNBC ·
· March 9, 2012 ·
· Charles Choi ·

The oldest animal with a skeleton has been discovered, a creature shaped like a thimble that lived on the seafloor more than a half-billion years ago, researchers say. These findings shed light on the evolution of early life on Earth, and could also help scientists recognize life elsewhere in the universe.

Oh So Mysteriouso

 Mayan Elder Says World Won't End

· 03/14/2012 7:18:12 PM PDT ·
· Posted by nickcarraway ·
· 58 replies ·
· The Pueblo Chieftan ·
· Tuesday, March 13, 2012 ·
· Gayle Perez ·

Instead, he maintains better era will start Dec. 21When the current Mayan calendar cycle ends Dec. 21, the world will not cease to exist, says a Mayan elder. "There is a lot of information of what is going to happen on that date. The scholars say that the Mayan calendar ends, the world ends. But we, as Mayans, don't know anything about that," Elder Miguel Angel Chiquin said speaking through a Spanish translator Monday night at Colorado State University-Pueblo. "The great teachings that our ancestors have left us over the centuries, the 21st of December, we will be moving over...

Climate

 Forget evolution, climate science is the most controversial subject in school

· 03/13/2012 6:16:57 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Ernest_at_the_Beach ·
· 11 replies ·
· Hot Air ·
· posted at 8:20 pm on March 12, 2012 ·
· Tina Korbe ·

Little by little, the federal Department of Education appropriates ever more power for itself. (Never mind that the department might very well be unconstitutional in the first place.) Today, most public schools are dependent one way or another on federal funds. Those funds don't come without strings -- and, under the Obama administration, bureaucrats have tightened those strings considerably. Through the Race to the Top competition, the Ed Department enticed states with reward funds to adopt national standards. (Some state leaders -- like Texas Gov. Rick Perry -- turned down the funding, but they were the exceptions.) The common core...

Underwater Archaeology

 Full Titanic Wreck Site is Mapped for First Time

· 03/09/2012 7:19:18 AM PST ·
· Posted by the OlLine Rebel ·
· 43 replies ·
· FoxNews.com ·
· March 9, 2012 ·
· AP ·

SOUTH PORTLAND, Maine -- Researchers have pieced together what's believed to be the first comprehensive map of the entire 3-mile-by-5-mile Titanic debris field and hope it will provide new clues about what exactly happened the night 100 years ago when the superliner hit an iceberg, plunged to the bottom of the North Atlantic and became a legend.

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany

 First Charles Dickens Film Found 111 Years After it Was Made (First Dickens Film)

· 03/12/2012 6:56:23 PM PDT ·
· Posted by nickcarraway ·
· 9 replies ·
· The Telegraph ·
· 09 Mar 2012 ·
· Florence Waters ·

The earliest surviving Charles Dickens film has been found in the BFI's archive after sitting on a shelf for more than 50 years.The Death of Poor Joe, a one minute-long silent film based on an episode in Dickens' novel 'Bleak House', was filmed in Brighton in 1901. It is thought to be the work of the pioneering Brighton filmmaker G.A. Smith, a view that is backed up by the his wife's appearance in it. Smith was married to the stage actress Laura Bayley, who appeared in many of his films and plays the role of the young boy 'Jo' in...

end of digest #400 20120317


1,387 posted on 03/17/2012 9:35:14 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1385 | View Replies]

To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #400 · v 8 · n 36
Saturday, March 17, 2012
 
38 topics
2860472 to 645191
807 members
view this issue

Freeper Profiles


 Antiquity Journal
 & archive
 Archaeologica
 Archaeology
 Archaeology Channel
 BAR
 Bronze Age Forum
 Discover
 Dogpile
 Eurekalert
 Google
 LiveScience
 Mirabilis.ca
 Nat Geographic
 PhysOrg
 Science Daily
 Science News
 Texas AM
 Yahoo
This issue #400 -- four hundred?!? -- has 38 topics. It was a slow week, but I had some extra time to dink around, so I added some the past few days, including some formerly ignored ones from the FRchives. My thanks again ring out to the FReepers who contributed to our fine collection of topics, and my apologies for any I've missed. I do indeed appreciate the help. GGG has always been a group effort, and has been successful as a consequence.
· view this issue ·
Stuff that doesn't necessarily make it to GGG here on FR sometimes gets shared here, that's my story and I'm sticking with it:
 
· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic ·


1,388 posted on 03/17/2012 9:37:50 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1387 | View Replies]



This week's topic links, order added, newest to oldest:

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #401
Saturday, March 24, 2012

Darwin, Lose or Draw

 FAU student threatens to kill professor and classmates

· 03/21/2012 8:51:30 PM PDT ·
· Posted by tpmintx ·
· 59 replies ·
· Florida Atlantic U ·
· University Press ·
· March 20, 2012 ·
· Rachel Chapnick ·

Associate Professor Stephen M. Kajiura was reviewing with his evolution class in GS 120 for a midterm when FAU student Jonatha Carr interrupted him: "How does evolution kill black people?" she asked. Kajiura attempted to explain that evolution doesn't kill anyone. And then, Carr became violent.


 "I Will Kill The F*** Out Of You" - Student's death threats in evolution class

· 03/22/2012 5:14:31 AM PDT ·
· Posted by MindBender26 ·
· 68 replies ·
· Daily Mail (UK) ·

A Florida student was Tased and taken to hospital after issuing death threats during a foul-mouthed rant in the middle of a class on evolution. Jonatha Carr repeatedly asked her professor, 'How does evolution kill black people?', and was unsatisfied by his response that evolution does not 'kill' people. She then apparently lost her temper, screaming obscenities and assaulting other students and staff, before being dragged out and taken away by police. The outburst was caught on camera by a number of students, who posted the footage online on sites such as YouTube and Facebook.

Let's Have Jerusalem

 Two cleared of faking Jesus-era box

· 03/15/2012 3:52:46 AM PDT ·
· Posted by nuconvert ·
· 6 replies ·
· Telegraph ·

Seven years of trial, evidence from dozens of experts and a 475-page verdict has come no nearer to discovering whether the purported burial box of Jesus' brother James is authentic or a fake. A Jerusalem judge, citing reasonable doubt, acquitted Israeli collector Oded Golan, who was charged with forging the inscription on the box once hailed as the first physical link to Christ.

Roman Empire

 Hoard of 30,000 silver Roman coins discovered in Bath

· 03/22/2012 6:37:19 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Engraved-on-His-hands ·
· 25 replies ·
· The Telegraph [UK] ·
· March 22, 2012 ·
· Andrew Hough ·

More than 30,000 silver coins have been found by archaeologists working at the site of a new city-centre hotel. The hoard, believed to date from the third-century, was unearthed about 450 feet from the historic Roman Baths. Experts believe the "treasure trove" is the fifth largest hoard ever discovered in Britain and the largest from a Roman settlement. The coins, which have now been sent to the British Museum for further analysis, are fused together in a large block. This makes identification and counting difficult and conservators at central London Museum expect the task of analysing the coins to take...

Longer Perspectives

 History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire [ch. VII, last 2 paragraphs]

· 03/13/2012 10:06:07 AM PDT ·
· Posted by matt1234 ·
· 17 replies ·
· History of the Decline and
  Fall of the Roman Empire ·
· 1776 ·
· Edward Gibbon ·

Since Romulus, with a small band of shepherds and outlaws, fortified himself on the hills near the Tyber, ten centuries had already elapsed. During the four first ages, the Romans, in the laborious school of poverty, had acquired the virtues of war and government: by the vigorous exertion of those virtues, and by the assistance of fortune, they had obtained, in the course of the three succeeding centuries, an absolute empire over many countries of Europe, Asia, and Africa. The last three hundred years had been consumed in apparent prosperity and internal decline. The nation of soldiers, magistrates, and legislators,...


 Anatomy of a Debt Crisis

· 03/18/2012 9:36:57 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Razzz42 ·
· 10 replies ·
· Armstrong Economics ·
· March 18, 2012 ·
· Martin Armstrong ·

"...I have hinted at in previous writings that the only politician in history who has ever in fact understood the nature of a Debt Crisis and came up with practical solutions, was Julius Caesar (100-44 BC). Nevertheless, there was intense political corruption, and those who have been mistakenly hailed as hero's against tyranny such as Marcus Porcius Cato (or Cato the Younger) (95-46 BC) and Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC) have taken credit that they do not deserve and have confused countless generations attempting to present Caesar as a dictator lusting for personal power. To set the record straight, a...

Ancient Autopsies

 Ice Age Death Trap

· 03/18/2012 10:06:11 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 21 replies ·
· PBS ·
· Aired February 1, 2012 ·
· NOVA / WGBH ·

Scientists race to uncover a site in the Rockies packed with fossil mammoths and other extinct ice age beasts... In the Rocky Mountains, archeologists uncover a unique fossil site packed with astonishingly well-preserved bones of mammoths, mastodons, and other giant extinct beasts. The discovery opens a highly focused window on the vanished world of the Ice Age in North America... They're finding thousands of bones of many different types, but most of them are mastodon, ancient elephants. In the depths of the Ice Age, entire families of these mighty beasts came down to this ancient lake to graze. And their...

Epigraphy & Language

 The writing on the wall: Symbols from the Palaeolithic

· 03/22/2012 5:23:51 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 6 replies ·
· Past Horizons ·
· 3-12-2012 ·

In 2009, a ground-breaking study by Genevieve von Petzinger revealed that dots, lines and other geometric signs found in prehistoric European caves may be the precursor to an ancient system of written communication dating back nearly 30,000 years. Von Petzinger, with University of Victoria anthropology professor April Nowell, compiled the markings from 146 different sites in Ice Age France, making it possible to compare the signs on a larger scale than had ever previously been attempted. What made her research "new' was that she was able to use a whole range of modern technology to compare inventories and digital images...


 Remarkable Russian Petroglyphs

· 03/22/2012 5:41:26 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 29 replies ·
· Past Horizons ·
· 3-18-2012 ·
· Hanne Jakobsen ·

Artefacts are usually displayed in museums but sometimes there are some that just can't be put on exhibition -- as is the case with one that is hidden deep in the Russian forests. It was known that there were rock carvings on some islands in Lake Kanozero, and Jan Magne Gjerde, project manager at the Tromsø University Museum, went out there to document them as part of his doctoral work however, when he and his colleagues had completed their work, the number of known petroglyphs had risen from 200 to over 1,000. "I still get chills up my spine when...

Australia & the Pacific

 Madagascar Founded By Women[Indonesian]

· 03/23/2012 7:46:23 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Theoria ·
· 13 replies ·
· Discovery News ·
· 20 Mar 2012 ·
· Jennifer Viegas ·

Madagascar was first settled and founded by approximately 30 women, mostly of Indonesian descent, who may have sailed off course in a wayward vessel 1200 years ago. The discovery negates a prior theory that a large, planned settlement process took place on the island of Madagascar, located off the east coast of Africa. Traditionally it was thought to have been settled by Indonesian traders moving along the coasts of the Indian Ocean. Most native Madagascar people today, called Malagasy, can trace their ancestry back to the founding 30 mothers, according to an extensive new DNA study published in the latest...

Helix, Make Mine a Double

 Genetic Studies of Modern Populations Show Varying Neandertal Ancestry

· 03/20/2012 4:55:36 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 82 replies ·
· Popular Archaeology ·
· 3-12-2012 ·

The complex world of human genetics research speaks a language unfamiliar to most of us, but it has opened up a new window on our understanding of the dynamics of ancient populations; and few areas of research have been more tantalizing than that surrounding the questions of how modern humans are related to the Neandertals, an ancient species of human whose morphology or physical characteristics disappeared from the human fossil record roughly 30,000 years ago. The most recent studies have provided evidence about when the Neandertal (Homo neandertalensis) and modern human populations (Homo sapiens) first diverged from a common ancestral...

Biology & Cryptobiology

 Cougars reported at University of Michigan

· 03/23/2012 4:34:28 PM PDT ·
· Posted by JoeProBono ·
· 25 replies ·
· upi ·
· March. 23, 2012 ·

ANN ARBOR, Mich., -- Police at the University of Michigan said officers were unable to find any trace of a pair of suspected cougars reported near campus. University police said a caller around 8:30 a.m. Thursday reported spotting a tan cougar near the North Campus along Hubbard Road and responding officers were unable to find tracks or any other sign of the animal, The Detroit News reported Friday. Police said a second caller around 3:30 p.m. reported a black cougar-like animal in the same area, but officers were again unable to find any trace of the reported feline. "The likelihood...

PreColumbian, Clovis & PreClovis

 Butchered sloth bone lends more evidence to early North American settlement

· 03/23/2012 2:43:22 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Theoria ·
· 22 replies ·
· Montreal Gazette ·
· 20 Mar 2012 ·
· Randy Boswell ·

A Canadian scientist's analysis of ancient animal remains found in Ohio -- including the leg bone of an extinct giant sloth believed to have been butchered by an Ice Age hunter more than 13,000 years ago -- has added weight to a once-controversial argument that humans arrived in North America thousands of years earlier than previously believed. The discovery of what appear to be dozens of cut marks on the femur of a gargantuan, 1,300-kilogram Jefferson's ground sloth is being hailed as the earliest trace of a human presence in the Great Lakes state. But the find also represents a...

Dinosaurs

 New toothed flying reptile found from the Early Creataceous of Western Liaoning, China

· 03/23/2012 11:16:20 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Red Badger ·
· 10 replies ·
· www.physorg.com ·
· 03-23-2012 ·
· Inst of Vertebrae Paleontology
  and Paleoanthropology ·

Although paleontologists have greatly increase the pterosaur diversity in the last decades, particularly due to discoveries made in western Liaoning, China, very little is known regarding pterosaur biogeography. An international team led by Dr. WANG Xiaolin, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, described a new pterosaur, Guidraco venator gen. et sp. nov., from the Early Creataceous Jiufotang Formation, western Lianing, China, adding significantly to our knowledge of pterosaur distribution and enhancing the diversity of cranial anatomy found in those volant creatures, researchers report in the April 2012 issue of the journal of Naturwissenschaften. The specimen, skull...

Paleontology

 Monster Titanoboa Snake Invades New York (43' Prehistoric Snake Weighed 2,500 lbs.)

· 03/21/2012 7:13:29 PM PDT ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 25 replies ·
· Yahoo! News ·
· March 21, 2012 ·
· Claudine Zap ·

Monster titanoboa snake invades New York New York commuters arriving at Grand Central Station were greeted by a monstrous sight: a 48-foot-long, 2,500-pound titanoboa snake. The good news: It's not alive. Anymore. But the full-scale replica of the reptile -- which made its first appearance at the commuter hub -- is intended, as Smithsonian spokesperson Randall Kremer happily admitted, to "scare the daylights out of people" -- actually has a higher calling: to "communicate science to a lot of people." The scientifically scary-accurate model will go a long way toward that: If this snake slithered by you, it would be...

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany

 Rare pipe organ may be dismantled for parts

· 03/18/2012 5:44:57 PM PDT ·
· Posted by iowamark ·
· 27 replies ·
· Mason City Globe-Gazette ·
· March 13, 2012 ·
· Deb Nicklay ·

A rare pipe organ, manufactured in Mason City over 100 years ago, may soon have its "glorious sound" forever silenced. An effort conducted over the past two years to sell the instrument -- the price today is $1 -- has failed, said the Rev. Martha Rogers of Christ Episcopal Church in Cedar Rapids, where the organ is housed. "We certainly want to see it preserved," Rogers said. "It's playable; it's been maintained. "But unless someone comes forward in the next couple of weeks or so, the organ will be dismantled and sold for parts." The instrument is only one of...

World War Eleven

 US reportedly to search again for Amelia Earhart's plane

· 03/19/2012 6:43:25 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Free ThinkerNY ·
· 86 replies ·
· msnbc.com ·
· March 19, 2012 ·
· msnbc.com staff ·

The State Department plans to join a new effort to find the plane of pioneering aviator Amelia Earhart, 75 years after she mysteriously disappeared over the South Pacific. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood will take part in a ceremony Tuesday morning announcing the joint public-private search at the State Department, The Wall Street Journal reports. The event, "Amelia Earhart, a Pacific Legacy," which is pitched as a celebration of the U.S.'s pan-Pacific ties, will be streamed live at 9 a.m. on the State Department's website, a spokesman for the agency said. Earhart's twin-engine Lockheed...

Underwater Archaeology

 How an 1870s Marine Expedition Changed Oceanography and Drove Eight Sailors Insane

· 03/21/2012 12:24:10 PM PDT ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 13 replies ·
· IO9 ·
· Esther Inglis-Arkell ·

How an 1870s marine expedition changed oceanography and drove eight sailors insane When was the first voyage of the Challenger? No, not the Space Shuttle -- the original Challenger, a sea ship that sailed in 1872. The HMS Challenger traversed the world's oceans for four years, drove some of its sailors completely insane, caused about a quarter of the crew to jump ship, and forever changed the face of ocean science. Is there a way to scroll past the nature channels without seeing one that describes the richness of the ocean and the life that teems in its depth? In...

end of digest #401 20120324


1,389 posted on 03/23/2012 10:23:59 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1387 | View Replies]

To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #401 · v 8 · n 37
Saturday, March 24, 2012
 
18 topics
2862266 to 2860863
809 members
view this issue

Freeper Profiles


 Antiquity Journal
 & archive
 Archaeologica
 Archaeology
 Archaeology Channel
 BAR
 Bronze Age Forum
 Discover
 Dogpile
 Eurekalert
 Google
 LiveScience
 Mirabilis.ca
 Nat Geographic
 PhysOrg
 Science Daily
 Science News
 Texas AM
 Yahoo
Issue #401 18 topics, okay, a little slow. Many thanks go to topic contributors, because I mostly sat on my big behind and/or was swamped with real life stuff.
· view this issue ·
Stuff that doesn't necessarily make it to GGG here on FR sometimes gets shared here, that's my story and I'm sticking with it: Have a great weekend, and spring greetings to all.
  • "The secret of Happiness is Freedom, and the secret of Freedom, Courage." -- Thucydides [Voice in your head, in a tagline]
 
· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic ·


1,390 posted on 03/23/2012 10:26:23 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1389 | View Replies]

To: SunkenCiv

Love that Thucydides quote. Adding it to my quote journal.

Cheers!


1,391 posted on 03/24/2012 7:02:37 AM PDT by TheConservativeParty ("Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God." T. Jefferson (I AM ANDREW BREITBART))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1390 | View Replies]



This week's topic links, order added, newest to oldest:

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #402
Saturday, March 31, 2012

Prehistory & Origins

 Ancient Foot Suggests How Man Gave Up Treehouses

· 03/31/2012 11:33:41 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 10 replies ·
· LiveScience ·
· Wednesday, March 28, 2012 ·
· Charles Choi ·

Ancient foot bones from a recently discovered pre-human species, which had opposable big toes like a gorilla's, could shed light on how the ancestors of humanity came to walk upright, researchers say. Humans dominate the planet partly because walking upright frees their hands for tool use. Among the earliest known relatives of humanity to walk upright was Australopithecus afarensis, the species including the famed "Lucy." This hominin is a leading candidate for direct ancestor of the human lineage, living about 2.9 million to 3.8 million years ago in East Africa. Although Lucy and her kin were bipedal, there is debate...

Homo Erectus

 Report from Former U.S. Marine Hints at Whereabouts of Long-Lost Peking Man Fossils

· 03/29/2012 9:18:28 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 9 replies ·
· Scientific American 'blogs ·
· March 22, 2012 ·
· Kate Wong ·

In the 1930s archaeologists working at the site of Zhoukoudian near Beijing recovered an incredible trove of partial skulls and other bones representing some 40 individuals that would eventually be assigned to the early human species Homo erectus. The bones, which recent estimates put at around 770,000 years old, constitute the largest collection of H. erectus fossils ever found. They were China's paleoanthropological pride and joy. And then they vanished. According to historical accounts, in 1941 the most important fossils in the collection were packed in large wooden footlockers or crates to be turned over to the U.S. military for...

Agriculture & Animal Husbandry

 From foraging to farming: the 10,000-year revolution

· 03/29/2012 4:46:05 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 8 replies ·
· PhysOrg ·
· March 26, 2012 ·
· U of Cambridge ·

The moment when the hunter-gatherers laid down their spears and began farming around 11,000 years ago is often interpreted as one of the most rapid and significant transitions in human history --- the 'Neolithic Revolution'. By producing and storing food, Homo sapiens both mastered the natural world and took the first significant steps towards thousands of years of runaway technological development. The advent of specialist craftsmen, an increase in fertility and the construction of permanent architecture are just some of the profound changes that followed. Of course, the transition to agriculture was far from rapid. The period around 14,500 years...


 Papua New Guineans Among World's First Farmers

· 06/20/2003 8:09:05 AM PDT ·
· Posted by blam ·
· 15 replies ·
· 291+ views ·
· News In Science ·
· 6-20-2003 ·

Papua New Guineans among world's first farmers Friday, 20 June 2003 Papua New Guinea's highlands are one of the places where farming first began (Pic: ANU) Papua New Guinea's highlands was one of the cradles of farming, where some of the world's staple food plants were first domesticated, researchers have confirmed. The region now joins five others as a core area in which the agricultural revolution - the world's most dominant landuse - had its origins, report a team led by archaeologist Dr Tim Denham of Adelaide's Flinders University in today's issue of the journal Science. "Until recently, the evidence...

Central Asia

 [From 1995] A Stone-Age Horse Still Roams a Tibetan Plateau

· 03/30/2012 7:17:50 PM PDT ·
· Posted by BenLurkin ·
· 25 replies ·
· New York Times ·
· November 12, 1995 ·
· Marlise Simons ·

Deep in Tibet... the explorers came upon the first of the enigmatic creatures. They saw one, and then three of them grazing in the open forest. Soon, to their astonishment, a whole herd of the unusual horses appeared. "They looked completely archaic, like the horses in prehistoric cave paintings," said Michel Peissel, a French ethnologist and the expedition leader. "We thought it was just a freak, then we saw they were all alike." A team of French and British explorers, who have just returned here from a six-week expedition in Tibet, say they believe that they found an ancient breed...

Near East

 Spotting ancient sites, from space

· 03/28/2012 2:59:44 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 17 replies ·
· Eurekalert! ·
· Monday, March 19, 2012 ·
· Peter Reuell, Harvard ·

A Harvard archaeologist has dramatically simplified the process of finding early human settlements by using computers to scour satellite images for the tell-tale clues of human habitation, and in the process uncovered thousands of new sites that might reveal clues to the earliest complex human societies. As described in a paper published March 19 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Jason Ur, the John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences, worked with Bjoern Menze, a research affiliate in MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory to develop a system that identified settlements based on a...

Egypt

 Six Old Kingdom tombs to be opened at Giza Plateau

· 03/27/2012 3:54:25 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 5 replies ·
· el-Ahram ·
· Sunday 18 Mar 2012 ·
· Nevine El-Aref ·

The first one belongs to Princess Mersankh, the granddaughter of King Khufu. This tomb was originally built for her mother, Queen Hetepheres II, but on Mersankh's sudden death the tomb was donated to her. The tomb was discovered in 1927 by archaeologist George Reisner where a black granite sarcophagus was found along with a set of Canopic jars, and a limestone statue depicting Queen Hetepheres II embracing her daughter. The sarcophagus is now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo while the statue is in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. The second tomb belongs to Seshem-Nefer, the overseer of...

Scotland Yet

 Skye cave find western Europe's 'earliest string instrument'

· 03/31/2012 10:44:01 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 13 replies ·
· BBC News ·
· Saturday, March 31, 2012 ·
· unattributed ·

Archaeologists believe they have uncovered the remains of the earliest stringed instrument to be found so far in western Europe. The small burnt and broken piece of carved piece of wood was found during an excavation in a cave on Skye. Archaeologists said it was likely to be part of the bridge of a lyre dating to more than 2,300 years ago. Music archaeologist Dr Graeme Lawson said the discovery marked a "step change" in music history... The remains, which were unveiled in Edinburgh, were found in High Pasture Cave, where Bronze and Iron Age finds have been made previously......

Climate

 Medieval warming WAS global -- new science contradicts IPCC

· 03/24/2012 3:17:13 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Salman ·
· 53 replies ·
· 4+ views ·
· The Register ·
· 23rd March 2012 ·
· Lewis Page ·

More peer-reviewed science contradicting the warming-alarmist "scientific consensus" was announced yesterday, as a new study shows that the well-documented warm period which took place in medieval times was not limited to Europe, or the northern hemisphere: it reached all the way to Antarctica. The research involved the development of a new means of assessing past temperatures, to add to existing methods such as tree ring analysis and ice cores. In this study, scientists analysed samples of a crystal called ikaite, which forms in cold waters. "Ikaite is an icy version of limestone," explains earth-sciences prof Zunli Lu. "The crystals are...

Ancient Autopsies

 Cross and Bed Found in Anglo-Saxon Grave Shed New Light on 'Dark Ages'

· 03/29/2012 12:14:19 PM PDT ·
· Posted by marshmallow ·
· 11 replies ·
· The Guardian (UK) ·
· 3/15/12 ·
· Maev Kennedy ·

Archaeologists in Cambridge thrilled to discover grave with body of young woman on a bed with an ornate gold crossThe dead are often described as sleeping, but archaeologists in Cambridgeshire have uncovered a bed on which the body of a young Anglo-Saxon woman has lain for more than 1,300 years, a regal gold and garnet cross on her breast. Three more graves, of two younger women and an older person whose sex has not yet been identified, were found nearby. Forensic work on the first woman's bones suggests she was about 16, with no obvious explanation for her early death....

Middle Ages & Renaissance

 Building a Monastery the Medieval Way

· 03/29/2012 7:06:27 AM PDT ·
· Posted by marshmallow ·
· 22 replies ·
· Der Spiegel Online ·
· 3/21/12 ·
· Angelika Franz ·

Historians, architects, archaeologists and volunteers in Germany are teaming up to build a medieval monastery the old-fashioned way. Working conditions will be strictly 9th-century, without machines, rain jackets or even coffee. It will take decades, but they hope to garner fresh insights into everyday life in the 800s.What did a medieval stonemason do when heavy rainfall interrupted his work? Umbrellas are impractical at construction sites. Gore-Tex jackets weren't yet invented, nor were plastic rain jackets. "He donned a jacket made of felted loden cloth," says Bert Geurten, the man who plans to build an authentic monastery town the old-fashioned way....

Early America

 America's First Christmas 1539, Tallahassee, Florida

· 03/29/2012 2:30:01 PM PDT ·
· Posted by First Christmas ·
· 3 replies ·
· Americasfirstchristmas.com ·
· 03/29/2012 ·
· Bert Pope ·

The sixteenth century Spaniard, Hernando de Soto, is remembered by historians for his exploration of the southeastern United States, which began in Florida. A former mercenary soldier in the conquest of Central and South America, he hoped to increase his notoriety and fortune by leading an expedition through parts of North America. In the end, De Soto's army spent over four years and covered 4,000 miles in its quest for gold and new territory to colonize. Neither resulted from his efforts. With approval from the Spanish Crown, De Soto assembled his expedition. He financed the endeavor himself with the understanding...

Biology & Cryptobiology

 Bizarre "King of Wasps" Found in Indonesia

· 03/27/2012 4:29:43 PM PDT ·
· Posted by nickcarraway ·
· 39 replies ·
· National Geographic ·
· March 27, 2012 ·
· Dan Mosher ·

Males of new species have long, sickle-shaped jaws -- A new species of giant, venomous wasp has been found on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi (map), scientists say. The two-inch-long (five-centimeter-long) black insects are shrouded in mystery --- all of the wasp specimens caught so far have been dead. "I'm not certain any researcher has ever seen one alive, but they are very bizarre-looking," said study co-author Lynn Kimsey, an entomologist at the University of California, Davis, who co-discovered the insect. "It's the extreme version of the [larrine wasp] subfamily they belong to." Larrine wasps typically dig nests for their eggs and larvae in...

Africa

 Elusive long-fingered frog found after 62 years

· 03/27/2012 12:18:39 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Red Badger ·
· 21 replies ·
· PhysOrg ·
· 03-27-2012 ·
· California Academy of Sciences ·

Herpetologists from the California Academy of Sciences and University of Texas at El Paso discovered a single specimen of the Bururi long-fingered frog (Cardioglossa cyaneospila) during a research expedition to Burundi in December 2011. The frog was last seen by scientists in 1949 and was feared to be extinct after decades of turmoil in the tiny East African nation. For biologists studying the evolution and distribution of life in Africa, Burundi sits at an intriguing geographic crossroads since it borders the vast Congo River Basin, the Great Rift Valley, and the world's second largest freshwater lake, Lake Tanganyika. Many of...

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany

 1940 Census Records to be release April 2, 2012

· 03/31/2012 3:24:19 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SMGFan ·
· 7 replies ·
· National Archives ·
· April 2, 2012 ·

The 1940 census will be released online on April 2, 2012. Please bookmark this page: 1940census.archives.gov. This is where you will be able to access the digitized census records starting on April 2. The digital images will be accessible free of charge at NARA facilities nationwide through our public access computers as well as on personal computers via the internet. Part 1: General Information FAQs about the 1940 Census 1940 Census Forms Questions Asked on the 1940 Census Selected List of Codes 1940 Census Lectures by NARA staff nationwide Part 2: How to Start Your 1940 Census Research

end of digest #402 20120331


1,392 posted on 03/31/2012 8:53:16 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1389 | View Replies]

To: TheConservativeParty

Thanks, my pleasure.


1,393 posted on 03/31/2012 8:54:07 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1391 | View Replies]

To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #402 · v 8 · n 38
Saturday, March 31, 2012
 
15 topics
2866429 to 2863398
810 members
view this issue

Freeper Profiles


 Antiquity Journal
 & archive
 Archaeologica
 Archaeology
 Archaeology Channel
 BAR
 Bronze Age Forum
 Discover
 Dogpile
 Eurekalert
 Google
 LiveScience
 Mirabilis.ca
 Nat Geographic
 PhysOrg
 Science Daily
 Science News
 Texas AM
 Yahoo
It's the 15 topic issue #402. Many thanks go to topic contributors, including those of yesteryear, and those who were unsuspectingly draw into the draGGGnet.
· view this issue ·
Stuff that doesn't necessarily make it to GGG here on FR sometimes gets shared here, that's my story and I'm sticking with it: It was nice to kick back and ass around all day. A big thank you to FreeRepublic for making that possible.
  • "Good intentions will always be pleaded for every assumption of authority. It is hardly too strong to say that the Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions. There are men in all ages who mean to govern well, but they mean to govern. They promise to be good masters, but they mean to be masters." -- Daniel Webster (1782-1852) [cited by rmlew in the topic First lady: Anti-obesity effort not about government telling 'people what to do']
 
· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic ·


1,394 posted on 03/31/2012 10:24:23 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1392 | View Replies]



This week's topic links, order added, newest to oldest:

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #403
Saturday, April 7, 2012

Ancient Autopsies

 Preserved in the ice for 10,000 years:
  Ginger-haired baby mammoth shows signs of death struggle


· 04/04/2012 2:45:19 PM PDT ·
· Posted by C19fan ·
· 29 replies ·
· UK Daily Mail ·
· April 4, 2012 ·
· Rob Waugh ·

A ginger-haired mammoth baby found in Siberia could have been snatched by hungry human hunters from the jaws of a lion 10,000 years ago. The body of the beast - the first ever found with its distinctive 'strawberry blonde' hair - has been described as being of 'huge' significance. It's could be evidence that ancient humans attacked and fed on mammoths in Siberia, with the body of 'Yuka' showing wounds consistent with an attack by lions AND people.


 Young Mammoth Likely Butchered by Humans

· 04/04/2012 3:32:01 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 16 replies ·
· Discovery News ·
· 4-4-2012 ·
· Jennifer Viegas ·

A juvenile mammoth, nicknamed "Yuka," was found entombed in Siberian ice near the shores of the Arctic Ocean and shows signs of being cut open by ancient people. The remarkably well preserved frozen carcass was discovered in Siberia as part of a BBC/Discovery Channel-funded expedition and is believed to be at least 10,000 years old, if not older. If further study confirms the preliminary findings, it would be the first mammoth carcass revealing signs of human interaction in the region. The carcass is in such good shape that much of its flesh is still intact, retaining its pink color. The...


 Well preserved mammoth from Siberia shows signs of early man stealing from lions

· 04/05/2012 7:24:06 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Red Badger ·
· 21 replies ·
· http://www.physorg.com ·
· 04-05-2012 ·
· Bob Yirka ·

An exceedingly well preserved juvenile mammoth carcass has been found in Siberia near the Arctic Ocean and it shows signs of having been attacked by a cave lion and then partially butchered by humans. Dubbed Yuka by the Mammuthus organization, which is studying the remains, the six foot long creature was believed to have been a year and a half to perhaps three or four years old at the time of its death. The mammoth was found by tusk hunters in Northern Siberia, who then turned it over to scientists with the Mammuthus organization. The BBC and Discovery have been...


 Perfectly Preserved Woolly Mammoth Discovered in Siberia

· 04/05/2012 10:22:55 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Free ThinkerNY ·
· 8 replies ·
· Yahoo! News ·
· April 5, 2012 ·
· Melissa Knowles ·

Scientists in search of ancient tusks made a startling discovery. They uncovered the nearly perfectly preserved remains of a woolly mammoth in northern Siberia. The juvenile mammoth is believed to be more than 10,000 years old, but was only 3 to 4 years old when it died. It is unlike any other mammoth that has been unearthed before. The scientists reveal their discovery, which they named "Yuka," in a BBC documentary. Yuka has strawberry blond hair, unlike the dark hair that other mammoths have been found to have. Plus, Yuka's footpads are incredibly well preserved, but some of his bones...

Astronomy & Catastrophism

 Clovis Comet Gets Second Look

· 04/06/2012 9:21:52 AM PDT ·
· Posted by baynut ·
· 16 replies ·
· Wall Street Journal ·
· March 16, 2012 ·
· Matt Ridley ·

Scientists, it's said, behave more like lawyers than philosophers. They do not so much test their theories as prosecute their cases, seeking supportive evidence and ignoring data that do not fit --- a failing known as confirmation bias. They then accuse their opponents of doing the same thing. This is what makes debates over nature and nurture, dietary fat and climate change so polarized. But just because the prosecutor is biased in favor of his case does not mean the defendant is innocent. Sometimes biased advocates are right. An example of this phenomenon is now being played out in geology over the...

Archaeoastronomy & Megaliths

 Researchers Say Gardom's Edge Monolith Is Astronomical Marker (Dates Back To 2000 B.C.)

· 04/03/2012 9:11:24 PM PDT ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 13 replies ·
· Sci-News.com ·
· Thu, Mar 29th, 2012 ·
· John Shanks ·

Researchers Say Gardom's Edge Monolith Is Astronomical Marker A team of researchers from the Nottingham Trent University has suggested that a 4000-year-old unique triangular shaped monolith, known as the Gardom's Edge monolith, was aligned to be an astronomical marker. The 2.2 meter high monolith, located in the Peak District National Park near Manchester, UK, has a striking, right-angled triangular shape that slants up towards geographic south. The orientation and inclination of the slope is aligned to the altitude of the Sun at mid-summer. The team believes that the monolith was set in place to give symbolic meaning to the location...

Helix, Make Mine a Double

 DNA analysis shakes up Neandertal theories

· 04/06/2012 10:21:33 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 29 replies ·
· Binghamton.edu ·
· April 4, 2012 ·
· Gail Glover ·

Focusing on mitochondrial DNA sequences from 13 Neandertal individuals, including a new sequence from the site of Valdegoba cave in northern Spain, the research team found some surprising results. When they started looking at the DNA, a clear pattern emerged. Neandertal individuals from Western Europe that were older than 50,000 years and individuals from sites in western Asia and the Middle East showed a high degree of genetic variation, on par with what might be expected from a species that had been abundant in an area for a long period of time. In fact, the amount of genetic variation was...

Agriculture & Animal Husbandry

 Ancient Egyptian Cotton Unveils Secrets of Domesticated Crop Evolution

· 04/07/2012 8:24:26 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 8 replies ·
· Science Daily ·
· ·

Scientists studying 1,600-year-old cotton from the banks of the Nile have found what they believe is the first evidence that punctuated evolution has occurred in a major crop group within the relatively short history of plant domestication. The findings offer an insight into the dynamics of agriculture in the ancient world and could also help today's domestic crops face challenges such as climate change and water scarcity. The researchers, led by Dr Robin Allaby from the School of Life Sciences at the University of Warwick, examined the remains of ancient cotton at Qasr Ibrim in Egypt's Upper Nile using high...

Prehistory & Origins

 Human ancestors used fire one million years ago, archaeologist find

· 04/02/2012 2:43:04 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Red Badger ·
· 54 replies ·
· www.physorg.com ·
· 04-02-2012 ·
· Provided by University of Toronto ·

An international team led by the University of Toronto and Hebrew University has identified the earliest known evidence of the use of fire by human ancestors. Microscopic traces of wood ash, alongside animal bones and stone tools, were found in a layer dated to one million years ago at the Wonderwerk Cave in South Africa. "The analysis pushes the timing for the human use of fire back by 300,000 years, suggesting that human ancestors as early as Homo erectus may have begun using fire as part of their way of life," said U of T anthropologist Michael Chazan, co-director of...

Diet & Cuisine

 Unicorn Cookbook Found at the British Library

· 04/01/2012 5:12:33 AM PDT ·
· Posted by MÈabh ·
· 59 replies ·
· The British Library ·
· 01 April 2012 ·
· The British Library ·

A long-lost medieval cookbook, containing recipes for hedgehogs, blackbirds and even unicorns, has been discovered at the British Library. Professor Brian Trump of the British Medieval Cookbook Project described the find as near-miraculous. "We've been hunting for this book for years. The moment I first set my eyes on it was spine-tingling."

Central Asia

 Unearthed cities in Southern Siberia could rewrite Aryan history

· 10/04/2010 7:10:56 PM PDT ·
· Posted by James C. Bennett ·
· 26 replies ·
· 1+ views ·
· Sify News ·
· Sify News ·

A new study has suggested that recently unearthed cities in Southern Siberia could rewrite Aryan history-as they are believed to be the original home of the Aryans. Twenty of the spiral-shaped settlements, believed to be the original home of the Aryan people, have been identified, and there are about 50 more suspected sites. They all lie buried in a region more than 640km long near Russia's border with Kazakhstan. The cities are apparently 3500-4000 years ago and are about the same size as several of the city-states of ancient Greece. If archaeologists confirm the cities as Aryan, they could be...

Egypt

 Archaeologist: Reign of Egyptian Pharaoh Thutmose II Suggests Crisis

· 04/01/2012 8:50:39 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 33 replies ·
· HeritageDaily ·
· March 19, 2012 ·
· Paleontological Research Corporation ·

Harvard University educated archaeologist and president of the Paleontological Research Corporation, Dr. Joel Klenck, states an array of archaeological discoveries evidence a crisis during the reign of the Egyptian Pharaoh Thutmose II... in the Eighteenth Dynasty. An inscription by the succeeding Pharaoh Hatshepsut... in her Underground Temple at Speos Artemidos states that Egypt was "ruined" and "had gone to pieces" before the beginning of her reign. Hatshepsut's inscription also states that a population of "vagabonds" emerged from former Asiatic populations that once controlled northern Egypt and caused this ruination. Hatshepsut notes these vagabonds were responsible for "overthrowing that which had...

Navigation

 Empuries: The Ancient Greek Town of Spain

· 04/07/2012 8:17:56 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 5 replies ·
· EU Greek Reporter ·
· March 29, 2012 ·
· Stella Tsolakidou ·

The most western ancient Greek colony documented in the Mediterranean is revealing its secrets through the development of a Document Centre on Greek trade and presence in Iberia, according to the creators of the Iberia Graeca centre. Empúries, formerly known by its Spanish name Ampurias, was a town on the Mediterranean coast of the Catalan comarca of Alt Empordà in Catalonia, Spain. It was founded in 575 BC by Greek colonists from Phocaea with the name of Emporion, meaning "market". It was later occupied by the Romans, but in the Early Middle Ages, when its exposed coastal position left it...

Roman Empire

 Mixed Martial Arts Celebrity Recruited for Ancient Roman Army

· 04/07/2012 9:49:40 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 2 replies ·
· LiveScience ·
· Thursday, March 29, 2012 ·
· Owen Jarus ·

A newly translated inscription, dating back about 1,800 years, reveals that Oinoanda, a Roman city in southwest Turkey, turned to a mixed martial art champion to recruit for the Roman army and bring the new soldiers to a city named Hierapolis, located hundreds of miles to the east, in Syria. His name was Lucius Septimius Flavianus Flavillianus and he was a champion at wrestling and pankration, the latter a bloody, and at times lethal, mixed martial art where contestants would try to pound each other unconscious or into submission. Flavillianus proved to be so successful as a military recruiter that...

Faith & Philosophy

 Cultural heritage: Takht Bhai offers a glimpse of life under Kanishka {Kushan Empire}

· 04/02/2012 4:33:51 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Cronos ·
· 4 replies ·
· The Tribune ·
· 10 Mar 2012 ·
· Mahwish Qayyam ·

A visit to Takht Bhai offers the chance to explore ruins dating back to the time of Kanishka, a Kushan emperor, famous for his military, political and spiritual feats.Buddhists offered prayers at the site and left statues to mark their gratitude once their wishes had been fulfilled, said Dr Shah Nazar Khan, from the Directorate of Archeology and Museums, K-P, while speaking to The Express Tribune. People visited the place in the final stages of life to meditate.Since the site is situated on top of a hill, it escaped the devastation wrought by successive invasions and is still well preserved,...

Religion of Pieces

 The 'Islamic Art' Hoax

· 04/01/2012 1:35:44 PM PDT ·
· Posted by WPaCon ·
· 86 replies ·
· American Thinker ·
· 4/1/2012 ·
· Jessica Rubin ·

Talking about Islamic art is rather like talking about the art of the Khanates. The Imperial Kingdom of Genghis Khan was the largest contiguous empire on earth. But just because different lands and cultures were conquered by Genghis Khan doesn't mean that there is a significance to grouping their art. The sphere of power of the Muslim Empire stretched from the borders of China and the Indian subcontinent across Central Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, Sicily, and the Iberian Peninsula, and on to the Pyrenees. There needs to be a further rationale for calling art collections from lands conquered...

Dinosaurs

 Dressed to kill: A feathered tyrannosaur is discovered in China

· 04/05/2012 4:39:12 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Renfield ·
· 13 replies ·
· Christian Science Monitor ·
· 4-4-2012 ·
· Pete Spotts ·

It's not often you see a dinosaur with a girth and toothy grimace reminiscent of Tyrannosaurus rex yet covered in a downy winter coat worthy of L.L. Bean. But that's what a team of paleontologists in China reports. They've dubbed their find Yutyrannus huali (beautiful feathered tyrant), a creature that stretched 30 feet from tail-tip to snout and weighed 1.5 tons. It's the largest dinosaur yet to host feather-like features all over its body -- features well preserved on three nearly complete, mostly intact fossil skeletons the team found....


 Warm and fuzzy T. rex? New evidence surprises

· 04/04/2012 12:03:18 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SatinDoll ·
· 36 replies ·
· Xfinity ·
· 04/04/2012 ·
· Alicia Chang ·

LOS ANGELES --- The discovery of a giant meat-eating dinosaur sporting a downy coat has some scientists reimagining the look of Tyrannosaurus rex. With a killer jaw and sharp claws, T. rex has long been depicted in movies and popular culture as having scaly skin. But the discovery of an earlier relative suggests the king of dinosaurs may have had a softer side. The evidence comes from the unearthing of a new tyrannosaur species in northeastern China that lived 60 million years before T. rex. The fossil record preserved remains of fluffy down, making it the largest feathered dinosaur ever...

end of digest #403 20120407


1,395 posted on 04/07/2012 11:00:19 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (FReepathon 2Q time -- https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1392 | View Replies]

To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #403 · v 8 · n 39
Saturday, April 7, 2012
 
18 topics
2866429 to 2863398
809 members
view this issue

Freeper Profiles


 Antiquity Journal
 & archive
 Archaeologica
 Archaeology
 Archaeology Channel
 BAR
 Bronze Age Forum
 Discover
 Dogpile
 Eurekalert
 Google
 LiveScience
 Mirabilis.ca
 Nat Geographic
 PhysOrg
 Science Daily
 Science News
 Texas AM
 Yahoo
It's the 18 topic issue #403. My thanks go to topic contributors, and a thank you from a slacker like me is worth more, believe it. :')
· view this issue ·
Stuff that doesn't necessarily make it to GGG here on FR sometimes gets shared here, that's my story and I'm sticking with it: I'm going to get my big behind off this chair right now (1:42 pm) and worry about this Digest a little later. I've got the dates changed and the new quote pasted in. The raw buffer file has been processed. The rest is easy, just takes a bit of time.
[some time passes]
Okay, it's about a minute after 2, and I'm about to post this. Then, for sure, gettin' off my big behind and getting going right out of the house.
  • "As a rule, dictatorships guarantee safe streets and terror of the doorbell. In democracy the streets may be unsafe after dark, but the most likely visitor in the early hours will be the milkman." -- Adam Michnik [cited by americanophile]
 
· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic ·


1,396 posted on 04/07/2012 11:06:21 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (FReepathon 2Q time -- https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1394 | View Replies]

To: 240B; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; cajungirl; ...

I was tied up Saturday, and I'm konkin' out right now, so I'm posting this now, along with my abject apologies, with the real Digest to follow tomorrow.
1,397 posted on 04/15/2012 8:14:00 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (FReepathon 2Q time -- https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1396 | View Replies]



This week's topic links, order added, newest to oldest:

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #404
Saturday, April 14, 2012

Epidemics, Pandemics, Plagues, the Sniffles

 Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Found In Four Million-Year-Old Cave

· 04/12/2012 5:42:31 PM PDT ·
· Posted by blam ·
· 34 replies ·
· Global Post ·
· 4-12-2012 ·
· Alexander Besant ·

The bacteria, found in the isolated Lechuguilla Cave in New Mexico, over 1300 feet below the earth, may hold the secret to understanding drug resistance. Researchers said they discovered ancient bacteria resistant to both natural and synthetic antibiotics while investigating a 4-million-year-old cave in New Mexico. The finding, may have implications for both the understanding of drug resistance and ways of preventing it. The scientists involved collected 93 strains of bacteria from Lechuguilla cave, approximately 1300 feet deep, and found that all the strains collected were resistant to...

Helix, Make Mine a Double

 Study Says DNA's Power to Predict Illness Is Limited

· 04/07/2012 9:16:19 PM PDT ·
· Posted by neverdem ·
· 16 replies ·
· NY Times ·
· April 2, 2012 ·
· Gina Kolata ·

If every aspect of a person's DNA is known, would it be possible to predict the diseases in that person's future? And could that knowledge be used to forestall the otherwise inevitable? The answer, according to a new study of twins, is, for the most part, "no." While sequencing the entire DNA of individuals is proving fantastically useful in understanding diseases and finding new treatments, it is not a method that will, for the most part, predict a person's medical future. So, the new study concludes, it is not going to be possible to say that, for example, Type 2...

Religion of Pieces

 Moses Was a Muslim Who Led Palestinian Muslims Out of Egypt. No Joke.

· 04/12/2012 5:02:22 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SJackson ·
· 44 replies ·
· Algemeiner ·
· 4-10-12 ·
· David Ha'ivri ·

A few years ago, while visiting the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, I had a very disturbing conversation with a member of the Islamic Wakf who was escorting me to make sure that I didn't pray on the holy mountain. I asked him if he could tell me when the Al Aqsa mosque was built. He looked at me with a straight face and responded that it was always there. I hadn't expected that, and of course was surprised and asked him again. I thought that maybe he didn't understand my question and meant that the mountain was always there. So...

Let's Have Jerusalem

 Jews sued for 'stealing' gold in Exodus

· 08/22/2003 5:35:19 PM PDT ·
· Posted by yhwhsman ·
· 31 replies ·
· 276+ views ·
· WorldNetDaily.com ·
· August 22, 2003 ·
· Joseph Farah ·

Law Of The Land -- Egyptians to seek compensation for 'tons' allegedly taken -- As attorneys and politicians grapple over the validity of slave reparations, a group of Egyptians have trumped the debate with a claim against Jews that dates back thousands of years. Dr. Nabil Hilmi, a dean at the University of Al-Zaqaziq, said Egyptian expatriates in Switzerland are mounting a massive lawsuit against "all Jews around the world" that seeks compensation for "tons" of gold they claim was stolen during the Jews' exodus out...


 In defense of Moses-Egyptians may sue Jews over the Exodus.

· 08/28/2003 5:42:12 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SJackson ·
· 18 replies ·
· 654+ views ·
· Jerusalem Post ·
· 8-28-03 ·
· Moshe Kohn ·

The dean of Al-Zaqaziq University's School of Law, Dr. Nabil Hilmi, and a group of Egyptian expatriates in Switzerland are preparing to sue "all the Jews of the world and the Jews of Israel in particular" for compensation for the wealth the Bible says the Jews "stole" when Moses led them out of Egypt 34 centuries ago (Jerusalem Post, August 22). Hilmi kindly offered to let us pay in installments over 1,000 years with interest, of course. It seems that where it suits Bible-deniers like Muslims who deny that the Jews have a history whose first stages are described in...

PreColumbian, Clovis & PreClovis

 Dig it! Volunteers can sign up to excavate at Topper site

· 04/08/2012 6:08:03 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 24 replies ·
· Times and Democrat ·
· Thursday, April 5, 2012 ·
· Albert Goodyear (probably) ·

The University of South Carolina is accepting registrations from volunteers to help excavate archaeological sites along the Savannah River April 30-June 2. The expedition will be led by archaeologist Albert Goodyear, whose discoveries at the Topper site in Allendale County have captured international media attention. Volunteers will learn excavation techniques and how to identify Clovis and pre-Clovis artifacts in several prehistoric chert quarries. This year, some volunteers may also be involved in the excavation of a nearby Paleoamerican site known as the Charles site. The cost is $488 per week ($400 is tax-deductible) and includes evening lectures and programs, lunch...

The Vikings

 Viking-era 'piggy bank' yields silver treasure

· 04/12/2012 6:07:47 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Engraved-on-His-hands ·
· 7 replies ·
· The Local [Sweden] ·
· April 11, 2012 ·
· David Landes ·

A bronze, Viking-era "piggy-bank" containing thousands silver coins dating from the 11th century has been unearthed on the Baltic island of Gotland in what Swedish archaeologists have described as a "fantastic" treasure find. The silver treasure was found last Thursday during an archaeological examination of a field in Rone, on southern Gotland. "We had an expert out there with a metal detector who got a signal that he's found something pretty big," Per Widerstrˆm, an archaeologist with the Gotland Museum, told The Local. The same field has yielded previous treasure finds, including a well-known discovery from the 1880s, when a...

The Civil War

 Civil War vet to be laid to rest --- 88 years after death

· 04/12/2012 5:33:09 AM PDT ·
· Posted by smokingfrog ·
· 13 replies ·
· koinlocal6.com ·
· 11 April 2012 ·
· Kohr Harlan ·

Portland, Ore. --- A Civil War veteran who died years ago will finally be laid to rest this Friday in Portland. He was the youngest of 13 children, and the last one to die. And so, after he passed away, his remains laid unclaimed for 88 years. Alice Knapp's curiosity about her own family tree led her to Peter Knapp's remains. She still remembers taking possession of the box Peter's remains are in. "It was a gold box --- both he and his wife were placed in this gold box," Alice Knapp said. "It had a ribbon around it and...

Astronomy & Catastrophism

 Coral Links Ice Sheet Collapse to Ancient 'Mega Flood'

· 04/07/2012 12:01:22 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 33 replies ·
· ScienceDaily ·
· April 3, 2012 ·
· U of Oxford ·

Previous research could not accurately date the sea-level rise but now an Aix-Marseille University-led team, including Oxford University scientists Alex Thomas and Gideon Henderson, has confirmed that the event occurred 14,650-14,310 years ago at the same time as a period of rapid climate change known as the B¯lling warming... During the B¯lling warming high latitudes of the Northern hemisphere warmed as much as 15 degrees Celsius in a few tens of decades. The team has used dating evidence from Tahitian corals to constrain the sea level rise to within a period of 350 years, although the actual rise may well...

Climate

 Life on the edge: Inside the world's largest STONE forest, where tropical rain has eroded rocks...

· 04/10/2012 7:41:23 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 19 replies ·
· Daily Mail / Nat Geog ·
· Sunday, April 8, 2012 ·
· Chris Parsons ·

Inhospitable: The Grand Tsingy may look uninhabitable, but there are thought to be 11 species of lemur, 100 types of bird and 45 kinds of reptile living there Perilous: An explorer climbs among the razor-sharp peaks of the stone forest, where the eroded limestone rocks extend for 230-square miles Intrepid: Climbers Luke Padgett and John Benson scale another dangerous-looking peak in the Grand Tsingy, thought to be the world's largest stone forest Forest of life: Various forms of greenery can be spotted within the Grand Tsingy stone forest, despite the apparently inhospitable environmental conditions It's like a cave without...

end of digest #404 20120414


1,398 posted on 04/15/2012 8:43:40 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (FReepathon 2Q time -- https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1396 | View Replies]

To: SunkenCiv

“abject apologies”

Apologies? I want my money back.


1,399 posted on 04/16/2012 12:45:04 AM PDT by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1397 | View Replies]



This week's topic links, order added, newest to oldest:

Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #405
Saturday, April 21, 2012

Astronomy & Catastrophism

 4 Quadrupole Magnetic Shift in Sun Mimics Mini Ice Ages

· 04/20/2012 11:38:07 AM PDT ·
· Posted by struggle ·
· 45 replies ·
· Mainichi News Japan ·
· 4/20/2012 ·
· Mainichi News ·

Apparently, the magnetic shifts in the Sun mimic those that occurred during the mini-Ice Ages of the 17th century, reports the Japanese Astronomical society. They also claim that this is the reason for the "halting" in the progress of global warming. Basically the sun's magnetic field has shifted from a straight N-S configuration - to a N-Equator Equator-S, 4 pole configuration This supposedly occurred during the 17/18th century and was responsible for the mini Ice Age.

Egypt

 "Breathtaking" Mummy Coffin Covers Seized in Israel

· 04/21/2012 8:39:42 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· LiveScience via Scientific American ·
· Tuesday, April 3, 2012 ·
· Jeanna Bryner ·

Two decorated covers of coffins that once contained mummies have been seized by Israeli authorities, authenticated and dated to thousands of years ago in ancient Egypt. Inspectors of the Unit for Prevention of Antiquities Robbery found the artifacts while checking shops in a marketplace in the Old City of Jerusalem. The inspectors confiscated the items under suspicion of being stolen property. The ancient covers are made of wood and adorned with "breathtaking decorations and paintings of ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics," says the Israel Antiquities Authority. Researchers examined the covers with carbon dating -- which looks at a radioactive form of carbon...

The Phoenicians

 Archaeologists Excavate Ancient Phoenician Port City [ Tel Achziv ]

· 04/21/2012 8:10:52 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 3 replies ·
· Popular Archaeology ·
· Thursday, April 5, 2012 ·
· Gwyn Davies et al ·

The ruins of the site rest atop a sandstone hill, hugging the far northern coast of the current State of Israel near the border with Lebanon. One can see later-period standing structures that provide the backdrop for what is now a national park and beach resort. But below the surface, and beneath the ocean waves, lie the remains of an ancient harbor town that reach back in history to as long ago as Chalcolithic times (4500-3200 BC)... Known today as Tel Achziv, its remnants have been explored and excavated before, by Moshe Prausnitz from 1963 through 1964 and, in...

Let's Have Jerusalem

 Israel's Other Temple: Research Reveals Ancient Struggle over Holy Land Supremacy

· 04/18/2012 8:22:37 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 18 replies ·
· Speigel ·
· Matthias Schulz (AFP) ·

The Jews had significant competition in antiquity when it came to worshipping Yahweh. Archeologists have discovered a second great temple not far from Jerusalem that predates its better known cousin. It belonged to the Samaritans, and may have been edited out of the Bible once the rivalry had been decided. Clad in a gray coat, Aharon ben Ab-Chisda ben Yaacob, 85, is sitting in the dim light of his house. He strikes up a throaty chant, a litany in ancient Hebrew. He has a full beard and is wearing a red kippah on his head. The man is a high...

Faith & Philosophy

 New find, old tomb, and peeks at early Christians

· 12/17/2003 6:13:16 PM PST ·
· Posted by Dubya ·
· 9 replies ·
· 274+ views ·
· Christian Science Monitor ·
· December 18, 2003 ·
· Ben Lynfield ·

JERUSALEM - For centuries it has been known as "Absalom's Tomb." People made pilgrimages to it. Jews, Christians, and Muslims would throw stones at it to punish King David's rebellious son. But now, because of an almost chance discovery, one of Jerusalem's oldest landmarks is reemerging as one of the sites of early Christianity. A recently unveiled inscription, believed to date circa AD 350, identifies the monument as the tomb of Zacharias, the father of John the Baptist. Scholars say it does not necessarily mean Zacharias was buried on the site and some completely discount that possibility. But the find...

Heeey Abbott!

 Extraordinary Discovery of 12th Century Abbot's Grave:
  2012 Technology Could Unmask his Identity


· 04/19/2012 11:38:20 AM PDT ·
· Posted by marshmallow ·
· 9 replies ·
· The Daily Mail (UK) ·
· 4/18/12 ·
· Paul Harris ·

Carbon dating and pathology to be used on skeleton Abbot reckoned to be 'portly' because of curvature of the spine Cistercian monastery supposedly 'haunted' by several ghostsFor something like seven centuries he had lain undisturbed. He -- or at least his remains -- survived Henry VIII's destruction of his abbey in 1537, eluded the grave-robbers that followed, and avoided discovery by Victorian archaeologists. Even deep excavations and the underpinning of the crumbling building in the 1930s failed to unearth him. But the abbot who headed Britain's second richest and most powerful Cistercian monastery may soon be unmasked -- along with...


 Medieval Abbot's Grave Uncovered

· 04/20/2012 2:08:28 PM PDT ·
· Posted by NYer ·
· 23 replies ·
· New Liturgical Movement ·
· April 19, 2012 ·
· Shawn Tribe ·

Extraordinary discovery of 12th century abbot's grave For something like seven centuries he had lain undisturbed. He -- or at least his remains -- survived Henry VIII's destruction of his abbey in 1537, eluded the grave-robbers that followed, and avoided discovery by Victorian archaeologists. Even deep excavations and the underpinning of the crumbling building in the 1930s failed to unearth him. But the abbot who headed Britain's second richest and most powerful Cistercian monastery may soon be unmasked... [...] The skeleton of a portly figure was discovered almost by fluke when emergency repairs had to be made to the abbey...

Dinosaurs

 Eggs of Enigmatic Dinosaur in Patagonia Discovered

· 04/21/2012 7:01:51 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 15 replies ·
· Science News ·
· Tuesday, April 10, 2012 ·
· Uppsala U via AlphaGalileo ·

An Argentine-Swedish research team has reported a 70-million-year-old pocket of fossilized bones and unique eggs of an enigmatic birdlike dinosaur in Patagonia... The dinosaur represents the latest survivor of its kind from Gondwana, the southern landmass in the Mesozoic Era. The creature belongs to one of the most mysterious groups of dinosaurs, the Alvarezsauridae, and it is one of the largest members, 2.6 m, of the family. It was first discovered by Dr. Powell, but has now been described and named Bonapartenykus ultimus in honor of Dr. JosÈ Bonaparte who 1991 discovered the first alvarezsaurid in Patagonia... The two eggs...


 'Giant dino' (as in 105 ft.) found in Argentina

· 10/16/2007 6:29:07 AM PDT ·
· Posted by yankeedame ·
· 4 replies ·
· 78+ views ·
· BBC.com ·
· Monday, 15 October 2007 ·
· staff writer ·

Last Updated: Monday, 15 October 2007, 23:32 GMT 00:32 UK 'Giant dino' found in Argentina The plant-eater's skeleton came complete with fossilised leaves Scientists think they have found a new species of giant plant-eating dinosaur, Futalognkosaurus dukei, that roamed the earth some 80m years ago. It would have measured at least 32m (105ft) in height, making it one of the tallest dinosaurs ever found, Argentine and Brazilian palaeontologists say. The skeleton showed signs that its owner had been eaten by predators. The excavation site in Argentina has yielded a series of specimens since the first fossils were found there in...


 105-Foot Dinosaur Unearthed in Argentina

· 10/15/2007 2:00:35 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Alter Kaker ·
· 54 replies ·
· 259+ views ·
· Associated Press ·
· 10/15/2007 ·
· Michael Astor ·

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) -- The skeleton of what is believed to be a new dinosaur species -- a 105-foot plant-eater that is among the largest dinosaurs ever found -- has been uncovered in Argentina, scientists said Monday.Standing alongside a replica of a neck vertebra more than 3 feet high, scientists from Argentina and Brazil said the find was remarkable because they have recovered the most complete skeletons one of one of these "giants" found so far.They said the Patagonian dinosaur appears to represent a previously unknown species of Titanosaur because of the unique structure of its neck. They...


 Fossil protein breakthrough will probe evolution

· 11/13/2002 1:16:37 PM PST ·
· Posted by dead ·
· 84 replies ·
· 444+ views ·
· New Scientist ·
· 19:00 13 November 02 ·
· Fred Pearce ·

The first complete sequencing of protein from a fossil bone suggests that proteins can survive for millions of years - long enough to probe the evolution of many extinct species, including the ancestors of modern humans. For many years, biologists have deduced evolutionary relationships from the visible features of living animals and fossils. Molecular biology has given them a new tool for living animals - comparing DNA sequences. However, DNA survives for only a short time after death, so paleontologists have been limited to comparing the shapes and sizes of the bones of extinct species. But analyzing ancient proteins now...

Prehistory & Origins

 Ancient walking gets weirder:
  Fossils from two human ancestors suggest diversity in gait, stance


· 04/19/2012 6:13:53 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 20 replies ·
· Science News ·
· Monday, April 16th, 2012 ·
· Bruce Bower ·

1.5 million-year-old footprints excavated in Africa, initially thought to reflect a thoroughly modern walking style, were instead made by individuals that walked differently than people today do, researchers reported April 13 at the annual meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists. And findings presented April 12 at the meeting revealed the surprisingly apelike qualities of foot fossils from a 2 million-year-old species that some researchers regard as the root of the Homo genus. These reports come on the heels of evidence that a previously unknown member of the human evolutionary family 3.4 million years ago possessed a gorillalike grasping...

Helix, Make Mine a Double

 Synthetic DNA Created, Evolves on Its Own

· 04/19/2012 8:05:05 PM PDT ·
· Posted by 2ndDivisionVet ·
· 33 replies ·
· National Geographic News ·
· April 19, 2012 ·
· Christine Dell'Amore ·

Step aside, DNA -- new synthetic compounds called XNAs can also store and copy genetic information, a new study says. And, in a "big advancement," these artificial compounds can also be made to evolve in the lab, according to study co-author John Chaput of the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University. (See "Evolution vs. Intelligent Design: 6 Bones of Contention.") Nucleotides, the building blocks of DNA are composed of four bases -- A, G, C, and T. Attached to the bases are sugars and phosphates. (Get a genetics overview.) First, researchers made XNA building blocks to six different genetic systems by replacing the natural...

Epigraphy & Language

 Scientists Find Runes on Ancient Comb

· 04/16/2012 9:55:56 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 40 replies ·
· The Local: Germany's news in English ·
· Friday, April 13, 2012 ·
· unattributed ·

Archaeologists have found the oldest engravings of letters ever to be discovered in central Germany, officials from the area announced on Thursday. The ancient letters, called runes, were scratched onto a 12.5 centimetre-long comb by Germanic settlers in the second century, scientists working on the site in Saxony-Anhalt believe. The letters spell out "Kama", meaning comb, the president of the state Heritage and Archaeology Management Office, Sven Ostritz, said on Thursday. It is the oldest ever example of runic writing to be found in that part of the country, he added. Germanic languages used the runic alphabet to write before...


 In The Valleys Of Patagonia, The Talk Is Of An Astonishing Revival Of The Welsh Language

· 04/18/2003 4:39:52 PM PDT ·
· Posted by blam ·
· 37 replies ·
· 579+ views ·
· Independent (UK) ·
· 4-19-2003 ·
· Marcus Tanner ·

[copyright complaint source]

Ancient Entertainments

 Rare Ancient Statue Depicts Topless Female Gladiator

· 04/17/2012 7:25:53 PM PDT ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 89 replies ·
· Live Science ·
· 17 April 2012 ·
· Owen Jarus ·

A small bronze statue dating back nearly 2,000 years may be that of a female gladiator, a victorious one at that, suggests a new study. If confirmed the statue would represent only the second depiction of a woman gladiator known to exist. The gladiator statue shows a topless woman, wearing only a loincloth and a bandage around her left knee. Her hair is long, although neat, and in the air she raises what the researcher, Alfonso Manas of the University of Granada, believes is a sica, a short curved sword used by gladiators....

Roman Empire

 On a day like today: conference to mark the battle of Milvian Bridge

· 04/18/2012 2:23:58 AM PDT ·
· Posted by markomalley ·
· 18 replies ·
· Spero News ·
· April 17, 2012 ·
· Martin Barillas ·

"Constantine the Great. The Roots of Europe" is the title of an international academic congress to be held in the Vatican from, April 18-21. The event has been organized by the Pontifical Committee for Historical Sciences to mark the 1700th anniversary of the Battle of the Milvian Bridge and role the Emperor Constantine played in bringing about tolerance for Christians. It was at the Milvian Bridge, which spans the Tiber river near Rome, where Constantine I defeated Maxentius as they contested the control of the Roman Empire on October 28, 312 AD. While marching to engage Maxentius, Constantine may or...

Megaliths & Archaeoastronomy

 Swedish Stonehenge? Ancient stone structure spurs debate

· 04/19/2012 1:53:22 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Engraved-on-His-hands ·
· 16 replies ·
· Fox News ·
· April 19, 2012 ·
· Crystal Gammon ·

Ancient Scandinavians dragged 59 boulders to a seaside cliff near what is now the Swedish fishing village of Kaseberga. They carefully arranged the massive stones -- each weighing up to 4,000 pounds (1,800 kilograms) -- in the outline of a 220-foot-long (67-meter) ship overlooking the Baltic Sea. Archaeologists generally agree this megalithic structure, known as Ales Stenar ("Ale's Stones"), was assembled about 1,000 years ago, near the end of the Iron Age, as a burial monument. But a team of researchers now argues it's really 2,500 years old, dating from the Scandinavian Bronze Age, and was built as an astronomical...

Middle Ages & Renaissance

 Marco Polo was not a swindler -- he really did go to China

· 04/17/2012 6:38:08 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 13 replies ·
· AlphaGalileo ·
· Monday, April 16, 2012 ·
· Universitaet Tübingen ·

It has been said that Marco Polo did not really go to China; that he merely cobbled together his information about it from journeys to the Black Sea, Constantinople and Persia and from talking to merchants and reading now-lost Persian books. But in Marco Polo was in China: New Evidence from Currencies, Salts and Revenues, (Brill Verlag) Hans Ulrich Vogel, Professor of Chinese Studies at the University of T¸bingen, puts paid to such rumors. He begins with a comprehensive review of the arguments for and against, and follows it up with evidence from relevant Chinese, Japanese, Italian, French, German and...

PreColumbian, Clovis & PreClovis

 No Ordinary Kids: Children of the Plumed Serpent

· 04/20/2012 2:42:56 PM PDT ·
· Posted by BenLurkin ·
· 26 replies ·
· cbs ·
· April 19, 2012 1:00 PM ·

Here in Los Angeles the influence of Mexican culture is part of our everyday experience. The new exhibit at LACMA gives us a chance to see the origins of a culture that is part of our own. Children of the Plumed Serpent: The Legacy of Quetzalcoatl in Ancient Mexico is the first large scale exhibition that explores the ancient kingdoms of southern Mexico -- known today as Oaxaca, Puebla and Tlaxcala. This exciting exhibition features more than 200 objects spanning from the 10th century to 1580. The legends of Quetzalcoatl -- the human incarnation of the Plumed Serpent -- provides...

NAGPRA

 Who Owns the Past? The federal government should fix or drop
  new regulations that throttle scientific study of America's heritage


· 04/17/2012 6:51:06 PM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 6 replies ·
· Scientific American ·
· March 27, 2012 ·
· The Editors ·

The original intention of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), passed in 1990, was to facilitate the return of Native American bones and sacred objects to descendants and culturally affiliated groups. NAGPRA sought to balance the rights of Native Americans to reclaim ancestral remains with the right of society as a whole to learn about our collective past. By and large, the law was succeeding. In recent years scientists and representatives of Native peoples have been working together to everyone's gain. For example, archaeologist Alston Thoms of Texas A&M University has been consulting with Native Americans about...

Early America

 The explorer who made Lewis and Clark look like tourists.

· 04/15/2012 7:48:33 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Rebelbase ·
· 64 replies ·
· http://www.nvo.com ·
· Old Article ·
· Timothy Harper ·

David Thompson was a monumental figure in North American history. A fur trader, an explorer and perhaps the greatest land geographer ever, he led expeditions through incredible hardship and danger to safety. His 77 journals made important contributions to our understanding of culture, history and everyday life in North America before Europeans brought horses, guns, alcohol and disease. And he and his American Indian wife lived one of the great love stories of all time. So why haven¬'t you heard of 19th-century frontiersman David Thompson? No doubt one reason is that he spent most of his long life in...

The Revolution

 George Washington named Britain's greatest ever foe

· 04/15/2012 3:20:17 AM PDT ·
· Posted by afraidfortherepublic ·
· 57 replies ·
· The Telegraph ·
· 4-14-12 ·
· Jason Copping ·

The American was voted the winner in a contest run by the National Army Museum to identify the country's most outstanding military opponent. He was one of a shortlist of five leaders who topped a public poll and on Saturday was selected as the ultimate winner by an audience of around 70 guests at a special event at the museum, in Chelsea, west London. In second place was Michael Collins, the Irish leader, ahead of Napoleon Bonaparte, Erwin Rommel and Mustafa Kemal Atat¸rk. At the event, each contender had their case made by a historian giving a 40 minute presentation....


 George Washington named Britain's greatest ever foe

· 04/15/2012 11:48:38 AM PDT ·
· Posted by AnotherUnixGeek ·
· 91 replies ·
· The Telegraph ·
· 14 Apr 2012 ·
· Jasper Copping ·

The American was voted the winner in a contest run by the National Army Museum to identify the country's most outstanding military opponent.

Paul Revere

 Lost And Found: Rare Paul Revere Print Rediscovered

· 04/16/2012 4:32:00 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Theoria ·
· 9 replies ·
· NPR ·
· 15 April 2012 ·
· NPR ·

The 237th anniversary of Paul Revere's famous midnight ride during the Revolutionary War falls on Wednesday. But long before Henry Wadsworth Longfellow made him famous, Revere was known as an engraver and a silversmith in Boston.Brown University announced this week that it had found a rare engraved print by Revere, one of only five in existence. The print was tucked inside an old medical book that had been donated by physician Solomon Drowne, a member of Brown University's class of 1773."It was an engraving, not a terribly large one," Richard Noble, Brown University's rare books cataloguer tells weekends on All...


 Paul Revere's Ride

· 04/18/2012 9:21:32 AM PDT ·
· Posted by TBP ·
· 20 replies ·
· Poetry Server ·
· 19th Century ·
· Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ·

Listen my children and you shall hear Of the midnight ride of Paul Revere, On the eighteenth of April, in Seventy-five; Hardly a man is now alive Who remembers that famous day and year. He said to his friend, "If the British march By land or sea from the town to-night, Hang a lantern aloft in the belfry arch Of the North Church tower as a signal light,-- One if by land, and two if by sea; And I on the opposite shore will be, Ready to ride and spread the alarm Through every Middlesex village and farm, For the...

The Framers

 Why were 10 dead bodies found in Benjamin Franklin's basement?
  (Ambassador's London residence)


· 04/14/2012 11:25:49 AM PDT ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 22 replies ·
· IO9 ·
· April 14, 2012 ·
· Lauren Davis ·

Why were 10 dead bodies found in Benjamin Franklin's basement? In 1998, a group called the Friends of Benjamin Franklin House began renovations on Franklin's London residence, No. 36 Craven Street, and discovered a nasty surprise: 1,200 pieces of bone from 10 bodies, six of which were children. And the bodies were buried in the basement around the time Franklin was living in the house. No, Franklin didn't engage in a murder spree in between penning Poor Richard's Almanack and flying kites in lightning storms. In fact, it's unlikely that the bodies were murder victims at all. The bones were...

The Civil War

 U.S. Civil War Took Bigger Toll Than Previously Estimated

· 04/03/2012 11:07:36 PM PDT ·
· Posted by U-238 ·
· 125 replies ·
· Science Daily ·
· 11/21/2012 ·
· Science Daily ·

The Civil War -- already considered the deadliest conflict in American history -- in fact took a toll far more severe than previously estimated. That's what a new analysis of census data by Binghamton University historian J. David Hacker reveals. Hacker says the war's dead numbered about 750,000, an estimate that's 20 percent higher than the commonly cited figure of 620,000. His findings will be published in December in the journal Civil War History. "The traditional estimate has become iconic," Hacker says. "It's been quoted for the last hundred years or more. If you go with that total for a...


 'Who, What, Why: How many soldiers died in the US Civil War?'

· 04/04/2012 6:34:20 AM PDT ·
· Posted by the scotsman ·
· 43 replies ·
· BBC News ·
· 4th April 2012 ·
· BBC News ·

'A study suggests a previously widely accepted death toll of the US Civil War may actually be way under the mark. How many did perish in this conflict, fought before the era of modern record-keeping and DNA identification? The US Civil War was incontrovertibly the bloodiest, most devastating conflict in American history, and it remains unknown - and unknowable - exactly how many men died in Union and Confederate uniform. Now, it appears a long-held estimate of the war's death toll could have undercounted the dead by as many as 130,000. That is 21% of the earlier estimate - and...


 Civil War authority Shelby Foote dead

· 06/28/2005 10:45:07 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Moose4 ·
· 165 replies ·
· 6,117+ views ·
· AP via CNN.com ·
· 28 June 2005 ·
· Unattributed ·

MEMPHIS, Tennessee (AP) -- Novelist and Civil War historian Shelby Foote, whose appearances on a PBS-TV documentary series helped America better understand one of the most defining periods of its past, has died, his family said Tuesday. Foote's widow, Gwen, said her husband, who was 88, died Monday night.

In Memoriam

 Last Living Veterans of America's Wars

· 03/06/2005 4:35:09 PM PST ·
· Posted by BulletBobCo ·
· 24 replies ·
· 2,935+ views ·
· Info Please ·
· March 6, 2005 ·

Last Living Veterans of America's Wars American Revolution (1775-1783) Last veteran, Daniel F. Bakeman, died 4/5/1869, age 109 Last widow, Catherine S. Damon, died 11/11/06, age 92 Last dependent, Phoebe M. Palmeter, died 4/25/11, age 90 War of 1812 (1812-1815) Last veteran, Hiram Cronk, died 5/13/05, age 105 Last widow, Carolina King, died 6/28/36, age unknown Last dependent, Esther A. H. Morgan, died 3/12/46, age 89 Indian Wars (c. 1861-1898) Last veteran, Fredrak Fraske, died 6/18/73, age 101 Mexican War (1846-1848) Last veteran, Owen Thomas Edgar, died 9/3/29, age 98 Last widow, Lena James Theobald, died 6/20/63, age 89 Last...

Pages

 Oxford University, Vatican libraries to digitize works

· 04/14/2012 5:52:01 AM PDT ·
· Posted by iowamark ·
· 6 replies ·
· Reuters ·
· 04/11/2012 ·
· Paul Casciato ·

The Bodleian Libraries of the University of Oxford and the Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana (BAV) said on Thursday they intended to digitize 1.5 million pages of ancient texts and make them freely available online. The libraries said the digitized collections will centre on three subject areas: Greek manuscripts, 15th-century printed books and Hebrew manuscripts and early printed books. The areas have been chosen for the strength of the collections in both libraries and their importance for scholarship in their respective fields... The initiative has been made possible by a 2 million pound ($3.17 million) award from the Polonsky Foundation. "The service...


 Vatican, Bodleian Libraries to Digitize Ancient Texts

· 04/19/2012 12:17:19 PM PDT ·
· Posted by null and void ·
· 6 replies ·
· Scientific Computing ·
· 4/12/12 ·

One of the Bodleian's newly digitized ancient texts is a manuscript from Venice dating from 1478. A collaboration between the Bodleian and the Vatican Libraries will bring ancient texts into the digital era. 1.5 million pages from both collections will be digitized and made publicly available. The Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana (BAV) and the Bodleian Libraries will embark on a new collaborative digitization project with the aim of opening up repositories of ancient texts and making a selection of their remarkable treasures freely available online to researchers and the general public worldwide. The initiative has been made possible by a...

World War Eleven

 Burmese treasure:'We've done some pretty silly things
  but the silliest was burying the Spitfires'


· 04/16/2012 1:58:33 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Theoria ·
· 27 replies ·
· Canberra Times ·
· 16 April 2012 ·
· Adam Lusher ·

EXTRAORDINARY plans to raise a lost ''squadron'' of Spitfires that have lain buried in Burma since the end of World War II were revealed at the weekend as David Cameron, Britain's Prime Minister, visited Rangoon. A Lincolnshire farmer who devoted 15 years of his life to finding the planes has spoken about his quest to recover them and get them airborne. David Cundall, 62, has spent £130,000 ($200,000) of his money, visited Burma 12 times, persuaded its secretive regime to trust him, and all the time sought testimony from a dwindling band of Far East veterans in order to locate...

Underwater Archaeology

 How fishermen are bringing lost secrets of UK waters to land

· 04/21/2012 8:35:48 AM PDT ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 1 replies ·
· Guardian UK ·
· Saturday, March 31, 2012 ·
· Robin McKie ·

Trawlerman Dennis Hunt was crossing Colwyn Bay in his boat in 1995 when its nets snagged on the seabed. Unable to free them, Hunt contacted diver Keith Hurley, who swam 60ft down to the sea floor -- and found that the nets were caught on a rusting submarine's conning tower. Hunt and Hurley had found the Resurgam, one of Britain's first submarines, which sank in 1880. It was a key historical discovery but certainly not a first for fishermen. Every day hundreds of items, ranging from Spitfire engines to ancient stone tools, are dragged up by fishing vessels while wreck...

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany

 Judge: Time to unseal Nixon's Watergate testimony

· 07/29/2011 12:26:44 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Hunton Peck ·
· 15 replies ·
· Associated Press ·
· Friday, July 29, 2011 2:42 PM EDT ·
· Nedra Pickler ·

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Thirty-six years after Richard Nixon testified to a grand jury about the Watergate break-in that drove him from office, a federal judge on Friday ordered the secret transcript made public. But the 297 pages of testimony won't be available immediately, because the government gets time to decide whether to appeal. The Obama administration opposed the transcript's release, chiefly to protect the privacy of people discussed during the ex-president's testimony who are still alive. Nevertheless, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth agreed with historians who sued for release of the documents that the historical significance outweighs arguments for secrecy,...

end of digest #405 20120421


1,400 posted on 04/21/2012 11:41:00 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (FReepathon 2Q time -- https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1398 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 1,361-1,3801,381-1,4001,401-1,420 ... 1,581-1,598 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Bloggers & Personal
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson