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

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

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To: SunkenCiv

dat's more than impressive!


521 posted on 03/24/2007 8:35:51 AM PDT by ken21 (it takes a village to brainwash your child + to steal your property! /s)
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To: ken21

Thanks!


522 posted on 03/24/2007 8:49:01 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Saturday, March 24, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #141
Saturday, March 31, 2007


Let's Have Jerusalem
First Temple wall found in City of David
  Posted by Dirtysnowbank
On News/Activism 03/30/2007 8:47:35 AM EDT · 34 replies


jpost.com | March 30, 2007
First Temple wall found in City of David A wall from the First Temple was recently uncovered in Jerusalem's City of David, strengthening the claim that it is the site of the palace of King David. The new find, made by Dr. Eilat Mazar, a senior fellow at the Shalem Center's Institute for the Archeology of the Jewish People, comes less than two years after she said she had discovered the palace's location at the site just outside the walls of the Old City. The monumental 10th century BCE building found by Mazar in 2005 following a six month dig...
 

Present-day Sanhedrin court seeks to revive ancient Temple rituals (PETA Alert!)
  Posted by NYer
On News/Activism 03/01/2007 9:27:56 AM EST · 36 replies · 884+ views


Haaretz | March 1, 2007 | Nadav Shragai,
The present-day Sanhedrin Court decided Tuesday to purchase a herd of sheep for ritual sacrifice at the site of the Temple on the eve of Passover, conditions on the Temple Mount permitting. The modern Sanhedrin was established several years ago and is headed by Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz. It claims to be renewing the ancient Jewish high court, which existed until roughly 1600 years ago, and meets once a week. Professor Hillel Weiss, a member of the Sanhedrin, told Haaretz on Tuesday that the action, even if merely symbolic, is designed to demonstrate in a way that is obvious to all...
 

Ramping Up the Violence: The truth about the Temple Mount controversy
  Posted by Caleb1411
On News/Activism 02/22/2007 1:00:12 PM EST · 14 replies · 566+ views


Weekly Standard | 02/26/2007 | David Gelernter
Israeli government authorities are building a ramp to allow non-Muslims to reach the enormous platform atop the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. The old access ramp was condemned as unsafe and torn down several years ago. The interim ramp that replaced it was designed for short-term service only. (Muslims control the Temple Mount and therefore have their own private access routes.) The new ramp is controversial. Some ramp must be built or non-Muslims will have no way to reach the Mount; but leading Israeli archaeologists say that the ramp under construction is badly placed and ought to be someplace else. This...
 

Q&A on the Temple Mount with Dr. Eilat Mazar
  Posted by SJackson
On News/Activism 02/15/2007 8:09:11 AM EST · 3 replies · 225+ views


Jerusalem Post | 2-15-07 | Dr. Eilat Mazar
Q&A on the Temple Mount with Dr. Eilat MazarDr. Eilat MazarPhoto: Dr. Eilat Mazar ExpeditionExcavations on the Mughrabi ramp near the Temple Mount, Jerusalem Old City, Sunday.Photo: Ariel JerozolimskiRenowned archeologist Dr. Eilat Mazar of the Hebrew University and the Shalem Center answers readers' questions about the Mughrabi Gate dispute and the status of the Temple Mount in recent years. Of the hundreds of questions received, here are 20 which encompass the major issues at hand.John, Hong Kong: The Muslims claim the Mughrabi dig is within their holy site. Israel says it's nowhere near. Is it at all possible to answer...
 

Islamic Movement: Suspicious digging under Temple Mount
  Posted by Alouette
On News/Activism 01/22/2007 7:47:01 AM EST · 45 replies · 1,384+ views


YNet | Jan. 22, 2007 | Roee Nahmias
Group raises charges that religious Jewish groups are making moves to construct Third Temple. Israel Antiquities Authority: There were no excavations, there are none, and none are planned Roee Nahmias Published: 01.22.07, 07:44 Israel has been digging underneath the al-Aqsa Mosque on the Temple Mount, with the aim of constructing the Third Temple, the chairman of the Islamic Movement in Israel charged. "This digging is a very dangerous phase in the mosque's history," Sheikh Raed Salah said in a statement. The Islamic Movement in Israel considers itself responsible for "safeguarding the Temple Mount mosques," and organizes transports to Friday prayers...
 

The New York Times Bashes The Jews
  Posted by Zionist Conspirator
On News/Activism 08/10/2005 9:33:39 PM EDT · 50 replies · 1,247+ views


FrontPageMag.Com | 8/10/'05 | Barry Rubin
For several years I have watched the revival of antisemitism with growing dismay. Then along comes Steve Erlanger's article in the New York Times, regarded by itself and many of its readers -- especially Jewish ones -- as the world's greatest newspaper. He writes about an Israeli archaeologist who has uncovered the ruins of an important two-thousand-year-old building which, she asserts, was part of King David's palace. Maybe she is right; maybe not. Archaeologists are not certain; more evidence and study is no doubt necessary. That is how science works. We are then informed, accurately, that archaeologists are debating whether David's kingdom was a...
 

Greece
Engineers To Help Find Homer's Itacha
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/27/2007 6:15:17 PM EDT · 13 replies · 300+ views


Yahoo News | 3-26-2007 | Derek Gatopoulos
Engineers to help find Homer's IthacaDerek Gatopoulous, Associated Press Writer Mon Mar 26, 11:02 PM ET ATHENS, Greece - A geological engineering company said Monday it has agreed to help in an archaeological project to find the island of Ithaca, homeland of Homer's legendary hero Odysseus. It has long been thought that the island of Ithaki in the Ionian Sea was the island Homer used as a setting for the epic poem "The Odyssey," in which the king Odysseus makes a perilous 10-year journey home from the Trojan War. But amateur British archaeologist Robert Bittlestone believes the Ithaca of Homer...
 

Anatolia
An Ancient Voyage In Just Two Months (Foca People)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/30/2007 5:02:04 PM EDT · 9 replies


Turkish Daily News | 3-29-2007 | Omer Erbil
An ancient voyage in just two months Thursday, March 29, 2007 OMER ERBIL A replica of the oldest known shipwreck, Uluburun II, was built by the 360 Degree Historical Research Association in Urla, Izmir and displayed in Bodrum as part of activities marking the 80th anniversary of Sabotage Day in July. Journey from Foca to Marseille.. A group, who built the replica of ships used by old Foca people 2,600 year ago, will set to sail next year. The voyage will last two months. The 360 Degree Research Group, which had built the replica of the oldest known shipwreck, Uluburun II,...
 

Climate
The Real History of Carbon Dioxide Levels
  Posted by WayneLusvardi
On Bloggers & Personal 03/24/2007 7:45:59 PM EDT · 16 replies · 283+ views


Greenie Watch | March 23, 2007 | Dr. John Ray
The Real History of C02 Levels Prof. Beck's paper "180 YEARS OF ATMOSPHERIC CO2 GAS ANALYSIS BY CHEMICAL METHODS" has now been published in the journal Energy and Environment. A PDF copy of the full paper can be obtained from the author: egbeck@biokurs.de. The short version of Beck's paper can be found here: http://www.anenglishmanscastle.com (Note: Chart could not be cut and pasted. Go to http://antigreen.blogspot.com to see chart) Excerpt below. It shows that actual past measurements of atmospheric CO2 have undergone great variation in levels from time to time in the period surveyed. Levels were not "flat" before the 20th...
 

Africa
Space Data Unveils Evidence of Ancient Mega-lake in Northern Darfur
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/29/2007 4:33:28 PM EDT · 14 replies


Physorg.com | 3-28-2007 | Boston University
Space Data Unveils Evidence of Ancient Mega-lake in Northern Darfur Researchers at the Boston University Center for Remote Sensing used recently acquired topographic data from satellites to reveal a now dry, ancient mega-lake in the Darfur province of northwestern Sudan. Drs. Eman Ghoneim and Farouk El-Baz made the finding while investigating Landsat images and Radarsat data. Radar waves are able to penetrate the fine-grained sand cover in the hot and dry eastern Sahara to reveal buried features. Segments of the lake's shoreline were identified at the constant altitude of 573 ± 3 meters above sea level. Ghoneim incorporated these segments...
 

Egypt
Egyptian-Spanish mission discovers flowers funerary items in Djehuty tomb
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 03/30/2007 1:09:21 PM EDT · 1 reply


Egypt State Information Service | Thursday, March 22, 2007 | unattributed
"An Egyptian-Spanish archaeological mission discovered Wednesday 21/3/2007 instruments, used in the funeral of Queen Hatshepsut (1502-1482 BC)'s chief of works in Thebes Djehuty, in Djehuty's tomb in Dar-Abul-Naga area in Luxor's West Bank," Al-Ahram reported... Jose Gallan, head of the Spanish team said that during excavation works at the tomb's open court, a moderate wooden sarcophagus was found inside a small pit. It includes the bones of an unidentified woman that can be dated to the New Kingdom era. Early studies on the bones reveal that they may go back to 500 years before the construction of Djehuty's tomb. Gallan...
 

Great Pyramid, again
Architect claims to solve pyramid secret
  Posted by Man50D
On News/Activism 03/30/2007 7:57:51 PM EDT · 16 replies


Yahoo News | March 30, 2007 | LAURENCE JOAN-GRANGE
PARIS - A French architect claimed Friday to have uncovered the mystery about how Egypt's Great Pyramid of Khufu was built -- with use of a spiral ramp to hoist huge stone blocks into place. The construction of the Great Pyramid 4,500 years ago by Khufu, a ruler also known as Cheops, has long befuddled scientists as to how its 3 million stone blocks weighing 2.5 tons each were lifted into place. Ending eight years of study on the subject, architect Jean-Pierre Houdin released his findings and a computerized 3-D mockup showing how workers would have erected the pyramid at...
 

British Isles
Early Welsh warriors in red who once defeated the mighty Romans
  Posted by aculeus
On News/Activism 03/24/2007 9:16:33 AM EDT · 33 replies · 852+ views


IC Wales | March 9, 2007 | by Sam Burson, Western Mail
A HARDY band of Welshmen in red, who took on the might of the Italians 2,000 years ago, could prove inspirational for tomorrow's Welsh Six Nations warriors. A leading historian has documented the exploits of the ancient Silures tribe, who fought a long campaign against the Romans two millennia ago. Dr Ray Howell from the University of Wales, Newport, even says our penchant for wearing red may spring from the tribe's favourite battle colour. Dr Howell, a reader at the university's School of Education, has published an examination of the South-East Wales tribe, who came close to thwarting the Roman...
 

Rome and Italy
Archaeologists Unearth Roman Era Artefacts In Kerala (India)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/25/2007 7:44:54 PM EDT · 27 replies · 602+ views


Daily India | 3-24-2007
Archaeologists unearth Roman era artefacts in Kerala From our ANI Correspondent Pattanam (Kerala), Mar 23: What began as exploratory studies in Kerala, has thrown up enough artefacts and structures of two millennia old Indo-Roman trade era to delight archaeologists, who are looking for the lost port of Muziris. Archaeological teams in Pattanam village, near the port city of Kochi have been working on a site, which has yielded pottery, amphora, beads and other artefacts that are reminiscent of the ancient Romans. "The initial studies carried out in this region have amply indicated that there was a Roman presence. The Roman...
 

India
Can the monkey god save Rama's underwater bridge?
  Posted by Alex Murphy
On Religion 03/27/2007 9:43:20 AM EDT · 18 replies · 201+ views


Times Online | March 27, 2007 | Ruth Gledhill and Jeremy Page
Hindu groups are launching an international campaign today to halt India's plans to create a shipping channel by dredging the sea between India and Sri Lanka. They say that the project will destroy an ancient chain of shoals known as Adam's Bridge, which Hindus believe was built by an army of monkeys to allow Lord Rama to cross to Lanka to rescue his abducted wife. They are also protesting on environmental grounds, arguing that the 30-mile string of limestone shoals, also known as Ram Sethu, protected large parts of India from the 2004 tsunami. "The bridge is as holy to...
 

Asia
Chinese tombs may surpass Egyptian wonders
  Posted by aculeus
On News/Activism 03/24/2007 9:12:25 AM EDT · 49 replies · 933+ views


Cosmos Magazine.com | March 15, 2007 | Agence France Press
XIAN, China: The tomb of China's first emperor is potentially one of the most spectacular on Earth, but a heated debate is developing over whether to excavate it at all. Chinese archaeologists have expressed concern that they do not currently have the expertise to properly preserve what they find inside the tomb - located in China's central province of Shaanxi -- but new technologies may be closing that gap. Qinshi Huang's enormous tomb complex is the home of Xian's famed terracotta warriors; 8,000 life-size figures that were discovered by accident in 1974. The tomb itself, though, has not yet been...
 

800-Year-Old Tombs Unearthed In North China Province
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/30/2007 4:25:49 PM EDT · 14 replies


Xinhuanet | 3-30-2007 | Chinaview
800-year-old tombs unearthed in N.China province www.chinaview.cn 2007-03-30 16:32:54 SHIJIAZHUANG, March 30 (Xinhua) -- Chinese archaeologists working in Shexian county in north China's Hebei province have discovered a group of 800-year-old tombs from the Song Dynasty (960-1279) and Jin Dynasty (1115-1234). Archaeologists with the Hebei provincial cultural relic research institute say that the tomb group, which covers an area of 2,600 square meters, comprises 17 tombs. The archaeologists have unearthed 146 historical artifacts from the tombs, including 126 copper coins, 15 china utensils, one silver earring, one copper ring, one crystal bead and a brick bearing a man's portrait. Initial...
 

Researchers Find Ancient Couple In Single Grave (Korea)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/28/2007 10:59:19 PM EDT · 6 replies


Chosun.com | 3-28-2007
Researchers Find Ancient Couple in Single Grave The remains of two people were discovered in a grave from the Neolithic age in the Yeosoo area of South Cheolla Province. It is the first time that bones from two people have been unearthed from the same Neolithic grave. Gwangju National Museum chief Cho Hyun-jong who led the excavation of the shell mound grave said that the taller of the two skeletons, at 158 cm, had a shell bracelet on the right arm and belonged to a woman. The gender of the other person who was 165 cm has not yet been...
 

Neanderthals / Neandertals
Why Aren't Humans Furry? Stone-Age Moms Could Be The Answer
  Posted by aculeus
On News/Activism 03/24/2007 12:12:40 PM EDT · 160 replies · 2,433+ views


Medical News Today | March 19, 2007 | Unsigned
A prize-winning paper suggests that humans are hairless apes because Stone-Age mothers regarded furry babies as unattractive Medical Hypotheses, an Elsevier publication, has announced the winner of the 2006 David Horrobin Prize for medical theory. Written by Judith Rich-Harris, author of The Nurture Assumption and No Two Alike, the article, "Parental selection: a third selection process in the evolution of human hairlessness and skin color" was judged to best embody the spirit of the journal. The £1,000 prize, launched in 2004, is awarded annually and named in honour of Dr. David Horrobin, the renowned researcher, biotechnology expert and founder of...
 

Prehistory and Origins
Archaeologist, Homeowner At Odds Over Spear Point
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/29/2007 4:45:36 PM EDT · 77 replies


Malibu Times | 3-28-2007 | Melonie Magruder
Archeologist, homeowner at odds over spear point Wednesday, March 28, 2007 This Clovis spearhead is believed to be 11,000 years old. A find of an 11,000-year-old Clovis spearhead has an archeologist up in arms because the owner of the site does not want any further research conducted. By Melonie Magruder / Special to The Malibu Times The discovery of a Clovis spearhead, believed to be thousands of years old, at a local home construction site has the homeowner and an archeologist at odds on what should be done with the site. The property owner wants to finish her home and...
 

Precolumbian, Clovis, And Preclovis
Peru: Bandurria May Rival Caral As Oldest Citadel In Americas
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/27/2007 5:44:41 PM EDT · 26 replies · 201+ views


Living In Peru.com | 3-27-2007
Peru: Bandurria may rival Caral as oldest citadel in Americas Bandurria's circular ceremonial center. -- Andina (LIP-jl) -- A team of specialists headed by archaeologist Alejandro Chu has informed that structures found in Bandurria may be as old as structures found in Caral, Peru, deemed as the oldest citadel in the Americas. Located north of Lima, near the city of Huacho, the Bandurria archaeological center has been found to have similar structures as those found in Caral. Among the similarities are a circular plaza made with circular borders, and a ceremonial center made of clay, all in an asymmetrical style....
 

Biology and Cryptobiology
Dung-eating mites throw light on Inca civilisation
  Posted by TigerLikesRooster
On News/Activism 03/26/2007 6:23:03 AM EDT · 32 replies · 761+ views


The Times | 03/26/07 | Mark Henderson,
Dung-eating mites throw light on Inca civilisation Mark Henderson, Science Editor Mites that eat llama dung are providing scientists with critical new clues to the rise and fall of the Inca empire and the civilisations that preceded it. The soil invertebrates are allowing researchers to trace the growth and decline of the peoples of the Andes several centuries before the Spanish conquest in 1532 brought written records to the region for the first time. The evidence gleaned from fossilised mites, preserved in sediments at a lake about 50km (30 miles) from the Inca capital of Cuzco, has shown how the...
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
Study: Dinosaur demise didn't spur species
  Posted by Pharmboy
On News/Activism 03/28/2007 3:18:37 PM EDT · 79 replies


AP via Yahoo! | 3-28-07 | MALCOLM RITTER
The big dinosaur extinction of 65 million years ago didn't produce a flurry of new species in the ancestry of modern mammals after all, says a huge study that challenges a long-standing theory. Scientists who constructed a massive evolutionary family tree for mammals found no sign of such a burst of new species at that time among the ancestors of present-day animals. Only mammals with no modern-day descendants showed that effect. "I was flabbergasted," said study co-author Ross MacPhee, curator of vertebrate zoology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. At the time of the dinosaur demise,...
 

Faith and Philosophy
Does Wikipedia Have a Fever?
  Posted by WannabeTurk
On Bloggers & Personal 03/26/2007 10:28:12 PM EDT · 6 replies · 98+ views


McGough's Musings | March 25, 2007 | John J. McGough
The recent Essjay brouhaha at Wikipedia has led a lot of denizens there to question whether the encyclopedia that "anyone can edit" is in reality more Second Life than Encyclopedia Britannica. For those of you in a coma during March 2007, Essjay was a long-time contributor to Wikipedia who was eventually promoted by Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy "Jimbo" Wales to the illustrious arbitration committee -- Wiki's grand tribunal that is the last stop in the dispute resolution process. In other words, Essjay had the final say over what information was real and what information should be included into Wikipedia. Problem was,...
 

Longer Perspectives
Jamestown Milestone
  Posted by Titus Quinctius Cincinnatus
On News/Activism 03/30/2007 10:42:35 AM EDT · 17 replies


National Review Online | 30 March 2007 | Mona Charen
The quadricentennial of the Jamestown settlement will be noted this spring. Whether it will be celebrated is a freighted question. Virginia has gone to some expense and effort remembering the founding settlers of 1607. Former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor is serving as honorary chair of what is being called "America's 400th Birthday." There will be musical performances, lectures and seminars. The Queen of England will visit on May 4 and 5. But emblematic of our troubled understanding of our past and our present discomfort with our national identity, the powers that be in Virginia have decided not to...
 

Rare Declaration of Independence copy fetches nearly $500,000
  Posted by wagglebee
On News/Activism 03/24/2007 8:59:37 PM EDT · 28 replies · 658+ views


Winston-Salem Journal | 3/23/07 | AP
NASHVILLE, Tenn. A rare 1823 "official" copy of the Declaration of Independence was sold at auction yesterday in North Carolina for $477,650 by the man who found it last year in a Nashville thrift store for $2.48. Michael Sparks, a music equipment technician, sold the document at Raynors' Historical Collectible Auctions in Burlington, N.C. The opening bid was $125,000 and six bidders were in contention. Most of the bidders were absentee by phone or Internet. The winning bidder was not disclosed. Sparks found his bargain last March while browsing at Music City Thrift Shop. When he asked the price on...
 

The Vikings
Viking woman had roots near the Black Sea
  Posted by Kurt_Hectic
On News/Activism 03/26/2007 1:57:08 PM EDT · 39 replies · 773+ views


www.aftenposten.no | 26 Mar 2007, 16:12 | Aftenposten's reporter Cato Guhnfeld - Aftenposten English Web Desk Nina Berglund
The bones of one of the women found in one of Norway's most famous Viking graves suggest her ancestors came from the area around the Black Sea. The woman herself was "Norwegian," claims Professor Per Holck at the University of Oslo, who has conducted analyses of DNA material taken from her bones. But Holck says that while she came from the area that today is Norway, her forefathers may have lived in the Black Sea region. Holck, attached to the anthropological division of the university's anatomy institute (Anatomisk institutt), isn't willing to reveal more details pending publication of an article...
 

Architecture
Why The Greeks Could Hear Plays From The Back Row
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/25/2007 2:50:01 PM EDT · 29 replies · 1,056+ views


Nature | 3-23-2007 | Phhillip Ball
Why the Greeks could hear plays from the back rowAn ancient theatre filters out low-frequency background noise. Philip Ball3-23-2007 Modern actors can be heard clearly 60 metres away on a windless day. Nico Declercq. The wonderful acoustics for which the ancient Greek theatre of Epidaurus is renowned may come from exploiting complex acoustic physics, new research shows. The theatre, discovered under a layer of earth on the Peloponnese peninsula in 1881 and excavated, has the classic semicircular shape of a Greek amphitheatre, with 34 rows of stone seats (to which the Romans added a further 21). Its acoustics are extraordinary:...
 

Oh So Mysteriouso
Castle Reveals Secrets After 900 Years (Aberlleiniog)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/25/2007 2:27:05 PM EDT · 61 replies · 1,727+ views


IC Wales | 3-24-2007 | Rin Simpson
Castle reveals secrets after 900 yearsMar 24 2007 Rin Simpson, Western Mail AN ancient castle which has been off limits to the public since it was built in 1088 is about to reveal its secrets for the first time. Aberlleiniog Castle, located on the south east corner of Anglesey, has been witness to a long and fascinating series of owners and events. The little-known castle has been the site of a murder mystery, love triangles and even fatal duels, but few people are aware of its significance and no one has been allowed to visit for almost a thousand years....
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
Archaeologists Find Ethiopia's Lost Islamic Kingdom (Shoa)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/28/2007 10:53:30 PM EDT · 17 replies


Adetocqueville.com | 3-27-2007
ARCHAEOLOGISTS FIND ETHIOPIA'S LOST ISLAMIC KINGDOM Received Tuesday, 27 March 2007 18:21:00 GMT PARIS, March 27, 2007 (AFP) - French archaeologists said on Tuesday that they had uncovered the remains of three large towns that may have been the heart of a legendary Islamic kingdom in Ethiopia. Ancient manuscripts have long told of the kingdom of Shoa, which between the 10th and 16th centuries straddled key trade routes between the Christian highlands and Muslim ports on the Red Sea. But Shoa's precise place on the map has never been clear. The National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) said a team...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Ancient Egyptian temple under threat in Spain
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 03/30/2007 1:02:54 PM EDT · 1 reply


Jurnalo | Friday, March 23, 2007 | dpa st sc (?)
When King Adikhalamani started erecting a sanctuary for the divinities Amon and Isis more than two millennia ago, he could scarcely have imagined that the building would one day leave the hot and dry climate of southern Egypt. Today, however, the temple where Egyptian priests once attended to a statuette of the high god Amon stands in a faraway city, where the cold bites, and winds blow for part of the year. Since it was brought to the Spanish capital Madrid in the early 1970s, one of the most important Egyptian temples of the Western world is said to have...
 

end of digest #141 20070331

523 posted on 03/31/2007 12:11:44 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Saturday, March 24, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: 7.62 x 51mm; 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; Androcles; AntiGuv; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; ...
For those new to the ping list, the Digest messages (this is one) are sent to the regular list members as well as those who are on the weekly digest ping list. Hi Red!
Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #141 20070331
To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)


Topics 1809460 to 1806042.

524 posted on 03/31/2007 12:14:43 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Saturday, March 24, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 523 | View Replies]

To: 7.62 x 51mm; adam_az; America's Resolve; Angus MacGregor; annyokie; add925; alessandrofiaschi; ...
I finally got around to checking the current GGG lists for inactive FReepers, and found you fit that description. I'm going to remove you from the ping lists I co-manage, for the time being. To be reactivated, just send me a FReepmail. Thanks.
sent to: 762x51mm; AdamAz; America'sResolve; AngusMacGregor; Annyokie; add925; alessandrofiaschi; Cavan; Cobaltblue; caryatid; Eno; Fatalis; Freedomfarmer; FreeperLady; Goldberry; HongKongExpat; Jhohanna; Jimmyclyde; Judywillow; jeremiah; jrewing; Littleleaguemom; Lobo59; Marius3188; MillerCreek; Modernman; MRMEAN; mlc9852; Narniafan; NormB; porkchops4mahound; Sandfleacsc; ServantOfThe9; Skeeve14; satchmodog9; TigerPawz; Treader; Txbsafh; Tyche; tahotdog; tomzz; UrsusArctosHorribilis; uncleshag; WilliamCreel; WindOracle; Wing0Walker; wyattearp; ZellsBells
525 posted on 04/01/2007 5:23:44 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Saturday, March 31, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #142
Saturday, April 7, 2007


Climate
Warmer Globe, Smaller Brain?
  Posted by Sopater
On News/Activism 04/02/2007 6:23:53 PM EDT · 23 replies · 446+ views


AccuWeather.com | April 1, 2007 | Laura Hannon
Researchers at the State University of New York at Albany have found that early humans developed larger brains as they adapted to colder climates. Most likely, it was the need to find ways to keep warm and manage fluctuating food supplies that drove the evolution of larger brains. Gallup and Ash suggest that while our understanding of brain evolution remains incomplete, the study provides evidence of the role of climate and migration away from the equator as selective forces in promoting human intelligence, and that the recent trend toward global warming may be reversing a trend that led to brain...
 

Ancient Primates Thrived In . . .Texas?
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/04/2007 5:41:08 PM EDT · 29 replies · 528+ views


Discovery | 4-3-2007 | AP
Ancient Primates Thrived in...Texas? Associated Press April 3, 2007 ó A team of anthropologists said their study of South Texas fossil deposits revealed evidence including ancient teeth that shows the area was home to numerous types of primates 42 million years ago. Lamar University Professor Jim Westgate and two colleagues announced the discovery of three new genera and four new species of primates based on their examination of material removed from Lake Casa Blanca International State Park near Laredo and the Mexican border. Westgate said the Laredo area was a coastal lagoon during the stage of geologic history known as...
 

Epigraphy and Language
Swansea woman donates birdman tablet to Mounds[Illinois]
  Posted by Dacb
On News/Activism 04/07/2007 11:00:18 AM EDT · 6 replies · 261+ views


News-Democrat | 03 April 2007 | TERI MADDOX
Archaeologists aren't sure why Mississippian Indians engraved small sandstone tablets with birdman images and crosshatching 1,000 years ago. Maybe the tablets were used as visual aids for spiritual storytelling. Maybe they were dipped in dye and stamped on deerskin to create patterns. "Maybe (a tablet) was displayed when you were traveling from one place to another," said Bill Iseminger, assistant site manager at Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site in Collinsville. "It was a passport to show your rank or status or authority." Whatever their purpose, the tablets are considered archaeologically significant because they provide rare pictures from an ancient culture....
 

Navigation
Americas' 1st People Rethought; New Dating Methods Reveal Clovis Migration Theory Flaws
  Posted by Diana in Wisconsin
On News/Activism 02/24/2007 1:14:19 PM EST · 14 replies · 585+ views


JSOnline | February 23, 2007 | Susanne Rust
Brace yourself: The pillars of conventional scientific wisdom are crumbling. Just as science book publishers are rewriting texts to say that there are eight planets instead of nine, they may have another edit to contend with - this time about the first inhabitants of the New World. And we can thank Wisconsin researchers in part for this turnabout. Since the 1960s, archaeologists have argued that the Americas were populated by one group of hunters that crossed a land bridge connecting Siberia to Alaska 11,500 years ago. The descendants of this population then moved throughout the hemisphere, taking up residence across...
 

Precolumbian, Clovis, And Preclovis
ARCHAEOLOGY: Clovis Technology Flowered Briefly and Late, Dates Suggest
  Posted by Lessismore
On News/Activism 02/24/2007 1:56:56 PM EST · 11 replies · 431+ views


Science Magazine | 2007-02-23 | Charles C. Mann
For almost 80 years, one of the most enduring puzzles in the archaeology of the Americas has been the "Clovis culture," known for its elegant, distinctively shaped projectile points. Was Clovis the progenitor of all later Native American societies, as many researchers have long maintained, and, if so, how and when did it arrive in the Americas? On page 1122 of this week's issue, Michael R. Waters of Texas A&M University in College Station and Thomas W. Stafford Jr., proprietor of a private-sector laboratory in Lafayette, Colorado, use new radiocarbon data to argue that Clovis was a kind of brilliant...
 

Art
Prehistoric Women: Not So Simple, Not So Strange
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 03/31/2007 2:03:47 PM EDT · 46 replies · 235+ views


New Scientist | 3-28-2007 | Germaine Greer
Prehistoric women: Not so simple, not so strange 18:00 28 March 2007 Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition. Germaine Greer Prehistoric women: Not so simple, not so strange This is a review of The Invisible Sex: Uncovering the true roles of women in prehistory by J. Adovasio, Olga Soffer & Jake Page, Collins, $27/£13.72, ISBN 9780061170911 Jim Adovasio is the leading expert in the perishable artefacts of the Palaeolithic -- baskets, cordage, woven fabric -- all associated, if somewhat arbitrarily, with women. To correct the astigmatism that has hitherto seen prehistory as the story of early man, Adovasio -- director...
 

CSI: Hopewell [ Researchers use forensic photography to see ancient textiles in new light ]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/01/2007 3:58:49 PM EDT · 7 replies · 33+ views


Columbus Dispatch | Tuesday, March 27, 2007 | Meredith Heagney
Christel Baldia and Kathryn Jakes borrowed forensic photographic techniques used in crime labs to study fabrics used by ancient American Indians. But instead of looking for stray fibers or blood evidence, they scan textile fragments for colors and patterns that might be invisible to the eye. These techniques "make the unseen, seen," said Jakes, a professor of textile and fiber science at Ohio State University who has studied ancient fabrics for 25 years. Baldia, a visiting professor at the Florida Institute of Technology who received her doctorate in textile science at Ohio State University in 2005, said she got the...
 

The Vikings
Iceland's Unwritten Saga
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/06/2007 5:26:34 PM EDT · 23 replies · 657+ views


Archaeology Magazine | 4-6-2007 | Zach Zorich
Iceland's Unwritten Saga Volume 60 Number 2, March/April 2007 by Zach Zorich Did Viking settlers pillage their environment? Birch and willow forests like this one at Lake M˝vatn used to cover much of Iceland's interior. Viking settlers cleared the forest for their pastures and burned the trees to make charcoal. The forests have never recovered. It is estimated that 90 percent of Iceland's pre-settlement forest is gone. (Sigurgeir SigurjÛnsson) Even when the weather is clear, gusts of wind lash the hillsides overlooking the Viking-age farm at Hr"sheimar leaving the land raw and strewn with pebbles. A few miles east the...
 

Biology and Cryptobiology
Doggy DNA: Scientists have dog size mystery licked
  Posted by Pharmboy
On News/Activism 04/06/2007 12:38:39 AM EDT · 44 replies · 1,057+ views


Reuters | Thu Apr 5, 2007 | Julie Steenhuysen
According to Guinness World Records, Gibson, a Great Dane, is the world's tallest dog, from floor to shoulder 42.2'. He stands 7'2' on his hind legs. Gibson plays with his friend, Zoie, a 7.5' Chihuahua in an undated photo. A single gene makes some poodles purse-sized while allowing a Great Dane to look a pony in the eye, U.S. scientists reported on Thursday in a finding that may shed light on human size differences and diseases. (Deanne Fitzmaurice/Handout/Reuters) A single gene makes some poodles purse-sized while allowing a Great Dane to look a pony in the eye, U.S. scientists...
 

Great Pyramid, again
War Of The Pyramid Theorists
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/02/2007 7:37:58 PM EDT · 57 replies · 827+ views


Jerusalem Post | 4-1-2007 | Yaniv Salama-Scheer - Jorg Luyken
Apr. 1, 2007 12:21 | Updated Apr. 1, 2007 14:53War of the pyramid theorists By YANIV SALAMA-SCHEER AND JORG LUYKEN Every significant historical site goes through periods of the day when the surrounding environment make a visit truly worthwhile. At the pyramids of Giza, the view at sunset can push away the claustrophobic memory of the flocks of tourists and local souvenir-sellers who dominate the site earlier in the day. In the hush of sunset, visitors can appreciate the beautiful symmetry of these ancient tombs as the half-light of dusk eradicates the imperfections of age that are evident during the...
 

Egypt
Sinai pumice linked to ancient eruption [...not!]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/07/2007 12:08:27 AM EDT · 11 replies · 116+ views


Yahoo | Monday, April 2, 2007 | Katarina Kratovac w/ contrib by Nicholas Paphits
The head of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities, Zahi Hawass, said the discovery of the pumice would open a new field of study in Egyptology. "Geologists will help us study how ... natural disasters, such as the Santorini tsunami, affected the Pharaonic period," he said... While noting that layers of ash from Santorini have been found in Egypt's Nile Delta, he told The Associated Press that he thought it more likely the floating pumice was carried to the Sinai by regular ocean currents. The archaeological team found the pumice while excavating at Tel Habuwa in the desert northeast of Qantara,...
 

Africa
Skeleton Holds Key To Origin Of Man
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/02/2007 10:09:39 PM EDT · 47 replies · 805+ views


The Telegraph (UK) | 4-3-2007 | Roger Highfield
Skeleton holds key to origin of man By Roger Highfield, Science Editor Last Updated: 2:24am BST 03/04/2007 A skeleton of a possible hybrid between modern and more ancient humans has been found in China, which challenges the theory that modern man originated in Africa. Most experts believe that our ancestors emerged in Africa more than 150,000 years ago and then migrated around the world. However, in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Prof Erik Trinkaus and colleagues provide details of a skeleton found in 2003 from Tianyuan Cave near Beijing. The skeleton is 42,000 to 38,500 years old,...
 

Find raises doubts on key theory of human evolution
  Posted by DaveLoneRanger
On News/Activism 04/02/2007 10:10:57 PM EDT · 85 replies · 1,671+ views


The Scotsman | April 3, 2007 | JOHN VON RADOWITZ
A 40,000-YEAR-OLD skeleton found in China has raised questions about the "out of Africa" hypothesis on how early modern humans populated the planet. The fossil bones are the oldest from an adult "modern" human to be found in eastern Asia. They contain features that call into question the widely held view that our direct ancestors completed their evolution in Africa before spreading out into Europe and the Far East. The "out of Africa" hypothesis proposes that all humans alive today are descended from a small group of sub- Saharan Africans who made their way out of the continent about 60,000...
 

New finding denies Chinese ancestor from Africa
  Posted by TigerLikesRooster
On News/Activism 04/03/2007 9:52:39 AM EDT · 11 replies · 349+ views


China Daily | 04/03/07
New finding denies Chinese ancestor from Africa(Xinhua)Updated: 2007-04-03 09:48WASHINGTON -- Chinese and US researchers have reported the finding of an approximately 40,000-year-old early modern human skeleton in China, indicating that the "Out of Africa" dispersal theory of modern humans may not be as simple as was previously thought. Fossil of a mandible bone found in the Tianyuan Cave, Zhoukoudian, in suburs of Beijing. [Xinhua] The findings were published Monday on the online issue of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Hong Shang, from the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Washington University,...
 

Asia
When Was Chinese Civilization Born?
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/05/2007 4:51:40 PM EDT · 18 replies · 458+ views


People's Daily | 4-5-2007 | Zhou Yixing
When was Chinese civilization born? The origin and formation of Chinese civilization has always been a topic of wide discussion. The Chinese word "long" is an important symbol of Chinese civilization. Wherever there are Chinese communities, there is a "long" history. A sacred symbol of the nation, the Chinese word "long" is completely different from the West's interpretation, "dragon". Long ago a foreign missionary translated "long" into "dragon" by mistake. That mistake has been repeated for 300 years. Now, because of this mistake, some people have proposed abandoning the dragon as the symbol of Chinese civilization and replacing it with...
 

Professor Digs For Clues To Our Survival
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/06/2007 4:36:32 PM EDT · 5 replies · 156+ views


University Of British Columbia | 4-5-2007 | Lorraine Chan
Prof Digs for Clues to our SurvivalUBC Reports | Vol. 53 | No. 4 | Apr. 5, 2007 By Lorraine Chan Zhichun Jing holds a replica of a 1,200 BC ivory cup from the Shang Dynasty of China's Bronze Age - photo by Martin Dee In the Yellow River valley of northern China, Zhichun Jing digs through the remains of long-ago cities to find insights for modern survival. Over the past 10 years, Jing has been excavating the cities of the late Shang Dynasty. Flourishing between 1,200 and 1,050 BC, the Shang was one of the first literate civilizations in China...
 

3000 Year-Old Jinsha Coming To Life
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/04/2007 7:27:39 PM EDT · 14 replies · 341+ views


China.org.cn | 4-3-2007 | Chen Lin
3000 Year-old Jinsha Coming to Life The archeological site of Jinsha located in the western suburbs of Chengdu, the capital city of Sichuan Province, is widely believed to have been the capital of the Shu Kingdom close to 3,000 years ago. After some burial grounds and sacrifice emplacements were recently discovered, a renewed effort was made to excavate Jinsha. This vigor has now revealed the outlines of the cemetery, living areas, palace remains and sacrifice grounds. Lying only 50 kilometers away from the famed Sanxingdui, Jinsha rose to prominence around 1000 BC and shared similar origins with Sanxingdui as can...
 

Forest Of Broken Urns
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/06/2007 5:37:36 PM EDT · 6 replies · 261+ views


Archaeology Magazine | 4-6-2007 | Karen J Coates
Forest of Broken Urns Volume 60 Number 2, March/April 2007 by Karen J. Coates Borneo's unexplored past is dying by the chainsaw. Tony Paran sits near a jar that held the remains of one of his ancestors. Soon, the forests that shelter these jars will be logged. (Jerry Redfern) Walter Paran was a lucky boy. Three minutes out his front door lay an old grave in the forest marked by big stone slabs, a broken jar, and human bones. A few minutes another way was a pit where the riches of the dead were purportedly buried. What more could an...
 

India
Interview [with Iravatham Mahadevan,] the Madras Indus scholar
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 03/31/2007 10:44:03 AM EDT · 24 replies · 33+ views


Himal | April 2007 | interviewed by Sundar Ganesan
[Q:] There are periodic reports of Indus script being deciphered. Are there standard methods to test the validity of claimed decipherments? [A:] The best summary and evaluation of the work done so far is Gregory Possehl’s book, The Indus Age: Its writing. I myself have reviewed five claims to decipherment – two based on Sanskrit, two on Tamil and one claiming that the script is merely a collection of numbers. My conclusion is negative – that none of the decipherments has been successful... There is very little interest in the Indus script in the West – there are very few...
 

Elam, Persia, Parthia, Iran
The Battle of Daras--The First Victory of the Last Great Roman General
  Posted by Antoninus
On Bloggers & Personal 04/04/2007 11:35:30 PM EDT · 9 replies · 106+ views


Gloria Romanorum | 4/4/07 | Paolo Belzoni
"It is possible to govern based on an approach that is distinctly different from one of coercion, force and injustice," wrote Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad recently in an open letter he thoughtfully scribed for the benefit of the American people. "It is possible to sincerely serve and promote common human values, and honesty and compassion. It is possible to provide welfare and prosperity without tension, threats, imposition or war." These statements sound almost reasonable until it is remembered that they came from the pen of an individual whose repressive regime funds proxy paramilitary forces and outright terrorist groups in Iraq,...
 

Iran loses fight over "Lost Paradise" relics
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 03/31/2007 11:07:59 AM EDT · 10 replies


Reuters | Thursday, March 29, 2007 | Peter Griffiths
In a ruling that could affect other countries' attempts to secure the return of antiquities, Britain's High Court rejected Iran's claim that it owned the artifacts... Lawyers acting for Iran said the treasures were among thousands of pieces stolen by looters after floods washed away the topsoil and exposed the ancient city of Jiroft in 2001. Senior judge Charles Gray said Iran had failed to prove its legal ownership of the jars, cups and other items but gave permission for his ruling to be challenged at the appeal court... The gallery's London lawyers, Lane & Partners, said the antiquities were...
 

Faith and Philosophy
Iran's Other Religion
  Posted by siunevada
On Religion 03/30/2007 1:35:10 PM EDT · 11 replies · 106+ views


Boston Review | Summer, 2003 | Jehangir Pocha
In Search of Zarathustra Paul Kriwaczek Alfred A. Knopf, $25 (cloth) A distinct staccato sound of chiseling echoes down a narrow alley in the southern Iranian city of Shiraz. Seated around a mass of black stone, a group of young Muslim men are shaping a Faroharóa winged angel from another time, and faith, than their own. "The Farohar is from our past . . . it is a symbol of our greatness," one of the men says haltingly when I ask him for an explanation. He is referring to one of the most secretive and ineffable aspects of modern Iran,...
 

Let's Have Jerusalem
'Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt' to Shoot in Israel This October [Anne Rice novel]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 03/31/2007 1:43:02 PM EDT · 8 replies · 65+ views


Earthtimes | Friday, March 30, 2007 | PR Newswire
Christ The Lord: Out Of Egypt, the motion picture based on Anne Rice's best-selling novel about Christ's early years, will begin shooting in Israel this October. Good News Holdings' decision to make the film in Israel has the full support of the Israeli government and casting has begun in Israel to find the boy who will play Jesus at the age of 7. A theatrical release is planned for Fall 2008. The Consul General of Israel in Los Angeles, Ehud Danoch said, "We are pleased that Good News Holdings chose Israel as the location for the making of this movie....
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
Did the Red Sea Part? No Evidence, Archaeologists Say [NYT celebrates Passover]
  Posted by SJackson
On News/Activism 04/03/2007 8:46:48 AM EDT · 89 replies · 1,271+ views


NY Times | 4-3-07
NORTH SINAI, Egypt, April 2 ó On the eve of Passover, the Jewish holiday that celebrates the story of Moses leading the Israelites through this wilderness out of slavery, Egypt's chief archaeologist took a bus full of journalists into the North Sinai to showcase his agency's latest discovery. It didn't look like much ó some ancient buried walls of a military fort and a few pieces of volcanic lava. The archaeologist, Dr. Zahi Hawass, often promotes mummies and tombs and pharaonic antiquities that command international attention and high ticket prices. But this bleak landscape, broken only by electric pylons, excited...
 

Prehistory and Origins
DNA Boosts Herodotus' Account of Etruscans as Migrants to Italy
  Posted by neverdem
On News/Activism 04/04/2007 12:27:29 AM EDT · 55 replies · 826+ views


NY Times | April 3, 2007 | NICHOLAS WADE
Geneticists have added an edge to a 2,500-year-old debate over the origin of the Etruscans, a people whose brilliant and mysterious civilization dominated northwestern Italy for centuries until the rise of the Roman republic in 510 B.C. Several new findings support a view held by the ancient Greek historian Herodotus ó but unpopular among archaeologists ó that the Etruscans originally migrated to Italy from the Near East. Though Roman historians played down their debt to the Etruscans, Etruscan culture permeated Roman art, architecture and religion. The Etruscans were master metallurgists and skillful seafarers who for a time dominated much of...
 

Rome and Italy
Prehistoric whale found in inland Italy
  Posted by martin_fierro
On General/Chat 04/03/2007 6:54:47 PM EDT · 32 replies · 259+ views


AP/Yahoo | 4/3/07 | ALESSANDRA RIZZO
Prehistoric whale found in inland Italy By ALESSANDRA RIZZO, Associated Press Writer 5 minutes ago ROME - Italian researchers have excavated the skeleton of a 4 million-year-old whale in the Tuscan countryside, a discovery that could help reconstruct the prehistoric environment of the sea that once covered the region, officials said Tuesday. The 33-foot skeleton, dating to the Pliocene epoch, was found in almost perfect order, with only the jaw bones out of place, said paleontologists with the Museum of Natural History in Florence. Nearly all of Italy was once under water, and it is not unusual to find cetacean...
 

Greece
Greek archaeologists unearth rich tomb (filled with gold jewelry,pottery,artifacts)
  Posted by NormsRevenge
On News/Activism 04/04/2007 8:08:45 PM EDT · 8 replies · 427+ views


AP on Yahoo | 4/4/07 | AP
ATHENS, Greece - Archaeologists on a Greek island have discovered a large Roman-era tomb containing gold jewelry, pottery and bronze offerings, officials said Wednesday. The building, near the village of Fiscardo on Kefalonia, contained five burials including a large vaulted grave and a stone coffin, a Culture Ministry announcement said. The complex, measuring 26 by 20 feet, had been missed by grave-robbers, the announcement said. Archaeologists found gold earrings and rings, gold leaves that may have been attached to ceremonial clothing, as well as glass and clay pots, bronze artifacts decorated with masks, a bronze lock and copper coins. The...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
The Discovery Of America: The Revolutionary Claims Of A Dead Historian
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/04/2007 7:49:18 PM EDT · 7 replies · 585+ views


University Of Bristol | 4-4-2007 | Alwyn Ruddock
The discovery of America: the revolutionary claims of a dead historian Press release issued 4 April 2007Replica Of John Cabot's Ship Dr Alwyn Ruddock, a former reader in history at the University of London, was the world expert on John Cabot's discovery voyages from Bristol to North America (1496-98). What she was said to have found out about these voyages looked set to re-write the history of the European discovery of America. Yet, when Dr Ruddock died in December 2005, having spent four decades researching this topic, she ordered the destruction of all her research. In an article published today...
 

Ancient Autopsies
Beyond The Family Feud (Olmecs)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/06/2007 5:19:37 PM EDT · 11 replies · 236+ views


Archaeology Magazine | 4-6-2007 | Andrew Lawler
Beyond the Family Feud Volume 60 Number 2, March/April 2007 by Andrew Lawler After decades of debate, are younger scholars finally asking the right questions about the Olmec? The lush, wet environment of the Laguna de los Cerros site, aerial view above left, typifies the Olmec heartland between the later Aztec (Tenochtitl·n) and Maya (Palenque) regions. (Ken Garrett) It's a drizzly autumn morning in the eastern Mexican city of Xalapa, near the heartland of what many scholars say was Mesoamerica's first civilization. At the city's elegant anthropology museum, amid one of the finest Olmec collections in the world, Yale archaeologist...
 

Show Me the Mummy: USC Orthodontist Investigates 2,000-Year-Old Girl
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/06/2007 11:48:52 PM EDT · 8 replies · 33+ views


Los Angeles Downtown News | April 2, 2007 | Ben Creighton
His patient was the mummy of a 4- or 5-year-old Egyptian girl. Wrapped and embalmed two millennia ago in North Africa, she called the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum in San Jose, Calif., her home for the past 75 years... Utilizing three-dimensional imaging software used in the School of Dentistry's orthodontic clinic, Mah and Jack Choi of Anatomage - manufacturer of the software - discovered tooth fragments lodged in the throat and the nasal pharynx of the mummy... Using image slices from the region where the tooth was dislodged, Mah was able to record bone density measurements to surmise that the girl...
 

Pa-Ib a real person, but royalty?(PT Barnum Mummy)
  Posted by GinJax
On News/Activism 09/19/2006 10:58:36 PM EDT · 1 reply · 260+ views


Connecticut Post | 15 Sep 2006 | MEG BARONE
BRIDGEPORT ó Every day was April Fools' Day for P.T. Barnum, the renowned showman and self-proclaimed Prince of Humbugs, a title that leads to questions about the authenticity of the artifacts he left behind. After all, the Bridgeport Renaissance man gave the world the Fejee Mermaid, a fantasy creature that was one of his biggest hoaxes. But leave it to Barnum to play with people's minds, even from beyond the grave. Just as one starts to believe everything in Barnum's collection sprang from his creative genius, along come a couple of archaeological experts to authenticate Pa-Ib, an Egyptian mummy reputed...
 

Joan of Arc remains 'are fakes'[Egyptian mummy and a cat]
  Posted by Dacb
On News/Activism 04/05/2007 1:45:21 AM EDT · 2 replies · 152+ views


BBC | 04 April 2007 | BBC
Bones thought to be the holy remains of 15th Century French heroine Joan of Arc were in fact made from an Egyptian mummy and a cat, research has revealed. In 1867, a jar was found in a Paris pharmacy attic, along with a label claiming it held relics of Joan's body. But new forensic tests suggest that the remains date from between the third and sixth centuries BC - hundreds of years before Joan was even born. The study has been reported in the news pages of the Nature journal. Forensic scientist Dr Philippe Charlier, who led the investigation, told...
 

Bone fragment likely not Joan of Arc
  Posted by NYer
On Religion 12/17/2006 6:29:22 PM EST · 17 replies · 372+ views


Yahoo News | December 17, 2006 | CHRISTIAN PANVERT
A rib bone and a piece of cloth supposedly recovered after Joan of Arc was burned at the stake are probably not hers, according to experts trying to unravel one of the mysteries surrounding the 15th century French heroine.Eighteen experts began a series of tests six months ago on the fragments reportedly recovered from the pyre where the 19-year-old was burned for heresy.Although the tests have not been completed, findings so far indicate there is "relatively little chance" that the remnants are hers, Philippe Charlier, the head of the team, told The Associated Press on Saturday.The fragment of linen from...
 

Longer Perspectives
Lessons On The Ancients Are History [UK to stop teaching ancient history]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 03/31/2007 2:05:53 PM EDT · 10 replies · 95+ views


Daily Express | Saturday March 31, 2007 | John Ingham
Elements of the existing ancient history exam will now be merged into a new classical civilisation A-level to be taught from September 2008. But Tory education spokesman Boris Johnson, who is also an author and TV presenter on classical civilisation, said: "You can't just subsume the study of ancient history into the study of classical civilisation. "You might as well say that you can learn English history by studying English language and literature... A spokesperson for the board said: "OCR is committed to enabling –students to study classics and we are the only awarding body still offering a comprehensive suite...
 

Teachers Drop Holocaust, Crusades From History Lessons to Avoid Offending Children
  Posted by B4Ranch
On News/Activism 04/02/2007 6:22:59 PM EDT · 57 replies · 1,124+ views


www.foxnews.com | April 01, 2007 | Alexandra Frean
Teachers are dropping controversial subjects such as the Holocaust and the Crusades from history lessons because they do not want to offend children from certain races or religions, a report claims. A lack of factual knowledge among some teachers, particularly in primary schools, is also leading to "shallow" lessons on emotive and difficult subjects, according to the study by the Historical Association.
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Trench discovery unearths Texas Revolution artifacts
  Posted by SwinneySwitch
On News/Activism 04/05/2007 12:35:27 PM EDT · 24 replies · 615+ views


Houston Chronicle/AP | April 5, 2007
SAN ANTONIO ó Historians say an old trench discovered in San Antonio might have been used by Mexican soldiers as fortification against Texan rebels during a siege that preceded the Battle of the Alamo. Workers found the trench off Main Plaza, San Antonio's historic city center, as they were digging up the street a couple of weeks ago to install a storm-water line, city officials said. Archeologists think the trench was built by Mexican forces under the command of Gen. Martin Perfecto de Cos. From October to December 1835, the city was under siege by Texas rebels in an early...
 

end of digest #142 20070407

526 posted on 04/07/2007 12:09:56 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Monday, April 2, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 523 | View Replies]

To: 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; Androcles; AntiGuv; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; ...
FReeper cgk has updated the List of Ping Lists -- #8. Historically, there was at least one other attempt to compile such a list, but that guy went way overboard, using other actual ping lists and pinging everyone and their brother, then getting argumentative when taken to task for it. About three hours of that was all the mods put up with. :') And yet, they've put up with me for something like three years.

I'm not sure how this Digest is going to turn out, I am in need of a nap.
Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #142 20070407
To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)


Topics 1813601 to 1809780.

527 posted on 04/07/2007 12:10:47 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Monday, April 2, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 526 | View Replies]


Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #143
Saturday, April 14, 2007


Climate
Sunspots reaching 1,000-year high
  Posted by George W. Bush
On News/Activism 04/10/2007 10:30:56 AM EDT · 270 replies · 4,435+ views


BBC News | Tuesday, 6 July, 2004 | Dr David Whitehouse
Sunspots reaching 1,000-year high By Dr David Whitehouse BBC News Online science editor Sunspots are plentiful nowadays A new analysis shows that the Sun is more active now than it has been at anytime in the previous 1,000 years. Scientists based at the Institute for Astronomy in Zurich used ice cores from Greenland to construct a picture of our star's activity in the past. They say that over the last century the number of sunspots rose at the same time that the Earth's climate became steadily warmer. This trend is being amplified by gases from fossil fuel burning, they...
 

Agriculture
FSU Anthropologist Finds Earliest Evidence Of Maize Farming In Mexico (7,300 YA)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/10/2007 1:37:52 PM EDT · 22 replies · 296+ views


Eureka Alert/FSU | 4-9-2007 | Mary Pohl/FSU
Contact: Mary Pohl mpohl@mailer.fsu.edu 850-644-8153 Florida State University FSU anthropologist finds earliest evidence of maize farming in Mexico TALLAHASSEE, Fla.--A Florida State University anthropologist has new evidence that ancient farmers in Mexico were cultivating an early form of maize, the forerunner of modern corn, about 7,300 years ago - 1,200 years earlier than scholars previously thought. Professor Mary Pohl conducted an analysis of sediments in the Gulf Coast of Tabasco, Mexico, and concluded that people were planting crops in the "New World" of the Americas around 5,300 B.C. The analysis extends Pohl's previous work in this area and validates principles...
 

Precolumbian, Clovis, And Preclovis
Archaeologists Find 3 Prehistoric Bodies In SE Mexico (Tulum - 10-14.5k YO)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/11/2007 6:40:41 PM EDT · 49 replies · 742+ views


Xinhuanet | 4-11-2007 | China View
Archaeologists find 3 prehistoric bodies in SE Mexico www.chinaview.cn 2007-04-11 11:39:34 MEXICO CITY, April 10 (Xinhua) -- Mexican archaeologists found remains of two women and a man that can be traced to more than 10,000 years ago in the Mayan area of Tulum, Mexico's National Anthropology and History Institute said in a statement on Tuesday. The remains were being examined by laboratories in Britain, the United States and Mexico, all of which had said the remains were people between 10,000 and 14,500 years ago, said Carmen Rojas, an archaeologist quoted in the statement. "This makes southeastern Mexico one of the...
 

Human Sacrifice
Ancient Mexicans took sacrifice victims from afar
  Posted by ruination
On News/Activism 04/12/2007 2:45:32 PM EDT · 45 replies · 795+ views


Reuters | Apr 11, 2007 | unattributed
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Ancient Mexicans brought human sacrifice victims from hundreds of miles (km) away over centuries to sanctify a pyramid in the oldest city in North America, an archeologist said on Wednesday. DNA tests on the skeletons of more than 50 victims discovered in 2004 in the Pyramid of the Moon at the Teotihuacan ruins revealed they were from far away Mayan, Pacific or Atlantic coastal cultures. The bodies, many of which were decapitated, dated from between 50 AD and 500 AD and were killed at different times to dedicate new stages of construction of the pyramid just...
 

Mexican sacrifice victims came from afar
  Posted by SwinneySwitch
On News/Activism 04/12/2007 5:23:37 PM EDT · 25 replies · 423+ views


UKTV | April 12, 2007
Archaeologists have discovered new evidence to suggest ancient Mexicans brought human sacrifice victims from locations hundreds of miles away. New evidence has been found to suggest ancient Mexicans could have brought people hundreds of miles for use as human sacrifices. Archaeologists examined the DNA of the skeletons of 50 sacrificial victims found at the Pyramid of the Moon at the Teotihuacan ruins in Mexico, finding that they may have originated from Mayan, Pacific or Atlantic areas hundreds of miles away. Experts believe that the bodies could have been decapitated between 50 and 500 AD, while the pyramid was being built....
 

Rome and Italy
2,200 Year Old Amphoras Contained Wine (Illyrian)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/10/2007 1:49:45 PM EDT · 17 replies · 482+ views


Science Daily | 4-10-2007
2,200-year old amphoras contained wine SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina, April 9 (UPI) -- Parts of amphoras believed to be 2,200 years old uncovered in a Bosnia-Herzegovina swamp are suspected to have carried wine, experts said Monday. Snjezana Vasilj, head of a Bosnian team of archaeologists, said a preliminary analysis showed amphoras, found at what are believed remains of the first-ever discovered Illyrian ships, were used for transporting wine, the Bosnian news agency FENA reported. Late in March, Vasilj and her team found what they believed were the Illyrian ships in the Desilo location, more than 20 feet under the water level of...
 

Africa
Roman Africa [economic, political lines between Carthage and Numidia separate Tunisia and Algeria]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/11/2007 1:14:56 PM EDT · 34 replies · 208+ views


Atlantic Monthly | June 2001 | Robert D. Kaplan
From the parapets of Le Kef, on a rocky spur in northwestern Tunisia, one can see deep into the mountains of Algeria, whose border is a short distance away. A fort of some kind has existed here since Carthaginian times, 2,500 years ago, and the ocher ruins of ancient cities are all around. Dominating the view to the southwest is Jugurtha's Table, a massive mesa atop which the Numidian King Jugurtha held out against a Roman army from 112 to 105 B.C... Since the days of ancient Carthage the area that makes up present-day Tunisia has been like this: an...
 

Elam, Persia, Parthia, Iran
Tehran's Standoff With West See Tourists Snub Persian Treasures
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/12/2007 11:38:19 AM EDT · 32 replies · 598+ views


The Guardian (UK) | 4-12-2007 | Robert Tait
Tehran's standoff with west sees tourists snub Persian treasuresIndustry faces collapse as tension grows over nuclear issue and sailors' detention Robert Tait in Tehran, The Guardian Thursday April 12 2007 Siosepol Bridge in the ancient city of Isfahan. Iran's tourist trade has been badly damaged by recent events. Photograph: Alamy With its enduring relics of a glorious imperial past, spectacular glittering mosques and breathtaking landscapes, Iran lays claim to some of the finest cultural jewels in the Middle East. But a potentially catastrophic collapse in the country's tourist trade is threatening to leave this dazzling array of attractions largely unseen...
 

India
Distributing Water (Ancient Indus Valley)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/13/2007 2:03:16 PM EDT · 21 replies · 499+ views


The Hindu | 4-13-2007 | Dr T V Padma
Distributing water DR. T. V. PADMA How did the people of the Indus manage to water their cities? In Indus cities, each house or group of houses had a private well, made with wedge-shaped bricks that slotted together in a cylindrical shape strong enough to withstand the weight of water when the well was full. This is not a simple matter, and required calculation ó otherwise a well could collapse once it was full of water. How did the Indus people keep wells and bathing facilities watertight? First, they used bricks that fitted together tightly. Second, they coated the outer...
 

Japan
Early Humans 'Mined' Tochigi Mountain To Produce Stone Tools (Japan - 35,000+ YA)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/13/2007 1:51:01 PM EDT · 11 replies · 263+ views


Asahi | 4-13-2007 | Nobuyuki Watanabe
04/13/2007 BY NOBUYUKI WATANABE, THE ASAHI SHIMBUN Humans may have trekked up a mountain 35,000 years ago in what is now Tochigi Prefecture to dig up raw obsidian ore to process into stone tools, archaeologists say. Trapezoid stone tools unearthed on Mount Takaharayama in the prefecture will shed light on early human history in Japan, they added. The tools indicate human beings at the start of the Upper Paleolithic Era (roughly 35,000 years ago) were already "mining" raw stones to produce tools, not just picking them up off the ground, the researchers said. Previous finds had led experts to believe...
 

Asia
Archaeologists Excavate Past Glories From Tombs (China)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/09/2007 5:27:20 PM EDT · 2 replies · 174+ views


Xinhuanet | 4-9-2007 | China View - Chen Yongzhi
Archaeologists excavate past glories from tombs www.chinaview.cn 2007-04-09 16:16:05 HOHHOT, April 9 (Xinhua) -- Archaeologists have unearthed more than 5,000 items dating back 2,000 years from a complex of 385 tombs uncovered at a construction site in north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The local cultural relics and archaeology authorities estimate the tombs cover an area of 50,000 sq m and must have been constructed sometime from the Warring States period (475 to 221 B.C.) to the Yuan Dynasty (1271 to 1368). They believe 285 of the tombs belong to the Warring States period, 43 belong to dynasties of the...
 

Silk Route
Roman-Style Column Bolsters Han Dynasty Tomb
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/08/2007 9:41:47 PM EDT · 35 replies · 801+ views


Peoples Daily | 4-9-2007
Roman-style column bolsters Han Dynasty tomb Archeologists excavate near a Roman-style column in a newly found Han Dynasty tomb (202 BC - 220 AD) in Xiao County, east China's Anhui Province, April 3, 2007. (newsphoto) Nearby villagers look on at the stone entrance of a newly found Han Dynasty tomb (202 BC - 220 AD) in Xiao County, east China's Anhui Province, April 3, 2007. (newsphoto) An archeologists cleans carved stones in a newly found Han Dynasty tomb (202 BC - 220 AD) in Xiao County, east China's Anhui Province, April 3, 2007. (newsphoto)
 

Let's Have Jerusalem
Jews Assists Ancient Chinese to Make Earliest Paper Money: Expert
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/09/2007 2:09:14 PM EDT · 22 replies · 240+ views


People's Daily Online | Friday, December 15, 2000 | unattributed
It is well known that "jiaozi," world's earliest paper money, originated in China some 800 years ago. But latest research indicate that Jews used to assist ancient China in doing this might surprise most people. "Jiaozi," also named "jiaochao," appeared in China in 1154 during the reign of the Jin regime (1115-1234). It was believed in the past that Jin regime hired coining workers of Song (960-1279), Jin's preceding dynasty, to make the paper notes. But Qiu Shiyu, researcher of the Harbin Academy of Sciences and expert of Jin history, concluded that Jews used to take part in the work...
 

Russia
Anomalous Zones Of Russia: Arkaim Town
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/12/2007 6:48:37 PM EDT · 28 replies · 415+ views


Russia - IC | 4-12-2007
Anomalous zones of Russia: Arkaim town Four thousand years ago the local dwellers suddenly left the town Arkaim located in the south of the present Chelyabinsk Region and burnt the empty settlement. The town had a circular structure coordinated with the stars order. Many believe in mystical characteristics of the area and link it with the legends of ancient Siberia and the Urals. Specialists of the monitoring station of anomalies` research in the Urals claim that the specialized national park-museum Arkaim is a vast anomalous zone. Arkaim was found by an archaeological expedition of the State University of Chelyabinsk in...
 

Malta
Emergence Of A New Picture Of The Maltese Holocene Environment
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/07/2007 7:03:52 PM EDT · 10 replies · 355+ views


The Malta Independent | 4-06-2007
Emergence of a new picture of the Maltese holocene environment A new picture of the Maltese holocene environment is emerging through Katrin Fenechís recent Ph.D. thesis entitled "Human-induced changes in the environment and landscape of the Maltese Islands from the Neolithic to the 15th century AD, as inferred from a scientific study of sediments from Marsa, Malta". The thesis investigates current theories through scientific analyses of sediment. For this purpose, an 11.2m long sediment core was retrieved from the Marsa Sports Ground, with the help of a mechanical corer, in June 2002, financed by Linda Eneix of the OTS Foundation....
 

Ancient Europe
Mystery Of The Fat Venus (Porn?)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/09/2007 5:38:27 PM EDT · 69 replies · 2,292+ views


Stuff.com.nz | 4-9-2007 | Bob Brockie
Mystery of the fat Venus The Dominion Post | Monday, 9 April 2007 WORLD OF SCIENCE - BOB BROCKIE We all know about those hand-sized Ice Age women carved in stone -- those plump ladies with huge breasts and behinds, tiny heads, artful hairdos and no faces. They're known as Palaeolithic Venuses and they raise a lot of puzzling questions: How come these almost identical figurines were found all the way from France to Siberia? How come this stylised carving tradition was practised and passed down over 20,000 years? What purpose did they serve? There are as many answers to...
 

Prehistory and Origins
Cavemen Chose Caves On Five Criteria
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/09/2007 5:16:57 PM EDT · 82 replies · 1,815+ views


Discovery | 4-9-2007 | Jennifer Viegas
Cavemen Chose Caves on Five Criteria Jennifer Viegas, Discovery NewsLocation, Location, LocationCave With A View April 9, 2007 ó House buyers today usually peruse properties with a checklist of desired features in mind. This aspect of human behavior has apparently not changed much over the millennia, according to a new study that found prehistoric cave dwellers in Britain did exactly the same thing when choosing their homes. The recently released three-year-long survey of approximately 230 caves in the Yorkshire Dales and 190 caves in the northern England Peak District determined that people there from 4,000 to 2,000 B.C. selected caves...
 

Megaliths and Archaeoastronomy
Stonehenge Amulets Worn By Elite
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/07/2007 7:11:50 PM EDT · 11 replies · 449+ views


Discovery | 4-7-2007 | Jennifer Viegas
Stonehenge Amulets Worn by Elite Jennifer Viegas, Discovery NewsSupernatural StoneStrking GoldApril 6, 2007 ó Forget dressing for success: Clothing ornaments thought to confer supernatural power were all the rage among chiefs and other important people in England 4,000 years ago, say scholars. A recent find indicates some of these fashion trends might have originally been designed by Stonehenge leaders. While working two months ago in South Lowestoft, Suffolk, British archaeologist Clare Good excavated a four-sided object made of the mineral jet. It closely matches a geometrically designed gold object found far away at a burial site called Bush Barrow near...
 

British Isles
7th Century Saxon Pendant Unearthed
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/10/2007 1:55:45 PM EDT · 28 replies · 1,107+ views


icLoughborough | 4-10-2007
7th Century Saxon pendant unearthedApr 10 2007 A TREASURE seeker from Shepshed has discovered a 7th Century pendant near his home. Stacey Spiby, 36, found the rare and valuable Anglo Saxon piece of jewellery while combing a nearby field with a metal detector. The oval pendant, which is about 2.5cm long and 1.8cm wide still needs to be valued, but according to Peter Liddle, Leicestershire County Councilís keeper of archaeology, it may be worth "in the region of a few thousand pounds." Mr Liddle told the Echo: "This find is very unusual - it is very much like the items...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
Have Scottish Archaeologists Found Rob Roy's Home?
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/11/2007 7:09:01 PM EDT · 27 replies · 723+ views


24 Hour Museum | 4-10-2007 | Graham Spicer
HAVE SCOTTISH ARCHAEOLOGISTS FOUND ROB ROY'S HOME? By Graham Spicer 10/04/2007 The large boulders may be part of the foundations for a 18th century turf-built longhouse. Photo NTS Archaeologists are excavating a house they think may have belonged to legendary Scottish outlaw Rob Roy. The National Trust for Scotland (NTS) dig is examining the lower slopes of Ben Lomond at Ardess, where Rob Roy is known to have lived in early 18th century. "Documentary evidence records that Rob Roy owned land at Ardess in 1710-11 and the Duke of Montrose became his feudal superior," said Derek Alexander, NTS archaeologist. "However,...
 

Faith and Philosophy
The 'Grave Slab Code' Baffles Experts
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/12/2007 6:08:53 PM EDT · 10 replies · 875+ views


IC Newcastle | 4-12-2007 | Tony Henderson
The 'grave slab code' baffles expertsApr 12 2007 By Tony Henderson Environment Editor, The Journal What could be a 900-year-old code is baffling archaeologist Peter Ryder. Over the last 30 years Northumberland-based Peter has recorded 700 ancient grave slab covers in the county, plus another 500 each in County Durham and Cumbria. But the carvings found on one 12th-Century slab, which had been recycled and used 300 years later in a church tower, have set Peter a puzzle. Three 12th-Century grave slabs were incorporated into the tower of St Michael and All Angels Church in Newburn, Newcastle. They have been...
 

Phony Stony Bony
Jesus Tomb Film Scholars Backtrack (Discovery's "Lost Tomb of Jesus")
  Posted by Reaganesque
On News/Activism 04/11/2007 11:56:08 PM EDT · 30 replies · 904+ views


The Jerusalem Post | 4/11/07 | Etgar Lefkovits
Several prominent scholars who were interviewed in a bitterly contested documentary that suggests that Jesus and his family members were buried in a nondescript ancient Jerusalem burial cave have now revised their conclusions, including the statistician who claimed that the odds were 600:1 in favor of the tomb being the family burial cave of Jesus of Nazareth, a new study on the fallout from the popular documentary shows. The dramatic clarifications, compiled by epigrapher Stephen Pfann of the University of the Holy Land in Jerusalem in a paper titled "Cracks in the Foundation: How the Lost Tomb of Jesus story...
 

Art
The Cigar Box Guitar
  Posted by martin_fierro
On General/Chat 04/13/2007 6:32:59 PM EDT · 16 replies · 192+ views


blogcritics.org | April 13 2007 | Jennifer Jordan
The Cigar Box Guitar Written by JJ Published April 13, 2007 Music and cigars arenít something I usually equate with each other. In fact, cigars are almost the last type of smoke I think of when I turn the dial of the radio. If I hear Ryan Adams, I imagine him on stage surrounded by a grayish cloud, a cigarette dangling from his mouth. If I hear Bing Crosby, I imagine that his "White Christmas" also involves a black pipe. And, if I hear Willie Nelson, I think of a type of smoke sure to make him hungry for some...
 

Navigation
Hunt on for HMS Sussex and world's richest underwater treasure
  Posted by Dacb
On General/Chat 04/07/2007 2:22:22 AM EDT · 16 replies · 707+ views


CYBER DIVER News Network | 03 April 2007 | SINIKKA TARVAINEN
MADRID, Spain (3 Apr 2007) -- In February 1694, British admiral Francis Wheeler set sail from the Bay of Gibraltar with an important mission. He was to bring a large sum of money to the Duke of Savoy in order to buy his loyalty and to ensure victory in Britain's ongoing war against France's Sun King Louis XIV. But when the HMS Sussex arrived in the Strait of Gibraltar, it was hit by a violent storm, and Wheeler struggled in vain to save it. The 50-metre warship went down with more than 500 men, 80 cannons and an estimated 10...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Holocaust Avoidance. British schools are jettisoning lessons to keep Muslims happy. [John Leo]
  Posted by aculeus
On News/Activism 04/04/2007 1:35:48 PM EDT · 26 replies · 484+ views


City Journal | April 4, 2007 | by John Leo
Some British schools are dropping lessons on the Holocaust and the Crusades, seeking to avoid antagonizing Muslim students. A Historical Association report, funded by the department for education and skills, said teachers feared confronting "anti-Semitic sentiment and Holocaust denial among some Muslim pupils." Some teachers also "deliberately avoided teaching the Crusades" because "a balanced school treatment would have challenged teaching in some local mosques." Give the study credit for raising the point that almost any history lesson could put some noses out of joint. Teaching about the slave trade, for instance, could leave both white and black children feeling alienated....
 

end of digest #143 20070414

528 posted on 04/14/2007 10:54:47 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Monday, April 2, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 526 | View Replies]

To: 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; Androcles; AntiGuv; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; ...
Everyone will be overjoyed to learn that I got my income tax returns filed, apart from the City of Grand Rapids, to which I owe $6. There's a/an historical relevance, to the Civil War, because April 15th is a Sunday, and April 16th is Emancipation Day in Washington DC, delaying the filing deadline to April 17th.

After punching out at midnight, I stayed at work (copiers, printers, internet connection; I supplied my own calculator) just to do this, and wound up getting home after 4 AM. While working on it I slipped in a CD of favorite tunes, snacked a bit, chatted with the third shift skeleton crew, and generally took my time. Results look good. Mailed 'em this morning.
Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #143 20070414
To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)


Topics 1817018 to 1813501.

529 posted on 04/14/2007 10:55:45 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Monday, April 2, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 528 | View Replies]


Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #144
Saturday, April 21, 2007


Prehistory and Origins
Israeli researchers: 'Lucy' is not direct ancestor of humans
  Posted by bedolido
On General/Chat 04/16/2007 11:51:39 AM EDT · 46 replies · 485+ views


jpost.com | 4-16-2007 | JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH
Tel Aviv University anthropologists say they have disproven the theory that "Lucy" - the world-famous 3.2-million-year-old Australopithecus afarensis skeleton found in Ethiopia 33 years ago - is the last ancestor common to humans and another branch of the great apes family known as the "Robust hominids." The jaw bone of Lucy and the jaw bone of Australopithecus afarensis.
 

Chimps knocked off top of the IQ tree
  Posted by bruinbirdman
On News/Activism 04/15/2007 9:26:26 PM EDT · 91 replies · 1,710+ views


The Times | 4/15/2007 | Jonathan Leake and Roger Dobson
ORANG-UTANS have been named as the worldís most intelligent animal in a study that places them above chimpanzees and gorillas, the species traditionally considered closest to humans. The study found that out of 25 species of primate, orang-utans had developed the greatest power to learn and to solve problems. The controversial findings challenge the widespread belief that chimpanzees are the closest to humans in brainpower. They also suggest that the ancestry of orang-utans and humans may be more closely entwined than had been thought. ìIt appears the orang-utan may possess a privileged status among human kindred,î said James Lee, the...
 

Hobbits
Hobbit Hominids Lived The Island Life
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/18/2007 2:19:12 PM EDT · 20 replies · 482+ views


Yahoo News | 4-18-2007
Hobbit hominids lived the island life Wed Apr 18, 6:43 AM ET PARIS (AFP) - A tantalising piece of evidence has been added to the puzzle over so-called "hobbit" hominids found in a cave in a remote Indonesian island, whose discovery has ignited one of the fiercest rows in anthropology. Explorers of the human odyssey have been squabbling bitterly since the fossilised skeletons of tiny hominids, dubbed after the diminutive hobbits in J.R.R. Tolkien's tale, were found on the island of Flores in 2003. Measuring just a metre (3.25 feet) tall and with a skull the size of a grapefruit,...
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
Why (Super-Volcano) Toba Matters
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/18/2007 6:15:14 PM EDT · 24 replies · 728+ views


Nova | Nova
Why Toba Matters What can a volcanic eruption that occurred almost 75,000 years ago teach us about today's world of air pollution, global warming, and climate change? Heaps, says Dr. Drew Shindell, a climatologist at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York. For starters, knowing what the massive upheaval of Indonesia's Toba supervolcano did to the planet's climate (it might have cooled global temperatures enough to kill vegetation for years on end and perhaps hasten an ice age) offers sobering insight into what pumping billions of tons of chemicals into the atmosphere as we're now doing could result...
 

Climate
Map Reveals Secret Of Awesome Mavericks Waves
  Posted by blam
On General/Chat 04/19/2007 10:42:14 PM EDT · 10 replies · 809+ views


New Scientist | 4-19-2007 | Phil McKeena
Map reveals secret of awesome Mavericks waves 17:27 19 April 2007 NewScientist.com news service Phil McKenna Seafloor map showing a long narrow ramp leading up to the Mavericks break (in black box) off Half Moon Bay in Central California. Blue = deep water, Red = shallow water, White = break zone (Image: Seafloor Mapping Lab, California State University, Monterey Bay)Rikk Kvitek, director of the Seafloor Mapping Lab at California State University-Monterey Bay Center for Habitat Studies at Moss Landing Marine Labs California Coast State Waters Mapping Project Images of the seafloor at Mavericks The magnificent waves in Half Moon Bay...
 

Ancient Autopsies
4600-Year-Old Skulls From Iraq To Get CT Scan
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/14/2007 11:30:28 AM EDT · 18 replies · 396+ views


Philadelphia Daily News | 4-14-2007 | Ron Todt
Posted on Fri, Apr. 13, 2007 4600-year-old skulls from Iraq to get CT scanRon Todt The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA - A pair of 4,600-year-old skulls from Iraq will be given a CT scan that promises to reveal the faces of two of the dozens of sacrificial victims found decades ago in the remains of an ancient Sumerian city. The procedure will be done Sunday at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania on the skulls of a young woman adorned with gold ornaments and a man wearing a copper helmet, both found in the southern Iraq city of Ur in...
 

Death and the Maidens
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/17/2007 6:30:07 PM EDT · 27 replies · 655+ views


Philly.com | 4-16-2007 | Tom Avril
Posted on Mon, Apr. 16, 2007Death and the maidensPenn researchers tackle Mesopotamian mystery. By Tom Avril Inquirer Staff Writer Aubrey Baadsgaard says the ancient victims may not have walked into the Mesopotamian tomb and sacrificed and drank poison. She hopes CAT scans of two skulls yesterday will back up her doubts. JONATHAN WILSON / Inquirer Staff Photographer Dozens of maidens, wearing headdresses of gold and lapis lazuli, walked down into a tomb in Mesopotamia 4,600 years ago. Each raised a cup to her lips, drank some poison, and lay down to die, hoping to join a king or other royal...
 

Elam, Persia, Parthia, Iran
Traces of Cyrus the Great Found in Borazjan Palace
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/16/2007 9:55:27 AM EDT · 4 replies · 40+ views


Cultural Heritage News | April 14, 2007 | Soudabeh Sadigh
Archeological excavations in vicinity of Borazjan Palace, Boushehr province, revealed that the construction of this half-constructed palace was started by order of Cyrus the Great, founder of Achaemenid dynasty (550-330 BC), and architectural evidence identified in the area are very similar to those implemented in Pasargadae palace.... The palace cover a 50x50 meters area and archeological evidence show that the huge stones used in its construction were brought from Tangjir quarry.
 

Iran dam said to threaten ancient sites
  Posted by NormsRevenge
On News/Activism 04/19/2007 11:02:43 PM EDT · 10 replies · 185+ views


AP on Yahoo | 4/19/07 | Ali Akbar Dareini - ap
TEHRAN, Iran - Iranian engineers began filling a new dam Thursday as archaeologists warned that its reservoir will flood newly discovered antiquities and could damage Iran's grandest site, the ancient Persian capital of Persepolis. At the inauguration ceremony, attended by Energy Ministry officials, pipes were opened for water to start flowing into an artificial lake created by the dam spanning the Sivand River, 520 miles south of the capital, Tehran. The lake's waters will be used to irrigate the area's farms. Iranian state-run television said the dam was opened "on the order of the President" Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, but the hard-line...
 

Iran dam said to threaten ancient Persian sites
  Posted by freedom44
On News/Activism 04/20/2007 4:44:56 AM EDT · 6 replies · 175+ views


Yahoo | 4/20/07 | Yahoo
TEHRAN, Iran - Iranian engineers began filling a new dam Thursday as archaeologists warned that its reservoir will flood newly discovered antiquities and could damage Iran's grandest site, the ancient Persian capital of Persepolis. At the inauguration ceremony, attended by Energy Ministry officials, pipes were opened for water to start flowing into an artificial lake created by the dam spanning the Sivand River, 520 miles south of the capital, Tehran. The lake's waters will be used to irrigate the area's farms. Iranian state-run television said the dam was opened "on the order of the President" Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, but the hard-line...
 

Greece
Ancient Thessaloniki emerges, thanks to digging for metro
  Posted by siunevada
On News/Activism 04/17/2007 11:19:06 PM EDT · 9 replies · 324+ views


Kathimerini | Iota Myrtsioti
Tunnels will go deeper to spare antiquities Preliminary work on the metro is slowly bringing to light the story of Thessaloniki. The first architectural remains and portable finds discovered in the cityís historic center are just a sample of what the metro tunneling machine will turn up once it starts digging deeper. Though the exploratory digs at 350 points along the 9.6-kilometer metro line that were begun last August have so far uncovered only a handful of portable finds, a museum has already been found to house them. It is the Alkazar (formerly Hamza Bey mosque). Refurbishment is under way,...
 

Rome and Italy
Roman camp's occupiers may have built the Antonine Wall
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/16/2007 1:46:39 AM EDT · 2 replies · 1+ view


Scotsman | Friday the 13th, April 2007 | unattributed
Archaeologists have found a camp thought to have been built to accommodate Roman construction workers who constructed the Antonine Wall. It was discovered in a dig following the demolition of the former OKI factory at Tollpark, near Castlecary, North Lanarkshire. Ross White of CFA Archaeology said the rectangular camp's outline was first identified in cropmarks on aerial photographs taken in the late 1940s, before the development of the area. The camp was situated about 400 metres south of the Antonine Wall and midway between the Roman forts at Westerwood and Castlecary... Construction of the Antonine Wall began in 142, during...
 

British Isles
Digger blunder at site of Roman fort [ Caister, near Yarmouth, UK ]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/16/2007 10:09:32 AM EDT · 10 replies · 148+ views


EDP24 / Archant Regional | April 13, 2007 | Shaun Lowthorpe
Norfolk Archaeology Unit (NAU) was commissioned to carry out a dig last year ahead of plans to build houses on a garden bordering the north-east corner of the fort at Uplands Avenue. A nationally important site, the fort was one of 12 built by the Romans stetching to the south coast, with the others in Norfolk being at Burgh Castle and Brancaster. The area in question was covered by a thin layer of tarmac, yet beneath that it was straight down into undisturbed Roman deposits allowing a fresh picture to be built up of an area stretching from the fort's...
 

Africa
[local] Artefact thieves ravage Nok culture [Nigeria]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/16/2007 10:03:39 AM EDT · 5 replies · 34+ views


The Tide | Sunday, April 15, 2007 | unattributed
The highly revered historical sites of the Nok culture have been reduced to a shadow of the past as looters have invaded the fields... Frankfurt University, Prof. Peter Breunig... said the Nok terracotta and its cultural links was still among the greatest discoveries of archeology and would continue to command global attention... Breunig said the museum at the Nok village does not meet acceptable standards ''as it is only a table with bits of artifacts"... Speaking at the same session, the Director General of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments, Dr Joseph Eboreime, said the government had adopted a...
 

India
Archaeology - 5th Century Gupta Era Relic Found
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/20/2007 1:51:57 PM EDT · 4 replies · 168+ views


News From Bangladesh | 4-20-2007 | Hasibur Rahman Bilu
Archaeology -5th century Gupta era relic found -- This photo shows terracotta plaques with Brahmi letters, ancient forms of Bangla letters. The relics were recently found at Bhair Dhap dig site in Shibganj upazila of Bogra. PHOTO: STAR The Brahmi inscriptions show ancient formation of some Bangla letters Friday April 20 2007 12:30:03 PM BDT Hasibur Rahman Bilu, Bogra The archaeology department recently found cement-like ancient building material, known as "vajralepa", dating back to the Gupta era, during an excavation at Bhair Dhap site in Shibganj upazila of Bogra.( The Daily Star ) Rajshahi region Director of the department Abdul Khalaque said...
 

Australia and the Pacific
Wollemi Find An Aboriginal Seat Of The Gods
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/20/2007 2:02:59 PM EDT · 3 replies · 178+ views


The Sydney Morning Herald | 4-21-1007 | James Woodford
Wollemi find an Aboriginal seat of the gods James Woodford April 21, 2007 A ROCK platform in the heart of the Wollemi wilderness may be the closest thing Australia has to Mount Olympus, the seat of the gods in Greek mythology. Last spring archaeologists discovered an enormous slab of sandstone, 100 metres long and 50 metres wide, in the 500,000-hectare Wollemi National Park. It was covered in ancient art. The gallery depicted an unprecedented collection of powerful ancestral beings from Aboriginal mythology. Last week the archaeologists who found the platform, Dr Matthew Kelleher and Michael Jackson, returned with a rock...
 

Precolumbian, Clovis, And Preclovis
Mexico finds bones suggesting Toltec child sacrifice
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/17/2007 12:03:18 PM EDT · 18 replies · 196+ views


Washington Post | Tuesday, April 17, 2007 | Monica Medel (Reuters)
The grisly find of the buried bones of 24 pre-Hispanic Mexican children may be the first evidence that the ancient Toltec civilization sacrificed children, an archeologist studying the remains said on Monday. The bones, dating from 950 AD to 1150 AD and dug up at the Toltecs' former capital Tula, north of present day Mexico City, indicated the children had been decapitated in a group. The way the children, aged between 5 and 15, were placed in the grave, and the fact they were buried with a figurine of Tlaloc, the God of rain, also pointed to a group sacrifice,...
 

Pre-Incan Mettalurgy Discovered
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/19/2007 7:43:37 PM EDT · 16 replies · 320+ views


Yahoo News/Live Science | 4-19-2007 | Charles Q. Choi
Pre-Incan Metallurgy Discovered Charles Q. Choi Special to LiveScience Thu Apr 19, 9:50 AM ET Metals found in lake mud in the central Peruvian Andes have revealed the first evidence for pre-Colonial metalsmithing there. These findings illustrate a way that archaeologists can recreate the past even when looters have destroyed the valuable artifacts that would ordinarily be relied upon to reveal historical secrets. For instance, the new research hints at a tax imposed on local villages by ancient Inca rulers to force a switch from production of copper to silver. Pre-Colonial bronze artifacts have previously been found in the central...
 

Archaeologists Explore Ocean Floor For Clues To Early Coastal Settlements
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/20/2007 1:37:02 PM EDT · 11 replies · 255+ views


University Of Connecuit | 4-23-2007 | Cindy Weiss
Archaeologists explore ocean floor for clues to early coastal settlement by Cindy Weiss - April 23, 2007 Anthropologists in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are identifying new sites to study archaeology that are fathoms, not feet, under the surface. Anthropology professor Kevin McBride and doctoral candidate David Robinson are scoping out early coastal human settlement sites, now under water, that could reveal clues to how the Americas were settled. McBride says early submerged sites may yield evidence of how the earliest coastal residents lived and how they got here. McBride, who is also director of research at the...
 

Navigation
Mystery Surrounds Possible Oldest Church in North America
  Posted by NYer
On Religion 04/17/2007 5:12:55 PM EDT · 25 replies · 429+ views


Yahoo News | April 16, 2007 | Heather Whipps
North America's oldest church may lie beneath a small town in Newfoundland, according to information cobbled together from the research of a historian who recently died before publishing her seminal work. "To describe Alwyn Ruddock's claims as revolutionary would not be an exaggeration," Jones said. "If Ruddock is right, it means that the remains of the only medieval church in North America may still lie buried under the modern town of Carbonear."Ruddock, a historian with the University of London, was one of the world's foremost experts on Cabot's voyages until her death in late 2005. In keeping with her will,...
 

Early America
Israel Bissell outrode Paul Revere, yet didn't get a poem
  Posted by Pharmboy
On News/Activism 04/14/2007 7:23:19 PM EDT · 45 replies · 687+ views


Associated Press WHDH | 4-14-07 | Anon
BOSTON -- Paul Revere gets all the glory for his midnight ride. After all, it was a stirring tale of patriotism told by a great storyteller. But one young messenger who called the colonists to arms during a remarkable five-day dash across five states is a mere footnote -- a man mentioned in historical documents that didn't even get his first name right. They called him Trail. His name was Israel Bissell, and he is one of the Revolutionary War's most unheralded heroes. Bissell, a 23-year-old postal rider when the war broke out on April 19, 1775, rode day and...
 

Dey Mansion serves as headquarters
  Posted by Coleus
On General/Chat 04/15/2007 12:29:35 AM EDT · 5 replies · 40+ views


NorthJersey.com | 04.14.07
† Visitors to the Dey Mansion in Wayne are being transported back in time this weekend with 18th-century crafts, merchants and musket drills. General George Washington used the eastern side of the Georgian mansion in 1780 as his headquarters during the American Revolution. The home was built around 1740 by Dirck Dey and inherited by his son Theunis, a colonel who commanded the Bergen County Militia. The Spring Encampment continues on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
 

Oh So Mysteriouso
The Last Confessions of E Howard Hunt
  Posted by meg88
OnNews/Activism 03/28/2007 2:29:12 PM EDT · 118 replies · 487+ views


Rolling Stone Magazine | April 2nd 2007 | Erik Hedegaard
Once, when the old spymaster thought he was dying, his eldest son came to visit him at his home in Miami. The scourges recently had been constant and terrible: lupus, pneumonia, cancers of the jaw and prostate, gangrene, the amputation of his left leg. Long past were his years of heroic service to the country. In the CIA, he'd helped mastermind the violent removal of a duly elected leftist president in Guatemala and assisted in subterfuges that led to the murder of Che Guevara. But no longer could you see in him the suave, pipe-smoking, cocktail-party-loving clandestine operative whose Cold...
 

The secrets and lies that a Cold-War warrior took to his grave
  Posted by Condor 63
OnGeneral/Chat 04/20/2007 4:47:35 PM EDT · 9 replies · 190+ views


The Sunday Times | April 15, 2007 | Erik Hedegaard
When the old spymaster thought he was dying, his eldest son came to visit him at his home in Miami. The scourges had been constant and terrible recently: lupus, pneumonia, cancers of the jaw and prostate, gangrene, the amputation of his left leg. Long past were his years of heroic service to his country. In the CIA, he had helped to mastermind the violent removal of a duly elected leftist president in Guatemala and assisted in subterfuges that led to the murder of Che Guevara. But no longer could you see in him the suave, pipe-smoking, cocktail-party-loving clandestine operative whose...
 

Anatolia
Rare footage of WWI Gallipoli battle unearthed
  Posted by george76
On News/Activism 04/19/2007 1:35:57 AM EDT · 28 replies · 1,194+ views


Reuters | Apr 18, 2007 | Stephanie Boyle
The Australian War Memorial has unearthed what it believes is the only footage of Anzac Cove during the Gallipoli battle of World War One, an iconic event in Australian history which is commemorated each year on Anzac Day. The one-minute grainy black and white film, which shows the shoreline at Anzac Cove and British soldiers massing at Suvla Bay, was shot in 1915 during the pioneering era of film. The footage pans across Anzac Cove from a position on the southern headland, showing a clutter of jetties and stores being unloaded. "Because we have so little authentic footage, everything we...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Irish village gets its harlot back
  Posted by bedolido
On General/Chat 04/16/2007 10:55:19 AM EDT · 50 replies · 476+ views


ABCNews | 4-16-2007 | staff writer
A village in south-west Ireland has won a fresh round in a battle to change its name in the Irish language back to Fort of the Harlot. For centuries, the village known as Doon in English had been known in Irish as Dun Bleisce, or Fort of the Harlot, but the name was changed in 2003 when the Government ordered a simpler An Dun, or The Fort. The unpopular move led to 1,000 locals signing a petition to have 'harlot' added back to the name. They were backed by local politicians and a Limerick County Council motion of support.
 

end of digest #144 20070421

530 posted on 04/21/2007 8:31:24 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Monday, April 18, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 528 | View Replies]

To: 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; Androcles; AntiGuv; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; ...
Welcome to the recently joined.

This week I had the sad task of removing the name of one deceased FReeper from the GGG list. In March (I think it was) I'd gone through all my ping lists (I won't bore you with the details) and weeded out the suspended/banned acc'ts. I think that means the lists are up to date. The combined census (including yours truly) is 614 members. Not bad, not bad at all.

Have a great week everyone.
Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #144 20070421
To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)


Topics 1808231 to 1817298.

531 posted on 04/21/2007 8:32:33 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Monday, April 18, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 530 | View Replies]

To: SunkenCiv

Well I reckon as how I got your post, I must not be banned/supended/dead. Thanks for the good news.


532 posted on 04/21/2007 12:11:38 PM PDT by ASA Vet (http://www.rinorepublic.com)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 531 | View Replies]

To: ASA Vet

:’) Since you asked... I wrote a little Chipmunk BASIC program to pull unused characters out of the nicknames, set up an HTML file, and then used that in one frame to control the other frame, allowing me to just scroll down the list and keep viewing profiles.

But anyway, glad you’re still alive.


533 posted on 04/21/2007 12:29:34 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Monday, April 18, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 532 | View Replies]

To: SunkenCiv

ping


534 posted on 04/21/2007 1:01:41 PM PDT by Cvengr (The violence of evil is met with the violence of righteousness, justice, love and grace.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 524 | View Replies]


Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #145
Saturday, April 28, 2007


Prehistory and Origins
The Emerging Fate Of The Neanderthals
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/24/2007 5:19:12 PM EDT · 31 replies · 829+ views


Eureka Alert | 4-23-2007 | Erik Trinkaus
Contact: Erik Trinkaus trinkaus@wustl.edu 314-935-5207 Washington University in St. Louis The emerging fate of the Neandertals For nearly a century, anthropologists have been debating the relationship of Neandertals to modern humans. Central to the debate is whether Neandertals contributed directly or indirectly to the ancestry of the early modern humans that succeeded them. As this discussion has intensified in the past decades, it has become the central research focus of Erik Trinkaus, Ph.D., professor of anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis. Trinkaus has examined the earliest modern humans in Europe, including specimens in Romania, Czech Republic and France. Those...
 

Helix? Make Mine a Double
European Skin Turned Pale Only Recently, Gene Suggests
  Posted by SirLinksalot
On General/Chat 04/27/2007 1:23:12 PM EDT · 73 replies · 1,687+ views


Science | April 2007 | Ann Gibbons
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGISTS MEETING: European Skin Turned Pale Only Recently, Gene Suggests Ann Gibbons PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA--At the American Association of Physical Anthropologists meeting, held here from 28 to 31 March, a new report on the evolution of a gene for skin color suggested that Europeans acquired pale skin quite recently, perhaps only 6000 to 12,000 years ago
 

Ancient Europe
Neolithic Burial Site Yields Unique Archaeological Find (Hungary)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/23/2007 6:18:04 PM EDT · 4 replies · 279+ views


MTI | 4-24-2007
Neolithic burial site yields unique archaeological find Budapest, April 23 (MTI) - Archaeologists exploring a Neolithic burial site in Tolna County, S Hungary, have discovered what may easily be the most exciting tomb ever unearthed in Europe, Professor Istvan Zalai-Gaal, who has been leading the diggings, reported on Monday. The tomb is seven thousand years old and was the burial chamber of a tribal chieftain. There is a heavy upright log in each corner, believed to have originally held an above ground structure over the two-metre by two-metre tomb. Inside, said Zalai-Gaal, archaeologists found polished stone axes and other stone...
 

Rome and Italy
Ancient Roman City Near Bulgaria's Svishtov To Be Explored
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/21/2007 3:48:54 PM EDT · 7 replies · 59+ views


Sofia Echo | Monday, April 16, 2007 | unattributed
Scientific exploration of the Roman city of Nove, located near the town of Svishtov, will begin in June 2007... Exploration began in 1960, when a Bulgarian- Polish team started inspecting the region near Svishtov, where the Roman city is located... Current regulations have some loopholes that allow treasure hunting, Blagov said. All such ambiguities should be dealt with... So far police has not received any signals concerning treasure hunting in the vicinities of Nove.
 

Thrace
Unique Ancient Thracian Chariot Unearthed in Bulgaria
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/21/2007 3:34:42 PM EDT · 4 replies · 164+ views


Novinite | Saturday, April 21, 2007 | unattributed
A completely intact Thracian chariot was unearthed by the Bulgarian archaeologist Vesselin Ignatov on Friday... near a burial barrow close to the central Bulgarian town of Nova Zagora. Ignatov and his team have already dated the finding to 2 century BC. The chariot has two wheels with its roof made of heavy bronze in the form of eagle heads and a folding iron chair, where the driver sat. The chariot was aimed to be pulled by three horses... He believes a second chariot will be found as the excavations continue... Another Thracian chariot was found near the Sadievo village and...
 

Unique Ancient Thracian Chariot Unearthed In Bulgaria
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/22/2007 12:14:31 AM EDT · 7 replies · 440+ views


Novinite.com | 4-21-2007
Unique Ancient Thracian Chariot Unearthed In Bulgaria 21 April 2007, Saturday A completely intact Thracian chariot was unearthed by the Bulgarian archaeologist Vesselin Ignatov on Friday, Darik News reported. The chariot was found near a burial barrow close to the central Bulgarian town of Nova Zagora. Ignatov and his team have already dated the finding to 2 century BC. The chariot has two wheels with its roof made of heavy bronze in the form of eagle heads and a folding iron chair, where the driver sat. The chariot was aimed to be pulled by three horses. The uniqueness of the...
 

Macedonia
2 000-year-old tombs unearthed [ 5th to 2nd c BC tombs NE Greece ]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/21/2007 3:10:27 PM EDT · 10 replies · 106+ views


News24 | Saturday, April 21, 2007 | unattributed
Archaeologists in northeastern Greece have unearthed eight tombs containing the remains of men and women who lived over 2 000 years ago, along with an assortment of jewellery, weapons and agricultural tools, the Greek culture ministry said on Friday. The tombs dating from the fifth to third centuries BC were dug into rock, likely covered with stone slabs and probably lay alongside an ancient road, the ministry said in a statement. They were discovered near a freeway between the cities of Salonika and Edessa during road construction. Prior excavation in the same area has already unearthed three farms dating from...
 

Greece
Fears for safety of ancient Naxos temple
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/21/2007 3:14:45 PM EDT · 6 replies · 49+ views


Kathimerini | Saturday, April 21, 2007 | unattributed
Laborers working to extend the harbor on the island of Naxos are dumping truckloads of building material in front of an archaeological site even though a court has ordered local authorities to suspend the work, campaigners claimed yesterday. A group of 33 concerned residents lodged an appeal in February with the Council of State, Greece's highest administrative court, asking for the construction work taking place in front of the Temple of Apollo to be stopped because of fears it is damaging the site. The court asked that the construction be suspended until it reaches a verdict, but the campaigners said...
 

Anatolia
Greek sculpture 'from throne of Midas' [2002]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/24/2007 11:51:46 AM EDT · 10 replies · 161+ views


BBC | Friday, January 4, 2002 | unattributed
A sculpture found in Greece in 1939 may have been part of King Midas' lost throne, an archaeologist has said. The 23cm-tall ivory sculpture, known to scholars as The Lion Tamer, has puzzled historians of classical Greece since its discovery... Keith DeVries, of the University of Pennsylvania's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, said there are signs that it once adorned Midas' royal throne... Mr DeVries said the sculpture appears to be Phrygian and to have been produced around the time that Midas was alive... According to Mr DeVries, Midas donated his throne as a gift to Delphi, where it was...
 

Giza
Pyramids of Giza out of contest for new wonders [ Zahi Hawass commits another outrage ]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/21/2007 3:21:03 PM EDT · 8 replies · 174+ views


Gulf Daily News | Friday 20th April 2007 | unattributed
"I am against this subject totally. I cannot accept a Greek historian choosing the seven wonders of antiquity and have a tourist company choosing the new ones," he added... Greek historian Herotodus chose the original seven, which included the hanging gardens of Babylon, the statue of Zeus at Olympia, the Colossus of Rhodes and the lighthouse of Alexandria.
 

Egypt
Restoring Djoser's Step Pyramid
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/21/2007 3:43:15 PM EDT · 16 replies · 162+ views


unattributed | Issue No. 841, 19 - 25 April 2007 | Al-Ahram Weekly
Regretfully, however, the sands of time have taken their toll of the Step Pyramid. Most of its outer casing has gone, the core of the masonry has disappeared in some places, deep cracks have spread all over the walls and ceilings of the pyramid's underground corridors and its southern tomb, while several parts of the queen's tunnels, found beneath the pyramid's main shaft, have collapsed. For safety reasons the pyramid is closed to visitors... The first phase, which started early this month, requires the cleansing of the pyramid from inside and outside as well as removing all accumulated dust and...
 

Longer Perspectives
History of Jihad against the Egyptian Coptic Christians (640-655)
  Posted by Islamwatch
On Bloggers & Personal 04/21/2007 11:35:12 PM EDT · 22 replies · 197+ views


islam-watch | 22 Apr, 2007 | History of Jihad
How the Jihadis vandalized this ancient land and wiped out Christianity as well as the ancient culture of Egypt -- leaving only the massive Pyramids and the Sphinx as mute witness to the glory of pre-Islamic Egypt. The heritage and legacy of the Copts and their ancestors the ancient Egyptians continue to be manifested all over the world in every day life in the use of the Gregorian calendar, a descendant of the ancient Egyptian solar calendar. The Coptic name of ancient Egypt " Chimie" has lent itself to the modern Chemistry. Ancient Egypt continues to provide inspiration for cotemporary...
 

Africa
Should The Islamic World Apologize For Slavery? Part One
  Posted by hripka
On News/Activism 04/05/2007 8:58:24 PM EDT · 25 replies · 566+ views


Family Security Matters | March 30, 2007 | Adrian Morgan
Islam's involvement in the black slave trade goes back over 14 centuries, back to its founder, Mohammed, who owned black slaves. Muslim slavers in North Africa also engaged in a red hot trade of white Christians. Read this fascinating, you-won't-see-it-anywhere-else romp through reality by FSM Contributing Editor Adrian Morgan who explains what politically-correct history books conveniently ignore. (CAIR: care to apologize?) Should The Islamic World Apologize For Slavery? – Part One By Adrian Morgan For members of Britain's politically correct establishment, this week has been one of hand wringing and embarrassing gestures of self-abasement. On Saturday, March 24, a procession...
 

Faith and Philosophy
Plato's Criticism of Democracy
  Posted by Ultra Sonic 007
On General/Chat 04/26/2007 11:15:30 PM EDT · 16 replies · 181+ views


04/26/2007 | Matt Brazil
Do not be angry with me for speaking the truth; no man will survive who genuinely opposes you or any other crowd and prevents the occurrence of many unjust and illegal happenings in the city. A man who really fights for justice must lead a private, not a public, life if he is to survive for even a short time. (Apology 31e-32a) These are the words of Socrates, who spoke before the Athenian jury in the trial that would, ultimately, condemn him to his death. Through works such as the Apology and The Republic, we can see Plato's distaste of...
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
The wave that destroyed Atlantis [Destroyed by a giant tsunami?]
  Posted by yankeedame
On General/Chat 04/22/2007 8:53:44 AM EDT · 44 replies · 509+ views


BBC On-Line | Friday, 20 April 2007 | Harvey Lilley
Last Updated: Friday, 20 April 2007, 08:05 GMT 09:05 UK The wave that destroyed Atlantis By Harvey Lilley BBC Timewatch The legend of Atlantis, the country that disappeared under the sea, may be more than just a myth. Research on the Greek island of Crete suggests Europe's earliest civilisation was destroyed by a giant tsunami. Video reconstruction of the tsunami Until about 3,500 years ago, a spectacular ancient civilisation was flourishing in the Eastern Mediterranean. The ancient Minoans were building palaces, paved streets and sewers, while most Europeans were still living in primitive huts. But around 1500BC the people who...
 

Scandinavia
Stone Age Remains Found In Gothenburg (Sweden)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/26/2007 6:39:08 PM EDT · 18 replies · 367+ views


The Local | 4-26-2007
Stone Age remains found in Gothenburg Published: 26th April 2007 15:27 CET Online: http://www.thelocal.se Archaeologists in Gothenburg have found the remains of an early Stone Age house. The discovery was made on a building site in the Kallebeck area of the city. Residents of the new apartments being built in the area will be living on a site inhabited 10,000 years ago. Kallebeck now lies about 5 kilometres from the open sea, but in the stone age the area was a headland jutting out into the sea. "They most probably fished, and would certainly have hunted for seal. This was...
 

Climate
Lost World Warning From (Under) North Sea
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/23/2007 5:29:02 PM EDT · 64 replies · 1,522+ views


BBC | 4-23-2007 | Sean Coughlan
Lost world warning from North Sea By Sean Coughlan BBC News education How a homestead might have looked in the flooded area Archaeologists are uncovering a huge prehistoric "lost country" hidden below the North Sea. This lost landscape, where hunter gatherer communities once lived, was swallowed by rising water levels at the end of the last ice age. University of Birmingham researchers are heralding "stunning" findings as they map the "best-preserved prehistoric landscape in Europe". This large plain had disappeared below the water more than 8,000 years ago. Scientists at the University of Birmingham have been using oil exploration technology...
 

Biology and Cryptobiology
Is this Nessie?
  Posted by presidio9
On General/Chat 04/23/2007 4:40:35 PM EDT · 35 replies · 705+ views


Highland News | Ian Barron
AN English holidaymaker thinks he may have taken the first picture of the season of the elusive Loch Ness Monster. Sidney Wilson was in the city with his wife Janet when they decided on a cruise down the loch to take in the sights. And it was as they approached Urquhart Castle that he ended up taking this intriguing photograph. Sidney, who comes from Nottingham, said: "I was just taking pictures of everything as we sailed down the loch. "As we approached the castle, two power boats appeared and circled us at speed, leaving a large wash in their wake....
 

India
Ram Sethu: Scientific Evidence Of Ancient Human Activity (Ramas Bridge)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/23/2007 6:35:24 PM EDT · 12 replies · 309+ views


Organizer | 4-29-2007 | S. Kalyanaraman
Ram Sethu: Scientific evidence of ancient human activity By S. Kalyanaraman Scientific evidences point to human activity in ancient times on both sides of Ram Sethu as found by Dept. of Earth Sciences and ocean technologists of Bharatam. This area should be declared a protected monument under the Protection of Monuments Act and declared as a World Heritage site by the Government of India and advised to UNESCO. The Geological and geophysical survey of the Sethu-samudram Project clearly reveal that Rama's bridge appears to be a major Geological feature. The surveys reveal that to the north of Ram Sethu on...
 

Australia and the Pacific
Spotlight: Stone Age Potters (Malaysia)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/23/2007 6:09:50 PM EDT · 5 replies · 97+ views


NST | 4-23-2007 | Santha Oorjitham
SpotLight: Stone Age Potters By : SANTHA OORJITHAM Bukit Tengkorak in Sabah's southeastern Semporna peninsula was a pottery hub for the region 3,000 years ago. -- Pictures courtesy of the Centre for Archaeological Research Malaysia at Universiti Sains Malaysia. Malaysia aims to become an ICT hub and an education hub, among others. But 3,000 years ago, it was a pottery-making hub, pre-historians tell SANTHA OORJITHAM. A clay stove found at Bukit Tengkorak archaeological site, in a style still used today. KAMPUNG Tampi-Tampi villagers today don't think twice about using clay from the foot of Bukit Tengkorak and nearby areas in...
 

Prehistory and Origins
Were Africans Living In Taupo In 630BC (New Zealand)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/24/2007 5:06:32 PM EDT · 14 replies · 275+ views


Stuff.co.nz | 4-23-2007 | Gill Cook
Were Africans living in Taupo in 630BC? By GILL COOK - Taupo Times | Monday, 23 April 2007 AMATEUR ARCHAEOLOGIST: Rob Ritchie recognises the familiar patterns in local rocks and artifacts that 'could have only been engraved by human hands'. Rob Ritchie's approach to his archaeology is different to others in the field and his non-conservative theories have earned him more than one cold shoulder. He has a collection of 25,000 photographs of rocks and artifacts that he says illustrate people lived around Lake Taupo at least 20,000 years before the Maori or European came to New Zealand. He picked...
 

Epigraphy and Language
Text Reveals More Ancient Secrets (Aristotle)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/26/2007 9:32:04 AM EDT · 14 replies · 842+ views


BBC | 4-26-2007 | Rebecca Morelle
Text reveals more ancient secrets By Rebecca Morelle Science reporter, BBC News The commentary on Aristotle lay hidden within the parchment Experts are "lost for words" to have found that a medieval prayer book has yielded yet another key ancient text buried within its parchment. Works by mathematician Archimedes and the politician Hyperides had already been found buried within the book, known as the Archimedes Palimpsest. But now advanced imaging technology has revealed a third text - a commentary on the philosopher Aristotle. Project director William Noel called it a "sensational find". The prayer book was written in the 13th...
 

Archimedes Palimpsest contains sections from at least seven books.
  Posted by Richard from IL
On News/Activism 04/27/2007 5:55:24 PM EDT · 10 replies · 388+ views


National Geographic News | April 26, 2007 | Kate Ravilious
At first glance, the manuscript appears to be a medieval Christian prayer book. But on the same pages as the prayers, experts using a high-tech imaging system have discovered commentary likely written in the third century A.D. on a work written around 350 B.C. by the Greek philosopher Aristotle. The discovery is the third ancient text to emerge from the layers of writing on the much reused pages. In 2002 researchers had uncovered writings by the mathematician Archimedes and the fourth-century B.C. politician Hyperides. Last year one of the pages was found to contain a famous work by Archimedes about...
 

(not-so-)Ancient Autopsies
It's not bone of Arc - Mystery surrounding relics goes up in smoke
  Posted by Grig
On Religion 04/05/2007 12:27:45 PM EDT · 3 replies · 119+ views


Ottawa Sun | April 5, 2007 | By JOHN LEICESTER, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PARIS -- A rib bone supposedly found at the site where French heroine Joan of Arc was burned at the stake is actually that of an Egyptian mummy, according to researchers who used hi-tech science to expose the fake. The bone, a piece of cloth and a cat femur were said to have been recovered after the 19-year-old was burned in 1431 in the town of Rouen. In 1909 -- the year Joan of Arc was beatified -- scientists declared it "highly probable" that the relics were hers. But starting last year, 20 researchers from France, Switzerland and Benin took...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
Fury over plan to relocate historic statue -- Locals want faces of Boa to stay on island
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/21/2007 3:38:52 PM EDT · 8 replies · 50+ views


Belfast Telegraph | Tuesday, April 17, 2007 | Linda McKee
The two-faced Janus figure at Boa Island, Co Fermanagh, has been linked to speculation that it will be removed to a Belfast museum to protect it from damage. But the Ulster Museum has told this newspaper it has no interest in acquiring the pagan statue currently in an old graveyard... the Environment and Heritage Service confirmed yesterday that the fate of the 2ft tall figure is under consideration... The Janus figure is not connected to the Roman god but its name symbolises its two-faced nature. The statue inspired the Nobel Prize winning poet Seamus Heaney to write the poem January...
 

Early America
George Washington Letter Found in Scrapbook
  Posted by Pharmboy
On News/Activism 04/27/2007 6:43:43 AM EDT · 77 replies · 1,630+ views


NY Times | April 27, 2007 | KAREEM FAHIM
Aaron Houston for The New York Times The 1787 letter from George Washington, beneath his image in a scrapbook begun in 1826. Aaron Houston for The New York TimesBill Schroh, director of operations at the Liberty Hall Museum, looking at the Washington letter. UNION, N.J., April 26 -- The letter from George Washington is pasted between poetry and party invitations, stuffed into a dusty scrapbook amid jokes and cutouts of handsome men, and all the highlights of a lucky little girl's life. It was written in May 1787 and addressed to Jacob Morris, grandfather of Julia Kean, the precocious...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
New Find Reveals Macabre Tale Of 400-Year-Old 'Neo-Con'
  Posted by blam
On General/Chat 04/24/2007 5:28:31 PM EDT · 25 replies · 914+ views


Alpha Galileo | 4-24-2007 | University Of Manchester
University Of Manchester 24 April 2007 New find reveals macabre tale of 400-year-old 'neo-con' Boxes in a Spanish nunnery containing documents which lay barely noticed for hundreds of years have given a unique insight into the gruesome life and times of one the first female missionaries to Britain. Luisa de Carvajal's writings also helped historian Dr Glyn Redworth from The University of Manchester to discover new evidence confirming that a Gunpowder Plotter executed in 1606 was probably innocent. Dr Redworth, who is based at the School of Arts, Histories and Cultures, is the first historian to examine hundreds of letters,...
 

end of digest #145 20070428

535 posted on 04/28/2007 7:29:28 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Saturday, April 28, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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To: 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; Androcles; AntiGuv; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; ...
Unusual it may be, but we had no PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis category topics this week. Plenty of variety though -- I could tell by the number of headings I had to type compared with last week's digest which I used for a template.

Have a great week everyone. Spring is here!
Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #145 20070428
To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)


Topics 1824833 to 1821313. 615 members.

536 posted on 04/28/2007 7:31:27 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Saturday, April 28, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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Another correction to the URLs, probably Dartmouth gets tired of the bandwidth use. So, go easy on 'em, and just download every one of the lessons, and save 'em to your local drive. :')

The Prehistoric Archaeology of the Aegean
  1. The Southern Greek Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, and Neolithic Sequence at Franchthi
  2. The Neolithic Cultures of Thessaly, Crete, and the Cyclades
  3. The Eutresis and Korakou Cultures of Early Helladic I-II
  4. The Early Cycladic Period
  5. The Early Minoan Period:The Settlements
  6. The Early Minoan Period: The Tombs
  7. Western Anatolia and the Eastern Aegean in the Early Bronze Age
  8. The 'Lefkandi I' and Tiryns Cultures of the Early Hellaadic IIB and Early Helladic III Periods
  9. Middle Helladic Greece
  10. Middle Minoan Crete
  11. The First Palaces in the Aegean
  12. Minoan Architecture: The Palaces
  13. Minoan Domestic and Funerary Architecture of the Neopalatial and Post-Palatial Periods
  14. Late Minoan Painting and Other Representational Art: Pottery, Frescoes, Steatite Vases, Ivories, and Bronzes
  15. Minoan Religion
  16. The Shaft Graves
  17. Akrotiri on Thera, the Santorini Volcano and the Middle and Late Cycladic Periods in the Central Aegean Islands
  18. The Nature and Extent of Neopalatial Minoan Influence in the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean Worlds
  19. Mycenaean Tholos Tombs and Early Mycenaean Settlements
  20. Mycenaean Residential Architecture: Palaces and Ordinary Housing
  21. Mycenaean Public and Funerary Architecture: Fortifications, Drainage Projects, Roads, and Chamber Tombs
  22. Aspects of Mycenaean Trade
  23. Troy VI
  24. Mycenaean Pictorial Art and Pottery
  25. The Linear B Tablets and Mycenaean Social, Political, and Economic Organization
  26. Mycenaean and Late Cycladic Religion and Religious Architecture
  27. Troy VII and the Historicity of the Trojan War
  28. The Collapse of Mycenaean Palatial Civilization and the Coming of the Dorians
  29. Post-Palatial Twilight: The Aegean in the Twelfth Century B.C.

537 posted on 04/29/2007 9:29:57 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Saturday, April 28, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #146
Saturday, May 5, 2007


Climate
Civilization Depends On A Stable Climate
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/28/2007 6:01:17 PM EDT · 43 replies · 719+ views


Knox News | John Krist
Civilization depends on a stable climate By JOHN KRIST April 26, 2007 If you were to able to travel back in time 50,000 years, abduct a paleolithic hunter from a river valley in southern France and haul him back to 21st century America, would he stand out in a crowd? Depends on the crowd. He probably wouldn't blend in very well at the New York Stock Exchange. But dress him in shorts and flip-flops, hand him a backpack and he could probably stroll across any college campus in the country without attracting attention. Human beings who lived 500 centuries ago...
 

Spanish Scientists Point At Climate Changes As The Cause Of The Neanderthal Extinction . . .
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/30/2007 6:04:45 PM EDT · 47 replies · 692+ views


Alpha Galileo | 4-30-2007
Spanish scientists point at climate changes as the cause of the Neanderthal extinction in the Iberian Peninsula30 April 2007 Climate -- and not modern humans -- was the cause of the Neanderthal extinction in the Iberian Peninsula. Such is the conclusion of the University of Granada research group RNM 179 - Mineralogy and Geochemistry of sedimentary and metamorphic environments, headed by professor Miguel Ortega Huertas and whose members Francisco JosÈ Jimenez Espejo, Francisca Martinez Ruiz and David Gallego Torres work jointly at the department of Mineralogy and Petrology of the University of Granada (Universidad de Granada [http://www.ugr.es]) and the Andalusian...
 

Helix? Make Mine a Double
Study: Prehistoric Man Had Sex for Fun
  Posted by cougar_mccxxi
On General/Chat 04/29/2007 6:54:15 PM EDT · 87 replies · 1,449+ views


Fox News | Sunday, April 29, 2007 | Unknown
He may have come down from the trees, but prehistoric man did not stop swinging. New research into Stone Age humans has argued that, far from having intercourse simply to reproduce, they had sex for fun. Practices ranging from bondage to group sex, transvestism and the use of sex toys were widespread in primitive societies as a way of building up cultural ties.
 

I Married a Neanderthal
  Posted by Diana in Wisconsin
On General/Chat 05/01/2007 9:30:29 PM EDT · 51 replies · 609+ views


JSOnline vis WAPO | April 30, 2007 | Marc Kaufman
(Scientist says modern humans, earlier species found camaraderie, and sometimes a mate, in each other) Researchers have long debated what happened when the indigenous Neanderthals of Europe met "modern humans" arriving from Africa starting some 40,000 years ago. The result was the disappearance of the Neanderthals, but what happened during the roughly 10,000 years that the two human species shared a land? A new review of the fossil record from that period has come up with a provocative conclusion: The two groups saw each other as kindred spirits and, when conditions were right, they mated.How often this happened will never...
 

Prehistory and Origins
Early Humans Dug for Food, Study Suggests
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 05/04/2007 12:08:43 PM EDT · 9 replies · 96+ views


LiveScience | May 1, 2007 | Ker Than
A 1999 analysis of teeth belonging to two species of hominids, Australopithecus aferensis and Paranthropus robustus, living 2 million years ago found chemical evidence that one-third of their diet consisted of grasses and sedges, or the meat of animals that ate such plants. The finding puzzled some scientists because the hominids had flat, thickly enameled molars best suited for chewing hard, brittle foods, not tough items like grass or meat. This discrepancy became known as the "C4 connundrum," named after the type of photosynthesis grasses and sedges use to create the unique chemical signature... Now researchers led by Nathanial Dominy...
 

Ancient Europe
How Europeans Got To Europe
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/04/2007 12:29:03 AM EDT · 27 replies · 564+ views


Discover Magazine | 4-23-2007 | Nicholas Bakalar
How Europeans Got to Europe 45,000-year-old carvings found in Russia by Nicholas Bakalar Carved bone and ivory tools, excavated in Russia, made by early humans more than 40,000 years ago. (Courtesy of A.A. Sinitsyn) It has been widely assumed that modern humans -- Homo sapiens -- first traveled out of Africa and settled in central and Western Europe before heading to Eastern Europe. That may not be the case. Recent finds from a site in Russia about 250 miles south of Moscow suggest that the first humans in Europe were Eastern European.The discoveries include bone and carved ivory artifacts. Researchers calculated the date they were...
 

Asia
Stone Age Site Yields Evidence Of Advanced Culture (China - 36-44,000 YA)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/04/2007 2:24:03 PM EDT · 28 replies · 670+ views


China Daily | 5-4-2007 | Xinhua
Stone Age site yields evidence of advanced culture (Xinhua) Updated: 2007-05-04 20:48 Chinese archaeologists say they have uncovered strong evidence that Stone Age people in southern East Asia were at least as technologically advanced as their European cousins -- challenging the long-standing theory of "two cultures". Excavations at the Dahe Stone Age site, in southwest China's Yunnan Province, had revealed elaborate stone tools and instruments that rivaled those of the Mousterian culture that existed at that time in Europe, said Ji Xueping, chief archaeologist at the site. Dated as 36,000 to 44,000 years old, the Dahe site has since 1998...
 

Ancient Autopsies
2500-year-old tomb uncovered
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 05/01/2007 11:50:37 AM EDT · 6 replies · 103+ views


PerthNow | April 30, 2007 | AFP correspondents in Beijing
The tomb in Lijia village in Jing'an county is believed to date back to the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (770 to 221 BC)... The discovery would provide valuable clues to the study of social customs, funeral rites and lifestyle in the area, Xinhua quoted archaeologists as saying... Archaeologists began protectively excavating the site in January to thwart grave robbers who had attempted to open the rare coffins. The coffins were not damaged but some cultural relics were removed from the site, according to local police. Some were later recovered, including bronze woodworking tools, lacquered spoons and wooden combs.
 

Mesopotamia
Epic Hero (Gilgamesh Saga)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/01/2007 7:20:40 PM EDT · 24 replies · 695+ views


Smithsonian Magazine | 5-1-2007 | Daqvid Damrosch
Epic HeroHow a self-taught British genius rediscovered the Mesopotamian saga of Gilgamesh -- after 2,500 years By David Damrosch In November 1872, George Smith was working at the British Museum in a second-floor room overlooking the bare plane trees in Russell Square. On a long table were pieces of clay tablets, among the hundreds of thousands that archaeologists had shipped back to London from Nineveh, in present-day Iraq, a quarter-century before. Many of the fragments bore cuneiform hieroglyphs, and over the years scholars had managed to reassemble parts of some tablets, deciphering for the first time these records of daily life in...
 

Giza
Pyramids of Giza in peril
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 05/04/2007 12:47:05 PM EDT · 10 replies · 72+ views


Toronto Star | Apr 30, 2007 04:30 AM | Oakland Ross
...the legendary Pyramids of Giza are endangered now -- and the agent of their peril is a gloomy Egyptian stable-owner by the name of Hesham el-Ghabri... "They forbid us to ride around the pyramids," grouses the owner of the TWA Stable ("Camel and Horse Riding")... "They accuse of us being terrorists. They say we are going to bomb the pyramids." "They" are high officials at Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities -- the government body responsible for administering the Pyramids of Giza along with the rest of this country's innumerable ancient monuments -- and they have not actually accused el-Ghabri and...
 

Rome and Italy
Ancient Roman Town Ruins Found In Bulgaria
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/01/2007 7:09:07 PM EDT · 14 replies · 394+ views


Novinite | 5-1-2007
Ancient Roman Town Ruins Found in Bulgaria 1 May 2007, Tuesday Archaeologists had to dig only 30 centimeters deep to uncover the stone foundations of the houses. photo by Bulgarian National Television. Bulgarian archaeologists have unearthed the remains of an early Roman town near the village of Gorsko Ablanovo, 30 kilometers south of Russe, Bulgaria's national television reported on Tuesday. Initial artefact finds include a bronze duck figurine of a previously unfamiliar design and a silver fibula, only the fifth documented find of its kind in Bulgaria. The stone foundations of the houses have been preserved well despite intensive agricultural...
 

Bread, Circus, Gallon of Milk
Ancient mosaic of the real Gladiator found
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/30/2007 12:24:30 AM EDT · 8 replies · 228+ views


Telegraph | Sunday, April 29, 2007 | Nick Pisa
A chance discovery by archaeologists has brought to light a mosaic nearly 2,000 years old depicting what may have been a real-life version of the Roman combatant played by Russell Crowe in the film Gladiator. The mosaic was found as Italian researchers carried out work on the spectacular Villa dei Quintili, south of Rome and home to the sports-loving Emperor Commodus. Commodus, portrayed by Joaquin Phoenix in the film, was known to enjoy gladiatorial combat and had a small amphitheatre in which fighters would train, near the villa, which Commodus had seized after having its owners executed on a trumped-up...
 

Gladiators' Graveyard Discovered
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/02/2007 8:55:16 PM EDT · 20 replies · 902+ views


BBC | 5-2-2007 | Monika Kupper - Huw Jones
Gladiators' graveyard discovered By Monika Kupper and Huw Jones BBC Timewatch Gravestones helped identify the site as a gladiator graveyard Scientists believe they have for the first time identified an ancient graveyard for gladiators. Analysis of their bones and injuries has given new insight into how they lived, fought and died. The remains were found at Ephesus in Turkey, a major city of the Roman world, BBC Timewatch reports. Gladiators were the sporting heroes of the ancient world. Archaeological records show them celebrated in everything from mosaics to graffiti. Motifs of gladiators are found on nearly a third of all...
 

Greece
The Parthenon Frieze
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/29/2007 1:18:11 AM EDT · 6 replies · 111+ views


Reed Library | 1996 | David L. Silverman
Joan B. Connelly's re-interpretation of the Parthenon frieze appears in the American Journal of Archaeology, AJA 100 [1996] 53-80. Here is an uncritical summary of her arguments, followed by a few questions... C's solution begins with the "peplos" panel on the east frieze. She holds that it represents the mythical king Erechtheus, together with his wife Praxithea and their three daughters. Our main Athenian source for this myth consists of the fragments of Euripides' play Erechtheus. One large fragment is preserved by the orator Lycurgus (Against Leocrates, 101) and another is preserved on papyrus (Sorbonne 2328 = Recherches de Papyr....
 

Classical Treasures, Bathed in a New Light [ Met Museum, NYC, Roman and Greek classics ]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 05/02/2007 1:13:52 PM EDT · 8 replies · 112+ views


New York Times | April 20, 2007 | Michael Kimmelman
The other day, apropos of the Metropolitan Museum's fine, new light-washed galleries for Greek and Roman art, a friend e-mailed to me a passage by Virgil. In it Aeneas, fleeing the Trojan War, arrives in Carthage and finds a temple for Juno under construction. He pushes open the temple's big bronze doors ("which made the hinges groan," Virgil reports) and "for the first time he dared to hope for life." He's astounded by the skill of the craftsmen and by the nobility and precision of a painting of the war. He starts to cry. "It was only a picture, but,...
 

Elam, Persia, Parthia, Iran
Lessons Of 'The 300'
  Posted by RDTF
On News/Activism 03/26/2007 9:36:58 AM EDT · 202 replies · 2,771+ views


Post-Gazette.com | March 25, 2007 | Jack kelly
A society that does not value its warriors will be destroyed by one that does. A low-budget movie with no recognized stars that presents a cartoonish version of an event that happened long ago and far away is a surprising box office hit. The movie is "The 300," about the battle in 480 B.C. at Thermopylae between Greeks and Persians. Its opening grossed more than $70 million, more than the next 10 highest grossing movies playing that weekend combined. "The 300" has been denounced by the government of Iran, and the battle it describes was cited by former Vice President...
 

Epigraphy and Language
Mycenaean and Hittite Diplomatic Correspondence: Fact and Fiction [ PDF file ]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 05/03/2007 1:59:47 PM EDT · 7 replies · 123+ views


University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill | circa 2004 | H. Craig Melchert
I now regard as established that Ahhiyawa of the Hittite texts refers to a Mycenaean Greek kingdom not located in Asia Minor. Those who wish to wait for the proverbial "smoking gun" may do so, but the circumstantial evidence is now overwhelming. The alternative hypothesis of Hajnal (2003: 40-42) of Ahhiyawa as a small city state of Cilicia is not credible. Hittite references show that Ahhiyawa was a formidable power influential in far western Asia Minor. I leave to others the problem of determining just which Mycenaean kingdom (or kingdoms) should be identified with the Ahhiyawa of the Hittite texts......
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
Comets And Disaster In The Bronze Age
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/30/2007 7:38:09 PM EDT · 62 replies · 1,067+ views


British Archaeology | December 1997 | Benny Peiser
Comets and disaster in the Bronze Age Cosmic impact is gaining ground as an explanation of the collapse of civilisations, writes Benny Peiser At some time around 2300BC, give or take a century or two, a large number of the major civilisations of the world collapsed. The Akkadian Empire in Mesopotamia, the Old Kingdom in Egypt, the Early Bronze Age societies in Israel, Anatolia and Greece, as well as the Indus Valley civilisation in India, the Hilmand civilisation in Afghanistan and the Hongshan Culture in China - the first urban civilisations in the world - all fell into ruin at more...
 

Whole Lotta Shakin'
Bones Throw Light on 1755 Lisbon Quake
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/30/2007 12:19:29 AM EDT · 7 replies · 132+ views


Examiner | April 28, 2007 | Barry Hatton
It was a chilling discovery: a mass grave of human bones - skulls smashed and scorched by fire, dog bites on a child's thigh bone, a forehead with an apparent bullet hole... [T]he estimated 3,000 dead in the grave were victims of the earthquake that devastated Lisbon in 1755, and that this is the first mass grave of its kind ever found in the Portuguese capital... The quake, which included a tsunami and a fire that raged for six days, was one of the deadliest catastrophes ever to hit western Europe. It is thought to have killed up to 60,000...
 

Splish Splash
Was Bristol Hit By A Tsunami? (1607)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/30/2007 7:14:31 PM EDT · 15 replies · 495+ views


Science Daily | 4-30-2007 | University Of Chicago
Source: University of Chicago Press Journals Date: April 30, 2007 Was Bristol Channel Hit By A Tsunami? Science Daily -- On the occasion of the 400th anniversary of Britain's largest natural disaster, the author of Tsunami: The Underrated Hazard, reveals strong new evidence that the Bristol Channel was devastated by a tsunami on January 30, 1607. On that day, historical accounts describe a storm in the Bristol Channel, flooding more then 500 km2 of lowland and killing 2,000 people. "Despite the recent Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004, tsunamis along most coastlines are currently viewed as an underrated hazard," write Edward...
 

Megaliths and Archaeoastronomy
Chankillo Observatory, Peru
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 05/01/2007 11:44:35 AM EDT · 13 replies · 114+ views


Earth Observatory | April 2007 | Responsible NASA Official: Dr. Michael D. King
The Thirteen Towers were the key to the scientists conclusion that the site was a solar observatory. These regularly spaced towers line up along a hill, separated by about 5 meters (16 feet). The towers are easily seen from Chankillo's central complex, but the views of these towers from the eastern and western observing points are especially illuminating. These viewpoints are situated so that, on the winter and summer solstices, the sunrises and sunsets line up with the towers at either end of the line. Other solar events, such as the rising and setting of the Sun at the mid-points...
 

PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis
Rare Skeleton, Jewels Found In Bolivia Pyramid (Tiwanaku)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/02/2007 8:38:33 PM EDT · 38 replies · 712+ views


Reuters | 5-2-2007
Rare skeleton, jewels found in Bolivia pyramid Wed May 2, 2007 9:46PM BST TIWANAKU, Bolivia (Reuters) - Archeologists have uncovered the 1,300-year-old skeleton of a ruler or priest of the ancient Tiwanaku civilization together with precious jewels inside a much-looted pyramid in western Bolivia. The bones are "in very good condition" and belong to either "a ruler or a priest," Roger Angel Cossio, the Bolivian archeologist who made the discovery, told Reuters on Wednesday. He said the tomb -- containing a diadem and fist-sized carved pendant of solid gold -- survived centuries of looting by Spanish invaders and unscrupulous raiders...
 

Biology and Cryptobiology
Ancient camel bones found in Arizona
  Posted by nypokerface
On News/Activism 04/28/2007 10:23:58 AM EDT · 40 replies · 869+ views


AP | 04/28/07
PHOENIX - Workers digging at the future site of a Wal-Mart store in suburban Mesa have unearthed the bones of a prehistoric camel that's estimated to be about 10,000 years old. Arizona State University geology museum curator Brad Archer hurried out to the site Friday when he got the news that the owner of a nursery was carefully excavating bones found at the bottom of a hole being dug for a new ornamental citrus tree. "There's no question that this is a camel; these creatures walked the land here until about 8,000 years ago, when the same event that wiped...
 

Let's Have Jerusalem
Unrecognized: The World's Oldest Monument (Jericho - Sultan's Hill)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/28/2007 6:22:13 PM EDT · 9 replies · 355+ views


Aawsat | 4-27-2007 | Osama al Eissa
Unrecognized: The World's Oldest Monument 27/04/2007 By Osama al Eissa Jerusalem, Asharq Al-Awsat- Approximately two kilometers away from Jericho's city center lies Tel es-Sultan (Sultan's Hill), the oval-shaped mound that the oasis of Jericho, the oldest city in the world, is famous for. The world's earliest settlement was located at Tel es-Sultan, which stands in the form of several layers of habitation that make up today's mound. And yet despite its importance and its ability to attract the world's greatest researchers, it is not included on the World Heritage List, which is precisely what the Palestinian Authority's Department of Antiquities...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
Armenia's Artistic Bridge From East To West
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/28/2007 6:11:50 PM EDT · 2 replies · 128+ views


IHT | 4-27-2007 | Souren Melikian
Armenia's artistic bridge from East to West By Souren Melikian Published: April 27, 2007A fragment of a capital from Dvin, 5th or 6th century. PARIS: It is not easy to display the art of a major culture left in tatters by organized physical destruction over centuries that reduced its territory to a tiny fraction of its historical dimension. What mostly survives is the art of religion, the hard-core to which the persecuted cling and carry away if portable. Otherwise it is fragments collected from ruins. Hence the title of the Armenian art show on view at the Louvre until May...
 

Faith and Philosophy
A Gospel Hoax? The Secret Gospel of Mark
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 04/30/2007 12:31:30 AM EDT · 8 replies · 398+ views


Biblical Archaeology Review | early 2007 | Scott Brown
Built into the side of a canyon in the middle of the Judean wilderness 12 miles south of Jerusalem, the Mar Saba Greek Orthodox monastery was founded in 439 A.D. In the accompanying article, author Scott Brown relates how Morton Smith, a Columbia University professor, found a late copy of a letter by the second-century Church Father Clement of Alexandria that quotes a longer version of the Gospel of Mark known as the Secret Gospel of Mark. The Secret Gospel was quickly questioned as a possible forgery, and some scholars demanded that Smith produce the manuscript for testimony. Smith, now...
 

Oh So Mysteriouso
Music Mystery Of Da Vinci Code Chapel Cracked (Rosslyn)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 04/30/2007 9:43:09 PM EDT · 69 replies · 1,544+ views


The Telegraph (UK) | 5-1-2007 | Richard Alleyne
Music mystery of Da Vinci Code chapel cracked By Richard Alleyne Last Updated: 2:05am BST 01/05/2007 A Scottish church featured in The Da Vinci Code is embroiled in a fresh mystery of secret codes and heretical knowledge - but this one could be more than mere fiction. An ex-RAF codebreaker and his composer son say they have deciphered a musical score hidden for nearly 600 years in the elaborate carvings on the walls of Rosslyn Chapel. Rosslyn Chapel, theories connect it with the Holy Grail, the Ark of the Covenant and the head of Christ The pair believe the tune...
 

Musicians unlock mystery melody in chapel (Scottish Church featured in DaVinci Code)
  Posted by NYer
On News/Activism 05/02/2007 9:28:52 AM EDT · 35 replies · 815+ views


Yahoo News | May 1, 2007
A Scottish church which featured in the best-selling novel "The Da Vinci Code" has revealed another mystery hidden in secret code for almost 600 years.A father and son who became fascinated by symbols carved into the chapel's arches say they have deciphered a musical score encrypted in them.Thomas Mitchell, a 75-year-old musician and ex-Royal Air Force code breaker, and his composer and pianist son Stuart, described the piece as "frozen music." "The music has been frozen in time by symbolism," Mitchell said on his Web site (www.tjmitchell.com/stuart/rosslyn.html) which details the 27-year project to crack the chapel's code."It was only a matter...
 

Early America
Remnants of Washington's house found near Liberty Bell
  Posted by Pharmboy
On News/Activism 05/04/2007 12:38:05 PM EDT · 30 replies · 893+ views


PA Central Daily | May. 02, 2007 | Anon.
Archeologists digging at a site where George Washington and his slaves once lived have unearthed portions of the president's house, a "long-shot" discovery that is already changing ideas about how the house was built. Officials from Independence National Historical Park and the city announced Wednesday that a section of the kitchen wall as well the foundation walls from the main house had been unearthed at the site, about a block from Independence Mall. Documentation about the house had led archaeologists to believe it had a one-story kitchen, but this week's find shows that a basement lay below the kitchen, possibly...
 

end of digest #146 20070505

538 posted on 05/05/2007 5:49:21 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Thursday, May 3, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 535 | View Replies]

To: 75thOVI; Adder; albertp; Androcles; AntiGuv; asgardshill; At the Window; bitt; blu; BradyLS; ...
What passes for my wit was all used up in editing together the Digest. Not enough sleep. It has to do with the De la Hoya / Mayweather fight, but I can't say how. It would be boring anyway.
Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #146 20070505
To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)


Topics 1828503 to 1825281. 616 members.

539 posted on 05/05/2007 5:50:16 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I last updated my profile on Thursday, May 3, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 538 | View Replies]


Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #147
Saturday, May 12, 2007


Catastrophism and Astronomy
Snowball fight erupts over frozen Earth theory
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 05/07/2007 3:23:27 PM EDT · 8 replies · 218+ views


LiveScience via MSNBC | Monday, May 7, 2007 | Michael Schirber
The theory that the Earth long ago froze completely over, like a giant snowball, is challenged by new data from desert outcroppings in Oman. The geological measurements indicate that even as glaciers spread across all the continents 700 million years ago, warm spells with liquid water were still common... "It was Earth's great escape," said geologist Philip Allen of Imperial College London. "The Earth experienced probably the most profound glaciation in its history, but somehow it pulled back from the brink of global catastrophe." ...Snow and ice reflect roughly 80 percent of sunlight back into space, while seawater reflects about...
 

Climate
Adapt, Move Or Die: Prehistoric Climate Change
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/01/2007 6:52:48 PM EDT · 29 replies · 534+ views


NPR | 5-1-2007 | Joe Palca
Adapt, Move or Die: Prehistoric Climate Change by Joe Palca The skeleton of a prehistoric elephant found on a beach in England raises questions about ancient changes in global climate. Scientists estimate that the elephant was 10 tons -- twice the size of today's African elephants. Sam Brown, Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service The prehistoric elephant bones were found protruding from the cliffs at West Runton after a winter storm. Geologists analyze the layers of sediment in the cliffs for clues about the ancient climate. "We're entering a new phase, and it certainly seems to me that this is now...
 

Megaliths and Archaeoastronomy
Ancient Romans Built Their Towns Based On Astronomical Grids
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/11/2007 7:11:57 PM EDT · 5 replies · 228+ views


New Kerala | 5-9-2007
Ancient Romans built their towns based on astronomical grids Washington, May 9 : Ancient Romans built their towns using astronomically aligned grids, a recently concluded Italian study has revealed. As part of the study, researchers examined the orientation of some 38 towns in Italy, and found that all of them followed strong symbolic aspects linked to astronomy. "It emerged that these towns were not laid out at random. On the contrary, they were planned following strong symbolic aspects, all linked to astronomy," said Giulio Magli of the mathematics department at Milan's Polytechnic University. While ancient Roman writers, including Ovid and...
 

Rome and Italy
Calcio Storico Fiorentino: Bare Knuckle Football
  Posted by 1rudeboy
On General/Chat 05/06/2007 11:57:56 AM EDT · 10 replies · 79+ views


The Offside | April 10th, 2007 | Bob
Calcio Storico Fiorentino: Bare Knuckle FootballBy: Bob | April 10th, 2007 Before football became the civilized and tidy sport that it is today it was Wild in the Streets in both England and in Italy. By some accounts, the early form of Italian football began in the 59 BC in the Piazza Santa Croce in Florence. The sport of giuoco del calcio fiorentino - a mix of soccer, rugby, Greco-Roman wrestling and bare-knuckle fighting - was played by the aristocrats on every night between Eipiphany and Lent.According to the occasionally reliable Wikipedia: The official rules of calcio were published for...
 

Africa
Extinct Ancient Societies Gaunches of the Canary Islands
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/05/2007 7:52:37 PM EDT · 21 replies · 764+ views


Trivia Library | 4-5-2007
Extinct Ancient Societies Gaunches of the Canary IslandsAbout the Gaunches of the Canary Islands, history of the extinct society, how they were destroyed and the last of them. Their Society: Inhabiting the Canary Islands, which lie off the coast of northwest Africa in the Atlantic Ocean, the Guanches were a tall, fair or red-haired race of people. It is believed that they were the descendants of Cro-Magnon men who migrated to the islands from southern France and the Iberian Peninsula in oceangoing canoes some 3,000 years ago. The Guanches' own oral history and mythology spoke of 60 men and their...
 

Navigation
Spaniards Search For Legendary Tartessos In A Marsh
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/11/2007 7:02:01 PM EDT · 12 replies · 243+ views


M & C | 5-11-2007 | Sinikka Tarvainen
Spaniards search for legendary Tartessos in a marsh By Sinikka Tarvainen May 11, 2007, 11:28 GMT Madrid - Where was the capital of Tartessos, the legendary pre-Roman civilization which once existed on the Iberian Peninsula? The culture which flourished from around 800 to 500 BC is believed to have been located mainly around the present-day cities of Cadiz, Seville and Huelva in southern Spain, but no traces of a major urban settlement have been found. Now, however, scientists have discovered surprising clues to where a major Tartessian city may have been, the daily El Pais reported. Its ruins could lie...
 

Let's Have Jerusalem
King Herod's tomb discovered, Israeli university says
  Posted by Alouette
On News/Activism 05/07/2007 6:40:03 PM EDT · 70 replies · 3,075+ views


YNet | May 7, 2007
Hebrew University announces discovery of Roman king's tomb at Herodium near Jerusalem Reuters Published: 05.08.07, 00:50 / Israel News The Hebrew University of Jerusalem announced on Monday the discovery of the grave and tomb of Herod the Great, the Roman empire's "King of the Jews" In ancient Judea. The University said in a brief statement the discovery was made at Herodium, where Herod's hilltop fortress palace once stood some 7 miles from the holy city where he had rebuilt and expanded the Jewish Temple. The university said it would give further details at a news conference on Tuesday. The Gospel...
 

Archaeologist finds tomb of King Herod
  Posted by pissant
On News/Activism 05/07/2007 9:55:04 PM EDT · 55 replies · 1,502+ views


Yahoooooo | 5/7/07 | Mark Levie
JERUSALEM - An Israeli archaeologist has found the tomb of King Herod, the legendary builder of ancient Jerusalem and the Holy Land, Hebrew University said late Monday. The tomb is at a site called Herodium, a flattened hilltop in the Judean Desert, clearly visible from southern Jerusalem. Herod built a palace on the hill, and researchers discovered his burial site there, the university said. The university had hoped to keep the find a secret until Tuesday, when it planned a news conference to disclose the find in detail, but the Haaretz newspaper found out about the discovery and published an...
 

[King] Herod's tomb found
  Posted by bedolido
On General/Chat 05/08/2007 11:30:12 AM EDT · 11 replies · 139+ views


new.com.au | May 09, 2007 12:00am | Staff Writer
THE tomb of the biblical King Herod the Great has been found, archeologists say. The final resting place of King Herod, who ruled Judea for the Roman empire from about 37BC, was found at the ruins of a magnificent palace he built near Jerusalem. King Herod was known for his role in the massacre of the innocents as described in the Gospel of Matthew, where he ordered the deaths of young males in Bethlehem to stop a new king of the Jews, whose birth had been prophesied by the three wise men. Herod was also known for expanding the second...
 

Faith and Philosophy
Historically Important Greek Stele Inscriptions Unveiled [ Heliodorus ]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 05/06/2007 9:31:02 PM EDT · 8 replies · 75+ views


Epoch Times | Sunday, May 6, 2007 | Epoch Times Israel Staff
The Israel Museum unveiled a unique 2,200-year-old stele (inscribed stone block) on May 3 that provides new insight into the dramatic story of Heliodorus and the Temple in Jerusalem, as related in the Second Book of Maccabees... The newly deciphered stele presents new information about Heliodorus, who, according to the Second Book of Maccabees, received orders to seize the treasure in the Temple in Jerusalem, but was driven from the sanctuary by the miraculous appearance of a fearsome horseman accompanied by two mighty youths. This presentation marks the first public display of the Heliodorus stele, which is on extended loan...
 

Greece
Greek Archaeologists Discover Rare Example Of 2,700-Year-Old Weaving
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/09/2007 5:42:53 PM EDT · 34 replies · 588+ views


IHT | 5-9-2007 | AP
Greek archaeologists discover rare example of 2,700-year-old weaving The Associated Press Published: May 9, 2007 ATHENS, Greece: Archaeologists in Greece have recovered a rare section of 2,700-year old fabric from a burial imitating heroes' funerals described by the poet Homer, officials said Wednesday. The yellowed, brittle material was found in a copper urn during a rescue excavation in the southern town of Argos, a Culture Ministry announcement said. "This is an extremely rare find, as fabric is an organic material which decomposes very easily," said archaeologist Alkistis Papadimitriou, who headed the dig. She said only a handful of such artifacts have...
 

2,700-Year-Old Fabric Found in Greece
  Posted by FreedomCalls
On News/Activism 05/11/2007 1:53:22 AM EDT · 31 replies · 631+ views


PhysOrg.com | 05/09/2007 | Nicholas Paphitis
(AP) -- Archaeologists in Greece have discovered a rare 2,700-year-old piece of fabric inside a copper urn from a burial they speculated imitated the elaborate cremation of soldiers described in Homer's "Iliad." The yellowed, brittle material was found in the urn during excavation in the southern town of Argos, a Culture Ministry announcement said Wednesday "This is an extremely rare find, as fabric is an organic material which decomposes very easily," said archaeologist Alkistis Papadimitriou, who headed the dig. She said only a handful of such artifacts have been found in Greece. The cylindrical urn also contained dried pomegranates -...
 

Epigraphy and Language
13th century text hides words of Archimedes
  Posted by dbehsman
On News/Activism 05/11/2007 4:32:53 AM EDT · 10 replies · 651+ views


Los Angeles Times | December 26, 2006 | Jia-Rui Chong
THE book cost $2 million at auction, but large sections are unreadable. Some of its 348 pages are torn or missing and others are covered with sprawling purple patches of mildew. Sooty edges and water stains indicate a close escape from a fire.
 

Egypt, Gift of the Nile
Egyptians, not Greeks were true fathers of medicine
  Posted by Renfield
On News/Activism 05/11/2007 9:19:24 AM EDT · 37 replies · 416+ views


EurekaAlert.org | 5-9-07 | Aeron Haworth
Scientists examining documents dating back 3,500 years say they have found proof that the origins of modern medicine lie in ancient Egypt and not with Hippocrates and the Greeks. The research team from the KNH Centre for Biomedical Egyptology at The University of Manchester discovered the evidence in medical papyri written in 1,500BC -- 1,000 years before Hippocrates was born. "Classical scholars have always considered the ancient Greeks, particularly Hippocrates, as being the fathers of medicine but our findings suggest that the ancient Egyptians were practising a credible form of pharmacy and medicine much earlier," said Dr Jackie Campbell. "When...
 

Elam, Persia, Parthia, Iran
Search On For Ancient King With Five Rings Of Power
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/07/2007 6:29:45 PM EDT · 30 replies · 970+ views


Payvand | 5-6-2007
Search on for ancient king with five rings of power TEHRAN, May 6 (Mehr News Agency) -- Iranian archaeologists are searching for a king who possessed five rings of power. The rings were discovered by chance by the Khuzestan Water and Waste Water Company during a grading operation in the city of Ramhormoz, Khuzestan Province last week. The rings have been discovered in two U-shaped coffins, which, unfortunately, have been seriously damaged by bulldozers. They are similar to a ring that belonged to the Elamite king Kidin-Khutran (1235-1210 BC), whose coffin was discovered in 1982 in the ruins of the...
 

Forgotten Post-Achaemenid Archer Still Waits to Shout!
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/07/2007 6:52:00 PM EDT · 5 replies · 252+ views


CHN Press | 5-6-2007
Forgotten Post-Achaemenid Archer Still Waits to Shout!Bas-relief of the post-Achaemenid archerRelief of a unique post-Achaemenid archer, which was remained unknown for hundreds of years, has been discovered during archeological excavations in the furthest parts behind Salman-e Farsi dam in Fars province. Tehran, 6 May 2007 (CHN Foreign Desk) -- Continuation of archeological excavations in the vicinity of Salman-e Farsi reservoir, Iranian Fars province, resulted in discovery of a huge rock with relief of a archer who is riding a horse dating back to post-Achaemenid period (333-248 BC). This unique bas-relief is on verge of destruction. Announcing this news, Alireza Jafari...
 

India
Dancing Girl From Mohenjo-Daro
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 05/10/2007 12:30:24 PM EDT · 33 replies · 442+ views


Vigyan Prasar | August 1999 | Gunakar Muley
The National Museum in New Delhi is one of the richest storehouses of India's cultural and scientific heritage. Among the prehistoric and protohistoric objects displayed in the very first gallery in the Museum's ground floor, there is a bronze figure from Mohenjo-daro (now in Pakistan). Made in circa 2500 B.C., it is an image of a naked young girl in a dancing pose. Though the figure's height is only 10.8 cms., it tells us a lot about the metal technology that was developed in the Indus Valley Civilization, also called the Harappan Culture. The bronze Dancing Girl from Mohenjo-daro is...
 

Helix? Make Mine a Double
Gene Mutation Linked To Cognition Is Found Only In Humans
  Posted by LibWhacker
On News/Activism 05/10/2007 2:50:52 PM EDT · 47 replies · 730+ views


ScienceDaily | 5/9/07
Science Daily -- The human and chimpanzee genomes vary by just 1.2 percent, yet there is a considerable difference in the mental and linguistic capabilities between the two species. A new study showed that a certain form of neuropsin, a protein that plays a role in learning and memory, is expressed only in the central nervous systems of humans and that it originated less than 5 million years ago. The study, which also demonstrated the molecular mechanism that creates this novel protein, will be published online in Human Mutation, the official journal of the Human Genome Variation Society. Led by...
 

Australia and the Pacific
Aborigines Came Out Of Africa, Study Shows
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/07/2007 10:17:22 PM EDT · 42 replies · 877+ views


The Telegraph (UK) | 5-8-2007 | Roger Highfield
Aborigines came out of Africa, study shows By Roger Highfield, Science Editor Last Updated: 2:24am BST 08/05/2007 Australia's Aborigines were formed from a single group of migrants who left Africa about 55,000 years ago, DNA evidence suggests. Once there the settlers evolved in relative isolation, developing genetic characteristics not found anywhere else and leading to unusual fossil finds that threatened the "out of Africa" hypothesis of human origins. DNA tests show that Aborigines did not develop separately but were part of the migration from Africa 55,000 years ago However, research published today confirms that all modern humans stem from a...
 

From DNA Analysis, Clues to a Single Australian Migration
  Posted by neverdem
On News/Activism 05/11/2007 1:35:40 AM EDT · 9 replies · 309+ views


NY Times | May 8, 2007 | NICHOLAS WADE
Geneticists re-examining the first settlement of Australia and Papua-New Guinea by modern humans have concluded that the two islands were reached some 50,000 years ago by a single group of people who remained in substantial or total isolation until recent times. The finding, if upheld, would undermine assumptions that there have been subsequent waves of migration into Australia. Analyzing old and new samples of Aborigine DNA, which are hard to obtain because of governmental restrictions, the geneticists developed a detailed picture of the aborigines' ancestry, as reflected in their Y chromosomes, found just in men, and their mitochondrial DNA, a...
 

Biology and Cryptobiology
Native American DNA Found In UK
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/05/2007 5:28:21 PM EDT · 96 replies · 1,751+ views


BBC | 4-5-2007
Native American DNA found in UK By Paul Rincon Science reporter, BBC News Doreen (left) with daughter Rebecca and granddaughter Anais DNA testing has uncovered British descendents of Native Americans brought to the UK centuries ago as slaves, translators or tribal representatives. Genetic analysis turned up two white British women with a DNA signature characteristic of American Indians. An Oxford scientist said it was extremely unusual to find these DNA lineages in Britons with no previous knowledge of Native American ancestry. Indigenous Americans were brought over to the UK as early as the 1500s. Many were brought over as curiosities;...
 

Longer Perspectives
German chancellor hands over map first naming America
  Posted by 3Quartets
On News/Activism 05/01/2007 3:59:14 PM EDT · 56 replies · 1,233+ views


German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday officially handed over to the United States the 500-year-old map that was the first to tell the world of a new land it called America. Library of Congress historians say the world map, completed by German-born cleric and cartographer Martin Waldseemueller in 1507, is the first known document to use the name America -- named after Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci -- the first to depict the Western Hemisphere and the first to show separate Pacific and Atlantic oceans. http://www.chron.com
 

PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis
Inca Leapt Canyons With Fiber Bridges
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/08/2007 10:53:39 PM EDT · 36 replies · 983+ views


The Tech On-line | 5-8-2007 | John Noble Wilford
Inca Leapt Canyons With Fiber BridgesMIT Students Plan to Stretch 60-Foot-Long Fiber Bridge Between Campus Buildings By John Noble Wilford May 8, 2007 CAMBRIDGE, Mass. Conquistadors from Spain came, they saw, and they were astonished. They had never seen anything in Europe like the bridges of Peru. Chroniclers wrote that the Spanish soldiers stood in awe and fear before the spans of braided fiber cables suspended across deep gorges in the Andes, narrow walkways sagging and swaying and looking so frail. Yet the suspension bridges were familiar and vital links in the vast empire of the Inca, as they had...
 

Early America
Sword, Armor Found Buried Inside Remains Of James Fort
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/09/2007 8:46:31 PM EDT · 47 replies · 1,218+ views


Virginian-Pilot | 5-9-2007 | Diane Tennant
Sword, armor found buried inside remains of James Fort Archaeologists Mary Anna Richardson, left, and Luke Pecoraro carefully begin excavating a potential cache of arms and armor that so far includes a broad sword with a basket hilt and blade, armor that protects the thigh and a rapier hilt, discovered recently at Historic Jamestowne. PHOTO BY MICHAEL LAVIN / APVA PRESERVATION VIRGINIA By DIANE TENNANT, The Virginian-Pilot © May 9, 2007 | Last updated 1:49 PM May. 9 JAMESTOWN -- A cache of armor from the early 1600s has been discovered by archaeologists excavating a trash pit inside the remains...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
Centuries On, but Martyred Queen's Story Still Unfinished (St Ketevan)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 05/05/2007 6:35:50 PM EDT · 9 replies · 406+ views


The Messenger | 4-5-2007 | Anna Kamushadze
Centuries on, but martyred queen's story still unfinished By Anna Kamushadze St Ketevan's relics were found in the Augustine Tower in Old Goa, India The history of the mortal remains of St Ketevan, Queen of Georgia, is as tragic as her life was. The Portuguese missionaries who witnessed her death and protected her remains left no precise account of where the body of the saint, canonised shortly after her death, lay. Contemporary reports from England speak of her being laid to rest in Goa, India, then a Portuguese colony. A bone belonging to Ketevan is housed in the church that...
 

Mesopotamia
Gertrude Bell, "uncrowned queen of Iraq"
  Posted by kiriath_jearim
On News/Activism 05/07/2007 1:34:28 PM EDT · 12 replies · 437+ views


Gertrude Bell Project (UK) | n/a | n/a
Gertrude Bell (1868-1926) was born in Washington, in what was then Co. Durham, but, when she was very young, she moved with her family to Redcar. She was educated first of all at home, and then at school in London; finally, in a time when it was not at all usual for a woman to have a university education, she went to Oxford to read history, and, at the age of twenty and after only two years study, she left with a first-class degree. In the years immediately following, she spent time on the social round in London and Yorkshire,...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Professor Forced Out for Citing George Washington
  Posted by yoe
On News/Activism 05/07/2007 6:05:33 PM EDT · 72 replies · 2,481+ views


News Max | May 7, 2007 | Staff
A tenured college professor is set to be fired for simply sending out an e-mail to colleagues containing George Washington's "Thanksgiving Day Proclamation of 1798." Already professor Walter Kehowski at Glendale Community College in Arizona has been placed on forced administrative leave and the school's chief has recommended his termination. "It simply boggles the mind that a professor could find himself facing termination simply for e-mailing the Thanksgiving address of our first president," said Greg Lukianoff, president of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE). On Nov. 22, 2006, the day before Thanksgiving, Kehowski, a professor in mathematics in...
 

Ken Burns' World War II (liberal columnist attacks political correctness at PBS)
  Posted by Clintonfatigued
On News/Activism 05/10/2007 7:09:02 PM EDT · 52 replies · 1,530+ views


Creators Syndicate | May 10, 2007 | Susan Estrich
All I can say is that it's a good thing it's Ken Burns. If the micromanagers and pseudo-censors representing the politically correct Congressional Hispanic Caucus were taking on a lesser filmmaker, who knows what would happen? At least it's relatively easy for PBS, the Public Broadcasting System, to stand behind the best documentary artist in America. In this climate, the second-best might not fare so well. The current controversy centers around Ken Burns' forthcoming film, "The War," which focuses on how the people of four American towns were affected by World War II. Famous historians everywhere have supported the project....
 

Oh So Mysteriouso
NOSTRADAMUS AND THE MABUS COMET
  Posted by Bob Evans
On Bloggers & Personal 02/02/2007 9:06:17 PM EST · 29 replies · 1,069+ views


Hogue Prophecy | Feb 2, 2007 | John Hogue
Friends, In all my thirty years of prophecy research I have never seen a stellar portent so closely match Nostradamus' prophecy dating the death of a potential candidate for his "Third Antichrist" such as the death of Saddam followed by the brilliant appearance of Comet McNaught. Because of these events we may at last understand why Nostradamus gave two timelines for a Third World War. Please click on this secure link to read my full article: http://hogueprophecy.com NOSTRADAMUS AND THE MABUS COMET Does the unexpected Appearance of Comet McNaught After the Hanging of Saddam Hussein Fulfill the Prophecy that He...
 

end of digest #147 20070512

540 posted on 05/11/2007 8:23:26 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Time heals all wounds, particularly when they're not yours. Profile updated May 11, 2007.)
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