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Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #290
Saturday, February 6, 2010

Trojan War

 Could museum's gold be from ancient Troy?

· 02/02/2010 8:50:18 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 8 replies · 374+ views ·
· Philadelphia Inquirer ·
· Sunday, January 31, 2010 ·
· Tom Avril ·

The scientist had traveled from Germany to examine the ancient items that lay before him on the University of Pennsylvania laboratory table, and he was dazzled. Earrings with cascades of golden leaves. Brooches adorned with tightly coiled spirals. A necklace strung with hundreds of gold ringlets and beads. The jewelry bore a striking resemblance to objects from one of the world's great collections - a controversial treasure unearthed long ago from the fabled city of Troy... The 24 pieces had been purchased from a Philadelphia antiquities dealer more than 40 years ago, and came with no documentation of their origin....

Egypt

 The most sacred of cities -- review of David O'Connor's
  "Abydos: Egypt's First Pharaohs and the...


· 02/03/2010 4:20:03 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 8 replies · 186+ views ·
· Al-Ahram Weekly ·
· 28 January -
  3 February 2010, issue #983 ·
· Jill Kamil ·

Abydos is situated on the western bank of the Nile about seven kilometres west of the town of Balyana in Middle Egypt. It made its debut on the stage of Egypt's ancient history even before the dynastic period, and it retained its aura of sanctity longer than any other site in Egypt. It houses the tombs and mortuary cult enclosures of the rulers of the First Dynasty. It was the cult centre of Osiris, Egypt's most beloved hero and the central figure of the country's most popular myth. And it is an archaeological site that casts light on the origins...

Faith and Philosophy

 An ancient Roman temple, discovered in the chancel of the church of Sant Feliu Girona

· 02/02/2010 9:00:54 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 5 replies · 213+ views ·
· Barcelona Reporter ·
· February 2010 ·
· unattributed ·

An ancient Roman temple, discovered following the first excavations in the chancel of the church of Sant Feliu Girona. The temple, with cross-shaped plan, apse, three naves and two side chapels, and several tombs from the sixth and seventh centuries, have appeared. This intervention is part of the European project "Sopra e sotto. Euopea La Città", the culture program involving the City of Brindisi (Italy) as main organizer, with participation as members of L'Ecole Nationale Superiore d ' Architetture of Toulouse (France), the University and the city of Girona. The work that has lasted three weeks have also brought to...

The Non-DaVinci Code

 Lost Roman law code discovered in London [ Codex Gregorianus ]

· 01/31/2010 7:36:52 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 25 replies · 655+ views ·
· Eurekalert ·
· Tuesday, January 26, 2010 ·
· Dave Weston,
  University College London ·

Part of an ancient Roman law code previously thought to have been lost forever has been discovered by researchers at UCL's Department of History. Simon Corcoran and Benet Salway made the breakthrough after piecing together 17 fragments of previously incomprehensible parchment. The fragments were being studied at UCL as part of the Arts & Humanities Research Council-funded "Projet Volterra" -- a ten year study of Roman law in its full social, legal and political context. Corcoran and Salway found that the text belonged to the Codex Gregorianus, or Gregorian Code, a collection of laws by emperors from Hadrian (AD 117-138)...

Roman Empire

 World's first Swiss Army knife revealed - made 1800 years before today's version (Pics)

· 01/30/2010 1:23:35 AM PST ·
· Posted by bogusname ·
· 48 replies · 1,750+ views ·
· Daily Mail ·
· January 30, 2010 ·
· Daily Mail Reporter ·

The world's first Swiss Army knife' has been revealed - made 1,800 years before its modern counterpart. An intricately designed Roman implement, which dates back to 200AD, it is made from silver but has an iron blade. It features a spoon, fork as well as a retractable spike, spatula and small tooth-pick. Experts believe the spike may have been used by the Romans to extract meat from snails.

British Isles

 Silver coin dating to 211 BC is oldest piece of Roman money ever found in Britain

· 02/02/2010 9:15:34 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 24 replies · 566+ views ·
· Daily Mail ·
· Friday, January 29th, 2010 ·
· Daily Mail Reporter ·

Dating from 211 BC and found near the Leicestershire village of Hallaton, the coin was uncovered with 5,000 other coins, a helmet and a decorated bowl. Unearthed in 2000 by a metal detectorist, staff at the nearby Harborough Museum have only just realised its significance. One side of the coin depicts the goddess Roma wearing her characteristic helmet while mythical twins Castor and Pollux sit astride galloping horses on the reverse. David Sprason, Leicestershire County Council cabinet member for communities and well-being said: 'Leicestershire boasts the largest number of Iron Age coins ever professionally excavated in Britain. 'To also have...

Oh So Mysteriouso

 Astronomy Picture of the Day

· 01/31/2010 5:41:54 AM PST ·
· Posted by sig226 ·
· 37 replies · 912+ views ·
· NASA ·
· 1/31/10 ·
· Yale University, B. E. Schaefer (LSU) ·

The Mysterious Voynich Manuscript Credit: Yale University ; Digital Copyright: B. E. Schaefer (LSU) Explanation: The ancient text has no known title, no known author, and is written in no known language: what does it say and why does it have many astronomy illustrations? The mysterious book was once bought by an emperor, forgotten on a library shelf, sold for thousands of dollars, and later donated to Yale. Possibly written in the 15th century, the over 200-page volume is known most recently as the Voynich Manuscript, after its (re-)discoverer in 1912. Pictured above is an illustration from the book...

Catastrophism & Astronomy

 Giant Meteorites Slammed Earth Around A.D. 500?

· 02/05/2010 7:31:57 AM PST ·
· Posted by Palter ·
· 21 replies · 563+ views ·
· National Geographic News ·
· 03 Feb 2010 ·
· Richard A. Lovett ·

Double impact may have caused tsunami, global cooling Pieces of a giant asteroid or comet that broke apart over Earth may have crashed off Australia about 1,500 years ago, says a scientist who has found evidence of the possible impact craters. Satellite measurements of the Gulf of Carpentaria (see map) revealed tiny changes in sea level that are signs of impact craters on the seabed below, according to new research by marine geophysicist Dallas Abbott. Based on the satellite data, one crater should be about 11 miles (18 kilometers) wide, while the other should be 7.4 miles (12 kilometers) wide....

Plato? Socrates? Aristotle? Morons.

 Ancient and modern: First science academy is 350 years old

· 01/31/2010 3:49:10 PM PST ·
· Posted by decimon ·
· 12 replies · 271+ views ·
· AFP ·
· Jan 31, 2010 ·
· Richard Ingham ·

Handout photo provided by the Royal Society shows Isaac Newton's 'Death Mask'. The Royal Society, the world's oldest science academy founded on November 20, 1660, celebrates its 350 years throughtout the year. (AFP/Royal Society/Richard Valencia) LONDON (AFP) -- From its classical pillars and porticoed entrance to its oil paintings of great men and women and archives that include the death mask of Sir Isaac Newton, history sits grandly on the Royal Society. Scientists who visit its headquarters overlooking the tree-lined avenue that runs from Trafalgar Square to Buckingham Palace tend to enter the building with the hushed awe of a...

Epigraphy and Language

 Saving Endangered Languages from Being Forgotten [Siberian Ob-Ugrian languages Mansi and Khanti]

· 01/31/2010 7:24:31 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 16 replies · 296+ views ·
· ScienceDaily ·
· Thursday, January 28, 2010 ·
· University of Vienna,
  via AlphaGalileo ·

With only 3.000 speakers in Northwest Siberia the Ob-Ugrian language Mansi is on the verge of extinction. Predictions say it will be extinct in ten to twenty years at the latest. The same holds true for Khanti, a member of the same language family. It is for this reason that extensive documentation is so important. Johanna Laakso, professor for Finno-Ugrian Studies at the University of Vienna concerns herself with the documentation of this and other minority languages in the framework of an FWF project and the EU project ELDIA... The documentation of the languages Mansi and Khanti is additionally of...

Early America

 In 1790, Philly "had a fever", today, not so much

· 02/03/2010 2:25:19 PM PST ·
· Posted by Free ThinkerNY ·
· 4 replies · 270+ views ·
· wattsupwiththat.com ·
· Feb. 3, 2010 ·

Steve Goddard reminded me that we've had "220 Years of Global Warming in Philadelphia." Starting in 1790, a prominent Philadelphia resident named Charles Pierce started keeping detailed records of the weather and climate, which has been archived on Google Books. His report from January, 1790 is below: JANUARY. 1790. The average or medium temperature of this month was 44 degrees. This is the mildest month of January on record. Fogs prevailed very much in the morning, but a hot sun soon dispersed them, and the mercury often ran up to 70 in the shade, at mid-day. Boys were often seen...

Climate

 Maine: Do rings of Herbie the elm have age, climate data?

· 01/31/2010 2:55:38 PM PST ·
· Posted by NormsRevenge ·
· 19 replies · 477+ views ·
· AP on Yahoo ·
· 1/31/10 ·
· David Sharp - ap ·

YARMOUTH, Maine -- Herbie, the giant American elm tree, is giving his trunk over to science. Since the tree was felled two weeks ago, scientists from Columbia University, the University of Maine and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have contacted the Maine Forest Service about examining Herbie's trunk to see what can be learned about the tree's age and about the climate over the years. Peter Lammert of the Maine Forest Service said his computer has been clogged with e-mails from scientists interested in the stories that Herbie's growth rings might tell. In particular, Herbie's demise is bringing out...

Greece

 Greece: New Underwater Archaeological Site Designated Off Polyaigos Island

· 02/02/2010 8:53:40 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 4 replies · 228+ views ·
· Balkan Travellers ·
· Monday, February 1, 2010 ·

A shipwreck located off the small uninhabited Cycladic island of Polyaigos in the central Aegean will be designated as an "underwater archaeological site" by Greece's Culture Ministry, the institution's representatives announced recently. The shipwreck, first spotted in 2004, was initially explored by underwater archaeologists in the fall of 2009, the Athens News Agency reported today. These excavations resulted in the discovery of valuable archaeological objects, including amphorae, ceramic vases and fragments of the vessel's anchor. In addition, the shipwreck was photographed and filmed in detail, which allowed the creation of a high-definition photo-mosaic, while procedures have been set in motion...

Paleontology

 Aznalcóllar disaster compared with Cretaceous mass extinction

· 02/02/2010 6:52:10 AM PST ·
· Posted by decimon ·
· 10 replies · 249+ views ·
· FECYT - Spanish Foundation
  for Science and Technology ·
· Feb 2, 2010 ·
· Unknown ·

Researchers from the University of Granada (UGR) have compared the disaster caused by the Aznalcóllar spillage in the Doñana National Park in Andalusia 11 years ago with the biggest species extinction known to date. What do these two disasters have in common? The scientists say that carrying out comparisons of this kind will make it possible to find out how ecosystems recover following mass extinctions. Until now, scientists used to study the fossil record in order to analyse how organisms responded to major environmental changes in the past, such as the mass extinction of species during the Cretaceous period (65...

Glaciation

 Seabed Scratches Show Icebergs Reached The Tropics

· 06/09/2008 12:24:13 PM PDT ·
· Posted by blam ·
· 20 replies · 758+ views ·
· New Scientist ·

Seabed scratches show icebergs reached the tropics 09 June 2008 NewScientist.com news service ICEBERGS often etch out messages on the shallow ocean floor. Now a newly discovered set of scratches suggests bergs from the icy north drifted further south than we thought after the last ice age. The meltdown of North American ice sheets about 15,000 years ago released a flotilla of icebergs into the Atlantic. Gouges left by bergs on the ocean bed have previously been found off New Jersey, close to the southernmost edge of the ice sheet, but it had been thought that looping currents would have...

Practicing without a License

 Stone Age amputee proves Neolithic medics more advanced than previously thought

· 01/31/2010 7:01:48 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 26 replies · 678+ views ·
· Telegraph ·
· Monday, January 25, 2010 ·
· By Heidi Blake ·

Early Neolithic surgeons used a sharpened flint stone and rudimentary anaesthetics to amputate the elderly man's left forearm, and treated the wound in sterile conditions, experts believe. Evidence of the early surgery was unearthed by CÈcile Buquet-Marcon and Anaick Samzun, both archaeologists, and Philippe Charlier, a forensic scientist, during work on a tomb discovered at Buthiers-Boulancourt, about 40 miles south of Paris... Tests showed that the humerus bone had been severed above the elbow in what scientists described as "an intentional and successful amputation". The patient, who is likely to have been a warrior, is thought likely to have damaged...

Neandertal / Neanderthal

 Polish scientists say 3 Neanderthal teeth found

· 02/02/2010 8:56:00 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 8 replies · 197+ views ·
· Ledger-Enquirer ·
· Monday, February 1, 2010 ·
· Vanessa Gera, Associated Press Writer ·

Mikolaj Urbanowski, an archaeologist with Szczecin University and the project's lead researcher... said the teeth were unearthed in the Stajnia Cave, north of the Carpathian Mountains, along with flint tools and the bones of the woolly mammoth and the woolly rhinoceros, both extinct Ice Age species.

Prehistory and Origins

 Fight, Fight, Fight: The History of Human Aggression

· 02/02/2010 11:44:40 PM PST ·
· Posted by neverdem ·
· 23 replies · 407+ views ·
· LiveScience ·
· January 2010 ·
· Charles Q. Choi ·

The use of weapons may date back well before the rise of humanity, given evidence that even our closest living relatives, the chimpanzees, can use spears to hunt other primates. To see how fighting evolved from hand-to-hand combat to world war, here are 10 major innovations that revolutionized combat.

Forensics is Ten

 Novel studies of decomposition shed new light on our earliest fossil ancestry

· 01/31/2010 2:22:45 PM PST ·
· Posted by decimon ·
· 6 replies · 274+ views ·
· University of Leicester ·
· Jan 31, 2010 ·
· Unknown ·

Revelations of rotting fish provide scientists with clearer picture of early life -- Decaying corpses are usually the domain of forensic scientists, but palaeontologists have discovered that studying rotting fish sheds new light on our earliest ancestry. The researchers, from the Department of Geology at the University of Leicester, devised a new method for extracting information from 500 million year old fossils -they studied the way fish decompose to gain a clearer picture of how our ancient fish-like ancestors would have looked. Their results indicate that some of the earliest fossils from our part of the tree of life may have been...

Descended from Beagles

 Horizontal and vertical: The evolution of evolution

· 02/01/2010 4:24:31 AM PST ·
· Posted by decimon ·
· 41 replies · 525+ views ·
· New Scientist ·
· Jan 26, 2010 ·
· Mark Buchanan ·

JUST suppose that Darwin's ideas were only a part of the story of evolution. Suppose that a process he never wrote about, and never even imagined, has been controlling the evolution of life throughout most of the Earth's history. It may sound preposterous, but this is exactly what microbiologist Carl Woese and physicist Nigel Goldenfeld, both at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, believe. Darwin's explanation of evolution, they argue, even in its sophisticated modern form, applies only to a recent phase of life on Earth. At the root of this idea is overwhelming recent evidence for horizontal gene transfer...

Africa

 Hippy apes caught cannibalising their young

· 02/01/2010 7:09:36 PM PST ·
· Posted by Free ThinkerNY ·
· 19 replies · 580+ views ·
· newscientist.com ·
· Feb. 1, 2010 ·
· Ewen Callaway ·

So much for the "hippy chimp". Bonobos, known for their peaceable ways and casual sex, have been caught in the act of cannibalism. An account of a group of wild bonobos consuming a dead infant, published last month, is the first report of cannibalism in these animals -- making the species the last of the great apes to reveal a taste for the flesh of their own kind. The account comes from a group of primatologists led by Gottfried Hohmann of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. The team has studied bonobos in the wild at...

Biology and Cryptobiology

 New research rejects 80-year theory of 'primordial soup' as the origin of life

· 02/02/2010 6:40:58 AM PST ·
· Posted by decimon ·
· 37 replies · 632+ views ·
· Wiley-Blackwell ·
· Feb 2, 2010 ·
· Unknown ·

Earth's chemical energy powered early life through 'the most revolutionary idea in biology since Darwin'For 80 years it has been accepted that early life began in a 'primordial soup' of organic molecules before evolving out of the oceans millions of years later. Today the 'soup' theory has been over turned in a pioneering paper in BioEssays which claims it was the Earth's chemical energy, from hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor, which kick-started early life. "Textbooks have it that life arose from organic soup and that the first cells grew by fermenting these organics to generate energy in the form...

Helix, Make Mine a Double

 Skeleton of Western man found in ancient Mongolian tomb

· 02/01/2010 8:42:29 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 17 replies · 569+ views ·
· Science News ·
· Friday, January 29th, 2010 ·
· Bruce Bower ·

Heading East Excavations several years ago at an ancient cemetery in Mongolia uncovered a man's skeleton, including this skull, that has yielded genetic evidence of Indo-Europeans reaching eastern Asia at least 2,000 years ago.Kim, et al. Dead men can indeed tell tales, but they speak in a whispered double helix... DNA extracted from this man's bones pegs him as a descendant of Europeans or western Asians. Yet he still assumed a prominent position in ancient Mongolia's Xiongnu Empire, say geneticist Kyung-Yong Kim of Chung-Ang University in Seoul, South Korea, and his colleagues... the Xiongnu Empire -- which ruled a vast...


 DNA testing on 2,000-year-old bones in Italy reveal East Asian ancestry

· 02/01/2010 2:28:11 PM PST ·
· Posted by decimon ·
· 14 replies · 432+ views ·
· McMaster University ·
· Jan 1, 2010 ·
· Unknown ·

HAMILTON, ON, February 1, 2010 -- Researchers excavating an ancient Roman cemetery made a surprising discovery when they extracted ancient mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from one of the skeletons buried at the site: the 2,000-year-old bones revealed a maternal East Asian ancestry. The results will be presented at the Roman Archeology Conference at Oxford, England, in March, and published in the Journal of Roman Archaeology. According to Tracy Prowse, assistant professor of Anthropology, and the lead author on the study, the isotopic evidence indicates that about 20% of the sample analyzed to-date was not born in the area around Vagnari. The mtDNA is...

Ancient Autopsies

 Mammoth Achievement: Researchers at the forefront of molecular biology

· 02/05/2010 1:47:18 PM PST ·
· Posted by 2ndDivisionVet ·
· 3 replies · 227+ views ·
· Physorg ·
· January 26, 2010 ·
· David Pacchioli ·

Forget Jurassic Park. By successfully sequencing the DNA of a long-extinct species, Stephan Schuster and Webb Miller have helped push back the boundaries of molecular biology. Stephan Schuster was never all that interested in ancient DNA. As a young genomicist at the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology in his native Germany, his forte had always been bacteria. By deciphering and comparing the genomes -- the genetic blueprints -- of various microbial species, he sought to unlock the secrets of these ubiquitous creatures: how they evolve and interact with the organisms that play them host. Schuster's early work had attracted...

Full House Beats a Flush

 Is Rice Domestication to Blame for Red-Faced Asians?

· 02/04/2010 6:31:23 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 37 replies · 601+ views ·
· ScienceNOW Daily News ·
· January 20, 2010 ·
· Michael Balter ·

If your face turns red after drinking just one glass of wine, blame ancient Chinese farmers. Researchers are reporting that the "Asian Flush" mutation cropped up just as rice was first being domesticated, and it may have protected early farmers from the harms of drinking too much. But some other scientists urge caution, saying that the dates may not match up. When you drink, enzymes in the liver known as alcohol dehydrogenases (ADHs) convert alcohol to an organic compound called acetaldehyde; another enzyme then converts acetaldehyde to acetic acid. But about 50% of Asians and 5% of Europeans have mutations...

Megaliths & Archaeoastronomy

 Long lost theory on Silbury Hill is uncovered

· 02/02/2010 8:46:49 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 11 replies · 320+ views ·
· Nigel Kerton ·
· Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010 ·
· Gazette-Herald (UK) ·

Letters that lay undiscovered in national archives for more than 230 years suggest that Silbury Hill, the enigmatic man-made mound that stands between Marlborough and Beckhampton, may have originally be constructed around some sort of totem pole... A separate excavation found fragments of oak timber within the cavity leading historians to believe that the mound was built around the pole dating from around 2,400 BC... The 18th century letters, written from Edward Drax to Lord Rivers... Drax, a wealthy landowner who lived in Bath, had hired a team of miners to dig a shaft from the top of Silbury Hill,...

PreColumbian, Clovis, PreClovis

 UA archaelogist backtracks on claim about Oxford stone mound

· 02/02/2010 9:03:59 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 4 replies · 194+ views ·
· The Anniston Star, via WHNT ·
· January 27, 2010 ·
· Associated Press ·

A University of Alabama archaeologist has contradicted a report he signed last year claiming a stone mound in Oxford was likely made by humans about 1,000 years ago. The Anniston Star reports that Robert Clouse told the Oxford city council Tuesday that erosion and other natural forces likely created the mound. Clouse heads the Office of Archaeological Research at the University of Alabama and the University of Alabama Museums. Clouse was answering questions about the mound behind the Oxford Exchange and the apparent removal of another mound at the historic Davis Farm site. Clouse last year signed a report on...

Agriculture and Animal Husbandry

 Native Americans First Tamed Turkeys 2,000 Years Ago

· 02/02/2010 8:42:58 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 12 replies · 188+ views ·
· Discovery News ·
· Monday, February 1, 2010 ·
· Jennifer Viegas ·

Native Americans first domesticated turkeys around 800 B.C. Turkeys weren't initially used for their meat, but rather their feathers. Native American groups may have shared turkey-raising tips... domesticated turkeys twice: first in south-central Mexico at around 800 B.C. and again in what is now the southwestern U.S. at about 200 B.C., according to a new study. The two instances of domestication appear to have been separate, based on DNA analysis of ancient turkey remains. However, the different Native American groups could have been in contact with each other, sharing turkey-raising tips... The scientists combined their efforts for the study, which...

Hope and Change

 Schools: U.S. History Out, Environment In

· 02/03/2010 3:51:04 PM PST ·
· Posted by khnyny ·
· 45 replies · 856+ views ·
· Fox News ·
· February 3, 2010 ·
· Lee Ross ·

Change often leads to controversy and that is certainly the case in North Carolina where an effort to revamp the state's education system has some people outraged that high school students will not learn enough American history. The formula for teaching American history has been pretty simple. Start at the beginning and go forward. But a new proposal under review in North Carolina threatens to disrupt that standard teaching philosophy. "If our students don't know what happened in world history, and if they don't know what happened in U.S. history from George Washington's presidency all the way up through the...


 N.C High Schools to Remove Pre-1877 U.S. History?

· 02/03/2010 7:09:53 PM PST ·
· Posted by phi11yguy19 ·
· 112 replies · 4,083+ views ·
· FoxNews.com ·
· February 3, 2010 ·
· Molly Henneberg ·

He may be the president who governed during the Civil War, freeing the slaves, but under a new curriculum proposal for North Carolina high schools, U.S. history would begin years after President Lincoln, with the presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes in 1877.


 N.C. high schools to replace U.S. History with environmental issues

· 02/04/2010 7:14:55 AM PST ·
· Posted by aquapub ·
· 23 replies · 730+ views ·
· Conservative Examiner ·
· 2-4-10 ·
· Robert Moon ·

North Carolina public high schools are trying to erase all early U.S. history from the curriculum, ranging from the Founding Fathers to Abraham Lincoln and the Civil War -- in exchange for things like environmental issues...


 Modernization or Memory Hole

· 02/05/2010 7:14:43 AM PST ·
· Posted by bs9021 ·
· 10 replies · 141+ views ·
· AIA-FL Blog ·
· February 5, 2010 ·
· Malcolm A. Kline ·

Modernizing history may be the ultimate oxymoron. "He may be the president who governed during the Civil War, freeing the slaves, but under a new curriculum proposal for North Carolina high schools, U.S. history would begin years after President Lincoln, with the presidency of Rutherford B. Hayes in 1877," Molly Henneberg reports on Fox News. "State education leaders say this may help students learn about more recent history in greater depth." It may but here's a few chaps such an approach would leave out:...

Abraham Lincoln

 Honest, Abe?

· 02/01/2010 9:16:30 AM PST ·
· Posted by Palter ·
· 12 replies · 262+ views ·
· Charlotte Observer ·
· 01 Feb 2010 ·
· John Bordsen ·

Local folklore has it that this overgrown N.C. hilltop is the real birthplace of Lincoln BOSTIC Note to aspiring saints and office-holders: You'll know you've achieved "legendary" status when whispered tales are attached to your life story with question marks. The higher you rise, the more there are. Consider Abraham Lincoln. There are tales about him in Washington, where the 16th president saved the Union and was assassinated. Likewise in Springfield, Ill., the closest to a normal "home" the self-made Lincoln had. Likewise in this Rutherford County crossroads where some say he was born atop Lincoln Hill, just east of...


 Looking for Lincoln

· 01/31/2010 9:02:10 AM PST ·
· Posted by 9422WMR ·
· 17 replies · 292+ views ·
· PBS ·
· 01/29/10 ·
· Henry Louis Gates ·

Historian Henry Louis Gates Jr.'s quest to piece together Abraham Lincoln's complex life takes him from Illinois to Gettysburg to Washington, D.C., and face-to-face with people who live with Lincoln every day -- relic hunters, re-enactors, and others for whom the study of Lincoln is a passion.

Currency Events

 15 Things You Never Noticed on a Dollar.

· 01/31/2010 5:26:20 PM PST ·
· Posted by GSP.FAN ·
· 37 replies · 2,090+ views ·
· Grandparents.com ·
· Jan 24 10 ·
· Grandparents.com ·

We're serious. Did you know a dollar bill has hidden pictures, flecks of color, and mysterious symbols? And that's just the beginning. What do all those seemingly random letters and Latin phrases mean, anyway?

Longer Perspectives

 Our Universal Civilization

· 02/04/2010 9:59:38 PM PST ·
· Posted by Lorianne ·
· 14 replies · 165+ views ·
· City Journal ·
· Summer 1991 ·
· Sir V.S. Naipaul ·

On October 30, 1990, V S. Naipaul, considered by many to be the greatest living English language novelist, delivered the fourth annual Walter B. Wriston lecture in Public Policy, sponsored by the Manhattan Institute. Mr. Naipaul takes as his subject the "universal civilization" to which the Western values of tolerance, individualism, equality, and personal liberty have given birth. He describes the personal and philosophical turmoil of those who find themselves torn between their native civilizations and the valued of universal civilization. The universal civilization has been a long time in the making. It wasn't always universal; it wasn't always...

World War Eleven

 For 30 minutes, former WWII pilot flies back in time

· 01/30/2010 3:47:08 PM PST ·
· Posted by greatdefender ·
· 40 replies · 1,081+ views ·
· St. Petersburg Times ·
· January 30, 2010 ·
· Bill Stevens ·

Lt. Nick Radosevich had his orders. Soon he would ship out to England and begin bombing targets deep inside Nazi territory. He sought an edge, a good-luck charm. He met a girl. They had some drinks and dinner. Her cocker spaniel had recently delivered puppies. "That's it,'' the handsome 26-year-old pilot said. He picked out a jet black female and named her Penelope -- Penny for short. He attached a small metal cylinder to her collar that contained contact information in case Penny should get lost. 2/Lt. Nick Radosevich, 734th Squadron, 453rd Bomb Group. For the long trip from March...

The Framers

 Early draft of the Constitution found in Phila.

· 02/02/2010 6:20:33 AM PST ·
· Posted by Danae ·
· 47 replies · 985+ views ·
· Philly.com ·
· Feb 2, 2010 ·
· Edward Colimore ·

Researcher Lorianne Updike Toler was intrigued by the centuries-old document at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. On the back of a treasured draft of the U.S. Constitution was a truncated version of the same document, starting with the familiar words: "We The People. . . ." They had been scribbled upside down by one of the Constitution's framers, James Wilson, in the summer of 1787. The cursive continued, then abruptly stopped, as if pages were missing.

Patriot's History

 Thanks for all your comments: PHUSA at #19 (and climbing?)

· 01/30/2010 5:15:30 PM PST ·
· Posted by LS ·
· 26 replies · 507+ views ·
· Patriot's History of the United States ·
· 1/30/2010 ·
· LS ·

Thanks to all for your comments about the Glenn Beck show. I couldn't respond to every single person, but I read them all and am honored that you watched. A Patriot's History of the United States: From Columbus's Great Discovery to the War on Terror was #19 on Amazon last I looked, second only to Zinn. It perhaps is fitting that he passed away this week, and maybe this means a changing of the guard. [ Civ's note -- Amazon sez: "#134 in Books... Popular in these categories:.. #2 in Books > Nonfiction > Social Sciences > Political Science > Political Doctrines, #2 in Books > Nonfiction > Philosophy > Political, #8 in Books > History > Americas" ]

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany

 Ronald Reagan elected 30 years ago ...

· 02/05/2010 3:02:34 PM PST ·
· Posted by opineapple ·
· 15 replies · 267+ views ·
· American Thinker ·
· February 04, 2010 ·
· Phil Boehmke ·

Saturday, Feb 6, would have marked President Reagan's 99th birthday. And being that it was 30 years ago he was elected president, now -- in the age of THE ONE -- would it not be a good time to reflect on that historic event? Ronald Reagan believed in American exceptionalism. Ronald Reagan believed in the American people who are the wellspring of that exceptionalism. Ronald Reagan unapologetically, unswervingly and unconditionally loved America. In these troubled times there are so many reasons for pessimism. The current administration and their congressional allies have taken our nation down...

end of digest #290 20100206



1,058 posted on 02/05/2010 9:21:17 PM PST by SunkenCiv (Happy New Year! Freedom is Priceless.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1056 | View Replies ]


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

Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #290 20100206
· Saturday, February 6, 2010 · 27 topics · 2445368 to 2441276 · 739 members ·

 
Saturday
Feb 06
2010
v 6
n 30

view
this
issue


Freeper Profiles
Last week's 289th issue was marred by my opening with "Welcome to the 288th issue."

Welcome to the 290th issue. Even though I got an unusually early start on it, I wound up not arranging the topics such that the hottest were at the top. You'll just have to read the whole thing to see what I mean. ;')

A big thank you goes out to opineapple for posting the topic Ronald Reagan elected 30 years ago ... -- "Saturday, Feb 6, would have marked President Reagan's 99th birthday." Happy Birthday, and we *will* retake and rebuild the City on the Hill.

Thanks go in alphabetical order to 2ndDivisionVet, 9422WMR, aquapub, blam, bogusname, bs9021, Danae, decimon, Free ThinkerNY, GSP.FAN, greatdefender, khnyny, Lorianne, LS, NormsRevenge, neverdem, opineapple, Palter, phi11yguy19, and sig226 for contributing the topics this week. If I've missed anyone, my apologies!

I may say it too often, but the topics this week were smokin', and a lot of variety. There were more than a few added to the catalog which didn't get pinged. Some were merely duplicative so no need, others were a little beyond the edge of what is pingworthy. I did however ping a couple of modern topics, and for that, my apologies. The only reason there wasn't a ping to the Ronald Reagan topic is that it came up today, and I knew I could ping it right here.

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


1,059 posted on 02/05/2010 9:21:54 PM PST by SunkenCiv (Happy New Year! Freedom is Priceless.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1058 | View Replies ]


Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #291
Saturday, February 13, 2010

Hope and Change

 Memory Hole Gets Crowded

· 02/09/2010 6:31:28 AM PST ·
· Posted by bs9021 ·
· 12 replies · 468+ views ·
· Accuracy in Academia ·
· February 9, 2010 ·
· Malcolm A. Kline ·

Marxists believe that he who controls the past controls the future. It's hard not to see that philosophy at work in the actions of various state boards of education around the country. Nevertheless, whether by accident or design, students who have not been taught, for example, the Constitution, will find it difficult to label anything unconstitutional. When my stepson was in high school, he was assigned the task of writing his own constitution. I suggested that he cut and paste the original to see if the teacher would notice. He...


 Look what they're erasing from U.S. history!

· 02/11/2010 7:11:23 AM PST ·
· Posted by Britt0n ·
· 278 replies · 4,102+ views ·
· www.wnd.com ·
· February 11, 2010 ·
· Chelsea Schilling ·

A state board of only 15 people will vote on whether to revise U.S. textbooks to omit references to Daniel Boone, Gen. George Patton, Nathan Hale, Columbus Day and Christmas. The Texas State Board of Education will also vote on a proposal to substitute the term "American" with "global citizen." Mathew Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel, is warning Americans to speak up before only eight people, with a majority vote, have a chance to literally rewrite American history. He appeared on the "Huckabee Show" to explain why the board's vote matters to the rest of America. Staver said...

Epigraphy and Language

 Ancient tribal language becomes extinct as last speaker dies

· 02/05/2010 1:17:19 AM PST ·
· Posted by cold start ·
· 34 replies · 1,101+ views ·
· Guardian.co.uk ·
· 4 Feb 2010 ·
· Jonathan Watts ·

Death of Boa Sr, last person fluent in the Bo language of the Andaman Islands, breaks link with 65,000-year-old culture The last speaker of an ancient tribal language has died in the Andaman Islands, breaking a 65,000-year link to one of the world's oldest cultures. Boa Sr, who lived through the 2004 tsunami, the Japanese occupation and diseases brought by British settlers, was the last native of the island chain who was fluent in Bo. Taking its name from a now-extinct tribe, Bo is one of the 10 Great Andamanese languages, which are thought to date back to pre-Neolithic human...


 Ancient dialect extinct after last speaker dies

· 02/05/2010 7:30:14 PM PST ·
· Posted by rdl6989 ·
· 41 replies · 580+ views ·
· Yahoo News/Reuters ·
· Feb 5, 2010 ·
· Sanjib Kumar Roy ·

PORT BLAIR, India (Reuters) -- One of the world's oldest dialects, which traces its origins to tens of thousands of years ago, has become extinct after the last person to speak it died on a remote Indian island. Boa Sr, the 85-year-old last speaker of "Bo," was the oldest member of the Great Andamanese tribe, R.C. Kar, deputy director of Tribal Health in Andaman, told Reuters on Friday. She died last week in Port Blair, the capital of Andaman and Nicobar Islands, which were hit by a devastating tsunami in 2004. "With the death of Boa Sr and the extinction...


 Last member of 65,000-year-old tribe dies, taking one of world's earliest languages to the grave

· 02/06/2010 4:06:39 AM PST ·
· Posted by SkyPilot ·
· 39 replies · 819+ views ·
· Mail Online ·
· 5 Feb 2010 ·
· Anny Shaw ·

The last member of a 65,000-year-old tribe has died, taking one of the world's earliest languages to the grave. Boa Sr, who died last week aged about 85, was the last native of the Andaman Islands who was fluent in Bo. Named after the tribe, Bo is one of the 10 Great Andamanese languages, which are thought to date back to the pre-Neolithic period when the earliest humans walked out of Africa.Boa Sr, who died last week aged about 85, was the last native of the Andaman Islands who was fluent in Bo.

Fertile Crescent

 Archaeological Findings: Cuneiform tablets, Seals and Tombs Unearthed in Syria

· 02/07/2010 9:33:18 AM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 6 replies · 406+ views ·
· Global Arab Network ·
· Saturday, February 6, 2010 ·
· Ruaa AL-Jazaeri ·

According to Syrian media, archaeological expeditions working at North-eastern Syria (Hasaka Province) have discovered several collective tombs and parts of seals with different shapes in addition to 27 cuneiform tablets dating back to 2500 BC. Director of Hasska Antiquities Department Abdul-Masih Baghdo... added that the expedition also studied several archaeological findings to find out the location of the buildings dating back to the Babylonian and Mitanni periods. Three... tombs were also unearthed at the site of Tal Majnuna, dating back to the period between 3600 to 3800 BC. The Japanese expedition working at the site of Tal Siker al-Ehmir discovered...

Ancient Autopsies

 Ancient tooth enamel defects linked with premature death [ Dentistry.co.uk ]

· 02/07/2010 9:38:28 AM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 7 replies · 209+ views ·
· Dentistry.co.uk ·
· 5th Feb 2010 ·
· Evolutionary Anthropology ·

A study reveals ancient human teeth showing evidence that stressful events during early development are linked to shorter lifespans. Anthropologist George Armelagos led a systematic review of defects in teeth enamel and early mortality. He said: 'Prehistoric remains are providing strong, physical evidence that people who acquired tooth enamel defects while in the womb or early childhood tended to die earlier. During prehistory, the stresses of infectious disease, poor nutrition and psychological trauma were likely extreme. The teeth show the impact.' His paper is the first summary of prehistoric evidence for the Barker hypothesis -- the idea that many adult...

Roman Empire

 Ben Hur in Colchester? Race is on to save UK's only Roman chariot racetrack

· 02/08/2010 4:39:18 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 17 replies · 311+ views ·
· Guardian~ ·
· Sunday, February 7, 2010 ·
· Maev Kennedy ·

When the white handkerchief dropped, the Ben Hurs of Colchester would have set off down Circular Road North, past the banked tiers of seats, turning left at Napier Road, their iron tyres gouging a deep rut in the track,and back up past St John's gatehouse towards the water-spouting dolphin marking the end of the first lap. Colchester, it seems, was the Formula One track of Roman Britain, with the only chariot racing circus ever found on the island, and the first found in northern Europe for 20 years... The racetrack is still buried under roads, gardens and old army buildings,...

Currency Events

 Staffordshire hoard comes home: 'It's a dream come true'

· 02/10/2010 8:12:41 AM PST ·
· Posted by pillut48 ·
· 8 replies · 413+ views ·
· Guardian.co.uk ·
· Wednesday 10 February 2010 ·
· Christopher Thomond
  and Shehani Fernando ·

Video: Deb Klemperer, head of collections at Stoke's Potteries Museum, describes the thrill of striking Anglo-Saxon gold -- and explains why keeping the treasure on Staffordshire soil requires visitors, too, to dig deep

British Isles

 History of England starts at 1700, says university

· 02/11/2010 3:19:42 PM PST ·
· Posted by bruinbirdman ·
· 59 replies · 963+ views ·
· The Telegraph ·
· 2/11/2010 ·
· Graeme Paton ·

Academics have attacked a decision by a top university to scrap research into English history before 1700. It was claimed that the move by Sussex University risked jeopardising the nation's understanding of the subject and "entrenching the ignorance of the present". Under plans, research and in-depth teaching into periods such as the Tudors, the Middle-Ages, Norman Britain, the Viking invasion and the Anglo-Saxons will be scrapped, along with the Civil Wars. The university will also end research into the history of continental Europe pre-1900, affecting the study of the Napoleonic wars and the Roman Empire. The university said it was...

Butter, No Guns

 Century-old butter found in Scott's Antarctic hut

· 12/16/2009 5:43:33 PM PST ·
· Posted by NormsRevenge ·
· 28 replies · 1,184+ views ·
· AFP on Yahoo ·
· 12/16/09 ·
· AFP ·

WELLINGTON (AFP) -- Two blocks of butter have been found intact after nearly a century in an Antarctic hut used by British explorer Robert Falcon Scott on his doomed 1910-12 expedition, a report said. Television New Zealand reported that conservators found the two blocks of New Zealand butter in bags in stables attached to the expedition Hut at Cape Evans in Antarctica. The extreme cold of the polar region has preserved the hut and expedition equipment inside, but recent signs of deterioration had prompted the Antarctic Heritage Trust to launch a preservation project. The trust's Lizzie Meek said the butter...

Whiskey, No Tobacco

 Explorers' century-old whisky found in Antarctic

· 02/05/2010 5:57:24 PM PST ·
· Posted by Redcitizen ·
· 32 replies · 802+ views ·
· Associated Press ·
· Fri Feb 5, 4:49 am ET ·
· unknown ·

WELLINGTON, New Zealand -- This Scotch has been on the rocks for a century. Five crates of Scotch whisky and two of brandy have been recovered by a team restoring an Antarctic hut used more than 100 years ago by famed polar explorer Ernest Shackleton. Ice cracked some of the bottles that had been left there in 1909, but the restorers said Friday they are confident the five crates contain intact bottles "given liquid can be heard when the crates are moved."


 Shackleton's whisky recovered

· 02/05/2010 7:52:41 PM PST ·
· Posted by Pan_Yan ·
· 20 replies · 683+ views ·
· Guardian.co.uk ·
· February 2010 12.20 GMT ·
· Rick Peters ·

That's the spirit! Cases of Mackinlay's 'Rare Old' scotch whisky have been recovered from the ice outside Shackleton's Antarctic hut. What will it taste like? After some hype and anticipation news has emerged that the crates of whisky long suspected to have been entombed by ice outside Sir Ernest Shackleton's Antarctic hut have finally been recovered. A team from the New Zealand Antarctic Heritage Trust have managed to extract five cases, three of Chas Mackinlay & Co's whisky and two containing brandy made by the Hunter Valley Distillery Limited, Allandale (Australia), which were abandoned by the expedition in 1909 as...


 Scotch Whisky Meant To Warm Antarctic Explorers Retrieved After Century Locked In Ice

· 02/06/2010 9:26:13 AM PST ·
· Posted by DogByte6RER ·
· 30 replies · 924+ views ·
· StarTribune.com ·
· February 5, 2010 ·
· AP ·

Scotch whisky meant to warm Antarctic explorers retrieved after century locked in ice Associated Press WELLINGTON, New Zealand - This Scotch has been on the rocks for a century. Five crates of Scotch whisky and two of brandy have been recovered by a team restoring an Antarctic hut used more than 100 years ago by famed polar explorer Ernest Shackleton. Ice cracked some of the bottles that had been left there in 1909, but the restorers said Friday they are confident the five crates contain intact bottles "given liquid can be heard when the crates are moved." New Zealand Antarctic...


 Whisky on (Antarctic) ice: Ernest Shackleton...left a stash at the bottom of the world.

· 10/26/2009 6:07:49 PM PDT ·
· Posted by xzins ·
· 45 replies · 2,661+ views ·
· Global Post ·
· October 26, 2009 ·
· Emily Stone ·

CAPE ROYDS, Antarctica -- This spit of black volcanic rock that juts out along the coast of Antarctica is an inhospitable place. Temperatures drop below 50° Fahrenheit and high winds cause blinding snowstorms... But if you happen upon the small wooden hut that sits at Cape Royds and wriggled yourself underneath, you'd find a surprise stashed in the foot and a half of space beneath the floorboards. Tucked in the shadows and frozen to the ground are two cases of Scotch whisky left behind 100 years ago by Sir Ernest Shackleton after a failed attempt at the South Pole. Conservators...

Farty Shades of Green

 Bronze brooch rises from the ashes [ medieval Ireland ]

· 02/08/2010 4:52:02 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 20 replies · 622+ views ·
· Irish Times ·
· Thursday, February 4, 2010 ·
· Anne Lucey ·

A 1,400-year-old brooch dating from the early Christian period has been discovered in the remnants of a turf fire in a range in north Kerry. It is believed the brooch fastened the cloak of a clergyman and was dropped, probably on a forest road which later became bog. It ended up in a sod of turf in the range of Sheila and Pat Joe Edgeworth at Martara, Ballylongford, near the Shannon estuary. Lands alongside the Shannon are chequered with early Christian ruins and holy wells. The bronze brooch was found shortly before Christmas by Ms Edgeworth when she was cleaning...

Abraham Lincoln

 Happy 201st birthday to Abe Lincoln

· 02/12/2010 4:40:20 PM PST ·
· Posted by La Enchiladita ·
· 14 replies · 149+ views ·
· KHQA ·
· Feb. 12, 2010 ·
· Staff ·

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) - It's Abraham Lincoln's birthday, and Illinois is celebrating by sealing up a time capsule and taking pictures of life across the state. Lincoln would have turned 201 today. To mark the occasion, officials are preparing a time capsule that will be stored at the Lincoln Presidential Library. It will include items such as birthday cards, photos and documents from the celebration of his 200th birthday. The time capsule is supposed to be opened in 2109. The Associated Professional Photographers of Illinois will also help celebrate. They're shooting Lincoln-themed pictures around the state today and will post...

The Civil War

 The Untold History of Nullification: Resisting Slavery

· 02/11/2010 5:14:36 PM PST ·
· Posted by ForGod'sSake ·
· 43 replies · 624+ views ·
· Tenth Amendment Center ·
· Feb 10, 2010 ·
· Derek Sheriff ·

The Untold History of Nullification: Resisting Slavery by Derek SheriffLast December, when Tennessee Rep. Susan Lynn, R-Mount Juliet, said she would introduce legislation which would declare null and void any federal law the state deems unconstitutional, some people were horrified. Rep. Lynn was specifically targeting the health-care reform legislation that was pending at that time. But the reaction that many people had to her language was not an expression of their support for Obamacare.Too many Americans hear the terms "states' rights" or the word "nullification" and immediately think of racial prejudice, Jim Crow laws and school segregation. Honestly, if all...

The Framers

 The Education of John Jay - America's indispensable diplomat

· 02/08/2010 12:37:57 AM PST ·
· Posted by neverdem ·
· 42 replies · 877+ views ·
· City Journal ·
· Winter 2010 ·
· Myron Magnet ·

Few could fathom why 55-year-old John Jay turned down President Adams's nomination to rejoin the Supreme Court when his two terms as New York's governor ended. What would lead him, in the hale prime of life, to retire instead to the plain yellow house he'd just built on a hilltop at the remote northern edge of Westchester County, two days' ride from Manhattan, where visitors were few and the mail and newspapers came but once a week? After 27 years at the forge of the new nation's founding, why would so lavishly talented a man give up his vital role...

Early America

 Bergen's unsung Founding Father (NJ)

· 02/11/2010 8:58:52 AM PST ·
· Posted by Pharmboy ·
· 12 replies · 197+ views ·
· Bergen (NJ) Record ·
· February 11, 2010 ·
· JIM WRIGHT ·

Jim Wright, a former staff writer for The Record, wrote an essay on John Fell's prison diary for the recently published book "Revolutionary Bergen County: The Road to Independence" (The History Press.) "Last night I was taken prisoner from my house by 25 armed menÖ" THUS BEGINS the Revolutionary War prison diary of John Fell of Allendale, the leader of the Bergen County insurgency against the king of England and his local sympathizers. Fell's 16-page diary, written in secret in the Provost Jail in Lower Manhattan from April 1777 to January 1778, is one of the most significant documents chronicling...

Faith and Philosophy

 Reformation and the Salem Witch Trials

· 10/31/2002 10:05:55 PM PST ·
· Posted by ppaul ·
· 28 replies · 1,691+ views ·
· VisionForum e-mail ·
· 10/31/02 ·
· Douglas Phillips ·

SALEM, MASSACHUSETTS, October 31, 2002 - In the New England town of Salem, once considered the city of peace for the New World and the gateway to a glorious Christian commonwealth, the community prepares for the annual Halloween celebration, viewed by many as a triumph over the narrow-mindedness of Christianity. More than three hundred years after the now-infamous witch trials of 1692, Salem has become a Mecca for witches, as covens and practitioners of the occult arts gather from around the nation each October 31 to glory in paganism and identify with the city whose name has become synonymous with...

The Great War

 Last U.S. veteran of World War I turns 109

· 02/01/2010 2:22:40 PM PST ·
· Posted by Daffynition ·
· 19 replies · 501+ views ·
· CNN ·
· February 1, 2010 ·
· Paul Courson ·

Washington (CNN) -- The last surviving U.S. veteran of World War I, former Cpl. Frank Buckles, turns 109 on Monday and is still hoping for a national memorial in Washington for his comrades. Buckles is expected to deliver remarks during a quiet celebration Monday afternoon at his home in Charles Town, West Virginia. But the old "Doughboy" -- as World War I American infantry troops were called -- has already been outspoken in recent years, urging congressional lawmakers to give federal recognition and a facelift to a run-down District of Columbia memorial in an overgrown, wooded area along the National...

Winter of '42

 60th Anniversary of Japanese Internment by FDR - Executive Order 9066

· 02/18/2002 11:18:08 AM PST ·
· Posted by CounterCounterCulture ·
· 10 replies · 3,924+ views ·
· FDR Executive Order No. 9066,
 San Jose Mercury News,
 Seattle Times,
 University of Arizona Library ·
· 1942; 1995; 2002 ·
· FDR et al. ·

Executive Order 9066 Japanese American Internment Order of WWII February 19, 1942 This order from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt enabled the establishment of "internment camps" for 110,000 Japanese Americans and others deemed "enemy aliens". EXECUTIVE ORDER NO. 9066 The President EXECUTIVE ORDER AUTHORIZING THE SECRETARY OF WAR TO PRESCRIBE MILlTARY AREAS WHEREAS the successful prosecution of the war requires every possible protection against espionage and against sabotage to national-defense material, national-defense premises, and national-defense utilities as defined in Section 4, Act of April 20, 1918, 40 Stat. 533, as amended by the Act ...

World War Eleven

 Crumpled map solves mystery of German gun behind D-Day massacre

· 01/04/2008 10:08:40 AM PST ·
· Posted by Stoat ·
· 94 replies · 2,222+ views ·
· The Daily Mail (U.K.) ·
· January 4, 2008 ·

A baffling mystery of the D-Day landings was solved by an amateur historian - after he found a crumpled map at a fair in Stockport. Experts have long disputed the location of the main Nazi gun battery which caused carnage on Omaha Beach, in terrible scenes which were recreated for the Hollywood film Saving Private Ryan. The Germans had built a decoy gun emplacement overlooking the area while the location of the real guns which blasted the beach, where 2,000 men lost their...

Longer Perspectives

 The fall of Spain, the first global superpower, and the fall of the US

· 02/09/2010 8:47:02 AM PST ·
· Posted by GeorgeSaden ·
· 41 replies · 802+ views ·
· American Economic Alert ·

It may be hard for most people to imagine, but Spain was the first global Superpower. It gained this status as the defender of Europe against Muslim armies and by leading the West's exploration of America. In 1492, the same year that Spanish-financed Christopher Columbus discovered the New World, the last Muslim stronghold of Granada was ceded to Ferdinand and Isabella to complete the Catholic Reconquest of the Iberian peninsula... It controlled rich parts of Italy through Naples and Milan, and Central Europe from the Netherlands through the Holy Roman Empire to Austria. In the 16th century it added the...

Patriot's History

 Beck Sends Freeper LS to #1 on Amazon

· 02/08/2010 5:07:26 PM PST ·
· Posted by LS ·
· 163 replies · 2,673+ views ·
· Glenn Beck Show/Amazon ·
· 2/8/2010 ·
· LS ·

Truly amazing: the power of Glenn Beck. He mentioned A Patriot's History of the United States today on his radio show, then again on the TV show, and lo and behold, #1. Big stuff happening. Can't tell all yet, but watch our web pages, www.patriotshistoryusa.com and www.rockinthewall.com. Oh, and if anyone knows how to do a screen saver, I'd like to bronze this one.

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany

 John F. Kennedy's corrupt ascent to power

· 02/06/2010 5:19:17 AM PST ·
· Posted by reaganaut1 ·
· 22 replies · 978+ views ·
· A History of the American People ·
· 1997 ·
· Paul Johnson ·

The other main area of lying [besides health] centered on [John F. Kennedy's] curriculum vitae. In 1940 his thesis was written for him by a number of people, including Arthur Krock of the New York Times, and Joe's personal speechwriter, who described it as a 'very sloppy job, mostly magazine and newspaper clippings stuck together.' But, processed, it not only allowed Jack to graduate cum laude but also appeared in book form as Why England Slept. Old Joe and his men turned it into a 'bestseller,' partly by using influence with publishers such as Henry Luce, partly by buying 30,000-40,000...

Plato? Socrates? Aristotle? Morons.

 British researcher asks: How many friends can you have? The magic number is 150

· 02/06/2010 4:46:23 AM PST ·
· Posted by One_Upmanship ·
· 21 replies · 419+ views ·
· the star ·
· Feb 05 2010 ·
· Debra Black ·

British anthropologist Robin Dunbar says human beings can have no more than 150 friends -- that's the upper limit the brain can absorb. His conclusion comes from studying the social group size of monkeys and apes and how that size might relate to the brain. Initially Dunbar was examining why primates groom each other. If the reason involved sexual bonding, it should correspond to "the social brain hypothesis" that the reason primates have a large brain is because of their social complexity. In other words, you need a large brain to keep track of your relationships. Humans, he says, are...

Biology and Cryptobiology

 Armed stake-out for big cats (in Wales)

· 01/08/2003 5:45:53 PM PST ·
· Posted by gd124 ·
· 42 replies · 20,479+ views ·
· BBC ·
· Tuesday, January 7, 2003 ·

Armed police are continuing to stake out the farm where at least one big cat is thought to have killed a dog. Dyfed-Powys Police sharpshooters have been drafted in to hunt two puma-like animals which struck at the farm at Llangadog, near Llandovery in Carmarthenshire, on Sunday evening. The force is warning the public and farmers not to search for the puma-like cat which attacked the dog within sight of its owner and was then joined by what could have been its cub. Officers armed with high-powered rifles are watching the site of the attack from hides and if the...


 Contemporary African Pterodactyls?

· 01/21/2003 3:31:15 PM PST ·
· Posted by vannrox ·
· 34 replies · 2,310+ views ·
· Strange ARK ·
· FR Post 1-20-03 ·
· M.D.W. Jeffreys, M.A., Ph.D. ·

In September, 1939, the West African Review contained an article "Living Monster or Fabulous.Animal?" Readers will recollect that some years earlier there had been a type of "Challenger Expedition" into Central Africa to search the Iruwuni forests of the Belgian Congo for a huge, mysterious, antedeluvian monster. "Is the Brontosauros still alive in the morasses of the Congo?" were the headlines in some of the London papers. No report of the traces of any such monsters ever appeared, and I was not surprised. I had been...


 Sweden's Loch Ness monster possibly caught on camera

· 08/29/2008 11:50:50 AM PDT ·
· Posted by BGHater ·
· 23 replies · 535+ views ·
· AFP ·
· 29 Aug 2008 ·
· AFP ·

Sweden's own version of the Loch Ness monster, the Storsjoe or Great Lake monster, has been caught on film by surveillance videos, an association that installed the cameras said Friday. The legend of the Swedish beast has swirled for nearly four centuries, with some 200 sightings reported in the lake in central Sweden. "On Thursday at 12:21 pm, we filmed the movements of a live being. And it was not a pike, nor a perch, we're sure of that," Gunnar Nilsson, the head of a shopkeepers' association in Svenstavik, told AFP. The association, together with the Jaemtland province and local...

Dinosaurs

 True-Color Dinosaur Pictures: First Full-Body Rendering - Dino-pecker?

· 02/06/2010 11:44:42 AM PST ·
· Posted by JoeProBono ·
· 23 replies · 1,321+ views ·
· nationalgeographic ·

For the first time, scientists have decoded the full-body color patterns of a dinosaur -- the 155-million-year-old Anchiornis huxleyi (pictured) -- a new study in the journal Science says. That may sound familiar, given last week's announcement of the first scientifically verified dinosaur color scheme. But the previous research, published in Nature, had found pigments only on a few isolated parts of dinosaurs (see pictures) -- and had used less rigorous methods for assigning colors to the fossilized, filament-like "protofeathers" found on some dinosaur specimens, say authors of the new report.

Paleontology

 World's Biggest Snake Lived in 1st "Modern" Rain Forest

· 10/14/2009 4:43:44 PM PDT ·
· Posted by JoeProBono ·
· 3 replies · 4,410+ views ·
· nationalgeographic ·
· October 13, 2009 ·
· Ker Than ·

If it were still alive today, the largest snake ever known to have lived would feel right at home in South America's tropical rain forests. That's because the modern ecosystem contains many of the same plants that grew in the massive serpent's home turf some 60 million years ago, according to a new study detailing the earliest known "modern" rain forest. The study is based on more than 2,000 fossil leaves recently discovered in Colombia's Cerrejón coal mine -- the same place where scientists had found fossils of Titanoboa cerrejonesis earlier this year. Many of the newfound plant fossils are of palm,...


 Prehistoric titanic-snake jungles laughed at global warming

· 10/20/2009 7:12:58 AM PDT ·
· Posted by snarkpup ·
· 11 replies · 764+ views ·
· The Register ·
· 13th October 2009 12:35 GMT ·
· Lewis Page ·

Fossil boffins say that dense triple-canopy rainforests, home among other things to gigantic one-tonne boa constrictors, flourished millions of years ago in temperatures 3-5°C warmer than those seen today - as hot as some of the more dire global-warming projections.The new fossil evidence comes from the Cerrejón coal mine in Colombia, previously the location where the remains of the gigantic 40-foot Titanoboa cerrejonensis were discovered. The snake's discoverers attracted flak from global-warming worriers at the time for saying that the cold-blooded creature would only have been able to survive in jungles a good...


 BIGGEST SNAKE PHOTOS: Prehistoric Giant Discovered

· 02/07/2010 7:29:08 AM PST ·
· Posted by JoeProBono ·
· 43 replies · 2,093+ views ·
· nationalgeographic ·
· February 4, 2009- ·

Found in a Colombian coal mine, a vertebra from a 45-foot (14-meter) Titanoboa cerrejones dwarfs a similar bone from a 17-foot (5.2-meter) anaconda--currently the world's biggest, if not longest, snake species. (View anaconda pictures and facts.) The ancient snake's giant size suggests that mean year-round temperatures in the tropics were several degrees warmer than they are today, according to a study that analyzed the relationships among a snake's body size, its metabolism, and the outside temperature. "We were able to use the snake, if you will, as a giant fossil thermometer," said biologist Jason Head, lead author of the new...

Neandertal / Neanderthal

 We May Soon Be Able to Clone Neanderthals. But Should We?

· 02/11/2010 12:18:13 AM PST ·
· Posted by 2ndDivisionVet ·
· 53 replies · 773+ views ·
· Discover Magazine ·
· February 10, 2010 ·
· Andrew Moseman ·

Last year DISCOVER asked the question, "Did We Mate With Neanderthals, or Did We Murder Them?" Now, Zach Zorich at Archaeology magazine is asking another big question about our hominid siblings: Should we bring them back? Thanks to a slew of recent advances, the possibility is getting closer. 80beats reported a year ago that researchers had published the rough draft of the Neanderthal genome. However, that's likely to contain many errors because it's so difficult to reconstruct ancient DNA. Within hours of death, cells begin to break down in a process called apoptosis. The dying cells release enzymes that chop...

Helix, Make Mine a Double

 Frozen Hair Yields First Ancient Human Genome

· 02/10/2010 12:57:13 PM PST ·
· Posted by decimon ·
· 59 replies · 769+ views ·
· Live Science ·
· Feb 10, 2010 ·
· Andrea Thompson ·

A few tufts of hair frozen in the permafrost of Greenland for more than 4,000 years have allowed scientists to sequence the genome of an ancient human for the first time. The hairs belonged to a member of the ancient Saqqaq culture of Greenland, the first humans known to inhabit the icy island. Scientists have long wondered where the Saqqaq came from and whether or not they were the ancestors of today's modern Inuit and Greenlanders. The new findings, detailed in the Feb. 11 issue of the journal Nature, have helped to settle that question. The hairs also tell about...


 Analysis of hair DNA reveals ancient human's face

· 02/10/2010 1:31:13 PM PST ·
· Posted by JoeProBono ·
· 25 replies · 716+ views ·
· bbc. ·
· 10 February 2010 ·

DNA analysis of human hair preserved in Greenland's permafrost has given clues as to what the owner looked like. A study, published in the journal Nature, says the individual's genome is the oldest to have been sequenced from a modern human. The researchers say the man, who lived 4,000 years ago, had brown eyes and thick dark hair, although he would have been prone to baldness. They say the genome also shows that his ancestors migrated from Siberia. The man has been named Inuk, which means "human" in the Greenlandic language.


 Ancient Greenland gene map has a surprise

· 02/11/2010 8:24:26 AM PST ·
· Posted by FredJake ·
· 37 replies · 1,119+ views ·
· Yahoo News ·
· 2/11/10 ·
· Maggie Fox ·

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- Scientists have sequenced the DNA from four frozen hairs of a Greenlander who died 4,000 years ago in a study they say takes genetic technology into several new realms. Surprisingly, the long-dead man appears to have originated in Siberia and is unrelated to modern Greenlanders, Morten Rasmussen of the University of Copenhagen and colleagues found. "This provides evidence for a migration from Siberia into the New World some 5,500 years ago, independent of that giving rise to the modern Native Americans and Inuit," the researchers wrote in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature. Not only can...

Catastrophism & Astronomy

 Rush for iron spurred Inuit ancestors to sprint across Arctic, book contends

· 02/10/2010 4:03:00 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 36 replies · 348+ views ·
· Vancouver Sun ·
· February 8, 2010 ·
· Randy Boswell,
  Canwest News Service ·

One of Canada's top archeologists argues in a new book that the prehistoric ancestors of this country's 55,000 Inuit probably migrated rapidly from Alaska clear across the Canadian North in just a few years -- not gradually over centuries as traditionally assumed -- after they learned about a rich supply of iron from a massive meteorite strike on Greenland's west coast. The startling theory, tentatively floated two decades ago by Canadian Museum of Civilization curator emeritus Robert McGhee, has been bolstered by recent research indicating a later and faster migration of the ancient Thule Inuit across North America's polar frontier...

PreColumbian, Clovis, PreClovis

 Extinct Ethnic Group Vestiges Discovered in Chihuahua

· 02/08/2010 4:43:32 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 13 replies · 257+ views ·
· Art Daily ·
· February 2010 ·
· unattributed ·

More than a dozen dwelling, ritual and funerary sites, some of them more than 1,000 years old, were located inside shallow caves at Barranca de la Sinforosa (Sinforosa Gully), Chihuahua. According to preliminary studies, vestiges could correspond to Tubar people, an indigenous group that isolated in Tarahumara Mountain Range during Colonial times to avoid evangelization, and extinguished in late 19th century. Nine dwelling sites, 2 ceremonial and 2 of funerary character were found in Ohuivo, Chorogue, Zapuri and G¸erachi localities of Guachochi municipality in Chihuahua... 3 types of sites were identified, which, according to architecture, burial system and regional research...

Mayans

 Wall with Maya Seignior Glyphs Discovered at Archaeological Zone

· 02/07/2010 9:46:03 AM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 7 replies · 222+ views ·
· Art Daily ·

A wall with a rich glyphic text that includes the complete name of the ruler that founded one of the most important Maya military seigniories was discovered in Tonina Archaeological Zone, in Chiapas. Epigraphists point out that the finding will bring in new information regarding Maya grammar, since it shows linguistic features yet to be deciphered. The discovery adds up to the sarcophagus recently uncovered by specialists of the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH). The wall dated in 708 AD was detected at El Palacio; a stucco portrait of K'inich B'aaknal Chaahk, the most powerful seignior of the...

Leafing Las Vegas

 A Tree Carving in California: Ancient Astronomers?

· 02/09/2010 11:24:31 AM PST ·
· Posted by Palter ·
· 40 replies · 1,092+ views ·
· Time ·
· 09 Feb 2010 ·
· Matt Kettmann ·

Though local lore held that the so-called "scorpion tree" had been the work of cowboys, paleontologist Rex Saint Onge immediately knew that the tree was carved by Indians when he stumbled upon it in the fall of 2006. Located in a shady grove atop the Santa Lucia Mountains in San Luis Obispo County, the centuries-old gnarled oak had the image of a six-legged, lizard-like being meticulously scrawled into its trunk, the nearly three-foot-tall beast topped with a rectangular crown and two large spheres. "I was really the first one to come across it who understood that it was a Chumash...

Middle Ages & Renaissance

 Scholar examines reports of solar eclipses in the Middle Ages

· 02/09/2010 8:54:25 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 1 replies · 221+ views ·
· Medieval News 'blog ·
· Sunday, February 07, 2010 ·
· medieval news blogger (duh) ·

Hundreds of solar eclipses were recorded by medieval chroniclers, offering historians of astronomy with some vital information about how people in the Middle Ages reacted to this phenomenon. The latest research into this subject has just been published in the Journal for the History of Astronomy. In his article, "Investigation of Medieval European Records of Solar Eclipses," F. Richard Stephenson states he wants to provide "an intriguing insight into the effects of solar eclipses over a wide range of magnitudes on largely untrained and unsuspecting observers." Using chronicles mainly from England, France, Germany and Italy, Stephenson finds hundreds of accounts....

Megaliths & Archaeoastronomy

 Stonehenge's secret: archaeologist uncovers evidence of encircling hedges

· 02/07/2010 9:58:47 AM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 24 replies · 732+ views ·
· Guardian ·
· Thursday, February 4, 2010 ·
· Maev Kennedy ·

Inevitably dubbed Stonehedge, the evidence from a new survey of the Stonehenge landscape suggests that 4,000 years ago the world's most famous prehistoric monument was surrounded by two circular hedges, planted on low concentric banks. The best guess of the archaeologists from English Heritage, who carried out the first detailed survey of the landscape of the monument since the Ordnance Survey maps of 1919, is that the hedges could have served as screens keeping even more secret from the crowd the ceremonies carried out by the elite allowed inside the stone circle... If the early Bronze Age date is correct,...

Forensics is Ten

 Bog woman given a face

· 02/10/2010 6:25:22 PM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 37 replies · 1,426+ views ·
· Copenhagen Post ·
· January 29, 2010 ·
· Unattributed ·

The female known as the Auning Woman, found in a northeastern Jutland bog 1886, and housed at the Museum for Culture and History in Randers, has finally got a face. Reasonably well-preserved when she popped up from the bog, the woman's 2000-year-old skull was broken into several pieces. But sculptor Björn Skaarup and medical examiner Niels Lynnerup from the Panum Institute in Copenhagen have now reconstructed the Auning Woman's face, using the common forensic clay method first developed by Russian anthropologist Mikhail Gerasimov. The finished product was put on display today at the museum. And although the results have shown...

Egypt

 Hey, that mummy is a daddy

· 06/25/2009 5:15:52 AM PDT ·
· Posted by Red Badger ·
· 21 replies · 1,305+ views ·
· 6-23-2009 ·
· BY ERIK BADIA ·

Egyptologists from the Brooklyn Museum and doctors from North Shore University Hospital learned Tuesday through a CT scan that a 2,500-year-old mummy previously thought to be a woman - and named Lady Hor - actually was a man. Dr. Jesse Chusid said that while the mummy's body wrap of linen covered in plaster, called cartonnage, bore the shape of a woman, the body within had the anatomy of a man.

Africa

 Archaeologists stumble on 8,000-year-old skeleton in Kenyir Lake [Malaysia]

· 02/07/2010 9:52:18 AM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 14 replies · 415+ views ·
· Daily Star (Burma) ·
· Saturday February 6, 2010 ·
· Bernama ·

Archaeologists have stumbled upon human skeletal remains believed to be from the Mesolithic Age in the Bewah Cave in the Kenyir Lake area, according to a university professor. The remains, believed to be those of a youth, are estimated to be between 8,000 and 11,000 years old, said Prof Datuk Dr Nik Hasan Shuhaimi Nik Abdul Rahman, deputy director of the Institute of the Malay World and Civilisation (ATMA) of Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM). The remains were uncovered by archaeologists from UKM, the Museums Department and the Terengganu Museum Board at a depth of 65 to 70 centimetres, he told...

Australia & the Pacific

 Maori canoe unearthed on New Zealand beach

· 02/09/2010 9:37:23 PM PST ·
· Posted by Fred Nerks ·
· 2 replies · 204+ views ·
· ablogabout history ·
· February 9, 2010 ·
· u/a ·

A canoe used for fishing and river travel, the waka tikai was discovered at the southern end of the beach. It took a couple of days to plan its excavation so that the seven-metre waka would not be damaged. Finding the whole length of a waka is fairly rare, as usually only sections are found, such as the prow or stern. Auckland Regional Council parks staff and locals carefully moved the waka on to a truck, which took it to a temporary home at the regional council depot. "It's difficult to date the waka because it may have been created...

Religion of Pieces

 Islam's golden age comes to life (Major hurl alert)

· 12/23/2006 4:44:36 AM PST ·
· Posted by radar101 ·
· 76 replies · 1,432+ views ·
· SacBee ·
· December 23, 2006 ·
· Stephen Magagnini ·

Poets and philosophers, merchants and mathematicians, artisans and astronomers re-enacted the Golden Age of Islam at the Al-Arqam Islamic School in south Sacramento on Friday. The artistry, story-telling and role-playing was a creation of 233 students from kindergarten through ninth grade who brought to life the sights, tastes and smells of an Islamic empire that spanned three continents from the eighth to the 13th centuries. From incense to Turkish coffee, dates to oranges, minarets to miniature mosques and castles -- you could find it all at The Islamic Civilization Exhibit and Festival in the school's multipurpose room. Pageantry was accompanied...

Self-Defense

 The Crusades: When Christendom Pushed Back

· 02/06/2010 6:37:51 AM PST ·
· Posted by Paladins Prayer ·
· 52 replies · 1,133+ views ·
· The New American ·
· 2/5/10 ·
· Selwyn Duke ·

The year is 732 A.D., and Europe is under assault. Islam, born a mere 110 years earlier, is already in its adolescence, and the Muslim Moors are on the march. Growing in leaps and bounds, the Caliphate, as the Islamic realm is known, has thus far subdued much of Christendom, conquering the old Christian lands of the Mideast and North Africa in short order. Syria and Iraq fell in 636; Palestine in 638; and Egypt, which was not even an Arab land, fell in 642. North Africa, also not Arab, was under Muslim control by 709. Then came the year...

Oh So Mysteriouso

 Israeli Rabbis Hope to Search Vatican

· 01/15/2004 5:26:25 PM PST ·
· Posted by Alouette ·
· 150 replies · 14,874+ views ·
· Associated Press ·
· Jan. 15, 2004 ·
· Gavin Rabinowitz ·

JERUSALEM - Israel's chief rabbis, who will meet the pope Friday, said they hope to get permission to search Vatican storerooms for artifacts such as the huge golden menorah that stood in the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem 2,000 years ago. Vatican officials confirmed the meeting would take place but declined comment on the rabbis' request. Yehuda Metzger and Shlomo Amar are to have an audience with Pope John Paul II, the first by Israel's chief rabbis in the Vatican. The pope met Israel's previous chief rabbis in the Holy Land during his visit in 2000. Amar, spiritual leader of Israel's...

Let's Have Jerusalem

 Israelite priests hold first gathering since Temple era

· 07/19/2007 3:59:10 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Squidpup ·
· 63 replies · 1,895+ views ·
· Israel Today ·
· July 15, 2007 ·
· staff writer ·

Israelite priests hold first gathering since Temple era Jews belonging to the Tribe of Levi, and particularly the Kohen clan, came together for a mass gathering in Jerusalem on Sunday. It was the first large-scale gathering of biblically-mandated Israelite priests since the time of the Second Temple. The gathering included lectures and seminars on the history and future of the Temple, and culminated with all of the participants declaring the priestly blessing over Israel from the Western Wall. Genetic research over the past several decades has succeeded in isolating a particular DNA signature shared by all members of the Tribe...


 Archaeologists find early depiction of a menorah

· 09/11/2009 5:04:55 PM PDT ·
· Posted by madison10 ·
· 12 replies · 818+ views ·
· AP on Yahoo ·
· Sept. 11, 2009 ·
· Amy Teibel ·

JERUSALEM -- Israeli archaeologists have uncovered one of the earliest depictions of a menorah, the seven-branched candelabra that has come to symbolize Judaism, the Israel Antiquities Authority said Friday. The menorah was engraved in stone around 2,000 years ago and found in a synagogue recently discovered by the Sea of Galilee. Pottery, coins and tools found at the site indicate the synagogue dates to the period of the second Jewish temple in Jerusalem, where the actual menorah was kept, said archaeologist Dina Avshalom-Gorni of the Israel Antiquities Authority.


 Court rules against residents near archaeological dig

· 10/24/2009 5:05:59 PM PDT ·
· Posted by Fred Nerks ·
· 11 replies · 597+ views ·
· Jewish Tribune ·
· Tuesday, 20 October 2009 ·
· U/A ·

JERUSALEM-TORONTO -- The Archaeological Research currently taking place in the "Walls Around the Old City' national park at the City of David in Jerusalem is in the public's best interests, according to an Israeli Supreme Court decision regarding two recent petitions against the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA). The petitions were submitted by residents living near the excavation site. According to a press release issued by Yaen Vered, the IAA representative in Canada, it is the IAA's opinion that "these residents are being incited by other factors whose considerations are political and improbable." In a telephone conversation with the Jewish Tribune,...


 Time Magazine Digging Up Trouble in Jerusalem

· 02/11/2010 1:13:47 PM PST ·
· Posted by Tigen ·
· 7 replies · 842+ views ·
· INN ·
· 2-11-10 ·
· Hana Levi Julian ·

(IsraelNN.com) The United States-based Time Magazine complained this week that the archaeological activities of the City of David Foundation, also known as "Ir David" or "Elad," are making life difficult for President Barack Obama.


 Archaeology in Jerusalem: Digging Up Trouble

· 02/12/2010 5:46:50 AM PST ·
· Posted by SJackson ·
· 6 replies · 418+ views ·
· TIME/Arutz Sheva ·
· 2-12-10 ·
· Tim McGirk ·

The Jerusalem syndrome is a psychological disorder in which a visit to the holy city triggers delusional and obsessive religious fantasies. In its extreme variety, people wander the lanes of the Old City believing they are biblical characters; John the Baptist, say, or a brawny Samson, sprung back to life. Archaeologists in the Holy Land like to joke that their profession is vulnerable to a milder form of the syndrome. When scientists find a cracked, oversize skull in the Valley of Elah, it can be hard to resist the thought that it might have belonged to Goliath, or to imagine,...


 Excavation uncovers evidence supporting mosaic Jerusalem map

· 02/12/2010 5:47:58 AM PST ·
· Posted by SJackson ·
· 13 replies · 460+ views ·
· Jerusalem Post ·
· 2-12-10 ·
· MARK REBACZ ·

The map, from the Byzantine period, is the oldest surviving original cartographic depiction of the Land of Israel. For the first time the main road of Jerusalem, dated 1,500 years ago, has been discovered. An Israel Antiquities Authority archeological excavation in the heart of Jerusalem's old city confirms a description of the road on the Madaba Map -- an ancient mosaic map from the sixth century CE, measuring eight by 16 meters, and located in a church in Madaba, Jordan. The map, from the Byzantine period, is the oldest surviving original cartographic depiction of the Land of Israel. What is...

The Exodus

 Sinai in Arabia

· 02/12/2010 8:03:38 AM PST ·
· Posted by Zionist Conspirator ·
· 10 replies · 264+ views ·
· Beliefnet ·
· 2/11/'10 ·
· David Klinghoffer ·

Where is Mt. Sinai? And does it matter? The second question is easier to answer than the first. If God's giving the Ten Commandments to Moses there is a historical event then yes, wanting to attach a genuine geographical location to the mountain makes sense. But finding Mt. Sinai presents a problem different from locating the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, or the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron. Unlike those two holy sites, Mt. Sinai's exact location isn't attested by any clear tradition among the people you would expect to be most likely to remember -- that is, the people...

Greece

 Under the Influence: Hellenism in ancient Jewish life

· 02/07/2010 9:17:14 AM PST ·
· Posted by SunkenCiv ·
· 8 replies · 244+ views ·
· Biblical Archaeology Review ·
· Jan/Feb 2010 ·
· Martin Goodman ·

From the time of Alexander the Great in the fourth century B.C.E., Jews lived in a world in which Greek culture carried a certain prestige and offered a route to political influence, first within the Hellenistic kingdoms that succeeded Alexander in the third to first centuries B.C.E., and thereafter within the Roman Empire in the eastern Mediterranean and the Near East. During this period -- when Alexander's empire was divided between the Seleucids and the Ptolemies, and later when the Romans dominated both the eastern Mediterranean and the Near East -- Greek was the language of government and administration. Native...


 Which Greek City-State -- Sparta or Athens

· 11/15/2002 7:47:20 PM PST ·
· Posted by F_L_A ·
· 12 replies · 918+ views ·

Pick which one you think is right. I'm interested in hear what you think.

Radiometric Dating

 Queen's helps produce archaeological 'time machine'

· 02/11/2010 8:35:46 AM PST ·
· Posted by decimon ·
· 4 replies · 192+ views ·
· Queen's University Belfast ·
· Feb 11, 2010 ·
· Unknown ·

Caption: Professor Gerry McCormac and Dr Paula Reimer pictured in the 14 Chrono Centre at Queen's University Belfast. Staff at the Centre have been involved in the creation of a new calibration curve, which extends back 50,000 years. Credit: Queen's University Belfast Usage Restrictions: Only to be used with full caption and reference to Queen's University Belfast. Researchers at Queen's University have helped produce a new archaeological tool which could answer key questions in human evolution. The new calibration curve, which extends back 50,000 years is a major landmark in radiocarbon dating-- the method used by archaeologists and geoscientists to...

end of digest #291 20100213



1,060 posted on 02/13/2010 8:10:11 AM PST by SunkenCiv (Happy New Year! Freedom is Priceless.)
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