Gods, Graves, Glyphs Weekly Digest #225 Saturday, November 8, 2008
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Prehistory and Origins
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'Devils' trails' are world's oldest human footprints
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11/06/2008 5:42:40 PM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 11 replies · 732+ views New Scientist | October 13, 2008 | Catherine Brahic It's official: the oldest human footprints ever found are 345,000 years old, give or take 6000. Known as the "devils' trails", they have been preserved in volcanic ash atop the Roccamonfina volcano in Italy. The prints were first described to the world by Paolo Mietto and colleagues of the University of Padova in Italy in 2003 after amateur archaeologists pointed them out. At the time, the team estimated that the prints were anywhere between 385,000 and 325,000 years old, based on when the volcano was thought to have last erupted. Now, Stephane Scaillet and colleagues at the Laboratory of Climatic...
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Ancient Autopsies
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Man or Gorilla? Scientist Questions Skull Theory
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07/12/2002 8:56:17 AM PDT · Posted by Junior · 98 replies · 1,511+ views Reuters | Fri Jul 12,10:29 AM ET | John Chalmers PARIS (Reuters) - A prehistoric skull touted as the oldest human remains ever found is probably not the head of the earliest member of the human family but of an ancient female gorilla, a French scientist said on Friday. Brigitte Senut of the Natural History Museum in Paris said certain aspects of the skull, whose discovery in Chad was announced on Wednesday, were actually sexual characteristics of female gorillas rather than indications of a human character.Two other French experts cast doubt on the skull as Michel Brunet, head of the archeological team that discovered it, was due to present his...
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Primates Americans Won't Do
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New fossil reveals primates lingered in Texas
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11/06/2008 4:10:01 PM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 12 replies · 524+ views EurekAlert! | October 13, 2008 | Chris Kirk, University of Texas at Austin More than 40 million years ago, primates preferred Texas to northern climates that were significantly cooling, according to new fossil evidence discovered by Chris Kirk, physical anthropologist at The University of Texas at Austin. Kirk and Blythe Williams from Duke University have discovered Diablomomys dalquesti, a new genus and species of primate that dates to 44-43 million years ago when tropical forests and active volcanoes covered west Texas. The researchers have published their discovery in the Journal of Human Evolution article, "New Uintan Primates from Texas and their Implications for North American Patterns of Species Richness during the Eocene." During...
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Paleontology
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Paleontologists doubt 'dinosaur dance floor' (No Discoaceous Period?)
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11/07/2008 3:10:14 PM PST · Posted by decimon · 11 replies · 328+ views University of Utah | Nov. 7, 2008 | Unknown Potholes or tracks? Both sides team for follow-up study -- A group of paleontologists visited the northern Arizona wilderness site nicknamed a "dinosaur dance floor" and concluded there were no dinosaur tracks there, only a dense collection of unusual potholes eroded in the sandstone. So the scientist who leads the University of Utah's geology department says she will team up with the skeptics for a follow-up study. "Science is an evolving process where we seek the truth," says Marjorie Chan, professor and chair of geology and geophysics, and co-author of a recent study that concluded the pockmarked, three-quarter-acre...
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'T.rex footprint' found by British dinosaur hunter: report
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10/09/2007 5:02:37 PM PDT · Posted by NormsRevenge · 17 replies · 694+ views AFP on Yahoo | 10/09/07 | AFP LONDON (AFP) - A Britain-based palaeontologist believes he has found the world's first known Tyrannosaurus rex footprint, he told a BBC television documentary Wednesday. Phil Manning said he has high hopes the one square metre (about 11 square feet) print, from the famed Hell Creek area of the northwest US state of Montana, is from the flesh-eating giant, although 100 percent certainty is impossible. "People have been trying to find T.rex tracks for a hundred years," Manning, who specialises in Jurassic and Cretaceous period dinosaur tracks, told the BBC. "Unless you come across an animal dead in its tracks you...
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Makin' Thunderbirds
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Ancient Birds Flew On All Fours
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09/22/2006 6:27:23 AM PDT · Posted by Tokra · 181 replies · 2,529+ views eurekalert | Spet. 22, 2006 | Nick Longrich The earliest known ancestor of modern-day birds took to the skies by gliding from trees using primitive feathered wings on their arms and legs, according to new research by a University of Calgary paleontologist. In a paper published in the journal Paleobiology, Department of Biological Sciences PhD student Nick Longrich challenges the idea that birds began flying by taking off from the ground while running and shows that the dinosaur-like bird Archaeopteryx soared using wing-like feathers on all of its limbs. "The discussions about the origins of avian flight have been dominated by the so-called 'ground up' and 'trees down'...
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Africa
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New Classification Of African Middle Stone Age
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11/03/2008 2:14:18 PM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 5 replies · 206+ views ScienceDaily | Monday, November 3, 2008 | Universitaet zu Koeln The Cologne archaeologist Dr. Ralf Vogelsang from the Africa Research Centre of the Institute of Prehistoric Archaeology and a team of international researchers have succeeded in dating layers in South Africa that provide information about stone tool innovation on the Middle Stone Age. This archaeological epoch began at the same time as the earliest appearances of humans (homo sapiens sapiens), about 200,000 years ago, in Africa and differs from the European Middle Stone Age chronologically. It is categorized as an era of change and marked by the development of regional stone tool traditions, the appearance of many innovations and the...
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Faith and Philosophy
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Earliest known shaman grave site found: study[Israel]
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11/03/2008 11:01:34 AM PST · Posted by BGHater · 6 replies · 348+ views Reuters | 03 Nov 2008 | Reuters An ancient grave unearthed in modern-day Israel containing 50 tortoise shells, a human foot and body parts from numerous animals is likely one of the earliest known shaman burial sites, researchers said on Monday. The 12,000-year-old grave dates back to the Natufian people who were the first society to adopt a sedentary lifestyle, Hebrew University of Jerusalem researcher Leore Grosman and colleagues said. "The interment rituals and the method used to construct and seal the grave suggest this is the burial of an ancient shaman, one of the earliest known from the archaeological record," they wrote in the Proceedings of...
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The Conquest of Canaan
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Inside, Outside: Where Did the Early Israelites Come From?
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11/05/2008 3:59:31 PM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 21 replies · 816+ views Biblical Archaeology Review [34:06] | Nov/Dec 2008 | Anson Rainey On one thing all scholars agree: In the period archaeologists call Iron Age I, from about 1200 to 1000 B.C.E., approximately 300 new settlements sprang up in the central hill country of Canaan that runs through the land like a spine from north to south. Almost everyone also agrees that these were the early Israelites settling down. The famous hieroglyphic text known as the Merneptah Stele, which dates to about 1205 B.C.E., refers to "Israel" at this time as a people (not a country or nation) probably located in Transjordan... In 1962 George E. Mendenhall... introduced a new theory of...
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Epigraphy and Language
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Shasu or Habiru: Who Were the Early Israelites?
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11/05/2008 3:47:04 PM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 8 replies · 424+ views Biblical Archaeology Review (BAR 34:06) | November/December 2008 | Anson Rainey Because of the surface similarity of the words habiru and "Hebrew," many scholars assumed the habiru were closely related, if not identical to, the earliest Israelite tribes. Upon closer examination, however, all similarity disappears. It is linguistically impossible to equate habiru and 'ivri (the Hebrew word for "Hebrew") and, in any case, the word habiru was not used to describe a single ethnic group but rather an array of disenfranchised social groups that inhabited the fringes of Bronze Age Near Eastern society. Since then, we have literally hundreds of references to habiru ('apiru) from Egypt, Nuzi (beyond the Tigris), Syria...
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Let's Have Jerusalem
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First Temple-Era Water Tunnel Revealed in Jerusalem
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10/30/2008 5:32:06 AM PDT · Posted by SJackson · 12 replies · 431+ views Arutz Sheva | 10-30-08 First Temple-Era Water Tunnel Revealed in Jerusalem by Hana Levi Julian (IsraelNN.com) A tunnel built thousands of years ago -- and which may even have been used during King David's conquest of Jerusalem -- has been uncovered in the ancient City of David, just outside the Old City and across the street from the Dung Gate. Renowned Israeli archaeologist Dr. Eilat Mazer, who is leading the dig, revealed the findings from the discovery Thursday morning at an archaeological symposium at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Mazer, who also uncovered King David's palace, has led the world in ancient Jerusalem findings....
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Rome and Italy
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Limestone altar Discovered at Dalheim Roman Dig [Luxembourg]
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11/03/2008 6:52:43 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 1 replies · 269+ views Station Network | Thursday, October 30, 2008 | unattributed Following previous archaelogical discoveries at the Dalheim dig, another artefact has been discovered. The site of the former Gallo-Roman baths has now produced what is described as an "exceptional archaeological discovery". The National Museum of History and Art (MNHA), led by the young German archaeologist Heike Posch and overseen by the curator John Krier, has uncovered fragments of a large 1.3m high limestone altar. The discovery dates from the 3rd century AD and has a Latin inscription showing that the altar was dedicated to the goddess Fortuna. The text over 10 lines mentions not only the people of Ricciacum vicus,...
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British Isles
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Caesar's British Landing Site Pinned Down
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11/06/2008 3:34:59 PM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 9 replies · 794+ views LiveScience | Saturday, November 1, 2008 | Harvey Leifert, Natural History Magazine When Julius Caesar arrived off the coast of Britain with his hundred-ship force in August, 55 b.c., he was greeted by a host of defenders poised to hurl spears down on his invading army from the towering Dover cliffs. Seeking a better landing site, he sailed on a strong afternoon current and landed his troops at a beach seven miles away, according to his own account. Caesar neglected to mention, however, whether he sailed southwest or northeast. The only shoreline within seven miles of Dover that matches Caesar's description lies to the northeast, near present-day Deal. That would settle it,...
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Saxon Bling
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Herefordshire Saxon find is declared as treasure[UK]
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11/05/2008 8:08:53 AM PST · Posted by BGHater · 3 replies · 508+ views Hereford Times | 05 Nov 2008 | Hereford Times A Saxon hook tag found in a Herefordshire field field has been declared as treasure. Assistant county coroner Roland Wooderson confirmed that the item, used for securing clothing or bags, was treasure at an inquest last week. The silver hook tag was found in Brampton Abbotts in June 2007 by Maxine Jones, from Swansea. In a statement, she said she spent her spare time looking for treasure using a metal detector and had sought permission from Mr Scudamore, who owns the land where the item was found. After the discovery was made, the hook tag was sent to the British...
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Anatolia
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Excavations put Izmir at 8,500 years old
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11/03/2008 6:43:13 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 16 replies · 236+ views Turkish Daily News | Friday, October 31, 2008 | unattributed New excavations have revealed that Izmir, once believe to be 5,000 years old, may be as old as 8,500 years. Associate professor Zafer Derin of the Ege University archeology department, the head of the excavation team, said in a written statement his team had removed 150 artifacts discovered at the Yeflilova Tumulus excavation site, reported the Anatolia news agency. Saying the findings discovered in the excavation played an important role in identifying those who lived in the area 8,500 years ago, Derin said: "Findings obtained from the excavation determined that those who lived in this area 8,500 years ago had...
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Greeks
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One of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World Brought Back to Life
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11/06/2008 6:03:06 PM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 45 replies · 1,364+ views Biblical Archaeology Review | November 6, 2008 | unattributed One of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World is set to be resurrected in Selcuk, Turkey. The famous Temple of Artemis was built at the expense of the Lydian king Karun in the 7th century B.C. Its architecture included 120 columns and 25,000 cubic meters of marble. The massive structure was dedicated to Artemis, the Greek goddess of virginity, fertility and the hunt. The original temple was destroyed during the early period of Christianity in Anatolia. In 2007, the Artemis Culture, Arts, and Education Foundation, was founded with the objective of rebuilding the ancient temple approximately 1,500 meters away...
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Trojan War
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Trojan arrows and unique seals from Perperikon stand out in archaeological summer '08
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11/03/2008 7:04:35 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 5 replies · 166+ views Bulgarian News | October 27, 2008 | Veneta Pavlova, Daniela Konstantinova, bnr.bg The place acted as a cult site as early as the end of 5 and the early 4 millennium BC. Researchers have come across finds from the second millennium BC and there is evidence the city prospered during Thracian times in Antiquity. An Episcopal center was set up here in the Middle Ages. At a press conference in Sofia Nikolay Ovcharov showed unique finds originating from different periods in the history of Perperikon. The oldest one is dated to the Trojan War, the archeologist contends. "It is a sword with a broken handle from 12-13 c. BC. It is made...
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The Vikings
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The Vikings' burning question: some decent graveside theatre
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11/03/2008 6:32:27 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 9 replies · 254+ views The Times of London | October 26, 2008 | Magnus Linklater The average Viking lived a life in which spirituality and thoughts of immortality played a far more important part than the rape and pillage more usually associated with his violent race, according to new research. A study of thousands of excavated Viking graves suggests that rituals were performed at the graveside in which stories about life and death were presented as theatre, with live performances designed to help the passage of the deceased from this world into the next... Detailed analysis of the burials revealed a remarkable variety of objects found alongside the bodies - from everyday items to great...
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Phoenicians
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French dig exposes underside of Tyre
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11/03/2008 5:44:29 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 7 replies · 172+ views Daily Star | Saturday, November 1, 2008 | Mohammed Zaatari A French excavations team from the Universite de Lyon has wrapped up phase I of works in the southern port city of Tyre, the head of the Directorate General of Antiquities (DGA) in the South told The Daily Star on Friday. "Excavations are centered in two main sites inside Tyre's Al-Mina ancient ruins area," Ali Badawi said. He added that archaeologists were working on uncovering the tomb of Frederic Archbishop of Tyre, which is said to be buried under an ancient cathedral dating back to the times of the Crusaders in the coastal city. "A German excavating team came to...
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Helix, Make Mine a Double
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Phoenicians Left Deep Genetic Mark, Study Shows
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11/03/2008 5:16:13 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 13 replies · 283+ views New Jack City Times | Thursday, October 30, 2008 | John Noble Wilford The Phoenicians, enigmatic people from the eastern shores of the Mediterranean, stamped their mark on maritime history, and now research has revealed that they also left a lasting genetic imprint. Scientists reported Thursday that as many as 1 in 17 men living today on the coasts of North Africa and southern Europe may have a Phoenician direct male-line ancestor. These men were found to retain identifiable genetic signatures from the nearly 1,000 years the Phoenicians were a dominant seafaring commercial power in the Mediterranean basin, until their conquest by Rome in the 2nd century B.C... The scientists who conducted the...
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Diet and Cuisine
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World's Oldest Cooked Cereal Was Instant
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11/06/2008 5:49:18 PM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 31 replies · 630+ views Discovery News | Friday, October 24, 2008 | Jennifer Viegas Dating from between 5920 to 5730 B.C., the ancient cereal consisted of parboiled bulgur wheat that Early Neolithic Bulgarians could refresh in minutes with hot water. "People boiled the grain, dried it, removed the bran and ground it into coarse particles," lead author Soultana-Maria Valamoti told Discovery News. "In this form, the cereal grain can be stored throughout the year and consumed easily, even without boiling, by merely soaking in hot water," added Valamoti, an assistant professor of archaeology at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in Greece. She and her colleagues studied the Bulgarian grain, excavated at a site called Kapitan...
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Climate
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Monsoon link to fall of dynasties[China]
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11/07/2008 8:53:13 AM PST · Posted by BGHater · 11 replies · 254+ views BBC | 06 Nov 2008 | BBC The demise of some of China's ruling dynasties may have been linked to changes in the strength of monsoon rains, a new study suggests. The findings come from 1,800-year record of the Asian monsoon preserved in a stalagmite from a Chinese cave. Weak - and therefore dry - monsoon periods coincided with the demise of the Tang, Yuan and Ming imperial dynasties, the scientists said. A US-Chinese team report their work in the journal Science. Stalagmites are largely made up of calcium carbonate, which precipitates from groundwater dripping from the ceiling of a cave. Chemical analysis of a 118mm-long stalagmite...
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China
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Chinese emperor was poisoned with arsenic
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11/04/2008 11:10:03 AM PST · Posted by nickcarraway · 6 replies · 520+ views The Telegraph | 04 Nov 2008 | Richard Spencer Analysis of hair and other fragments taken from the tomb of the Guangxu emperor, who died 100 years ago this month, showed high levels of the chemical. The findings are seen as proving suspicions that the emperor was murdered, and the implications will be eagerly discussed, not just by historians. The traditional secrecy of Chinese rulers through the centuries makes the fate of China's last dynastic rulers important for understanding modern-day Communist Party politics. The Guangxu emperor, like all Chinese rulers, was known by a formal title given to his reign since commoners were not allowed to speak his name....
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Navigation
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Small Islands Given Short Shrift In Assembling Archaeological Record
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11/03/2008 5:26:29 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 4 replies · 124+ views ScienceDaily | Thursday, October 30, 2008 | University of Florida Small islands dwarf large ones in archaeological importance, says a University of Florida researcher, who found that people who settled the Caribbean before Christopher Columbus preferred more minute pieces of land because they relied heavily on the sea... Early Ceramic Age settlements have been found in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Montserrat, for example, but are absent from all of the larger islands in the Lesser Antilles, Keegan said. And all of the small islands along the windward east coast of St. Lucia have substantial ceramic artifacts -- evidence of settlement -- despite being less than one kilometer, or .62...
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PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis
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No burial for 10,000-year-old bones: U of California denies request for repatriation of remains
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11/03/2008 5:07:01 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 25 replies · 323+ views Nature 455, 1156-1157 | Wednesday, October 29, 2008 | Rex Dalton In the latest twist in the tug-of-war between Native Americans and anthropologists, officials at the University of California have decided not to repatriate a pair of well-preserved skeletons that are nearly 10,000 years old. Archaeology students unearthed the bones in 1976 near the clifftop home of the chancellor of the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). It may be possible to extract some of the oldest human DNA in North America from the exquisitely preserved remains, say researchers. But in the past two years the bones have become a political football over US$7-million plans to demolish and rebuild the house....
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Mayans
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New Maya Olmec Archeological Find in Guatemala [Takalik Abaj]
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11/03/2008 5:01:49 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 6 replies · 182+ views Guatemala Times | Thursday, October 30, 2008 | unattributed It is known that the fragments of this enigmatic sculptures were placed into the buildings during the second part of the Late Pre- Classic Period (Phase Ruth 200 BC - 150 AD), which is when the early Mayan culture was florishing. Therefore this sculpture must have been carved before this time. There are two possibilities, it was carved at the start of the early Mayan era, or a little earlier, when the changes in Tak'alik Ab'aj from the Olmec era to the Mayan era was taking place, what is called the transition period. Could it be that the early Mayan...
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Australia and the Pacific
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Epic Voyage To Discover Origins And Migration Routes Of Ancestors Of Ancient Polynesians...
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11/06/2008 3:25:54 PM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 6 replies · 236+ views ScienceDaily | Thursday, November 6, 2008 | Durham University Two Durham University scientists are to play a key part in a 6000km trip following the migration route of ancient Pacific cultures. Drs Keith Dobney and Greger Larson, both from the Department of Archaeology, will be joining the voyage, which will be the first ever expedition to sail in two traditional Polynesian boats -- ethnic double canoes -- which attempts to re-trace the genuine migration route of the ancient Austronesians. The main aim of the voyage is to find out where the ancestors of Polynesian culture originated but the Durham University researchers will also be examining the local wildlife. Dr...
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Biology and Cryptobiology
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Scientists Race to Save "Water Monster" From Extinction
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11/05/2008 9:43:59 PM PST · Posted by nickcarraway · 23 replies · 1,094+ views nbc11 | Nov 3, 2008 Beneath the tourist gondolas in the remains of a great Aztec lake lives a creature that resembles a monster - and a Muppet - with its slimy tail, plumage-like gills and mouth that curls into an odd smile. The axolotl, also known as the "water monster" and the "Mexican walking fish," was a key part of Aztec legend and diet. Against all odds, it survived until now amid Mexico City's urban sprawl in the polluted canals of Lake Xochimilco, now a Venice-style destination for revelers poled along by Mexican gondoliers, or trajineros, in brightly painted party boats. But scientists are...
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Bring Out The Dead
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Frozen mice cloned - are woolly mammoths next? - how about Ted Williams?
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11/03/2008 3:10:47 PM PST · Posted by JoeProBono · 23 replies · 326+ views reuters | Mon Nov 3, 2008 5:30pm EST WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Japanese scientists have cloned mice whose bodies were frozen for as long 16 years and said on Monday it may be possible to use the technique to resurrect mammoths and other extinct species..."There is hope in bringing Ted Williams back, after all," cloning and stem cell expert John Gearhart of the University of Pennsylvania said in an e-mail. The family of Williams, the Boston Red Sox hitter, had his body frozen by cryogenics firm Alcor after he died in 2002..."
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Cloned Mammoths Made More Likely by Frozen Mice
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11/07/2008 4:00:13 AM PST · Posted by Renfield · 6 replies · 288+ views Fox News | 11-05-08 Jurassic Park? Still not close to being real. But cloned woolly mammoths just became more possible, thanks to Japanese researchers who announced Monday that they'd cloned dead mice that had been frozen for 16 years. When animal tissue freezes, cell walls burst and the DNA inside the cell nuclei can be seriously damaged. Because of that, most scientists had assumed it'd be impossible to get any good DNA from the thousands of frozen mammoths thought to still lie in Siberian permafrost. The Japanese team figured, however, that the high concentration of sugar in brain tissue might preserve DNA. So they...
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Middle Ages and Renaissance
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Martin Luther's Death Mask on View at Museum in Halle, Germany
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11/03/2008 8:58:17 AM PST · Posted by Alex Murphy · 23 replies · 673+ views Artdaily.org | November 3, 2008 HALLE.- Martin Luther's original death mask belongs to the treasures and witnesses from the Reformation that Halle is amply equipped with. In one room of the tower, you can see the death mask of the great reformer, as well as a later plaster cast and a pulpit that stems from Luther's time. Presumably, the mask was created after a plaster cast that had been made by the local painter Lukas Furtenagel on Luther's deathbed in Eisleben on February 19, 1546. As Luther's body had to be taken to Wittenberg for the planned burial, his coffin was placed in the...
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Early America
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Little object, big find from shipwreck [ Blackbeard , Queen Anne's Revenge ]
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11/03/2008 10:48:33 AM PST · Posted by SunkenCiv · 12 replies · 550+ views Freedom ENC | October 28, 2008 | Jannette Pippin One of the smallest artifacts recovered during the latest dive expedition at the shipwreck presumed to be Queen Anne's Revenge is getting big attention. The circular, dime-sized piece has been resting on the ocean floor for 300 years, but early examination indicates it may be the first coin to come from the site believed to be the flagship of the pirate Blackbeard... QAR Conservation Field Supervisor Wendy Welsh said.. a coin weight with a bust of Queen Anne was recovered from the site during a 2006 dive but no actual coins. Shanna Daniel, assistant conservator at the QAR lab in...
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Possible Blackbeard Ship Cannon Found
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10/15/2004 9:22:23 AM PDT · Posted by Area Freeper · 38 replies · 1,108+ views Associated Press | Fri Oct 8 Underwater archaeologists have found another cannon from the wreckage of what they believe was the flagship of the notorious pirate Blackbeard. Historical records indicate Blackbeard had 40 guns on the French frigate he captured in 1717 and renamed Queen Anne's Revenge. Since 1996, when the wreckage of the ship was discovered in Beaufort Inlet, divers have found 22 at the site. "We're pretty positive that we have cannon number 23," said project archaeologist Chris Southerly. It is a large cannon that probably shot a 6-pound or 8-pound ball, Southerly said. Divers uncovered the cannon while excavating an area of the...
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Cavalry
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First-hand account of the Charge of the Light Brigade unearthed
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11/04/2008 4:53:19 PM PST · Posted by bruinbirdman · 31 replies · 2,064+ views The Telegraph | 11/4/08 | Nick Britten A graphic first-hand account by the last survivor of the Charge of the Light Brigade, describing his ride 'in the valley of death' during the Crimean War, has been unearthed. Pte James Olley, of the 4th Light Dragoons, who was in the van of the 1854 cavalry action, tells of how he relentlessly fought the Russians despite having an eye blown out and a chunk of his head torn off. The three-page document is believed to be one of the only eyewitness accounts by a frontliner and is expect to fetch about £2,000 at auction. Pte Olley, who was aged...
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World War Eleven
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Airman Missing In Action From WW ll is Identified Staff Sgt. Martin F. Troy, U.S. Army Air Forces
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11/05/2008 3:40:46 PM PST · Posted by Dubya · 15 replies · 964+ views DOD | DOD Airman Missing In Action From WW ll is Identified The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced today that the remains of a U.S. serviceman, missing in action from World War II, have been identified and will be returned to his family for burial with full military honors. He is Staff Sgt. Martin F. Troy, U.S. Army Air Forces, of Norwalk, Conn. He will be buried on Nov. 20 in Arlington National Cemetery near Washington, D.C. Representatives from the Army's Mortuary Office met with Troy's next-of-kin to explain the recovery and identification process and to coordinate interment with military...
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Vietnam
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Marines Missing From Vietnam War Are Identified NOV 08
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11/06/2008 4:23:54 PM PST · Posted by Dubya · 61 replies · 2,236+ views DOD | DOD The Department of Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) announced today that the remains of four U.S. servicemen, missing from the Vietnam War, have been identified and will be returned to their families for burial with full military honors. They are Lance Cpl. Kurt E. La Plant, of Lenexa, Kan., and Lance Cpl. Luis F. Palacios, of Los Angeles, Calif. Remains that could not be individually identified are included in a group. Among the group remains are Lance Cpl. Ralph L. Harper, of Indianapolis, Ind., and Pfc. Jose R. Sanchez, of Brooklyn, N.Y. All...
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Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
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How We Used to Vote.
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11/02/2008 1:39:09 PM PST · Posted by Bubba_Leroy · 6 replies · 370+ views Slashdot | November 2, 2008 | Staff Think hanging chads, illegal purges of the voter rolls, and insecure voting machines are bad? The New Yorker looks back at how we used to vote back in the good old days: 'A man carrying a musket rushed at him. Another threw a brick, knocking him off his feet. George Kyle picked himself up and ran. He never did cast his vote. Nor did his brother, who died of his wounds. The Democratic candidate for Congress, William Harrison, lost to the American Party's Henry Winter Davis. Three months later, when the House of Representatives convened hearings into the election, whose...
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Oh So Mysteriouso
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Nostradamus Writings Predict McCain Victory
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11/03/2008 6:18:43 AM PST · Posted by backinthefold · 52 replies · 3,827+ views http://www.propeller.com/story/2008/10/30/nostradamus-writings-predict-mccain-victory/?icid=200100397x1212350706x1200748789 CAP NEWS - "Conventional wisdom picks Obama. Nostradamus, four and a half centuries ago, picked John McCain," said Dr. Hubert Evans, professor of Renaissance Studies at Yale University and author of the best-selling "Nostradamus: Prophesize This!" "Quatrain 78, Century X in particular seems to indicate that Obama had better not be measuring the White House windows for curtains quite yet, at least by my interpretation," said Dr. Evans. The quatrain to which Dr. Evans refers - Quatrain 78 - is located in the grouping of stanzas known as Century X. Originally published in 1555 in Nostradamus' still-popular Les Prophecies, Quatrain...
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end of digest #225 20081108
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