Posted on 10/14/2005 9:42:13 PM PDT by LauraleeBraswell
The myth of the Amazons, a tribe of bloodthirsty blond women thundering across arid battlefields to the horror of their male foes, has lingered for centuries. Their exploits seized the imagination of the Greek scribes Homer, Hippocrates, and Herodotus. But proof of their existence had always been lacking. Now, a 2,500-year-old mystery may have been solved, cracked by an American scientist whose 10-year odyssey led her tens of thousands of miles in pursuit of the truth. After unearthing a culture of ancient warrior women in the Russian steppes, Dr. Jeannine Davis-Kimball followed a trail of artifacts to a remote village in Western Mongolia, where her quest for a living link to a long-imagined tribe ended with a startling discovery. There, among the black-eyed Mongols, Davis-Kimball finds a blond child, a 9-year-old girl named Meiramgul. Through DNA testing, Davis-Kimball find that the DNA sequences of the warrior woman and those from the girl of Mongolia are identical.
Did she star in a cheesy 70s sitcom, by any chance?
It's Blossom!
If this turns out to be the only reply I get- I'm posting it again tommorow morning. And I'm a product of the 80s- I have no idea what you are talking about.
Have all the serious people gone to bed?!
You never saw reruns of Wonder Woman?
no.
Well to be serious, I always thought a race of Amazonian women was just a myth.
Interesting. Are you familiar with the red headed mummies of China?
It's Friday. Interesting, but it's Friday night and we need a laugh.
""In the fifth century BCE, the Greek researcher Herodotus of Halicarnassus, the author of the Histories, describes the Sauromatae as the descendants of Scythian fathers and Amazon mothers. Of course, this is a legend, but the nomadic tribe did exist and lived where Herodotus says it lived, on the plains between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, north of the Caucasus. The river Don divided the Sauromatae and the Scythians, the famous riders from Ukraine.""
-http://www.livius.org/sao-sd/sarmatians/sarmatians.html
This turns out to not be a legend anymore.
no. Do you have a link?!
Wikipedia has a different take: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarim_mummies
Ancient Warrior Women Alert.
No, not yet!
I understand how she got a DNA sample of a present day girl; however, I do not understand how she got a DNA sample from a 2,500 years ago, long imagined Amazon to match up with it.
But, it is late, and I just may be a little slow.
Or, there could be another ages old explanation: The gypsies left this girl where she is...
It's Chelsea's sister.
Web Hubbell really gets around.
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