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Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #167
Saturday, September 29, 2007


Ancient Autopsies
DNA Extracted From Woolly Mammoth Hair
  Posted by saganite
On News/Activism 09/28/2007 1:18:39 AM EDT · 51 replies


Science Daily | 27 Sep 07 | staff
Science Daily -- Stephan C. Schuster and Webb Miller of Penn State, working with Thomas Gilbert from Copenhagen and a large international consortium, discovered that hair shafts provide an ideal source of ancient DNA -- a better source than bones and muscle for studying the genome sequences of extinct animals. Their research achievement, described in a paper to be published in the journal Science on Sept. 28, includes the sequencing of entire mitochondrial genomes from 10 individual woolly mammoths. Schuster and Miller, working at Penn State's Center for Comparative Genomics and Bioinformatics, and Gilbert, from the Center for Ancient Genetics...
 

Helix, Make Mine a Double
Where Do The Finns Come From?
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/26/2007 1:49:43 PM EDT · 75 replies


Sydaby | Christian Carpelan
WHERE DO FINNS COME FROM? Not long ago, cytogenetic experts stirred up a controversy with their "ground-breaking" findings on the origins of the Finnish and Sami peoples. Cytogenetics is by no means a new tool in bioanthropological research, however. As early as the 1960s and '70s, Finnish researchers made the significant discovery that one quarter of the Finns' genetic stock is Siberian, and three quarters is European in origin. The Samis, however, are of different genetic stock: a mixture of distinctly western, but also eastern elements. If we examine the genetic links between the peoples of Europe, the Samis form...
 

Prehistory and Origins
Myths Of British Ancestry
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/28/2007 10:42:35 AM EDT · 83 replies


Prospect | 10-2006 | Stephen Oppenheimer
Myths of British ancestry October 2006Stephen Oppenheimer Everything you know about British and Irish ancestry is wrong. Our ancestors were Basques, not Celts. The Celts were not wiped out by the Anglo-Saxons, in fact neither had much impact on the genetic stock of these islands The fact that the British and the Irish both live on islands gives them a misleading sense of security about their unique historical identities. But do we really know who we are, where we come from and what defines the nature of our genetic and cultural heritage? Who are and were the Scots, the Welsh,...
 

Mediterranean
Ancient Fishermen Lured Fish With Fire
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/26/2007 6:02:02 PM EDT · 33 replies


Discovery | 9-25-2007 | Jennifer Viegas
Ancient Fishermen Lured Fish With Fire Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News Sept. 25, 2007 -- Fishermen around areas mentioned in the New Testament worked the night shift, suggests fishing gear found in a 7th century shipwreck off the coast of Dor, Israel, west of Galilee, where Jesus is said to have preached. The standout item among the found gear is a fire basket, the first evidence for "fire fishing" in the ancient eastern Mediterranean. Early images and writings indicate fires were lit in such baskets, which were suspended in giant lantern devices from the end of fishing boats. Light emitted from...
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
Research Team Says Extraterrestrial Impact To Blame For Ice Age Extinctions (More)
  Posted by blam
On General/Chat 09/25/2007 3:58:19 PM EDT · 56 replies


Eureka Alert | Northern Arizona University - Lisa Nelson
Contact: Lisa Nelson Lisa.Nelson@nau.edu 928-523-6123 Northern Arizona University Research team says extraterrestrial impact to blame for Ice Age extinctions A colorized scanning electron microscope image of a glassy carbon sphere that contains evidence of extraterrestrial impact. The sphere measures about .012 inches in width. What caused the extinction of mammoths and the decline of Stone Age people about 13,000 years ago remains hotly debated. Overhunting by Paleoindians, climate change and disease lead the list of probable causes. But an idea once considered a little out there is now hitting closer to home. A team of international researchers, including two Northern...
 

Cosmic blast may have killed off megafauna Scientists say early humans doomed, too
  Posted by baynut
On News/Activism 09/25/2007 9:45:11 PM EDT · 49 replies


Boston Globe | September 27, 2007 | Colin Nickerson
Wooly mammoths, giant sloths, saber-toothed cats, and dozens of other species of megafauna may have become extinct when a disintegrating comet or asteroid exploded over North America with the force of millions of hydrogen bombs, according to research by an international team of scientists. The blast, which the researchers believe occurred 12,900 years ago, may have also doomed a mysterious early human culture, known as Clovis people, while triggering a planetwide cool-down that wiped out the plant species that sustained many outsize Ice Age beasts, according to research published online yesterday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
 

Climate
Ice Age Australians Sheltered In Caves
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/24/2007 1:07:17 PM EDT · 20 replies


ABC Science | 9-24-2007 | Anna Salleh
Ice age Australians sheltered in caves Anna Salleh ABC Science Online Monday, 24 September 2007 Why would Aboriginal Tasmanians flock to one of the coldest parts of the island during an ice age? One researcher says it was to shelter from the wind in caves and steep valleys (Image: Ian Gilligan) Ice age Aboriginal Australians protected themselves from bitterly cold winds by flocking to caves in one of the most inhospitable parts of the continent, says an archaeologist. Ian Gilligan, a postgraduate researcher from the Australian National University, lays out his argument in the current issue of the journal Antiquity....
 

Australia and the Pacific
Early Polynesians Sailed Thousands Of Miles For Trade
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/27/2007 6:46:25 PM EDT · 47 replies


National Geographic | 9-27-2007 | Dave Hansford
Early Polynesians Sailed Thousands of Miles for Trade Dave Hansford for National Geographic News September 27, 2007 Early Polynesians sailed thousands of miles for exploration and trade, suggests a new study of early stone woodworking tools. The analysis confirms traditional tales of vast ocean voyages and hints that a trading network existed between Hawaii and Tahiti as early as a thousand years ago. The work also bolsters research suggesting that the Polynesians were skillful sailors who rapidly expanded across the Pacific and journeyed as far as South America by the 1400s A.D. Kenneth Collerson and Marshall Weisler of the University...
 

Biology and Cryptobiology
Historians propose various theories on early migrations
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 09/27/2007 12:39:46 PM EDT · 6 replies


Helena Independent Record | September 23, 2007 | Marga Lincoln
European prehistoric artifacts similar to ones in North America, such as Clovis points, have led some scholars to suggest that European prehistoric people crossed the Atlantic Ocean in boats, said Vrooman. And research in Siberia, where the Bering land bridge supposedly originated, reveals no solid evidence of Clovis points originating there, he said... A site in Brazil yields possible evidence of human habitation 37,000 years ago, long before the land bridge is believed to have existed, said Vrooman... Helena Forest archaeologist Carl Davis said it's also likely that early people walked down the frozen coast from Alaska to Baja thousands...
 

PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis
Snake-Bird Gods Fascinated Both Aztecs And Pharaohs
  Posted by blam
On General/Chat 09/25/2007 3:19:09 PM EDT · 38 replies


Reuters | 9-24-2007 | Robin Emmott
Snake-bird gods fascinated both Aztecs and pharaohs Mon 24 Sep 2007, 17:05 GMT By Robin Emmott MONTERREY, Mexico, Sept 24 (Reuters Life!) - Ancient Mexicans and Egyptians who never met and lived centuries and thousands of miles apart both worshiped feathered-serpent deities, built pyramids and developed a 365-day calendar, a new exhibition shows. Billed as the world's largest temporary archeological showcase, Mexican archeologists have brought treasures from ancient Egypt to display alongside the great indigenous civilizations of Mexico for the first time. The exhibition, which boasts a five-tonne, 3,000-year-old sculpture of Egyptian pharaoh Ramses II and stone carvings from Mexican...
 

Egypt
Update - Latvian Scientifique Mission In The Step Pyramid Of Saqqara (Egypt)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/22/2007 11:14:49 AM EDT · 12 replies


Archaeogate | 9-18-2007 | Bruno Deslandes
Update on the recent works carried out by the Latvian Scientifique Mission in the Step Pyramid of Saqqara (Egypt) Redazione Archaeogate, 18-09-2007 During its last campaign, the Latvian Scientific Mission, which has already worked more than two years in the Step Pyramid of Saqqara (Egypt) in the framework of its joint-venture with the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities and direct supervision from Dr. Zahi Hawass, has successfully carried out some additional documentation works, very important for the safeguarding and restoration of the oldest stone monument in the world. Resources allocated to this program (15 scientists) represent the largest scientific team...
 

Elam, Persia, Parthia, Iran
Ancient wall unearthed in Iran
  Posted by freedom44
On News/Activism 09/24/2007 1:01:05 AM EDT · 12 replies


Zeenews | 9/24/07 | Zeenews
Tehran, Sept 24: British and Iranian archaeologists have discovered the ruins of a 200 kilometre-long wall, the second longest wall in Asia after the Great Wall of China, in northern Iran. Experts believe the Gorgan Great Wall in northern Iran's Golestan Province was built at about the same time as the Great Wall of China and was used as a defence system against the invasions of the Ephthalites, a nomadic people who once lived in Central Asia. Archaeologists also discovered a 50-kilometre long stretch of a canal near the wall that was used to transfer water from the Gorganrud River...
 

Let's Have Jerusalem
Quarry Used For Jewish Temple Unearthed In Israel
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/24/2007 1:23:22 PM EDT · 26 replies


Yahoo News | 9-23-2007 | Rebecca Harrison
Quarry used for Jewish temple unearthed in Israel By Rebecca Harrison Sun Sep 23, 11:22 AM ETReuters Photo: Ultra-orthodox Jewish boys walk through a quarry in Jerusalem September 23, 2007. Israeli archaeologists have... JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Archaeologists have found an ancient quarry where King Herod's workers may have chiselled the giant stones used to rebuild the second Jewish temple in Jerusalem some 2,000 years ago. The Israel Antiquities Authority said on Sunday experts believe stones as long as 8 meters (24 feet) were extracted from the quarry and then dragged by oxen to building sites in Jerusalem for major projects...
 

Japan
Israelites Came To Ancient Japan
  Posted by pseudogratix
On Religion 03/27/2003 9:01:51 AM EST · 17 replies · 8,124+ views


5.ocn.ne.jp | Arimasa Kubo
Israelites Came To Ancient Japan Many of the traditional ceremonies in Japan seem to indicate that the Lost Tribes of Israel came to ancient Japan.Arimasa Kubo Ark of the covenant of Israel (left) and "Omikoshi" ark of Japan (right) Dear friends in the world, I am a Japanese Christian writer living in Japan. As I study the Bible, I began to realize that many traditional customs and ceremonies in Japan are very similar to the ones of ancient Israel. I considered that perhaps these rituals came from the religion and customs of the Jews and the Ten Lost Tribes of...
 

Agriculture
Stone Age Rice Farms Found In China
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/28/2007 10:04:14 AM EDT · 9 replies


Statesman | 9-27-2007
Stone Age rice farms found in ChinaScientists find evidence of mass rice cultivation 7,700 years ago. Thursday, September 27, 2007 Stone Age Chinese began cultivating rice more than 7,700 years ago by burning trees in coastal marshes and building dams to hold back seawater, converting the marshes to rice paddies that would support growth of the high-yield cereal grain, researchers plan to report today. New analysis of sediments from the site of Kuahuqiao at the mouth of the Yangtze River near Hangzhou provides the earliest evidence in China of such large-scale environmental manipulation, experts said. "It shows people were changing...
 

British Isles
Archaeologists Have Uncovered A Royal Palace Used By King Henry II
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/23/2007 4:38:57 PM EDT · 41 replies


Newbury Today | 9-23-2007
Archaeologists have uncovered a royal palace used by King Henry II AN ANCIENT royal palace near Kingsclere unearthed during recent excavations will be open to the public over the weekend (September 22-23). The Royal Palace of Fremantle has lain hidden under the Hampshire Downs at Tidgrove Warren Farm, in the parish of Hannington, for nearly 900 years. Over the last three years the site has been excavated by staff and students from the University of Southampton in association with the Kingsclere Heritage Association local volunteers. Explorations have revealed a medieval enclosed settlement surrounded by a massive ditch - larger than...
 

Anatasia Screamed In Vain
Alexei and Maria Romanov: I Possibly Know Where Bones Are in Russia
  Posted by GermanBusiness
On News/Activism 12/25/2005 5:58:41 PM EST · 74 replies · 4,830+ views


I've been dating a woman in St. Petersburg, Russia for over a year whose grandfather was apparently given a lethal injection by the communists when he went in for a routine physical in the late 1940s. His name: Fyedor Korablyev, born 16 February 1907 Even before the apparent murder, the family has been afraid to talk about any relation to the Romanov Family but an older family member has just told me that Alexei Romanov died as a monk in Siberia in 1960. The world is aware that Alexei's bones were never found. He was not executed with this family...
 

Remains may be children of last czar
  Posted by darkangel82
On News/Activism 09/28/2007 8:47:14 PM EDT · 17 replies


Yahoo | 9/28 | Mike Eckel
MOSCOW - There is a "high degree of probability" that bone fragments found recently near the Russian city of Yekaterinburg are those of a daughter and son of the last czar, forensics experts said Friday. If confirmed, the find would fill in a missing chapter in the story of the doomed Romanovs, who were killed after the violent 1917 Bolshevik Revolution ushered in more than 70 years of Communist rule. The fragments were found by archaeologists in a burned field near the Ural Mountains city where Czar Nicholas II, his wife, Alexandra, and their five children were held prisoner by...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
How Joan escaped the stake and lived happily ever after
  Posted by Renfield
On General/Chat 09/22/2007 12:55:20 PM EDT · 27 replies


The Guardian (UK) | 9-22-07 | Angelique Chrisafis
New book angers historians with claims maid was not an illiterate peasant but a royal.... She was a peasant teenager inspired by voices from God to lead the French against the English, and burned as a witch before being recognised as a hero and saint. For centuries, France's cult of Joan of Arc has been seized on by politicians looking for patriotic martyr figures, including by Nicolas Sarkozy during his presidential campaign. Now a new book has sparked anger among historians by claiming the Maid of Orleans was not an illiterate peasant but a royal. She did not hear voices...
 

Longer Perspectives
Politically Correct Anthropology
  Posted by bs9021
On News/Activism 09/25/2007 10:39:57 PM EDT · 21 replies


Campus Report | September 25, 2007 | Don Irvine
Politically Correct Anthropology by: Don Irvine, September 25, 2007 Political correctness which has been invading academia with a vengeance has a new target- Anthropology. An ad-hoc group calling themselves the Network of Concerned Anthropologists is now circulating a petition on the internet called the Pledge of Non-Participation in Counterinsurgency whose central theme says that "Anthropologists should not engage in research and other activities that contribute to counterinsurgency operations in Iraq or in related theaters in the 'war on terror.'"In other words it's an anti-war declaration for anthropologists. The organizers, two of whom are at George Mason University, feel that anthropologists...
 

Early America
Archaeologist takes 2nd look at cannon Found off Virginia coast. How did it get there?
  Posted by Pharmboy
On General/Chat 09/25/2007 9:29:15 PM EDT · 13 replies


The Associated Press via MSNBC | Sept 25, 2007 | Anon
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. - An archaeologist is taking a second look at a small cannon found by fishermen off the Virginia coast more than two decades ago in hopes of determining how it got to the bottom of the ocean -- and who left it there. Rod Mather, a professor of maritime history and underwater archaeology at the University of Rhode Island, has studied the 25-square-mile area surrounding the site where the cannon was found the past two summers. Some historians believe the 4-feet-long, 300-pound cannon, which was loaded when it was found 24 years ago, is an English cannon...
 

London, Paris, Fresno
Archaeologists Probe Secret Tunnels in California
  Posted by decimon
On News/Activism 09/27/2007 5:46:36 PM EDT · 55 replies


Associated Press | September 27, 2007 | Unknown
FRESNO, Calif. -- Tunnels run beneath Chinatown in Fresno, Calif.: brick-walled passages that were once home to people and activities that couldn't be mentioned aboveground. Rick Lew knows, because he walked the passages as a child, entering through a trapdoor in his grandfather's liquor store. "There was a nightlife you couldn't see from the streets," he said. As late as the 1950s, when Lew was a boy, Chinatown was still thriving -- both its respectable establishments and as its shadier side. He remembers visiting the underground world with his father, first passing though a dark basement before descending into a...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Three-year Genghis Khan trek ends
  Posted by Renfield
On General/Chat 09/25/2007 4:49:08 PM EDT · 13 replies


BBC News | 9-23-07
An Australian man has completed a three-year journey from Mongolia to Hungary, following in the footsteps of the Mongolian leader Genghis Khan. The journey took more than double the time Mr Cope anticipated When Tim Cope began his 10,000 km (6,200 mile) journey in June 2004 he expected it to take 18 months. However, a stint at home when his father died and other delays meant it took more than double that. Throughout the trek he travelled on horseback and relied on the hospitality of local people, including nomads. He travelled with three horses at any time, one to carry...
 

end of digest #167 20070929

610 posted on 09/28/2007 11:41:35 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Profile updated Wednesday, September 12, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 608 | View Replies ]


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

Gods Graves Glyphs Digest #167 20070929
· Saturday, September 29, 2007 · 25 topics · 1903835 to 1900623 · now 653 members ·

 
Saturday
Sept 29
2007
v 4
n 11

view this issue
Welcome to the 167th issue of the Gods, Graves, Glyphs ping list Digest. Better week than last, a few more topics, some of which are updates to earlier stories and whatnot. Excellent selection, and a couple new headers, mostly for my own amusement. Happy autumn to all.

Visit the Free Republic Memorial Wall -- a history-related feature of FR.
 

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


611 posted on 09/28/2007 11:47:08 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Profile updated Wednesday, September 27, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 610 | View Replies ]


Gods, Graves, Glyphs
Weekly Digest #168
Saturday, October 6, 2007


Helix, Make Mine a Double
Why Home Doesn't Matter
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/29/2007 12:53:22 PM EDT · 42 replies


Prospect | May 2007 | Judith Rich Harris
Why home doesn't matterMay 2007Judith Rich Harris The BBC series "Child of Our Time" assumes that studying children with their parents will help us understand how their personalities develop. But this is a mistake: parents influence their children mainly by passing on their genes. The biggest environmental influences on personality are those that occur outside the home During much of the 20th century, it was considered impolite and unscientific to say that genes play any role in determining people's personalities, talents or intelligence. But we're in the 21st century now, the era of the genome. So when Robert Winston informs...
 

Paleontology
Funny-Looking Dinosaur Found in China
  Posted by decimon
On News/Activism 10/04/2007 7:32:47 PM EDT · 30 replies · 980+ views


Live Science | October 04, 2007 | Robin Lloyd
A strange, long-necked waddling dinosaur with massive arms and probably enormous claws has been discovered. It walked only on its hind legs like the carnivorous dinosaurs from which it evolved, but Suzhousaurus megatherioides, meaning "giant sloth-like reptile from Suzhou," was an herbivore, says researcher Daqing Li of the Third Geology and Mineral Resources Exploration Academy of Gansu Province in northwestern China, where the fossil specimen was found. The creature belongs to a group of dinosaurs called therizinosaurs, characterized by long necks capped by small heads, massive arms and claws, and flaring ribs and hips that made their bodies very wide.
 

Duck-billed dinosaur amazes scientists
  Posted by Renfield
On General/Chat 10/05/2007 7:14:06 AM EDT · 12 replies · 119+ views


Yahoo News | 10-03-07 | BROCK VERGAKIS
SALT LAKE CITY - Scientists are amazed at the chomping ability of a newly described duck-billed dinosaur. The herbivore's powerful jaw, more than 800 teeth and compact skull meant that no leaf, branch or bush would have been safe, they say. "It really is like the Arnold Schwarzenegger of dinosaurs -- it's all pumped up," said Scott Sampson, curator of the Utah Museum of Natural History. The newly named Gryposaurus monumentensis, or hook-beaked lizard from the monument, was discovered near the Arizona line in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in 2002 by a volunteer at the site. Details about the...
 

Biology and Cryptobiology
Giant Bones Challenged 18th-Century Intellectuals
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/29/2007 8:27:14 PM EDT · 31 replies


Cincy Post | Dan Hurley
Giant bones challenged 18th-century intellectuals By Dan Hurley Post columnist Today, the valley is dry, dusty and unremarkable, but 250 years ago it was one of the most fascinating spots ever discovered in the North America. From the very first time in 1739 that local Indians led a contingent of French explorers to the salt licks near the Ohio River in what is today Boone County, Ky., the spot raised intellectually troubling questions. European and American scientists understood the importance of salt licks and why thousands of modern buffalo, deer and elk beat broad paths to the marshy lick, but...
 

Catastrophism and Astronomy
Evidence for an extraterrestrial impact 12,900 years ago
  Posted by baynut
On General/Chat 09/30/2007 1:14:28 PM EDT · 55 replies


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, October 9, 2007, Vol. 104 | Setember 27, 2007 | R. B. Firestone, et. al.
A carbon-rich black layer, dating to 12.9 ka, has been previously identified at 50 Clovis-age sites across North America and appears contemporaneous with the abrupt onset of Younger Dryas (YD) cooling. The in situ bones of extinct Pleistocene megafauna, along with Clovis tool assemblages, occur below this black layer but not within or above it. Causes for the extinctions, YD cooling, and termination of Clovis culture have long been controversial. In this paper, we provide evidence for an extraterrestrial (ET) impact event at 12.9 ka, which we hypothesize caused abrupt environmental changes that contributed to YD cooling, major ecological reorganization,...
 

Neanderthal / Neandertal
Neanderthals Roamed As Far As Siberia
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 09/30/2007 6:03:36 PM EDT · 20 replies


New Scientist | 9-30-2007 | Roxanne Khamsi
Neanderthals roamed as far as Siberia 18:00 30 September 2007 NewScientist.com news service Roxanne Khamsi DNA extracted from skeletal remains has shown that Neanderthals roamed some 2000 kilometres further east than previously thought. Researchers say the genetic sequence of an adolescent Neanderthal found in southern Siberia closely matches that of Neanderthals found in western Europe, suggesting that this close relative of modern humans migrated very long distances. Svante Paabo at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, and colleagues examined skeletal remains found in the Okladnikov cave in the Altai Mountains and dated as between 30,000 and...
 

Go East old man: Neanderthals reached China's doorstep
  Posted by Renfield
On General/Chat 10/01/2007 1:11:19 PM EDT · 5 replies


AFP | 9/30/07
PARIS (AFP) -- European Neanderthals, modern man's ill-fated cousins who died out mysteriously some 28,000 years ago, migrated much further east than previously thought, according to a study released Sunday. Remains from the slope-browed hominid have previously been found over an area stretching from Spain to Uzbekistan, but the new study extends the eastern boundary of their wanderings another 2,000 kilometres (1,250 miles) deep into southern Siberia, just above the western tip of what is today China. The fossils underpinning the study are not new, but the techniques used to analyse them are. Geneticist Svante Paabo of the Max Planck...
 

British Isles
The man who died half a million years ago
  Posted by Renfield
On General/Chat 10/05/2007 7:25:03 AM EDT · 28 replies · 310+ views


Current Archaeology
Boxgrove The man who died half a million years ago In a gravel pit at Boxgrove, just outside Chichester, the remains of a man have been discovered, half a million years old. Only a shin bone and two teeth were discovered, but his position, under thick layers of gravel show that he is the oldest 'man' so far discovered in Britain. The Boxgrove quarry The discovery was made in a gravel quarry. The gravel was laid down in a later Ice Age on top of a chalk bed, which is visible in the upper squares. Originally a stream flowed from...
 

Navigation
Underwater survey nets traces of 2,400-year-old Greek wreck off southern Albania
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 10/05/2007 2:18:24 AM EDT · 5 replies · 41+ views


International Herald Tribune | September 12, 2007 | Associated Press
Encrusted with tiny shells and smelling strongly of the sea, a 2,400-year-old Greek jar lies in a saltwater bath in Durres Museum, on Albania's Adriatic coast. Part of a sunken shipment of up to 60 ceramic vessels, the 67-centimeter (26-inch) storage jar, or amphora, was the top find... Launched in July, the month-long survey was the first step in compiling an underwater cultural heritage map that could eventually plot the position of sunken fleets from ancient and mediaeval times believed to lie along Albania's 360-kilometer (220-mile) coastline... The light-brown clay amphora, probably used to store wine or oil, was found...
 

Greece
Even Without Math, Ancients Engineered Sophisticated Machines
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 10/02/2007 8:58:55 PM EDT · 59 replies · 184+ views


Science Daily | 10-2-2007 | Harvard University
Source: Harvard University Date: October 2, 2007 Even Without Math, Ancients Engineered Sophisticated Machines Science Daily -- Move over, Archimedes. A researcher at Harvard University is finding that ancient Greek craftsmen were able to engineer sophisticated machines without necessarily understanding the mathematical theory behind their construction. Recent analysis of technical treatises and literary sources dating back to the fifth century B.C. reveals that technology flourished among practitioners with limited theoretical knowledge. "Craftsmen had their own kind of knowledge that didn't have to be based on theory," explains Mark Schiefsky, professor of the classics in Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences....
 

Prehistory and Origins
Senate Bill Could Untie Kennewick Man Bones
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 10/04/2007 8:36:07 PM EDT · 33 replies · 557+ views


Tricity Herald | 10-4-2007 | Annette Cary
Senate bill could untie Kennewick Man bones Published Thursday, October 4th, 2007 By Annette Cary, Herald staff writer A Senate committee has approved a bill that could clear the way for Native Americans to claim the ancient bones of Kennewick Man. This is the third time the change has been proposed to the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act. It would ensure federally recognized tribes could claim ancient remains even if a direct link to a tribe can't be proven. Tribes have pushed for a change to the law since the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2004...
 

Ancient Europe
Archaeologists Stumble On Sensational Find (7,500 YO Metal Tools)
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 10/04/2007 11:12:12 AM EDT · 20 replies · 1,007+ views


B92 | 10-4-2007
Archaeologists stumble on sensational find 4 October 2007 Prokuplje -- Serbian archaeologists found evidence of the what could be the oldest metal workshop in all of Europe. According to National Museum archaeologist Du?oan ?aljivar, experts found a "copper chisel and stone ax at a location near Prokuplje in which the foundation has proven to be 7,500 years old, leading us to believe that it was one of the first places in which metal weapons and tools were made in prehistory. Archaeologists hope that this find in southern Serbia will prove the theory that the metal age began a lot earlier..."
 

Scotland Yet
Burial chambers of the Neolithic
  Posted by Renfield
On General/Chat 10/05/2007 7:31:41 AM EDT · 7 replies · 113+ views


Current Archaeology
Clava Burial chambers of the Neolithic In the Neolithic - the New Stone Age - the older you were, the more important you were, and thus logically the dead were the most important of all. Ancestor worship became the centre of people's lives, and great emphasis was placed on the burial of the dead. Magnificent tombs where therefore built as houses for the dead. Some of the finest of these are the Clava cairns, in North East Scotland, near Inverness. Here stone chambers were built, and then stones were built up around them to form a mound, and a long...
 

Agriculture
[Mesa Verde] M. Verde repairs ruins in alcove
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 10/05/2007 11:57:42 AM EDT · 9 replies · 114+ views


Cortez Journal | September 29, 2007 | Shannon Livick
[A]rchaeologist Jim Hampson... is part of a four-person team of archaeologists working this fall to repair a wall that was crushed in late 2006 when a large slab of rock sheered off the alcove above and crushed a 12-foot-high wall and pierced another wall of a kiva... The rock that fell was estimated to weigh about 4.5 tons. Crews spent several weeks breaking up the boulder and hauling it away so they could begin documenting the damage and planning a route to repair. "It was a huge slab," archaeologist Tim Hovezak said. "We lost most of the north wall. You...
 

Stripes and Solids
Sabre-Toothed Tiger Was A Pussycat
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 10/01/2007 9:57:03 PM EDT · 38 replies · 18+ views


The Telegraph (UK) | 10-2-2007 | Roger Highfield
Sabre-toothed tiger was just a pussycat By Roger Highfield, Science Editor Last Updated: 12:01am BST 02/10/2007 It may have had some of the most ferocious teeth ever seen on a mammal but scientists say that the much feared sabre-tooth tiger was actually a bit of a pussycat. Smilodon, the sabre-tooth tiger, roamed across North and South America until 10,000 years ago Powerfully built, with upper canines like knives, the sabre-tooth tiger was a fearsome predator of Ice-Age America's lost giants, such as bison and horses, perhaps even mammoths. But while Smilodon ("knife tooth") may have had an impressive set of...
 

Sabretooth's surprising weak bite
  Posted by Renfield
On General/Chat 10/05/2007 10:34:36 AM EDT · 5 replies · 79+ views


BBC News | 10-02-07
The sabretooth tiger may have looked a fearsome sight with its massive canines but its reputation takes something of a knock with a new piece of research. Scientists who have studied the extinct creature's skull in detail say it had a relatively weak bite - compared with, say, a modern lion. And although those fangs must have been amazing killing implements, they made for a very restricted hunting strategy.....
 

PreColumbian, Clovis, and PreClovis
Canary expedition in search of the white stone llamas
  Posted by Fred Nerks
On News/Activism 10/03/2007 5:50:55 PM EDT · 39 replies · 566+ views


tenerifenews.com | updated August 11, 2007 | unattributed
A team of Canary investigators is currently in remotest Peru to study a startling new archaeological discovery which came to light recently in Choquequirao, an ancient Inca site which is being described in glowing terms as Machu Picchu's "twin town". The find consists of a line of white stone llamas embedded in massive terraced stone walls and which, it is thought, could well form part of the entrance to the sacred valley of the Incas. And make no mistake - the expedition to Choquequirao is no jolly. The three men and two women face a gruelling five days on foot...
 

Oh So Mysteriouso
Archeological Discovery in Ohio River Causes Debate [Indian's Head Rock]
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 10/03/2007 1:14:10 PM EDT · 23 replies · 332+ views


WSAZ | September 27, 2007 | Randy Yohe
A recent river recovery of an eight ton treasure was followed by angry claims of arch[a]eological thievery... After years of planning and weeks of effort, a Portsmouth, Ohio Volunteer Recovery Team pulled the prehistoric, legendary Indian's Head Rock off the mighty Ohio River's bottom... In the 18 and early 1900's before the days of locks and dams, the boulder would pop up every decade or so, depending on river levels the rock became a popular tourist attraction, a gilded age photo op, featured in post cards. Some of Portsmouth's most prominent citizens scratched their names in the sandstone. Some think...
 

Egypt
Ancient Pharaoh Temple Discovered Inside Egypt Mosque
  Posted by SunkenCiv
On General/Chat 10/03/2007 11:06:56 AM EDT · 11 replies · 198+ views


National Geographic | September 27, 2007 | Steven Stanek
The previously concealed architectural elements reveal well-preserved hieroglyphics and unique scenes depicting the powerful pharaoh. The discovery is likely to touch a nerve among religious leaders, because the newly exposed reliefs contain representations of humans and animals, which are forbidden inside mosques, the experts said. The mosque was erected as a shrine to Muslim saint Abul Haggag in the 13th century A.D. on the site of an earlier Christian church, which was itself built on top of the ancient temple, the archaeologists explained... Christians, and later Muslims, frequently built their shrines on top of ancient Egyptian holy sites, said W....
 

Let's Have Jerusalem
Radio-dating authenticates Biblical tunnel
  Posted by Aracelis
On News/Activism 09/23/2003 8:52:08 AM EDT · 15 replies · 239+ views


CBS News | Updated 10 Sep 2003 | CBC News Online staff
JERUSALEM - Scientists have found and radio-dated a tunnel described in the Bible. The books of Kings II and Chronicles II report the construction of the Siloam Tunnel during the reign of King Hezekiah, who ruled 2,700 years ago. It was built to move water from the Gihon spring into ancient Jerusalem, protecting the city's water supply in the event of an Assyrian siege. It has been difficult for scientists to verify modern equivalents of buildings mentioned in the Bible because specimens have been poorly preserved, hard to identify and access. Amos Frumkin of the geography department at the Hebrew...
 

Longer Perspectives
Earthquake Experts At Tel Aviv University Turn To History For Guidance
  Posted by blam
On News/Activism 10/04/2007 11:05:51 AM EDT · 12 replies · 205+ views


Tauac | 10-2-2007
Earthquake Experts at Tel Aviv University Turn to History for Guidance Tuesday, October 2, 2007 Ancient documents reveal devastating earthquake may threaten Middle East's near future Damage in Jerusalem's Old City following a July 11, 1927, earthquake. One of the first earthquakes on the Dead Sea Fault to be recorded by modern seismographic techniques, it reached 6.2 on the Richter scale. The epicenter was in the northern part of the Dead Sea. Photo credit: American Colony Hotel, American Colony Collection. The best seismologists in the world don't know when the next big earthquake will hit. But a Tel Aviv University...
 

Elam, Persia, Parthia, Iran
Tomb of Cyrus the Great under Threat in Iran
  Posted by freedom44
On News/Activism 10/05/2007 4:52:58 PM EDT · 8 replies · 445+ views


Moscow Times | 10/05/07 | Fredrik Dahl and Reza Derakhshi-Salmasi
PASARGADAE, Iran -- For the people protesting against it, a new dam near these sun-drenched ruins may be more than an environmental upheaval: In it they see an affront to the country's pre-Islamic identity. For 2,500 years, the tomb of Cyrus the Great has stood on the plain at Pasargadae, in southern Iran, a simple but dignified monument to a king revered as the founder of the mighty Persian empire. But some fear the dam and reservoir pose a threat to the ancient structure. They say the project may increase humidity in the arid area near the city of Shiraz,...
 

Ancient Autopsies
10 Most Fascinating Tombs in the World
  Posted by Renfield
On General/Chat 10/03/2007 5:44:57 PM EDT · 16 replies · 259+ views


Neatorama.com | 10-1-07
Throughout the history of human civilization, different cultures mourn and treat the dead differently. Some, like Tibetan Buddhists, have no use for burials as they dispose the dead by feeding corpses to vultures or by burning them in funeral pyres. Most cultures, however, show their respect by burying the dead, sometimes in complex and ornate tombs, crypts, and catacombs. This article takes a look at ten of the most fascinating final resting places around the world, from the largest prehistoric burial mound in Europe to the the tombs of pharaohs to the most beautiful mausoleum in the world:....
 

Rome and Italy
Ancient World Treasure Unearthed
  Posted by blam
On General/Chat 10/05/2007 1:57:39 PM EDT · 12 replies · 423+ views


BBC | 10-5-2007 | David Willey
Ancient world treasure unearthed By David Willey BBC News, Rome The head of a satyr was discovered during the dig After seven hot summers of digging, an Italian archaeological team believe they have discovered one of the most important sites of the ancient world. Fanum Voltumnae, a shrine, marketplace and Etruscan political centre, was situated in the upper part of the Tiber river valley. It lies at the foot of a huge outcrop of rock, upon which is perched the mediaeval city of Orvieto. A walled sanctuary area, 5m-wide (16ft) Etruscan roads, an altar, and the foundations of many Roman...
 

Middle Ages and Renaissance
Vatican paper set to clear Knights Templar
  Posted by Daffynition
On General/Chat 10/05/2007 4:44:50 AM EDT · 6 replies · 184+ views


The Telegraph | 05/10/2007 | Malcolm Moore
The mysteries of the Order of the Knights Templar could soon be laid bare after the Vatican announced the release of a crucial document which has not been seen for almost 700 years. A new book, Processus contra Templarios, will be published by the Vatican's Secret Archive on Oct 25, and promises to restore the reputation of the Templars, whose leaders were burned as heretics when the order was dissolved in 1314. The Knights Templar were a powerful and secretive group of warrior monks during the Middle Ages. Their secrecy has given birth to endless legends, including one that they...
 

Vatican book on Templars' demise
  Posted by NYer
On News/Activism 10/05/2007 4:44:55 PM EDT · 112 replies · 2,065+ views


BBC | October 5, 2007
The Vatican is to publish a book which is expected to shed light on the demise of the Knights Templar, a Christian military order from the Middle Ages. The book is based on a document known as the Chinon parchment, found in the Vatican Secret Archives six years ago after years of being incorrectly filed. The document is a record of the heresy hearings of the Templars before Pope Clement V in the 14th Century. The official who found the paper says it exonerates the knights entirely. Prof Barbara Frale, who stumbled across the parchment by mistake, says that...
 

Climate
Caribbean Forests Thrived In 'Little Ice Age'
  Posted by blam
On General/Chat 10/01/2007 10:20:31 PM EDT · 4 replies


New Scientist | 10-1-2007 | Jeff Hecht
Caribbean forests thrived in 'Little Ice Age' 22:00 01 October 2007 NewScientist.com news service Jeff Hecht Some Caribbean forests were at their densest for the past 2000 years during the 'Little Ice Age', new research shows. This forest growth was not expected, because other areas in the region were cool and dry, but the curious finding shows that the effects of climate change can vary from place to place, say researchers. From approximately 1350 to 1850, the Little Ice Age cooled low latitudes and dried the Caribbean including the Yucatan Peninsula. So you might expect to see evidence of this...
 

Was There a 15th-Century "Little" Medieval Warm Period?
  Posted by PeaceBeWithYou
On News/Activism 07/04/2004 8:37:51 PM EDT · 18 replies · 1,358+ views


CO2 Science Magazine | June 30, 2004 | Sherwood, Keith and Craig Idso
Volume 7, Number 26: 30 June 2004 In one of the more intriguing aspects of his study of global climate change over the past three millennia - of which he amazingly makes no particular mention - Loehle (2004) presents a graph of the Sargasso Sea and South African temperature records of Keigwin (1996) and Holmgren et al. (1999, 2001) that reveals the existence of a major spike in surface air temperature that began sometime in the early 1400s. This abrupt and anomalous warming pushed global air temperatures considerably above the peak warmth of the 20th century, after which they fell...
 

Early America
Pony Express to ride again
  Posted by SandRat
On General/Chat 10/01/2007 8:59:40 PM EDT · 3 replies


Sierra Vista Herald/Review | Adam Bernal
BENSON -- The Pony Express will ride again during Butterfield Stage Days on Oct. 13, and the U.S. Postal Service will issue a special postmark to commemorate the event. At noon, special Pony Express riders will be sworn in by Postmaster Lesley Tower in a ceremony in Lions Park. They will carry the mail from Benson to the Dragoon post office, arriving in Dragoon around 3:30 p.m. The Benson post office will offer a special postmark commemorating the 22nd Annual Pony Express Ride. The postmark, which features a Butterfield Overland Stagecoach design, will be available from 9 a.m. to noon...
 

Thoroughly Modern Miscellany
Goodbye Mr Burns: Ken Burns' "The War"
  Posted by american_ranger
On News/Activism 10/01/2007 8:59:05 PM EDT · 216 replies · 22+ views


Dear Mr Burns; I just turned off my TV. I have watched 5 of your episodes on WWII. I have defended your negativism by posting positive comments on several blogs. But tonight is the end. Your blatant anti-Americanism propaganda in repeating bullshit about a recent West Point graduate being a battalion commander and ordering American soldiers to execute German POWs is way over the line. Recent West Point graduates are 2nd Lieutenants (O1). Bn Commanders are normally LTC(O5) or Majors (O4). You sir, are a commie pinko. Maybe you should get a haircut and a real job. I will never...
 

end of digest #168 20071006

617 posted on 10/06/2007 8:58:17 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Profile updated Friday, October 5, 2007. https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/)
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