Posted on 03/29/2014 9:14:22 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
This^
But what if it was cloudy??
LOL
Thanks!
Or maybe Snojet.
It’s interesting that the Phaistos Disk, which was excavated on Crete, was found to have been inscribed using dies, iow, movable type. No other examples of the disk have been found AFAIK, but time will tell. Sometime in the last 15 or so years one scholar claimed that the Phaistos Disk was a modern forgery, I wonder if the claim grew out of the use of dies.
navigation ping
Probably grew out of the desire to diss the maker(s) of the Disk, and make himself seem smarter. I, for one, do not discount or disrespect ANYthing found that indicates intelligence and innovation.
There are many possibilities for this “newfound data,” not the least of which is “alien intelligence.” We don’t know that there is no such thing, and we can’t discount a Higher Power aka Angels, who guide our thinking in ways that will help us.
So when I hear of someone who “pooh-pooh’s” the items found, I have to laugh at their ignorance and closed minds. Anything is possible.
Loki built one of these for Ragnar Lodbrok in season 1.
All you have to do is read the personal letters of people from a few hundred years ago to realize how much more literate and intelligent they were than the average iPhone user of today.
No lie. Bigger words, more complex sentences, and much better defined sense of the fitness of things, personal, spiritual and communal.
A small population from Scndinavia was vey successful for a few hundred years.
They invaded then merged in the British Isles. They conquered then merged into northern France. William the Conqueror who in 1066 took over England was a Viking descendant.
They went far into Russia and Asia, started the Kievan Rus culture, which is the basis for Russia that followed.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kievan_Rus%27
They sailed into the Mediterranean, and made an empire from southern Italy to Turkey.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_conquest_of_southern_Italy
They sailed to north America. You all know that story.
Few cultures can boast the influence achieved by such a small population. Today the Scandinavian countries’ population is less than 20 million. At home in the face of a hostile climate, they prosper as few others do.
I had high hopes for that series. They really let me down.
Chinese and Greeks used lodestones for navigation 3,000 years ago- these guys are morons-,
Magnesia in Greece was famous for lodestones=
Homer`s “The Iliad”, describes the 12 points of the magnetic compass as 12 ancient greek cities that are located on the 12 points-
duhh gimme a break
bunchA MORONS\”schulars”
Sums it up better than I ever could. Well said.
Archaeologists and anthropogists do not own boats.
That is my conclusion after 60 years of watching non sailors commenting on people and cultures who sailed continuously.
Free clue: Sailors sail. All the time. Whenever possible. 3 days on the sea is not death defying high adventure but merely a fun sail.
The attraction of the lodestone to iron was known in Greece in the 7th century BC. The Greeks didn’t use a compass, they judged the direction traveled by the winds.
The Chinese discovered that the Earth has a magnetic field about 2000 years ago, but noticed that it didn’t point to true north a few centuries later, probably as a consequence of widespread seagoing trade during the time when Roman Empire and Han China were at their peaks, a period that has been described as the happiest time the Earth has ever known. Of course, they didn’t have streaming vid back then.
The Han court records record a visit from a Roman trade expedition during the time of Marcus Aurelius. At another time the Chinese sent an ambassador toward Rome, by sea; unfortunately they wound up in the Persian Gulf and did some trading with the locals there instead.
The early European compasses consisted of a magnetic sliver stuck through a couple of small pieces of cork to make it float on water. After 1492 the deviation of magnetic north from true north was rediscovered.
http://www.magnet.fsu.edu/education/tutorials/timeline/600bc-1599.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_compass_winds#Homer
http://www.freerepublic.com/tag/antikytheramechanism/index
What you say??!!! Fire isn’t just a weapon of mass destruction??!!
Just a reminder that lodestones, or any other magnetic device, is less effective in the polar regions.
The Scandinavians had a big population explosion as a consequence of the Medieval warming; Viking-era farmsteads are found (as ruins) both farther north and at higher altitudes than are viable today.
They controlled a long route based on rivers and portages, and worked for the Byzantine emperors as the Varangian Guard, becoming both wealthy and powerful. That went on for a couple centuries.
Hardrada was working for the Byzantine general tasked with pushing the Saracens out of Sicily; the Saracens broke up pottery behind them to prevent a cavalry charge, so Hardrada had his cavalry wrap the horse’s hooves with palm fronds cut from the nearby trees, and charged them anyway.
The later Norman kingdom in Sicily didn’t last long, only two generations.
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