Posted on 10/13/2019 4:19:08 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
It was the lead solder in the radiators that did it -- but it also added a sweet taste to the moonshine.
Hey, when one's history is entirely imaginary, there's no limit to how far back it can go! ;^).
A rose-red city half as old as Time.
One billion years ago the city's age
Was just two-fifths of what Time's age will be
A billion years from now. Can you compute
How old the crimson city is today?
-- Martin Gardner
I was curious about that. And I’m sure they retrofitted used radiators full of good gunk and chemicals also.
Didn’t the Romans accidentally add lead to their wine using lead vessels? Or was that a myth? I read this many times but was never sure.
I am also anxious to learn about this aspect of the find. I think it a bit curious that the IAA has failed to name the site. I hope that does not portend a quick excavation and dismissal in favor of modern road building.
Prehistoric bootleggers... I like that. :)
A model Tet? Offensive!
The original pet rocks.
Eventually it was replaced by a second Model Aleph.
Yes, that move was even bolder.
Someone saddled on the idea that lead plumbing caused the fall of Rome, and some people just cling like a dingleberry to the whole lead poisoning idea. There aren't a lot of human remains from the Roman Empire that have been known about for more than a few decades (most of them come from Herculaneum) and I very much doubt that anyone has looked for possible lead poisoning. It's a given that NO evidence for lead poisoning was obtained prior to the emergence of the notion itself.
OF course, back then they were called sandalleggers. That's probably when the AA concept of a "barefoot meeting" originated.
Sounds like they're doing a thorough job -- also, the dig has probably been going on for a while (at least a few years), but this is the first I'd read about it. Must be they finally have some dates to publish, that kind of thing.
I have a file on it on my desktop. CBN (Pat Robertson) and a scientific journal (?) did a story on it in the past few weeks. There have been questions why the site remains unnamed - other than New York of the ancient Levant... Look that up in your concordance. :)
Of course there are no records from 5K BCE to identify urban remains, but the top levels might appear in Egyptian or even Greek records. Phoenician? ...or just a modern name: The Interchange Impressway?
***sandalleggers***
Good point! 😉
The site may have been abandoned (well, obviously, eh? ;^) well before anyone from literate areas wandered in. Best shot might be Eblaite records, assuming that this "NY" site was large enough and prosperous enough when/if their existences overlapped..
In another article on this find, it is stated that the entire site will soon be paved over as part of an enormous vehicle interchange.
They'd better get a move on then.
Thanks, and glad I looked for more -- that is pretty cool:
IAA archaeologists also discovered an earlier, 7,000-year-old Chalcolithic settlement under several of the 5,000-year-old structures... Salvage excavations have been taking place at the site for the past two and a half years, financed by Netivei Israel the National Transport Infrastructure Company Ltd. Over 5,000 high school students and volunteers from the area have participated in them. Due to the importance of the site, Netivei Israel has significantly increased the height of the planned interchange and will preserve the excavations through high-tech documentation and physical conservation.
...megalopolis may rewrite history. Uncovered in northern Israel, Ein Esur, largest Early Bronze Age settlement ever excavated here...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.