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Incredible Discoveries Made in Remote Caves
LiveScience ^
| 31 July 2008
| Robert Roy Britt, LiveScience Managing Editor
Posted on 08/02/2008 2:58:56 AM PDT by Fred Nerks
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Image of ungulate bones observed in the walls of Cuevita de Huesos. The team found "hundreds of thousands of bones and skulls eroding out of the cave walls." Credit: J. Wynne et al. Advertisement
To: Fred Nerks
2
posted on
08/02/2008 3:15:50 AM PDT
by
Leisler
To: Fred Nerks
ungulate bonesNot very specific is it? Are we talking horses, pigs, cattle, goats, deer, camels, or what?
To: Lucius Cornelius Sulla
The findings are preliminary and have not been analyzed.
4
posted on
08/02/2008 3:26:29 AM PDT
by
Fred Nerks
(fair dinkum!)
To: Fred Nerks
I suspect that cave detection technology would be useful in other places right here on earth... like the western territories of Pakistan for example.
5
posted on
08/02/2008 3:31:38 AM PDT
by
Ron/GA
To: Lucius Cornelius Sulla
All of them. Which leads us again to #2.
6
posted on
08/02/2008 3:37:39 AM PDT
by
SolidWood
(Obamarxislamism, the threat to our Republic!)
To: SunkenCiv; neverdem; blam
7
posted on
08/02/2008 3:38:22 AM PDT
by
djf
(Locusts? Locusts??! What a podunk plague! Let me tell you about the Bernankes...)
To: djf
8
posted on
08/02/2008 3:54:20 AM PDT
by
Fred Nerks
(fair dinkum!)
To: Lucius Cornelius Sulla
ungulate bones/ Dino found.
9
posted on
08/02/2008 3:55:32 AM PDT
by
Vaduz
(and just think how clean the cities would become again.)
To: Fred Nerks
Shueee! Don’t tell Al Gore. He might want to add this to his slide show:
What Causes Deserts?
Atacama Desert in Chile
One reason is that the high atmospheric pressure in this region over the Andes can cause dry, cold air from the upper altitudes to compress and come down to earth. This dry air has almost no water vapor so it can be easily heated by the sun, causing high ground temperatures with very low humidity.
10
posted on
08/02/2008 4:35:28 AM PDT
by
CHEE
(Stink, Steam and All)
To: Vaduz
Drill Atacama. Drill now.
11
posted on
08/02/2008 4:44:19 AM PDT
by
Ghost of Philip Marlowe
(If Hillary is elected, her legacy will be telling the American people: Better put some ice on that.)
To: Leisler
12
posted on
08/02/2008 5:00:43 AM PDT
by
LibLieSlayer
(REAGANISM... NOT communism!!!)
To: Fred Nerks
"We found hundreds of thousands of bones and skulls eroding out of the cave walls," Wynne wrote in his blog. "So, weve renamed this small cave Cuevita de Huesos (or Small Cave of the Bones)."
The researchers had to climb about 13 feet up to find a walkable passage.
"This is where we found all the bones mixed in with tree branches," Wynne wrote.
It's not clear if the animals were dumped into the cave by prehistoric people or if perhaps they were trapped by a flood.
Trapped by a flood or, mixed in with tree branches, the consolidated flotsam of a flood?
13
posted on
08/02/2008 5:39:29 AM PDT
by
aruanan
To: Ron/GA
"I suspect that cave detection technology would be useful in other places right here on earth... like the western territories of Pakistan for example."An EXCELLENT IDEA!!! Maybe you should forward the info to the CIA.
14
posted on
08/02/2008 6:33:47 AM PDT
by
LZ_Bayonet
(There's Always Something.............And there's always something worse!)
To: Fred Nerks; blam; StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; ...
15
posted on
08/02/2008 6:58:21 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_________________________Profile updated Friday, May 30, 2008)
To: SunkenCiv
i don’t understand what’s so “incredible” about finding water in caves.
dry caves, in deserts often have water.
in fact, i’m not a geologist, but having hiked a lot in socal and arizona
i notice water seeping out of cracks of rocks even on the outside of mountains.
very slow. who knows how long it takes water to move under the pressure from the weight of rocks.
16
posted on
08/02/2008 7:09:28 AM PDT
by
ken21
(people die and you never hear from them again.)
To: ken21
......who knows how long it takes water to move under the pressure from the weight of rocks.....
If you believe Tony Hillerman, and I do, the Hopi know. They mark the seeps as shrines and monitor them.
In one of his novels involving an air plane crash near Second Mesa, on land disputed by Hopi and Navajo, Jim Chee investigated the sabotage of a new wind mill. The sabotage was by a Hopi who observed the decrease in seepage from an ancient nearby seep.
17
posted on
08/02/2008 7:40:55 AM PDT
by
bert
(K.E. N.P. +12 . Conservation? Let the NE Yankees freeze.... in the dark)
To: Fred Nerks
It's not clear if the animals were dumped into the cave by prehistoric people or if perhaps they were trapped by a flood. After all, the expedition is related to figuring out the thermal signatures of Mars caves, and the finding was made just this week. Maybe they used the cave for drinking water, lived out their lives near the cave, and died there.
To: bert
19
posted on
08/02/2008 9:50:24 AM PDT
by
ken21
(people die and you never hear from them again.)
To: aruanan; SunkenCiv
If these bones were somehow flushed into the cave by water, wouldn’t this mean we’ve found the sewage terminus for South America comparable to New Jersey in North America?
20
posted on
08/02/2008 10:04:26 AM PDT
by
wildbill
( FR---changing history by erasing it from memory.)
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