Posted on 09/24/2001 1:40:07 PM PDT by blam
September 23 2001 MIDDLE EAST
Galilee drought uncovers oldest village in the world
Dina Shiloh Tel Aviv
ISRAELI archeologists have found what could be the world's oldest village on the dried-out bed of the Sea of Galilee. The settlement, dating back 20,000 years, came to light in one of the worst droughts in recent years.
Thousands of items including huts, tools and fireplaces found at Ohalo, on the southwestern shore, give a unique insight into the semi-nomadic people who lived there towards the end of the early Stone Age.
"We found what every researcher dreams of finding," said Dani Nadel, who leads the Haifa University excavation team, "items used in everyday life, and small artefacts that tell us things we never even dreamed about in regard to the technology, society and environment of these people."
The items are in almost perfect condition because the water that covered them prevented decay. Nadel said the large quantities of seeds and other organic materials meant carbon-14 testing could be used to date them accurately.
"Usually dwellings from this period are not preserved, and we do not know how many they were, where they stood, the number, size, and orientation of their fireplaces, or how the living area was arranged," he said. "Here we found the most ancient huts in the world."
The brush huts - less than 2ft apart - were made with branches of oak and tamarisk trees, with the cracks stuffed with shrubs and grasses.
"These nomads ate mostly fish and fruit," Nadel said. "We are talking about 9,000 years before the beginning of agriculture, before the domestication of animals or plants. But we did find hundreds of thousands of fish bones, so they were fishermen. They also knew how to hunt water fowl, ravens, birds of prey, and even animals like the gazelle, fallow deer, fox, hare and turtle."
The team also found the skeleton of a man. Aged about 40 when he died and just over 5ft tall, he had his hands folded across his chest. Only one other skeleton from this period has been discovered in Israel.
Haifa University intends to display some of the treasures from Ohalo next year. The excavation ended last month and the team has left plenty of material for other archeologists to find when scientific techniques have become more developed.
"The finds unearthed by our team could serve as research material for each and every one of us until we retire," Nadel said. "But we should leave future archeologists things to discover, too."
http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs2001/0321acc_beta_decay.asp
So if the village wasn't built by humans, who was it? The Smurfs? A reverse of Planet of the Apes?
All kidding aside, let's hope the global warming fanatics don't latch onto this one as a sign that global warming exists (Although it would be a poor argument against global warming since it's taken 20,000 years to uncover the village, and had it been uncovered and recovered at any point I'm sure there wouldn't be much left and global warming is supposed to have been going on for a while).
Right. Carbon 14 dating is only good out to 50,000 years or so. Due to the halflife, don't you know?
So it did! spit on someone and they will respond.... Your manners are bad. Keep your spit in your mouth. I don't like it on me, and I am sure that your spit that drips off of other religous FReepers don't think highly of it either.
I used to have a higher opinion of Vermonters. You must be a flatlander. Go figure.
Ashland, Missouri
Well, he did say he would target those with a global reach, and they have been traveling to foreign countries to protest trade conferences...
I really don't think he'll want to have the US labeled as an exporter of terrorism while he's attacking other countries for that self-same thing. I think it might be high time to start adding the environmental and anti-trade organizations to the list of financially embargoed groups.
The snippets I posted indicated that the calibrations from independent sources show that the error was in the opposite direction. Items dated prior to calibration for the changes in C-14 rates of absorption are much too young.
Ah, Thomas G. Barnes 1973 ICR technical monograph? An old chestnut... I'm surprised that YECs are still using it! One of the main reasons for rejecting the theory is that the earth's magnetic field periodically reverses itself (asrecorded in sea floor sedments), thus of course rendering any unidirectional extrapolation on field strength useless.
Here's a useful discussion on it.
By the way, here's how to make links:
<a href="http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/magfields.html">Click here</a>
Or, if you want to make the page open in a new window:
<a href="http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/magfields.html" target="_blank">Click here</a>
You mean like 1600 year old Buddha statues.
http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-age-of-earth.html
;-)
You can, of course, produce all the geological evidence to support these ideas?
Jeez, I wouldn't have thought that the industrial pollution in those days would have been enough to trigger the type of global warming they must have had then!
8')
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