Posted on 08/31/2005 10:04:35 AM PDT by wildbill
An Early Bronze Age grave In the spring of 2002 what started as a routine excavation was undertaken in advance of the building of a new school at Amesbury in Wiltshire. By the end of the excavation the richest Bronze Age burial yet found in Britain had been discovered. The Bronze Age man discovered there had been buried not far from the great temple of Stonehenge. He was a man who owned and could work the new and magical metals of gold and copper. And he had come from what is now central Europe, perhaps around the Alps. Was he a king of Stonehenge?
(Excerpt) Read more at bbc.co.uk ...
Chuckling here, as one who has lived in England, and understands the significance of that sentence. But thanks for posting this. A good read.
Congressman Billybob
Latest column: "NY Post: Better a Bad Story than None as All (Able Danger)"
How 'bout that articulated instep? I have a hard time visualizing that, but it seems it would make it difficult to climb or jump. Never heard of such a thing.
Very very cool.
He must have been a Republican!
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Note: this topic is from August 31, 2005. Thanks wildbill. |
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Ya know something. Maybe the great changes in world history and regional communities of tribes were actually the result of traders, craftsmen (smiths for one)and businessmen bringing new technologies in and local procucts out.
Adam Smith was right about the ‘invisible hand.’
:’)
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