Terrestrial Archaeology, Marine Archaeology & Astro-Archaeology News Headlines Archive August 2013

The Morien Institute - The events of July 16th to 22nd 1994, when the remnants of a fragmenting comet, P/Shoemaker-Levy 9, bombarded the surface of Jupiter causing fireballs many times the size of our own planet, were an abrupt wake-up call even for those who were aware of them. The historical sciences generally, and archæology in particular, have collectively painted a picture of the past as if our planet stands alone in empty space. Nothing could be further from reality. Our resilient planet exists in a solar system that has experienced a very dynamic history over the past 20 to 30 millennia, and it is only from this wider solar system perspective that the true history of human civilisation will ever be fully understood. The Morien Institute archive therefore contains relevant material from many disciplines.

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Image of a revolving globe showing current sea levels since the last ice age, before which many ancient societies like Atlantis flourished all over planet Earth on what are now sunken lands.



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As we enter the 21st century technological advances are coming to the aid of scientists of all descriptions. But it will likely be the Marine Archæologists, whose discoveries on the continental shelves that were once the coastal plains of the archaic world that will most significantly change our picture of the past. We cannot go on thinking of the past from the scant knowledge available to us from excavations of the remains of ancient peoples discovered solely on the dry land we now live on.


This dry land comprises just 29% of the total surface area of our planet and the remaining 71% is currently ocean. Over the last 15 years The Morien Institute has been carefully documenting as much information about new discoveries underwater as we can find, and The Morien Institute Marine Archæology Archive gives just a glimpse of the many recent discoveries showing evidence of sometimes vast coastal settlements that were inundated by the seas in ancient times.


During the last Ice Age the sea-levels were more than 300 feet lower than they are today, and a wide band either side of the equator enjoyed a pleasant enough climate for human civilisation to have flourished in many parts of the world. When the sea levels rose as the ice sheets melted many coastal settlements disappeared under the waves – forgotten except in the oral traditions of peoples in every land. These oral traditions represent an invaluable archive of knowledge from the archaic world, but they are almost always dismissed by academic archæologists and prehistorians who have traditionally regarded them simply as ‘quaint myths’ which they claimed have no bearing on reality.


But that is a very foolish perspective. What remains of the oral traditions of the many ancient societies that once developed on our planet must be preserved at all costs so that future peoples can study the wisdom of ancient peoples with an open mind that was sadly absent from 20th century academic thinking. These oral traditions are now acknowledged as being the invaluable “Indigenous Knowledge” of ancient peoples, and represent a collective understanding of the natural world that had developed through careful observation over countless millennia. Despite the scepticism expressed in some academic disciplines, we cannot afford to let this ancient knowledge die out simply because the supposed “experts” of today cannot understand it.


Neither can we continue to look at the prehistory of human societies and civilisations as if our planet somehow stands alone in empty space. Nothing could be further from reality. Our immediate solar system environment is more of a cosmic shooting gallery’ than a vast expanse of emptiness, and a great body of evidence is building which shows that the environmental impact of encounters with comets, asteroids and cometary debris has been responsible for the destruction of numerous ancient civilisations on many occasions in the archaic world over the past 10 to 20 millennia.


Throughout the last few hundred years, and quite probably before that, individual researchers ranging from the eccentric ‘Gentleman Antiquarians’ of the 17 & 1800s to the so-called ‘dissident professors’ of the 20th century have pursued lines of enquiry which has horrified general academia. Those individuals were ridiculed and vociferously opposed by academic archæologists and prehistorians who had often invested a lifetime’s work in what the more honest amongst them might reluctantly admit in private company to have been a totally inaccurate view of human prehistory.


Theories that many megalithic sites began life as some form of observatories acting as ‘early-warning systems’ for imminent impacts of cosmic debris from the break up of a giant comet have been emerging over the last 30 years or so. Evidence supporting these theories is helping not only to date some of these monuments, but also illustrates how well their builders were oriented in time and space. A new appreciation that our ancestors were acutely aware that the Earth orbited the Sun, and that it periodically encountered streams of cometary debris, suggests that ancient peoples understood the dynamics of the solar system to a far greater degree than has previously been acknowledged.


Dr. Duncan Steel, then of Spaceguard Australia, presented a paper to the Society for Inter-Disciplinary Studies conference at Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, in July of 1997, in which he gave details of his research suggesting that the earlier ‘henge circle’ which preceded the stone circles at Stonehenge could have been deliberately constructed to function as a ‘cosmic impact early warning system’. His paper, “Before the Stones: Stonehenge I as a Cometary Catastrophe Predictor” is must reading for all serious students of ancient astronomy, astro-archæology and prehistory.


The Cambridge Conference focussed primarily on the effects of natural catastrophes resulting from the impacts of cometary debris. These impacts were presented as being the likely causes of the sudden collapse and in many cases the total destruction of various Bronze Age civilisations, giving rise to radical cultural changes, and to a number of new religions with accompanying astro-mythologies that had hitherto been impossible for academia to understand.


The simultaneous collapse of these civilizations has long puzzled archæologists and prehistorians as the vast areas affected ran right across the ‘fertile crescent’ destroying the most advanced societies of the time, ranging in distance from Greece and Anatolia through to Mesopotamia and Afghanistan and continuing eastwards to encompass India and Central Asia.


The cause of this most perplexing ‘Bronze Age Event’ around 2350 – 2300 BC has only recently become clear as a wide variety of assorted ‘ologists from various disciplines have begun reviewing the mythologies of the time. What they have found throughout numerous inter-disciplinary studies are the accurate observations of ancient skywatchers describing cosmic bombardment and flooding which in every case, and in every region, came directly from the ancient skies.


These natural cosmic catastrophes were recorded by all ancient societies and passed down through many generations to become the oral traditions that are held sacred by the peoples whose ancestors directly experienced them, but which are often dismissed as being ‘quaint myths that have no bearing on reality’ by so-called scholars who have never even tried to understand them. Bombardment of our planet by cosmic debris is, like all things in the natural world, a cyclical phenomenon. It has happened many times in the past, and if we dismiss the records kept by ancient peoples simply because they were recorded in a language that our modern scientists cannot understand, then we will not be prepared when it happens again.


The sophistication and unprecedented accuracy of the astronomical phenomena that was an integral part of almost all of the megalithic structures that have been discovered on most continents suggests a long period of development, yet academic archæologists and prehistorians have been at a loss to expain them. Most have simply ignored the astronomy, or made idiotic statements about ancient peoples not being capable of that level of understanding, but there they are for all the world to see.


In October 1900, Captain Dimitrious Kondos was leading a team of sponge divers near the island of Antikythera off the coast of Greece. They noticed a shipwreck about 180 feet below the surface and began to investigate. Amongst the artifacts that they brought up was a coral-encrusted piece of metal that later archæologists found was some sort of gear wheel. The rest of the artifacts, along with the shape of the boat, suggested a date around 2000 years ago, which made the find one of the most anomalous that had ever been recovered from the Greek seas. It became known as “The Antikythera Mechanism”.


In 2006 the journal “Nature” published a letter, and a full paper about the mechanism was published in 2008, detailing the findings of Prof. Mike G. Edmunds of Cardiff University. Using high-resolution computed tomography to study the fragments of the anomalous Antikythera Mechanism, they found that it was in fact a bronze mechanical analog computer that could be used to calculate the astronomical positions and various cycles of the Moon – as seen from the Earth.


This incredible discovery is indisputable evidence that ancient peoples were far more capable of understanding the cyclical nature of heavenly bodies than they had previously been given credit for, and
“The Antikythera Mechanism Research Project”
showed they could also construct devices which could predict them. There was much discussion about its supposed anomalous nature, but it is only anomalous if viewed in isolation or in the context of a completely inaccurate view of prehistory. In the context of the astronomical knowledge embedded into megalithic structures a long period of development becomes evident, and is deserving of radical review in light of the discovery of The Antikythera Mechanism.


Over the past 15 years The Morien Institute has archived new archæological discoveries as well as new interpretations of old archæological discoveries. In our news pages we list many items that may not seem directly related to a better understanding of what our ancestors saw and experienced in ancient skies. But astromythology and its interpretation, and constant review of our poor appreciation of the scientific achievements of our ancestors remains the common theme that we feel ties most of them together. It is only an open-minded approach to prehistory, and a willingness to accept what is found rather then attempting to make new discoveries fit into some pre-conceived paradigm, that will help us gain a better understanding of our ancient past than is currently taught in our schools, colleges and universities.


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Morien Institute News Headlines Archive for
2013

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Marine Archæology News Archive |
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Marine Archæology 2013 News |
Astro-Archæology 2013 News

 


Lunar Phases
 


 


Top August 2013 New Discoveries


“Archaeologists discovered a unique woman figurine in Silesia”

   

“European hunter-gatherers owned pigs as early as 4600 BC”

   

“Early South Americans conquered the Atacama desert”

   

“Meteorite Beads Oldest Example of Metalwork”

   

“Fragments of Mayan Jaguar Sculptures Found in El Salvador”

   

“Nara researcher finds oldest weights in Japan”

   

“Handaxe design reveals distinct Neanderthal cultures”

   

“Climate change may have caused demise of Late Bronze Age civilizations”

   

“Human occupation of Madagascar pushed back 2500 years”

   

“Bone tools found at Neanderthal site”

   

“Mayan frieze found in Guatemala”

   

“Vizhinjam: Once a port, always a port”

   

“Evidence Points to Human Settlement in London 9,000 Years Ago”

   

“Rich Thracian tomb with lion-goat ornament discovered in Sliven”

   

“7,000 years old metal ring found near Prokuplje”

   

“Laois ‘bog body’ said to be world’s oldest”

   

“Ice core data supports ancient space impact idea”

   

“5,000-year-old Neolithic art found in Orkney dig”

   

“Mystery deepens in coffin-within-a-coffin found at Richard III site”

   

“Ancient Text May Have Been Written in Hebrew”

   

“Archeologists claim to have found ‘piece of Jesus’ cross’ at church excavations in Turkey”

   

“Sacred Cenotes: Secrets of the Maya Otherworld”

   

“The Antikythera Mechanism Research Project”

   


 


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News Headlines Digest
August 2013


“Valuable findings of Polish archaeologists in Sudan”

Nauka w Polsce (Poland)


“First Scottish Iron Age ‘loch village’ found in Wigtownshire”

BBC News (UK)


“1,300-year-old monastic site hailed the new Clonmacnoise by archaeologists”

Irish Independent (Ireland)


“Revealing the mysteries of Kosovo’s Roman ruins”

EuroNews (Kosovo)


“Mexican archaeologists discover twenty-eight flint knives adorned as warriors”

Art Daily (USA)



“Archaeologists discovered a unique woman figurine in Silesia”

Nauka w Polsce (Poland)


“Four thousand year old sheepskin recovered from burial cist in Sutherland”

Past Horizons (UK)


“Canaanite Ritual Stone Discovered in Northern Israel”

The Jewish Press (Israel)


“Bulgarian archaeologists find Roman-era frigidarium in Bourgas”

The Sofia Globe (Bulgaria)


“Feasting and fighting: the long-lost secrets of Beowulf”

The Independent (UK)


“Archeologists discover two stone sculptures at Chavin de Huantar in Ancash”

Peru This Week (Peru)



“European hunter-gatherers owned pigs as early as 4600 BC”

EurekAlert (USA)



“European hunter-gatherers acquired domesticated pigs from nearby farmers as early as 4600BC, according to new evidence.

The international team of scientists, including researchers at Durham and Aberdeen universities, showed there was interaction between the hunter-gatherer and farming communities and a ‘sharing’ of animals and knowledge.

The interaction between the two groups eventually led to the hunter-gatherers incorporating farming and breeding of livestock into their culture, say the scientists.

The research, published in Nature Communications today (27 August), gives new insights into the movements of pre-historic humans and the transition of technologies and knowledge.”


[Full Story]


“Artifacts in northern Quebec could be 7,000 years old”

CBC News (Canada)


“2,000-Year-Old Bear Ring Found In Siberia, Used In Ancient ‘Bear Cult’”

International Business Times (India)


“Scientists Discover Earliest Human Presence in Bolivian Amazon”

Popular Archaeology (USA)


“Groundbreaking discovery of archaeologists in Woszczowa”

Nauka w Polsce (Poland)


“Prehistoric Meteorite ‘Shrines’ in Arizona May Be Linked, Says Archaeo-Astronomer”

Western Digs (USA)


“Archaeologists Find Israel Was Land of Milk, Honey – and Cinnamon”

The Jewish Press (Israel)


“Tomb find confirms powerful women ruled Peru long ago”

PhysOrg (USA)


“Ancient Libyan necropolis threatened by real estate speculators”

France 24 (France)


“Giant prehistoric fish grew to 16 metres, scientists claim”

The Irish Times (Ireland)


“Fossil Insects Tweak Date of Deadly ‘Atlantis’ Eruption”

National Geographic Daily News (USA)


“Excavations at Byzantine castle in Istanbul reveal 80 artifacts”

Hürriyet Daily News (Turkey)



“Early South Americans conquered the Atacama desert”

New Scientist (UK)



“The heart of the Atacama Desert is the driest place on Earth. But that didn’t prevent the first settlers of South America from setting up home there more than 12,000 years ago.

Aside from Antarctica, South America was the last continent that modern humans colonised, says Claudio Latorre of the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile in Santiago.

The first settlers arrived from North America at least 14,000 years ago, but their route south is a mystery. Most researchers assume they travelled through fertile corridors, perhaps down the west coast where seafood was plentiful, at least until you hit the desert.

‘Extreme environments, such as the Atacama, were naturally assumed to be barriers’, says Latorre. ‘This was not the case.'”


[Full Story]
|

[Journal Reference]


“Archaeological Survey of India ready to unveil Tamils-Chinese links”

Deccan Chronicle (India)



“Meteorite Beads Oldest Example of Metalwork”

National Geographic Daily News (USA)


“Archaeologists race to save Gaza’s ancient ruins”

The Daily Telegraph (Australia)


“There’s Now Evidence That Other Europeans Beat the Vikings to the North Atlantic”

Smithsonian Blog (USA)


“Archaeologist identifies rare terracotta find”

The Hindu (India)


“Phytoliths in Pottery Reveal the Use of Spice in European Prehistoric Cuisine”

PLoS ONE (USA)


“Ancient stone circle discovered in Ukraine”

PAP (Poland)


“Earliest Known Iron Artifacts Come from Outer Space”

Science Daily (USA)


“3,000-year-old nomad shields excavated in China”

Business Standard (India)


“Wooden head ‘clue to wreck mystery’”

IOL (South Africa)


“Neolithic settlement reconstructed”

News From Poland (Poland)


“Neanderthals More Culturally Complex Than Previously Acknowledged, Says Researcher”

NewsRoom America (USA)



“Fragments of Mayan Jaguar Sculptures Found in El Salvador”

Latin American Herald Tribune (Venezuela)



“At least 160 fragments of sculptures, possibly of jaguars, were discovered by specialists in the archaeological park of Cihuatan, located in central El Salvador, the Culture Secretariat said.

The remains come from ‘five or six feline sculptures’, found along with pieces of two censers, the secretariat said in a statement.

Archaeologists of the secretariat and of El Salvador’s private National Archaeology Foundation, or FUNDAR, made the discoveries during excavations carried out between February and May but not announced until now, officials said.

The fragments were found in a structure built against the perimetric wall of the Cihuatan ceremonial center, a site of Mayan origin located some 36 kilometers (22 miles) from Aguilares, a town north of San Salvador.”


[Full Story]


“Archaeologists Unearth Massive Iron Age Fortifications”

Scientific Computing (USA)


“Kosovo Hails Discovery of Ancient Roman Site”

Balkan Insight (Kosovo)


“2700 Year-Old Inscription in City of David Excavations”

The Jewish Press (Israel)


“World’s oldest temple built to worship the dog star”

New Scientist (UK)


“Fossil of most successful mammal unearthed”

ABC Science News (Australia)


“Oldest Gaming Tokens Found in Turkey”

Discovery News (USA)



“Nara researcher finds oldest weights in Japan”

The Japan Times (Japan)


“Prophet Abraham’s lost city found in Turkey’s Kilis”

Hürriyet Daily News (Turkey)



“Handaxe design reveals distinct Neanderthal cultures”

EurekAlert (USA)


“Polish archaeologists discovered medieval coins on Bornholm”

Nauka w Polsce (Poland)


“Durham University archaeologists discover signs of ancient colony on Faroe Islands”

The Northern Echo (England)



“Climate change may have caused demise of Late Bronze Age civilizations”

Los Angeles Times (USA)



“Archaeologists have debated for decades over what caused the once-flourishing civilizations along the eastern Mediterranean coast to collapse about 1200 BC.

Many scholars have cited warfare, political unrest and natural disaster as factors. But a new study supports the theory that climate change was largely responsible.

Analyzing ancient pollen grains from Cyprus, researchers concluded that a massive drought hit the region about 3,200 years ago.

Ancient writings have described crop failures, famines and invasions about the same time, suggesting that the drying trend triggered a chain of events that led to widespread societal collapse of these Late Bronze Age civilizations.

Before their downfall, the Aegeans, Hittites, Egyptians and Syro-Palestinians had formed a complex, economically linked network in the eastern Mediterranean.

But about 1200 BC, they ‘disappeared completely from history’, said Lee Drake, an archaeologist at the University of New Mexico who was not involved in the study.”


[Full Story]


“Burren archaeological discovery of woman and two children ‘very significant’”

The Irish Times (Ireland)


“New CU-Boulder led research effort dates oldest known petroglyphs in North America”

EurekAlert (USA)


“Badger digs up medieval warrior graves”

The Local (Denmark)



“Human occupation of Madagascar pushed back 2500 years”

Past Horizons (UK)


“Assyrian Period Fortifications Unearthed in Ashdod”

The Jewish Press (Israel)


“Mexican Experts to Reconstruct Face of Pre-Columbian Man”

Hispanically Speaking News (Mexico)


“DNA reveals details of the peopling of the Americas”

Science News (USA)


“Huge old columns found underground in ancient city of Laodicea”

Hürriyet Daily News (Turkey)


“Roman temple clues found during dig in Conwy Valley”

BBC News (UK)


“Archaeological Census Reveals Human Presence in Cuba 8,000-10,000 Years Ago”

Latin American Herald Tribune (Venezuela)


“Mini-Colosseum of ‘Gladiator’ Emperor Found”

Discovery News (USA)



“Bone tools found at Neanderthal site”

ABC Science News (Australia)



“Sophisticated leather-working tools found in a cave in France offer the first evidence that Neanderthals had more advanced bone tools than early modern humans.

The four fragments of hide-softening bone tools known as lissoirs, or smoothers, were found at two neighbouring sites in southern France, according to the study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

A combination of radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence dating shows that the tools are about 50,000 years old, say scientists.

That would make the bone tools the oldest known in Europe, having been made and used well before modern humans replaced the Neanderthals some 40,000 years ago, researchers say.”


[Full Story]


“Part of 14th Century Ottoman commander’s armour found at Bulgaria’s Perperikon”

The Sofia Globe (Bulgaria)


“Analysis of ancient glass beads from cult site in Germany”

Past Horizons (UK)



“Vizhinjam: Once a port, always a port”

The Hindu (India)



“Mayan frieze found in Guatemala”

The Australian (Australia)


“A Medieval Discovery at a west Cornwall church”

This is Cornwall (Kernow)


“Mystery dagger molds imply ancient links to northern China”

The Asahi Shimbun (Japan)



“Evidence Points to Human Settlement in London 9,000 Years Ago”

Latin American Herald Tribune (Venezuela)


“Inside the Palaeo Lab”

ABC Radio National – Off Track (Australia)


“‘City of the Sun God: Amarna and its rulers, Akhenaten and Nefertiti'”

Archaeological Institute of America (USA)


“New project to protect megalithic sites”

The New Indian Express (India)


“Head of a goddess statue discovered in Aegean province”

Hürriyet Daily News (Turkey)


“Tracking the colonisation of Europe by modern humans”

ABC Radio National – The Science Show (Australia)


“A New Archaeological Technique Gives Insight Into the Day Before Death”

Science Daily (USA)



“The day before the child’s death was not a pleasant one, because it was not a sudden injury that killed the 10-13 year old child who was buried in the medieval town of Ribe in Denmark 800 years ago.

The day before death was full of suffering because the child had been given a large dose of mercury in an attempt to cure a severe illness.

This is now known to chemist Kaare Lund Rasmussen from University of Southern Denmark – because he and his colleagues have developed a new methodology that can reveal an unheard amount of details from very shortly before a person’s death.

Mercury is of particular interest for the archaeologists as many cultures in different part of the world have been in contact with this rare element.”


[Full Story]


“Court rules state can’t prove Jehoash Tablet fake”

Ha’aretz (Israel)


“Intact Roman ship, complete with cargo, found off coast of Italy”

UPI (USA)


“Archaeological dig uncovers prehistoric fishing community on remote Alaska island”

Anchorage Daily News (Alaska)



“Rich Thracian tomb with lion-goat ornament discovered in Sliven”

Standart News (Bulgaria)


“Herzliya Byzantine-era find sheds light on ancient Samaritans’ lives”

The Jerusalem Post (Israel)


“Stunning Maya sculpture unearthed from buried pyramid”

USA Today (USA)


“One of the world’s oldest breweries reconstructed”

Nauka w Polsce (Poland)



“7,000 years old metal ring found near Prokuplje”

InSerbia News (Serbia)


“Bow and arrow forever changed ancient cultures”

The Columbus Dispatch (USA)


“Hoard of 1,500-Year-Old Coins Found in Ancient Garbage Dump”

The Jewish Press (Israel)



“Archaeologists and researchers are trying to figure out why a recently found treasure of 1,500-year-old coins and other artifacts was buried in Byzantine era refuse pits.

The excavations, on behalf of the Tel Aviv University and the Israel Antiquities Authority, are being carried out prior to expanding the city of Herzliya, immediately north of Tel Aviv.

Numerous finds dating to the Late Byzantine period of the 5th-7th centuries were among the antiquities discovered in excavations conducted in the agricultural hinterland of the ancient city of Apollonia-Arsuf, located east of the site.

Among the finds uncovered are installations for processing the agricultural produce such as wine presses, and what also might be the remains of an olive press, as well as remains of walls that were apparently part of the ancillary buildings that were meant to serve local farmers.”


[Full Story]


“Secrets of the tiny, unspoilt Lesser Cyclades islands unveiled”

eKathimerini (Greece)



“Laois ‘bog body’ said to be world’s oldest”

The Irish Times (Ireland)


“Rich Thracian tomb with lion-goat ornament discovered in Sliven”

Novinite (Bulgaria)


“Mycenaean artifacts found in Bodrum”

Hürriyet Daily News (Turkey)


“Settlement of merchants from pre-Islamic history slowly rises from Bahrain sands”

The Washington Post (USA)



“5,000-year-old Neolithic art found in Orkney dig”

The Scotsman (Scotland)


“Experts investigate Silk Road’s ancestors”

People’s Daily (China)


“Archaeological Discoveries At Holt Castle”

Wrexham News (Cymru)


“Oldest Human Fossil in Western Europe Found in Spain”

Popular Archaeology (USA)


“Hafeet area thrives in Stone and Bronze Ages”

Gulf News (United Arab Emirates)


“Vikings ‘ransacked Church gold for jewellery”

Irish Examiner (Ireland)



“Mystery deepens in coffin-within-a-coffin found at Richard III site”

Loughborough News (England)


“Honduras Opens Mayan Fortress to Public”

Hispanically Speaking News (Honduras)


“Neanderthals Found in Greece”

Popular Archaeology (USA)



“Scientists have uncovered new evidence of Neanderthal occupation at the Kalamakia cave site on the western coast of the Mani peninsula in Greece, adding to previously recovered finds at other sites in the area.

The finds lend additional support to the theory that Greece and the Southern Balkans served as a dispersal corridor and refugium for Pleistocene era human populations.

The Middle Paleolithic (300,000 to 30,000 BP) cave site was excavated in 1993 – 2006 by an interdisciplinary team from the Ephoreia of Paleoanthropology and Speleology (Greek Ministry of Culture) and the Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle (Paris).

The cave yielded lithic (stone tool) remains, an abundance of fauna (animal remains), and human remains of at least 8 and possibly 14 individuals consisting of 10 isolated teeth, a cranial (skull) fragment and three postcranial (other skeletal) elements, as well as several hearths.”


[Full Story]


“Finds rewrite Christchurch history”

Stuff (New Zealand)



“Ancient Text May Have Been Written in Hebrew”

The Jewish Press (Israel)


“Neolithic engraved stone discovered at the Ness of Brodgar”

Past Horizons (UK)


“Wealth of finds uncovered during second dig at site of Richard III’s grave”

Heritage Daily (Panama)


“Ancient Feathered Shield Discovered in Peru Temple”

Live Science (USA)



“Archeologists claim to have found ‘piece of Jesus’ cross’ at church excavations in Turkey”

Hürriyet Daily News (Turkey)


“Heritage not for rent”

Al-Ahram Weekly (Egypt)


“Major archaeological dig is planned for a site near Toowoomba”

612 ABC Brisbane News (Australia)



“Ice core data supports ancient space impact idea”

BBC News (UK)


“Lost royal deer park discovered”

Heritage Daily (Panama)


“Early civilisation sleeping giant waits off north west coast”

PhysOrg (USA)


“‘Abode house in China’s Silk Road resembles those from C Asia'”

Business Standard (India)



“The Antikythera Mechanism Research Project”

Cardiff/Athens Universites (Cymru/Greece)



[In October 1900, Captain Dimitrious Kondos was leading a team of sponge divers near the the island of Antikythera off the coast of Greece. They noticed a shipwreck about 180 feet below the surface and began to investigate. Amongst the artifacts that they brought up was a coral-encrusted piece of metal that later archaeologists found was some sort of gear wheel.

The rest of the artifacts, along with the shape of the boat, suggested a date around 2000 years ago, which made the find one of the most anomalous that had ever been recovered from the Greek seas. It became known as The Antikythera Mechanism.

In 2006 the journal “Nature” published a letter, and another paper about the mechanism was published in 2008, detailing the findings of Prof. Mike G. Edmunds of Cardiff University. Using high-resolution X-ray tomography to study the fragments of the anomalous Antikythera Mechanism, they found that it was in fact a bronze mechanical analog computer that could be used to calculate the astronomical positions and various cycles of the Moon – as seen from the Earth: – Ed]



Part of the Antikythera Mechanism


an image of Part of the Antikythera Mechanism, which is also a clickable link directly to the Lichfield Blog story


Copyright © 2006
Antikythera Mechanism Research Project


2000-year-old analog computer recreated


More Antikythera Mechanism Information & Commentary:


“Return to Antikythera: Divers revisit wreck where ancient computer found”

The Guardian Science Blog (UK)


“In search of lost time”

Nature (UK)


“World’s First Computer Displayed Olympic Calendar”

Wired Gadget Lab (USA)


“Antikythera Mechanism – World’s earliest existing analogue computer”

HotnHit News (India)


“In search of lost time”

Nature (UK)


“Imaging the Antikythera Computer”

Wired Gadget Lab (USA)


“Decoding an Ancient Computer: Greek Technology Tracked the Heavens”

Scientific American (USA)


“2,000 Year Old Computer Yields Her Secrets”

Wired Gadget Lab (USA)


“Watch a video explaining the Antikythera mechanism”

Nature (UK)


“Antikythera mechanism”

Wikipedia (USA)


“World’s First Computer Rebuilt, Rebooted After 2,000 Years”

Wired Gadget Lab (USA)


“Antikythera: A 2,000-year-old Greek computer comes back to life”

The Guardian Science Blog (UK)


Google image search results for The Antikythera mechanism

Google (USA)

 


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“Recent studies of Stonehenge and other megalithic monuments have given rise to the science of astro-archaology, the study of early astronominical knowledge through the interpretation of ancient monuments and other archaeological data. A noted British astronomer’s fascinating study of early megalithic period astronomical knowledge through the interpretation of such monuments as Stonehenge, Carnac, and many other megalithic sites.


Stone Age sculpture, astronomical computations, radiocarbon dating and many other topics explored. Over 140 maps, photographs and illustrations. An essential summary of astronomy in the Stone Age.”




“Stairways to the Stars: Skywatching in Three Great Ancient Cultures”


by


Anthony Aveni



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“What was the meaning of Stonehenge? What was the Mayan Code? Why was the elaborate Incan city of Cuzco built? Groundbreaking archaeoastronomer Anthony Aveni offers a host of startling new insights and conclusions in this acclaimed study of three of life’s most mesmerizing mysteries.”




“A Sumerian Observation of the Kofels’ Impact Event”

by

Mark Hempsell
&
Alan Bond



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“The Earth Spirit:
Its Ways, Shrines and Mysteries”

by

John Michell



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“Decoding the Heavens:
Solving the Mystery of the World’s First Computer”

by

Jo Marchant

William Heinemann Ltd



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“Secrets of the Stones:
New Revelations of
Astro-Archaeology and
the Mystical Sciences
of Antiquity”

by

John Michell



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“Earthing
The Most Important Health Discovery Ever?”

by

Clinton Ober
Stephen Sinatra
&
Martin Zucker



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“Stonehenge: A New Understanding: Solving the Mysteries of the Greatest Stone Age Monument”

by

Mike Parker Pearson


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“Stonehenge: Exploring the Greatest Stone Age Mystery”

by

Mike Parker Pearson


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“Eden in the East: The Drowned Continent of Southeast Asia”

by

Stephen Oppenheimer


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“Unearthing Ancient America: The Lost Sagas of Conquerors, Castaways, and Scoundrels”

by


Frank Joseph




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“Discoveries: Underwater Archaeology”

by

Jean-Yves Blot
&
Alexandra Campbell


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“Man: 12, 000 Years Under the Sea a Story of Underwater Archaeology”

by

Robert F. Burgess
&
George F. Bass


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August 2013
Monthly Magazine Articles


“New evidence of meteoritic origin of the Tunguska cosmic body”


Planetary and Space Science Journal


“Islam’s Medieval Underworld”


Smithsonian Magazine


“The anatomy of long-term warming since 15 ka in New Zealand based on net glacier snowline rise”


Geology


“An echo of Supernova 2008bk”


The Astronomical Journal


“Chronology of the perishables: first AMS 14C dates of wooden artefacts from Aeneolithic–Bronze Age waterlogged sites … “


Antiquity



“Sacred Cenotes: Secrets of the Maya Otherworld”


National Geographic Magazine


“Lost Tombs: In search of history’s greatest rulers”


Archaeology Magazine


“The x-ray spectral evolution of galactic black hole x-ray binaries toward quiescence”


The Astrophysical Journal


“Size variation of conodonts during the Smithian–Spathian (Early Triassic) global warming event”


Geology


“The Nordic razor and the Mycenaean lifestyle”


Antiquity


“Artifact: A 13th-century limestone sundial is one of the earliest timekeeping devices discovered in Egypt”


Archaeology Magazine


“The origin of Asteroid 162173 (1999 ju3)”


The Astronomical Journal


“Intensified Southern Hemisphere Westerlies regulated atmospheric CO2 during the last deglaciation”


Geology


“‘The king in the car park’: new light on the death and burial of Richard III in the Grey Friars church, Leicester, in 1485”


Antiquity


“Observational Evidence from Supernovae for an Accelerating Universe and a Cosmological Constant”


The Astronomical Journal


“From The Trenches: Portals to the Underworld”


Archaeology Magazine


“Marking resistance? Change and continuity in the recent rock art of the southern Kimberley, Australia”


Antiquity


“Tsunami recurrence revealed by Porites coral boulders in the southern Ryukyu Islands, Japan”


Geology


“Molecular gas and star formation in nearby disk galaxies”


The Astronomical Journal


“World Roundup of Recent Archaeological Discoveries – July/August 2013”


Archaeology Magazine



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Morien Institute News Headlines Archive for
2013

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