Byrd Wrote:
-------------------------------------------------------
> Ugh.
>
> His Gobekli Tepi hypothesis has been debunked by
> the archaeologists who dig there, and his idea is
> debatable in other ways, but it still keeps
> lurking around like a Mysterious Container in the
> back of the fridge.
Go see;
Defant, M., 2017. Conjuring up a lost civilization: an analysis
of the claims made by Graham Hancock in magicians of the
Gods. Skeptic (Altadena, CA), 22(3), pp.32-44.
[
www.skeptic.com]
Notroff, J. (2017). Archaeoastronomy, meteor showers, mass
extinction: What does the fox say? (And what the crane? The
aurochs?). The Tepe Telegrams, 21.04.2017.
[
www.dainst.blog]
Notroff, J. & Dietrich, O. (2017). Dances with Cranes.
Early Neolithic animal masquerades. Current
World Archaeology, 85, 10-11.
[
www.dainst.blog]
Notroff, J. and Dietrich, O., 2019. But what is it good for?–
Experiences in Public Outreach of the Göbekli Tepe Project
(DAI). Archäologische Informationen, 42, pp.289-302.
[
journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de]
[
journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de]
Notroff, J., Dietrich, J., Clare, L., Dietrich, L., Schlindwein, J.,
Kinzel, M., Lelek-Tvetmarken, C. & Sönmez, D. (2017). More
than a vulture: A response to Sweatman and Tsikritsis.
Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry, 17(2), 57-63.
[
maajournal.com]
Yours,
Paul H.
"The past is never dead. It's not even past."
William Faulkner, Act 1, Scene III, Requiem for a Nun (1951)