May 4, 2024, 3:23 pm UTC |
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No, it didn't look too convincing to me, either!by Hermione - Humanities
2,000-year-old Sumerian cities torn apart and plundered by robbers.by Hermione - Ancient History
Kanga Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > Rubbish. If you want to correct what you believe is mistaken information, please give the correct information and leave it at that; there's no need for comments like this.by Hermione - Ancient Egypt
About 4,000 people have travelled to an Essex resort to consecrate a 6ft image of the Hindu deity Lord Ganesha.by Hermione - Humanities
A number of rare and invaluable medical and astronomical manuscripts have been found at the National Library of Egypt (also known as Dar al-Kotob).by Hermione - Ancient Egypt
Martin Stower Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > An exercise for the reader: what is conspicuous by > its absence?by Hermione - Ancient Egypt
A series of tombs and silos, probably dating back to the Bronze Age and early Roman period, have been discovered on the site set to become the new US Embassy, in Ta' Qali.by Hermione - Ancient History
EINSIEDELN, Switzerland: A librarian at this 10th century monastery leads a visitor beneath the vaulted ceilings of the archive past the skulls of two former abbots. He pushes aside medieval ledgers of indulgences and absolutions, pulls out one of 13 bound diaries inscribed from 1671 to 1704 and starts to read about the weather.by Hermione - Laboratory
EXCITEMENT is growing over the discovery of a suspected Roman grave at Corfe Castle. Corfe Castle was in the spotlight after a metal detectors' club event at Norden Farm uncovered the find.by Hermione - Ancient History
By wrapping up archeological excavations on Gorgan’s Great Wall, Iranian-British joint team has succeeded in identifying 30 historical sites dating back to Parthian (248 BC-224 AD) and Sassanian (224-651 AD) dynastic eras.by Hermione - Ancient History
While scrambling around on Huxley Island doing an archeological survey in August, grad student Jenny Storey made an exciting discovery - a new cave under the roots of a blown down tree. Upon entering the cave she found an ancient stone knife blade lying on top of bare rock.by Hermione - Ancient History
Welcome to the real world, darkuser ... You can still access journals online ... but via a slightly different method. It's called paying ...by Hermione - Coffee Shop
Clive, You might want to note that it was Katherine Griffis-Greenberg (an expert on AE, as her signature demonstrates) who replied to you, not Katherine Reece ... so it's "Katherine", not "Kat" ...by Hermione - Ancient Egypt
Some recent Russian DNA discoveries documented by Grazyna Fosar and Franz Bludorf in their book Vernetzte Intelligenz have been summarised by Baerbel. ‘The human DNA is a biological Internet’ with evidence that DNA can be ‘influenced and reprogrammed by words and frequencies.’ This suggests that ‘our DNA is not only responsible for the construction of our body, but also serves as data storage andby Hermione - Laboratory
Open Access article PDFby Hermione - Ancient History
The Indian government has withdrawn a controversial report submitted in court earlier this week which questioned the existence of the Hindu god Ram.by Hermione - Ancient History
The hidden content in ancient works could be illuminated by a light source 10 billion times brighter than the Sun.by Hermione - Laboratory
A CACHE of charcoal, stone tools and artefacts unearthed to make way for a high-rise apartment block has been found to be 30,000 years old, more than doubling the accepted age of Aboriginal settlement in Sydney.by Hermione - Ancient History
The ancient Egyptians were not the only ones to mummify their dead, according to a study in this month's Antiquity Journal that claims prehistoric Scottish people created mummies too.by Hermione - Ancient History
If no one has any substantive comments to make on this topic, there seems little point in continuing with it.by Hermione - Ancient Egypt
If we could stay on topic, please ...by Hermione - Ancient Egypt
Hi Ritva, The summary was the way I (a non-Egyptologist) saw the 11-page thread: seems I got quite a lot wrong, so thanks for sorting out some of the more glaring errors. > > Disappointingly, no definite conclusion > seemed > > possible on any of these questions ... > > > Really? Well, that was the impression I was left with ...by Hermione - Ancient Egypt
Lee, > > The whole discussion of Osiris at Giza began here > . The discussion of Bolshakov's article (and > rejoinders) came later in the same, rather > extensive, thread. Thanks for this. I went through the whole thing again, and came up with the following summary. I must start off by emphasising that my understanding of the subject is necessarily clouded by a comby Hermione - Ancient Egypt
More on the Slagen story ... Archaeologists open Viking grave to seek secrets of women buried thereby Hermione - Ancient History
Bronze vases, lead and clay objects, weapons, iron tools and figurines are among the harvest of finds from an archaic-era sanctuary on the hill of Spartia, Sesklo, in the prefecture of Magnesia.by Hermione - Ancient History
Archaeologists have discovered traces of Switzerland’s oldest known building, but it will never draw tourists: it lies underwater in the middle of a lake.by Hermione - Ancient History
So some European wild boar were domesticated, very early on ... but some must have been hunted There are some wild boar populations in Europe today, so not all boar can be extinct, can they ... Anyway, could the discussion please remain courteous and on-topic from now on.by Hermione - Ancient History