Tag Archive | "archaeologists"
Posted on 03 December 2009. Tags: Ancient Egypt, Ancient Europe, Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, archaeologists, art, Balkan foothills, cemetery, European culture, gold artifacts, headdresses, historians, long-distance trade, Lower Danube Valley, Mesopotamia, necklaces, new research, Old Europe, overlooked culture, political power of women in society, pre-5000 B.C., recent discoveries, scholars, Technology, terracotta "goddess" figurines, towns, visual language
A Lost European Culture, Pulled From Obscurity
Before the glory that was Greece and Rome, even before the first cities of Mesopotamia or temples along the Nile, there lived in the Lower Danube Valley and the Balkan foothills people who were ahead of their time in art, technology and long-distance trade. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, History, R.T., Science
Posted on 26 October 2009. Tags: "Book of Counsel", "Book of the Community", "Book of the Mat", 1926, 1930, 1978, 1983, 1984, 1992, 300 BC, 60 Minutes, ABC's 20/20, archaeologists, archaeology, BBC, Brian Stross, Brigham Young University, Catholic University of America, Chichicastenango, CNN, diluvian creation myth, Discovery Channel, divine right, Dr. Bruce Dahlin, Dr. Ray Matheny, Dr. Richard D. Hansen, El Mirador, FARES, Foundation for Anthropological Research and Environmental Studies, Francisco Ximenez, genealogies, Good Morning America, Guatemala, history channel, Hunahpu, Ian Graham, Idaho State University, jungle, Learning Channel, legendary gods, Maya, Mayan, Mayan creation myth, Mesoamerica, Mesoamerican, Mesoamerican mythologies, Mirador Basin, Mirador Basin Project, mythistory, National Geographic, Popul Vuh, Post-Classic Quiché kingdom, Pyramid, Quiché kingdom, stucco, University of Texas, wonders, Wonders of the World, Xbalanqué
Although CNN has chosen to report this ‘discovery’ as something that has happened recently, the discovery of this pyramid is not recent news. According to this Wikipedia entry for El Mirador:
Discovery
El Mirador was first discovered in 1926, and was photographed from the air in 1930, but the remote site deep in the jungle had little more attention paid to it until Ian Graham spent some time there making the first map of the area in 1962.[citation needed] A detailed investigation was begun in 1978 with an archaeological project under the direction of Dr. Bruce Dahlin (Catholic University of America) and Dr. Ray Matheny (Brigham Young University). Dahlin’s work focused primarily on the bajo swamps and mapping, while Matheny’s team focused primarily on excavations in the site center and architecture. This project ended in 1983. To the surprise of the archaeologists, it was found that a large amount of construction was not contemporary with the large Maya classic cities in the area, like Tikal and Uaxactun, but rather from centuries earlier in the Pre-Classic era[citation needed] (see: Mesoamerican chronology). Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, Education, History, R.T., Video
Posted on 28 September 2009. Tags: 1964, 23 A.D., 79 A.D., archaeologists, blue grotto, Capri, Cave, Discovery News, Greek god, Marevivo, Neptune, Pompeii, Poseidon, Romans, Rosalba Giugni, sea cave, Triton, Tritons' shoulders, Wonders of the World
Sept. 28, 2009 — A number of ancient Roman statues might lie beneath the turquoise waters of the Blue Grotto on the island of Capri in southern Italy, according to an underwater survey of the sea cave.
Dating to the 1st century A.D., the cave was used as a swimming pool by the Emperor Tiberius (42 B.C. – 37 A.D.), and the statues are probably depictions of sea gods. Read the full story
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Posted in Arts & Entertainment, Authors, J.K., Travel
Posted on 24 September 2009. Tags: Andrew Haigh, Anglo-Saxon, archaeologists, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, British Museum, Burntwood, coroner, Department of Prehistory and Europe, england, Gold, Leslie Webster, metal detector, Portable Antiquities Scheme, royalty, seventh century, Staffordshire, The Staffordshire Hoard, treasure, warfare paraphernalia
An unemployed man has unearthed the largest hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold ever found with the help of his metal detector.

Experts are now calculating its value – a process that could take more than a year because of its size.
The find was declared as treasure by coroner Andrew Haigh, which means the cache will be offered for sale after it is valued.
Read the full story
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Posted in Authors, Education, History, J.K., The Wire
Posted on 11 September 2009. Tags: 50BCE, Apostles, archaeologists, Ark New Gate, Avshalom-Gorni, Christians, construction, discovery, Early Roman Period, frescoes, Great Revolt, hotel, Israel, JERUSALEM, Jesus, Jews, Jose Miguel Abat, Mary Magdalene, menorah, Migdal, Sea of Galilee, Second Temple, synagogues
If you look closely at the image CNN provides, you will see what resembles the flower of life below… Read the full story
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Posted in Education, History, R.T., The Wire
Posted on 14 August 2009. Tags: archaeologists, Belmarsh Prison, Greenwich, london, Oldest, Plumstead, Stonehenge, Timber Structure
Archaeologists have unexpectedly uncovered London’s oldest timber structure, which predates Stonehenge by about 500 years.
The structure, apparently a platform or trackway used to make a boggy area more navigable, was found during the excavation of a prehistoric peat bog adjacent to Belmarsh Prison in Plumstead, Greenwich, in advance of the construction of a new prison building. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, Education, Featured, History, J.K., The Wire
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