Sunday, February 10, 2008

Medieval Waterworks


Thanks to peter Alaca of sci.archeolgy for providing us with a brief translation:

During roadworks last year in Brughes a valve of the old
public waterworks was found. The age of the valve is
unknown, but it is mentioned in the records of 1610.
http://www.raakvlak.be/nieuwsbrief.php?itemno=113
The object on the right is the "key" to operate the valve


Already in the late 13th century waterworks made of lead
pipes existed in Brughes, bringing water from a pond (and
later from the moat around the city) to public wells and to
some businesses in the centre of town. They were called
"moerbuizen". A pipe in a different location can be seen in
photo 3.


Water was brought into the system with a peddle wheel
in a "waterhouse". The 14th/15c waterhouse can be seen
here in the first picture and in the second picture on the
right. http://www.molenechos.org/molen.php?AdvSearch=1214
Left in the second pucture is its 18th c replacement.
The system was in use until the early 20th century




Water Works
Water House
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Saturday, February 9, 2008

40,000 year old Neanderthal tooth suggests mobility

40,000 year old Neanderthal tooth found in Greece suggests greater
mobility of Neanderthals than previously believed. That is, if you
believe 20 kilometers is proof of mobility.

Picture at the cite
A 40,000-year-old tooth is seen in this undated hand out photo
released by Greek Culture Ministry. Analysis of the tooth uncovered in
southern Greece indicates for the first time that Neanderthals may
have traveled more widely than previously thought, paleontologists
announced on Friday, Feb. 8, 2008. (AP Photo/Greek Culture Ministry)


(AP) -- Analysis of a 40,000-year-old tooth found in southern Greece
suggests Neanderthals were more mobile than once thought,
paleontologists said Friday.


Analysis of the tooth - part of the first and only Neanderthal remains
found in Greece - showed the ancient human had spent at least part of
its life away from the area where it died.


"Neanderthal mobility is highly controversial," said
paleoanthropologist Katerina Harvati at the Max Planck Institute for
Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany.


Some experts believe Neanderthals roamed over very limited areas, but
others say they must have been more mobile, particularly when hunting,
Harvati said.


Until now, experts only had indirect evidence, including stone used in
tools, Harvati said. "Our analysis is the first that brings evidence
from a Neanderthal fossil itself," she said.


The findings by the Max Planck Institute team were published in the
Journal of Archaeological Science.


The tooth was found in a seaside excavation in Greece's southern
Peloponnese region in 2002.


The team analyzed tooth enamel for ratios of a strontium isotope, a
naturally occurring metal found in food and water. Levels of the metal
vary in different areas.


Eleni Panagopoulou of the Paleoanthropology-Speleology Department of
Southern Greece said the tooth's levels of strontium showed that the
Neanderthal grew up at least 12.5 miles from the discovery site.


"Our findings prove that ... their settlement networks were broader
and more organized than we believed," Panagopoulou said.


Clive Finlayson, an expert on Neanderthals and director of the
Gibraltar Museum, disagreed with the finding's significance.


"I would have been surprised if Neanderthals didn't move at least 20
kilometers (12.5 miles) in their lifetime, or even in a year ... We're
talking about humans, not trees," Finlayson said.

Source Article
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Thursday, February 7, 2008

Royal Goddesses of a Bronze Age State

Royal Goddesses of a Bronze Age State Volume 61 Number 1, January/
February 2008
by Marco Merola




Its arms arranged in a gesture of prayer, the figurine at right
probably depicts a living queen worshipping the statuette of a dead
royal, left. (Courtesy Maura Sala)


It's been more than 30 years since Italian archaeologists found a vast
archive of 17,000 cuneiform tablets at the Bronze Age site of Ebla in
northern Syria. But the ancient city is still surprising those who
work there. Last year archaeologist Paolo Matthiae's team discovered
two almost perfectly preserved figurines that confirm textual evidence
for a royal cult of the dead focused on the city's queens. They also
found an unusual tablet that allowed scholars to reconstruct the
political climate that led to Ebla's destruction in 2300 B.C., when it
was sacked by Sargon of Akkad.


"We made the finds in two peripheral rooms of the great Royal Palace,
where we discovered the cuneiform archive in the 1970s," explains
Matthiae. "They were part of the zone behind the Court of the Audience
Hall, a sort of storage area which must have held the treasures of the
king of Ebla."


Initially the team avoided the rooms, assuming they had been emptied
when Sargon ransacked the city. "But we were wrong!" says Matthiae.
"Evidently the two statues were crushed into the ground and
miraculously escaped the pillage."


Both figurines are intricate representations of women, which are rare
in Near Eastern Bronze Age art. One, made of steatite and wood, is
depicted with her arms arranged in a gesture indicating prayer. The
second figurine holds a goblet and wears an ornate gold dress. Both
seem to have been used in a ritual mentioned in a tablet from Ebla
that describes how the city's dead queens became female deities who
were then worshiped privately by their successors. Matthiae suspects
the steatite figure depicts a living queen who would have prayed to
the gold-covered figurine, itself a representation of a dead queen who
had become a goddess.


[image]


This cuneiform tablet, ca. 2300 B.C., details arms shipments from Ebla
to allied states. (Courtesy Maura Sala)


In the same area, Matthiae found a cuneiform tablet which accounted
for weapons distributed from Ebla to allied cities during a war
sometime before 2300 B.C. "The military campaign the tablet mentions
is possibly the one Ebla waged against the state of Mari," says
Matthiae. Records indicate that Ebla defeated Mari, its great
commercial and political rival, just before it in turn was destroyed.


Matthiae thinks Ebla's military aggression alarmed the powerful states
of southern Mesopotamia, such as Akkad, because soon after its
conflict with Mari, Sargon launched his campaign against the city.


The tablet lists the number of spear points Ebla sent to each of its
allied states, a stark expression of the political influence and
military prowess the southern states feared. Nagar, today known as
Tell Brak was the biggest client, receiving 2,000 spear points.
According to Matthiae, this proliferation of weaponry may have
impelled Sargon to launch the preemptive strike against Ebla, which
ended the state.
Source Site and Pics
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Doctoral student makes discovery on Neanderthal eating habits

The Hatchet
(George Washington University student newspaper)

Doctoral student makes discovery on Neanderthal eating habits
by Michael Moffett
Hatchet Reporter
Issue date: 2/7/08 Section: News


A doctoral student studying hominid paleobiology has pioneered a
method for analyzing reindeer bones from around 65,000 to 12,000 years
ago, an accomplishment that allows scientists to further understand
the eating habits of early humans.


Early humans flocked to reindeer meat when the temperature dropped, J.
Tyler Faith discovered.


"We see a steady increase in the abundance of reindeer, associated
with declines in summer temperature," Faith said.


Faith analyzed bones from the Grotte XVI archaeological site in
southern France in order to better understand the relationship between
early humans and animals, and how this was affected by changes in the
environment.


Faith's new findings help to understand the differences between
Neanderthals and the modern man. He said differences in hunting
behavior cannot explain why Neanderthals dropped out of existence
between 40,000 and 50,000 years ago.


"Variation in the types of animals hunted and the parts of those
animals that were exploited and processed by the human and Neanderthal
occupants of Grotte XVI can be explained largely by environmental
change, rather than behavioral or technological differences," Faith
said.


His study was called "important, insightful and innovative" by Donald
Grayson, a renowned Grotte XVI researcher and professor at the
University of Washington, in an interview with Discovery News.


Faith has previously worked to develop "quantitative methods for
measuring changes in how humans butchered and transported large animal
remains."


He has also done research at the Shompole conservation area in
southern Kenya, where he studied animal bones as a way to understand
living wildlife.


For his dissertation, Faith is researching the extinction of large
mammals in southern Africa. He hopes to determine whether human
hunting pressure or changes to the environment contributed to the
extinction of large mammals.


Including this study, Faith has been published five times in The
Journal of Archeological Science, and has also been featured in
Discovery News. He recently submitted work to the Journal of Human
Evolution. Faith said he hopes to continue researching in East and
southern Africa after he receives his Ph.D. and eventually hopes to
become a professor at a research-oriented university.


"I have had a great time at GWU - I couldn't be happier anywhere
else," Faith said. "I was excited by the many research opportunities
available here in my program and at the National Museum of Natural
History."
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6 Vicus Culture Pyramids Discovered in Peru!!

LIP-ir) -- It was announced today that a group of pyramids belonging
to the Vicús Culture were found by workers doing clean-up work in
Piura. Archaeologists from Peru's Institute for Culture (INC) were
immediately informed and confirmed the pyramids were a religious area
or a cemetery for Vicús Culture elite.


The archaeological complex consists of six pyramids - two large
pyramids and four smaller ones. It was reported that a high
concentration of vestiges have been found in one of the larger
pyramids as well as bone fragments and a human skull.


It is believed an important member of the Vicús Culture is buried 25
meters (82 feet) underground. A platform, where it is believed
ceremonies took place, has been found next to one of the larger
pyramids.
Source Article and Picture
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Flying Pyramids Soaring Stones

History Explorer
Flying Pyramids Soaring Stones.
Tune In:
Sunday, February 10 @ 12pm ET/PT


How did the ancient Egyptians build the pyramids and lift obelisks?
These spectacular feats of engineering defy explanation. Theories
about ropes, ramps, ingenuity, and brute force abound. Even aliens
have been credited. But no definitive answer to this enigma exists.
Now, an extraordinary new theory is being tested. Expert sailors,
Egyptians used wind power on the Nile. Could they also harness the
power of the wind on land and use land sails, or kites, to help lift
heavy stones?
Read More on the California Technical Institute Website Kite Life Magazine
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The Black Rat Cometh

The black rat seems to be part of the early spread of agriculture, at
least in Europe.

The Black Rat Cometh


By Cheryl Jones
ScienceNOW Daily News
6 February 2008
CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA--Potentially fatal rat-borne diseases, such as
typhus and leptospirosis, are likely to spread farther around the
world, according to research presented here this week at the
Archaeological Science Conference 2008.


The findings come from a genetic analysis of the black rat (Rattus
rattus), the rodent that spreads the bubonic plague. Researchers led
by mammalogist Ken Aplin of Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and
Industrial Research Organisation compared DNA sequences from 170 urban
and wild black rats from around the world to create a family tree. The
data allowed the team to track the rat's prehistoric and modern
migrations and to investigate its impact on people. Black rats wreak
havoc on agriculture, especially in Asia, and remain a major source of
human disease.


The rodent is much more genetically diverse than previously thought,
Aplin reported. His team identified six lineages, each of which could
turn out to be a separate species. According to the genetic data, the
ancestral black rat group first appeared in Southeast Asia about a
million years ago.


Since then, the rodent has been on a global march. The study revealed
high genetic variation among Indian rats, suggesting that the pest
arrived there naturally, long before modern humans evolved. According
to Aplin's study, one group of Indian rats invaded the Middle East.
The black rat then colonized Europe, probably traveling with the first
farmers. Using Europe as a launch pad and sailing ships as transport,
the rodent spread to the Americas, Africa, Australia, and the islands
of the Indian Ocean and eastern Pacific.


Another two of the six lineages dispersed around Southeast Asia and
the western Pacific during prehistoric times and more recently made
landfall on other continents, the study showed. One of those lineages
lives as a rat ethnic minority, along with the dominant European
group, in California. That suggests a second wave of migration to the
Americas, perhaps during the gold rush.


The rats haven't stopped invading new territories. "We have evidence
that the lineages of black rats are increasingly on the move," Aplin
says. "They [continue to] cross oceans and borders in cargo, invading
countries."


That could lead to an increasing spread of the diseases that black
rats transmit, such as typhus and leptospirosis. The team's comparison
of known disease epidemiology and its own genetic results suggest that
each group of black rats carries its own disease variants. "Human
resistance to newly introduced disease variants may be low," Aplin
says. One such assault might have already occurred. Seoul virus, a rat-
borne disease well known in Asia, and which causes hemorrhaging,
turned up in California in the 1990s, killing several people and
taking medical authorities by surprise. "That's the sort of thing that
is going to happen increasingly as we see black rats move around the
world," Aplin says.


The study will provide the genetic data pest managers need to control
the spread of rats in rural areas, says Grant Singleton, a biologist
at the International Rice Research Institute in Manila, Philippines,
and an expert on rat ecology. The genetic groups are likely to breed
in response to differing seasonal cues--behavior that could be
exploited in the fight against them. "We now know that we cannot be
generic in our management," he says.
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Romulus and Remus For Real?

More on the supposed discovery of the Lupercal, a
shrine with which Romans in historical times commem-
orated their legendary past:


http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/discoveries/2008-02-06-romulus-r...


"Does a cave prove Romulus and Remus are no myth?"


By Andrea Pitzer, Special for USA TODAY


The discovery of an ancient Roman cave has unearthed
a debate about its historical purpose and delved into a
deeper question for scholars: Can archaeology prove
mythology? The cave was found when a camera was
lowered through a hole in Rome's Palatine Hill during
restorations of the palace of the Emperor Augustus,
who ruled from the late first century B.C. until his
death in A.D. 14. The Palatine Hill was a seat of power
in ancient Rome; today it is home to the fragile remains
of palaces and temples.


The discovery of the vaulted cavern, more than 50 feet
underground and covered in mosaics, was announced in
November. Some believe it is a shrine of the Lupercale,
the sacred cave where Romulus and Remus, the legend-
ary founders of Rome, are said to have been suckled by
a wolf --lupa in Latin.


According to Roman mythology, the twin sons of a
priestess and Mars, the god of war, were set adrift in
the Tiber River. Instead of drowning, the infants
washed ashore.


Francesco Rutelli, Italy's Minister of Culture, says the
cave is the Lupercale celebrated in Augustus' time, as
evidenced by references in 2,000-year-old texts.


Archaeologist Andrea Carandini of Rome's La Sapienza
University calls the finding "one of the greatest discov-
eries ever made" and says the chances are "minimal"
that the cave is not the site revered by the Romans as
the Lupercale.


Carandini and others point to discoveries such as the
cave and earlier findings of ancient structures as evi-
dence that myths about the city's founding reflect
history, and say that the founder of Rome may actual-
ly have been named Romulus.


Subject to interpretation


But linking artifacts to legends is risky business, say
historians and other archaeologists.


"Everyone always wants to think that archaeology has
proved the Bible is true, or that there really was a Tro-
jan War, or that King Arthur was a real character,"
says historian T.P. Wiseman of England's University
of Exeter. "Archaeology by its nature can't provide
such evidence."


He says that when archaeologists interpret an artifact,
their expert perspective is essentially a best guess, be-
cause there's no means of confirmation.


Historian Christopher Smith of Scotland's University of
St. Andrews notes that even if artifacts clearly reference
the Romulus and Remus story, all they will show is that
the cavern is a place where first-century Romans cele-
brated the legend -- not that the story is real.


"It is tempting to argue that the finds support historical
events," Smith says, "when in fact they merely support
ancient beliefs about events."


Wiseman says everything we believe we know about
the ancient world must be treated as a hypothesis, one
that may be disproved by future finds. The only concrete
relationship between an artifact and a myth is "what
people create with their own will to believe."


Earlier discoveries linked to Romulus and Remus, who
supposedly founded Rome in 753 B.C., have divided
experts.


In 1988, Carandini discovered a section of wall in Rome
dating from the eighth century B.C., which he linked to
a boundary found in the legend: Romulus killed Remus
when he mocked such a wall. Other archaeologists and
historians have recognized the validity of Carandini's
find as an archaeological discovery but don't see it
giving credence to mythology.


The Capitoline Wolf, a bronze statue of a wolf suckling a
pair of infant boys, has come under fire. Long believed
to be a fifth-century B.C. Etruscan statue, it may be much
younger than that. Last year, Anna Maria Carruba, who
was involved in its restoration, published a book claiming
the process showed that the wolf was made outside Italy
during the medieval period.


If so, Wiseman says, the statue is no longer proof that
fifth-century B.C. inhabitants knew the story of Romulus
and Remus, which had added weight to the argument
that the legend might have historical roots.


Archaeologist Adriano La Regina, also of La Sapienza,
who was in charge of the city's archaeological excava-
tions from 1976 to 2005, is among those who argue that
the newly discovered cave is not the Lupercale. Ancient
sources, from the writings of Dionysius to Cicero, indi-
cate otherwise, he says.


Historian Mario Torelli of Italy's University of Perugia
suggests the chamber is only a grotto of the Palatine
palace, included in the historical record since the 16th
century.


More to discover


Augustus saw himself as a new founder -- Romulus
and Remus combined, according to Stanford University
scholar Adrienne Mayor. And with written references
to an actual Lupercale site during Augustus' time, Mayor
believes it's fair game for scholars to try to find it.


Mayor says more study has to be done before drawing
conclusions about the underground chamber. Experts
ave been investigating the cave with endoscopes and
aser scanners, fearful that the grotto -- already partially
caved in -- would not survive an archaeological dig.


Still, Mayor is impressed that the ancient story of the
nurturing wolf has survived at least 2,000 years and has
meaning for people today. Trying to connect with the
past, "humans return again and again to archaeology to
confirm the reality of myth," she says. "It's a timeless
impulse."


Contributing: The Associated Press
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Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Mammoth Dig

Check out the cool mammoth dig in washington~!
Mammoth Dig
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Peruvian Head Lice 15000 years old!

Researchers report that mummified Peruvian mummies also had mummified
head lice and DNA has been extracted from those head lice. The DNA
shows the head lice goes all the way back to at least 15,000 years ago
in the Americas. The story will appear in the Journal of Infectious
Diseases. Further tests may help show the exact location of the origin
of the lice and the year the lice entered the Americas with people.
The International Herald Tribune has the story here
Mike Ruggeri's The Ancient Americas Breaking News
Mike Ruggeri's Ancient Andean World
Mike Ruggeri's Andean Archaeology News and Links
Andean and Amazonian Archaeology Discussion Group

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The Bible Scores Again!




Archeologist revises read of ancient seal inscription
Etgar Lefkovits , THE JERUSALEM POST Feb. 4, 2008


A prominent Israeli archeologist said Monday that she has revised her
reading of an inscription on an ancient seal uncovered in an
archeological excavation in Jerusalem's City of David after various
scholars around the world critiqued her original interpretation of the
name on the seal.


The 2,500 year-old black stone seal was found last month amid
stratified layers of debris in the excavation under way just outside
the Old City walls near the Dung Gate, said archeologist Dr. Eilat
Mazar, who is leading the dig.


Mazar had originally read the name on the seal as "Temech," and
suggested that it belonged to the family of that name mentioned in the
Book of Nehemiah.


But after the find was first reported in The Jerusalem Post, various
epigraphers around the world said Mazar had erred by reading the
inscription on the seal straight on (from right to left) rather than
backwards (from left to right), as a result of the fact that a seal
creates a mirror image when used to inscribe a piece of clay.


The critics, including the European scholar Peter van der Veen, as
well as the epigrapher Ryan Byrne, co-director of the Tel Dan
excavations, suggested in Internet blogs that the correct reading of
the seal is actually "Shlomit," also a biblical name.


Mazar said Monday that she accepted the reading of "Shlomit" on the
ancient seal, and added that she appreciated the scholarly research on
the issue.


....More on the


The three-year-old east Jerusalem dig is being sponsored by the Shalem
Center, a Jerusalem research institute, where Mazar serves as a senior
fellow, and the City of David Foundation, which promotes Jewish
settlement throughout east Jerusalem.Source Site
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Friday, February 1, 2008

All Blue Eyed People Are Related

They've isolated the gene and tracked its lineage...Read About it Here
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