Past Articles
| Thursday, July 29 |
| · | Dead Sea Scrolls Mystery Solved? (0) |
| Thursday, July 22 |
| · | "Lost" Languages to Be Resurrected by Computers (0) |
| · | Bowls of Fingers & Baby Victims, More Found in Maya Tomb (0) |
| Tuesday, July 06 |
| · | China says it can't remember the Dalai Lama's birthday (0) |
| · | Baby deaths link to Roman 'brothel' in Buckinghamshire (0) |
| Friday, June 18 |
| · | Pagan-Cult Objects found in rock hollow (0) |
| Wednesday, June 16 |
| · | Bright Green Comet Easy to See This Week (0) |
| · | Swarm Of Toxic Jellyfish Found Off UK Coast (0) |
| Monday, June 14 |
| · | Wiltshire vicar revives ancient archery law (0) |
| · | Sudden oak death spreads across channel to south Wales (0) |
| · | Experts In A Spin Over Nero's Rotating Room (0) |
| Friday, June 11 |
| · | Taliban hang 7 year old child (0) |
| Thursday, June 10 |
| · | Gladiator Cemetery Uncovered In York (0) |
| · | The oldest, old world leather shoe (0) |
| Saturday, May 29 |
| · | Viking Weather returns to Greenland (0) |
| · | Pagan Burial Altar Found in Israel (0) |
| Saturday, May 01 |
| · | Noah's Ark Found in Turkey (0) |
| Monday, April 12 |
| · | Mysterious patterns on met radar system (0) |
| Saturday, March 27 |
| · | "Goddess" Glacier Melting in War-Torn Kashmir (0) |
| Friday, March 12 |
| · | Nemesis (0) |
| · | Windermere's 'black hole' (0) |
| Wednesday, February 10 |
| · | First results from Large Hadron Collider published (0) |
| Friday, February 05 |
| · | Teenage Turkish Girl Buried Alive For Talking To Boys (0) |
| · | Vast "Cloud Warrior" Ruin Found in Amazon (0) |
| Tuesday, January 19 |
| · | India's Lost Nomads (0) |
| · | Lost Tribes of the Green Sahara (0) |
| Wednesday, December 16 |
| · | Jesus-era' burial shroud found (0) |
| · | Boy has Arabic script from the Koran appear on skin (0) |
| · | Viking Weapon-Recycling (0) |
| Saturday, December 12 |
| · | Decoded Ancient Tablets Shed Light on Assyrian Empire (0) |
| | Older Articles |
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Packed with blackened tortoise shells, an ancient shaman's grave may be evidence of early feasting. Some 12,000 years ago in a small sunlit cave in northern Israel, mourners finished the last of the roasted tortoise meat and gathered up dozens of the blackened shells. Kneeling down beside an open grave in the cave floor, they paid their last respects to the elderly dead woman curled within, preparing her for a spiritual journey. They tucked tortoise shells under her head and hips and arranged dozens of the shells on top and around her. Then they left her many rare and magical things—the wing of a golden eagle, the pelvis of a leopard, and the severed foot of a human being. Now called Hilazon Tachtit, the small cave chosen as this woman's resting place is the subject of an intense investigation led by Leore Grosman, an archaeologist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel. Already her research has revealed that the mystery woman—a member of the Natufian culture, which flourished between 15,000 and 11,600 years ago in what is now Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, and possibly Syria—was the world's earliest known shaman. Considered a skilled sorcerer and healer, she was likely seen as a conduit to the spirit world, communicating with supernatural powers on behalf of her community, Grosman said..
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About 127 light-years away there's a star like our sun that hosts at least five planets, each roughly the same mass as Uranus or Neptune, astronomers announced today. The planets were found via what's called the radial velocity method, aka the Doppler wobble. This method of planet hunting looks for periodic shifts in starlight caused by the gravitational pull of orbiting worlds. Using an instrument dubbed the HARPS spectrograph on a European Southern Observatory telescope in Chile, the team saw five strong wobbles corresponding to planets between 13 and 25 times Earth's mass orbiting the star HD 10180. For comparison, Uranus is roughly 14 times Earth's mass, and Neptune is about 17 times Earth's mass. By contrast, Saturn is 95 Earth masses, and Jupiter tips the scales at almost 318 Earth masses. What's more, there are hints that the planetary system also hosts a world roughly the mass of Saturn, with at least 65 Earth masses, and another more like Earth itself. The Saturn-like world would be farther out, taking about 2,200 days to complete an orbit. The Earthlike planet, meanwhile, would be closer in than all the rest, and it would be the least massive exoplanet yet found, at just 1.4 Earth masses. If confirmed, the two additions would make this planetary system the most like our own yet discovered, at least in terms of number and general layout...
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Long dismissed as accidental additions to Viking graves, prehistoric "thunderstones"—fist-size stone tools resembling the Norse god Thor's hammerhead—were actually purposely placed as good-luck talismans, archaeologists say. Using fire-starting rock such as flint, Stone Age people originally created the stones to serve as axes. But the Vikings, whose Iron Age heyday lasted from about A.D. 800 to 1050, saw the primitive tools as lightning repellent.m Because the axes predate the Viking age by thousands of years, archaeologists have long seen the stones as random artifacts, perhaps stirred up from earlier, lower burials or dropped in centuries after the Viking era. But now "we have made enough discoveries of Stone Age artifacts in younger graves to say that they make a clear pattern," archaeologist Eva Thäte, of the University of Chester in the U.K., said in a statement...
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They date back to at least ancient Roman times, but Friday the 13th superstitions won't be getting much of a workout this year. Luckily for triskaidekaphobia sufferers, today is 2010's only Friday the 13th. That must come as a relief, after 2009's nine Friday the 13ths—the maximum possible in a year, at least as long as we continue to mark time with the Gregorian calendar, which Pope Gregory XIII ordered the Catholic Church to adopt in 1582. "You can't have any [years] with none, and you can't have any with four, because of our funny calendar," said Underwood Dudley, a professor emeritus of mathematics at DePauw University in Indiana, and author of Numerology: Or, What Pythagoras Wrought. The calendar works just as its predecessor, the Julian calendar, did, with a leap year every four years. But the Gregorian calendar skips leap year on century years except those divisible by 400. For example, there was no leap year in 1900, but there was one in 2000. This trick keeps the calendar in tune with the seasons. The result is an ordering of days and dates that repeats itself every 400 years, Dudley noted. As time marches through the order, some years appear with three Friday the 13ths. Other years have two or, like 2010, one...
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Just northeast of Cincinnati, Ohio, a sort of wooden Stonehenge is slowly emerging as archaeologists unearth increasing evidence of a 2,000-year-old ceremonial site. Among their latest finds: Like Stonehenge, the Ohio timber circles were likely used to mark astronomical events such as the summer solstice. Formally called Moorehead Circle but nicknamed "Woodhenge" by non-archaeologists, the site was once a leafless forest of wooden posts. Laid out in a peculiar pattern of concentric, but incomplete, rings, the site is about 200 feet (57 meters) wide. Today only rock-filled postholes remain, surrounded by the enigmatic earthworks of Fort Ancient State Memorial (map). Some are thousands of feet long and all were built by Indians of the pre-agricultural Hopewell culture, the dominant culture in midwestern and eastern North America from about A.D. 1 to 900. This year archaeologists began using computer models to analyze Moorehead Circle's layout and found that Ohio's Woodhenge may have even more in common with the United Kingdom's Stonehenge than thought—specifically, an apparently intentional astronomical alignment. The software "allows us to stitch together various kinds of geographical data, including aerial photographs and excavation plans and even digital photographs," explained excavation leader Robert Riordan, an archaeologist at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio. The researchers had known, for example, that an opening in the rings; a nearby, human-made enclosure; stone mounds; and a gateway in a nearby earthen wall are all aligned. But the model revealed that the alignment is such that, during the Northern Hemisphere's summer solstice—the longest day of the year—the sun appears to rise in the gateway, as seen from the center of the circle, Riordan said. In much the same way, and on the same day, the sun appears to rise alongside Stonehenge's outlying Heel Stone, casting a beam on the monument's central altar...
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Bournemouth and Poole in Dorset
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