Wednesday, April 23, 2014

KINDLE FREEBIE - Princess Alexia and the Dragon by K. Meador - April 23 and 24, 2014



 Follow Princess Alexia as she and her brave dog, Zoey, as they embark on a mission to confront a fire-breathing dragon. She hopes to do what her father’s soldiers could not, capture the dragon so another Ample Apple Orchard celebration would not be attacked and the land set ablaze.

When Princess Alexia faces her adversary, she is frightened, but her fears abate once she and Titus, the dragon, begin talking. Can she convince Titus to stop plaguing her father’s kingdom, and will the festival be celebrated without fear of destruction?

Amazon US

http://www.amazon.com/Princess-Alexia-Dragon-K-Meador-ebook/dp/B00ISGD866/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1397176934&sr=8-1&keywords=Princess+alexia+and+the+dragon

Amazon UK

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Princess-Alexia-Dragon-K-Meador-ebook/dp/B00ISGD866/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1397177023&sr=8-1&keywords=princess+alexia+and+the+dragon Follow on Bloglovin

History Trivia -Battle of Clontarf Brian Boru defeats Viking invaders

April 23

215 BC A temple was built on the Capitoline Hill and dedicated to Venus Erycina to commemorate the Roman defeat at Lake Trasimene.

1014 Battle of Clontarf Brian Boru (High King of Ireland in 1002) defeated Viking invaders, but was killed during the battle.

1348 The founding of the Order of the Garter by King Edward III was announced on St George's Day. Follow on Bloglovin

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Mr. Chuckles was around The Wizard's Cauldron checking out Welsh chickliterati Karenne Griffin


The Wizard says:

Around the Cauldron today we have Karenne Griffin, Australian by birth (Tasmanian, actually), but now as staunchly welsh as Charlotte Church, Robbie Savage and original rebel, Owen Glendower. She writes chicklit set in the valleys and villages of where she lives. 

Karenne is a lover of life and always seems to be at a party, a wedding or down the pub for a few pints of Skull Attack and so I was lucky to track her down.

Want more of Karenne - click on the link

http://greenwizard62.blogspot.com/2014/04/karenne-griffin-welsh-chickliterati.html Follow on Bloglovin

Ancient Assassin Flies Found in Amber

By Megan Gannon, News Editor
 
A scientist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History discovered and named a new 100-million-year-old species of assassin fly, Burmapogon bruckschi, after studying the first two specimens ever preserved in Burmese amber.
Credit: David Grimaldi

 
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Ancient Rome's tap water heavily contaminated with lead, researchers say

An archaeologist works at Portus: scientists inferred levels of lead pollution in the Roman water supply by analysing sediment cores taken from the Trajanic harbour basin. Photograph: Chris Ison/PA

Supply became contaminated as it passed through giant network of lead pipes that distributed water around city, scientists believe

, science correspondent

Tap water in ancient Rome, provided by its famous aqueducts, was contaminated with up to 100 times more lead than local spring water, researchers say.
Huge volumes of fresh water flowed along aqueducts to the heart of the Roman empire but the supply was contaminated as it passed through the giant network of lead pipes that distributed water around the city.
Researchers in France said levels of lead in Roman drinking water were a concern, but were probably insufficient to cause widespread mental problems, or potentially drive up crime rates, through lead poisoning.
"It's marginal. You would start being worried about drinking that water all your life," said Francis Albarède, who led the study at Claude Bernard University in Lyon. "Even though they probably did not get degenerate, as some people say, or even get more violent, lead pollution might have been something to be concerned about."
The scientists inferred lead pollution levels by analysing sediment cores taken from the Trajanic harbour basin at Portus, a major port of imperial Rome, and a canal that connected the port to the Tiber river.
The Trajanic harbour, a hexagonal inland basin, was built in the early years of the second century AD to give safe mooring to merchant ships as the population of Rome expanded.
Albarède's team studied lead isotopes in a nine-metre-deep core drilled from the harbour and a 13-metre core taken from the canal, which carried a record of contaminants from the Tiber. Sediments trap contaminants as they form, so studies of sediment cores drilled from ocean floors and river beds can reveal levels of environmental pollution dating back hundreds or thousands of years.
The tests on the Tiber sediments were striking. They showed that two kinds of water mixed in the river. The first was natural river water, which carried lead isotopes originally from the Apennines and volcanic rock in the Alban hills south-east of Rome.
The second type was much cleaner drinking water, that had drained into the river, and was contaminated with isotopes of lead not found in Italy. The researchers believe the lead was mined elsewhere, perhaps in Eifel in Germany, or even the English Pennines, and then brought back in ingots to make lead piping.
Further tests on the sediments showed that levels of lead in the Roman tap water varied over time from 14 to 105 times higher than those found in natural spring water. The findings are reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Though Rome's complex plumbing system gave officials control over the distribution of water around the city, it was not unknown for locals to punch holes in the pipes to draw water off, increasing the number of people exposed to the lead. Even so, Albarède believes that any health problems caused by lead piping could not have brought the civilisation to its knees.
"Can you really poison an entire civilisation with lead? I think it would take more than lead piping in Rome to do that," he said.
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/apr/21/ancient-rome-tap-water-contaminated-lead-researchers
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The Briton and the Dane Concordia featured on eBookSoda

The Briton and the Dane: Concordia ebook cover

The Briton and the Dane: Concordia

by Mary Ann Bernal

Stunning historical romantic adventure

Beautiful noblewoman, Concordia, finds herself at the center of intrigue, betrayal and the vain desires of two egotistical brothers, each willing to die for her favor. Using only feminine cunning, Concordia must defend her honor while plotting her escape.

Get it now

$0.99  (£0.77)


 
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The Phil Naessens Show: Portland’s LeMarcus Aldridge is the Real Deal

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/04/22/the-phil-naessens-show-portlands-lemarcus-aldridge-is-the-real-deal/

 
On today’s Phil Naessens Show Dave Deckard joins Phil to discuss the Portland Trailblazers upset win over the Houston Rockets, LeMarcus Aldridge, Damian Lillard and previews Wednesday night’s playoff game against Houston. Amar joins Phil to finish their discussion of ESPN 30 for 30 documentary Bad Boys and the guys share their thoughts on the playoffs thus far.
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History Trivia - First stone of the Bastille laid

April 22

 238 Year of the Six Emperors: The Roman Senate outlawed emperor Maximinus Thrax for his bloodthirsty proscriptions in Rome and nominated two of its members, Pupienus and Balbinus, to the throne.

960 Basil II was crowned Emperor of the Byzantine Empire.

1073 Gregory VII was elected pope. 1056 Supernova Crab nebula last seen by the naked eye.

1370 First stone of the Bastille laid. The fortress that was later to become a prison was built on the orders of King Charles V of France. It was intended as a fortification to help protect the wall around Paris against English attack during the Hundred Years' War.

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Monday, April 21, 2014

The Phil Naessens Show: The Indiana Pacers and Memphis Grizzlies Need to be Bad Boys Now!

http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/04/21/the-phil-naessens-show-the-indiana-pacers-and-memphis-grizzlies-need-to-be-bad-boys-now/





 On today’s Phil Naessens Show Tom Lewis joins Phil to discuss the Atlanta Hawks upset win over the Indiana Pacers in Game 1 of their Eastern Conference Playoff match up, the troublesome match-ups the Hawks present and how Indiana can get back on track. Amar joins Phil for part 1 of their two part discussion regarding ESPN’s 30 for 30 documentary on the Detroit Pistons. Kevin Lipe joins Phil to talk about the Memphis Grizzlies game 1 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder, Grizzlies Coach Dave Joerger and what the Grizzlies have to do to get back in this series. Follow on Bloglovin

Chilean Mummies Reveal Signs of Arsenic Poisoning

As expected, the team detected arsenic in the mummy's hair and in the soil. They also discovered skin conditions indicative of arsenic poisoning.
By Joseph Castro, Live Science Contributor

People of numerous pre-Columbian civilizations in northern Chile, including the Incas and the Chinchorro culture, suffered from chronic arsenic poisoning due to their consumption of contaminated water, new research suggests.
Previous analyses showed high concentrations of arsenic in the hair samples of mummies from both highland and coastal cultures in the region. However, researchers weren't able to determine whether the people had ingested arsenic or if the toxic element in the soil had diffused into the mummies' hair after they were buried.
In the new study, scientists used a range of high-tech methods to analyze hair samples from a 1,000- to 1,500-year-old mummy from the Tarapacá Valley in Chile's Atacama Desert. They determined the high concentration of arsenic in the mummy's hair came from drinking arsenic-laced water and, possibly, eating plants irrigated with the toxic water.

"In Chile, you have these sediments that are rich in arsenic because of copper-mining activities in the highlands," which expose arsenic and other pollutants, said lead study author Ioanna Kakoulli, an archaeological scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles. "When it rains, the arsenic can leach out into the rivers."
In fields ranging from forensics to archaeology, hair is widely used to gain insight into the lives of modern and past peoples. Unlike other biological samples, such as bone and skin tissue that change over time, hair remains stable after it forms (keratinizes). This feature, along with hair's steady growth rate, means that it can provide a chronological record of the substances that previously circulated in the blood.
In the past, scientists have analyzed the hair samples of the mummies from the pre-Columbian populations that lived in Chile's Atacama Desert between A.D.
500 and 1450. The remains showed patterns of chronic poisoning, which some researchers have suspected was due to these populations' consumption of water contaminated with arsenic. But the methods didn't allow them to determine how the arsenic got into the mummies' hair.
"They didn't map where the arsenic is precipitated on the hair — they just took it and dissolved it," Kakoulli told Live Science. With this technique, you cannot tell if the arsenic wound up in the hair externally, or if it was ingested and traveled through the bloodstream first, she said.
To learn more about the possible arsenic poisoning of the ancient people from northern Chile, Kakoulli and her colleagues looked at a naturally preserved mummythat was buried in the TR40-A cemetery in the Tarapacá Valley of the Atacama Desert. Using portable techniques that were noninvasive and nondestructive, they imaged and analyzed the mummy's skin, clothes and hair, as well as the soil encrusting the mummy.
As expected, the team detected arsenic in the mummy's hair and in the soil. They also discovered skin conditions indicative of arsenic poisoning. Though these findings were suggestive of arsenic ingestion, they weren't definitive, so the researchers collected hair samples to analyze further in the lab.
Finding the source
Kakoulli and her colleagues imaged the hair samples with a very-high-resolution scanning electron microscope. They also subjected the samples to various tests with the synchrotron light source — a large particle accelerator that analyzes materials with intense, focused X-ray beams — at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, allowing them to map the distribution of the elements and minerals in the hair.

Their tests revealed a uniform, radial distribution of arsenic in the hair. If the hair had been contaminated from arsenic in the soil, the toxic element would have only coated the surface, Kakoulli said. Comparisons of the arsenic in the soil and hair also showed the soil contained much lower concentrations of the element.
Furthermore, the dominant form of arsenic in the hair was a type called arsenic III, while the inorganic arsenic in surface water and groundwateris mostly arsenic V. Studies have suggested that the body "biotransforms" ingested arsenic into arsenic III.
"The results are consistent with modern epidemiological studies of arsenic poisoning by ingestion," Kakoulli said, adding that the technological approach used in the study could prove useful to forensic investigations and toxicity assessments in archaeology.
The team is now using the same approach to see if the ancient people of the Tarapacá Valley used certain hallucinogens, as some individuals were buried with exotic Amazonian seeds and various hallucinogenic paraphernalia. If the people buried with the items didn't use the hallucinogens, it would suggest they were shaman or doctors who used the hallucinogenic plants to aid other people, the researchers said.
"It then becomes a question about the level of interaction they had with the people of the Amazon, because the seeds aren't from Chile," Kakoulli said. "They would've had to have known the properties of the seeds and where to get them."
The study was published in January in the journal Analytical Chemistry.
http://www.livescience.com/44838-chilean-mummies-show-arsenic-poisoning.html Follow on Bloglovin

Ancient Puppy Paw Prints Found on Roman Tiles

 
 
A dog pushed its paws into this ancient Roman tile before it could dry.Credit: Adam Slater, Wardell Armstrong Archaeology

 By Megan Gannon, News Editor

The paw prints and hoof prints of a few meddlesome animals have been preserved for posterity on ancient Roman tiles recently discovered by archaeologists in England.
"They are beautiful finds, as they represent a snapshot, a single moment in history," said Nick Daffern, a senior project manager with Wardell Armstrong Archaeology. "It is lovely to imagine some irate person chasing a dog or some other animal away from their freshly made tiles."
The artifacts, which could be nearly 2,000 years old, were found in the Blackfriars area of Leicester, the English city where the long-lost bones of King Richard III were discovered under a parking lot in 2012. Wardell Armstrong Archaeology was brought in to dig at a site where a construction company plans to build student housing.


 At least one of the tiles is tainted with dog paw prints, and one is marked with the hoof prints of a sheep or a goat that trampled on the clay before it was dry.
"My initial thought was that it must have been very difficult being a Roman tile manufacturer with these animal incursions going on all the time," Philip Briggs, another Wardell Armstrong archaeologist, told Live Science in an email.
The tiles were found in layers of rubble that had been laid down as a hard base for subsequent floors, but the artifacts' original context is unclear, Daffern said.
"We don't know if the tiles were originally part of an earlier building or were bought in from elsewhere specifically to raise and stabilize ground," Daffern told Live Science in an email.
Leicester was the stronghold of an Iron Age group known as the Corieltauvi tribe, and it remained an important city after the Roman conquest of Britain in the first century A.D., as it was located along the Fosse Way, a Roman road that connected southwestern England with the East Midlands.
The excavators say that, in addition to the animal-printed tiles, they've uncovered Roman tweezers, brooches, coins and painted wall plaster. They've also unearthed traces of a large Roman building — perhaps a basilica, with a peristyle, or columned porch — that was largely robbed of its masonry during the medieval era for other construction projects.
The archaeologists even discovered late Iron Age artifacts, such as several fragments of clay molds that the Corieltauvi tribe likely used to make coins before the Roman rule. Daffern said it's rare to find sites with coin molds, given how closely managed coin production would have been during the Iron Age.
"I think the excavation thus far has significantly multiplied the number of coin mold fragments recovered from Leicester, probably by approximately tenfold," Daffern said in an email.
The excavation is funded by construction company Watkin Jones. The archaeologists are providing updates on Wardell Armstrong Archaeology's blog.
     http://www.livescience.com/44910-ancient-dog-paw-prints-roman-tiles.html

 

 
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The Fix Was in for Ancient Wrestling Match

 
Researchers have deciphered a contract, pictured here, that was written in A.D. 267 between the guarantors of two wrestlers named Nicantinous and Demetrius.

by Owen Jarus, LiveScience


Who says only modern-day pro wrestling is fake?
            
Researchers have deciphered a Greek document that shows an ancient wrestling match was fixed. The document, which has a date on it that corresponds to the year A.D. 267, is a contract between two teenagers who had reached the final bout of a prestigious series of games in Egypt.
This is the first time that a written contract between two athletes to fix a match has been found from the ancient world.
In the contract, the father of a wrestler named Nicantinous agrees to pay a bribe to the guarantors (likely the trainers) of another wrestler named Demetrius. Both wrestlers were set to compete in the final wrestling match of the 138th Great Antinoeia, an important series of regional games held along with a religious festival in Antinopolis, in Egypt. They were in the boys' division, which was generally reserved for teenagers.
The contract stipulates that Demetrius "when competing in the competition for the boy , to fall three times and yield," and in return would receive "three thousand eight hundred drachmas of silver of old coinage …"
There were no pins in this Greek style of wrestling, and the goal of the wrestlers was to throw the other to the ground three times. A wide array of holds and throws were used, a few of which look a bit like a body slam.
The contract includes a clause that Demetrius is still to be paid if the judges realize the match is fixed and refuse to reward Nicantinous the win. If "the crown is reserved as sacred, (we) are not to institute proceedings against him about these things," the contract reads. It also says that if Demetrius reneges on the deal, and wins the match anyway, then "you are of necessity to pay as penalty to my son on account of wrongdoing three talents of silver of old coinage without any delay or inventive argument."
The translator of the text, Dominic Rathbone, a professor at King's College London, noted that 3,800 drachma was a relatively small amount of money — about enough to buy a donkey, according to another papyrus. Moreover, the large sum Demetrius would forfeit if he were to back out of the deal suggests his trainers would have been paid additional money Rathbone said.
http://news.discovery.com/history/archaeology/the-fix-was-in-for-ancient-wrestling-match-140417.htm Follow on Bloglovin

Showpitch.com - Those Who Know Belong! #GetDiscovered



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History Trivia - Henry VIII ascends the throne of England

April 21

753 BC – Romulus and Remus founded Rome (traditional date).

43 BC Battle of Mutina: Mark Antony was again defeated in battle by Aulus Hirtius, who was killed. Antony failed to capture Mutina and Decimus Brutus was murdered shortly after.

1509 Henry VIII ascended the throne of England on the death of his father, Henry VII.
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Sunday, April 20, 2014

Congratulations Green Wizard Publishing - Celebrating Two Years in the industry




Congratulations to Mark Barry and Green Wizard publishing upon celebrating its second year in a rapidly expanding industry.  The accomplishments achieved thus far continue to entice readers on both sides of the pond, piquing interest by offering quality novels in diverse genres.

 



I, along with your followers, wish you every success throughout the year.




 
 
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Bet You Didn't Know: Easter Traditions






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History Trivia - The last naval battle in Byzantine history occurs

April 20

1303 The University of Rome La Sapienza was instituted by Pope Boniface VIII.


1314 Clement V died. Clement, who owed his election largely to King Philip IV of France, chose to move the Papacy to Avignon, where it remained for more than 60 years. He also had a hand in the trial of the Templars.

1442 Edward IV, King of England, 1461-83, was born.

1453 The last naval battle in Byzantine history occurred, as three Genoese galleys escorting a Byzantine transport fought their way through the huge Ottoman blockade fleet.
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Saturday, April 19, 2014

Congratulations Ngaire Elder - Authorsdb #1

Authors Directory Ngaire Elder

Ngaire ElderNgaire Elder Hot

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Written by Ngaire Elder     December 14, 2013    
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Author Details

Pen Name
Ngaire Elder
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Bio
Ngaire Elder, author of The Adventures of Cecilia Spark novels, is a natural storyteller whose love of animals is reflected in her work.

Ngaire was born and raised in Glasgow, Scotland, where she spent most of her childhood playing with her brother and her imaginary friends. As a child, she wrote plays, just for fun, but it would be years before her first book was ultimately published.

After college and university, Ngaire embarked on a career in the health and safety sector. As a Health and Safety Advisor, she was instrumental in implementing health and safety laws in the workplace. After meeting her husband, she chose a new occupation, and became a full-time wife and mother.

In the past decade, Ngaire has managed to balance a writing career and family commitments. She has participated in reading events at primary schools in County Derry, Northern Ireland, Seeley Primary School, Sherwood, and has taught English to young children participating in the Spanish school system’s extracurricular activity programme. She has been interviewed extensively by European and American bloggers, and her work has been featured in Indie Author News, British Indie Fiction, the Coleraine Times, and The Nottingham Post.

Ngaire is a passionate supporter of horse rescue, having volunteered in a rescue center in southern Spain. She is actively involved in fund raisers supporting not only local rescue centers, but also for international programs, such as saving the wild mustangs in the Pryor Mountain range in Montana.

Ngaire resides in Spain with her husband and four children.
Where I Live
Spain
Shout Out
Author interview: http://greenwizard62.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/an-interview-with-ngaire-victoria-elder.html

Author interview: http://authorvoxiansseriesbooks.wordpress.com/2013/10/09/wednesdays-just-got-interesting-welcome-one-and-all-to-the-wednesdays-wonderful-world-of-authors-try-saying-that-after-a-few-pints/

Author interview: http://littlesugarplums.blogspot.com.es/2013/03/the-adventures-of-cecilia-spark.html

Author interview: http://vickiemckeehan.wordpress.com/2013/03/23/childrens-author-ngaire-elder/

Author spotlight: http://www.examiner.com/article/author-ngaire-elder-spotlighted

School visit: http://www.nottinghampost.com/Pupils-hear-character-s-exploits-told-author/story-20038656-detail/story.html#ixzz2kXa8yqzi

School visit: http://www.ceciliaspark.com/WhatsNew.htm

Fun Things to Do: http://www.ceciliaspark.com/ThingsToDo.htm
 
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