Sunday, May 4, 2014

Solved! How Ancient Egyptians Moved Massive Pyramid Stones

By Denise Chow, Sci-Tech Editor

pyramids
The Pyramids of Giza, built between 2589 and 2504 BC.
Credit: Dan Breckwoldt | Shutterstock

The ancient Egyptians who built the pyramids may have been able to move massive stone blocks across the desert by wetting the sand in front of a contraption built to pull the heavy objects, according to a new study.
Physicists at the University of Amsterdam investigated the forces needed to pull weighty objects on a giant sled over desert sand, and discovered that dampening the sand in front of the primitive device reduces friction on the sled, making it easier to operate. The findings help answer one of the most enduring historical mysteries: how the Egyptians were able to accomplish the seemingly impossible task of constructing the famous pyramids.
To make their discovery, the researchers picked up on clues from the ancient Egyptians themselves. A wall painting discovered in the ancient tomb of Djehutihotep, which dates back to about 1900 B.C., depicts 172 men hauling an immense statue using ropes attached to a sledge. In the drawing, a person can be seen standing on the front of the sledge, pouring water over the sand, said study lead author Daniel Bonn, a physics professor at the University of Amsterdam. [Photos: Amazing Discoveries at Egypt's Giza Pyramids]

 "Egyptologists thought it was a purely ceremonial act," Bonn told Live Science. "The question was: Why did they do it?"
Bonn and his colleagues constructed miniature sleds and experimented with pulling heavy objects through trays of sand.
When the researchers dragged the sleds over dry sand, they noticed clumps would build up in front of the contraptions, requiring more force to pull them across.
Adding water to the sand, however, increased its stiffness, and the sleds were able to glide more easily across the surface. This is because droplets of water create bridges between the grains of sand, which helps them stick together, the scientists said. It is also the same reason why using wet sand to build a sandcastle is easier than using dry sand, Bonn said.
Lab Studies of How Egyptians Moved Pyramid Stones
A large pile of sand accumulates in front of the sled when it is pulled over dry sand (left). On the wet sand (right) this does not happen.
Credit: Daniel Bonn/University of Amsterdam
But, there is a delicate balance, the researchers found.
"If you use dry sand, it won't work as well, but if the sand is too wet, it won't work either," Bonn said. "There's an optimum stiffness."
The amount of water necessary depends on the type of sand, he added, but typically the optimal amount falls between 2 percent and 5 percent of the volume of sand.
"It turns out that wetting Egyptian desert sand can reduce the friction by quite a bit, which implies you need only half of the people to pull a sledge on wet sand, compared to dry sand," Bonn said.
The study, published April 29 in the journal Physical Review Letters, may explain how the ancient Egyptians constructed the pyramids, but the research also has modern-day applications, the scientists said. The findings could help researchers understand the behavior of other granular materials, such as asphalt, concrete or coal, which could lead to more efficient ways to transport these resources.

http://www.livescience.com/45285-how-egyptians-moved-pyramid-stones.html Follow on Bloglovin

Neanderthals aren't grunting, club-wielding idiots – we are

For years our ancestors have been the victim of an ugly stereotype, so let's start their rebranding here



Recreation of the face of a Neanderthal
'People had been comparing Neanderthals to their successors, rather than their contemporaries. Which is rather like assuming I am more advanced than my parents because I know how to work an iPhone.' Photograph: Jose A Astor/Alamy
They've long been maligned as grunting, club-wielding idiots, but apparently we've got Neanderthals all wrong. Misled by their simple tools (clubs) and simple language (grunting) we have stereotyped them as primitive beings – but this couldn't be further from the truth. In fact, according to recent research, Neanderthals were no less intelligent than their modern human contemporaries.
After careful study of archaeological records, scientists in the Netherlands found evidence to suggest that Neanderthals were just as advanced in culture, weaponry and hunting as our human forebears. According to those scientists, the misunderstanding came about because people had been comparing Neanderthals to their successors, who had more advanced tools, rather than their contemporaries. Which is rather like assuming I am more advanced than my parents because I know how to work an iPhone. But this doesn't make my parents any less intelligent … just obsolete and unable to function in this modern, fast-paced world.
So, what we have here is an ugly, ugly stereotype; a stereotype that needs to be quashed. As ever, the Guardian is the perfect place to start that process – and perhaps even to "rebrand" the Neanderthal. After all, when you really think about it, aren't we the real club-wielding prehistoric creatures?
Take some of our most pressing modern concerns. To pick just one example, let's look at the unpalatable truth about quinoa. All evidence suggests that Neanderthal food was both organic and locally sourced. But unlike modern man, Neanderthals were not "consciously ethical" consumers so preoccupied with "personal health, animal welfare and reducing their carbon 'foodprint'" that they drove up the price of a staple grain beyond the grasp of local Bolivians. No.
Not for them, either, the errors of cupcake fascism. They refrained from such products which, as has been pointed out, "treat their audience as children, and more specifically the children of the middle classes – perfect special snowflakes full of wide-eyed wonder and possibility" and thereby "succeed as expressions of a desire on behalf of consumers to always and for ever be children, by telling consumers not only that this is OK, but also that it is, to a real degree, possible." Which was really wise of them.
And neither were Neanderthal women held up to ridiculously high beauty standards. They were not impelled to shave their legs in order to live up to unreachable social ideals concocted by a controlling patriarchy.
And finally, Neanderthals had the skills that will really matter post-rewilding. When George Monbiot has his way and wolves, bears, bison and lynx roam Britain (sheep cast finally into the furthest pit of hell), we'll be relying on our hunting nous. Only then, as we square up to a hungry grizzly, will we know who the club-wielding idiots truly are.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/may/02/neanderthals-arent-grunting-club-wielding-idiots-stereotype
Follow on Bloglovin

Britain's oldest settlement is Amesbury not Thatcham, say scientists

Archaeologists discover Wiltshire site is forerunner to Stonehenge and has been continually occupied since 8,820BC

, arts correspondent

Bone and tool found at Amesbury site
A bone and tool found at Blick Mead, an excavated Mesolithic site a mile-and-a-half from Stonehenge. Photograph: University Of Buckingham/PA
Britain's oldest settlement is not where we thought it was, a team of archaeologists said on Thursday as they announced with confidence that Amesbury should now hold the distinction.
It was previously considered that Thatcham in Berkshire held the distinction but researchers from the University of Buckingham are certain we need to look 40 miles west, to the parish of Amesbury, in Wiltshire, which also includes Stonehenge.
Carbon dating of bones of aurochs – the giant cattle that were twice the size of today's bulls – at the Blick Mead dig site, has shown that Amesbury has been continually occupied for each millennium since 8,820BC. Older than Thatcham, occupied since 7,700BC, it is in effect where British history began.
David Jacques, research fellow in archaeology at the University of Buckingham, led the dig. He said: "The site blows the lid off the Neolithic revolution in a number of ways. It provides evidence for people staying put, clearing land, building and presumably worshipping monuments.
"The area was clearly a hub point for people to come to from many miles away and in many ways was a forerunner for what later went on at Stonehenge itself. The first monuments at Stonehenge were built by these people.
"For years people have been asking 'why is Stonehenge where it is?' Now, at last, we have found the answers."
It was the same dig, at Blick Mead, which last year led to the discovery that Mesolithic Britons were enjoying eating frogs legs about eight millennia before the French.
At the time, Jaques expressed confidence that evidence would prove it was Britain's oldest settlement. That has now been confirmed and on Thursday it was recognised by the Guinness Book of Records.
The dig also unearthed the largest number of Mesolithic worked flints ever found; 31,000 were discovered in just over 40 days, all in a 16-sq-metre (172-sq-ft) area.
The discoveries put a date to the activities of those who built the first monuments at the Stonehenge site, using enormous pine posts. It shows their communities lived in the area for a further 3,000 years, close to the dawn of the Neolithic era when Stonehenge itself was built.
Archaeologists say the results provide something of a missing link between the erection of the posts, between 8,820 and 6,590BC, and of Stonehenge, in 3,000BC. The findings provide evidence which suggests that Stonehenge, rather than a Neolithic new-build sitting, at first, in an empty landscape should be viewed as a response to long-term use of the area by indigenous hunters and home-makers.
Bill Dunn, spokesman for the Amesbury History Centre, said: "We are naturally delighted at the confirmation of Amesbury's longevity as the oldest continuously inhabited place in England. We have always known Amesbury as somewhere special and this confirms it. All the visitors to the museum are amazed at what they find, and we hope even more people will now visit."
• This article was amended on 2 May 2014. An earlier version referred to Amesbury as being continually occupied for each millennia, rather than millennium, since 8,820BC.

http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/may/01/oldest-britain-settlement-amesbury-wiltshire-stonehenge
Follow on Bloglovin

The Night I Danced with Rommel featured on Bargain Books



The Night I Danced with Rommel
by Elisabeth Marrion
Rating: 4.7 Stars
Genre: Historical Fiction
Price: $0.99 Save $2.00
Make sure price is still $0.99 before clicking “Buy”.
“It is a beautifully written, artfully edited story….If you are looking for an entertaining book with purpose, this is it.” -Linda R.
‘May I have this dance, Hilde’ asked Field Marshal Rommel, opening the Grande Ball held in his honour.
Did this dance save the life of Hilde’s Polish friends?
Hilde had come a long way since her dream of becoming a singer was shattered when her father made arrangements for her to work as a housekeeper in Berlin at the tender age of fourteen.
Hilde’s life is thrown into turmoil in Berlin during the late 1920’s early 1930’s. Having Polish friends meant it was becoming increasingly unsafe for her to stay there and she finds a new life in the Harz mountains.
In Goslar, Hilde meets her husband, Karl, a young officer in the German Army. When he joins the 7th Panzer Brigade led by General Erwin Rommel at the beginning of World War II, Hilde is left to bring up their children in war-torn Germany.
Hilde’s story is based on facts and is told here by her youngest daughter, Elisabeth.

 http://ereadernewstoday.com/more-bargain-and-free-books-for-5-4-14/6743579/ Follow on Bloglovin

Star Wars Day - May 4







Follow on Bloglovin

History Trivia - Pope Alexander VI divides the New World between Spain and Portugal

May 4

1256 The Augustinian monastic order was constituted at the Lecceto Monastery in Tuscany when Pope Alexander IV issued a papal bull Licet ecclesiae catholicae.


1415 Religious reformers John Wycliffe and Jan Hus were condemned as heretics at the Council of Constance.

1471 Wars of the Roses: the Yorkists defeated the Lancastrians at the battle of Tewkesbury.

1493 Pope Alexander VI divided the New World between Spain and Portugal along the Line of Demarcation.
Follow on Bloglovin

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Horror thriller fan? Try a FREE PDF or read on Scribd - The Ritual, Daughter of Satan, by Mark Barry


The Ritual (Part I) by Wiz Green

http://www.scribd.com/doc/220586489/The-Ritual-Part-I Follow on Bloglovin

Hard as Roxx: kicking ass and taking names

Photo: Hard as Roxx: kicking ass, taking names, and on sale now. 

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00EL1YP6Y
 
 
Follow on Bloglovin

Audio Book - Dragon's Star: The Adventures of Cecilia Spark, Book 3

http://www.audible.com/pd/Kids/Dragons-Star-Audiobook/B00K1NBZ1E/ref=a_pd_Kids_D_c2_pin



  • Written by: Ngaire Elder
  • Narrated by: Hana Khalique
  • Cecilia Spark is in a race against time. Her challenge is to save the last Millennium Dragon, captured by a hideous knight of darkness, and reunite him with the star that gives him his power. With Orson, Ractus and Pacha by her side, Cecilia must rescue Fuego and save the Land of Dragons from an endless, desperate gloom. Harassed by crooked imps, captured in the lair of a giant spider, lost in the darkest of dungeons and threatened by a hidden river monster, will Cecilia and her brave friends succeed in their quest.
    Follow on Bloglovin

    History Trivia - Gregory V consecrated as pope

    May 3

    612 Constantine III, Byzantine Emperor was born.

    996 Gregory V was consecrated as pope. The pontificate of Gregory was brief and turbulent, and was interrupted by the installation of John XVI as antipope.

    1415 Cecily Neville, mother of Edward IV of England and Richard III of England was born.

    1469 Niccolo Machiavelli was born.
    Follow on Bloglovin

    Friday, May 2, 2014

    Diane Turner - London Rocks - 02.05.2014

    Diane Turner - London Rocks - 02.05.2014


    Follow on Bloglovin

    The Phil Naessens Show: Donald Sterling, 1st Amendment and NBA Playoff Talk


    On today’s Phil Naessens Show J.R. Wilco shares his thoughts on Donald Sterling and the series between the Dallas Mavericks and San Antonio Spurs. David Ramil shares his thoughts on Sterling, the Miami Heat first round playoff sweep of the Charlotte Bobcats and more NBA talk. J.A. Sherman joins Phil to share his thoughts on Donald Sterling, the 1st Amendment and game six of the playoff series between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Memphis Grizzlies. http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/05/02/the-phil-naessens-show-donald-sterling-1st-amendment-and-nba-playoff-talk/ Follow on Bloglovin

    'MEIN TANZ MIT ROMMEL' by Elisabeth Marrion


    Biografie

    Elisabeth Marrion ist gebuertige Hildesheimerin. 1969 wollte sie ein Jahr in England verbringen um ihre Sprachkenntnisse zu erweitern.Dann noch ein Jahr und dann noch ein Jahr. Bevor sie sich besann sind die Jahre verflogen. Sie hat geheirated, ihre Familie grossgezogen, das Ehepaar hat eine Grosshandelsfirma aufgebaut, haben im Fernen Osten und Mittel Osten gearbeited und haben ihren Fabrikanten in Bangladesh geholfen eine Schule auf dem Land fuer weiterbildene Schueler und Schuelerinnen zu bauen. Heute gehen dort Jungen und Maedchen im Alter von 12-18 Jahren zur Schule.In der Zwischenzeit ist Elisabeth im Ruhestand und ist noch immer in England.


    Amazon Germany




    Follow on Bloglovin

    History Trivia - Anne Boleyn, Queen of England, arrested and imprisoned on charges of adultery, incest, treason and witchcraft

    May 2

    1194 King Richard I of England gave Portsmouth its first Royal Charter.

    1230 William de Braose (Marcher lord detested by the Welsh) was hanged by Prince Llywelyn the Great. 

    1519 Leonardo da Vinci died. 1

    536 Anne Boleyn, Queen of England, was arrested and imprisoned on charges of adultery, incest, treason and witchcraft.

    1559 John Knox returned from exile to Scotland to become the leader of the beginning Scottish Reformation.

    1568 Mary, Queen of Scots, escaped from Loch Leven Castle.
    Follow on Bloglovin

    Thursday, May 1, 2014

    The Phil Naessens Show: Oakland Athletics, NFL Draft and New York Mets Sports Talk


     
    On today’s Phil Naessens Show Alex Hall joins Phil to talk Oakland Athletics baseball, Joe Mullinax joins Phil to preview Wide Receiver NFL Draft hopefuls and Mark Berman joins Phil to talk New York Mets baseball

    http://phillipnaessens.wordpress.com/2014/05/01/the-phil-naessens-show-oakland-athletics-nfl-draft-and-new-york-mets-sports-talk/ Follow on Bloglovin

    Mr. Chuckles stopped by the Wizard's Cauldron, hoping to track down a rogue agent




    R.Kyle Hannah, ex-Army turned science fiction writer, was the second interviewee to visit the Cauldron in 2012.

    Promoting his well received novel "Time Assassins", he and his many friends and fans helped establish the Cauldron in those early days when few people had heard of us. It was only in the last three months that Kyle's interview dropped out of the top ten, such was its popularity amongst readers of the Cauldron.

    I was delighted to be able to interview Kyle once more. A gentleman and an optimist, I picked up the Wizphone and caught up with Kyle as he was battling his way through Level 19 of The Division somewhere south of the Mason Dixon line.
    Want more of R. Kyle Hannah?  Click on the link

    http://greenwizard62.blogspot.com/2014/04/rkyle-hannah-sci-fi-writer-of-assassins.html Follow on Bloglovin

    Dozens of Mummies Unearthed at Egypt's Valley of the Kings

    By Megan Gannon, News Editor  

     
    Tomb KV 40 at the Valley of the Kings was plundered several times and damaged by a fire. During recent excavations, archaeologists discovered mummified remains alongside fragments of coffins, cloth and pottery. Family members and children related to the pharaohs were likely buried here in the 14th century B.C.
    Credit: Matjaz Kacicnik, University of Basel/Egyptology

     Archaeologists have discovered the final resting place of at least 50 royal Egyptians — including princes, princesses and infants — while excavating a trashed tomb at the Valley of the Kings.
    Hieratic inscriptions (a cursive form of hieroglyphs) revealed that most of the mummies in the tomb were related to two pharaohs, Thutmose IV and Amenhotep III, who ruled during the 14th century B.C. The dead included at least eight previously unknown royal daughters, four princes and some children, the archaeologists said.
    During Egypt's New Kingdom (1550-1070 B.C.), royals were buried at the Valley of the Kings, a site along the Nile, opposite modern-day Luxor, about 312 miles (500 kilometers) south of Cairo. King Tutankhamun's tomb is among the best preserved burials to have been discovered at the Valley of the Kings, and new tombs are still being discovered and studied at the site today.

    One of those newly studied tombs is KV 40. From the surface, the only hint of a burial chamber was a depression in the ground. Excavations revealed a 16-foot-deep (5 meters) shaft, a corridor and four rooms in shambles. The 3,300-year-old tomb was likely plundered for its gold and wood during antiquity, and later looted for any other valuable goods that could be sold. The archaeologists, who have been excavating in the region since 2009, found textiles, mummy bandages, linen cloths, bones and other scattered funerary artifacts in the tomb. These objects were covered with soot from a heavy fire, presumably set by grave robbers of the late 19th century.
    The adult mummies in KV 40 are largely fragmentary, likely torn apart by grave robbers, but infant corpses in the underground burial chamber remain intact, said researcher Susanne Bickel, of the University of Basel in Switzerland. And while most infants who died would have been buried in a simple fashion at the time, royal children buried in KV 40 seem to have been given a proper mummification, Bickel added.
    "They are wrapped in numerous layers of bandages and treated with bitumen," a sticky embalming substance, Bickel told Live Science in an email.
    For now, the archaeologists have not determined a cause of death for these infants; anthropological investigations are planned for the next dig season, Bickel said.
    "What is certain is that they did not die at the same time (no epidemic), but over a certain time span," Bickel said.
    Follow on Bloglovin Bits of coffins made from wood and a plastered material known as cartonnage indicate that tomb KV 40 was used again as a burial ground in the ninth century B.C., for members of priestly families during Egypt's Third Intermediate Period.
    Studying the newfound mummies and their scattered grave goods could shed light on the lives of people in the pharaohs' royal court, Bickel and her colleagues said.
    http://www.livescience.com/45186-mummies-unearthed-egypts-valley-of-the-kings.html
     

    Early Image of Jesus Found in Egyptian Tomb

    http://news.discovery.com/history/archaeology/early-image-of-jesus-found-in-egyptian-tomb-140430.htm


    by Rossella Lorenzi


     
    Spanish archaeologists have discovered what may be one of the earliest depictions of Jesus in an ancient Egyptian tomb.
    Painted on the walls of a mysterious underground stone structure in the ancient Egyptian city of Oxyrhynchus, about 100 miles south of Cairo, the image shows a young man with curly hair and dressed in a short tunic.
    “He raises his hand as if making a blessing,” said Egyptologist Josep Padró, who has spent over 20 years excavating sites in the area.
    What Did Jesus Look Like?
    In this expedition, he led a team of archaeologists from the University of Barcelona, the Catalan Egyptology Society and the University of Montpellier.
    “We could be dealing with a very early image of Jesus Christ,” Padró added.
    Oxyrhynchus is known for the worship of the Egyptian god of the afterlife Osiris: indeed the underground structure was located in the middle of a processional route that joins the Nile with the Osireion, the temple dedicated to Osiris.
    But the painting is from much later, dating from between the sixth and seventh century A.D.
    To get to the underground chamber, Padró’s team removed over 45 tons of stones.
    Finally, the archaeologists reached a rectangular crypt measuring about 26 feet long and 12 feet deep. They are unsure what the function of the structure was originally, but believe it might have possibly been another temple dedicated to Osiris.
    Fact-Checking the Bible
    Once inside, the archaeologists found five or six coats of paint on the walls, the last of which was from the Coptic period of the first Christians.
    In addition to the image of the curly man, the walls feature symbols and images of plants and inscriptions written in the Coptic language, which are currently being translated.
    “In order to carry out future campaigns, it is necessary to excavate an attached structure. A flight of well worn stairs give access to it, but researchers do not know its content yet,” the University of Barcelona said in a statement.
    Photo: The image, protected from the sun with a thin layer of material, shows a young man with curly hair and dressed in a short tunic, with a hand raised as if making a blessing. Credit: University of Barcelona

    Follow on Bloglovin