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... Donovan A. Courville 37 Chapters 16 Chronological Charts 34 Tables 7 Plates 3 Maps More than 700 pages Challenge Books Loma Linda, California Library of Congress Catalog Card Number Copyright, 1971, by Donovan A. Courville. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America TABLE OF CONTENTS Volume II Chapter Page I Are the Foundations of Archaeological Science Secure? 1 II What Happens to Synchronisms Used to Support Current Views? 7 III Limitations of Carbon-14 Dating 29 IV Limitations of the Astronomical Dating Methods 48 V The Placement of Dynasty XII in the Archaeological Ages 90 VI Natural Catastrophe and Archaeological Synchronism 120 VII Archaeological Evidences of the Dispersion from Babel 141 VIII Archaeology and the Duration of ...
... Donovan Courville trained early in life for the ministry, completing his studies to the B.Th. degree in 1922 from Andrews University. Subsequent developments were such as to lead into the teaching profession, additional studies leading to the B.A . degree from the same institution in 1931. One of his major interests was the field of Archaeology, but again developments dictated the alternate field of Chemistry as his teaching major. The M.A . degree in Chemistry was from Indiana University in 1934 and the Ph.D . degree was from Washington University in 1945. He taught at Pacific Union College between the years 1935 and 1949, at which time he joined the staff ...
3. An Integrated Model for an Earthwide Event at 2300 BC. Part I: The Archaeological Evidence [Journals] [SIS Review]
... From: SIS Review Vol V No 3 (1980/81) Home | Issue Contents An Integrated Model for an Earthwide Event at 2300 BC. Part I: The Archaeological Evidence M. M. MANDELKEHR (c ) M. M. Mandelkehr 1983 M. M. Mandelkehr holds a B.Sc. and M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering (University of Kansas) and an M.Sc. in Systems Engineering and Operations Research (University of Pennsylvania). He currently works in advanced radar system design. The work of Claude Schaeffer showing widespread destruction at archeological sites in the Near and Middle East due to catastrophic earthquakes around 2300 BC (conventional chronology) ...
4. The Problem of Adjusting the Date Limits of the Archaeological Ages to Meet Velikovsky's Revision [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... From: Proceedings of The Second Seminar of Catastrophism and Ancient History (1985) Home | Issue Contents The Problem of Adjusting the Date Limits of the Archaeological Ages to Meet Velikovsky's Revision Donovan A. Courville Introduction It is only recently that the necessity for revising the dates for the archaeological ages has come to the front as a factor in evaluating the feasibility of Velikovsky's revision of Egyptian chronology as provided in Ages in Chaos. This problem, however, was recognized by the writer as early as the mid-1960's, as indicated by a placement of the exodus/conquest era at the end of the Early Bronze Age. [1 ] The principle involved was iterated at the 1978 Glasgow ...
5. Abraham to Hezekiah: An Archaeological Revision Part I [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... From: Catastrophism and Ancient History V:2 (July 1983) Home | Issue Contents Abraham to Hezekiah: An Archaeological Revision Part I Stan F. Vaninger Introduction In his reconstruction of ancient times Immanuel Velikovsky has concentrated primarily on synchronizing the history of Israel with that of the major empires of the Ancient Near East using historical sources.(1 ) This is especially true of the initial volume of his reconstruction (Ages in Chaos) and to a lesser extent of the subsequent volumes (Ramses II and His Time and Peoples of the Sea). when archaeological data is cited it is usually employed in pointing out the inadequacies of ancient history's conventional chronology. Velikovsky is most ...
6. Chronological Problems in the Archaeology of the Hittites [Journals] [SIS Review]
... From: SIS Review Vol VI No 1-3 (1982) "The 1978 Glasgow Conference Proceedings" Home | Issue Contents Saturday afternoon CHAIRMAN: HAROLD TRESMAN Chronological Problems in the Archaeology of the Hittites Peter J. James A revised chronology of the sort proposed by Immanuel Velikovsky's Ages in Chaos, if applied to the history of ancient Anatolia and Syria, might rescue the archaeology of those regions from a series of extreme difficulties which are apparently quite insoluble within the framework of the accepted chronology. Introduction The Hittites were an Anatolian people whose existence, long suspected from the occasional mentions of their name in the Bible and in Assyrian and Egyptian records, received archaeological confirmation in a remarkable series ...
7. The Archaeology of Geological Catastrophes [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... From: SIS Internet Digest 2000:1 (May 2000) Home | Issue Contents The Archaeology of Geological Catastrophes CCNet, 28 February 2000 The Archaeology of Geological Catastrophes. Edited by: W. J. McGuire (University College London, UK), D. R. Griffiths (University College London, UK), P. L. Hancock (University of Bristol, UK) and I. Stewart (Brunel University, UK). Geological Society Special Publication no. 171, 28 April 2000. ISBN: 1-86239-062-2. 440 Pages. Hardback List price: £79.00 / US$132.00 www.geolsoc.org.uk Archaeology is playing ...
8. Abraham to Hezekiah: An Archaeological Revision Part II [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... From: Catastrophism and Ancient History VI:1 (Jan 1984) Home | Issue Contents Abraham to Hezekiah: An Archaeological Revision Part II Stan F. Vaninger 4. The United Monarchy So far in our survey we have sought to show that the Israelite conquest of Canaan is to be synchronized with the end of the EBIII period and that the period of the Judges corresponds roughly to the EBIV/MBI and MBIIA periods. If this is correct, then the next period, MBIIB (or MBIIB,C according to some writers), should correspond to the era of the United Monarchy in Israel. The Scriptures clearly portray the period of the United Monarchy as a time ...
9. Forum [Journals] [SIS Review]
... makes an Early Bronze Age Exodus acceptable, it also rules out Velikovsky's 13th Dynasty Exodus. Since this is such a key point and has not been dealt with previously I have briefly outlined a case for shortening the SIP in an appendix. Also, I have shown elsewhere that some of the incidents in the Judges Period match well with the archaeology of Middle Bronze Age Palestine (Porter, 1992A). Other Advocates of an EB Exodus As stated in an earlier article where I outlined the sources of my overall scheme (Porter, 1990A), the original proposal for an Early Bronze Exodus came from Donovan Courville in his two volume work The Exodus Problem and its Ramifications, but ...
10. New Archaeological Dates for the Israelite Conquest Part I [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... From: Catastrophism and Ancient History X:1 (Jan 1988) Home | Issue Contents New Archaeological Dates for the Israelite Conquest Part I Proposals for an Early Bronze III Conquest William H. Stiebing, Jr Scholars have generally dated the Israelite exodus and conquest to the fifteenth century B.C . (based on the date given in 1 Kings 6:1 ), or to the thirteenth century B.C . (based primarily on the reference in Exodus 1:11 to the city of Ra'amses, which is almost certainly to be identified with Per-Ramesses, capital of Ramesses II). Both of these dates fall within the Late Bronze Age according to the conventional archaeological ...
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