Catastrophism.com
history linguistics mythology palaeontology physics psychology religion Uniformitarianism |
Sign-up | Log-in |
Introduction | Publications | More
Search results for: a*ology in all categories
2191 results found.
220 pages of results. 251. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... nomadic hunter-gatherers, who spent most of the year away from the site. Old People (New Scientist, 19.2 .05, p. 18; Current World Archaeology, No. 7, September/October 2004, p. 9) The earliest remains of modern man, found in Ethiopia in 1967, were originally thought to ... dinosaur eggs, which were compared to proteins in chicken eggs. The dinosaur eggs were found in Argentina and presumed to have fossilised extremely fast after being buried by floods. ANTHROPOLOGY Upright Apes (The Times, 20.1 .05) The remains of at least nine ape-like creatures have been found in Ethiopia, dating to over 4 Myrs ...
252. In Defence of Higher Chronologies [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Hammurabi would be the same as Darius the Great, Ammisaduqa would be the same as Artaxerxes III Ochos [9 ] and so on. Heinsohn based these conclusions mainly on archaeological and stratigraphical considerations, which I tend to see as of secondary import. My endorsement of Heinsohn's late dating of the First Babylonian Dynasty resulted from astronomical and calendrical considerations ... part of present experience (and ancient experience) - but not mice which can disable the army of Assyria in a single night of mischief. 28. H Hunger, Astrological Reports to Assyrian Kings, Vol. VIII of State Archives of Assyria, Helsinki Univ. Press, Helsinki, 1992, pp. 25-26, 105. See also ...
253. 094book.htm [Journals] [Aeon]
... from England- one area of research caught me by surprise: James' redating of the later stratigraphy of Lachish. By so doing he has shed new light on the archaeological problems attending the early Persian Period. Centuries of Darkness is divided into 13 major chapters each attempting to deal with a specific problem or area of the ancient Near East ... Venus. Beginning with the earliest speculations of Sumerian skywatchers, Aveni traces the evolution of planetary-images from the first astronomical impulses in Babylon, through the Greeks and the rise of astrology, to Galileo and the invention of the telescope, to the revelations of Venera and Magellan. Unfortunately, there are so many errors of fact and logic along the ...
254. Were the "Sumerians of the Third Millennium" in Reality the Chaldeans of the First Millennium? [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... in Uruk are not just one among many, but that- observed also as one of the great projects of the Deutsche Orientgesellschaft- they play a key role in Near-Eastern archaeology. Kramer (1963 :28): In 1954, the German expedition returned to Erech under a new director, H. Lenzen, [who] is carrying ... its careful and methodical excavations, which will no doubt make Erech- the city of Sumer's great heroes- the keystone of Mesopotamian archeology in all its aspects: architecture, art, history, religion, and epigraphy. Now the elegance with which, for example, Seton Lloyd attempts to dispute the untraceable relics of the so-called Akkadian monarchs is ...
255. Egyptian Influence Upon Early Israelite Literature [Journals] [Aeon]
... .) . [2 ] The existence of a distinct people known as Israel will also be specifically addressed. The opinions of experts will be explored, as well as archaeological evidence, in order to determine the historicity of Israel as a nation. An attempt will be made to determine what effect Egyptian culture had upon early Israelite traditions and ... , p. 228. [116] Psalm 104, 6-8. [117] J. B., Pritchard, The Ancient Near East – Volume 1: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures (Princeton, N. J., 1958), pp. 227-230. [118] Psalm 104, 10. [119] J ...
256. Cosmic Catastrophes and the Ballgame of the Sky Gods in Mesoamerican Mythology [Journals] [SIS Review]
... . of Chicago Press, Chicago & London, 1962. 23. Cf. e.g ., W.H . Stiebing: The Nature and Dangers of Cult Archaeology' in: F.B . Harrold and R.A . Eve, Cult Archaeology and Creationism: Understanding Pseudoscientific Beliefs about the Past, p. 3, ... ball-game, played at a time of world-destruction, in which the sun and moon defeated the lords of hell. ' [2 ] Introduction Ever since the Berlin School of Anthropology (Konrad Theodor Preuss, Eduard Seler and Walter Krickeberg) tried to decipher the cosmic symbolism of the Mesoamerican ballgame, historians have been aware of the close relationship between ...
257. Radiocarbon Dating The Extinction [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... 11 Deloria, who examines a quite typical manipulation that occurs with radiocarbon dating, tells that... "[ Alex] Krieger...[discussed] the archaeological discoveries at the Lewisville site northwest of Dallas, Texas. The excavators found a Clovis fluted point and conducted radiocarbon tests on associated vegetable materials found in the Heath No ... Vero are of the same workmanship as those unearthed in early Indian sites, two thousand of which are known in the area. "All these and other considerations of an anthropological, as well as geological nature, being summed up prove, in the opinion of I. Rouse, a recent analyst of the muchdebated fossils of Florida, that ...
258. The Knowledge Industry [Books] [de Grazia books]
... The Velikovsky Affair." in 1963, and am presently going to press with another book on the disasters of the Homeric Age. A heavy flow of written materials and archaeological reports has begun and promises to be practically endless. There is a need for an academic center for presenting and discussing the problems they present to all fields. Excellent ... , I have encountered and had to deal with problems that are central, not related incidentally, to the fields of linguistics, historical chronology, astronomy, physical and cultural anthropology, comparative literature, archaeology (worldwide), geology, fossil paleontology, soil chemistry, electromagnetics, astrophysics, sociology of sex, ecology, climatology, oceanography, ...
259. The ISCBM Newark Earthworks Conference [Journals] [Horus]
... faint glimmer that Irish monks may once have made landfall, the evidence that New and Old World contacts may reach back well into pre-Christian times generally is ignored. The established archaeological and anthropological community remains steadfastly committed to crusty doctrine that the pre-Columbian inhabitants of this land arrived in dim prehistory by way of an imaginary land bridge across the Bering Straits ... and evolved in cultural isolation until Columbus made his epic voyage. Yet, from the multi-ton dolmens of New England, to the Ogham inscriptions from West Virginia to Oklahoma, the Newark "Holy Stones" and the discovery of Phoenician beads in a sealed context in Bolivia, the range and quantity of evidence for an alternative to the traditional view ...
260. A Hemisphere Travels Southward, Part 2 Mars Ch.7 (Worlds in Collision) [Velikovsky] [Velikovsky Worlds in Collision]
... moved into that region. This assumption implies that these lands, to the extent that they were not covered by the sea, were most probably places of human habitation. Archaeological work should be undertaken in northeastern Siberia with the purpose of establishing whether these now uninhabited tundras w ere sites of culture twenty-seven centuries ago. In 1939 and 1940 " ... By F. G. Rainey and his colleagues under the sponsorship of the American Museum of Natural History in New York; the results of their expedition were published in the anthropological papers of the museum. 5 Description by Evelyn Stefansson in her book, Here Is Alaska (1943), pp. 138 ff. 6 F. G. ...
Search powered by Zoom Search Engine Search took 0.057 seconds |