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Search results for: archaeolog* in all categories

1726 results found.

173 pages of results.
401. Troy and the Greek Dark Age [Journals] [Kronos]
... , The Dark Age of Greece. Edwin Schorr, who for a number of years worked as a research assistant to Dr. Velikovsky, and has pursued studies in classical archaeology at the University of Cincinnati, gave me liberal access to his copious notes. His article in Pensee IVR IX, "Applying the Revised Chronology" has already addressed ... deposits of Knobbed Ware [pottery characteristic of the last Bronze Age settlement] presents a perplexing and still unexplained problem".(12) In the Greek city, the archaeologists came upon the remains of a house (no. 814) which, as became evident with the progress of digging, had been originally a Late Bronze Age building ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 430  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/kronos/vol0802/001troy.htm
402. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... vast majority of scientifically investigated dinosaur finds have been from North America, and only aquatic and semi-aquatic swamp environments have been envisaged. Another New Date for Exodus sources: Biblical Archaeology Review Sept/Oct 1987, pp.40-68: Biblical Archaeology Review Nov/Dec 1987, pp.56-61 John J. Bimson and David Livingston have presented a ... assumption. In about the 6th to 5th millennium BC tin bronzes were worked in Anatolia, and by the 2nd millennium BC they had replaced arsenical bronzes. The puzzle for archaeologists has always been the source of the tin, for Turkey was not thought to have natural deposits. Now a major mining area has been discovered in the Taurus mountains ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 430  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/workshop/w1987no2/25monit.htm
403. The Founding of Rome [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... ," became a major god in Troy and not by coincidence in Rome. The latest consensus may be expressed in the words of F. Castagnoli:(4 ) Archaeological excavations have opened up new prospects: the considerable documentation of evidence of the Late Bronze Age (particularly in the zone involved directly with the legend such as Ardea and ... , forward to Egypt." J. H. Breasted, Ancient Records of Egypt. 1906, Vol. IV, 37-38. 4. In Enea nel Lazio: Archaeologia e Mitto. Milan: Palombi, 1981, 5. 5. Early Rome and the Etruscans. 6. London: Benn, 1972. Malcolm Lowery provides this ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 430  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/cat-anc/vol0601/19rome.htm
404. The Founding of Rome [Books] [de Grazia books]
... ," became a top god in Troy and not by coincidence in Rome. The latest consensus may be expressed in the words of F.Castagnoli: [4 ] Archaeological excavations have opened up new prospects: the considerable documentation of evidence of the Late Bronze Age (particularly in the zone involved directly with the legend such as Ardea and ... of Egypt (1906), IV, 37-8) translates "They came with fire prepared before them, forward to Egypt." 4. In Enea nel Lazio: Archaeologia e Mito (Milano: Fratelli Palombi; 1981), 5. 5. R.M . Ogilvie, Early Rome and the Etruscans, New York: Humanities ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 430  -  29 Mar 2004  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/degrazia/burning/ch03.htm
... Sea, from Arabia. This was a view suggested by Naville and championed by other writers since, most recently by a writer called Abdel-Aziz Saleh, in Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, and it seems to be the commonest view of who these people were, but I've not seen any discussion of their identity which tries to link this view with ... what today would be Eritrea. From about 1000 BC onwards, the real flowering of this Arabian culture in Africa took place from about the 8th century BC, but most archaeologists put the beginnings of it around 1000 BC, in other words, roughly at the time when Solomon was ruling in Israel. So what I want to say then ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 429  -  30 Mar 2001  -  URL: /online/pubs/articles/talks/sis/820626jb.htm
406. 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 " ... their bones must have had the same effect on human beings, and it is not excluded that human bodies encased in ice will be found, too. A problem the archaeologists will have to solve is that of clarifying whether the extermination of life in these regions of northwest America and northeast Asia, resulting in the death of mammoths, took ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 429  -  03 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/worlds/2074-hemisphere.htm
407. Pot Pourri [Journals] [SIS Review]
... hierarchy. And these ideas and traditions could have been the seeds that fertilised the great civilisations of India, Mesopotamia, Egypt and the Mediterranean'. All but a few archaeological traces of the founder cultures, located in Southeast Asia, would have been destroyed by the catastrophic flood, which the author links to the 10-25m rise in worldwide sea ... ancestors of the aborigines'. The narrator makes no further references to Africa or Africans, speaking instead of the first aborigines' or, ambiguously, American Aborigines'. Archaeologist Anne-Marie Pessis refers specifically to Africans (my emphasis) being washed over to Brazil, and others [i .e . other Africans] could have done so, ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 429  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v2001n2/49pot.htm
... retirement, and the young men took over the throne, agreed together that they should reign in alternative years." Diodoros, trans. Oldfather. 9 Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, XI (1925), 227-29. 10 Pendlebury, Tell el-Amarna, p. 44-45. The name Tell el-Amarna is a composite invented by the early archaeologists of ... a young person with long hair arranged not unlike that of the womenfolk of the time. If the seer was the prototype of Tiresias, this remarkable portrait, which made archaeologists wonder, may explain a curious detail in the Greek legend of Tiresias. The legend says that Tiresias once killed a female snake and in punishment was turned for a ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 429  -  04 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/oedipus/113-blind-seer.htm
409. The Excavation Of Ebla [Journals] [Kronos]
... historians in St. Louis and later at Harvard, Yale, Columbia, and the Universities of Michigan and Chicago. R. H. Hewsen RECOMMENDED ADDITIONAL READING THE BIBLICAL ARCHAEOLOGY REVIEW, II, 3 (Sept 1976), pp. 36-37; Science News, 8/21/76, pp. 117-118. For what we already ... and syllabic units and are written in the earliest known Semitic language yet found. This language is related to Hebrew and has been designated as Eblaite (or Eblaic) by archaeologists. The texts are said to cover the period 2400-2250 B.C ., the criteria being supposed Akkadian accounts of the destruction of the city of Ebla by King ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 429  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/kronos/vol0202/107discv.htm
410. Jeremy Goldberg - Still Looking for David [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... escaped the attention of the compiler of Judges but he does not even attempt to explain the importance of this career for the history of Yahweh's relationship with Israel. In biblical archaeology Bernard has ignored the potentially important problem which I raised of how to explain the unfortified earliest Israelite settlement, if not by the secure conditions of the mid-later United Monarchy ... very few remains between the end of the Early Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age! As the results of recent excavations suggest, the answer may be that archaeologists simply haven't looked in the right places. If there were no archaeological remains at Hebron from the Late Bronze Age it would be a problem for the New Chronology. ...
Terms matched: 2  -  Score: 429  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/workshop/w1994no2/20still.htm
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