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1726 results found.
173 pages of results. 571. The Stones Of Ballochroy [Journals] [Kronos]
... much more conspicuous foresight marker than the featureless western end. These may be minor objections but they do illustrate that close analysis will often show that the astronomical interpretation of an archaeological site may not always be as simple as it seems at first sight"(19) (Emphasis added). Now Gerald Hawkins, for one, does not ... . In the case of Ballochroy, not even this is allowable. As Evan Hadingham stated: "Ballochroy consists of a large megalithic cist [or kist], which archaeologists interpret as a structure that might originally have been covered over by cairn material and built for collective burial, perhaps well before 3000 B.C ." (25 ...
572. Velikovsky and the Apparatus of Scholarship [Journals] [SIS Review]
... actually partially modified already. His historical work, too, is being modified; there are very strong Velikovsky supporters in Britain, highly qualified and knowledgeable in the fields of archaeology and ancient history, who do not agree with Velikovsky in all respects and are attempting to modify the revised chronology. Secondly, considering the importance of his work - ... , it is still rare to find a distinguished or even a highly recognized scholar in a particular discipline who has supported Velikovsky openly. It is similar with institutions. The archaeologists of a given institution are Velikovskians, but its astrophysicists and physicists are not. At most universities, Velikovsky is supported by no one - physicist, astrophysicist or archaeologist ...
573. On the Disproportion between Geological Time and Historical Time Part One - Of Apes and Men [Journals] [SIS Review]
... : op. cit. [10], p. 69, date the skull between 200,000 and 250,000 years BP. In The New Encyclopaedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land (Jerusalem 1993), Vol 1, Amud Nahal', Bar-Yosef dates it between 250,000 and 300,000 years BP. ... 17] In 1888 a skeleton was found during digging operations at a gravel pit at Galley Hill, outside Dartford, and before being moved, was inspected by an amateur archaeologist named Heys. He remarked: "No doubt could possibly arise to the observation of an ordinary intelligent person of their deposition contemporaneously with that of the gravel, for ...
574. Experiments with Time II: Synchronisms and Stratigraphies [Journals] [SIS Review]
... The difficulties are frequently compounded by false deductions which arise as a result of reliance on the original error. In fact, many of the chronological arguments which figure in the archaeological literature are really the result of bad chronology rather than any fundamental difference in the viewpoint of the protagonists. Now that solutions to the five key chronological problems have been ... ; where these are sparse or non-existent, recourse has to be made to a different method - comparative stratigraphy. This approach was pioneered by Dr CFA Schaeffer, an eminent archaeologist, who spent many years between the wars excavating the ancient city of Ugarit on the Syrian coast which was a major focal point for trade routes by both land and ...
575. Monitor. C&C Review 2002:1 [Journals] [SIS Review]
... by brown and red rings with teeth' on. A Korean chronicle from the same time describes a red aurora, which would be a likely corollary of sunspot activity. ARCHAEOLOGY Lost Civilisations Science Frontiers 140, p. 1, The New York Times 13.5 .01 Several areas are claimed to have the remains of drowned cities off ... Egyptians' sun worship A tomb dating back to the mid-14th century BC could shed light on the early years of ancient Egyptians' veneration of the sun god Aten, Dutch archaeologists said this week in describing their discovery of a priest's burial site. Inscriptions on a column found at the 20-metre by 10-metre tomb unearthed at Sakkara, 25 kilometres south ...
576. The Environment And Preservation Of The Mammoth [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... [the] fate [of the settlers] was unknown, but the history of the Eastern Settlement has now been made out by . . . excavations of a Danish archaeological expedition.... The most important evidence is derived from the excavation of the churchyard, in soil which is now frozen solid throughout the year, but which ... of man in areas of present day Russia where mammoths lived alongside of humans. He speaks of... ". .. houses...discovered by Soviet archaeologists at a...station of mammoth-hunters at Megina near Kiev, and another at Pushkari in the Ukraine. Here half-subterranean houses were found, ringed about with substantial ...
577. The Radiocarbon Dating Method [Journals] [Pensee]
... produced neutrons (and thus C14 ) in about the same amount as the tests of 1962 which gave about 50% increase in the biospheric concentration of C14. HISTORY AND ARCHAEOLOGY The correction curve itself is primarily of interest to historians and archaeologists. With it we now can say that the Egyptian chronology currently accepted probably is nearly correct. Further ... is needed to clarify detailed points and the possibilities of substantial clarification of the history of the first dynasties appear to be good. The opportunities for pre-dynastic Egypt extending back into palaeolithic seem to be very substantial (Save-Soderbergh & Wentdorf) (2 ). In Europe the main new result seems to be a redating of the neolithic (Neustupny ( ...
... story Herodotus tells. That the Scythians in part also invaded the British Isles is proved by the very name of the Scots. Scandinavia's antiquities have revealed high culture and her archaeology corresponds closely with that of Britain, such as round temples, long barrows and the like. According to the Swedish archaeologist Nagerbring, she enjoyed a high culture at ... as early as the third millennium BC. Not only did Baug and Johann Magnus claim that the race of Adam settled first in that ancient seat of man but Magnus said that King Sven ruled over the Goths in Sweden before the Flood. He contended further that Magog, the son of Japheth, settled in Sweden, possibly a reference to ...
579. Why Pensee? [Journals] [Pensee]
... to catastrophic occurrences. His paper will appear in English for the first time when Pensee publishes it. Israeli archaeologist Dr. Eva Danelius reassesses, in the light of Palestinian archaeology, Velikovsky's identification of the Queen of Sheba as the Egyptian Queen Hatshepsut. She concludes that the evidence for Velikovsky's contention is even better today than when Ages in Chaos ... they originate from within the Solar System, and that they testify to catastrophic occurrences. His paper will appear in English for the first time when Pensee publishes it. Israeli archaeologist Dr. Eva Danelius reassesses, in the light of Palestinian archaeology, Velikovsky's identification of the Queen of Sheba as the Egyptian Queen Hatshepsut. She concludes that the evidence ...
580. The Location of Punt/Ophir Part II [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... : Catastrophism and Ancient History XI:2 (July 1989) Home | Issue Contents The Location of Punt/Ophir Part II Nel Kluitman THE EUROPEAN SOURCES 5. The Archaeological Evidence: Deir-el-Bahari The ruins of the splendid temple of Pharaoh Hatshepsut are on the western bank of the Nile, opposite Luxor in Egypt.[7 ] The fourth ... via the Wadi Hamamat to the Red Sea, looking for the Wadi on maps, I paused a moment. Casually I switched on the television and there was the British archaeologist John Romer showing us a splendid view of the temple at Deir-el-Bahari in his series, "Life in Ancient Egypt." A moment later he took us with him ...
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