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Search results for: radiocarbon in all categories
445 results found.
45 pages of results. 361. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... the spruce grouse. The jaguar is a southern species, found nowadays no further north than Mexico: and the spruce grouse is a northern species found no further south than New England and north Wisconsin. This fact used to be explained by assuming that the fossils had accumulated over thousands of years, reflecting climate changes and migration patterns. New radiocarbon evidence has overthrown all this. It can be conclusively shown that the jaguar and spruce grouse were contemporaries, living some 11-10,000 years ago. The latest explanation for the contemporary living of two species with such different climatic preferences is that the Ice Ages were not times of severe climate. Instead, palaeontologist J. Alan Holman of ...
362. The Saturn Problem [Journals] [SIS Review]
... the Holocene. The catastrophic flooding of the Black Sea during the Neolithic, as argued by the geologist/oceanographer team Ryan and Pitman [29]. The massive upheavals and climate change which destroyed the Early Bronze Age civilisations of the Near East (c . 2300BC conventional dating). Initially explored by archaeologist Euan MacKie on the basis of radiocarbon evidence [30], the case for a global event at this date was developed in a series of pioneering articles by engineer Moe Mandelkehr [31]. Mainstream archaeology has now accepted this event' [32], though it yet has to embrace an exo-terrestrial cause, such as the cometary debris model long argued by Mandelkehr. ...
363. On The Symposium Trail [Journals] [Pensee]
... Egypt. Curiously, Kadish restricted himself to voicing agreement with Rivkin, and outlining the means by which a New Kingdom chronology can be constructed, together with their difficulties- an outline with which Velikovsky, in later discussion, offered full agreement. After reviewing various sources of information- annals, king lists, linguistics, genealogies, reliefs and drawings, radiocarbon dates, etc. --Kadish concluded: "I do not say these things as ways of presenting to you authorities who must be accepted. I give them to you as attempts to show the kinds of elaborate and detailed study of ancient Egyptian materials which must be gone into.... If Velikovsky's work alerts students and scholars to ...
364. Confessions Of A Philosophical Velikovskian [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... -`a procedure, ' as R. S. Young remarked, `highly extravagant of labor. '58 There are disputes between epigraphists and archaeologists over whether material excavated in Syria dates from the eighth century or the thirteenth,59 and greater olive cultivation in the `dark age' than in Mycenaean times seems to be indicated by radiocarbon analysis of pollen at a site in Greece.60 In C. W. Blegen's excavation of `the palace of Nestor' at Pylos, pottery dated by correlation with the Egyptian chronology, to about 1200 B.C .E ., was persistently found at the same level as artifacts assigned, by criteria internal to Greece, ...
365. The Mystery Of The Pleiades [Journals] [Kronos]
... L. Ginzberg, The Legends of the Jews, (Philadelphia, 1961), Vol. I, p. 232. 42. D. Cardona, op. cit.; L.M . Greenberg and W.B . Sizemore, (see note # 32). 43. I. Velikovsky, "The Pitfalls of Radiocarbon Dating," in Pensee, (Spring-Summer 1973), p. 13; D. Cardona, (see note #27) p. 49. 44. M. Sieff, op. cit., p. 19; I. Velikovsky, (see note #9 ), pp. 134-139. 45. J-P Hallet ...
366. Abbreviations, Glossary and Bibliography [Books] [de Grazia books]
... 1955), Earth in Upheaval (Doubleday: Garden City) -- (1969), "Are the Moon's Scars Only 3000 Years Old?," New York Times, early ed., 21 Jul.; repr. Pensée 2, no. 2 (May 1972) -- (1973), "The Pitfalls of Radiocarbon Dating," Pensée 3, no. 2 (Sp./Su,), pp. 12-14, 50 -- (1978a), "Khima and Kesil," Kronos 3, no. 4 (May), pp. 19-23 -- (1978b), "The Weakness of the Venus Greenhouse Theory," ...
367. The Rape of Helen [Books] [de Grazia books]
... (1903, 1904); and Ovid; for the ten -month year, he sites Schiefner (1857), Male (1846), Nilssen (1920), and Frazer (1931) together with Plutarch, Eutropius and Procopius. 8. "The Three Causes of the Secular C14 Fluctuations. Their Amplitudes and Time Constants," Radiocarbon Variations and Absolute Chronology (Proceedings. 12th Nobel Symposium at Uppsala Univ. 1969), ed. Ingrid V. Olsson (Almquist and Wiksell, Stockholm, 1970), p. 602, quoted in Pensée, Fall 1972, p. 41. 9. Worlds in Collision, p. 358. ...
368. Sean Mewhinney's Critique Based On Bombastic Subterfuge, Evasion And Denial [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... about the dating of Thera, no one knows the correct answer." (Ibid., p.24)27 I also pointed out Baillie's citation of the paper by J. S. Vogel, et al., who "have now suggested at least three other eruptions [from other volcanos] which, on the basis of radiocarbon evidence, may have taken place at about the same time as Thera" (Ibid for Bailley: Also see J.S . Vogel, et al., "Vesuvius/Aviello: One Possible source of 17th Century B.C . Climatic Disturbances," Nature, Vol. 344, (1990), pp. 534-537 ...
369. Forum [Journals] [SIS Review]
... the advantages of being able to accommodate much of the material in the book of Exodus considered fanciful, such as certain of the plagues', the pillars of fire and smoke (volcanic ash and dust), the parting of the waters of the Red Sea (tidal wave) and the darkness. But, besides coming into conflict with radiocarbon dates, pointing to a 17th century date for the eruption, he was severely criticised for attempting to equate the eruption with the time of Exodus. Stiebing [1987] has indicated that the eruption would not have been visible from the Delta, that significant quantities of ash and dust also would not have reached Egypt, and that the ...
370. Some Additional Evidence from the Period from the Exodus to the End of the Eighteenth Dynasty [Journals] [SIS Review]
... culture vanished about 800 B.C ." , four hundred years after their empire was overthrown in the twelfth century BC [35]. With this imposing score of confirmations from the field of archaeology for the work of reconstruction of ancient history, growing ever since 1952, the question could be asked: Which test, besides a complete radiocarbon survey of the New Kingdom in Egypt, would I desire; and which discovery reflecting on chronological problems would I anticipate in the years to come? Compelling evidence will continue to arrive from almost every excavated place and there will be an evergrowing number of surprises. I shall select here one site of great promise for excavation. The identification ...
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