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Search results for: stratigraph* in all categories

486 results found.

49 pages of results.
... spread of the ice [216]. The impact was into a deep ocean basin in the southeast Pacific, and spread debris over 600 km of ocean floor. Analysis of this debris has indicated that the missile was a low-metal mesosiderite meteorite, not a comet. Iridium abundance anomalies were demonstrated in several deep-sea cores from the region, magnetic stratigraphy giving an age of 2.3 Myr for the impact, unresolvable from the temperature drop as indicated by oxygen isotope ratios. The late Pliocene iridium concentration in one of the cores was similar to that found in the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary layer, but the latter, of course, is present in all parts of the world [216] ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 12  -  26 Mar 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/palmer/5erratic.htm
... my works, and with restrain imposed, you may and will find many details that would enrich my work: and if I am right in my reconstruction, then more proofs, and without end, must show themselves; for that purpose a thorough reading of reports of excavations is necessary, since so many archaeologists would pay more attention to stratigraphical evidence than to textual testimonies; Schaeffer is one of them. PS. You mention a paper that you have prepared for JNES [Journal of Near Eastern Studies]. It is clear that nothing based on my unpublished work (like Oedipus) should be printed without my consent. The idea of Oedipus legend having been originated in events ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 12  -  19 Jun 2005  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/vorhees/12late5.htm
... catastrophism had existed prior to and during the time in which Charles Lyell lived. This school was represented by such eminent figures in science as Georges Cuvier, the father of paleontology, and Louis Agassiz, the discoverer of the Ice Ages. Other notables of this school were Adam Sedgewick, William Buckland and Roderick Murchison, whose contributions explained the stratigraphical column. Like his predecessors, one of the most outspoken of the catastrophists, Henry H. Horworth, maintained that, in the age of man, the Earth had experienced a global catastrophe which destroyed the megafauna. Each of these scientists had done extensive geological field work and reported their evidence as support for their conclusion that the Earth ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 12  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/velikov/vol0103/hutton.htm
... after the discovery of C-14 dating should not be taken too seriously' (Bruins & van der Plicht, Radiocarbon 1998, p. 621). Dendrochronology suffers from similar problems - e.g . a timber sample from a Hittite site (Masat), which supposedly proved the conventional date for Suppiluliumas, turns out to be of uncertain stratigraphy and from tree-rings which could have been inner ones (i .e . ancient when felled) and/or from a reused piece of timber. Another Hittite site, Tille Hoyuk, gave a surprisingly late dendro-date for its final Hittite fortified gateway. It was originally published with the timber felling date of c. 1135 37 BC ( ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 12  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v1999n1/45recent.htm
... , for there exists a great body of evidence, some of it missed even by Velikovsky himself, which indicates that the dark age' gap between the Late Bronze Age of the second millennium and the Early Iron Age of the first, is in fact a full five centuries long. This is demonstrated in numerous ways, not least by stratigraphy, where, in the land of Israel for example, the hiatus (occupation gap) between Late Bronze 2b (end of the 19th Dynasty in Egypt) and the beginning of the Iron Age (contemporary in Israel with the Neo-Assyrian kings Tiglath-pileser III and Sargon II), lasts almost exactly 500 years. This was admitted, and ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 12  -  13 Apr 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v2004n3/16dark.htm
... Dynasty, which Velikovsky places largely contemporary with the XXth. According to his model, it was a priestly and military creation of the Persians under Darius I, set up by them in the strategic western Oases of Egypt. He adduces synchronism to demonstrate this, and another mass of supposed "anomalies" in the art, language, and stratigraphy of this Dynasty to support his case. Several documents are examined in detail and new light is shed on their interpretation - the pathetic journey of Wenamon, for instance, shows details that could only fit into a late 5th, rather than an eleventh century context. The Maunier Stele from the time of the High-priest Menkheperre is shown to ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 12  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v0105/99east.htm
297. Society News [Journals] [SIS Review]
... same time it enabled him persevere with his theories and to leave a positive legacy. His major role may ultimately have been within his own discipline with his theory of cultural trauma. After lunch Gunnar Heinsohn followed on from his autumn 1993 SIS lecture (see C&CW 1993:2 , p. 4), reminding us of how stratigraphic evidence in Mesopotamia indicates that there were four great cultures before the Hellenistic period. However, due to pen and paper' dating systems, these were assigned to much earlier periods, leaving the four great periods attested to by Greek history without any apparent physical evidence. In this lecture he proposed to show how, if the four stratigraphic ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 12  -  05 Mar 2003  -  URL: /online/pubs/journals/review/v1996n2/48soc.htm
... were those of the Triassic system. In Europe, where this geological profile is probably best developed, for reasons which are only now becoming apparent, the first (Buntsandstein) strata of sandsone and limestone were laid down when the satellite was perhaps somewhere over Arabia, and sent the first outrunners of its zenithal tide hill into Europe. From stratigraphic evidence it would appear that Europe had a desert climate then, and with the aid of Hoerbiger's teachings we can now see why that was so. Europe was situated some way to the west of the zenithal tide hill but well within the climatic protection afforded by the zenithal air tide hill. When the satellite had reached, and tarried ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 12  -  26 Mar 2007  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/bellamy/life-history/14-evidences.htm
299. Genesis and Extinction [Books] [de Grazia books]
... is an approximately continuous sequence from one to another known. In most cases the break is so sharp and the gap so large that the origin of the order is speculative and much disputed [8 ]. ' E.C . Olson, reviewing the literature lately, reports: "under the very best circumstances... morphological and stratigraphically graded transitions between classes and subclasses have been found. At the level of phyla and higher categories, any information on transitions as far as the fossil record is concerned is essentially non-existent."[9 ] T.H . van Andel surmises that missing links "may have been expunged from the record."[10] The ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 12  -  29 Mar 2004  -  URL: /online/pubs/books/degrazia/lately/ch27.htm
... campaign in -343, Palestine was in the domain of Nectanebo II (Ramses VI). Therefore we could expect that some sign of his occupation of this country would be found too. And actually in Megiddo during the 1934 campaign a base of Ramses VI's bronze statue was discovered. Certain conclusions were made, once more, as to the stratigraphical chronology of Megiddo. A revealing footnote by the excavator, G. Loud, supplied to a short paper by James Breasted on the statue, says that it was found "under a wall in Stratum VIIB room (number) 1832 as if deliberately buried there and therefore intrusive".[1 ] From this kind of estimate it ...
Terms matched: 1  -  Score: 11  -  04 Jul 2007  -  URL: /online/no-text/velikovsky/peoples/105-ramses.htm
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