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thenewenlightenmentage: Pictures: 3,000 Ancient Buddhas...

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thenewenlightenmentage:

Pictures: 3,000 Ancient Buddhas Unearthed in China

Knowing Smile

Top Photograph by Sun Zifa, Imaginechina/AP

The head of a Buddha statue peeks above the dirt in Handan (map), China, where archaeologists have reportedly unearthed nearly 3,000 Buddha statues, which could be up to 1,500 years old.

The discovery is believed to be the largest of its kind since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, an archaeologist with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences told reporters in late March, according to the Associated Press.

The Buddha statues—most of which are made of white marble and limestone and many of which are broken—could date back to the Eastern Wei and Northern Qi dynasties (A.D. 534 to 577), experts say.

The statues—discovered during a dig outside of Ye, the ancient capital of the Eastern Wei and Northern Qi dynasties—may have been rounded up and buried after the fall of the Northern Qi dynasty by later emperors in an attempt to purge the country of Buddhism.

“It may have been that some of the ruins and broken sculptures from the past were gathered from old temple sites and buried in a pit,” said Katherine Tsiang, director of the Center for the Art of East Asia at the University of Chicago.

In some cases, the Buddhist statues may have been buried by the faithful themselves in times of danger.

“In other sites, there are inscriptions that suggest that old damaged sculptures were not just dumped in a pit, but respectfully buried in an orderly way,” Tsiang said.


itwasthefourteenthdayofapril: Inside a cistern at...

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itwasthefourteenthdayofapril:

Inside a cistern at Masada.

MASADA is situated atop an isolated rock cliff at the western end of the Judean Desert, overlooking the Dead Sea. It is a place of gaunt and majestic beauty.

On the east the rock falls in a sheer drop of about 450 meters to the Dead Sea (the lowest point on earth, some 400 m. below sea level) and in the west it stands about 100 meters above the surrounding terrain. The natural approaches to the cliff top are very difficult.

The only written source aboutMasadais Josephus Flavius’The Jewish War. Born Joseph ben Matityahu of a priestly family, he was a young leader at the outbreak of theGreat Jewish RebellionagainstRome(66 CE) when he was appointed governor of Galilee. He managed to survive the suicide pact of the last defenders of Jodfat and surrendered to Vespasian (who shortly thereafter was proclaimed emperor) – events he described in detail. Calling himself Josephus Flavius, he became a Roman citizen and a successful historian. Moral judgment aside, his accounts have been proved largely accurate.

gardant: Decorated Ware Jar Depicting Ungulates and Boats with...

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gardant:

Decorated Ware Jar Depicting Ungulates and Boats with Human Figures
ca. 3500-3300 BCE, Predynastic, Late Naqada II
Egypt
Metropolitan Museum of Art 

Photo

tammuz: Paintings on Northern Ubaid pottery. The Oriental...

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tammuz:

Paintings on Northern Ubaid pottery. The Oriental Institute Museum of the University of Chicago, Chicago, IL.   

Photo by Babylon Chronicle

oldowan: Core Refit Challenge Your task is to refit eight flint...

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oldowan:

Core Refit Challenge

Your task is to refit eight flint flakes back to the core they were originally struck from - it may take a few moments for the page to fully load, so please be patient

(If you are using an Apple device for the 3D image» click here)

  1. There are twelve flakes below, but only eight are a correct match for this core
  2. The flakes must be selected in the right order at each stage to complete the lithic core refit
  3. At each stage the outline of the required flake will be highlighted in red on the 3D model of the core
  4. Use your mouse to rotate and enlarge the 3D model
  5. To view a bigger image, click on the spinning flake to reveal a large static image of the flake at the bottom (this may help you decide)
  6. Enter the letter of the flake that you feel would be the best match for the highlighted area in the white box below the 3d model, then click on the VALIDATE SELECTION box to see if you are correct

mothernaturenetwork: The mystery of the Phaistos Disc is a story...

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mothernaturenetwork:

The mystery of the Phaistos Disc is a story that sounds like something out of an Indiana Jones movie. Discovered by Italian archaeologist Luigi Pernier in 1908 in the Minoan palace-site of Phaistos, the disc is made of fired clay and contains mysterious symbols that may represent an unknown form of hieroglyphics. It is believed that it was designed sometime in the second millennium BC. Some scholars believe that the hieroglyphs resemble symbols of Linear A and Linear B, scripts once used in ancient Crete. The only problem? Linear A also eludes decipherment. Today the disc remains one of the most famous puzzles of archaeology.


10 of the world’s biggest unsolved mysteries

The Archaeologist On Twitter. Follow Please.


My Own Personal Twitter. Please Follow.

princessstomper: 5 Baffling Discoveries That Prove History Books...

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princessstomper:

5 Baffling Discoveries That Prove History Books Are Wrong

[Cracked.com]

A generation of students found out the hard way that archaeology isn’t anywhere near as much fun as Indiana Jones made it look. Still, experts in the field do have their exciting, and even shocking, days at the office. Mainly, these occur when they discover baffling artifacts that are half a planet away from where they should be, proving that a whole lot of what we thought about history was dead wrong. Like …

#5. Cocaine Discovered in Egyptian Mummies

When Columbus and his buddies made it to the New World, aka not India, they found more than just future smallpox sufferers waiting for them. There was a whole cornucopia of never-before-seen plants and animals growing in the Americas, not to mention new and interesting ways to use beads. So while the natives came away from their first European encounter with raging infectious diseases and honeybees, Europeans were introduced to the glories of tobacco, narcotics made from the coca leaf and a whole mess of open-air nudity. If you’ve ever needed evidence that history is unfair, there it is.

At least that’s the story we know. And if that’s true, then how did some Egyptian mummies wind up with traces of cocaine in their bodies?

The Finds:

In 1992, German scientists were testing their mummies when they found remnants of hashish, tobacco and cocaine in their hair, skin and bones. Now, hashish comes from Asia, so it’s not unfathomable that a royal Egyptian would know a guy who could get him the hook-up. But tobacco and cocaine were strictly New World plants at the time of the mummification. It’d be like if some celebrity today tested positive for heroin that could only have been grown on Venus.

So how did it happen? All we have are theories. Maybe the sites were contaminated by hard-partying archaeologists (although you’d think that if somebody had old pics of themselves snorting coke off of a mummy’s ass, they’d have uploaded that shit to Facebook by now). Or maybe the mummies themselves were fake, like maybe they were disco-era archaeologists who just took their love of mummification too far.

» MORE »

4000-year-old Cliff Paintings Discovered in Northern China

Archaeological News: Rare Find in Jerusalem Reflects Ancient Connections with Egypt

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Archaeological News: Rare Find in Jerusalem Reflects Ancient Connections with Egypt:

archaeologicalnews:

Sat, Apr 21, 2012

Discovery of a rare ancient Egyptian scarab during excavations in Jerusalem provides a glimpse into the Late Bronze Age city.

“For archaeologists and students of archaeology, hearing the name “Jerusalem” conjures up images of ancient artifacts that can be found in few other places in the world. But recent archaeological excavations there have uncovered something that has not been commonly found.”

Read More Here: http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/march-2012/article/rare-find-in-jerusalem-reflects-ancient-connections-with-egypt

omgthatartifact: Lamp Roman, 5th century CE The Metropolitan...

arterupestre: 1566 Rain Angels by rcc1204 on Flickr.

aboutegypt: Temple at Edfu  (by LordLiverpool)


openaccessarchaeology: New Open Access Issue of the African...

oosik: Bronze Bracelets by Buzz Hoffman on Flickr. 3,000...

arconnection: Mount Nermut, a huge acropolis in Turkey, where...

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arconnection:

Mount Nermut, a huge acropolis in Turkey, where King Antiochus I is buried, represents a graveyard for the “beheaded gods.” Antiochus originally meant for the area to be a place of worship, combining different gods fro different theologies. However, sometime in history, the statues of these many gods were destroyed, their heads roughly removed. The reason is lost to history. 

inothernews: From the Washington Post: Every morning in this...

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inothernews:

From the Washington Post:

Every morning in this mountain village in eastern Afghanistan, four dozen girls sneak through a square opening in a mud-baked wall, defying a Taliban edict.

A U.S.-funded girls school about a mile away was shuttered by insurgents in 2007, two years after it opened. They warned residents that despite a new government in Kabul and an international aid effort focused on female education, the daughters of Spina were to stay home. For a while, they all did.

Then two brothers, among the few literate men in the village, began quietly teaching math, reading and writing to their female relatives in a living room on the edge of town. They wanted to keep the classes small, they said, to stay off the Taliban’s radar. That turned out to be impossible.

The United States and its allies have spent millions of dollars on female education in the past decade, and Afghan and Western officials have pointed to the issue as one of the most hopeful changes of the post-Taliban era. Female enrollment in public schools has risen from 5,000 under the Taliban to 2.5 million, according to the Afghan Education Ministry.

But Afghanistan is rife with places like Spina, where formal efforts to educate women and girls have crumbled. About 2 million Afghan girls do not attend school.

…The insurgency had already forced the closure of dozens of girls schools beginning in the middle of past decade, when insurgents started to return to Afghanistan. Many of the schools were built and funded by the United States, and many never reopened. In some villages, the schools have gone underground, hidden in living rooms and guesthouses, as they were during the Taliban’s reign.

“It’s risky for the teachers and it’s risky for the students, but these underground schools show the thirst people have for education under the Taliban,” said Shukriya Barakzai, a parliamentarian who ran her own underground school when the Taliban held power in Kabul in the 1990s.

“It doesn’t feel much different from those years,” said one of the brothers in insurgent-infested Spina. “We live in a community very far from democracy and freedom.”

A reminder of the good we’re trying to do in Afghanistan, and of what heinous, terrible, tyrannic people the Taliban are.

(Photo of girls attending an “underground” school in the insurgent-infested town of Spina, Afghanistan — in defiance of a Taliban edict against educating women — by Kevin Sieff / The Washington Post)

omgthatartifact: Helmet Villenova, 9th century BC The...

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