Posted in August 4th, 2007
Many of those recovered from the Titanic were laid to rest without names.
One of the more poignant stories is that of an unknown baby who was found and laid to rest in Halifax Canada.
The child was one of some 150 Titanic victims buried in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
For decades, the boy was known simply […]
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Posted in July 11th, 2007
The historic Ford’s Theater in Washington D.C., which is in the process of being renovated, is now going to be delayed several months because the bidding process for the job was unsuccessful. The National Park Service closed the theater in early June for an 18-month renovation job. The theater has since been reopened because bids […]
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Posted in July 10th, 2007
Attention - Due To Allegations of Plagiarism, This Article Is Highly Suspect
In the United Kingdom, which has many historical structures, the buildings which are listed or which lie within a conservation area are protected by law. Any repairs, alterations and modifications that are required to be done are meant to be done by firms and […]
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Posted in July 6th, 2007
Most of the official Seven Wonders of the World have disappeared. Most people probably couldn’t even name them. Because of this, Bernard Weber, a Swiss-Canadian filmmaker and aviator decided that a new seven wonders list should be established for existing pieces of architecture. He created the site new7wonders.com to allow people to begin to vote […]
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Posted in July 3rd, 2007
Hartwood Mansion is a popular tourist attraction in Pittsburgh. Built in 1929 as a Tudor, Elizabethan style, the 31-room mansion sits on a 629-acre park. It was originally owned by John and Mary Lawrence. Mary was the daughter of Senator William Flinn who owned the city’s largest construction firm. In 1969, she sold the mansion […]
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Posted in June 30th, 2007
This week, Titanic memorabilia was sold at Christie’s auction in Europe. Probably the most talked about item sold at the auction was a handwritten account of a 16-year-old girl who survived the sinking. Laura Marie Cribb, a third-class passenger from Newark, New Jersey scribbled her account on eight handwritten pages of the ocean liner’s last […]
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Posted in June 29th, 2007
Forget the Egyptian cats.
Tabby probably domesticated us 12000 years ago in the Middle East, about the same time as agriculture was invented. The theory is that agriculture allowed fixed settlements and grain storage, and the cats were attracted by rats eating the grain, and gradually became used to humans, who fed and tamed them.
DNA studies […]
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Posted in June 26th, 2007
In the dark days of World War II, the United States started flying B17 bombers across the Atlantic to England.
Operation Bolero was the name given to the operation that ferried the airplanes and crew on this difficult route, where original estimates was that ten percent of the flights would never arrive. But arrive they did:
By […]
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Posted in June 20th, 2007
Richard Dawkins, scientist, atheist, and author of “The God Delusion”:
Refusing to believe that science and religion could ever be happy bedfellows, the self-confessed atheist said that professional scientists who did promote that theory needed to prove the existence of god because it was a scientific question.
Emphasis mine, to point out that there have been many […]
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Posted in June 17th, 2007
Most people like a good ghost story, and one of the most popular is the story of King Tut’s curse.
As a scientist, I suspect the “Mummy’s curse” story originated with those trying to keep tomb robbers from stealing grandmom’s jewelry, and was reinforced by a nasty fungal infection that can kill those who open crypts…
So […]
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Posted in May 24th, 2007
As a doc who has worked in cross cultural medicine most of my life, I love to read history. One of the sites I usually read is History News Network, a blog of George Mason University.
Often the essays are merely regurgitation of Chomsky, but sometimes you get insight into todays news thru the eyes of […]
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Posted in May 12th, 2007
Attention - Due To Allegations of Plagiarism, This Article Is Highly Suspect
The famed Buddhas of Bamiyan in Afghanistan are now set to rise from rubble after they were blown up by the Talibanis in 2003. Now, even as the Taliban seeks to re-establish its presence in Afghanistan, Afghan authorities are trying to figure out a […]
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Posted in April 12th, 2007
The LATimes reports that T.Rex might be related to FoghornLeghorn:
It began two years ago when paleontologist Mary H. Schweitzer and colleagues at North Carolina State University announced they had found bits of soft tissue inside a fossilized T. rex bone excavated from the Hell Creek Formation of Montana. At the time, no detailed tests had […]
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Posted in March 30th, 2007
News Item:
Dinosaur extinction did not trigger evolution in mammals
When T-Rex ruled the planet, the evolution of mammals was stunted because dinosaurs were bigger, a whole lot bigger, and mammals were on the menu, so the mammals had to stay small, so they could hide, right? If mammals, however, had been allowed to evolve to a […]
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Posted in March 14th, 2007
The documentary on the so called “Jesus tomb” made several technical errors in their interpretation of the inscription of the bonebox they insist was Mary Magdalen’s bonebox, says one scholar.
The documentary claims that scholars read the inscription on one box as “Mariamene e Mara,” meaning “Mary the teacher” or “Mary the master.”
However, Stephen Pfann, a […]
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Posted in February 28th, 2007
A sculptor at Palermo University has taken a 12 000 year old stone age woman’s skull and reconstructed it using techniques that are frequently used to identify crime victims.
To those of you in love with garlic and the Mediterranean diet, the University observed she died at age thirty, which was older than the average age […]
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Posted in February 7th, 2007
Today’s edition of the daily round up is starting in my home state of Washington State where a group that is in favor of same sex marriages has taken a drastic step towards getting their cause recognized. In an effort to open “discussion about the many misguided assumptions” of the same sex ban that was […]
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Posted in January 13th, 2007
What is Tarot?
Tarot (also known as Tarock, Tarokk, Taroky, Taroc, Tarok, Tarocchi and similar names) is a family of trick taking card games played with an enlarged deck of 78 cards which include an extra court card for each of the four regular suits, a permanent trump suit of 21 cards, and a kind of […]
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Posted in January 5th, 2007
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yossarin in
All News, Archeology & Antiquities News, Asian News, Business News, China News, Economic News, European News, History News, India News, Russia News, World Politics
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OffStumped For All Things Right of Center, Bringing a Right of Centre Reality Check to Indian Politics, News Media Reporting and Opinion now in Hindi अब आप के लिये हिंदी मे.
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The Prime Minister started his New Year with a healthy break off politics for a much needed consensus building with the opposition BJP inviting Vajpayee […]
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Posted in January 3rd, 2007
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prying1 in
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Coming to San Diego, June 29–December 31, 2007!
While the scrolls have been exhibited in the U.S. before, Dead Sea Scrolls will be the most comprehensive exhibition of the scrolls ever assembled, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Dead Sea Scrolls was created by the San Diego Natural History Museum for the Museum specifically, and will not travel to […]
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Posted in December 13th, 2006
by Lonnie Hodge One of my favorite authors alive is Pat Conroy. I can still visualize that white dolphin that played a powerful metaphorical role in his book The Prince of Tides. The real life fin and blood species may only be the subject of fictional tales in the future. It […]
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Posted in December 11th, 2006
Attention - Due To Allegations of Plagiarism, This Article Is Highly Suspect
A CENSUS of the world’s oceans has made a host of new discoveries, stretching the frontiers of mankind’s marine knowledge.
About 150 breeds of fish were among 500 new marine species, including furry crabs, found in the seas this year.
An international team of scientists also […]
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Posted in December 10th, 2006
Did King Tut die of an accident, or was he murdered? Did he die of a simple broken leg?
The latest CT scans of his mummy shows that the young king had a fracture of his upper leg probably shortly before he died.
Earlier conspiracy theories based on X ray findings of a skull fracture suggested […]
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Posted in December 3rd, 2006
Attention - Due To Allegations of Plagiarism, This Article Is Highly Suspect
Anthropologists said they have pieced together Leonardo da Vinci’s left index fingerprint — a discovery that could help provide information on such matters as the food the artist ate and whether his mother was of Arabic origin.
The reconstruction of the fingerprint was the result […]
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