The following link from Explorator at Yahoo contains an obituary of
Gerald Stanley Hawkins
http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,3604,1004737,00.html
who is often seen as the founder of scientific archaeoastronomy.
Hawkins was in my opinion the greatest student of the
megaliths in the 20th century.
He understood that megalithic man was quite a bright and resourceful
student of the heavens and that Neolithic man in general was and
still is greatly understimated by smug establishment scholars.
Mainstream archaeologists who thought they were criticizing the
superb work of Hawkins and who referred to the builders of
Stonehenge as "howling barbarians" were referring - in the last
anaylsis - to themselves.
Sunday, July 27, 2003
Wednesday, July 16, 2003
Books at Eisenbrauns - 215 LexiLine Journal
Eisenbrauns at http://www.eisenbrauns.com is - as far as I know -
the leading bookseller in the field of ancient studies and I
subscribe to their newsletter which I highly recommend to everyone.
As an example, the following newsletter just came in....
_________
But one preliminary comment....
If we compare any science to a tree, the trunk to its main
foundation, the branches to its main hypotheses and its leaves to
the detail questions - mainstream science is fairly good at doing
the detail work - indeed, in this context, most scientists are "leaf
people". When we attack mainstream science, we are looking to see if
the "branches" of the tree are healthy, which in many cases they are
not, and indeed, to see if the trunk is naught but a stump,
indicating that this or that tree need to be planted anew. Very few
scientists are "branch people" and a true "trunk person" only
appears about once a century.
The following articles are all "leafy".
__________
BOOKNEWS FROM EISENBRAUNS
To order the following title visit the Eisenbrauns web site:
http://www.eisenbrauns.com/wconnect/wc.dll?ebGate~EIS~~I~STEUNDERO
"Under One Sky: Astronomy and Mathematics in the Ancient Near East."
Alter Orient und Altes Testament (AOAT) 297. Edited by John M. Steele and
Annette Imhausen. Ugarit-Verlag, 2002, vii + 496 pages, Cloth, English. ISBN:
3934628265. $118.00
"Under One Sky" presents 26 revised and expanded contributions to the
conference that took place at the British Museum June 2001. The
authors examine the many-faceted interdependencies of Egyptian and
Mesopotamian astronomy and mathematics, ranging from Sumerian Ur III mathematical
problems (J. Hoyrup), astronomical and mythological references in
Egyptian texts (R. Krauss), and the Babylonian Diviner's Manual (C. Williams)
to gnosis and astrology in the 4th book of the Pistis Sophia (A. von
Lieven and Babylonian lunar theory in Roman Egypt (A. Jones).
Eisenbrauns is the exclusive North American distributor of "Under
One Sky" and the entire AOAT series that features monographs and collected
volumes on the ancient Near East and biblical studies. To view the entire list
of available AOAT volumes, visit our web site and search by
series "AOAT."
CONTENTS:
On Columns H and J in Babylonian Lunar Theory of System B - Asger Aaboe
Predictions of Lunar Phenomena in Babylonian Astronomy - Lis Brack-Bernsen
Treatments of Annual Phenomena in Cuneiform Sources - John P. Britton
History of the heleq - Leo Depuydt
Measuring Egyptian Statues - Friedhelm Hoffmann
How to Educate a Kapo or Reflections on the Absence of a Culture of Mathematical Problems in Ur III - Jens Hoyrup
The Algorithmic Structure of the Egyptian Mathematical Problem Texts - Annette Imhausen
Babylonian Lunar Theory in Roman Egypt. Two New Texts - Alexander Jones
Early Babylonian Observations of Saturn: Astronomical Considerations - Teije de Jong
The Eye of Horus and the Planet Venus: Astronomical and Mythological References - Rolf Krauss
The Historicity Question in Mesopotamian Divination - Daryn Lehoux
Gnosis and Astrology. 'Book IV' of the Pistis Sophia - Alexandra von Lieven
Ration Computations at Fara: Multiplication or Repeated Addition - Duncan J. Melville
Square Tablets in the Yale Babylonian Collection - Karen R. Nemet- Nejat
A Goddess Rising 10,000 Cubits into the Air . . . Or Only One Cubit, One Finger? - Joachim F. Quack
Aristarchos and the 'Babylonian' Month - Dennis Rawlins
Closing the Eye of Horus - Jim Ritter
More than Metrology: Mathematics Education in an Old Babylonian Scribal School - Eleanor Robson
A Study of Babylonian Normal-Star Almanacs and Observational Texts - Norbert A. Roughton
Egyptian Festival Dating and the Moon - Anthony Spalinger
A Simple Function for the Length of the Saros in Babylonian Astronomy - John M. Steele
The Earliest Datable Observation of the Aurora Borealis - F. Richard Stephenson and David M. Willis
The 'Transit Star Clock' from the Book of Nut - Sarah Symons
Enuma Anu Enlil Tablets 1-13 - Lorenzo Verderame
The Role of Astronomical Techniques in Ancient Egyptian Chronology: The Use of Lunar Month Lengths in Absolute Dating - Ronald A. Wells
Signs from the Sky, Signs from the Earth: The Diviner's Manual Revisited - Clemency Williams
the leading bookseller in the field of ancient studies and I
subscribe to their newsletter which I highly recommend to everyone.
As an example, the following newsletter just came in....
_________
But one preliminary comment....
If we compare any science to a tree, the trunk to its main
foundation, the branches to its main hypotheses and its leaves to
the detail questions - mainstream science is fairly good at doing
the detail work - indeed, in this context, most scientists are "leaf
people". When we attack mainstream science, we are looking to see if
the "branches" of the tree are healthy, which in many cases they are
not, and indeed, to see if the trunk is naught but a stump,
indicating that this or that tree need to be planted anew. Very few
scientists are "branch people" and a true "trunk person" only
appears about once a century.
The following articles are all "leafy".
__________
BOOKNEWS FROM EISENBRAUNS
To order the following title visit the Eisenbrauns web site:
http://www.eisenbrauns.com/wconnect/wc.dll?ebGate~EIS~~I~STEUNDERO
"Under One Sky: Astronomy and Mathematics in the Ancient Near East."
Alter Orient und Altes Testament (AOAT) 297. Edited by John M. Steele and
Annette Imhausen. Ugarit-Verlag, 2002, vii + 496 pages, Cloth, English. ISBN:
3934628265. $118.00
"Under One Sky" presents 26 revised and expanded contributions to the
conference that took place at the British Museum June 2001. The
authors examine the many-faceted interdependencies of Egyptian and
Mesopotamian astronomy and mathematics, ranging from Sumerian Ur III mathematical
problems (J. Hoyrup), astronomical and mythological references in
Egyptian texts (R. Krauss), and the Babylonian Diviner's Manual (C. Williams)
to gnosis and astrology in the 4th book of the Pistis Sophia (A. von
Lieven and Babylonian lunar theory in Roman Egypt (A. Jones).
Eisenbrauns is the exclusive North American distributor of "Under
One Sky" and the entire AOAT series that features monographs and collected
volumes on the ancient Near East and biblical studies. To view the entire list
of available AOAT volumes, visit our web site and search by
series "AOAT."
CONTENTS:
On Columns H and J in Babylonian Lunar Theory of System B - Asger Aaboe
Predictions of Lunar Phenomena in Babylonian Astronomy - Lis Brack-Bernsen
Treatments of Annual Phenomena in Cuneiform Sources - John P. Britton
History of the heleq - Leo Depuydt
Measuring Egyptian Statues - Friedhelm Hoffmann
How to Educate a Kapo or Reflections on the Absence of a Culture of Mathematical Problems in Ur III - Jens Hoyrup
The Algorithmic Structure of the Egyptian Mathematical Problem Texts - Annette Imhausen
Babylonian Lunar Theory in Roman Egypt. Two New Texts - Alexander Jones
Early Babylonian Observations of Saturn: Astronomical Considerations - Teije de Jong
The Eye of Horus and the Planet Venus: Astronomical and Mythological References - Rolf Krauss
The Historicity Question in Mesopotamian Divination - Daryn Lehoux
Gnosis and Astrology. 'Book IV' of the Pistis Sophia - Alexandra von Lieven
Ration Computations at Fara: Multiplication or Repeated Addition - Duncan J. Melville
Square Tablets in the Yale Babylonian Collection - Karen R. Nemet- Nejat
A Goddess Rising 10,000 Cubits into the Air . . . Or Only One Cubit, One Finger? - Joachim F. Quack
Aristarchos and the 'Babylonian' Month - Dennis Rawlins
Closing the Eye of Horus - Jim Ritter
More than Metrology: Mathematics Education in an Old Babylonian Scribal School - Eleanor Robson
A Study of Babylonian Normal-Star Almanacs and Observational Texts - Norbert A. Roughton
Egyptian Festival Dating and the Moon - Anthony Spalinger
A Simple Function for the Length of the Saros in Babylonian Astronomy - John M. Steele
The Earliest Datable Observation of the Aurora Borealis - F. Richard Stephenson and David M. Willis
The 'Transit Star Clock' from the Book of Nut - Sarah Symons
Enuma Anu Enlil Tablets 1-13 - Lorenzo Verderame
The Role of Astronomical Techniques in Ancient Egyptian Chronology: The Use of Lunar Month Lengths in Absolute Dating - Ronald A. Wells
Signs from the Sky, Signs from the Earth: The Diviner's Manual Revisited - Clemency Williams
Monday, July 07, 2003
Cahokia Figurines elsewhere in the USA - 214 LexiLine Journal
The Science Daily news online from Science Daily Magazine
has an article today entitled
"New Technique Helps Solve Mystery Of Ancient Figurines"
at
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/07/030707090954.htm
This article deals with ancient figurines found in the South and
Southeast of the USA whose origin has been traced by very modern
methods to quarries near the site of Cahokia.
These findings of course confirm my decipherment of ancient sites in
the USA as being interconnected and bear witness to the wide travels
of ancient man.
I am certian that this new method - called PIMA -- which stands for
non-invasive "Portable Infrared Mineral Analyzer" will bring us many
more surprises once it is applied to other ancient artifacts.
has an article today entitled
"New Technique Helps Solve Mystery Of Ancient Figurines"
at
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/07/030707090954.htm
This article deals with ancient figurines found in the South and
Southeast of the USA whose origin has been traced by very modern
methods to quarries near the site of Cahokia.
These findings of course confirm my decipherment of ancient sites in
the USA as being interconnected and bear witness to the wide travels
of ancient man.
I am certian that this new method - called PIMA -- which stands for
non-invasive "Portable Infrared Mineral Analyzer" will bring us many
more surprises once it is applied to other ancient artifacts.
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