Mysteries Of Africa. Why Is Africa Splitting Apart?

Тhese lands once became the cradle of humanity. But now, they are among the most dangerous places for human life. Barren deserts give way to luscious nature, but some of nature's dangers are greater than the scorching sun. These lands have some of the richest natural resources yet some of the poorest communities in the world. It's hard to imagine a place that is more controversial than this.

But what do we actually know about this vast and mysterious continent?

Did you know that most people have a distorted perception of Africa's size due to flawed mapping?

Is it true that Africa is set to split in two, and this process has already begun?

Could the largest dormant volcano on the continent wake up?

And what are these peculiar giant structures with precise geometric shapes that one can see from space?

Today, we’ll embark on a journey through Africa trying to see it from a quite unusual perspective.

The Sahara Desert: What Lies Below It?

People are always curious about what lies beneath the sand, whether it be due to archaeologists or simply some boys on the beach digging a hole that looks like an asteroid hit it.

A storm in the Sahara desert.

Naturally, the solution varies based on the type of sand. Sand is produced by the ceaseless churning of the sea as it grinds up nearby rocks over thousands or millions of years. Sandstone, a sedimentary rock formed by the pressure of the layers above, can be found beneath the ocean sediment. If you dig through this, you might uncover fossils or oil (which, by the way, is not made of dinosaurs). Fossils are generated when minerals seep into an organism and transform it to stone.

Sand can also be created on land from rocks that have been weathered by rivers and other factors. The Sahara desert is one place where it is (kind of) present. The Sahara is well-known for its huge sand dunes, yet unlike most deserts, it is primarily composed of other materials.

What then lurks below the sand dunes of the Sahara? As it turns out, many intriguing discoveries. The Sahara wasn't always the parched, desolate region that it is now. According to a recent study, the change in monsoon seasons brought on by the tilt of the Earth's axis causes it to turn green around every 21,000 years.

The Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System, the largest fossil water aquifer system in the world, is just one of the desert's many surprises. One was a prehistoric mega-lake that was discovered back in 2010. Researchers have discovered evidence that the Nile flooded the eastern Saharan desert some 250,000 years ago, spanning an area of more than 108,800 square kilometers (42,000 square miles) and covering fish fossils discovered 400 kilometers (250 miles) west of the Nile.

"These lakes could have originated from overflow of the Nile through Wadi Tushka, the low point on the west bank of the Nile. An overflow origin is consistent with recent hypotheses on the origin of the Nile and its integration with drainage from Central Africa," the team wrote in their study, adding that "the topographic data add to the growing evidence for numerous early and middle Pleistocene lakes across North Africa that could have supported human migration patterns."

The scientists concluded that Paleolithic people most likely established towns close to the old mega-lake's water supply.

Despite how hostile the Sahara may appear, people have lived there for ages, and over time, settlements and forts from long-lost civilizations have been found there. You won't be surprised to find that our good friend sandstone is once again beneath all of this. Bedrock and dried-out mud can be found if you delve deep enough through the sandstone.

Source: https://www.iflscience.com/what-lies-under...

Easter Island's Moais demand restoration one year after the catastrophic fire

The ancient sculptures in the form of human heads are battling deterioration and are pleading for money to be rebuilt a year after a fire decimated a remote area of Easter Island and harmed more than 200 moais.

On October 4, a fire started in some pastures but quickly spread out of control until it reached the Rano Raraku volcano's crater, also known as the moai quarry because it is there that the prehistoric Rapa Nui Indians carved their recognizable monoliths from tuff stone and dispersed them throughout the island, which was designated a World Heritage Site in 1995.

Rano Raraku, the name given by the indigenous people of this island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, 3,700 kilometers from Chile's mainland, is much more than a massive ancestral workshop. It was the epicenter of the cultural apogee of Rapa Nui, the island's name given by the indigenous people.

“It was like watching our ancestors burn. They are our history. The flames caused us great desolation,” Carlos Edmunds, president of the Council of Elders, an ancestral institution, told EFE.

Deterioration is imminent

In June, 222 moai were harmed by the fire, 22 of which showed "serious alterations" and "must be treated in the short term," according to a Unesco report and island experts.

The Rapa Nui National Park, which covers roughly half of the island, and archaeologist Daniela Meza stated to EFE that the statues did not sustain major cracks because the exposure to the flames was not prolonged. However, they did exhibit minor thermal changes and soot streaks.

She notes that these damages "seem superficial at first sight." However, they weaken the tuff and hasten the biological erosion-caused deterioration of the statuary.

“The moai are exposed to an environment that is constantly damaging them. There is a lot of wind. It rains frequently. Solar radiation is very strong,” the archaeologist explained.

“All these agents – added to other fires in the past – accumulate and in the long term produce cracks and fractures,” adds Meza, who also points to lichens as a source of erosion as they seep through the tuff.

Experts advise pricy consolidation methods to restore the stone's stability and water repellency to shield it from moisture to avoid the mystery statues from crumbling.

Each sculpture takes two to three months to complete, and in order to employ the materials that have been used on other moais, they must be brought in from outside and applied by experts.

“We can’t wait too long because many moais already present deplacements from before, which means that plates of tuff are falling off, and they become deformed, lose their characteristic features, and then cease to be moais,” warns the archaeologist.

"Resources everywhere"

The Ma'u Hena indigenous community, which has been in charge of running the park since 2016, faces the greatest issue of finding funding even though the diagnosis and course of treatment are clear.

“We have to look for national, international, and our own resources from wherever,” Nancy Rivera, director of the Rapa Nui National Park, admits to EFE.

According to Rivera, the Council of National Monuments of Chile must first grant authorization for any conservation measures to be taken. They are awaiting their approval before beginning to raise funds.

They may now maintain the park with public monies, including mowing the grass, sweeping the walks, and constructing firebreaks to stop new fires.

The main source of income for Rapa Nui is tourism, which supplemented these funds. However, because to the epidemic, the most remote inhabited island territory on Earth remained shielded for two years before slowly opening up in August of last year.

During that time, the islanders maintained the park with their hands: “Each family organized themselves. We saw mothers with their children cutting the grass around the moais. It was very nice.”

Source: https://www.laprensalatina.com/one-year-af...

Herostratus: the person who demolished a historic global wonder

Around 1000 BC, Athenian immigrants crossed the Aegean Sea and made their way to what is now Turkey, where they founded the city of Ephesus. The worship of Artemis, a goddess of hunting, wild animals, chastity, and childbirth, was one of the cultures and practices the colonists brought to the area. They built a huge temple in her honor.

The temple ruins at Ephesus. (Credit: Carole Raddato / Wikipedia)

The temple, which took more than a century to construct, according to the historian Herodotus, immediately gained recognition as one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, among other man-made wonders like the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, the Colossus of Rhodes, and the Statue of Zeus at Olympia. The Artemisium, as it was sometimes known, was one of the first Greek temples to be constructed completely of stone. It was an incredible 429 feet (131 m) long and 259 feet (79 m) broad. It was likely constructed on an elevated plateau, making it earthquake- and flood-resistant, according to archeological findings. According to records kept by the Roman philosopher Pliny the Elder, there were 127 columns, each measuring 65 feet (20 meters) high, constructed in the Ionic order of classical architecture, and adorned with scenes from Greek mythology, as shown by one specimen that was brought to the British Museum in the 19th century.

Several life-size statues of Artemis herself, the largest of which was positioned in the center beneath a partially opened roof, completed the construction. Today, the Artemisium is better remembered for its notorious destruction in 356 BC than for its painstaking design, which occurred due to Herostratus, a disgruntled citizen rather than a natural calamity as its architects had feared.

Damnation of memory

Herostratus, who by pure coincidence destroyed the world wonder on the same night Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great was born, is a man about whom nothing is known. His social status was likely poor because he was either a former slave or the son of a slave, according to historians. The arsonist, who upon his arrest stated that he committed this unimaginable crime because he was seeking kleos: infamy, reputation, may have been best described by the Russian poet Semyon Nadson. Nadson hypothesizes that Herostratus' determination to destroy the Temple of Artemis was motivated by the sobering understanding that he was but a "maggot squashed by destiny, in the midst of the countless hordes," and that doing so was the only way for him to make his mark on history.

The Ephesian authorities believed that the death penalty did not adequately reflect the seriousness of the offense. Herostratus was sentenced to death as well as damnatio memoriae, which forbade mentioning his name in writing or conversation moving forward. This was done in order to severely punish the fame-seeking criminal.

Damnatio memoriae was a common practice in classical antiquity, with the Roman writer and grammarian Aulus Gellius explaining that terms like inlaudatus and inlaudabilis were used to refer to "one who is worthy of neither mention nor remembrance and is never to be named; as, for example, in days gone by the common council of Asia decreed that no one should ever mention the name of the man who had burned the temple of Diana [the Roman name for Artemis] at Ephesus." The punishment was given to Marc Anthony by Augustus, the founder of the Roman Empire. Although not from the ancient world, Joseph Stalin treated his foes similarly.

Ironically, damnatio memoriae frequently had the reverse result, maintaining rather than wiping out a person's memories. Even if he was briefly forgotten, Anthony is still as well-known in history as Augustus. For his part, Herostratus is now much more well-known than the skilled masons who built the temple. Theopompus, a historian from the island of Chios who did not fall under the jurisdiction of Ephesus and, in his quest to record events as accurately as possible, mentioned the destroyer of the Temple of Artemis by name in his biography of King Philip II, the Philippica, ensured that his legacy survived despite being overlooked by historians from his hometown.

Theopompus' material was later included in the writings of the Roman historians Plutarch, Valerius Maximus, and Gellius as well as the Greek geographer Strabo.

An illustration of Herostratus. (Credit: Rijksmuseum / Wikipedia)

Herostratus disorder

Not only is Herostratus' legacy preserved in history, but also in literature, philosophy, and the arts. The English polymath Thomas Browne observed the poetic irony of the murder and its motivation in his 1658 work Hydriotaphia, writing:

“But the iniquity of oblivion blindly scattereth her poppy, and deals with the memory of men without distinction to merit of perpetuity… Herostratus lives that burnt the Temple of Diana, he is almost lost that built it… Who knows whether the best of men be known, or whether there be not more remarkable persons forgot than any that stand remembered in the known account of time?

The Don Quixote author Miguel de Cervantes, the English poet Geoffrey Chaucer, and even Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky in his film Stalker all made use of the same sarcasm. The eponymous short novella by French existentialist Jean-Paul Sartre is a particularly thorough homage to Herostratus. Inspired by the classic tragedy, Erostratus follows Paul Hilbert, a Parisian who, suffering from impotence and low self-esteem, decides to pick up a gun and begin randomly killing bystanders.

Literary critics have noted that Sartre's story, which was first published in 1939, has a startling resemblance to the recent headline-grabbing atrocities of serial killers and religious terrorists. These people, in the words of Matthew Fraser, author of Monumental Fury: The History of Iconoclasm and the Future of Our Past, utilize violence to make "a desperate claim on personal identity." They are channeling their inner Hilberts and Herostratuses. The ethnologist Pierre Centlivres linked the destruction of the Temple of Artemis to the Islamist destruction of historic Buddhist structures and artifacts in Afghanistan more than 2,000 years later, describing both as "attacks against piety and beauty, a religious offense and an outrage to an art monument." Or, to put it another way, a sacrifice in all its contradictory forms.

In fact, these modern imitators of Herostratus resemble him so much that sociologists and criminal psychologists today refer to it as the "Herostratus syndrome." The symptoms, as outlined by Polish psychologist Michael Myslobodsky in his book The Fallacy of Mother's Wisdom, are as follows: Jean-Paul Azam and Mario Ferrero define it as affecting "people who perpetrate odious attacks for the sake of infamy."

“Signs of deep humiliation due to public revelation (actual or imagined) of either personal inadequacies (assumed or genuine) or those presumably shared via the membership in groups; Attribution of unhappiness and resentment to individuals who belong to salient factions or institutions; Relative prosperity of adversaries that is considered unfair; Feeling of being trapped in a punitive situation with no way of recovery from the current bleak state unless the enemy suffers recognizable injury or pain; A culture of redemption and recovery through retribution; Unquenchable craving for recognition and immortality.”

It seemed that Herostratus won the joke at first look. That is not the case, though. Even if he earned a modest place in history, what we remember about him is what he accomplished, not who he was. Even though the Temple of Artemis destruction has been extensively examined, very little is still known about his life before that fatal night. Because of this, even his reasons are still a matter of conjecture.

Source: https://bigthink.com/the-past/temple-artem...

Ancient grave found by archaeologists in Palenque

The Maya Train Hotel's "first, ancestral guest" has been discovered, according to archaeologists excavating beside the building of the hotel close to Palenque, according to a colorful description in a press release from the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH).

According to INAH, what they found was the skeletal remains of a human body clothed in expensive ornaments in a burial that may be more than 1,000 years old. The find was made on September 11 while archaeological work was being done in southern Mexico alongside the multibillion-dollar Maya Train project.

Six new hotels will be along the train's 1,554-kilometer (965-mile) route through the states of Tabasco, Chiapas, Campeche, Yucatán, and Quintana Roo, which also includes the Palenque, Chiapas hotel where the find was made.

It is only 2 kilometers from Palenque, one of the largest and most advanced metropolises of the ancient Maya civilisation, which is home to imposing temples and a vast palace complex. The city-state, also called Lakamha by the Maya, flourished from about 300 to 900 A.D.

Palenque, in Chiapas, was one of the most important cities of the ancient Maya world. (Ricraider/Wikimedia)

The human remains, which were discovered in a sizable stone box and sealed with slabs of limestone, were those of an important individual who lived outside the ancient city's core, according to INAH officials. A funerary collection of three pottery jars, two greenstone beads, and two Maya ear flares was found next to the bones.

Director of INAH Diego Prieto Hernández stated that the person was buried face up with his head facing north, adding that more examinations will attempt to ascertain the person's cause of death and other details. According to reports, the tomb was 4 meters (13 feet) below the roof of a Maya building.

Prieto Hernández presented the results at the press conference held on Monday morning by President López Obrador. He added that archaeologists and environmentalists were completing their plans for the region.

The individual was buried with lavish adornments, say archaeologists. (INAH)

The find was made on the Maya Train's Section 1, which as of Monday has recorded the following findings: There are 2,698 buildings, 248 pieces of furniture, 284,900 ceramics, 177 graves, and 55 natural elements connected to pre-Columbian Maya tribes.

Although it is expected that the federal government will spend an additional 120 billion pesos (US $6.9 billion) to complete the project and its ancillary works in 2024, the Maya Train is set for a preliminary inauguration in December. With this added, the project's estimated total cost is now 480 billion pesos ($27.7 billion).

Source: https://mexiconewsdaily.com/culture/archae...

We May Have Completely Misunderstood The European Syphilis Epidemic's Origins

The fatal syphilis pathogen was infamously carried back to Europe from the Americas by the Italian explorer Christopher Columbus and his Spanish mercenaries in the late 15th century. That is how the tale goes.

Treponema pallidum, the spiral-shaped bacteria that causes syphilis. (Kateryna Kon/Science Photo Library/Getty Images)

The truth might not be as obvious as we think. Treponema pallidum or closely comparable strains may have been present in Europe even before Christopher Columbus returned from his first expedition in 1493, according to previous investigations of medieval bones and teeth.

A more nuanced picture of T. pallidum's prevalence in earlier centuries is emerging with newer data, however this is far from excusing Columbus for sowing a sickness that raced through Europe (or for the plagues Spanish armada carried to the Americas, killing dozens of Indigenous people).

That alternative hypothesis is strengthened by a recent study from a team of paleomicrobiologists, who discovered evidence of a T. pallidum infection in a thigh bone from the 7th or 8th century France. The researchers found antibodies unique to T. pallidum in the sick femur in addition to extracting fragmented DNA of a potential ancestor strain of T. pallidum.

According to a report that has been published, "these data break a century-old dogma in medical microbiology," written by French infectious disease expert Hamadou Oumarou Hama and colleagues.

The burial site where the bones were found. (Hama et al., Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2023)

The sick femur was discovered in 1987 during archaeological digs at Chapelle Saint-Vincent in Roquevaire, France, among a mass of other bones; nevertheless, its significance was not understood until much later.

Working in a lab that had never previously handled T. pallidum DNA, Hama and colleagues went to great measures to verify the pockmarked bone and the extracted samples weren't contaminated by DNA from other sources.

The diseased femur's extracted DNA and antibodies were both similar to a small section of the T. pallidum reference genome, but neither was discovered in a different unaffected bone from the same burial site that was used as a control.

If the data are correct, the researchers claim that T. pallidum infections first appeared in Europe eight hundred years ago.

"To the best of my knowledge," Aix-Marseille University microbiologist and co-author Michel Drancourt told journalist Maryn McKenna for Wired, "this is the first, proven, strong piece of evidence that the Treponema of syphilis were circulating in the European population before Columbus."

However, not everyone is persuaded. McKenna claims that there is no proof of syphilis outbreaks earlier than those that ravaged Europe in the 1490s.

In addition, distinct diseases are brought on by several subspecies of the spiral-shaped Treponema bacteria. Yaws is a specific disease caused by the T. pallidum pertenue subspecies, while bejel is a sickness caused by the T. pallidum endemicum subspecies. Both are skin illnesses, but unlike syphilis, neither can be spread through sexual contact.

The diseased femur and unmarred control. (Hama et al., Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2023)

Hama and colleagues may have found some evidence of a Treponema infection, but they cannot say with certainty that it was the source of syphilis; it may have been a subspecies that induced yawns, for instance.

Only 2.4 percent of the pallidum subspecies genome was covered by the damaged DNA from the 1,400-year-old bone, but it was almost identical to those regions, raising questions.

According to certain medical professionals, including Hama and colleagues, there is growing evidence that pertenue or endemicum was probably present in Europe when Columbus arrived, possibly brought from the Americas with a new, more contagious form called pallidum.

More information regarding the origins of syphilis may eventually become available, adding more specifics and completing the history of this still-stigmatized illness.

Source: https://www.sciencealert.com/we-may-have-b...

The 5,000-year-old Highland burial site is depicted in new pictures

One of the most significant prehistoric burial sites in Scotland has recently been captured in new pictures.

Carn Glas burial site is on a moor above Inverness

The Neolithic settlement at Carn Glas, close to Inverness, is thought to be roughly 5,000 years old.

At 116 meters (380 feet), it is one of Scotland's longest chambered cairns.

According to Historic Environment Scotland (HES), anthropologists excavated bones from the location on Essich Moor in 1918.

A false colours image of Carn Glas

The latest photos include shots in false colors that unmistakably depict Carn Glas' shape.

The North of Scotland Archaeological Society (NOSAS), which is vested in the site's preservation, has released the photographs by Andy Hickie.

Gorse that had covered the protected monument has been removed by the society.

Carn Glas is Scotland's longest chambered cairn

Carn Glas is deemed to be of great archaeological interest by HES due to its potential to advance knowledge of Neolithic rituals and funeral customs.

It consists of three connected cairns.

Nearby historical sites from the same era include the chambered cairn at Culduthel in Inverness and the stone circle at Torbreck.

The burial site is made up of three interlinked cairns

There are more chambered cairns in Scotland, albeit not all of them are built similarly.

After robbing some for stone to erect dykes around fields on crofts or farms, not much of some remains.

It is believed that the Cairn Holy II site in Dumfries and Galloway is the grave of the legendary Scottish king Galdus.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c3gr38e6...

Curiosity piqued by mystery package on Vizag beach

A sizable crowd of people descended on the beach on Saturday in search of a mystery wooden box that had washed ashore on the RK Beach in Visakhapatnam on Friday. The 100-ton, five-layered wooden box is usually a component of a system that anchors boats and guards against collisions.

On Friday night, small-town fishermen found the enormous package and immediately notified the authorities. Santosh, a SI from III-Town, arrived on the scene. Two earthmovers assisted in moving the mysterious box onto the sand. Even as they awaited the arrival of the archaeological and police departments for inspection in the morning, the police kept a rigorous monitor the entire night. The people gathered at the location in the meanwhile to get a look at this enigmatic object.

When the dog squad and clues team got there to look at the box, they discovered that it was empty. “This might appear unusual to the public as they don’t typically encounter such objects in their daily lives. However, we were confident that it was a wooden box commonly used by boats and ships to prevent collisions,” according to local fisherman. “Occasionally, these boxes can get detached from boats and ships,” the policemen clarified.

Source: https://www.newindianexpress.com/states/an...

A remarkable find was made in France: a Roman sarcophagus dating back 1800 years

In the massive ancient necropolis on Rue Soussillon in northeastern France, archaeologists from the National Institute of Preventive Archeology (INRAP) of France discovered an unlooted antique stone sarcophagus.

Archaeologists seldom discover intact Roman sarcophagi, but when they do, it is an excellent opportunity to learn more about the past.

One of the biggest cities in the Roman Empire was the old Durocortorum, which served as the provincial capital of Belgium's Gaul region. The city was 600 hectares in size and was enclosed by a strong wall. The contours of this so-called "Augustan" enclosure and the extra muros necropolises, which were situated around the seven main access roads, were highlighted in the second half of the 19th century during extension work in Reims. (within the direction of Boulogne, Soissons, Paris, Lyon, Trier, Cologne, and Bavay). 5,000 tombs have been investigated and added to the museum's collections over the course of 22 years of study.

The museum was destroyed during the First World War, along with a significant portion of its contents and records. Very little was discovered during the excavations of these ancient necropolises, other from information about the topography of the funeral sites. Archaeology has only partially studied the "great enclosure"'s layout, and there are still several unanswered questions. In this regard, the archaeologists of Reims made an astonishing find when they discovered a section of the entire necropolis on Rue Soussillon.

Researchers have found 1,200 m2 on Rue Soussillon, which is only a fragment of a vast ancient necropolis. This area of the city contains a very high concentration of tombs, which is noteworthy because it has long been assumed that it is a swampy location unsuitable for any form of population.

Scientists recently unearthed a limestone sarcophagus that is 3.3 feet tall, 5.4 feet long, and 2.6 feet wide. It weighs 1,700 pounds, and its lid is secured in place by iron pegs that are sealed with lead. The sarcophagus was first subjected to X-rays by the archaeologists, who then employed an endoscopic camera. They discovered a woman's skeleton inside, along with several other items, including a mirror.

“It’s quite exceptional, it’s the first time that we have found a tomb intact and which has not been looted. It was sealed by eight iron staples, and we were the first to explore it,” Agnès Balmelle, deputy scientific and technical director at Inrap Grand Est, told local news Le Parisien.

“The skeleton occupied the entire space of the [5-foot] tank, the individual must have been around 40 years old and had a special status. Four oil lamps were found near her legs and shoulders, as well as a small mirror, an amber ring and a comb,” Balmelle added.

Additionally, there were two glass jars inside the sarcophagus that may have held fragrant oils.

The artefacts discovered show that the burial took place in the second century A.D. It will be possible to identify whether there are plant remains or products related to the treatment of bodies by taking samples of the sediment from the bottom of the tank and the sediment on the bones.

Source: https://arkeonews.net/extraordinary-discov...

The Atlantis of actuality? In a mystery underwater city off the coast of Egypt, archaeologists find fresh artifacts that date back at least a thousand years

New artifacts from Heracleion, the 'lost' Egyptian city that sank into the Mediterranean Sea over a thousand years ago, have been found by archaeologists.

The 'valuable' new discoveries were revealed by French marine archaeologist Franck Goddio and include gold jewelry, silver tableware, and an unusual pouring object in the form of a duck.

A Djed, an eerie porcelain hand that was discovered jutting out of the mud, and a pillar-like symbol from Egyptian hieroglyphs made of the blue stone lapis lazuli are also present.

Before Alexander the Great founded Alexandria in 331 BC, Heracleion served as Egypt's principal Mediterranean port for many years.

Gold objects, jewellery and a Djed pilar (a symbol of stability and made of the blue stone lapis lazuli) were retrieved at the remains of Heracleion. They likely date to 5th century BC

Heracleion has been compared to Atlantis in Egypt, although unlike Heracleion, many people don't believe the legendary island actually existed.

Goddio, who first uncovered Heracleion in 2000, called the new discoveries "precious" and "moving" on his website.

“They bear witness to the wealth of this sanctuary and the piety of the former inhabitants of the port city,” he said.

Heracleion was established in the early eighth century BC, and all ships sailing from the Greek world were required to enter Egypt through this port, according to Mr. Goddio.

A hand is emerging from the sediment during an archaeological excavation at Heracleion. It dates from the 5th century BC-early 4th century BC, probably from Cyprus

The 'various natural calamities' that Heracleion experienced before it completely submerged into the Mediterranean, most likely in the eighth century AD, were probably earthquakes and tsunamis.

The port city's ruins are now submerged beneath the water, around four miles (7 km) from Egypt's current coast.

The most recent excavation, carried out in July of this year, focused on the south canal of the buried city, which contains the ruins of a significant temple to the Egyptian god of the air Amun.

The city of Heracleion was one of the most important trade centers in the Mediterranean area. Before Alexandria was founded by Alexander the Great in 331, Heracleion was the largest port city in Egypt

About 1,000 years before the entire city was destroyed, large pieces of stone from the temple crumbled during a "cataclysmic event" dating to the middle of the second century BC, according to Goddio.

At the site of the temple, they discovered silver ritual objects, gold jewelry, and delicate alabaster receptacles that were probably used for perfumes.

Two ceremonial plates made of silver, which was highly prized in ancient Egypt, were used for 'libations for the gods.

Meanwhile, a stunning Djed was created from lapis lazuli, a semi-precious stone that has long been valued for its striking blue hue.

Two silver ritual dishes for libations for the gods from the temple treasure. Silver was considered extremely precious in ancient Egypt. An alabaster container for unguents and perfumes was found amongst them

“It is extremely moving to discover such delicate objects, which survived intact despite the violence and magnitude of the cataclysm,” Mr Goddio said.

They also discovered underground buildings supporting well-preserved wooden columns and beams from the fifth century BC beneath the temple.

They also found an ancient Greek shrine to Aphrodite, the goddess of sexual love and beauty, to the east of the Amun temple.

After excavation, an archaeological diver gazes at the huge blocks of the Amun temple, which fell in the mid-second century BC in the south canal of Heracleion. They were discovered under around 10 feet (3 metres) of hard clay

The sanctuary produced items made of imported bronze and ceramic, including a common object in the shape of a duck that was encircled by ceramic pots and shields.

Despite being dated the fourth century BC, the delicate pourer may have been used to pour wine, which could indicate Greek trade.

A delicate bronze duck-shaped pourer is discovered amongst ceramics of the 4th century BC on the site of a newly discovered Greek sanctuary to Aphrodite in ThonisHeracleion.

“This illustrates that Greeks who were allowed to trade and settle in the city during the time of the Pharaohs of the Saïte dynasty (664 - 525 BC) had their sanctuaries to their own gods,” Mr Goddio added.

“The presence of Greek mercenaries is also seen by numerous finds of Greek weapons.”

Despite the fact that the French explorer discovered Heracleion more than 20 years ago, new geophysical prospecting technology have made it feasible to find cavities and other artifacts buried beneath clay layers several meters thick, enabling them to find more objects.

The British Museum in London has already featured earlier discoveries from Heracleion, including statues of pharoahs and goddesses.

Under the floor level of the Amun temple, very well-preserved under-ground wooden structures were discovered. 5th century BC

There is no question that Heracleion existed, but Atlantis, to which it is compared, cannot be said the same.

Although it is purported that the alleged ancient city was destroyed and sunk beneath the Atlantic Ocean, most people think that Greek philosopher Plato dreamed it up.

Another study team said earlier this year that they had discovered Rungholt, which was sunk by a storm in 1362, Germany's version of Atlantis.

Source: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ar...

A biblical verse was discovered on an old inscription at a Judean archaeological site

Archaeologists from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have discovered an old inscription that paraphrases the first two verses of Psalm 86 at a remote location in Israel's Judean Desert.

A rare Byzantine Greek inscription paraphrasing the first two verses of Psalm 86 has been found at a remote site in Israel’s Judean desert, Hebrew University archaeologists said Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2023. (Photo courtesy of Hebrew University)

According to university teaching fellow Oren Gutfeld, who was speaking to The Washington Times over the phone from a field location, the Byzantine Greek inscription, which dates to the early 6th century, was discovered on a monastery building stone at a dig site where there are no roads for vehicle access. To get the equipment to the site, his team had to employ donkeys.

The find is “the first time that I recall a phrase from the Psalms on an inscription [on a] huge stone building stone. It’s very, very rare — a unique something [that’s] bigger than the inscription itself,” Mr. Gutfeld mentioned.

Marked with a cross, the biblical inscription reads: “Jesus Christ, guard me, for I am poor and needy.” The first two verses of Psalm 86 say, “Hear me, Lord, and answer me, for I am poor and needy. Guard my life, for I am faithful to you,” according to the New International Version.

“This psalm holds a special place in the [Hebrew] Masoretic text as a designated prayer and is notably one of the most frequently recited psalms in Christian liturgy,” epigraphist Avner Ecker of Bar-Ilan University said in a statement. “Thus, the monk drew a graffito of a cross onto the wall, accompanied by a prayer with which he was very familiar.”

Source: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/...

Stonehenge: A recent analysis raises the possibility that the Altar Stone may not be Welsh as previously believed

The largest of the stone circle's "bluestones" is the Altar Stone. A site in west Wales was once assumed to be the source, but recent study has called that into question.

The most plausible historical context for the Stonehenge Altar Stone has been clarified by a recent study.

Previously, it was believed that the largest "bluestone" at the attraction came from west Wales.

The majority of the bluestones have been taken from the Preseli hills in Pembrokeshire, which are 180 miles to the west of the Wiltshire location.

For the past 100 years, it has also been assumed that the Altar Stone at Stonehenge came from the local Old Red Sandstone strata. But its source's precise location had not been determined.

Researchers suggest to take a closer look at northern Britain, including Cheshire, the Lake District, and parts of Scotland, saying it is time to "broaden our horizons" at this time.

Journal of Archaeological Science published the study, which was directed by Aberystwyth University.

In the report, scientists claim that the long-held belief that the Altar Stone was from Wales has been impacted by treating it as a "bluestone" instead.

By severing the connection to bluestones derived from the Preseli highlands, they now argue that the stone should be "de-classified" as such.

Does not originate in Wales

The Altar Stone, also known as Stone 80, is an abnormality and ought to be treated separately, according to Professor Nick Pearce, one of the paper's authors, in a statement to Sky News.

"The view in terms of the conclusions we've drawn from this is that it doesn't come from Wales and maybe we should remove the Altar Stone from that grouping of bluestones and consider it independently," he mentioned.

Sandstone, or the Altar Stone, contains an exceptionally high quantity of barium compared to other sandstones of a similar composition, which may be useful in determining its provenance. According to Professor Pearce, the research will cause people to reconsider Stonehenge.

He continued: "Keeping them grouped together doesn't really make sense and I think it will cause people to start looking at it in a slightly different context in terms of how it got there, when it got there, where it came from, and so on. So hopefully it will lead to some sort of new thoughts about the development of Stonehenge."

Source: https://news.sky.com/story/stonehenge-new-...

The Most Interesting Antarctic Archeological Discoveries

Archaeologists have unearthed beautiful artifacts from one of the most valiant periods of human travel, despite the fact that they haven't (yet) found aliens or ancient civilizations.

For a country that is so frigid, Antarctica undoubtedly is a hub of scientific research, from astronomy and archaeology to geology and meteorology.

I see, archaeology.

That's correct. Even at one of the most remote locations on Earth, archaeologists have studied the ice, but not in the way you might expect.

The Ice's Mysterious Mystery

Here, we must admit that among a subset of pop-culture theorists and conspiracy enthusiasts, it's a common pastime to believe that beneath the Antarctic ice lie the remains of ancient civilizations, which may have been much more advanced than our modern society and may even have had extraterrestrial influences or origins.

The possibility that prehistoric humans could have lived in Antarctica at a time when the continent wasn't covered in ice and instead was a real Garden of Eden is hypothesis that has garnered support in some quarters.

The dark suspicion that some secret cabal of scientists, corporations, or governments (or all three) are keeping these "discoveries" under wraps for a variety of (inadequately explained) reasons is frequently raised whenever any of these outlandish theories are advanced (and you won't have to look far on the internet to find them).

While it is rare for experts to declare something to be impossible, these particular theories concerning Antarctica are so absurd that occasionally respectable science publications will publish an April Fool's joke making fun of them.

This is exactly how it should be, as the impact of genuine scientific research is greatly diminished by pseudoscience and conspiracy theories, which also produce a lot of quasi-intellectual chaff that obscures the work of real archaeologists and other scientists who have spent decades researching humanity's recent past. And make no mistake: The waters and lands of Antarctica are teeming with authentic, historical artifacts left by humans. Although it isn't very old, that doesn't make it any less fascinating or interesting to study.

Intriguing relics from our own civilisation, some of which date as recently as a century ago or perhaps less, have been discovered in Antarctica. With the finest available knowledge and tools at the time, the sailors and explorers of that era probed the depths of a hostile and largely unexplored land.

Whether it was a ship that was crushed by ice, a store of supplies left behind from a failed voyage, or the remains of an abandoned outpost, what they left behind has a lot to teach us and future generations. Here is what research has revealed about the ice's surface and interior.

Has Antarctica Ever Hosted Ancient Humans?

There has never been an indigenous human population in Antarctica, to be clear. If that were the case, that would be fantastic, but it's just not realistic. Without the aid of modern technology, Antarctica was last habitable — that is, had a climate that early humans could have considered remotely temperate or survivable — at least 35 million years ago. This is in addition to the fact that there is no land bridge or other obvious points of transit for prehistoric humans.

Given that, both then and for many millions of years prior, Antarctica was positively balmy, a prehistoric rainforest that would be difficult to imagine on the dry, ice-swept country that we know today. However, it is implausible, to put it mildly, to suggest that any human-like creature could have traveled to, let alone survived, Antarctica in the past, given that Homo sapiens didn't exist until about 350,000 years ago and that Homo erectus, one of our closest ancestors, dates back only to about 2 million years.

In reality, it wasn't until approximately 350 B.C. that humanity even had the idea of a massive landmass at the bottom of the planet. Aristotle was one of the earliest known Western thinkers to propose the existence of Antarctica (or Antarktikos, as they called it). Of course, they had no proof that it existed, and they didn't even try to find it, much less live in it.

According to compelling evidence, the Polynesian people who are said to have accidentally discovered the frozen continent around 600 A.D. is when mankind first saw Antarctica. These conclusions are the result of a comprehensive examination of the oral histories of the Maori and other comparable tribes, which recount interactions with a region to the south that was most likely Antarctica.

When Was Antarctica Found by Contemporary Explorers?

A few hundred years later, the Europeans arrived, and numerous explorers, including the renowned Captain Cook, searched for but were never quite able to locate the true Antarctic mainland. Although even history books cannot agree on who exactly discovered Antarctica first, the "discovery" of the continent is typically dated to approximately 1820.

A daring sea captain by the name of John Davis claimed to have led his crew short ashore to go seal-hunting in 1821, marking the first recorded landing on Antarctica. Ships started to spend the winter on Antarctic ice, frequently unintentionally, by the late 1890s after earlier, better-documented landings had taken place. Since then, there had always been some sort of human presence in the area.

The so-called Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration quickly began, with daring explorers and scientists setting out on arduous and occasionally deadly excursions towards the continent around the beginning of the 20th century. On Laurie Island, one of the earliest bases in the area was founded in 1903, making it the oldest such outpost currently in use. The first long-term mainland bases weren't created until 1944, and in the 1950s more bases for science and increased international scientific collaboration followed.

What have researchers found in Antarctica?

Since then, researchers have found amazing things on and beneath the Antarctic ice, including more than 45,000 meteorites, as well as rocks that originated from the Moon and even Mars, hidden ecosystems teeming with unanticipated animals, astonishingly resilient plant life that can survive beneath the ice with almost no light, and much more.

This covers activities like archeology. In order to research and preserve relics from the Heroic Age that date to the late 19th and 20th centuries, entire volumes have been published about Antarctic archaeology. Such research includes the examination and preservation of early whaling and sealing stations; huts built to aid Robert Falcon Scott's numerous (and ultimately unsuccessful) expeditions to reach the heart of Antarctica; the discovery of the final resting place of the Endurance, the renowned ship lost during Sir Ernest Shackleton's 1914–15 expedition; and even the exploration of mid-century "ghost" stations that had been long abandoned by earlier researchers.

It is unfortunate that so much online energy and excitement is focused on the analysis of fantastical concepts and pseudoscientific theories about purported Antarctic civilizations — for which, to be clear, there is not a shred of proof. There is such rich recent history to investigate and preserve.

The recent historical record, on the other hand, tells volumes about the bravery and tenacity of true human heroes and scientists, whose efforts and sacrifices are genuinely deserving of recognition. Let's appreciate them instead of wasting time on unfounded lore and myths.

Source: https://www.discovermagazine.com/planet-ea...