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Archeologists perplexed by tar decorations scrawled on bones of nomadic woman buried 4,500 ago in Ukraine

Tar decorations bones woman ukraine
Mysterious tar decorations scrawled on the bones of a nomadic woman buried 4,500 years ago have left archaeologists stumped.

The burial ritual, which is unlike anything ever seen in Europe, was unearthed along the river Dniester in Ukraine.

Experts believe the markings were made after the woman's body had completely decomposed, allowing ancient people to draw directly on the bones.

No other comparable prehistoric custom has ever been recorded in Europe.

Researchers say the baffling new find proves how complicated and elaborate funeral rituals were millennia ago.

Chess

Medieval-era gaming board found in search for Pictish monastery

medieval game Hnefatafl
© Michael Sharpe/Book of Deer ProjectThe medieval gaming board used to play Norse strategy game Hnefatafl.
A medieval gaming board has been found by archaeologists working to find a lost Pictish-era monastery in Aberdeenshire.

Archaeologist Ali Cameron said the board found near Old Deer was a "very rare" find with it used to play the Norse strategy game of Hnefatafl.

A date for the board has yet to be established but a similar piece found in Birsay, Orkney, in 1989 was dated to the Late Iron Age/Pictish period from the 5th to 9th Century AD. Ms Cameron said: "It is a very rare object and only a few have been found in Scotland, mainly on monastic or at least religious sites."

Dig

136 ancient tombs discovered in Shandong, China

shadong tomb china
A total of 136 tombs have been unearthed in a cemetery dating back to the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (770-256 B.C.) in east China's Shandong Province, local archeological authorities said Tuesday.

The cemetery is located in Dahan Village of Tengzhou City, according to the provincial cultural heritage and archaeology institute.

Liu Yanchang, a researcher from the institute said that the excavation of the cemetery started in October last year.

So far, 100 small tombs, 36 large and medium-sized tombs, as well as more than 800 items of ceramic, jade, bone and bronzeware have been found.

"Based on the size of the tombs, distribution and number of burial objects, the large and medium-sized tombs might belong to nobles. Their nationalities haven't been identified yet," Liu said.

Comment: See also:


Document

The new JFK revelations: What the declassified documents reveal about Cold War history

cia magnifying glass
© Adapted by WhoWhatWhy from Tullio Saba / Flickr and CIA / Wikimedia
One year ago this week, the National Archives and Records Administration released the first of what were to be seven batches of newly declassified documents. Some of those documents had actually been released in past decades, albeit with extensive redactions. Others had never been seen before.

Analysis of the newly available documents, including those released in the 1990s - most of which still remain undigitized - are already shedding light on the murky background of President Kennedy's murder.

Among other things, the findings offer a golden opportunity to unpack more of the hidden history of the Cold War, revise our assumptions about that fraught era, and - finally - get the story right.

There will be no new document releases until 2021. That gives us three years to digest what we already have, and to create some stronger tools for analysis.

But the work of researchers and interested citizens is already paying off.

Magic Wand

Carving of modern bicycle in 2,000 year old temple in India - ancient or added recently?

carving bicycle India temple
© Phenomenal Travel VideosThe carving inside the temple left the explorer stunned


The founders of Panchavarnaswamy Temple, built during India's ancient Chola period, may have predicted the arrival of the bike by hundreds of years


A carving of a modern bicycle has been found on the wall of an ancient 2,000-year-old temple.

The founders of Panchavarnaswamy Temple, which was built during India's ancient Chola period, may have predicted the arrival of the bike by hundreds of years if these images are correct.

Praveen Mohan, who found the carving and posted about it on his YouTube channel, said: "In a dark corner on one of the walls we can see this amazing carving of a man riding a bicycle.


Comment: Of course, extraordinary explanations are always a possibility - but in this case it does seem most likely that the carving was added to the temple at the beginning of the twentieth century.


Megaphone

Remember that time when the US invaded Russia?

US invaded russia
Amid the bi-partisan mania over the Trump-Putin Summit in Helsinki, fevered, anti-Russian rhetoric in the United States makes conceivable what until recently seemed inconcievable: that dangerous tensions between Russia and the U.S. could lead to military conflict. It has happened before.

In September 1959, during a brief thaw in the Cold War, Nikita Khrushchev made his famous visit to the United States. In Los Angeles, the Soviet leader was invited to a luncheon at Twentieth Century-Fox Studios in Hollywood and during a long and rambling exchange he had this to say:
"Your armed intervention in Russia was the most unpleasant thing that ever occurred in the relations between our two countries, for we had never waged war against America until then; our troops have never set foot on American soil, while your troops have set foot on Soviet soil."

Map

The history of Ukraine as an artificial state

Ukraine territory history
Ukraine through the ages
From what source came the name Ukraine?

A Western yotuber whose channel currently has 281,641 subscribers has made a video, in which he listed countries which he believes to be artificial, or created arbitrarily without historical justification.

Among the countries he listed, he included Ukraine, saying that Ukraine "was created as an artificial buffer state by Germany".

In the video, he describes many States which some believe to be artificial, it must be said in full disclaimer that I am stating that I agree or disagree with these things, however his mention of the Ukraine gives an opportunity to discuss how Ukraine came about. It will also allow us to explain Ukraine's artificial origin, and what that means, first and foremost, that it is NOT a prejudiced statement against Ukrainians, but rather a matter of historical fact.

Take 2

Nelson Mandela's legacy hijacked by hypocrite Western leaders like Obama

Obama Mandela
© Marco Longari / AFP


The theft and distortion of Nelson Mandela's legacy by champions of Western liberalism has and continues to be both sickening and obscene to behold.


Libya hovers into sharp relief

Just how obscene is reflected in the sight of former US President Barack Obama delivering the annual Nelson Mandela lecture in Johannesburg on July 17, the 100th anniversary of the giant of the anti-apartheid struggle's birth.

This event has been held annually in South Africa since 2003, organized by the Nelson Mandela Foundation. According to the foundation's website "global leaders have used the lecture to raise topical issues affecting South Africa, Africa and the rest of the world." Instantly arriving on the back of these words, however, given Obama's participation as the event's star act this year, comes anger and a crippling sense of irony - cruel irony - as 'Libya' hovers into sharp relief.

Not only was the former US president key in turning the North African country from a functioning state with a 'high human development rank', according to the UN, into a manifestation of hell on earth, but Libya's murdered leader, Muammar Gaddafi, provided significant material aid to Mandela and the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa when at its most intense. This was way before it achieved the status of cause celebre in the West, when Washington and its allies were doing their utmost to lend legitimacy to the country's brutal apartheid government and state institutions.

Comment: South African activists say no to Obama's 'Whitewashing' of Mandela


Dig

Stone tools put early hominids in China 2.1 million years ago - 250k earlier than previously thought

Shangchen, China
© Z. ZHOU/CASResearchers excavate a stone tool from 2.1 million-year-old sediment at Shangchen, China
Members of the human genus, Homo, left Africa far earlier than thought, reaching what's now central China by around 2.12 million years ago, a new study finds.

Some stone tools unearthed at China's Shangchen site date to roughly 250,000 years before what was previously the oldest Eurasian evidence of Homo, say geologist Zhaoyu Zhu of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Guangzhou and his colleagues. Toolmakers visited the Chinese spot on and off until as late as 1.26 million years ago, the scientists report online July 12 in Nature. No hominid fossils have been found at Shangchen.

Until now, the Dmanisi site, in the western Asia nation of Georgia, had yielded the oldest hominid remains outside Africa. Homo erectus fossils unearthed at Dmanisi date to between 1.85 million and 1.77 million years ago (SN: 11/16/13, p. 6).

"An early form of Homo probably made the Shangchen artifacts, but it's too early to say if that was H. erectus," says coauthor Robin Dennell, an archaeologist at the University of Exeter in England.

After learning how to make stone flakes sharp enough to slice meat off animals' carcasses around 2.6 million years ago, African hominids may have had the survival skills to fan out into Asia and reach Shangchen by 2.1 million years ago, Dennell says.

Whatever Homo species made that roughly 7,000-kilometer journey, Shangchen now stands as the oldest hominid site in China by some 400,000 years, says archaeologist Michael Petraglia of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History in Jena, Germany. Petraglia did not participate in the new study.

Archaeology

'She was different': Body of a 'outcast' found at Chernyakhov settlement burial site

Skeletal remains
The remains of the 'witch' found in Ukraine.
History is littered with executions of women suspected of dabbling in black magic. Now archaeologists believe they have found the ancient remains of a so-called witch, buried with her hands propped behind her back.

It's unknown how the woman - who was from a third-to-fourth century Chernyakhov settlement in modern day Ukraine - came to meet her death.