Secret History
Last year, archaeologists were investigating an ancient mound site in central Turkey called Türkmen-Karahöyük. The greater region, the Konya Plain, abounds with lost metropolises, but even so, researchers couldn't have been prepared for what they were about to find.
A local farmer told the group that a nearby canal, recently dredged, revealed the existence of a large strange stone, marked with some kind of unknown inscription.
Local media said that the farmer stumbled across the 'four glyptodonts', a heavily armoured mammal that lived during the Pleistocene epoch and were relatives of present-day armadillos.
They developed in South America around 20 million years ago and spread to southern regions of North America after the continents connected several million years ago.
Some have argued that the eruption caused an extended volcanic winter that disrupted human dispersal out of Africa and the colonisation of Australasia, although archaeological evidence has been limited.
Now an international study by researchers from Australia, Germany, India, the US and the UK, led by Chris Clarkson from Australia's University of Queensland, has found that human occupation of northern India spanned the Mount Toba eruption.
In a paper in the journal Nature Communications they describe a large collection of stone artefacts from archaeological excavations at Dhaba in the Middle Son River Valley which indicate that the area has been continuously occupied over the last 80,000 years.
Similarities between Levallois tool technology (stone tools created by flint knapping) at Dhaba and those found in Arabia between 100,000 and 47,000 years ago and in northern Australia 65,000 years ago also suggest linkage of these regions by an early modern human dispersal out of Africa, they say.

The cave with the archaeological remains Drone-flying amateur archaeologists have found the mummified ancient remains of 72 pre-Hispanic 'Guanche' natives in the holiday island of Gran Canaria.
The mummified remains of 72 skeletons belonging to natives of the 'Guanche' society were discovered by drone. The amazing find included 62 adult skeletons and 10 newborns.
They were found in the Guayadeque ravine on the island of Gran Canaria, which is part of the Spanish Canary Islands. Experts have confirmed the discovery and have linked it to the Guanche civilization as the cave dates back to between 800-1000AD.
Guanche people are thought to be the original inhabitants of the Canary Islands and may have travelled there from North Africa. Historians think that the Guanches people were ethnically and culturally absorbed by Spanish settlers when they colonized the islands.
The theory? Because we got lazy.
Biological anthropologist Habiba Chirchir and her colleagues at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History studied the bones of different primates including humans. They were surprised when they looked the inside of the bones near the joints. This spongy area of bone is considerably less dense in modern humans than early humans and primates.
Comment: What's amazing is that these scientists have apparently not considered the most likely culprit in why bone density has decreased since the move from hunting-gathering to agriculture: Diet. Obviously the diet between these two groups would be vastly different and would be the most significant change at the time. While a change in physical activity might explain some of the change in bone density (although an agricultural society, it could be argued, might actually be more physically active; farm work using primitive tools isn't for slouches) it seems rather obvious that the change diet was the most significant.
See also:
- New study reveals agriculture has weakened human bones
- We have weaker bones than our hunter-gatherer ancestors - this is what you can do about it
- Going Vegetarian Poses Own Set of Potential Health Risks
- Vitamin D Deficiency Unquestionably Linked to Bone Fractures
- Natural ways to safeguard bone health
- Hunter gatherer clue to obesity epidemic
The Hatay region, located on the coast north of Latakia, was originally a part of Syria according to the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon, a League of Nations mandate after the First World War, but Turkey showed interest in the area and its large Turkish-speaking community. In 1936, the Turkish government began to push for Hatay's "reunification" with Turkey. The French decision to hand it over to Ankara three years later came in tandem with a Turkish-French treaty guaranteeing Turkish "friendship" during the Second World War. It was a blunt violation of the Treaty of Lausanne that partitioned the former Ottoman Empire and the text of the French mandate, both written in 1923, but the move was defended by France before the League of Nations as necessary in order to avoid a Turkish attack on Syria.

A 3D laser scan image showing the location of the tomb (in yellow) buried beneath the steps to the Curia Julia, or Senate House, in the Roman Forum.
The underground tomb and the temple built around it are thought to date from the sixth century B.C., according to archaeologists.
Ancient Romans believed the tomb held the remains of their city's founder, but the stone sarcophagus that archaeologists just found inside the tomb is empty.
The underground temple — called a hypogeum in Greek — contains a votive altar that was dedicated to Romulus, said Alfonsina Russo, the director of the Parco Archeologico del Colosseo, which oversees the city's ancient ruins.
The entrance to the tomb is hidden in the northwest of the Forum, underneath the building of the Curia Julia, or Senate House, Russo told a news conference in Rome today (Feb. 21). The tomb itself would once have been beneath the Comitium — the central meeting place of the ancient city where votes by public assemblies were conducted, she said.
The tomb is also near the Lapis Niger — meaning "Black Stone" in Latin — an ancient shrine paved in black marble and thought to cause bad luck, with a stone block marking the spot where Romulus was said to have been murdered by jealous members of the Senate.
The temple was therefore "located in a highly symbolic place for the political life of Rome," Russo said.
The empty 4.5-foot-long (1.4 meters) sarcophagus in the tomb was made of a light volcanic stone, called tuff, quarried from the Capitoline Hill beside the Forum, she said.

Paleontologists uncovered 17,551 identifiable remains on the Tadrart Acacus Mountains, with 80 percent belonging to fish that fed early humans during the Holocene period. (A and B are both fossilized remains of a catfish, while C and D belong to a tilapia. The fossil E is remains of a crocodile)
Paleontologists uncovered 17,551 identifiable remains on the Tadrart Acacus Mountains, with 80 percent belonging to fish that fed early humans during the Holocene period.
The remains show there was once an abundance of catfish and tilapia in the area, which died off from over fishing - the bones had cut marks and traces of burning.
The study also found that tilapia decreased more significantly over time, which may have been because catfish have accessory breathing organs allowing them to breathe air and survive in shallow, high-temperature waters.

Peter Ungar with the jaw of a dog-like canid at the Moravian Museum in the Czech Republic.
The study, published in the Journal of Archaeolgical Science, was co-directed by Peter Ungar, Distinguished Professor of anthropology at the University of Arkansas.
The researchers performed dental microwear texture analysis on a sample of fossils from the Předmostí site, which contains both wolf-like and dog-like canids. Canids are simply mammals of the dog family. The researchers identified distinctive microwear patterns for each canid morphotype. Compared to the wolf-like canids, the teeth of the early dog canids — called "protodogs" by the researchers — had larger wear scars, indicating a diet that included hard, brittle foods. The teeth of the wolf-like canids had smaller scars, suggesting they consumed more flesh, likely from mammoth, as shown by previous research.
- Alexander Solzhenitsyn: he made up numbers about 66 million people killed by the Soviet regime, he spoke favorably of General Andrei Vlasov, he was a CIA stooge, he was an anti-Semite, a Russian nationalist and a monarchist. Finally, there is a popular saying in modern Russia: "show me an anti-Soviet activist ("антисовечик") and I will show you a russophobe" (which makes Solzhenitsyn a russophobe).
- Vladimir Rezun: he is a traitor, he is the creator of the theory that Hitler only preempted a Soviet attack which Stalin was about to launch, he is a MI-6 front to spread russophobic theories.
The answer is typically rather nebulous. They mostly refer to either one or two books (at most) and a number of articles (often articles not even written by either author, but paraphrasing, often rather "creatively").
This reminds me of an old Soviet joke: "a Party official comes to some factory or office to deliver a political lecture and absolutely tears into Solzhenitsyn's famous "Gulag Archipelago" calling it an ugly collection of lies. One of the workers present asks the Party official whether he read the entire book to which the Party official replies "I don't read such anti-Soviet filth!"
There is much truth to that as I have rarely encountered Solzhenitsyn-haters who actually read at least a few books by him.











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