There’s lots of news to finish up the week.
- Neanderthals grew fast and died young.
- CT and laser-scanning techniques have combined to recreate the life and death of a priest buried in Thebes 2,800 years ago.
- The Angono Petroglyphs probably tell an ancient story with human figures accompanied by frogs, lizards, rectangles, and triangles.
- An ancient brewery is discovered on a mountaintop in Peru. Wari lite.
- The UK government has launched a consultation document to consider the repatriation of human remains held in Britain to aboriginal groups.
- Afghanistan’s Buddha’s may rise again.
- Was King Arthur really King McArthur?
- The fundamental teachings of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints about some events in the Book of Mormon are challenged by DNA evidence. Losing a Lost Tribe: Native Americans, DNA and the Mormon Church is available from Amazon US and UK (advanced order).
- A Roman Catholic bishop is doing his best to keep hate alive in Croatia.
- The ancient Olympians were not exactly heroes.
- The Catholic Church has officially declared the oil-seeping and bleeding artifacts at the Inala Vietnamese Catholic Centre as fakes. So did our TDG survey.
- Believing in Hell has its benefits.
- British Nobel Prize winner Francis Crick, who along with American James Watson discovered the double helix structure of DNA, has died at the age of 88.
- That animated parody of President Bush and Sen. John Kerry set to the tune of “This Land Is Your Land” on TDG last week has everyone laughing except the owners of Woody Guthrie’s copyrights.
- A diving-mule act splashes controversy. It’s not the same without the monkeys.
- Cremation is changing the face of funerals.
- An anti-HIV protein evolved millions of years before the emergence of AIDS.
- The DNA of rare and endangered species is to be preserved for future generations. Good idea.
- Shrimp shells help save soldiers’ lives.
- Weird worms are found on whale bones.
- A brain tweak makes flies lecherous. Our brains may have a similar tweak.
- Czech labor inspectors convinced a retail chain to drop a plan that would have required women cashiers to wear red headbands when menstruating. No, we don’t make this stuff up.
- Are Americans evenly divided on the issues? The Fifty – Fifty Split in American politics is phony.
- Salam Majeed looks forward to democratic Iraq. I’ll bet he’s not alone.
- If we could find solutions to the dozen or so factors that cause the body to age, decay and die, humans could live as long as 200-years.
- Can vines grow rocks?
- The shocking ‘suicides’ of four young recruits begs the question – What really happened at Deepcut barracks?
- Video provided by the Mexican government could be key to credibility in a UFO-enthusiast’s career.
- Is this circle of mushrooms the work of fairies or fungi?
- The new expedition has embarked to solve the mystery behind the popular phenomenon known as Tungus (Tunguska) meteorite.
- Linda Moulton Howe reports on the Crop Circles in Tilden, Wisconsin oats, and 90-Degree Angles in Litchfield, Minnesota barley with lots of pics. Doug and Dave, no doubt. ;o)
- Some say Bigfoot is alive and well. Does a mysterious beast really roam the mountains of southern Oklahoma?
- Has an elusive Chupacabra been killed on a ranch near San Antonio, Texas? Here’s the story and the pics.
- The Maryland mystery animal has been seen worldwide.
- A rubber band is invoked to explain dark energy.
- A lucky find in the desert of Oman has allowed scientists to reconstruct the most detailed ever history of a lunar meteorite.
- A pair of 35-million-year-old craters on Earth thought to have been carved by comets now appears to be the result of a broken asteroid that generated a slowly delivered shower of debris over millions of years.
- NASA wants some Martian spies.
- Supersonic plasma jets that dart across the low atmosphere of the Sun are explained.
Quote of the Day:
Any fool can criticize, condemn, and complain, and most fools do.
Benjamin Franklin