25 Nov 2020 Gods of Antiquity: Elongated Skulls From Africa By Pieter Archaeology & Science 0 The remains of an ancient female skeleton with an elongated skull, dating back to 400 – 600 AD, has been found during recent excavations at the Gamurzievsky settlement in the city of Nazran, Ingushetia, southern Russia. Discoveries such as these... Read More
02 Nov 2020 The Medicine Wheel: An Embodied Non-Linear Data Transformation Tool By Dr Linda Tello Archaeology & Science, Health & Well-being 0 Medicine Wheels simultaneously represent time and space as well as the transcendence of the limits of time and space. So, like a seed comes from what came before and contains what will be, Medicine Wheels are living non-linear thought tools... Read More
14 Oct 2020 Atlantean Temples of Mexico: The Sacred Valley Of Tepoztlàn By Marco M. Vigato Archaeology & Science 1 Nestled in a sacred valley, at an altitude of about 1,700 meters (5,560 feet) above sea level, to the south of Mexico City, lies the town of Tepoztlán. The surrounding landscape has been shaped by millions of years of volcanic eruptions and... Read More
12 Oct 2020 The Comet Hunters Of Göbekli Tepe By Andrew Collins Archaeology & Science 1 The ancient peoples of Anatolia and the Near East did not go unaffected by the terrible consequences of the Younger Dryas comet impact event, now known to have devastated the North American continent sometime around 10,800 BC. Indeed, there is... Read More
28 Sep 2020 The Younger Dryas Impact Research Debate – Are We There Yet? By Martin Sweatman Archaeology & Science 1 The Younger Dryas impact hypothesis has received considerable attention since its publication in 2007 in the prestigious peer-reviewed journal PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences). It suggests the Younger Dryas geological period... Read More