07 Jul Asian Storytelling: Rakugo, Pingshu And The Art Of Sitting Seiza By MartiniF History & Tradition 0 Intertwined with the development of mythologies, storytelling predates writing and the earliest oral storytelling was animated with gestures and expressions thrown in for good measure. Tools to enhance the oral narrative of the prehistorical storyteller could have been rock art, rhythm and dance, Read More
13 Jul Modern Science Steps In To Revive Ancient Ceremonial Stone Landscapes By Glenn M. Kreisberg Archaeology & Science 0 On the winter solstice of December 20, 2019, Chief Vincent Mann of the Ramapough Lunaape Munsee Nation Turtle Clan, accompanied by some members of the Turtle Clan, ‘keepers of the pass’, and members of the Overlook Mountain Center Read More
14 Jul The Lonely Stones That Square The Cosmic Circle By ashley cowie Archaeology & Science 0 Both beneath and beyond Stonehenge in England, the Great Sphinx and Pyramid of Khafre in Egypt, Machu Picchu in Peru, Chichen Itza in Mexico and Newgrange in Ireland, exists an underlying code that binds the distant builders. Read More
16 Jul Galleons, Stallions Of The Seas By Aaronne Colagrossi History & Tradition 0 The 17th-century was of fundamental importance for everything related to naval design in the centuries to follow. In the 1600s a vessel called a galleon, took center stage in international maritime traffic; however, this type of ship already existed since the 15th century, especially in the Mediterranean Sea. Read More
19 Jul Akhenaten Heretic Pharaoh: The New Osiris By Jonathon Perrin Archaeology & Science 0 Did Egypt’s Heretic Pharaoh outlaw the God of the Dead, or become him? Akhenaten has been called ancient Egypt’s ‘Heretic Pharaoh’. From 1354-1337 BC Akhenaten so drastically altered his country’s religion, art, and mythology that his monuments were afterwards destroyed and his name was effectively erased from history until the 18th century AD. Read More
21 Jul Dragon Sharks, Fish Flippers And Other Real Life Monsters Of The Primordial Soup By ashley cowie Archaeology & Science 0 From the human perspective oceans appear endless and unchanging, but in reality they are in a constant state of flux, continuously evolving over vast periods of time. Many modern humans seem oblivious to the fact that their way-back ancestors crawled from the oceans and that for three billion years the majority of the planet's life was water locked. Read More