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To: IngotWeTrust who wrote (9250)4/3/1998 3:43:00 PM
From: bobby beara  Respond to of 116761
 
Very interesting 9'er, could you keep me updated on that. I have been doing some biblical archeology myself lately.

To Yahoo or not? is the question?

iqc.com

NOT - look at that beautifully formed head and shoulders.

Greater Fools and FIATS bye bye, Hello Yellow Brick Road.

(I just clicked my silver sorels three times and bought a couple more yhoo puts -gggg-)



To: IngotWeTrust who wrote (9250)4/4/1998 2:14:00 PM
From: Eashoa' M'sheekha  Respond to of 116761
 
Ancient observatory found in the Sahara.(Ya Just Never Know,eh?)

Copyright c 1998 Nando.net
Copyright c 1998 Scripps Howard

LONDON (April 4, 1998 00:07 a.m.
Stone age people built the first astronomical observatory
centuries before anyone thought. Scientists working in the
Sahara have identified a series of megaliths that predate
Stonehenge and other sites by more than 1,000 years.

Around 6,500 years ago, an unknown people living in Nabta
in southern Egypt began dragging slabs of stone, some
9-feet high, into position on the west bank of the Nile.

The alignments run north-south and east-west, and point to
the sun where astronomers estimate its solstice would have
been 6,000 years ago.

"This is the oldest documented astronomical alignment of
megaliths in the world," said Professor McKim Malville of the
University of Colorado at Boulder, who -- with colleagues
from the United States, Egypt and Poland -- has completed a
satellite survey of the stones. "A lot of effort went into the
construction of a purely symbolic and ceremonial site."

The ruins are by what would have been the shoreline of a
lake that filled with water about 11,000 years ago, when the
African monsoon moved north. It was used by nomads until
4,800 years ago, when the rainfall patterns shifted, and the
area became arid and uninhabitable.

Five alignments radiate out from a central collection of
stones. Beneath one was a carved rock resembling a cow
standing upright. The researchers reported in this week's
Nature that they found the remains of buried cattle, including
a skeleton laid to rest in a clay-lined chamber. There were
cinders from ancient hearths, and fragments of decorated
ostrich eggs.

The stones are mute evidence of a vanished world -- and a
foretaste of the pyramid-builders who would arrive 1,500 or
2,000 years later. Neolithic herdsmen came to Nabta,
probably from further south in Africa, and used cattle in their
rituals just as Masai tribesmen do today, said Malville.
Because Nabta was close to the Tropic of Cancer, the noon
sun would be directly overhead and for a brief while each
day, the standing stones would cast no shadows.

"These vertical sighting stones correspond to the zenith sun
during the summer soltice," he said. "For many cultures in
the tropics, the zenith sun has been a major event for
millennia."

Some of the other alignments are still puzzling the scientists.
Some of the monoliths would probably have been
submerged in the lake and may have "marked" the onset of
the rainy season.

"The organization of these objects suggest a symbolic
geometry that integrated death, water and the sun," Malville
said.

The discovery points to a world peopled by nomadic
herdsmen prepared to face daunting conditions.

The "high" culture of the Egyptians is traditionally thought to
have been borrowed from Mesopotamia and Syria. But the
forgotten stonemasons of Nabta clearly understood
symbolism: Malville and his colleagues believe that they,
rather than the Assyrians or the Babylonians, may have
triggered the social complexity that ended in the pyramids of
the Pharaohs.

By TIM RADFORD, The Guardian. Distributed by
Scripps Howard News Service.