archaeology

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KLISHDFSDF, in 'Christ' tattoo discovered on 1,300-year-old body in Sudan
@KLISHDFSDF@lemmy.ml avatar

anyone background in this field able to chime in on how accurate this is? I read it briefly and looked up alpha/omega and the “chi-rho” but not sure how they got that out of some random blotches that are barely visible. Seems like generous interpretation may have been used. I can see how they may be able to verify its a tattoo by looking at the materials the blotch is made of, but superimposing an image of what it “is” seems like a stretch to me without knowing more about this.

FrickAndMortar,

I agree - you could just as easily make those blotches “coalesce” into a conventional dagger-and-skull tattoo, as you could into the shape shown here.

theodewere, in 3,000-year-old necropolis found in Batman
@theodewere@kbin.social avatar

In the first stage, archaeologists opened eight trenches and found a necropolis with nearly 150 urn graves, rock tombs and earthen graves, which were determined to belong to the Iron Age Assyrian civilization dating back to the first millennium B.C., in an area of approximately 100 square meters.

Spears, arrowheads, daggers, knives, swords and a wide variety of war materials, thought to belong to the dead, were unearthed in the urn graves, where the remaining bones of the dead were buried after being cremated.

sounds like a pretty awesome find

Rooty, in 3,000-year-old necropolis found in Batman

When a play session with Ra’s Al Ghul goes wrong.

Ok, now that we got the obvious joke out of the way, are we really going to find out anything new about the Assyrians from this site? I thought their civilization was already well documented?

DavidGarcia, in Early Europeans Ate Seaweed for Thousands of Years

we forgot like 95% of our native culinary practices with the world wars, globalization, industrial farming and the commodification of food. I’ve been getting into foraging and permaculture, and it’s insane how much amazing food you’re missing out on, if you’re just eating what someone else can profitably sell.

If you watch some videos on coastal foraging in the UK, it’s insane. There’s food everywhere. Even with just my amateur knowledge in foraging, there’s food everywhere.

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

I need to look into foraging. I am sure there are tons of things even in landlocked Colo. I was surprised to find weeds in my yard that are an ancient grain, for example.

DavidGarcia,

Yeah I’ve had common evening-primrose, prickly lettuce, tall hedge mustard as spicy as wasabi, chicken of the woods killing our plum tree lol, now what looks like artist’s bracket too in our garden this year. But to be fair most of these seem to grow almost everywhere. Once you learn to identify one of these you will really see them everywhere.

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

Hedge mustard? Sounds cool. I forgot we get prickly lettuce too. Lots of it. The wild bunnies love it. I definitely need to learn more.

DavidGarcia,

hedge mustard is definitely one to know if you like the tast of arugula, wasabi, horseradish or paint thinner

shalafi,

I’ve got 2.5 acres of swamp in NW Florida and I’d LOVE to learn more about growing forage. Help a brother get his feet wet?

Deceptichum,
@Deceptichum@kbin.social avatar

Are you an ogre per chance?

DavidGarcia,

I’m just a beginner and I live a totally different biome, not sure I can help you much. I guess learn the basics of foraging and plant&mushroom ID (like never eat something you aren’t certain you’ve identified correctly). See if there’s any local organizations that can help you out. If you’re a social type you could make friends with some local forager and gather seeds and plants to propagate. If not, buy some books about your local area, find a foraging YouTuber in your area. I generally use plant&mushroom ID apps to scan everything I see, look up the plant and what its uses are, what are common poisonous lookalikes. You will get the hang of it pretty quickly and have a few plants that you can confidently identify. I’ve looked it up and perhaps you can find these in your local area: Cattails, Watercress, Water Mint, Water Lily, wapato, Water Hyacinth, Elderberry, Pawpaw, Fiddlehead Ferns and it seems many of the culinary and medicinal mushrooms should grow where you live too.

I guess if you’re planning to grow non-natives too, you could try to plant some perannial/ self-propagating/hardy staple crops. Taro, water spinach, wild rice, lotus, sorghum etc… Perhaps the Chinampa technique works in a swamp? Perhaps you could use the swamp water for self-wicking raised garden beds to grow regular crops that are pretty hands off like sweet potatoes. Might want to do a water test to check for salinity and excess nutrients tho.

I guess you can always have some gator barbecue too, if you are so inclined.

hperrin, in Early Europeans Ate Seaweed for Thousands of Years

Why not? It’s delicious and plentiful.

SeabassDan,

Is it healthy or just filling?

hperrin,

It depends on the species, but most edible seaweed is quite healthy for you.

sock,

low cal and filling is good for weight loss either way

cutting sucks when u wanna munch fr

MisterNeon, in Earthquake reveals giant Aztec snakehead beneath Mexico City university
@MisterNeon@lemmy.world avatar

A fantastic fortunate find! A snake rising from the earth after an earthquake, a coatl emerging from a tlalolin. How poetic!

NocturnalMorning, in Earthquake reveals giant Aztec snakehead beneath Mexico City university

This article made wonder what actually happened to the aztecs. I don’t recommend looking it up

MisterNeon,
@MisterNeon@lemmy.world avatar

I study Mesoamerican and especially Tenochtitlan history for fun. It breaks my heart every time I get to that part in any of my books.

Sertou, in Earthquake reveals giant Aztec snakehead beneath Mexico City university

This is a sign that we are in the end times.

mercury,

That is what they said in 2012

nieceandtows, in Did Ancient Egyptians Know Meteorites Came From Space?

Is that really that hard to understand? Somebody sees a fireball falling from the sky. They investigate it, and it turns out to be a very strong material, great for making weapons with. It wasn’t as obvious to the British in 19th century, because iron is most commonly mined everywhere. Since there was no iron mining back when they first started using it, they had no confusion realizing it came from the sky.

webghost0101, in Early Europeans Ate Seaweed for Thousands of Years

I remember my dad harvesting different kinds at the beach and frying them. Healthy, nutritious, tasty, the only reason its not a staple seems to be that it may not be profitable.

jlow,

I would really like to know of my feeling that these should be even fuller of microplastics than other food os right or wrong …

webghost0101,

I’ve heard that most types of seaweed might lightly aid against radiation damage but thats a good point.

From all the school reports the one that stuck to me the most is microplastics. I wasn’t even doing the report, i cant remember what my own subject was but microplastics are truly one of the most awfull consequences of humankind. Makes me sad just thinking about it.

SpezCanLigmaBalls, in Coal miners accidentally discover ancient Roman ship in Serbia
@SpezCanLigmaBalls@lemmy.world avatar

This type of stuff just makes you wonder what is under the ground we walk

ButtDrugs,

Crab People. Look like crab, talk like people.

TurnItOff_OnAgain,

Idk. Probably bugs and stuff.

EdibleFriend,
@EdibleFriend@lemmy.world avatar

Rocks too.

KnowledgeableNip,

You’re not wrong, I’m really behind on vacuuming.

Skua, in Coal miners accidentally discover ancient Roman ship in Serbia

Wow, that's far bigger than I was expecting considering how far Serbia is from the sea. I know the Danube is a big river, but still, this is over 600 km from the mouth as the crow flies

Coasting0942, in Coal miners accidentally discover ancient Roman ship in Serbia

We’re going to need to stop all coal mining in the area. For historical reasons not at all connected to our future.

intensely_human, in A 15th century French painting depicts an ancient stone tool

The red and blue cherubs in the right painting are intense

acockworkorange,

They mimic the colors of the two monks. The red ones have almost devilish wings. The queen is depicted in blue. I’m sure there’s some symbolic message about the artist calling one of the clerics a devil.

Both monks seem to be staring at her ghost nipple 🧐

malamignasanmig, in How Asia’s first nomadic empire broke the rules of imperial expansion

fascinating.

this makes me think of Austronesian speakers from Taiwan who spread to the Philippines and throughout Oceania and even Madagascar. their initial movement to the Philippines - was that a single large empire who made the dominant migration or was it a consistent movement by smaller groups of people whose only commonality is their shared ancestry to Taiwanese Austronesian speakers?

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