Creato da: diegobaratono il 02/05/2008
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Messaggi del 12/10/2010

 

Notte di Halloween al Museo Egizio

Post n°570 pubblicato il 12 Ottobre 2010 da diegobaratono

NOTTE DI HALLOWEEN AL MUSEO EGIZIO

 

In occasione della Notte di Halloween, il Museo Egizio propone la seguente iniziativa:

  29-30-31 ottobre 2010
“I paurosissimi antichi egizi”

Percorso notturno in compagnia di un egittologo per scoprire, evocando le paurose atmosfere di Halloween, gli antichi misteri della civiltà Egizia. Prenotazione obbligatoria

Al termine del percorso i giovani, coraggiosissimi, partecipanti riceveranno un gadget a tema con la serata.

 

Orario partenza gruppi: 20.00 - 20.30 - 21.00 - 21.30 - 22.00 - 22.30  (l’ultima visita termina alle ore 23.30 circa). I visitatori devono presentarsi 15 minuti prima dell’orario di inizio.

Durata: 1 ora
Disponibilità: max 25/30 persone/visita

Costo: 7 € per i bambini (6-12 anni) e 10 € per gli adulti. È richiesta la presenza di almeno un adulto ogni tre bambini.

Prenotazione: obbligatoria (fino ad esaurimento posti). Tel. 011.4406903

 
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La Carta di Martin Waldseemuller ...

Post n°569 pubblicato il 12 Ottobre 2010 da diegobaratono

Da: "ScienceDaily"
Science Video
Preserving America's Birth Certificate
Engineers' Case Protects America’s Birth Certificate

July 1, 2008 — Engineers designed a case to protect the map that first used the word "America" to describe the land masses now called North and South America. The air-tight container is made of two large sheets of aluminum and a double piece of non-reflective laminated glass. It also includes a system dedicated to maintaining the proper temperature and replacing all potentially destructive oxygen with inert argon gas.

A map thought lost for almost five centuries is found and is now on display. It's often called America's birth certificate.

Created in 1507, the Waldseemüller map is the first map to show a Pacific Ocean, the Western Hemisphere and a continent called America.

"It is the first map of its kind, in projecting the world as it is as we know it now," Elmer Eusman, conservator at Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., told Ivanhoe.

But a 500 year old, one-of-a-kind map needs a special display case. Conservators worked with engineers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology to design a unique, air-tight enclosure.

"This is a completely sealed case that is designed to be passive for many years, where if you don't do anything to it, it will be just fine for many, many years." Richard Rhorer, engineer at the National Institute of Standards and Technology told Ivanhoe.

The encasement is sealed with a thick sheet of non-reflective laminated glass to keep out harmful ultraviolet light. While sensitive monitoring devices measure temperature changes 24-hours a day. Special valves flush out oxygen from the air -- which damages the paper and ink -- and replace it with harmless argon gas. "The idea is to make a very good seal," said Rhorer.

The map cost 10 million to purchase, but well worth the cash. "If you consider that this map is 500 years old and looking at it, in what great shape it's still in, that's pretty amazing," said Eusman.

Safekeeping America's history with science.

A STATE OF THE ART FRAME: Engineers from the National Institute of Standards and Technology built an encasement to protect the Waldseemuller map, produced in 1507. It was the first to show both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, and an outline of the land separating the two. The frame is about ten feet by six feet, and made from two solid pieces of aluminum. It also includes a double sheet of non-reflective laminated glass and interior environmental monitoring devices, along with valves that allow preservationists to control the gases inside the case. Additionally, the engineers designed a system to raise and lower the map for display and maintenance.

WHY GO THROUGH THE TROUBLE? This map, which marked the first use of the word “America” as a designation for the continents now called North and South America, is over 500 years old. Like any other old map, book, or scroll, it requires special care. If not properly protected, the ink will fade and the paper will break down. Filling the encasement with inert argon gas flushes out all the oxygen and stops the chemical reactions that can damage both the ink and the paper. NIST expects the seals to remain effective for more than twenty years.

Note: This story and accompanying video were originally produced for the American Institute of Physics series Discoveries and Breakthroughs in Science by Ivanhoe Broadcast News and are protected by copyright law. All rights reserved. 

 
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A tutta birra ...

Post n°568 pubblicato il 12 Ottobre 2010 da diegobaratono

Da: "ScienceDaily"
Science News
Ancient Brew Masters Tapped Antibiotic Secrets

ScienceDaily (Sep. 2, 2010) — A chemical analysis of the bones of ancient Nubians shows that they were regularly consuming tetracycline, most likely in their beer. The finding is the strongest evidence yet that the art of making antibiotics, which officially dates to the discovery of penicillin in 1928, was common practice nearly 2,000 years ago.


The research, led by Emory anthropologist George Armelagos and medicinal chemist Mark Nelson of Paratek Pharmaceuticals, Inc., is published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology.

"We tend to associate drugs that cure diseases with modern medicine," Armelagos says. "But it's becoming increasingly clear that this prehistoric population was using empirical evidence to develop therapeutic agents. I have no doubt that they knew what they were doing."

Armelagos is a bioarcheologist and an expert on prehistoric and ancient diets. In 1980, he discovered what appeared to be traces of tetracycline in human bones from Nubia dated between A.D. 350 and 550, populations that left no written record. The ancient Nubian kingdom was located in present-day Sudan, south of ancient Egypt.

Armelagos and his fellow researchers later tied the source of the antibiotic to the Nubian beer. The grain used to make the fermented gruel contained the soil bacteria streptomyces, which produces tetracycline. A key question was whether only occasional batches of the ancient beer contained tetracycline, which would indicate accidental contamination with the bacteria.

Nelson, a leading expert in tetracycline and other antibiotics, became interested in the project after hearing Armelagos speak at a conference. "I told him to send me some mummy bones, because I had the tools and the expertise to extract the tetracycline," Nelson says. "It's a nasty and dangerous process. I had to dissolve the bones in hydrogen fluoride, the most dangerous acid on the planet."

The results stunned Nelson. "The bones of these ancient people were saturated with tetracycline, showing that they had been taking it for a long time," he says. "I'm convinced that they had the science of fermentation under control and were purposely producing the drug."

(The yellow film in the flask above shows tetracycline residue from dissolved bones.)

Even the tibia and skull belonging to a 4-year-old were full of tetracycline, suggesting that they were giving high doses to the child to try and cure him of illness, Nelson says.

The first of the modern day tetracyclines was discovered in 1948. It was given the name auereomycin, after the Latin word "aerous," which means containing gold. "Streptomyces produce a golden colony of bacteria, and if it was floating on a batch of beer, it must have look pretty impressive to ancient people who revered gold," Nelson theorizes.

The ancient Egyptians and Jordanians used beer to treat gum disease and other ailments, Armelagos says, adding that the complex art of fermenting antibiotics was probably widespread in ancient times, and handed down through generations.

The chemical confirmation of tetracycline in ancient bones is not the end of the story for Armelagos. He remains enthused after more than three decades on the project. "This opens up a whole new area of research," he says. "Now we're going to compare the amount of tetracycline in the bones, and bone formation over time, to determine the dosage that the ancient Nubians were getting."


Story Source:

The above story is reprinted (with editorial adaptations by ScienceDaily staff) from materials provided by Emory University.

Journal Reference:

  1. Mark L. Nelson, Andrew Dinardo, Jeffery Hochberg, George J. Armelagos. Brief communication: Mass spectroscopic characterization of tetracycline in the skeletal remains of an ancient population from Sudanese Nubia 350-550 CE. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2010; DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.21340
Emory University (2010, September 2). Ancient brew masters tapped antibiotic secrets. ScienceDaily. Retrieved October 12, 2010, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2010/09/100902094246.htm

 
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Giudizi ...

Post n°567 pubblicato il 12 Ottobre 2010 da diegobaratono

" ... Ognuno vede quel che tu pari. Pochi sentono quel che tu sei ...".

                                     Niccolò Machiavelli

 
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Valori universali ...

Post n°566 pubblicato il 12 Ottobre 2010 da diegobaratono

"... Il valore dell'uomo viene giudicato dal grado in cui egli agisce contro il proprio interesse e contro la propria volontà ...".

                                          Hannah Arendt 

 
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