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Messaggi del 28/03/2011

 

Notizie dalle Piramidi ...

Post n°778 pubblicato il 28 Marzo 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"aeraweb.org"

 By Dr. Richard Redding, Archaeozoologist, University of Michigan
and Brian V. Hunt

Egyptians of the 4th Dynasty (2575-2465 BC) witnessed the construction of some of the world’s most enduring symbols: the pyramids, the temples, and the Sphinx of Giza. Tens of thousands of workers came together in great public works projects, undertaken to ensure the successful afterlife of kings. The problems this created for planners and administrators were monumental as well.

They could not, for example, solve the problems of provisioning a city of ten or twenty thousand by just scaling up the methods used for a village of a few hundred. The methods the Egyptians employed at Giza may have influenced the royal administration of the country for millennia to come.

How did the royal house manage to feed this massive workforce? What can the remains of animals in the archaeological record at Giza tell us about how the Egyptians solved this problem?

Prime beef for pyramid builders

In an area of the world where people have traditionally reserved meat eating mostly for special occasions and feast-days, we have found evidence that the ancient state provisioned the pyramid city with enough cattle, sheep, and goat to feed thousands of people prime cuts of meat for more than a generation—even if they ate it every day.

We have examined and identified over 175,000 bones and bone fragments from the excavations at the Giza pyramid settlement. The bones are from fish, reptiles, birds and mammals. About 10% have been identifiable to at least the level of the genus (a group of closely related species).

Cattle and sheep dominate the fauna. We have found:

  • 3,356 cattle fragments
  • 6,897 sheep and goat fragments
  • 536 pig fragments
Dr. Richard Redding examining bones.

Dr. Richard Redding examining bones.

The ratio of individual sheep and goat to individual cattle is 5 to 1.

It might appear that sheep and goats were more common at Giza than cattle, and that sheep and goats were more important. But remember that an 18-month-old bull produces 10 to 12 times as much meat as an 18-month-old ram

The ratio of sheep to goats at Giza is biased towards sheep. For the entire settlement site, the ratio of sheep to goat is 3 to 1.

There is a low frequency of pig bones.


The cattle and sheep consumed at the settlement were young.

  • 30% of the cattle died before 8 months, 50% before 16 months, and only 20% were older than 24 months.
  • 90% of the sheep and goats survived 10 months, only 50% were older than 16 months, and only 10% older than 24 months.

The cattle and sheep are predominately male.

  • The ratio of male to female cattle is 6 to 1.
  • The ratio of male to female sheep and goats is 11 to 1.

What does this tell us about life at the pyramid settlement?

Problems in scale

The agrarian society of ancient Egypt was centered on crops and animals. The Egyptians’ colorful tomb paintings depict a rich agricultural life and we find evidence of this life in the archaeological remains of their settlements.

The Egyptians could not catch fish, birds, and wild mammals in numbers adequate to support a large settlement like that at Giza.

Feeding the pyramid builders required an increased production of domestic mammals: sheep, goats, cattle, and pigs. But there may have been inadequate space near Giza to support large herds of animals to feed the pyramid builders. Where did the supply of meat protein come from?

Expectations at Giza

Our models of animal use in the Middle East and Egypt are based on studies of the ecological, reproductive, productive, physiological and behavioral characteristics of domestic cattle, sheep, goats and pigs. These models help us make predictions.

Tomb scene: driving cattle.

The royal administrators had to develop a system that encouraged the production of animals beyond the needs of the villages of the Nile Delta and the Nile valley. They then collected the surplus and moved it along the Nile to Giza.

If the Giza settlement was organized and provisioned by a central authority (the royal administration), then we expect certain evidence to emerge from the archaeological data. Based on our knowledge of agrarian societies and food production, the evidence at Giza should show:

  1. Pigs are evident at very low frequency.
  2. Cattle and sheep dominate the fauna.
  3. The cattle and sheep are mostly young males.
Animal utility

Pigs would have been unsatisfactory for provisioning a workforce on a large-scale in the ancient world. They cannot be herded and do not travel well over long distances. There are no nomadic pig herders anywhere in the world today.

Tomb scene: ritual buthering.

Pigs have a dispersed birthing pattern that is not seasonal; they give birth up to three times a year. Therefore, young pigs are available at almost anytime for consumption.

Pigs provided no secondary products (hair, milk, etc.) and were therefore less valuable than cattle, sheep, and goats.

Because of the pig’s unsuitability for feeding workers on a large scale, the Egyptian workforce administrators were not interested in them as stock, and pigs were not involved in inter-regional exchange the way other animal stocks like cattle, sheep, and goats were.

Our studies indicate, however, that while the central authority did not consider pigs a valued provisioning resource, Egyptian families reared pigs for protein. Even today, in rural and urban areas around the world, farmers and non-farmers use pigs (where they are not proscribed by religion).

Delivered when needed

We know that the Egyptians recorded regular and detailed counts of animal stocks throughout the Nile Valley. These counts are a clear indication of the value of animals as a commodity to the state.

Tomb model: counting cattle.

Although they cannot provide the quantity of meat that cattle do, sheep and goats are valuable for similar reasons. They can be herded and provide secondary products.

Sheep, goats, and cattle can and do travel long distances. Americans in the 19th century drove cattle to market over vast distances. Nomadic sheep and goat pastoralists today move animals 1,000 miles (1,609 km) by hoof in migration (e.g. Qashghi in Iran).

In the 4th Dynasty, it was not possible to rear sheep, goats, and cattle around Giza in the numbers needed for the pyramid builders. We are working on an estimate of the farm area required to rear these animals in sufficient numbers to provide a surplus that would support 8,000-10,000 workers laboring at ancient Giza. Preliminary estimates suggest a required area substantially larger than the Giza environs would allow.

The administrators would have organized drives of sheep, goats, and cattle between the Nile Valley and the high desert to move the required animals to Giza. In a foreshadowing of modern manufacturing, the animals would arrive in waves—a “just in time” delivery system.

Secondary produce

Sheep, cattle, and goats all have secondary products beyond their meat:

  • Sheep’s wool can be woven for cloth.
  • Leather is valuable for clothing and tools.
  • Cattle bones can be used to make tools.

The ancient inhabitants may also have consumed milk from cows and goats, but not in such large quantities that it would have been signficant for the diet of the pyramid labor force. Secondary produce makes all of these animals more valuable resources.

Birth cycles and surplus males

Sheep and goats have tight birthing seasons (compared to pigs) and produce age classes from which the young male surplus needs to be harvested. As with cattle, female sheep and goats are needed to produce offspring, while only a few males are needed for breeding.

Without a central authority, this surplus creates a labor problem for herders and agriculturists. Do they reduce the herd size or increase meat consumption seasonally? It would therefore have been relatively easy for administrators to encourage villages to increase production. The central authority then becomes a convenient market for the surplus in exchange for goods and services.

Ideal grazing

In Egypt, ranchers would have raised cattle in grassy areas with wells and watering holes like the Nile Delta. They would have raised sheep in the drier areas. Goats could have thrived in both places and would have complimented cattle rearing because these animals do not compete for food.

Imagine a division across the Nile Delta or Valley: cattle and goats in the middle and sheep and goats along the edges. Sheep and goats would go out into the high deserts in the rainy season and returned to the edges of the delta or valley in the dry season.

Kom el-Hisn: contradiction and example

Dr. Redding at Kom el-Hisn, 1988.
Photo courtesy of Dr. Anthony J. Cagle

The Old Kingdom (5th and 6th Dynasty, 2465-2150 BC) Egyptian village, Kom el-Hisn, was excavated by archaeologists in 1985, 1986, and 1988. A contradiction appears in the archaeological record there.

There is abundant evidence of cattle dung from the Old Kingdom level at Kom el-Hisn, which means there must have been large herds there. Yet the cattle bones indicate two things: the numbers of cattle slaughtered at Kom el-Hisn are relatively few and the bones that exist are from very old or very young individuals.

Where are the prime, young males, which provide the best cuts of beef?

The residents were not consuming the cattle they reared and were consuming few of the sheep. They only used very old animals or animals that were very young and ill. The residents of Kom el-Hisn were dependent on the pig as a source of protein and, unsurprisingly, we find a dominance of pig bone at the site.

Kom el-Hisn is just 4 kilometers from the ecotone where the Nile Valley meets the desert. The Egyptians could have reared cattle in the grassy areas around their villages and sent herders out with flocks of sheep and goats to exploit the ecotonal area.

The royal cattlemen periodically gathered up herds of young, male cattle and sheep (1 to 2 years) and drove them along the Nile to a central point for redistribution. These young male animals were not consumed locally and so their remains did not enter the archaeological record at Kom el-Hisn.

Cattle were raised at Kom el-Hisn but not consumed there. Where were the consumers?

We hypothesize that Kom el-Hisn was a regional or provincial center for raising cattle, but that the young males were sent to the core area of the Old Kingdom state—the capital zone and the pyramid zone—for feeding cities. Our systematic excavations and retrieval of animal bone from such core-area settlements, like Giza, allow us to test our hypothesis. In fact, we find the inverse ratios of Kom el-Hisn: lots of cattle, sheep, and goat but very little pig.

Conclusions

Our study of the 4,500-year-old animal bones at Giza are another piece of the puzzle of life in ancient Egypt. Based on the data above, we see that the pyramid settlement at Giza was a well-provisioned site, supplied by the central authority; the archaeological pattern is not one of a livestock producing site.

A central authority gathered predominately young, male sheep, goats, and cattle and brought them to the site to feed the occupants; the bones of these animals dominate the faunal remains and pigs are in very little evidence. Once again we find that an interdisciplinary approach to our examination of the evidence at Giza, yields a much fuller picture of life at the settlement and reveals clues to the organization of the ancient Egyptian state.

More to tell

There’s yet another story to tell about animal use at Giza. Further analysis now indicates that species are not equally, or randomly, distributed around the site. Patterns exist in animal use across the site and these patterns need to be explained.

Please visit our site again to read a future article that discusses the unequal distribution of animal remains across the pyramid settlement and what that might mean about the people who lived there.


Seattle, Washington web design by Gravitate

 
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Ma che freddo fa ...

Post n°777 pubblicato il 28 Marzo 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"galileonet.it"

Con una temperatura di appena 100 gradi centigradi, ecco a voi la migliore candidata al titolo di stella più fredda e buia dell’Universo. L’ha scovata Michael C. Liu, astronomo della Università delle Hawaii, che l’ha presentata al mondo con un articolo pubblicato su arXiv.org.

Nei database astronomici si trova ora sotto il nome di CFBDSIR J1458+1013B: sembra essere tra le 4 e le 5 volte meno brillante dell’astro che ha detenuto il primato fino ad oggi, e ben 130 gradi più fredda. 
Si trova a 75 anni luce dalla Terra, fa parte di un sistema binario e finora era rimasta oscurata dalla sua compagna, assai più grande e vistosa. È stata trovata grazie ai telescopi del
W. M. Keck Observatory e del Canada France Hawaii Telescope (CFHT), entrambi a Mauna Kea (Hawaii); il Very Large Telescope (Cile) dell’Eso, poi, ha contribuito alla ricerca misurando la temperatura della stella. 

La new entry è stata classificata come una nana bruna (come la compagna), ma potrebbe essere la rappresentate di una nuova classe di oggetti celesti formata da stelle “fallite” (si pensa che le nane brune non abbiano sufficiente massa per innescare le reazioni nucleari), a metà strada tra un pianeta delle dimensioni di Giove e una stella degna di questo nome. “Con temperature così basse, ci aspettiamo che mostri proprietà diverse da quelle delle altre nane brune, più simili a quelle degli esopianeti giganti, e potrebbe persino avere nuvole di acqua nella sua atmosfera” scrive Liu nel comunicato rilasciato dall’università. 

Secondo uno studio pubblicato lo scorso gennaio su The Astrophysical Journal, il limite per classificare un corpo celeste come nana bruna invece che come pianeta gigante è rappresentato da una massa circa 13 volte quella di Giove. Superato questo valore, il deuterio potrebbe cominciare a bruciare. CFBDSIR J1458+1013B potrebbe essere qualcosa di ancora diverso. Anche il colore è strano: dà più sul blu di quanto dovrebbe. 

La gloria di questo piccolo, tiepido oggetto potrebbe però durare poco. Lo Spitzer Space Telescope della Nasa ha infatti già individuato due sfidanti. Si attendono le misurazioni delle temperature. 

Riferimento: arXiv:1103.0014v2

Via Wired.it

 
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Manufatti rivelatori ...

Post n°776 pubblicato il 28 Marzo 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"NATURE.com"

Stone tools cut swathe through Clovis history

Dig uncovers previously unknown North American culture.

The artefacts found indicate a more migratory culture than the sedentary Clovis.Courtesy of Michael R. Waters

The long-standing idea that the Clovis people of ancient North America were the first tool-using humans on the continent 13,200 years ago is being overturned by the discovery of human artefacts in a Texan creek bed that are even older.

Michael Waters, a geoarchaeologist at Texas A&M University in College Station, and his team unearthed more than 15,000 stone artefacts from the Debra L. Friedkin archaeological site in Texas. Using luminescence dating, which dates the last time samples were exposed to sunlight, the researchers found that the artefacts are between 13,200 and 15,500 years old. They seem to have been left undisturbed by any sort of soil movement, suggesting that the artefacts come from a time before the Clovis people came to dominate the landscape.

"With these sorts of soils it is easy for objects to move around over time, but with 15,000 artefacts in the pre-Clovis horizon that would involve a whole lot of transport," says Rolfe Mandel, a geoarchaeologist at the University of Kansas in Lawrence who was not involved in the study, which is published online today in Science1. "A lot of archaeological studies like this have problems, but this one is about as perfect as they come, there is little to question here."

The finding does not, however, suggest that the Clovis people simply lived in North America earlier than previously believed. Instead, it hints that a different group of people using different tool types was present during the earlier years. This group could have been replaced by or culturally evolved into the Clovis.

Although most of the newly recovered artefacts are debris such as bits of chipped stone, Waters and his team have uncovered 56 stone tools made from chert. Twelve of these are bifaces, two-sided sharp-edged stone tools made through flaking and chipping. They seem to have been used as knives and choppers on both soft and hard materials. Crucially, a few of these tools are similar to the iconic, lance-like spear points that the Clovis people made, but they are simpler and recognizably different.

"The tools seem to be locally technologically ancestral to those used by the Clovis," says James Adovasio, an archaeologist at Mercyhurst College in Pennsylvania.

The toolkit of these pre-Clovis people is also lighter than that used by the Clovis culture. "This suggests they were mobile hunter–gatherers, readily moving across the landscape — quite different from the Clovis people who had heavier tools and were sedentary," says Waters.

Last nail in the Clovis coffin

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It is not entirely surprising that the Clovis people developed their impressive spear points in southern North America from simpler tools. Genetic studies indicate that the Clovis people hailed from northeast Asia. The only plausible path for them to have made it to North America was via a gruelling journey over the Alaskan land bridge, which once connected Asia and North America and through glacial corridors in Canada. "People have assumed that they developed their spear points along the journey into North America and then quickly used them to drive many species to extinction," says Adovasio. Yet none of the iconic Clovis spear tips has ever been found in Asia, in Alaskan sediments dating to the time when they probably made their migration or in the Canadian glacial corridor.

"It never made sense to me that the spear points originated during the migration. Now that we have biface technology at pre-Clovis sites in the continental United States, it seems that this is where Clovis technology developed and spread from," says Waters.

"I think we can safely say this work puts another nail in the Clovis-first coffin," says Adovasio. 

 
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Artico in crisi ... ma l'Antartico?

Post n°775 pubblicato il 28 Marzo 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"ANSA.it"
Nuovo minimo storico ghiaccio Artico
Cosi scarsi solo nel 2006 per National Snow and Ice Data Center26 marzo, 15:12

 (ANSA) - ROMA, 26 MAR - Nuovo minimo storico per il ghiaccio dell'Artico: secondo i dati del National Snow and Ice Data Center americano la calotta ha cominciato a restringersi lo scorso 7 marzo, e l'area massima registrata e' la stessa del 2006, l'anno del record precedente. Secondo i dati riportati il massimo raggiunto quest'anno e' stato di 14,64 mln di kmq, piu' di 1,2 milioni di chilometri quadrati piu' bassa della media degli ultimi 30 anni e all'incirca pari al record negativo di cinque anni fa.

 
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Werner Herzog: un film di ventimila anni fa ...

Post n°774 pubblicato il 28 Marzo 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"CNN.com"Herzog brings 20,000-year-old art to life

By Laura Allsop for CNN
March 25, 2011 7:02 a.m. EDT
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • 3D film by Werner Herzog brings prehistoric cave art to life
  • Cave paintings of hyena and mammoth up to 32,000 years old
  • First film ever made of the caves
  • Director currently working on Death Row documentary

London, England (CNN) -- Untouched for 20,000 years, the awe-inspiring Chauvet-Pont-d'Arc cave in Southern France is now brought to life in 3D by visionary German director Werner Herzog.

As the camera drops into the cave, to the sounds of eerie chanting, breath-taking scenes of glittering, calcite formations and large halls littered with the bones of now extinct cave bears are not only illuminated but made to seem close enough to touch.

Most important are the numerous paintings on the undulating walls of the cave, of animals including rhinoceros, bison, mammoths, lions, hyenas and horses, some painted up to 32,000 years ago and which are so vivid as to seem alive.

"Cave of Forgotten Dreams" is Herzog's first foray into 3D filmmaking and he says in this case for format was an obvious choice.

"The films I have made so far should not have been made in 3D but I think in this case that it was imperative," he said. "I am still in general skeptical about 3D."

'Cave of Forgotten Dreams'

His approach has allowed the viewer into Chauvet cave, which was only discovered in 1994 and is otherwise shut off to the public for fear of upsetting its delicate climate and damaging the irreplaceable wall paintings.

And for Herzog, the medium also lent itself to the cave's layout: "If you look at the formation of the cave, it's not that there are flat walls and paintings on them; there's a great drama in the formation of wild, undulating walls, and bulges and niches, which were all used and utilized by the artists."

Director of notorious films such as "Fitzcarraldo," "Aguirre, the Wrath of God" and more recently "Grizzly Man" and "Encounters at the End of the World," Herzog is used to breaching hallowed and sometimes hostile spaces in his works.

The films I have made so far should not have been made in 3D but I think in this case that it was imperative
--Werner Herzog

"You have to understand why (the French government) is trying to keep people out of this cave, which was preserved like a perfect time capsule when a collapse of this rock face in the gorge of Ardeche more than 20,000 years ago -- just sealed it off completely," he said.

Herzog says he has always had an "independent intellectual fascination" with Paleolithic art. Granted permission to film by the French ministry of culture (he became an employee for the nominal fee of €1), Herzog and his crew of four set off to film in spring 2010.

The crew were only allowed to film in the cave for four hours a day over six days. They had to keep to a metal walkway connecting the subterranean chambers to protect the cave's 30,000-year-old footprints. High carbon dioxide levels in some parts of the cave also restricted shooting.

Inside the cave, negative hand prints of the elusive prehistoric painters dot the walls. The film emphasizes the sophistication of these early artists, detailing their use of shading and perspective in the paintings of the animals as well as their ability to depict expression and movement.

"Somehow art is bursting on the scene 32,000 years ago, completely accomplished, and it never got any better," Herzog said.

Somehow art is bursting on the scene 32,000 years ago, completely accomplished, and it never got any better
--Werner Herzog
Herzog suggests an echo of similarity between the drawing of a strange figure composed of a woman and a bison and paintings by Pablo Picasso; elsewhere, multi-phased images of the same rhino prompt the director, who narrates the film in his recognizable Teutonic voice, to say that they have an almost proto-cinematic aspect.

Herzog's cast of characters includes the cave's dedicated archaeologist Jean-Michel Geneste, alongside other more colorful interviewees such as an unicyclist-turned-scientist, a caribou-skin-clad "experimental archaeologist" and a perfumer who may recreate the scent of the cave for a proposed replica.

A strange post-script featuring albino crocodiles, living in a glasshouse heated by a nuclear power station close to the cave, turns the film from mildly off-beat documentary to full-blown fantasy.

"That's a moment when the film goes completely wild, into a science fiction fantasy," Herzog said, laughing.

"But the science-fiction fantasy has to do with perception -- with a very basic question," he explained, the question being: How did these people, separated by an abyss of time, perceive the images they made? We can no more answer that question than an albino crocodile, said Herzog.

The prolific director is currently working on a new documentary, about Death Row inmates in Texas and Florida.

"It's just like the cave film -- it's looking into an abyss," he said. "Not just one abyss but wherever you look, there is another abyss. Not uncharacteristically, he said: "It's going to be intense."

 
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Scoperte in Canada ...

Post n°773 pubblicato il 28 Marzo 2011 da diegobaratono

Da:"Reuters.com"

Rare dinosaur found in Canada's oil sands

 The 110-million-year-old dinosaur fossil found in Canada's oil sands this week.

Credit: Reuters/Alberta Culture and Community

TORONTO | Fri Mar 25, 2011 2:16pm EDT

TORONTO (Reuters) - The Canadian oil sands, a vast expanse of tar and sand being mined for crude oil, yielded treasure of another kind this week when an oil company worker unearthed a 110-million-year-old dinosaur fossil that wasn't supposed to be there.

The fossil is an ankylosaur, a plant-eating dinosaur with powerful limbs, armor plating and a club-like tail. Finding it in this region of northern Alberta was a surprise because millions of years ago the area was covered by water.

"We've never found a dinosaur in this location," Donald Henderson, a curator at Alberta's Royal Tyrrell Museum, which is devoted to dinosaurs, said on Friday. "Because the area was once a sea, most finds are invertebrates such as clams and ammonites."

The ankylosaur that was found by the oil worker is expected to be about 5 meters (16-1/2 feet) long and 2 meters (6-1/2 feet) wide.

"It is pretty amazing that it survived in such good condition," said Henderson, noting the fossil was three dimensional, not flattened by the heavy rock sediment.

"It is also the earliest complete dinosaur that we have from this province."

The fossil was found on Wednesday by a Suncor Energy shovel operator who was clearing ground ahead of development. By a quirk of fate, the worker had visited the Royal Tyrrell dinosaur museum in southern Alberta just the week before.

Henderson suggested he may have had dinosaurs on the brain. "Maybe his mind was subconsciously prepared."

Suncor has suspended work at the site and has given scientists a three-week window to remove the fossil and ship it to the Royal Tyrrell museum.

The last major fossil find in northern Alberta was a giant reptile called an ichthyosaur, which was found 10 years ago near Fort McMurray.

(Editing by Peter Galloway)

 
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