martes, 30 de octubre de 2012

"Sandy" paraliza la Costa Este

"SANDY" PARALIZA LA COSTA ESTE

El huracán Sandy tocó tierra a las 8pm del martes, hora local, en la ciudad de Atlantic City provocando vientos de más de 128km/h, según el Centro Nacional de Huracanes. La fuerza del viento ha destruido todo lo que ha encontrado a su paso, llevándose consigo diques, barreras y postes eléctricos.

A lo largo de la tarde del domingo se paralizaron los transportes públicos y se cancelaron colegios y universidades para el día siguiente. Las autoridades también recomendaron que la gente no fuera a trabajar y que evitaran los desplazamientos que no fueran esencialmente necesarios. Además, los habitantes de la denominada "Zona A" fueron obligados a evacuar sus casas. Dicha zona incluye varios barrios de Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens y Staten Island.

Ya son más de 13 las víctimas que se cuentan en el territorio, debido, en la mayoría de casos, a la caída de árboles encima de sus casas o coches. Los accesos a la ciudad de Nueva York están colapsados y varios puentes y bocas de metros están inundados. De hecho, todos los metros están cerrados desde Boston hasta Washington desde el domingo por la noche. Alrededor de 13.000 vuelos han sido cancelados en todo el territorio y los aeropuertos continúan cerrados. También se ha tenido que cerrar el paso por el Canal de Erie y el alcalde de la ciudad, Michael Bloomberg, ha recomendado a los taxistas que retiren sus vehículos de las calles de la ciudad.

El presidente Obama ha dicho que hay distintos equipos técnicos preparados para reparar los distintos accidentes, especialmente, los que provocan cortes de luz, pero que dichos equipos no podrán ponerse a trabajar hasta que no amaine la tormenta. Se prevé que ?Sandy? pierda fuerza a medida que se adentra en el territorio, a lo largo del miércoles.

Mar Selvas



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lunes, 22 de octubre de 2012

El colosal Gran Cañón de Marte


Valles Merineris es diez veces más largo y cinco veces más profundo que el gran cañón de Colorado. Es el más grande del Sistema Solar.

Marte posee un 'gran cañón' aún más grande que el famoso accidente geográfico situado en Colorado, EEUU. El 'gran cañón' se llama Valles Merineris y mide más de 4.000 kilómetros de largo, 200 kilómetros de ancho y tiene una profundidad de 10 kilómetros, lo que le convierte en el más grande del Sistema Solar. Concretamente, el accidente geográfico marciano es diez veces más largo y cinco veces más profundo que el terrestre.

La Agencia Espacial Europea (ESA, por sus siglas en inglés) ha obtenido ahora una nueva visión de Valles Merineris gracias una imagen obtenida con los datos capturados durante las 20 órbitas individuales de la sonda Mars Express. Según han indicado los expertos, esta fotografía muestra laamplia variedad de características geológicas del lugar, demostrando la compleja historia del planeta rojo en este aspecto.

La ESA ha señalado que la formación del cañón podría estar íntimamente ligada con la formación de la protuberancia de Tharsis, hogar del volcán más grande del Sistema Solar, Olympus Mons. En este sentido, ha apuntado que la actividad volcánica se manifiesta en la naturaleza de las rocas en las paredes del cañón y la llanura circundante, que fueron construidas por los flujos de lava sucesivos.

A medida que la protuberancia de Tharsis se hinchó de magma durante los primeros millones de años del planeta, la corteza circundante se estiró, desgarrando y eventualmente colapsando los canales gigantescos de Valles Merineris.

Del mismo modo, la ESA ha destacado que los deslizamientos de tierra también han desempeñado un papel importante en la conformación de la escena, sobre todo en las depresiones más al norte, donde el material dejó caer las escarpadas paredes del cañón.



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domingo, 21 de octubre de 2012

Aurora Season Begins

Untitled Document

Aurora Season Begins
Story posted: September 22
Northern Autumn has begun--and that means it's aurora season. Equinoxes favor Northern Lights. Right on cue, the Arctic Circle is glowing.
Large image


viernes, 19 de octubre de 2012

Having a Blast.

Untitled Document

NASA Heliophysics News from 3D Sun iPhone app
Having a Blast. SDO watches a prominence erupt on April 9, 2010.
April 9: A prominence in motion. Cool gas is shown in red (60,000 - 80,000 K) with traces of hotter plasma in green (1.4 million K).
Large image | Video


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martes, 16 de octubre de 2012

Pilgrimage to Sudan - Archaeology Magazine

Pilgrimage to Sudan

Miracles of Banganarti

mural painting

At the site of Banganarti in Sudan (ancient Nubia), archaeologist Bogdan Żurawski and his team are shown just hours after the discovery in 2001 of a mural painting hidden for centuries under the Sahara. The image depicts a ruler of the Kingdom of Makuria. To the king's left, the hand of the Archangel Raphael is visible.
(Courtesy Jacek Poremba)

Sometime in the fourteenth century A.D., a traveler named Benesec journeyed from either southern France or northern Spain across the Mediterranean, through Egypt, and then up the Nile far into Africa's desert interior, a trip of more than 2,500 miles. His destination was Banganarti, the most important pilgrimage site in the medieval Christian Kingdom of Makuria. Benesec may have traveled to Banganarti ("Island of the Locust" in the local language) to be healed of some ailment, or he may have been on a trading mission. Perhaps he shared in one of the sanctuary's curative rituals. These included drinking holy water and drilling holes in the unpainted walls to obtain holy dust, which was mixed with water and taken as a medication. He may have engaged in the practice of incubation, which involved sleeping inside the church of the site's patron saint. Whether Benesec was cured or not is unknown, but an inscription he scratched onto the wall survives as a record of his journey. Written in the Latin alphabet, the inscription reads, "When Benesec came to pay homage to Raphael," and is one of almost a thousand mementoes left by the pilgrims who came to Banganarti over a period of 600 years. In the mid-fourteenth century the church collapsed and the sanctuary was abandoned to be covered by the drifting sands of the Sahara for almost seven centuries.

In 2001 a team of archaeologists from the University of Warsaw's Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology, led by Bogdan Żurawski of the Polish Academy of Sciences, came to Banganarti in the land of ancient Nubia (now part of Sudan) to begin excavating a huge kom (artificial mound) covering a church. Known locally as the kom el-kenissa ("mound of the church"), the kom had been created by centuries of discarding debris around the building and the accumulation of sand on top of it. The consecration of this church had been mentioned in The History of the Patriarchs of Alexandria, the major historical work of the Coptic Church, but its history was not the reason Żurawski and the archaeological mission from the University of Warsaw were there. They came because the site was increasingly threatened by aggressive palm planting surrounding the kom.


To read more, find ARCHAEOLOGY in your local newsstand or bookstore, or click here to buy a copy of the issue online. And if you'd like to receive ARCHAEOLOGY in your mailbox, click here to subscribe.

Jarrett A. Lobell is executive editor 




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Down by the Savannah Riverside - Archaeology Magazine

Down by the Savannah Riverside

By studying ancient landforms, archaeologists are uncovering evidence of a novel hunter-gatherer behavior

Johns Bay, located in Allendale County, South Carolina

Many bays have been lost to development, but Johns Bay, located in Allendale County, South Carolina, is still viable and filled with water. Thousands of years ago, Archaic hunter-gatherers came to these pond-like bodies of water in the fall or winter to process large, wild birds that would migrate to the bays seasonally.
(Courtesy Christopher R. Moore/SRARP)

A steady warm breeze barely ruffles the high-rise canopy of tall, straight pine trees. Diffuse sunlight filters down to the ground. Underfoot, maypop vines, flaunting fancy lavender blossoms, slyly tangle with poison ivy on a crunchy carpet of pine needles patched with peek-a-boo white sand. A bird chirps. A gnat bites. A vehicle whirs along a distant unseen road. At first take it could all pass for an unremarkable stretch of Southeastern woods. But to archaeologists of the Savannah River Archaeological Research Program (SRARP), this is Flamingo Bay. It's a shining example of an ancient landform, once a pond-like body of accumulated rainwater with the nontechnical name "Carolina bay," where they are finding new knowledge of Middle Archaic hunter-gatherer sustenance, industry, and lifestyles.

Mark J. Brooks, an archaeologist at the University of South Carolina and director of SRARP, trudges across the slight rise of sand that surrounds the bay as he gestures toward the scattered handful of blue, white, and orange flags stuck in the dry ground. Only the center of Flamingo Bay occasionally holds water these days. The flags indicate recent investigation. Brooks says, "From the samples we have taken we know that this area had a major concentration of food-processing activity. We have evidence that small groups of people returned here repeatedly, every fall or early winter."

The archaeological record that Brooks and his colleagues have uncovered shows that hunter-gatherers at this bay, and perhaps others, stood notably apart from other prehistoric groups in their use of natural resources. In pre-agrarian times here, as elsewhere, people typically banded together to forage for food. They gravitated toward forests, plentifully supplied with game, deer being the main meat in their diet, and toward oceans, rivers, and streams for a steady harvest of fish and other seafood.

Brooks, though, and Christopher R. Moore, also a University of South Carolina and SRARP archaeologist, have discovered a sophisticated departure from these patterns. They have found artifacts along the edges of Carolina bays that are specifically associated with a well-organized system of preserving the meat of large migratory birds. Evidence shows that every autumn or winter people would return to the bay site, which reliably provided all the raw materials—including slow-combusting hickory nut shells, not practical for fuel but excellent for the smoking process—needed to stockpile great amounts of food. Underlying this activity would have been an understanding on the part of these prehistoric peoples that birds would arrive at Carolina bays at particular times of year and in great numbers.


To read more, find ARCHAEOLOGY in your local newsstand or bookstore, or click here to buy a copy of the issue online. And if you'd like to receive ARCHAEOLOGY in your mailbox, click here to subscribe.

Margaret Shakespeare is a freelance writer living in New York City and Long Island.






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Zeugma After the Flood - Archaeology Magazine

Zeugma After the Flood

New excavations continue to tell the story of an ancient city at the crossroads between east and west

Zeugma

Much of the ancient town of Zeugma and its modern counterpart of Belkis now lie under the reservoir created by the construction of one of Turkey's largest dams in 2000.
(Hasan Yelken/Images & Stories)

Roman mosaics

Extraordinary Roman mosaics such as this image of a girl or perhaps a goddess once decorated wealthy houses in Zeugma in southern Turkey.
(Sites & Photos/Art Resource)

Inside the TombsInside the Tombs

Mosaic MastersMosaic Masters



It wasn't good policy that saved ancient Zeugma. It was a good story. In 2000, the construction of the massive Birecik Dam on the Euphrates River, less than a mile from the site, began to flood the entire area in southern Turkey. Immediately, a ticking time-bomb narrative of the waters, which were rising an average of four inches per day for six months, brought Zeugma and its plight global fame. The water, which soon would engulf the archaeological remains, also brought increasing urgency to salvage efforts and emergency excavations that had already been taking place at the site, located about 500 miles from Istanbul, for almost a year. The media attention Zeugma received attracted generous aid from both private and government sources. Of particular concern was the removal of Zeugma's mosaics, some of the most extraordinary examples to survive from the ancient world. Soon the world's top restorers arrived from Italy to rescue them from the floodwaters. The focus on Zeugma also brought great numbers of international tourists—and even more money—a trend that continues today with the opening in September 2011 of the ultramodern $30 million Zeugma Mosaic Museum in the nearby city of Gaziantep.

But Zeugma's story begins millennia before the dam was constructed. In the third century B.C., Seleucus I Nicator ("the Victor"), one of Alexander the Great's commanders, established a settlement he called Seleucia, probably a katoikia, or military colony, on the western side of the river. On its eastern bank, he founded another town he called Apamea after his Persian-born wife. The two cities were physically connected by a pontoon bridge, but it is not known whether they were administered by separate municipal governments, and nothing of ancient Apamea, nor the bridge, survives. In 64 B.C., the Romans conquered Seleucia, renaming the town Zeugma, which means "bridge" or "crossing" in ancient Greek. After the collapse of the Seleucid Empire, the Romans added Zeugma to the lands of Antiochus I Theos of Commagene as a reward for his support of General Pompey during the conquest.

Throughout the imperial period, two Roman legions were based at Zeugma, increasing its strategic value and adding to its cosmopolitan culture. Due to the high volume of road traffic and its geographic position, Zeugma became a collection point for road tolls. Political and trade routes converged here and the city was the last stop in the Greco-Roman world before crossing over to the Persian Empire. For hundreds of years Zeugma prospered as a major commercial city as well as a military and religious center, eventually reaching its peak population of about 20,000-30,000 inhabitants. During the imperial period, Zeugma became the empire's largest, and most strategically and economically important, eastern border city.

However, the good times in Zeugma declined along with the fortunes of the Roman Empire. After the Sassanids from Persia attacked the city in A.D. 253, its luxurious villas were reduced to ruins and used as shelters for animals. The city's new inhabitants were mainly rural people who employed only simple building materials that did not survive. Zeugma's grandeur and importance would remain forgotten for more than 1,700 years.

shelter at Zeugma

A shelter protects both the ancient structures and numerous visitors from Zeugma's harsh climate, where summer temperatures average 97 degrees F.
(Matthew Brunwasser)

limestone channels

Zeugma's residents built sophisticated water systems, including the limestone channels that once carried wastewater out of wealthy private homes.
(Matthew Brunwasser)

This may sound difficult to believe, considering that at least 25 percent of the western bank of the ancient town now sits below almost 200 feet of water and the city's eastern bank is completely submerged, but there is still much left to see—and to excavate—in Zeugma. With the imminent threat of the rising water having abated, archaeologists including Kutalmis Gorkay of Ankara University, who has directed work at Zeugma since 2005, have focused their attention on new projects as well as on conservation and preservation of what remains above the water. Fortunately, these excavations are still relatively well funded, Gorkay says, although the budget is not comparable with the monies that came in during the salvage excavation.

Gorkay is now looking for more evidence of how this multicultural city functioned as the transition between east and west, and the Persian and Greco-Roman worlds. He is also seeking to understand how the shift from the Hellenistic Greek world to the domination of the Roman Empire affected the city. "We don't know of any other big cities in this area that changed from a Hellenistic city into a Roman garrison city in such an important geopolitical location, making it an ideal place to study the cultural changes between the two," says Gorkay.

Just 50 yards from the shore of the large reservoir created by the dam sits a shiny $1.5-million steel-textile and polycarbonate structure that contrasts boldly with the desolate landscape. Constructed to protect the remains of five Roman houses, it has multilevel viewing platforms that allow visitors to see the carefully excavated buildings and streets. Most of the structures under the shelter were built in the first and second centuries A.D., during the Roman imperial period. The residents of this once upscale neighborhood were likely high-ranking civil and military officials and merchants grown wealthy from trade. There is ample evidence of a sophisticated sewage and water supply system. Grooves cut into the stone streets once held pipes that delivered water from at least four reservoirs and cisterns on the Belkis Tepe, the city's highest point, through spouts capped with bronze lion heads. Sunny courtyards in the center of the houses allowed fresh air to circulate inside. Some had shallow pools, called impluvia, to collect rainwater and cool the air before it entered the house. These courtyards also once contained some of Zeugma's most famous mosaics, many of which have water themes: Eros riding a dolphin; Danae and Perseus being rescued by fishermen on the shores of Seriphos; Poseidon, the god of the sea; and other water deities and sea creatures.

Now only geometric mosaics remain visible at the site. Although archaeologists prefer to restore and leave mosaics in situ so that visitors can understand their original setting, protection from the elements is difficult and expensive. Theft is also a great challenge in Zeugma, where looting has long been considered a legitimate source of income for an impoverished local population. One night in 1998 all the figures were stolen from a mosaic depicting the wedding of Dionysus and Ariadne that archaeologists were working on. In response to this incident, the Gaziantep museum removed all the previously excavated figural mosaics, and the site now has armed guards around the clock.

satyr and nymph

The mosaics that once decorated Zeugma's elite residences often depicted mythological scenes such as the story of Antiope and the satyr (above, top), the nymph Galatea (above, bottom), and the muses (below). The choice of topic was not only decorative, but was also informed by the homeowners' level of learning and idea of how they wished to be regarded by their guests.
(Matthew Brunwasser)

the muses

(Courtesy Kutalmis Gorkay, Zeugma Archaeological Project)

team excavates Roman house

A team from Ankara University is excavating the remains of a Roman house in hopes of learning more about the private lives of Zeugma's ancient residents.
(Matthew Brunwasser)

According to Gorkay, the mosaics were an important part of a house's mood, and their function went far beyond the strictly decorative. Many of the mosaics were selected according to a room's function. For example, bedrooms sometimes featured lovers' stories, such as that of Eros and Telete. The choice of images in the mosaics also reflected the owner's taste and intellectual interests. "They were a product of the patron's imagination. It wasn't like simply choosing from a catalog. They thought of specific scenes in order to make a specific impression," he explains. "For example, if you were of the intellectual level to discuss literature, then you might select a scene like the three muses," Gorkay says. The muses were thought to be the inspirations for literature, science, and the arts. "They are also a personification of good times. When people drank near this mosaic, the muses were always there, accompanying them for atmosphere," he says. Other popular themes in these reception and dining areas were love, wine, and the god Dionysus.

However, it was not only subject matter that was important in choosing the mosaics. It was also their placement. "In a dining room off a courtyard, the couches on which people were sitting or lying, drinking, and having parties were positioned around the mosaics so people could see them, as well as the courtyard and pool," Gorkay says. He also explains that there was an order in which the mosaics were intended to be viewed. When guests first entered the house, there was a salutory mosaic positioned to make an impression on people coming through the doorway. This mosaic might give introductory hints to the guests about the favorite subjects, taste, or themes of the host. In the next room, they were invited to recline on couches in order to view other mosaics. After the guests were seated, the convivium, or feast, would begin.

Currently Gorkay and his team of 25 students are excavating two first-century A.D. houses about 300 feet from the area under the shelter, where work has been completed. Here the team will learn more about the private lives of Zeugma's former residents. For every room of each house being excavated, there is always the hope of a fantastic mosaic waiting for them when they reach the floor level. The team also hopes to find examples of graffiti, a term archaeologists use to mean any images or text written on a building's wall. Graffiti can be an important type of evidence in determining the religion, profession, or ethnicity of a house's inhabitants. For example, in Zeugma, a painted or scratched-on name could determine whether an inhabitant was Semitic, Persian, Greek, or Roman.

Gorkay has also supervised preliminary studies in the Hellenistic agora, the commercial and administrative center of the city, some 100 yards away from the shelter. As yet there has been little excavation there, but Gorkay hopes that future digging will reveal more about Zeugma's civic identity. In 2000, a team excavating a market building in the agora uncovered an archive room containing tens of thousands of official seals, giving previously unknown details about the administration of the military and trading center. Other excavations across the site have yielded several bronze statues, thousands of coins, and hundreds of pounds of ceramics. When they are catalogued and studied, these too will reveal valuable information about the city's residents, their customs, and the types of goods being used and traded there.

There is also much yet to learn about the practice of religion in Zeugma. Through further excavation, Gorkay wants to examine the place of politics and nationality in the practice of religion during the transformative periods in Zeugma's history. In 2008, atop the Belkis Tepe, archaeologists excavated a temple and sanctuary where three colossal cult statues of Zeus, Athena, and probably Hera, were found, marking it as one of the city's most important religious sites. But there are still many questions left to answer about the ways in which the traditional Greco-Roman gods were worshipped alongside the Persian deities who were also honored in the city. Similarly, says Gorkay, "In the time of the Commagene rulers, Antiochus I consecrated many sanctuaries and depicted himself in all of them," including stelae on which the king is shown shaking hands with gods. But during the Roman period, these temples were stripped of their political character and the gods were portrayed alone, signifying a change in the cult dedicated to the worship of the ruler.

In the future, Gorkay hopes to continue to explore the civic, sacred, and private identities of the city, and to focus his excavations on the sanctuaries, civic buildings, houses, and necropolises that give Zeugma its cosmopolitan character. While many of the mysteries of this ancient city will remain forever sealed under the waters of the Euphrates, Gorkay is convinced that Zeugma has only started to tell its story.

Matthew Brunwasser is a freelance writer living in Istanbul.


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Factory of Wealth - Archaeology Magazine

Factory of Wealth

A mint from the Han Dynasty produced billions of coins that enabled vast economic growth and trade along the Silk Road

brick coin mold

A brick excavated near the modern city of Xi'an in China's Shaanxi Province was used as a coin mold at an imperial mint on the outskirts of the Western Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 9) capital of Chang'an.
(Courtesy Liu Zhendong, Imaginechina)

In a back room at the Shanglinyuan archaeological headquarters, just outside the modern city of Xi'an, a concrete floor is nearly entirely covered by a single layer of loosely arranged and dusty bricks. They have been placed in rows and come in red, gray, and brown. Some are crumbling at the edges, and others have been rounded over time. But these are no simple construction materials. Archaeologist Liu Rui picks up one of the bricks, which date to the Western Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 9), and dusts it off with a brush. Each brick has one or more circular impressions on its face, and further dusting reveals a square protrusion at the center of each circle. It is an iconic shape in Chinese archaeology—the outline of the country's longest-lived currency, the "Wu Zhu" coin. These are molds for casting the coins that helped unify China and build the Silk Road, which connected the region to the rest of the world. The room is filled with the phantoms of the enormous wealth of the Han Dynasty.

Liu is the head of an ongoing excavation at a Han Dynasty mint, a gigantic ancient factory located in Shanglinyuan, a few miles from the ruins of the Han capital of Chang'an. "We have discovered Wu Zhu coins in tombs all over China, but we have never excavated a site like this," says Liu. "We don't yet know the full story of how the Wu Zhu coin was minted." To him, the bricks provide a new way to look at the empire's vast wealth and an opportunity to study the lives of the workers and artisans that once kept the sprawling factory—and the empire it supplied—running. It is estimated that during the Western Han, around 28 billion coins were minted. They remained in use for 700 years, as other dynasties adopted the currency and continued minting the coins, which have been uncovered in sites as far afield as Southeast Asia, Japan, and Russia.

The city of Chang'an served as the Han capital from 220 B.C. to A.D. 11, and rivaled Rome in both size and grandeur. The remains of this site, including the mint, miles of mud-and-brick city walls studded with gates, several imperial palaces, and a variety of other official buildings and residences, lie at the edges of Xi'an's modern sprawl. Though study of the site has been going on for some 60 years, there is still much to be learned—as long as modern China's rapid development can be held at bay. The bricks that served as molds for coins provide a humble entry point to big questions about commerce and the ways of empire-building. "This mint," Liu says, "can help us tell the story of the booming Han economy."


To read more, find ARCHAEOLOGY in your local newsstand or bookstore, or click here to buy a copy of the issue online. And if you'd like to receive ARCHAEOLOGY in your mailbox, click here to subscribe.

Lauren Hilgers is a freelance writer based in Shanghai.






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The Maya Sense of Time - Archaeology Magazine

The Maya Sense of Time

As one Maya calendar reaches the end of a cycle, we take a look at how an ancient people understood their place in the cosmos

Temple of the Inscriptions at Palenque

The Maya tracked astronomical movements and recorded them on calendars, monuments, and architecture. One example is the Temple of the Inscriptions at Palenque, which may have been built with solar alignments in mind.
(Copyright Kenneth Garrett)

A little more than 2,000 years ago, the Maya were creating spectacular works of art and erecting massive stone buildings across what is now southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, northern Honduras, and El Salvador. As their culture spread and developed, the Maya also created a complex system of calendars that reflected an understanding of the passage of time that is very different from anything in Western culture. It is not entirely clear whether the Maya invented all of the calendars they used or whether they adopted them from the neighboring Olmec people. But over a period that may have lasted from 900 to 1,200 years they made a careful and accurate study of astronomical cycles and used that knowledge as a way to make sense of and bring order to the unpredictable world in which they lived.

The Maya recognized that the natural world, the cosmos, and even their own bodies functioned according to observable cycles. To locate themselves within these cycles they tracked the movements of planets, the moon, and the sun. They also used a 260-day calendar that many scholars believe to be based on the approximate duration of a human pregnancy. Another Maya calendar, the Long Count, was used to tally the number of days that had elapsed since the mythological date of their creation. The Long Count is set to reach the end of a 1,872,000-day-long period on December 21, 2012. (Some scholars, however, pinpoint the date as December 23.) Regardless of the date, this has given rise to widespread apocalyptic predictions about what will happen. Evidence from archaeological sites, ancient books, and the modern-day Maya themselves shows that while this one cycle is ending, many others will continue.

Primer: Three Maya CalendarsPrimer: Three Maya Calendars

The Calendar InscriptionsThe Calendar Inscriptions

An Eye on VenusAn Eye on Venus

The Maya CodicesThe Maya Codices

The Modern Calendar PriestsThe Modern Calendar Priests

Zach Zorich is a senior editor at ARCHAEOLOGY.






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viernes, 12 de octubre de 2012

ENIM - Une revue d'égyptologie sur internet


Quatre études sur la bataille de Qadech Frédéric Servajean, « Quatre études sur la bataille de Qadech », CENIM 6, Montpellier, 2012 — (26 mai 2012) Consulter
Avec Megiddo, Qadech est la seule bataille relativement bien connue de la fin de l'âge du bronze. Cependant, contrairement à la première, qui opposa Thoutmosis III à une coalition dirigée par le prince de Qadech, la bataille qui va nous occuper n'a cessé de retenir l'attention des chercheurs. L'importance de la documentation et sa nature pourraient expliquer cela, les textes et les figurations du Poème, du Bulletin et des Reliefs ayant été gravés ou consignés sur les parois de nombreux grands temples et ailleurs. Le fait que cette documentation ne permette pas de reconstituer la bataille dans son ensemble et que certains points restent encore débattus pourraient aussi l'expliquer. Mais il y a probablement une autre raison, de nature psychologique. Car le chercheur perçoit bien qu'à Qadech, il s'est produit quelque chose d'inhabituel, quelque chose ayant justement motivé cette profusion de textes dans lesquels Ramsès se met en scène, combattant seul avec l'aide d'Amon. Au point que l'on a pu écrire que Qadech fut une bataille perdue par les Égyptiens. Mais, simultanément, on se rend bien compte, à l'issue des différentes reconstitutions de celle-ci, que ce ne fut pas le cas. Certes, il ne s'agit pas d'une victoire brillante, comme l'avait été auparavant Megiddo, mais c'est un fait : à Qadech même, Ramsès ne fut pas vaincu.

<i>Et in Ægypto et ad Ægyptum</i>, Recueil d'études dédiées à Jean-Claude Grenier « Et in Ægypto et ad Ægyptum, Recueil d'études dédiées à Jean-Claude Grenier », Textes réunis et édités par A. Gasse, Fr. Servajean, et Chr. Thiers CENIM 5, Montpellier, 2012 — (25 avril 2012) Consulter
Étudiants, collègues et amis, égyptologues, hellénistes ou romanistes – nombreux sont les auteurs qui ont tenu à offrir leur contribution à ces Études dédiées à Jean-Claude Grenier, titulaire de la chaire d'égyptologie de l'université Paul Valéry-Montpellier 3. L'extrême variété des sujets abordés offre un reflet fidèle de la multiplicité des intérêts qu'a toujours manifesté Jean-Claude Grenier pour l'histoire antique de la Vallée du Nil et du monde méditerranéen des Césars. C'est aussi une brillante illustration des innombrables étincelles que peut allumer un savant aussi chaleureux dans des esprits différents par leur formation, par leurs intérêts et leur culture. Ces participations aussi généreuses qu'enthousiastes occupent quatre volumes et couvrent plus de deux mille ans d'histoire. Outre des études d'égyptologie « classique », on y trouvera nombre de travaux consacrés aux dernières périodes de l'histoire de l'Égypte ancienne : l'Égypte sous domination romaine et la diffusion des croyances égyptiennes hors d'Égypte sont abordées de manière multiforme. Ces pages d'égyptologie originale s'inscrivent in Ægypto et ad Ægyptum…


Topographie cultuelle de Memphis 1 a- Corpus. Temples et principaux quartiers de la XVIIIe dynastie Stéphane Pasquali, « Topographie cultuelle de Memphis 1 a- Corpus. Temples et principaux quartiers de la XVIIIe dynastie », CENIM 4, Montpellier, 2011 — (7 mars 2011) Consulter
Corpus des sources relatives à la topographie cultuelle de la ville de Memphis à la XVIIIe dynastie. Celui-ci est constitué de trois listes : A) les monuments royaux d'origine memphite (vestiges archéologiques, fondations palatiales et cultuelles attestées textuellement), B) une prosopographie du personnel des dieux de la région memphite, C) les sources concernant le quartier de Pérounéfer ainsi que l'arsenal et le port de Memphis jusqu'au début de la XIXe dynastie. Cet ouvrage est le premier volume des monographies associées au projet Topographie cultuelle de Memphis de l'équipe d'égyptologie de l'UMR 5140 (CNRS-Université Paul Valéry-Montpellier III).

<em>Documents de Théologies Thébaines  Tardives</em> (D3T 1) « Documents de Théologies Thébaines Tardives (D3T 1) », Textes réunis et édités par Christophe Thiers CENIM 3, Montpellier, 2009 — (7 fevrier 2010) Consulter
Le présent ouvrage réunit une dizaine de contributions mettant en exergue différentes facettes des théologies qui se sont développées au coeur de la région thébaine dans le courant du Ier millénaire avant notre ère et plus spécifiquement dans les temples des époques ptolémaïque et romain


<em>Verba manent</em>. Recueil d'études dédiées à Dimitri Meeks par ses collègues et amis « Verba manent. Recueil d'études dédiées à Dimitri Meeks par ses collègues et amis », Textes réunis et édités par Isabelle Régen et Frédéric Servajean CENIM 2, Montpellier, 2009 — (16 décembre 2009) Consulter
Trente-six études dédiées par ses amis et collègues à l'égyptologue français Dimitri Meeks. Ces contributions portent sur l'histoire, l'archéologie, la religion, la langue (lexicographie, paléographie) et l'environnement naturel de l'Égypte pharaonique. Autant de domaines que Dimitri Meeks a enrichis par des apports décisifs avec un savoir et un talent unanimement reconnus.

L'Osiris ANTINOOS Jean-Claude Grenier, « L'Osiris ANTINOOS », CENIM 1, Montpellier, 2008 — (26 décembre 2008) Consulter
Cinq contributions pour approcher par des propositions nouvelles la question posée par l' « affaire Antinoos » et la fabrication du dernier des dieux : une traduction des inscriptions de l'obélisque romain (l'Obélisque Barberini) qui se dressait sur le site de la tombe d'Antinoos et raconte son apothéose, la question de l'emplacement de cette tombe peut-être à Rome dans les Jardins de Domitia, sur la rive droite du Tibre, où Hadrien fit élever son tombeau dynastique (le Château Saint Ange), une évocation des circonstances de la mort d'Antinoos sans doute à l'issue d'une chasse au lion qui se déroula dans la région d'Alexandrie au début du mois d'août 130, quelques remarques sur la nature « royale » d'Antinoos et une analyse du contexte alexandrin de l'année 130 qui pesant sur sa divinisation fit, peut-être, d'Antinoos un dieu « politique » au lendemain de la « Guerre Juive » qui avait ensanglanté l'Égypte et à la veille de l'ultime conflit qui allait éclater entre l'Empire et la Judée.



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