Discover New York’s Abundant Ancient and Unusual Treasures

The Finger Lakes region is known for its beauty, but look carefully and you will discover some of New York’s other abundant–and unusual–treasures. The cliffs of Excelsior Glen are scattered with ancient Indian pictographs, and Bluff Point conceals the ruins of an unknown civilization. The wine industry has its own strange stories; discover why one wine producer was banned from using his own name. Among the oddities of the Finger Lakes region are the world’s largest pancake, a slice of Susan B. Anthony’s seventy-eighth birthday cake and the anecdote of the boy who accidentally caught an eight-pound trout with his nose. Join author Melanie Zimmer and uncover these and other curiosities and strange tales of the Finger Lakes.

Melanie Zimmer is very active in the folklore and storytelling community. She is currently a member of the League for the Advancement of New England Storytelling, the Puppeteers of America, the Puppetry Guild of Upstate New York and the New York Folklore Society. She has published numerous books and articles and frequently presents and performs at libraries, schools, museums and historical societies.

Thanks to Cliff Dunning http://www.earthancients.com/

If DNA is Software, Who Wrote The Code ?

If you deeply understand what it means for life to operate with the precision and perfection of the software we have created in its image, it can open you up to a completely different view of nature and yourself.

We all use the precisely encoded instructions programmed by brilliant minds, and take it for granted – we simply call it “software.”

But now we have discovered that the same methods of processing information – programs and subroutines – instruct our bodies as DNA and in our brains as neural networks.

Thanks to Cliff Dunning http://www.earthancients.com/

Help Out a Friend on Twitter

Every topic is now getting overrun with cheats, there are many examples. These users are using dates such as November 19 2017 on videos that originally aired sometimes as far back as 2005. This has become very annoying, this is what we will focus on first. Follow us here and lets clean this place up. All help will be much appreciated. https://twitter.com/CleanYoutube

Palenque Astronaut Revisited – King Pakal’s Tomb

1414 years ago, amid a dense jungle of cedar, mahogany, and sapodilla trees, a Mayan king was born in Palenque, which is the modern-day State of Chiapas, Mexico. Born in 603 CE, and dying eighty years later after a reign of 68 years, K’inich Janaab Pakal I was considered the greatest king of Palenque. His reign was the longest known regnal period in the ancient America’s and the 30th longest in all the world to date.

Commonly known as King Pacal (which means ‘shield’), he is famous for transforming the city of Palenque into a great power through his building projects in the city (namely the Temple of the Inscriptions). But…perhaps his number one claim to fame in modern times is his elaborately carved sarcophagus lid.

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The Spread of Prehistoric Archd Innovations iaeological Cultures ann Artefacts

In the history of archaeological theory the term migrationism was opposed to the term diffusionism (or “immobilism”) as a means of distinguishing two approaches to explaining the spread of prehistoric archaeological cultures and innovations in artefact. Migrationism explains cultural change in terms of human migration, while diffusionism relies on explanations based on trans-cultural diffusion of ideas rather than populations (pots, not people).

Western archaeology the first half of the 20th century relied on the assumption of migration and invasion as driving cultural change. This was criticized by the processualist in the 1960s and 1970s, leading to a new mainstream which rejected “migrationism” as outdated. Since the 1990s, there has been renewed interest in “migrationist” scenarios, as archaeologists attempted the archaeological reflexes of migrations known to have occurred historically.

Thanks to Cliff Dunning http://www.earthancients.com/