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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Airfield near Stalingrad

So the car Opel-Blitz is well preserved for 65 years while the land it was blown up and it remained only the front part

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this omission was German soldiers wounded or for another reason for the departure of Stalingrad environment, it probably is not able to use the

the last plane took off from the airport GUMRAK and before that the entire deployment of German troops was at the airfield Pitomnik

Africa, dating back to 60,000 years ago

An interesting story begins to emerge from these relatively isolated data. It doesn't have to be the right story at this stage as I think it's important that people begin to look at the various pieces of the puzzle with the idea of putting them together. We need to radically reorganize how we think about our ancestors and we'll have to try out some ideas and discard them before we come up with the most plausible explanation.

Still, I think it's fairly clear that from about 200,000 BCE through 70,000 BCE human populations went through periods of migration and diversification. They must have been increasing their numbers both in the north (Neanderthals) and in the warmer regions of Africa and Asia (modern humans) and expanding away from their traditional centers of habitation. And then the Toba event happened. This massive supervolcano erupted and probably threw the planet into a downward spiral of cold temperatures. That may explain why sources disagree on the dating of the last glacial and previous interglacial periods.

Most modern humans probably died. Scientists estimate as few as 10,000 people (comprising about 2,000 mating couples and close relatives) survived to carry on the human race. Now, that does not mean that all 10,000 people had to be located in Africa. Nor does it mean that they all had to be modern humans. And it could be that a larger number of people survived. Still, it seems certain that the most significant human population to survive was probably located in south Africa, perhaps near the coast. They could have spread north as the lands recovered and their numbers increased.

It could be that in the years following the super volcano's eruption human groups that were near to each other worked together to improve their chances of surviving. These human groups could have taken the first steps toward forming social organizations that eventually became clans, tribes, and nations (in the modern era). Until that time, lacking agriculture and the means to grow food in large quantities, human groups would have had to remain small.

Research into the psychology of human relationships led Dr. Robin Dunbar to propose a practical limit to the number of relationships the modern human brain can manage: 148. Rounded up, this number has been called Dunbar's Number or the Monkeysphere. Dunbar's research suggests that -- depending on brain size -- animals can work together groups that have practical limits. Of course, social insects like ants and bees would seem to defy this principle but they are extremely alien to mammalian physiology. Among primates, the principle holds up well under close scrutiny.

In hunter-gatherer groups, for example, the maximum size is reached around 30-50 individuals (the same as among chimpanzees). If you add the ability for the group to obtain more food than hunter-gatherers normally can, the maximum group size increases to about 150. Sociologists point to Hutterite communities, which sub-divide after their populations exceed 150 because (the Hutterites say) their ability to control behavior through public shunning diminishes as the group grows beyond 150. The next larger division, requiring moderate social organization, achieves a range of between 500 and 2500 individuals. Dunbar calls these three groups bands, cultural lineage groups, and tribes.
I find it doubtful that actual tribes developed among ancient humans after the Topa Event but their clans (cultural lineage groups) may have been able to sustain themselves in coastal environments if the waters remained warm enough to support large numbers of fish and shellfish. In fact, Neanderthal diets were extensively dependent upon large game animals while early modern human diets included smaller animals, fish, and seafood. In a rich coastal environment, large numbers of early modern humans could have lived closer together and shared food resources when need arose.

This is a significant factor in social development, obviously, because as people live close together in larger numbers the potential for conflict and competition for resources arises. As the population of the coastal peoples increased they may have split off colony groups that emigrated northward, and yet those splinter groups may have stayed in contact with their parent groups for both social and economic reasons.

British discoveries

When young Craig Barnard joined a wildlife and history group, he was
hopeful of spotting a rare bird, digging up a few bits of old pottery or
maybe even finding out how our ancestors made spears.

But deep in the woods on a field trip, the 11-year-old made a find that
was to overturn one of the county's historians' most popular beliefs.

The ancient arrowhead unearthed by Craig and his friends led to the
discovery of that a Neolithic and Iron Age site described by experts as
"without question of the most important of its kind found in Norfolk".

Historians had long believed that the site in Breckland had been covered
in woodland for an aeon, but the discovery made by youngsters from
the Watton-based Wayland RSPB Wildlife Explorers' and Wildlife Group
proves that more recently it was open land favoured by Neolithic and
Iron Age settlers.

These important finds were put on public display for the first time at
Watton Junior School yesterday alongside brooches, Roman coins,
spearheads and even second world war shellcases– all found by the
Wayland children's group set up by keen historian Sean O'Reilly.
An unspoilt Northumbrian valley has been hailed as one of the finest ancient landscapes in Europe.

In July the final excavation in a 10-year series will start in the Breamish Valley as part of a programme of discovery spanning 10,000 years.

The wealth of finds and knowledge gained has stunned experts from Durham University, Northumberland Archaeology Group and Northumberland National Park who have been partners in the project.

"We knew when we started that it was a special landscape. Although we have only scratched the surface in a few tiny places we can now say that it is unsurpassed in interest throughout Europe," said national park archaeologist Paul Frodsham.

"There is nothing better in Europe. We will never know the full story because of a jigsaw of 1,000 pieces we now have only about two."

The venture has unearthed Bronze Age burial cairns of around 4,000 years ago on Turf Knowe, overlooking the valley, which contained five intact cremation urns now being examined at Durham. The burial site itself used what had been a summer hunting camp for Stone Age people from 7,000 years ago.

Stone Age Graveyard Reveals Lifestyles Of A 'Green Sahara'

The largest Stone Age graveyard found in the Sahara, which provides an unparalleled record of life when the region was green, has been discovered in Niger by National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence and University of Chicago Professor Paul Sereno, whose team first happened on the site during a dinosaur-hunting expedition.

The remarkable archaeological site, dating back 10,000 years and called Gobero after the Tuareg name for the area, was brimming with skeletons of humans and animals — including large fish and crocodiles. Gobero is hidden away within Niger’s forbidding Ténéré Desert, known to Tuareg nomads as a “desert within a desert.” The Ténéré is the setting of some of Sereno’s key paleontological discoveries, including the 500-toothed, plant-eating dinosaur Nigersaurus that lived 110 million years ago and the enormous extinct crocodilian Sarcosuchus, also known as SuperCroc.

The discovery of the lakeside graveyard — representing two successive human populations divided by more than 1,000 years — is reported in the September 2008 issue of National Geographic magazine and the Aug. 14 issue of the journal PLoS ONE.

As they explored the site, the team tiptoed among dozens of fossilized human skeletons laid bare on the surface of an ancient dune field by the hot Saharan wind. Jawbones still clenched nearly full sets of teeth; a tiny hand reached up through the sand, its finger bones intact. On the surface lay harpoon points, potsherds, beads and stone tools. The site was pristine, apparently never visited.
A suite of five ancient crocs, including one with teeth like boar tusks and another with a snout like a duck's bill, have been discovered in the Sahara by National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Paul Sereno. The five fossil crocs, three of them newly named species, are remains of a bizarre world of crocs that inhabited the southern land mass known as Gondwana some 100 million years ago.

Sereno, a professor at the University of Chicago, and his team unearthed the strange crocs in a series of expeditions beginning in 2000 in the Sahara. Many of the fossils were found lying on the surface of a remote, windswept stretch of rock and dunes. The crocs galloped and swam across present-day Niger and Morocco when broad rivers coursed over lush plains and dinosaurs ruled.

"These species open a window on a croc world completely foreign to what was living on northern continents," Sereno said. The five crocs, along with a closely related sixth species, will be detailed in a paper published in the journal ZooKeys and appear in the November 2009 issue of National Geographic magazine.
The pharaohs of ancient Egypt owed their existence to prehistoric climate change in the eastern Sahara, according to an exhaustive study of archaeological data that bolsters this theory.

Starting at about 8500 B.C., researchers say, broad swaths of what are now Egypt, Chad, Libya, and Sudan experienced a "sudden onset of humid conditions." (See a map of Africa.)

For centuries the region supported savannahs full of wildlife, lush acacia forests, and areas so swampy they were uninhabitable.

During this time the prehistoric peoples of the eastern Sahara followed the rains to keep pace with the most hospitable ecosystems.

Troy and the Trojan war

The ruins of Troy now perch on the edge of a plateau overlooking a river flood plain.
Homer knew his geography, say US researchers. The ancient Greek writer's description of the war fought around Troy is consistent with a new reconstruction of the way the region looked about three millennia ago1.

In his Iliad, Homer recounts how the city of Troy was besieged and finally conquered by the army of the Spartan king Menelaus, who sought to reclaim his wife Helen from her abductor, prince Paris. This is thought to have happened around 1250 BC.

Homer's account of the siege and battles give several clues about the lay of the Trojan plain. Then, in the first century AD, the Greek writer Strabo expanded on the description in his book Geography, by which time Troy was known as New Ilium.

Ancient Troy is thought to have stood at a site called Hissarlik in present-day Turkey; archaeological excavations have revealed the remains of a city. There are, in fact, several different ancient Troys, as the settlement was built and destroyed many times since the third millennium BC. These ruins now perch on the edge of a plateau overlooking a river flood plain of sand, silt and marshland.

When Troy was first built around 3000 BC, say John Kraft, of the University of Delaware in Newark, and his colleagues, it was on the coast of a great bay that filled most of the plain.

Today, however, Troy's environs look very different. Little by little, silt from the Simois and Scamander rivers (today called the Dumrek Su and Kara Menderes), which flow into the bay, moved the Dardanelles coastline several kilometres north, leaving Troy high and dry.