Monthly Archives: July 2013

Fighting Back Against Sexual Abuse

The linked video below says it is about “everyday sexism,” which as we know in America can be used for all sorts of meanings.  However, the things described in this video are not just sexism, but actual sexual abuse of women and girls by men across the world.  Please listen, though it may be difficult for you, and join in the effort to get rid of such disturbing behavior in our society.  Help protect the young girls and the adult women from abuse.  My thanks to my friend Chris Wilke for bringing this video and this campaign to my attention.

http://vimeo.com/67582923

Help Shout Back against indecent behavior towards women.  As a father, a husband and as a human being, I am outraged that this occurs at all, much less with so much frequency.

http://www.catapult.org/project/fighting-everyday-sexism

everdaysexismfunded copy 3

 

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Talking Toy Doll from 1890

Thomas Edison produced a talking doll, which he called The Greatest Wonder of the Age

1890:

Edison’s Phonograph Doll, “The Greatest Wonder of the Age”

1-620x426 8-e1341168659724 21 41-e1341168688161 51 Doll-1

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Digging up Goliath’s Home town

Archaeologists enlist volunteer help to uncover Biblical city

By Sasha Bogursky

Digging History

Published July 11, 2013

FoxNews.com 

 They still haven’t found the slingshot — maybe you will?

Archaeologists in Israel are busy excavating huge, fortified structures in the Biblical city of Libnah, which overlooks the Philistine capital of Gath, home to the tale of David famously slaying the giant Goliath with a well-slung stone.

And they could use a little help.

“One of our goals is to open the excavation to the public,” Itzhaq Shai, program director of the Tel Burna Excavation Project, told FoxNews.com. “Unlike most excavations, we are looking for people come to participate for even just a few hours. Hopefully they will be captivated and come back.”

Archaeology is no longer just for archaeologists, it seems; the initiative by Bar Ilan University is leading experts and volunteers on the excavation of the Biblical Judean city, known today as Tel Burna.

The site of Tel Burna is about an hour drive from Jerusalem and is thought to have served during the Iron Age as a border city between the kingdoms of Judah and the Philistines — a people remembered chiefly as the bad guys of the Hebrew Bible. The site has been well known since the middle of the 19th century, but excavations only began in 2009.

“No one excavated Tel Burna before because they didn’t think there would be too much to find,” Shai said.

It appears they were wrong. Since beginning the dig, Shai and his team have uncovered huge fortifications, building structures, idols, decanters, human and animal remains, and pottery with the seal of Judah from the 7th and 8th centuries B.C.E.

“We found jar handles with the stamped seal that is unique to the administration of Judah in the 7th century,” Shai explained. “Because of this, we are able to identify the [human] remains we found as belonging to the administration of the kingdoms of Judah.”

“We believe Tel Burna to be the Biblical Libnah for a number of reasons,” Shai explains. “Based on the location of the site, the dates of the artifacts we found and the very nice architectural elements that date to the 7th century; adding this all together we believe it to be Libnah.”

Recently, a group of high school graduates from Canada participated in a dig at the Tel Burna site

“I’ve always wanted to go on an archaeological dig,” Jordanna Miller told the Canadian Jewish News. “During the dig I was helping to break down a barrier between areas to uncover a wall. We found lots of pottery shards and some bones. We found the jaw of a goat in three pieces and a rather large storage jar. It was hard work and a lot of manual labor but amazing and I would love to do it again.”

“Our jobs included digging for ancient artifacts, sifting through the dirt and dusting off rocks,” student Ami Moyal told FoxNews.com.

Shai is glad to share the spotlight on the findings; he says people from all over the world volunteer to excavate.

“One of the reasons I chose my job is I get to make the past come alive.”

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2013/07/11/archaeologists-uncover-biblical-city/?intcmp=features#ixzz2YoUR0RUr

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Mummy Toe Rings?

Mummy Toe Rings? Mysterious Jewelry Found On 3,300-Year-Old Egyptian Skeletons

LiveScience  |  By Owen JarusPosted: 07/07/2013 9:32 am EDT  |  Updated: 07/09/2013 3:35 pm EDT

Archaeologists have discovered two ancient Egyptian skeletons, dating back more than 3,300 years, which were each buried with a toe ring made of copper alloy, the first time such rings have been found in ancient Egypt.

The toe rings were likely worn while the individuals were still alive, and the discovery leaves open the question of whether they were worn for fashion or magical reasons.

Supporting the magical interpretation, one of the rings was found on the right toe of a male, age 35-40, whose foot had suffered a fracture along with a broken femur above it. [See Images of Skeletons & Toe Rings]

Unique rings in a unique ancient city

Both skeletons were found in a cemetery just south of the ancient city of Akhetaten, whose name means “Horizon of the Aten.” Now called Amarna, the city of Akhetaten was a short-lived Egyptian capital built by Akhenaten a pharaoh who tried to focus Egypt’s religion around the worship of the sun disc, the “Aten.” He was also likely the father of Tutankhamun.

After Akhenaten’s death, this attempt to change Egyptian religion unraveled, as his successors denounced him and the city became abandoned. Even so, Anna Stevens, the assistant director of the Amarna Project, said the newly discovered rings are unlikely to be related to the religious changes Akhenaten introduced.

The findings do appear to be the first copper alloy toe rings discovered in ancient Egypt. “I’m not aware of any, but that doesn’t mean they don’t exist. Bear in mind that if we found something like this in a house, for example, we would have no idea of its purpose,”Stevens wrote in an email toLiveScience.

A gold toe ring was previously found on a mummy named Hornedjitef, a priest at Karnak more than 2,200 years ago. The mummy, which resides at the British Museum, has a “thick gold ring on the big toe of his left foot,” writes anthropologist Joyce Filer in her book “The Mystery of the Egyptian Mummy” (British Museum Press, 2003). [Images: The Faces of Egyptian Mummies Revealed]

A magical healing device?

The man whose right foot had been injured was likely in great pain when alive.

mummy toe rings

The male ancient Egyptian skeleton lived more than 3,300 years ago and died at the age of 35-40, before being buried with a ring on his right toe.

He “showed signs of multiple antemortem [before his death] fractures, including of several ribs, the left radius, right ulna, right foot (on which the toe ring was found) and right femur,” Stevens wrote. “The fracture of the right femur healed at an angle and must have caused this individual considerable ongoing pain.”

The ring was placed on the toe of the injured foot, suggesting perhaps it was intended as a magical healing device of sorts.

“The act of ‘binding’ or ‘encircling’ was a powerful magical device in ancient Egypt, and a metal ring, which can be looped around something, lends itself well to this kind of action,” Stevens said. “This is a possibility that we will look into further, checking through sources such as the corpus of magico-medical spells that have survived from ancient Egypt, to look for parallels.”

However, the skeleton of the second individual with the toe ring, found in 2012, bore no visible signs of a medical condition. Stevens notes that this individual has yet to be studied in depth by bio-archaeologists and its sex is unknown.

Who were they?

The skeletons were wrapped in textile and plant-stem matting, and both burials had been disturbed by tomb robbers.

None of the skeletons in the cemetery were technically “mummified” so to speak. “There is no evidence from the cemetery as a whole of attempts to mummify the bodies, in terms of the removal of internal organs (we quite often find remains of brain within the skulls) or the introduction of additives to preserve tissue (the bodies survive largely as skeletons),” Stevens wrote. “But in a way the wrapping of the bodies within textile and matting is a step towards preserving the shape of the body, and a form of simple mummification.” [In Photos: Mummy Evisceration Techniques]

Figuring out who these individuals were in life is tricky, Stevens said. This cemetery appears to represent a “wide slice” of the city’s society. These people were not wealthy enough to get buried in a rock-cut tomb but could afford, and were allowed, the simple burials seen at this cemetery.

“They [the two individuals] probably lived, like most citizens of Amarna, in a small house adjacent to that of a larger villa belonging to one of the city’s officials, for whom they provided services and labor in exchange for basic provisions, especially grain,” Stevens said.

In the case of the male with multiple fractures, his life appears to have been especially difficult and he also has signs of degenerative joint disease. It “suggests a life [of] labor was more likely for this individual than, say, an existence as a scribe,” Stevens said. In both cases, however, the individuals’ lives ended with each having a copper alloy ring on one of their toes.

The case of the male individual with the toe ring was published in the most recent edition of the Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. More information on the Amarna Project can be found at http://www.amarnaproject.com.

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Steampunk Aircrew

This is another recurring post on my blog of potential Steampunk Airship crew.  Please select crew for your next airship.  You can’t pick them all.  Keep in mind what purpose your ship will have – pirate, merchant, explorer, trader, military vessel, world conquest…etc.

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Universal Perspective

Some perspective 

Want to feel small?  The following provides some interesting perspective for our lives.

JUNE 9, 2013

 

FOLLOW  ON TAPITURE

 

 

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1898: Comedy Musical Called “The Air Ship”

c. 1898:

The Air Ship: A musical farce comedy

The-Air-Ship-620x923

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Funny Signs, Headlines and Newspapers

Some funny stuff for your hump day amusement:

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Birthday Present

By the way, if you are interested in wishing me Happy Birthday in a REALLY cool way…

Please check out my first book for just 99 cents on Kindle:  (That way you will give yourself the gift of a fun story as well.)  The book is an adventure story like Jules Verne, HG Wells, Sherlock Holmes, rated PG, with a fun science fiction twist referred to by many as “Steampunk.”

http://www.amazon.com/Travelers-Club-Ghost-Ship-ebook/dp/B0060QYM2K/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1373423033&sr=8-1&keywords=michael+bradley+travelers+club

kindle gs

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A Personal Landmark

Today, I turned half a century.  50 years have I tread upon this verdant land casting about to mold it in my image.  The time has flown.  I was pretty depressed about it for the last few weeks as I had to select life insurance, retirement options and health insurance.  I worked enough in various locations that I was able to officially retire today, although in fact, I left the normal working world a few years ago to be a full-time author.  There was that disgusting invite to join AARP.  Wow…

fifty

When you retire with a retirement plan, you have to select pay-out options.  To optimize your reward, you have to coldly predict how much longer you will be alive, how active you will be, what the inflation rate will be (if you are an Economist like me and want to calculate net-present values and income streams), whether you will outlive your spouse or die first, if you die first how much longer will they live than you and all those great things.  It makes you step back and evaluate the scarcity and rapidness of the human life and its implications on a more personal basis.

After awhile, you stop this introspective wallowing and get back mindlessly into the stream of moment-by-moment life you are more familiar with.  Luckily, for me, I was able to get over the maudlin aspects before this actual day so I was able to enjoy it.  I started out by filling out paperwork, completing a consulting job, then spending five hours with a client in a meeting.  Afterwards, we had some adult beverages with friends.  Now, tired, I sit at my keyboard, wife next to me, dogs at my feet, relaxing.

My wife does not ask anymore what I want for my birthday.  Having been born in July, growing up all my school friends were gone or on vacations during the summer, so I never had birthday parties.  I feel uncomfortable with parties held in my honor and even more so with receiving gifts.  So she asked me what I wanted to DO on my birthday.  It would have been wise to have an answer other than, “I don’t know.”  Instead, I end up by default with a pretty busy day of the usual.  Still, marking fifty years of life lived and gone could be disturbing, so it is probably better to just keep busy on such occasions and not mark them with too much pomp and circumstance.

fifty 2

There was a pleasant surprise though born on the wings of the modern social media phenomenon.  I look at my email, facebook, twitter, pinterest, stumbleupon, other emails, blog, other websites, phone messages, texts, ad nauseum each morning as I rise for a new day.  Today, I had forgotten it was birthday in my early wakeful grogginess.  It started with facebook where I saw that scores of folks had posted on my wall that morning.  What the?  I have a news feed that scrolls like a ticker tape but my own personal wall usually only gets a handful of posts per day.  I sat in mystified silence for a moment pondering this irregularity.  With a shock it came back to me that those must be well wishing birthday posts.  They were indeed.

It is nice to know that so many people throughout the day saw my little birthday reminder pop-up and took the time to send me a congratulations.  It was really nice.  When you make some angry you always know right away.  It is good to have a day where people just say nice things to you – because they have some regard.  Thanks to all of you traveling this wild ride of life with me.  I hope your day is wonderful.

 

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