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  • General news: the Legacy of Howard Carter

    Free Internet Press

    Howard Carter, the British explorer who opened the tomb of Tutankhamun in 1922, will forever be associated with the greatest trove of artifacts from ancient Egypt. But was he also a thief?

    Dawn was breaking as Howard Carter took up a crowbar to pry open the sealed tomb door in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings. With shaking hands, he held a candle to the fissure, now wafting out 3,300-year-old air. What did he see, those behind him wanted to know. The archaeologist could do no more than stammer, “Wonderful things!”

    This scene from Thebes in November, 1922, is considered archaeology’s finest hour. Howard Carter, renowned as the “last, greatest treasure seeker of the modern age,” had arrived at his goal.

    Carter obtained about 5,000 objects from the four burial chambers, including furniture, jars of perfume, flyswatters, and ostrich feathers – the whole place was a dream of jasper, lapis lazuli, and turquoise. He even discovered a ceremonial staff adorned with beetles’ wings.

    The “unexpected treasures,” as Carter described them, suddenly brought to light an Egyptian king previously almost unknown – Tutankhamun, born approximately 1340 B.C., who ascended the throne as a child.

    UPI.com

    The man responsible for discovering King Tut’s tomb may have deceived Egyptian authorities to steal treasured relics for himself, experts say.

    British explorer Howard Carter discovered the Pharaoh Tutankhamun’s tomb in 1922 in one of the world’s most famous archaeological finds, but may have systematically removed objects without authorization, Der Spiegel reported Sunday.

    Carter had intended the contents of the tomb to go to England and the United States, but Egypt refused, insisting all artifacts remain in the country. Thwarted, Carter and his team then secretly helped themselves to many of the relics, some of which ended up in museums outside Egypt, the newspaper said.

  • How Scott Brown’s victory can help get climate legislation over the finish line

    by Jon Isham

    So was that it?  With the stunning Scott Brown victory in Massachusetts, have we already reached the end of the Obama era?  After all—play dramatic cord—the Democrats no longer have 60 votes!

    I say good riddance.  Sure, if you’re a climate-movement activist, it’s not hard to be bummed, big time, by Brown’s victory.  Here’s a guy that went from a supporter of the Northeast’s Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative—“Reducing carbon dioxide emissions in Massachusetts has long been a priority of mine”—to Limbaugh-lite— “I think the globe is always heating and cooling. … It’s a natural way of ebb and flow.”  Mitt Romney, Scott Brown—what is it about these Massachusetts Republicans?  Could it be that they are actually … politicians?!

    Well, yes.  As it turns out, most politicians do actually change with the electoral tides.  And this time, the regular ebb and flow of Massachussets voter sentiment was swamped by the real emotions of these tough, tough times: There’s a tsunami of voter anger out there about jobs, Wall Street, and political business as usual.  Scott Brown needed to only slightly alter his course to catch this wave.

    So how can this anger actually help rally the country in support of climate legislation?  Think of the Brown mandate not as the triumph of the Tea-Baggers, but as a 2010 call for change on top of 2008’s still-very-real call for Obama-fired change.  For when Jesse Jackson and the rest of the nation shed joyful tears as we watched Obama’s victory speech 14 months ago, we weren’t celebrating the fact that Democrats would have 60 votes in the Senate.  Far from it—we were rejoicing in the idea that America was poised to help “build the world anew.”

    Guess what?  It hasn’t happened yet, and as we saw yesterday from all parts of Massachusetts, voters are angry (or indifferent—I’m sure that polls will show that the core Democratic base was simply not inspired by this race).

    And that fact, I think, actually augurs well for climate-change legislation.  For here, in a nutshell, is what voters are angry about: 

    The economy has not recovered Wall Street is still having its way The Democratic leadership is out of touch

    As quoted it today’s New York Times, here’s 73-year-old Marlene
    Connolly, a lifelong Democrat who voted Republican for the first time. “I’m hoping that it gives a message to the country. … If Massachusetts
    puts Brown in, it’s a message of ‘that’s enough.’ Let’s stop the
    giveaways and let’s get jobs going.”  

    Even more than the now-teetering health-care bill, the current global-warming legislative strategy—Waxman/Markey/Boxer/Kerry/Graham/Lieberman—is about giveways, literally.  In order to get—play that same dramatic chord again—the 60th vote, thinking to date has been to give away revenues generated by capping greenhouse-gas emissions to beltway powers-that-be: electrical utilities, labor, industry, coal, and—in part because the whole thing rests on a complex trading scheme—Wall Street.  Billions of dollars per month into the hands of clients of K Street, Wall Street, and Don Blankenship’s coal-paved Easy Street.  Want to know just how anti-consumer the current formulation is?  Check out the good work of Tyson Slocum and his colleagues at Public Citizen

    I have the greatest respect for green leaders and climate-friendly politicians of all kinds (it is significant that the current bill is being shaped by a Democrat, a Republican, and an Independent).  For over a decade, they have worked so hard to get us where we are: a global-warming bill passed last summer in the House and one had a good chance of passing in the Senate—well, maybe until about 9:00 p.m. last night.  We owe hard-working staffers who have helped get us this far the greatest thanks and respect.  And moreover, we will need their wisdom and wherewithal to get us to the next level.

    But ultimately, these leaders cannot outfox the times.  And these times do call for something new, an approach that is anti-giveaway and pro-pocketbook, an approach that is not built for special interests and Wall Street but rather built for Main Street. 

    And we’ve got it in the CLEAR Act.  If there was ever a piece of legislation that celebrates simplicity and transparency while promoting the fortunes of the average American household, this is it.  It’s simple to explain.  Senator-elect Brown, check this out:

    Put a cap on sources of global warming pollution as they are introduced into the economy Give 75 percent of revenues generated from that cap to Americans with a Social Security number, equally, a few hundred bucks a year to every kid and adult alike
    Invest the remaining 25 percent in clean-energy and sequestration stuff that we need—and that will help us take on the Chinese and others in the job-creating green-arms race

    Pretty simple, huh?  Pretty cool.

    Survey after survey—even after all of the Climate Cover-Up pushback—shows that Americans do want to fight global warming and they do believe in the prospects for green jobs and clean energy.  But hard as it is for us climate junkies to admit it, something trumps even this: the desire for straight-shooting from our leaders, the desire for integrity.  And this is what I and so many others see in the Cantwell-Collins CLEAR Act (see this good recent analysis from Michael Livermore): a built-in integrity that has a real chance to connect with restless, even angry, voters—and to give each family of four, on average, about $1100 per year. 

    In the quest for the 60th health-care vote, the Obama revolution did not arrive.  Nor will it arrive, for better or worse, in the quest for a 60th cap-and-trade vote.  But perhaps, in the words of my favorite kick-ass tune, the revolution starts now—in a simple, clear piece of legislation that favors Main Street over Wall Street and special interests, that is pro-jobs and pro-family, not pro-lobbyist. 

    What do you think, all you good climate activists in Massachusetts—ready to try all of this on Scott Brown?

    Related Links:

    Did China block Copenhagen progress to pave way for its own dominance in cleantech?

    Clean Energy Business Zones: A tool for economic growth

    Time to bust the filibuster






  • In the lab: Looking for birds in a mummy

    necn.com

    Video, with partial transcript.

    Back in 2006 Gerry Conlogue and Ron Beckett used x-rays, a c-t scanner and endoscope to look inside Pa Ib. He’s a mummy that has been on display at the PT Barnum Museum in Bridgeport, Connecticut since 1896. Conlogue and Beckett are scientists. Three years ago they were looking for clues into Pa Ib’s identity. The radiologist who looked at the x-rays then came across something startling. There is a packet of some kind inside Pa Ib’s abdomen.

    Prof. Gerald Conlogue, Quinnipiac University: He thought he saw a falcon mummy in there so instead of an organ packet he thought it was an actual mummified bird within the body cavity. This is what we’re going to be looking for.

    Although it is rare scientists have found bird mummies connected to human mummies in the past.

    Yahoo! News

    Researchers are using the latest imaging technology on an Egyptian mummy to try to unlock secrets of the ancient world, including whether a mysterious packet inside her was an offering to the gods to help secure a place in the afterlife.

    The high-resolution testing Thursday at Quinnipiac University also may determine the age at which the woman died and whether she gave birth, researchers say.

    “It really is going to give us a fantastic view of this mummy,” said Ronald Beckett, co-director of the Bioanthropology Research Institute at Quinnipiac. “Every mummy has a story to tell. Every piece of information adds to our understanding of the ancient Egyptians.”

    The mummy, known as Pa-Ib (pronounced py eeb) and believed to be about 4,000 years old, will be transported Thursday in a coffin complete with a police escort from the Barnum Museum in Bridgeport to the university’s campus in North Haven. A CT scanner will take images that are eight times the resolution of tests done on the mummy in 2006, and a tiny camera will be inserted inside the mummy.

    Researchers are trying to determine if bundles in the abdomen and pelvis cavities contain a bird mummy or are organs. The earlier tests led to speculation that the bundles might contain a bird mummy.

    And the results:

    SFGate (John Christoffersen)

    Researchers who examined an Egyptian mummy with the latest imaging technology found no evidence that a packet inside her was an offering to the gods of the ancient world.
    More News

    Previous tests led to speculation that the packet was a bird mummy — something researchers said would be an unusual and exciting find — but high-resolution tests Thursday at Quinnipiac University showed no remnants of a bird. Instead, researchers said the packet and a few others in the mummy likely contained organs, which were sometimes preserved and placed back in mummies for use in the afterlife.

    The mummy, known as Pa-Ib and believed to be about 4,000 years old, has been in the Barnum Museum in Bridgeport since the 1890s and was a prized exhibit of the flamboyant showman P.T. Barnum.

    It was transported Thursday in a coffin complete with a police escort from the museum to the university’s campus in North Haven.

    A CT scanner took thousands of images that are eight times the resolution of tests done in 2006, and a tiny camera was inserted inside the mummy’s skull. Researchers expect to report their conclusions in March.

  • HOTT 7 inch MID runs Windows CE 6.0, costs only $250

    Chinese electronics maker HOTT has shown of a new Windows CE 6.0 powered tablet at CES.  The device features a 7 inch screen and 8 hours of battery life for WIFI web browsing, or 3 hours of video, which includes 1080p video decoding and HDMI output.

    The 800 Mhz ARM A9 device also features USB Host, which can be used for keyboards, mice and also USB 3G Dongles, also also a consumer Infra-Red transmitter, so with the right software could be used as a universal remote.

    The device accepts SD cards, which means internal storage can easily be expanded to 32 GB.

    The HOTT M700 will be sold to OEM’s for as little as $120, and should reach end consumers for only $250.

    Via Ubergizmo.com and liliputing.com

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