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Head For Threads - by Harmony Rocks

 

Between sunrise and sunset and sunrise, there does exist beautiful news in this world

Early American Autopsies

November 3rd 2006 21:51
It was a bitter in the winter of 1604-05 in St. Croix Island, near Portland Maine. A combination of malnutrition and harsh weather claimed the lives of almost half of the 79 French settlers led by Pierre Dugua and Samuel Champlain that year.

The results of these deaths? Early American autopsies. US and Canadian forensic anthropologists have confirmed a skull discovered during excavations by the National Park Service in June, 2003, belonged to a man who had been the subject in a series of autopsies to determine the cause of so many deaths over such a short period of time.


The first snow fell in October in 1604; thirty-five of the settlers died and scientists have since concluded their deaths were caused by scurvy. Champlain’s writings describe the dire situation of that winter and further state that his barber/surgeon was ordered to "open several of the men to determine the cause of their illness."

According to Thomas Crist of Utica College in upper New York state, “this is the same procedure that forensic pathologists use to conduct autopsies today”. Crist led the anthropological team who analyzed the remains.

The graves were originally excavated in 1969 by a team from Temple University in Pennsylvania and the remains re-interred by the National Park Service after consultation with the French and Canadian governments. The excavation project, in 2003, was led by Steven Pendery from the National Park Service's Northeast Region Archaeology Program.

St. Croix Island is protected by the National Park Service as part of Saint Croix Island International Historic Site.

The National Park Service announced the autopsies will be the subject of a program on the Discovery Health Channel series "Skeleton Stories" on November 10.
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The Statue of Liberty celebrated its 120th dedication birthday on October 28. A milestone in its right, but, adding to the celebration is that America’s greeter’s torch is now lit by windmill-generated energy.

For history buffs, the Statue was dedicated in New York harbor by President Grover Cleveland on October 28, 1886.
windmills - pennsylvania to ellis island



For those envirnmental people, the celebration is a windfall of natural resources.

Since this past March, the torch has been lit by power from windmills in western Pennsylvania. The windmills, part of a governmental credit system, provide electricity for the whole of Ellis Island, as well as the famous statue. The statue and the island use enough electricity each year to power 1,000 homes,

Windmill power is part of a government program that ensures one-third of the energy used in government facilities in the Northeast and Caribbean region is from renewable sources.

Statue Of Liberty Torch
The statue, 305 feet tall, was commissioned by France to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the America's Declaration of Independence. It was, however, completed and assembled more than 10 years late.
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The Statue of Liberty celebrated its 120th dedication birthday on October 28. A milestone in its right, but, adding to the celebration is that America’s greeter’s torch is now lit by windmill-generated energy.

For history buffs, the Statue was dedicated in New York harbor by President Grover Cleveland on October 28, 1886.
windmills - pennsylvania to ellis island


For those envirnmental people, the celebration is a windfall of natural resources.

Since this past March, the torch has been lit by power from windmills in western Pennsylvania. The windmills, part of a governmental credit system, provide electricity for the whole of Ellis Island, as well as the famous statue. The statue and the island use enough electricity each year to power 1,000 homes,

Windmill power is part of a government program that ensures one-third of the energy used in government facilities in the Northeast and Caribbean region is from renewable sources.

Statue Of Liberty Torch
The statue, 305 feet tall, was commissioned by France to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the America's Declaration of Independence. It was, however, completed and assembled more than 10 years late.
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The Statue of Liberty celebrated its 120th dedication birthday on October 28. A milestone in its right, but, adding to the celebration is that America’s greeter’s torch is now lit by windmill-generated energy.

For history buffs, the Statue was dedicated in New York harbor by President Grover Cleveland on October 28, 1886.
windmills - pennsylvania to ellis island

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Less than ten years after cats were introduced to Socorro Island, the native Socorro dove, a rare Mexican bird, was driven to extinction. The dove was recently bred successfully at London Zoo. Named Arnie, for Arnold Schwarzenegger, the bird is raising hopes of successful captive breeding to increase its numbers; to date, its thought there are fewer than 100 of the Socorro dove in captivity.

The last sighting of the dove was in 1972 in Socorro, in the Revillagigedo Islands, 600 miles off the west coast of Mexico. Socorro Island was the only home to the chestnut-colored bird. Now, this island is among the highest conservation priorities worldwide.
socorro dove
Socorro Dove

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Every day, I try to do something to improve my blogs and to make them better for everyone.

Some of those changes are quiet and behind the curtains; they're not obvious to you at all. This post is an example of one of those changes.

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The long-held idea that there’s a link between our relationships with each other and our physical health is now being backed by research. Neuroscientists have discovered we have a class of brain cells, mirror neurons, that can track othings like emotional flow, movement and intentions of a person we’re with. These mirror neurons replicate those we sense in others by stirring in our brain the same active areas in the other person. This emotional closeness allows the biology of one person to influence that of another.

The mechanism of these neurons might explain why we can “pick up vibes” from someone else, kind of an emotional contagion. By allowing for rapid synchronization of another’s posture, voice, and movements, the neurons might account for feelings of rapport by allowing for the interpersonal orchestration of shifts in physiology.

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We Are Not Neanderthal

October 29th 2006 03:27
New discoveries and studies are suggesting that Neanderthals and humans had a common ancestor, but it was about 400,000 years ago. This indicates that the hairy Eurasian hunters had an early genetic split from modern humans and backs up the idea that the Neanderthal were not Homo sapiens. Scientists in another study, however (see Finlayson study below) believe that humans and Neanderthals shared a common ancestor and overlapped for several thousand years in Europe.

Geneticist James Noonan, of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, extracted DNA from fossilized Neanderthal bones. His early results indicate very little genetic contribution from Neanderthal to human.

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Ancient Pet Cemetery Unearthed In Peru

October 27th 2006 05:38
Last month, National Geographic News reported that archaeologists have found more than 40 mummified dogs buried a thousand years ago by the Chiribaya, an ancient people of Peru. The dogs were buried with treats and blankets for the afterlife. They were found next to their human owners in a thousand-year-old pet cemetery the archaeologists discovered while excavating a human cemetery south of Lima, Peru.

The discovery speaks to the high status the Chiribaya culture placed on their dogs, which were prized for their skill in herding llamas. It’s speculated that the Chiribaya shepherds have descendants still living today and that the dogs constitute a unique breed


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Ancient Tombs Found By Thieves

October 26th 2006 03:34
Thieves in Egypt recently led archaeologists to the 4,200 year old gravesite of three royal dentists. The graves were found in Saqqara, an ancient royal cemetery south of Cairo.

In an article Monday in the National Geographic News, Stefan Lovgren quoted Zahi Hawass as saying, “it seems for the first time that the ancient Egyptians made a cemetery to the dentists and they were buried in the shadow of the Step Pyramid“. Hawass is chief of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities and an explorer-in-residence with the National Geographic Society. The Step Pyramid is thought to be Egypt’s oldest.

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