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Armenia: cradle of civilization (archaeological discoveries)

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  • #11
    Re: Armenia: cradle of civilization (archaeological discoveries)

    Has it been confirmed that this is not an Azerbaijani shoe.

    ...... just checking
    Politics is not about the pursuit of morality nor what's right or wrong
    Its about self interest at personal and national level often at odds with the above.
    Great politicians pursue the National interest and small politicians personal interests

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    • #12
      Re: Armenia: cradle of civilization (archaeological discoveries)

      Originally posted by Muhaha View Post
      Watch out bro, I hear women in white latex gloves is a Zionist invention, meant to distract and brainwash the population so they can be allowed to further their Zionist Agenda, which is intertwined with the Masonic Agenda, which of course is really just an invention and extension of the Globalist Agenda.
      You might be onto something here...I wouldn't doubt that the researchers here also have an agenda. Israelis like using archeology as a cover. I'm glad the Armenian authorities are giving them a hard time. Who cares about the shoe, I want to see the human heads preserved in jars!

      Armenian cave yields oldest known leather shoe

      Archaeologists from UCLA and Ireland have discovered the world's oldest leather shoe, an exquisitely preserved, 5,600-year-old woman's Size 7 lace-up, in a cave in Armenia.

      The shoe, 1,000 years older than the great pyramid of Egypt and 400 years older than Stonehenge in the United Kingdom, was in such pristine condition that at first researchers thought it was just a few centuries old. It was stuffed with grass that may have been used to keep the wearer's foot warm or that might have been to preserve the shoe's shape for storage, the researchers reported Wednesday in the online journal PLoS One.

      Both grass and shoe were well preserved, like other organic materials discovered in preliminary excavations of the cave on the border between Armenia and Iran, including winemaking apparatus complete with grapes and three human heads preserved in jars.

      Most such materials degrade over time; the team attributed the unusual preservation to the cave's perennially cool temperature and low humidity and a concrete-like layer of sheep dung that sealed everything in and prevented fungi from destroying the remains.

      "The conditions in the cave ... are rather rare," allowing preservation of artifacts from a time period for which such materials are scarce, said UCLA archaeologist Charles Stanish, who was not involved in the research.

      "The potential to rewrite the early history of northern Mesopotamia is quite vast," he said.

      The artifacts date from the Chalcolithic or Copper Age, when the first metal tools began appearing. "The fourth millennium is when the modern world appears - the first cities, the first kings, the first axes, the first bureaucrats, and the first international trading system," Rothman said.

      The new paper focuses primarily on the shoe, however. Prior to the discovery, the oldest known footwear from Eurasia was found on Otzi, the Iceman discovered on a glacier in the Otztal Alps on the border between Austria and Italy. Those shoes are about 5,300 years old, but were in relatively poor shape. They were moccasin-type footwear in which the sole is attached to an upper "sock" with leather thongs.

      The oldest known footwear - more sandal than shoe - was discovered in Missouri and is about 6,900 years old. Made from woven fibers and leather, it is also in poor condition.

      Radiocarbon dating indicated that the newly-found shoe was from about 3,600 B.C. Its relatively sophisticated design, however, suggests that the style had already been in use for a long period, said UCLA archaeologist Gregory Areshian, the co-leader of the research team.

      Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/articl...#ixzz0qvMMmlZU
      Last edited by KanadaHye; 06-15-2010, 10:17 AM.
      "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

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