Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Sunday, 24 January 2016

Sir David Attenborough was there to help dig up the largest creature ever...Titanosaur

Dad's biggest adventure yet: It was as long as four double-decker buses while its heart alone weighed as much as three men - and Sir David Attenborough was there to help dig up the largest creature ever

  • Titanosaur is believed to be the biggest animal to have walked on Earth
  • 37m long, the length of four double-decker buses, and weighing 70 tonnes  
  • Attenborough And The Giant Dinosaur is on tomorrow, 6.30pm, BBC1
Almost two years ago, in an arid stretch of Patagonia some 700 miles south-west of Buenos Aires in Argentina, a shepherd was looking for a lost sheep. 
In such a huge expanse the search was almost certain to have been in vain. However, as he hunted, the shepherd was to stumble upon something far more interesting than some missing livestock.
Jutting out of the hard earth was a piece of bone - but this was no ordinary piece of bone. It was immediately clear to the shepherd that it had not belonged to some everyday animal such as a cow, or indeed a sheep. 
The titanosaur would have stomped its way around what is now southern Argentina 101m years ago
The titanosaur would have stomped its way around what is now southern Argentina 101m years ago
For a start, the bone was vast, seriously vast. And it looked old, very old indeed. The shepherd knew at once that it must have belonged to a dinosaur, although he did not have a clue what species it might be from. 
The man's ignorance was surely forgivable, for even when a team from the Museum of Palaeontology Egidio Feruglio in the Argentine city of Trelew arrived, they too were stumped. It was clear they were dealing with no run-of-the-mill, easily identifiable dinosaur.
For well over a year the team drilled, scraped, dug and jackhammered out a large quarry and found, to their astonishment, the remains of not just one, but seven huge dinosaurs, all belonging to a new and as-yet unnamed species of a giant plant-eating beast.But what makes the find even more exciting is that the enormous creature - appropriately classed as a 'titanosaur' - is believed to be the biggest to have ever walked on this planet. At 37m long, the length of four double-decker buses, and weighing 70 tonnes (the equivalent of 14 African elephants), the titanosaur would have stomped and thundered its way around what is now southern Argentina 101 million years ago.
One person who above all would have loved to have seen the dinosaur in the flesh is Sir David Attenborough who, at 89, may possibly be television's oldest presenter, but not quite old enough to have witnessed the Cretaceous period. 
Sir David with a replica thigh bone from a titanosaur. One of the titanosaur's thigh bones is a whopping 8ft long
Sir David with a replica thigh bone from a titanosaur. One of the titanosaur's thigh bones is a whopping 8ft long
Instead, tomorrow evening Sir David will be doing the next best thing, presenting a documentary on BBC1 in which he joins the palaeontologists as they not only unearth the magnificent creature, but also establish what it looked like along with other fascinating discoveries such as the workings of its cardiovascular system and its diet. 
'Like many people young and old, I'm fascinated by dinosaurs,' says Sir David. 'So the chance to join this investigation was too good an opportunity to miss.'
The word 'investigation' is most certainly the correct one, for as one of the team leaders Dr Diego Pol says, the dig was like 'a palaeontological crime scene'. And, just as with a crime scene, Dr Pol's team had to take immense care with everything they saw and touched, for fear of losing any vital evidence or clues that might help them reconstruct the titanosaur. 
What a thrill it would have been to have seen it alive
Sir David Attenborough 
One of the investigation's biggest enemies was the weather. Even though the area where the fossils were found is desert-like, just a light amount of rain could wreak havoc on fragile fossils that have been buried for over 100 million years.
In order to protect them, the bones were shrouded in - of all things - wet toilet paper and plaster of Paris. This created a protective shell which was only finally removed when the huge bones arrived back at the museum. And the bones most certainly are huge. 
One of the titanosaur's thigh bones is a whopping 8ft long, and some of the most engaging scenes in the programme are those that show several palaeontologists huffing and puffing over a single vertebra which, on a human, would weigh no more than a few grams. 'When you stand by one of these bones, you feel really tiny,' says Dr Pol.
Joining David to help reveal how a pile of vast bones might have looked as a living creature is the evolutionary biologist and bones expert Ben Garrod. For Ben, who's currently finishing his doctorate and is a teaching fellow at Anglia Ruskin University, part of the thrill of making the programme wasn't just about the bones, but also about the chance to work with David. 
The team uncovering the bones in Argentina, 700 miles south-west of Buenos Aires
The team uncovering the bones in Argentina, 700 miles south-west of Buenos Aires
'I know it sounds corny, but working with David really was incredible,' he says. 'He has so much knowledge and a childlike desire to learn more and more. And he's just the same off-camera as he is on it - he's constantly looking at the fossils and quizzing the palaeontologists. He doesn't just sit there!'
In the course of the investigation, Ben shows David how certain bones display vast lumps and bumps, which would have been used as anchor points to hold the huge amount of muscle the creature would have required to support its skeleton. 
Keeping such a huge body on the move would have required an enormous amount of energy and oxygen, and it is here that the sheer scale of this beast makes you gasp. As it was a herbivore, it would have had to have eaten some 680 kilos of vegetation a day to supply it with enough energy - that's five times what an elephant needs to eat. 
Furthermore, that food would have taken some ten days to pass through its enormous gut. That would have meant that at any given moment, the titanosaur would have been digesting nine skipfuls of plant matter. One can only shudder at the alimentary consequences.

RECONSTRUCTING THE TITANOSAUR 

The 122-foot-long dinosaur stands 20 feet tall and likely weighed 70 tons, according to the Wall Street Journal, about the same as 10 African elephants.
Its thigh bone is nearly 8 feet long.
To build the display, the bones were recreated through plaster casts and 3-D printing.
Scientists from the Museo Paleontológico Egidio Feruglio and a team at the American Museum of Natural History collaborated with a Canadian company, Research Casting International worked with what they had, using existing bones to create what wasn't there.
Now, the Titanosaur will be shown to the public in a walking pose, with its neck stretched out toward the museum's fourth-floor elevators.
This is the only way the dinosaur would fit in the building.
Some of the best-preserved bones will also be on display, amongst them being the massive femur.
The Titanosaur is so large that it will not fit into one room in the American Museum of Natural History ; its head will reach the ceiling, poking out of the gallery and into the hall along with part of the neck
The Titanosaur is so large that it will not fit into one room in the American Museum of Natural History ; its head will reach the ceiling, poking out of the gallery and into the hall along with part of the neck
Unsurprisingly, the dinosaur's heart would have been epically large. Weighing in at 230 kilos - the combined weight of three adult men - it would have pumped 90 litres of blood around the beast's body with a beat every five seconds. To put that into perspective, the average human heart pumps 70ml of blood per beat.
But what makes the find even more gobsmacking is that the dinosaur the team examined was still not fully grown. 'We can look at the growth rings in bones just as we can look at the growth rings in trees,' says Ben, 'and that enables us to establish that this dinosaur was a young adult, which meant that it might have got a little larger had it not died.'
So how did it - and the six other dinosaurs at the site - die? That's a question the investigators tackle, but unfortunately it seems impossible to come up with a definitive answer. Heavy waters could have drowned the dinosaurs and washed them all down to the same spot, or the site could have been the last dwindling water source during a particularly dry period. Whatever the truth, the titanosaur's untimely demise is of course our fossilised gain, and the programme's crowning moment is when we see Sir David standing next to a computer-generated version. 'What a thrill it would have been to have seen it when it was once alive,' he says, radiating that boyish enthusiasm.
What the programme does not reveal is the dinosaur's name, which will shortly be published in an academic journal. It may just be called Attenboroughsaurus, but Sir David himself remains anything but a dinosaur.  
Attenborough And The Giant Dinosaur, tomorrow, 6.30pm, BBC1.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-3411727/Sir-David-Attenborough-dig-largest-creature-Earth-Titanosaur.html#ixzz3yCXHW8Xt
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Tuesday, 22 December 2015

Prize-Winning Animation Lets You Fly Through 17th Century London

Prize-Winning Animation Lets You Fly Through 17th Century London



Six students from De Montfort University have created a stellar 3D representation of 17th century London, as it existed before The Great Fire of 1666. The three-minute video provides a realistic animation of Tudor London, and particularly a section called Pudding Lane where the fire started. As Londonist notes, “Although most of the buildings are conjectural, the students used a realistic street pattern [taken from historical maps] and even included the hanging signs of genuine inns and businesses” mentioned in diaries from the period.
For their efforts, the De Montfort team was awarded first prize in the Off the Mapcontest, a competition run by The British Library and video game developers GameCity and Crytek.

Saturday, 25 July 2015

Europe’s largest international jousting tournament is happening right now

Knight fever: Europe’s largest international jousting tournament is happening right now

A knight works the crowd at Arundel Castle© Julia Claxton
Lovers of medieval re-enactment, horses, the 15th century, castles and/or fancy dress, listen up – because there’s an international jousting tournament happening at Arundel Castle in West Sussex right now. TheInternational Jousting & Medieval Tournament, to give it its full name, kicked off on Tuesday, and this weekend will see four teams of men in full suits of armour compete for glory. The competitors are professional knights (yes, that’s a thing) from across Europe and the USA, who are representing The Kingdom of Poland, The Kingdom of France, The Burgundian Alliance (the defending champions) and The Kingdom of Great Britain. The tournament’s been going since 2008 and is the largest in Europe – and people get pretty into it, to say the least. If past events are anything to go by, this is what onlookers will be treated to this year. Egads!
Horseback hi-fives:
arundel castle
Colour-coordinated human/horse outfits:
Tuesday 23rd July 2013 Joust Week at Arundel Castle, Arundel, West Sussex, UK
Straight-up horseplay:
Sunday 28th July 2013 England win the Joust at the International tournament at Arundel Castle, Arundel, West Sussex, UK
Excellent hats:
arundel castle
This bloke:
Joust 2014 Knight Marshal Andreas Wenzel Photo Credit Victoria Dawe
Some horsing around:
Tuesday 23rd July 2013 Joust Week at Arundel Castle, Arundel, West Sussex, UK
A man with the horn:
Winner Skill At Arms Jan Gradon Joust 2014 Photo Credit - Victoria Dawe
And these lads:
Knights of the Joust 2014 Photo Credit Victoria Dawe (1)
The International Jousting & Medieval Tournament continues Saturday July 25 and Sunday July 26 at Arundel Castle, West Sussex. Full details here

Tuesday, 3 March 2015

Has the White City of the Monkey God been found after 500 years?

Has the White City of the Monkey God been found after 500 years? Ruins could be legendary lost jungle city where lurid tales say tribe worshipped a giant simian deity and bred chimp-human children

  • National Geographic team ventured into Honduras rainforest to look for the fabled 'White City' filled with gold
  • Found white rubble which they believe to be remnants of temples built thousands of years ago 
  • American explorer in the 1940s said people believed a monkey God raped women and had half-monkey babies 
A team hunting for the legendary 'lost city' of Ciudad Blanca in Honduras has made a dramatic discovery of untouched ruins deep in the jungle that are thought to be thousands of years old, according to National Geographic.
Researchers believe the complex of plazas, mounds, a pyramid and dozens of artefacts belong to a civilization which was blooming thousands of years ago and then vanished without a trace. 
It prompts the tantalizing possibility that they have found the lost civilization known as the White City, which as been the subject of local rumors among tribes people and Spanish explorers around the la Mosquita area of jungle in Honduras for hundreds of years.
Some people call it the White City Of Gold, after ancient texts described ivory temples filled with treasure - and western explorers first made reference to it from conquistador Hernando Cortes to King Charles V of Spain in 1526.
Since then countless adventurers have scoured the jungle for the ancient civilization, rumored to have enjoyed treasures beyond the wildest dreams of many budding Indiana Jones'. 
One such adventurer even suggested that the city was in fact known as the White City of the Monkey God, and saw an ancient civilization worship a giant simian deity, symbolized by a large statue. 
Theodore Morde, writing of his adventures in US magazine The American Weekly, said that local tribes people told him of the monkey worshiping civilization and went on with even more outlandish suggestions that a monkey from the city. Locals even told him that one 'monkey god' from the city kidnapped a local woman and bred half-human, half-chimp children. The children were then hunted for revenge.
Local tribes people also reportedly related the same story to an anthropologist, according to a Honduran media report.
Morde said that local people told him of a huge monkey temple inhabited by a civilization known as the Chorotegas, and claimed to have fond evidence of such a place on his expedition in 1939-40. But Morde never revealed the location of his alleged find and killed himself in 1954.
A sign of history? This block of stone could be a remnant of a temple built in the Lost City of Honduras thousands of years ago
A sign of history? This block of stone could be a remnant of a temple built in the Lost City of Honduras thousands of years ago
Incredible: The aerial shots taken by National Geographic show luscious forestland where the City Of The Monkey God once thrived
Incredible: The aerial shots taken by National Geographic show luscious forestland where the City Of The Monkey God once thrived
However, despite archaeologists' following attempts to detect man-made structures - whether they be from Ciudad Blanca, The White City of the Monkey God or elsewhere -  have been unsuccessful. Until now. 
Traveling into uncharted territory last month, a National Geographic team found the mounds of white rubble in the shape of a monkey's skull that experts believe to be thousands of years old.
The National Geographic's Douglas Preston wrote: 'The tops of 52 artifacts were peeking from the earth. Many more evidently lie below ground, with possible burials.
'They include stone ceremonial seats (called metates) and finely carved vessels decorated with snakes, zoomorphic figures, and vultures.
'The most striking object emerging from the ground is the head of what Fisher speculated might be 'a were-jaguar,' possibly depicting a shaman in a transformed, spirit state. 
'Alternatively, the artifact might be related to ritualized ball games that were a feature of pre-Columbian life in Mesoamerica.' 
According to Theodore Morde, stone effigies of monkeys lined the approach to the city's central temple, which was built in the shape of the monkey God. 
He described the myth: 'One day three of the hairy men who looked like great apes walked into an Indian village and carried off three of its most beautiful and pleasing maidens.
'They took the girls back into the caves high in the mountains to live with them and bear their children.
'From this union came, however, not human nor partly human children but the small Urus or monkeys.' 
Discovery? American explorer Theodore Morde wrote in 1939 that he had discovered the fabled city described by conquistador Hernando Cortes centuries before
Morde learned they city had been a shrine to the monkey God akin to Hindu's Hanuman
Discovery? American explorer Theodore Morde (left) wrote in 1939 that he had discovered the fabled city described by conquistador Hernando Cortes centuries before. Speaking to locals, he learned the city had been a shrine to the monkey God akin to Hindu's Hanuman who is pictured (right) hiding Rama and Sita, two more Hindu deities, in his heart to protect them. The Honduran monkey God is more menacing, he said

WHAT IS THE CITY OF THE MONKEY GOD... OR THE WHITE CITY OF GOLD

The lost city, believed to be full of gold, has merited two names based on legends. 
Texts cite 'la Ciudad Blanca' or 'the White City' it as the birthplace of the Aztec god Quetzalcoatl and old reports describe elaborately carved white stones.
Other reports claim there once stood a giant monkey-shaped temple. There were also tales of a monkey stealing three women in the city and raping them to create half-monkey, half-human babies, warranting the name: The City Of The Monkey God.
Either way, it has been sought since conquistador Hernando Cortes first made reference to it in a 1526 letter to King Charles V of Spain. 
It inspired the Dance Of The Dead Monkeys, during which locals roast monkeys over a fire in an apparent act of revenge for stealing their virgins.
The first mention of the city came in Hernando Cortes' fifth letter to King Charles V of Spain in 1926, when he wrote that it will 'exceed Mexico in riches'. 
Historians believe, based on his description, that the city was in the region of Mosquitia - which was then, and remains now, impenetrably dangerous.  
'…I have trustworthy reports of very extensive and rich provinces,' he wrote, 'and of powerful chiefs ruling over them, and of one in particular, called Hueitapalan, and in another dialect Xucutaco, about which I possessed information six years since, having all this time made inquiries about it, and ascertained that it lies eight or ten days' march from that town of Trujillo, or rather between fifty and sixty leagues. 
'So wonderful are the reports about this particular province, that even allowing largely for exaggeration, it will exceed Mexico in riches, and equal it in the largeness of its towns and villages, the density of its population, and the policy of its inhabitants.'
Centuries later, in 1939, Theodore Morde rediscovered the site, and learned from locals that it was home to the myth of the monkey God.
Writing in the Milwaukee Sentinel on September 22, 1940, apologized to his readers that he could not reveal the exact location other than the fact that it was shrouded by towering mountains, a 'rushing cataract, beautiful as a robe of shimmering jewels, cascading into the green valley of the ruins.'
He added: 'More definite location than this I cannot give, because, as I have written, many are they who have sought for the Monkey God's City, attracted by tales of treasure, and we want to find it unmolested on our return journey in January.'
His words have been echoed decades later by the Virgilio Parades, director of the Honduran Institute of Anthropology and History (IHAH), who warned the city and the surrounding rainforest could be obliterated in eight years if the government does not rush to protect it, El Heraldo reported.
The latest discovery comes after researchers from the University of Houston and the National Center for Airborne Laser Mapping (NCALM) flew over the Mosquitia region in a small plane shooting billions of laser pulses at the ground to create a 3D digital map of the topology beneath the jungle canopy.
Compiling their data, the analysts revealed what appears to be man-made elevation changes that are thought to show a forgotten city plaza dotted with pyramids reclaimed by the jungle.
According to legend, Ciudad Blanca or the 'White City' is full of gold and has been sought out by explorers and treasure hunters since conquistador Hernando Cortes first made reference to it in a 1526 letter to King Charles V of Spain.
Inspired by this legend, cinematographer and Ciudad Blanca enthusiast Steven Elkins sought backing from private investors to pay for the team at NCLAM to use their laser mapping technology to chart the forest floor of Mosquitia. 
Over the course of a week, the NCALM and University of Houston engineers flew over 60 square miles of forest in their dual-engine Cessna planes.
LiDAR's computer-generated images allow researchers to 'see' through the forest canopy to the ground surface, revealing any evidence of ancient settlements or human-engineered landscapes.
'The LiDAR point cloud data clearly show the remains of large settlements that can be characterized as ancient cities based on their spatial complexity, size and organization,' said  Colorado State University professors Christopher Fisher, who led the research.
'We may never be able to tell whether any of these are Ciudad Blanca, or whether the legendary city ever existed, but we can clearly see in the UTL data evidence that there was a densely settled region with a human modified environment.
'These conclusions provide important new insights into the pre-Hispanic settlement of this largely unexplored region.'
This was one of the first times that laser mapping, specifically light detection and ranging (LiDAR) had been used to locate ancient ruins.
Investigation: The University of Houston and National Center for Airborne Laser Mapping team produced this 3D digital topological map which when examined shows a man-made plaza ringed in red
Investigation: The University of Houston and National Center for Airborne Laser Mapping team produced this 3D digital topological map which when examined shows a man-made plaza ringed in red
The researchers first flew over the area and captured the treeline (top), and then were able to 'see through'  to the ground below (bottom image)
The researchers first flew over the area and captured the treeline (top), and then were able to 'see through' to the ground below (bottom image)
The original uses of the technology were to provide intelligence after earthquakes, military spying and for river erosion detection.
Flying above the intended target area, LiDAR operates by sending out 100,000 short laser pulses to the ground each second.
The University of Houston and the NCALM team blanketed the Mosquitia rainforest with as many as 25-50 laser pulses every square metre that totaled up as more than four billion shots during the entire project. 
Ciudad Blanca has played a central role in Central American mythology. 
Texts cite it as the birthplace of the Aztec god Quetzalcoatl and previous reported sightings over the years have described golden idols and elaborately carved white stones, leading to the lost city's name.
However, no confirmation of the existence of the city has ever been provided.
If confirmed, the discovery of Ciudad Blanca would be comparable to the popularisation of forgotten sites such as Machu Picchu, which lay ruined for hundreds of years until reintroduced to western eyes in 1911 by American historian Hiram Bingham.  




Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2976834/Incredible-photos-untouched-ruins-Honduran-rainforest-reveal-fabled-City-Money-God-DOES-exist-centuries-speculation.html#ixzz3TJgMettR
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