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#1291 Julia36

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Posted 26 February 2014 - 10:01 AM

QUANTUM ARCHAEOLOGY.

How Science is trying to resurrect the dead.


Micro Map of the past being created.
  • Quantum computers and new maths to calculate detailed histories and memories of everyone dead.
  • Face and body reconstructions a million years old already achieved: mind reconstructions coming.
  • 106 billion people to be resurrected within 40 years.
MAIN ARTICLE:~~>(working: Nine pages)
QuantumArchaeology


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TEDxDeExctinction talks website »

<--- MORE INFORMATION BACK THRU THIS THREAD<------

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


World's oldest cheese found with Mummies.

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Small river cemetry China with phalic poles.
"
"We not only identified the product as the earliest known cheese, but we also have direct … evidence of ancient technology," says study author Andrej Shevchenko, an analytical chemist at Germany's Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics. The method was "easy, cheap … It's a technology for the common people."
The cheese, like the mummies, owes its existence to the extraordinary conditions at Small River Cemetery Number 5, in northwestern China. First documented by a Swedish archaeologist in the 1930s, it sits in the fearsome Taklamakan Desert," More


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Taklamakan Desert preserves for thousands of years.
http://www.usatoday....cheese/5776373/

The World is safe for Radical life extension


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The World is safe for Radical life extension - We can research life extension to rejuvenate the old because we will use technology that is over 100 years old to provide food for over 100 billion people

It'll be neded if Quantum Archaeology is actioned.

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Aging Successfully Reversed in Mice; Human Trials to Begin

Jan 28 2014
(I have to doubt this article??)

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"Scientists have successfully reversed the aging process in mice according to a new study just released. Human trials are to begin next, possibly before the year is over. The study was published in the peer reviewed science journal Cell after researchers from both the U.S and Australia made the breakthrough discovery. Lead researcher David Sinclair of the University of New South Wales says he is hopeful that the outcome can be reproduced in human trials. A successful result in people would mean not just a slowing down of aging but a measurable reversal.
The study showed that after administering a certain compound to the mice, muscle degeneration and diseases caused by aging were reversed. Sinclair says the study results exceeded his expectations, explaining:



I’ve been studying aging at the molecular level now for nearly 20 years and I didn’t think I’d see a day when ageing could be reversed. I thought we’d be lucky to slow it down a little bit. The mice had more energy, their muscles were as though they’d be exercising and it was able to mimic the benefits of diet and exercise just within a week. We think that should be able to keep people healthier for longer and keep them from getting diseases of ageing.

The compound the mice ate resulted in their muscles bec..." MORE

http://guardianlv.co...-to-begin-next/


David Sinclair (biologist) - Wikipedia

Edited by Innocent, 26 February 2014 - 10:33 AM.


#1292 Julia36

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Posted 26 February 2014 - 10:37 AM

Number of Calculations possible increases fast

- by technology
- by mathematics discovery

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Accelerating supercomputing power

- fair general article on the challenges for speed.

Edited by Innocent, 26 February 2014 - 10:39 AM.


#1293 Julia36

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Posted 26 February 2014 - 10:52 AM

Scientists Demonstrate First Contagious Airborne WiFi Virus



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Published: February 25, 2014. By University of Liverpool
http://www.liv.ac.uk
Researchers at the University of Liverpool have shown for the first time that WiFi networks can be infected with a virus that can move through densely populated areas as efficiently as the common cold spreads between humans. " More

Read Full Story »

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Some of us have been looking at the use of viruses in intelligent computing.
Viruses are generally not modifying in technology transmissions, but they are likely to, forcing evolution and natural selection, which could mutate form of artificial Intelligence.

#1294 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 08:46 AM

NASA - 715 new planets!



#1295 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 08:53 AM

DROPLETON DISCOVERED - quantum particle


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http://www.scientifi...-quasiparticle/




"Part particle, part liquid, a newly discovered "quasiparticle" has been dubbed a quantum droplet, or a dropleton. The dropleton is a collection of electrons and "holes" (places where electrons are missing) inside a semiconductor, and it has handy properties for studying quantum mechanics.

The new entity is termed a quasiparticle because it is not an elementary particle, like the quarks and electrons that make up atoms. Rather, it is a composite. Like other quasiparticles, the dropleton—the first quasiparticle found to behave like a liquid—can exist only inside solid materials. "It's a particle inside matter, and it is an entity whose properties are determined by its environment," says Mackillo Kira of Philipps University Marburg in Germany, one of the co-discoverers. Quasiparticles can form in semiconductors because semiconductors' atoms are organized into a lattice by the bonding of their valence (outer shell) electrons. This arrangement allows a conglomeration of electrons and holes to effectively travel though the material as a coherent entity. Thinking about these conglomerations as quasiparticles is a way to simplify the math describing the complex quantum mechanics of many particles within a solid.

The dropleton was not predicted... "MORE

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Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 08:57 AM.


#1296 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 09:07 AM

Archaeologists preserving European Polovtsian Stalae

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http://www.degruyter.../product/209739


"(From) 2008, a team of archaeologists and conservators from Poland and Czech Republic undertook maintenance work on the Polovtsian anthropomorphic late medieval steles from the collection of the Veliklanadolskyi Forest Museum, at Komsomolsky Podsiolok in East Ukraine.
Their goal was to prevent the degradation of the sculptures caused by environmental factors and human activities, as well as to restore the aesthetics of the statues. Aneta Go&#322;&#281;biowska-Tobiasz, a member of the team became strongly aware of the cultural value of the monumental sculptures – barely known in the rest of Europe, and decided to channel her efforts into research and the restoration of the stelae, which represent so majestically the cultural heritage of the Turkic people of the steppe zone of Eastern Europe." MORE

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polovtsy

Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 09:09 AM.


#1297 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 09:19 AM

Amazon forests maintain consistent canopy structure and greenness during the dry season

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" Most of the Amazon rainforest's inhabitants are insects, but more than 500 mammal, 175 lizard and 300 additional reptile species are known to live here, along with more than 33 percent of the world's bird species. "



"The seasonality of sunlight and rainfall regulates net primary production in tropical forests1. Previous studies have suggested that light is more limiting than water for tropical forest productivity2, consistent with greening of Amazon forests during the dry season in satellite data3, 4, 5, 6, 7. We evaluated four potential mechanisms for the seasonal green-up phenomenon, including increases in leaf area5, 6, 7 or leaf reflectance3, 4, 6, using a sophisticated radiative transfer model8 and independent satellite observations from lidar and optical sensors. Here we show that the apparent green up of Amazon forests in optical remote sensing data resulted from seasonal changes in near-infrared reflectance, an artefact of variations in sun-sensor geometry.
"MORE

The beauty of Nature to humans can also be expressed as data and traced back to the beginning of earth. That is the conjecture of Quantum Archaeology.

http://www.nature.co...ature13006.html

Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 10:12 AM.


#1298 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 09:31 AM

How Plants Secretly Talk to Each Other
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dec 2013

"
The evidence for plant communication is only a few decades old, but in that short time it has leapfrogged from electrifying discovery to decisive debunking to resurrection. Two studies published in 1983 demonstrated that willow trees, poplars and sugar maples can warn each other about insect attacks: Intact, undamaged trees near ones that are infested with hungry bugs begin pumping out bug-repelling chemicals to ward off attack. They somehow know what their neighbors are experiencing, and react to it. The mind-bending implication was that brainless trees could send, receive and interpret messages.
The first few “talking tree” papers quickly were shot down as statistically flawed or too artificial, irrelevant to the real-world war between plants and bugs. Research ground to a halt. But the science of plant communication is now staging a comeback. Rigorous, carefully controlled experiments are overcoming those early criticisms with repeated testing in labs, forests and fields. It’s now well established that when bugs chew leaves, plants respond by releasing volatile organic compounds into the air." MORE

http://www.wired.com...uage-of-plants/

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Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 10:26 AM.


#1299 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 09:41 AM

Iceland’s Uninhabitable Landscapes

http://www.wired.com...d-from-the-air/

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Iceland’s epic vistas, vast glaciers, soft light and ominous volcanoes make beautiful abstract art in Emmanuel Coupe-Kalomiris’s aerial photos. He’s made striking visuals out of the island’s natural formations without focusing on their actual geography.
“I wanted something that doesn’t have context, no sense of scale,” says Kalomiris. “I wanted it to be lost. In the end it doesn’t really matter what you’re looking at. It’s supposed to be just pure visual pleasure.”" MORE




The pictures people take and upload will be available for coming machine intelligences to draw The Quantum Archaeology Grid.
Machines are already photographing the earth and stars. As robotics increase they will cruise everywhere photographing the inner world as well.

Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 10:07 AM.


#1300 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 09:47 AM

NASA’s Latest Robot:

today

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The Super Ball Bot, currently deep in the research phase in NASA’s Innovative Advanced Concepts program, looks nothing like its robotic predecessors. The spindly sphere is a tensegrity structure, which means to move it relies on a system of rigid components that are connected by flexible joints and cables.
This allows the bot to evenly distribute stress and pressure over the entire structure, as opposed to concentrating it on specific joints. The idea is that by adjusting the length of the cables, this flexible robot will be able to roll around the surface of a planet or moon with more speed and resiliency than wheeled robots could even dream about." more


http://www.wired.com...onize-robotics/

"

#1301 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 10:01 AM

Robot arms to help knit replacement human body parts

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"
Until now, bioprinting has largely involved depositing a single type of human cell – like skin cells – onto a scaffold that is later dissolved. But the scaffold approach cannot produce 3D analogues of cartilage and muscle, for instance, which incorporate strong, fibrous cellular-material as well as individual cells of other types.
So Oxbolat's team equipped a 3D printer with two robot arms so that it can simultaneously deposit filaments and cells. They fitted a nozzle to one arm and used it to create multilayer patterns with filaments of sodium alginate. The other arm populated the gaps between the filaments with cells that grow into cartilage.
The result was a 20-layer stack of tissue, 20 millimetres square, made of filaments and living cells, that did not require a scaffold..." MORE

http://www.newscient...ml#.Uw8K-c6dMb4

It is already possible to 3D print cyborg robotic arms (below)
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Seems to me there have to be many arms in a decent 3D printer? Possibly millions.

Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 10:43 AM.


#1302 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 10:38 AM

Future Day March 1

http://www.kurzweilai.net/future-day

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"Six international futurist organizations join forces to invite their members and the public to come online at 12 noon in their timezone to explore how they can help build a better future
February 26, 2014

[+]On March 1, Future Day, six international futurist organizations will come together to conduct a 24-hour conversation about the world’s potential futures, challenges, and opportunities, according to Millennium Project CEO Jerome Glenn and Humanity+ Secretary Adam A. Ford.
In addition to The Millennium Project, the organizations are: Association of Professional Futurists, Club of Amsterdam, Humanity+, World Future Society, and the World Futures Studies Federation. Future Day events worldwide are already scheduled in a number of more than 20 cities around the world."
MORE

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Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 10:38 AM.


#1303 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 11:33 AM

" Please don’t kill Hitler"
British media-

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"Hitler had the perfect combination of drive, charisma, evil and incompetence..."

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http://www.theguardi...ll-adolf-hitler

Quantum Archaeology raises the political question of what crime is: can crime exist eg murder cant exist since you can resurrect the dead (we're already Raising the dead
in resurrection biology, and with comping calculation power should be able to raise everyone and their memories).
Any action is probably reversible.

That leaves you with the conflict of the validity of 'present conscious' states.
Nothing is fixed...nor can it ever be. Sci-fi has explored this under time travel and at least one story on quantum archaeology.

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A difficulty is our concept space is not good enough to juggle the notions...most are unnamed....and our brains think linearly in one time direction. We have no memory yet of the future: Our evolved selves will, but it seems too difficult to comprehend.

Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 12:26 PM.


#1304 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 11:53 AM

Rare Neolithic or Bronze Age rock art in Ross-shire

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A rare example of prehistoric rock art has been uncovered in the Highlands.
Archaeologists made the discovery while moving a boulder decorated with ancient cup and ring marks to a new location in Ross-shire.
When they turned the stone over they found the same impressions on the other side of the rock. It is one of only a few decorated stones of its kind." MORE
http://www.bbc.co.uk...slands-26366644

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#1305 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 12:00 PM

Drought coincided with decline of Indus Civilisation

"
Scientists from the University of Cambridge have demonstrated that an abrupt weakening of the summer monsoon affected northwest India 4,100 years ago. The resulting drought coincided with the beginning of the decline of the metropolis-building Indus Civilisation, which spanned present-day Pakistan and India, suggesting that climate change could be why many of the major cities of the civilisation were abandoned.
The research involved the collection of snail shells preserved in the sediments of an ancient lake bed. By analysing the oxygen isotopes in the shells, the scientists were able to tell how much rain fell in the lake where the snails lived thousands of years ago."
"the finding now links the decline of the Indus cities to a documented global scale climate event"
MORE

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#1306 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 12:12 PM

Anglo-Saxon cemetery results question violent invasion theory

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Anglo Saxon 16yr old female in grave.

The early fifth century transition from Roman Britain to Anglo-Saxon England is a poorly understood period in British history. Historical narratives describe a brutal conquest by Anglo-Saxon invaders with nearly complete replacement of the indigenous population, but aspects of the archaeological record contradict this interpretation leading to competing hypotheses."

A new study, published in the Journal of Archaeological Science, suggests a more peaceful process, according to Dr Andrew Millard, from Durham University, one of the paper’s lead authors."

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As the number of Anglo-Saxon immigrants arriving in Britain is one of the focal issues of this debate, strontium and oxygen isotopic ratios, with their ability to identify immigrants in a burial population, offered a technique to test competing hypotheses. The researchers examined these ratios in the tooth enamel of 19 individuals from the cemetery at Berinsfield.
Background values from local fauna material and soil samples allowed the scientists to characterize the regional fingerprint for the oxygen and strontium isotopes. In addition, the diet of the burial community as a whole was analysed and cross related against the sex, age and grave goods of the individuals.
The balance of particular chemicals in our teeth can give clues about where most of our food and drink has come from. Scientists can then use this information to work out where people were born, and where they lived in childhood. Had there been a mass invasion, the graves would be expected to contain at least 20 per cent immigrant remains. But only five per cent of the buried individuals seem to have come from out-with the local area." MORE

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Anglo-Saxon Chronicle - Wikipedia

"The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is a collection of annals in Old English chronicling the history of the Anglo-Saxons. The original manuscript of the Chronicle was created late in the 9th century, probably in Wessex, during the reign of Alfred the Great."

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Villages have been recreated but QA predicts the exact village and the exact people will be reconstructed.


http://www.pasthoriz...invasion-theory




Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 12:44 PM.


#1307 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 12:26 PM

Archaeology is not small it is is huge and growing vaster.

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It has to be seen as something in nature...a system regains itself.

Calculation is possible into the past with Causation and Probability:



QA doesn't use Solomonoff's techniques alone, but runs them with known positions of the Quantum Archaeology grid.
No one maths or statistics technique is adequate

Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 12:33 PM.


#1308 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 12:42 PM

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#1309 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 01:24 PM

Quantum Archaeology was inspired by Asimov's "Psychohistory is a fictional science in Isaac Asimov's Foundation universe which combines history, sociology, and mathematical statistics to make general predictions about the future behavior of very large groups of people, such as the Galactic Empire. It was first introduced in the five short stories (1942–1944) which would later be collected as the 1951 novel Foundation." wiki

" Axioms

Psychohistory depends on the idea that, while one cannot foresee the actions of a particular individual, the laws of statistics as applied to large groups of people could predict the general flow of future events. Asimov used the analogy of a gas: an observer has great difficulty in predicting the motion of a single molecule in a gas, but can predict the mass action of the gas to a high level of accuracy. (Physicists know this as the Kinetic theory.) Asimov applied this concept to the population of his fictional Galactic Empire, which numbered a quintillion.

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The character responsible for the science's creation, Hari Seldon, established two axioms:
  • that the population whose behaviour was modeled should be sufficiently large
  • that the population should remain in ignorance of the results of the application of psychohistorical analyses
There is a third underlying axiom of Psychohistory, which is trivial and thus not stated by Seldon in his Plan:
  • that Human Beings are the only sentient intelligence in the Galaxy.
The Prime Radiant

Asimov presents the Prime Radiant, a device designed by Hari Seldon and built by Yugo Amaryl, as storing the psychohistorical equations showing the future development of humanity.
The Prime Radiant projects the equations onto walls in some unexplained manner, but it does not cast shadows, thus allowing workers easy interaction. Control operates through the power of the mind, allowing the user to zoom in to details of the equations, and to change them. One can make annotations, but by convention all amendments remain anonymous.
A student destined for speakerhood has to present an amendment to the plan. Five different boards then check the mathematics rigorously. Students have to defend their proposals against concerted and merciless attacks. After two years the change gets reviewed again. If after the second examination it still passes muster the contribution becomes part of the Seldon Plan." MORE

http://en.wikipedia....ctional)#Axioms



QA wonders what would happen if psychhistory was done on the linear past where there are fewer events than in the present?
Using Asimov;s general ideas but for retrodiction
http://www.oxforddic...sh/retrodiction
instead of prediction, ideas began to be discussed about the limits of historical recovery (archaeology, and what magnitude of calculation would be needed for dead people. How specific could it be?

There is no difference of principle between a family tree and the 5 nanometre scale of human brain recoveries.
Impossible to accept instinctively, a theory of Quantum Archaeology was sketched out and tested against known science laws.
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Map of the entire universe.


As science was trying to map the whole universe as well as run simulations of it back to it;s birth, that had logically to include anyone who had ever lived. Men were unique, but had lots in common and part maps of many survive as genetic inheritance. Then there are growing data bases. If all these could be synthesized, plotting back may be possible with incredible minuteness.
But charting the entire universe quarks and all may take time. Could local parts be charted...not from geography but from human histories?
QA posits this may be possible shortly after Machine Intelligence is achieved in about 2022.

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the brain is being maped.

There was nothing to contradict it being possible and a longer article was written in the first decade of the 2nd millennium.

Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 01:34 PM.


#1310 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 01:30 PM

NASA RESULTS SHOW EARTH -LIKE PLANETS ARE COMMON

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http://www.theregist...n_breakthrough/

""These results establish that planetary systems like our own solar system are in fact common."

"
A panel of scientists from the project said that the newly discovered planets, orbiting stars observed by Kepler, were between the size of Earth and Neptune, and have been primarily spotted in close orbit to their parent stars.
Four of the discovered celestial bodies were deemed to be within the "habitable" zone of their stars, where life as we know it is sustainable; those planets range from 2 to 2.5 times the size of Earth.
The researchers credited the massive finding to a new discovery technique which analyzes stars with multiple planet candidates traveling with specific orbits. In doing so, the scientists were able to quickly spot and verify the cosmic bodies were indeed bona fide planets.
In particular, the discoveries found that small planets orbiting close to their parent stars are much more common than originally believed." MORE


"
NASA's Kepler mission announced Wednesday the discovery of 715 new planets. These newly-verified worlds orbit 305 stars, revealing multiple-planet systems much like our own solar system.
Nearly 95 percent of these planets are smaller than Neptune, which is almost four times the size of Earth. This discovery marks a significant increase in the number of known small-sized planets more akin to Earth than previously identified exoplanets, which are planets outside our solar system.
"The Kepler team continues to amaze and excite us with their planet hunting results," said John Grunsfeld, associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. "That these new planets and solar systems look somewhat like our own, portends a great future when we have the James Webb Space Telescope in space to characterize the new worlds.”
Since the discovery of the first planets outside our solar system roughly two decades ago, verification has been a laborious planet-by-planet process. Now, scientists have a statistical technique that can be applied to many planets at once when they are found in systems that harbor more than one planet around the same star.
To verify this bounty of planets, a research team co-led by Jack Lissauer, planetary scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., analyzed stars with more than one potential planet, all of which were detected in the first two years of Kepler's observations -- May 2009 to March 2011.
The research team used a technique called verification by multiplicity, which relies in part on the logic of probability. Kepler observes 150,000 stars, and has found a few thousand of those to have planet candidates. If the candidates were randomly distributed among Kepler's stars, only a handful would have more than one planet candidate. However, Kepler observed hundreds of stars that have multiple planet candidates. Through a careful study of this sample, these 715 new planets were verified.
This method can be likened to the behavior we know of lions and lionesses. In our imaginary savannah, the lions are the Kepler stars and the lionesses are the planet candidates. The lionesses would sometimes be observed grouped together whereas lions tend to roam on their own. If you see two lions it could be a lion and a lioness or it could be two lions. But if more than two large felines are gathered, then it is very likely to be a lion and his pride. Thus, through multiplicity the lioness can be reliably identified in much the same way multiple planet candidates can be found around the same star.
"Four years ago, Kepler began a string of announcements of first hundreds, then thousands, of planet candidates --but they were only candidate worlds," said Lissauer. "We've now developed a process to verify multiple planet candidates in bulk to deliver planets wholesale, and have used it to unveil a veritable bonanza of new worlds."
These multiple-planet systems are fertile grounds for studying individual planets and the configuration of planetary neighborhoods. This provides clues to planet formation.
Four of these new planets are less than 2.5 times the size of Earth and orbit in their sun's habitable zone, defined as the range of distance from a star where the surface temperature of an orbiting planet may be suitable for life-giving liquid water.
One of these new habitable zone planets, called Kepler-296f, orbits a star half the size and 5 percent as bright as our sun. Kepler-296f is twice the size of Earth, but scientists do not know whether the planet is a gaseous world, with a thick hydrogen-helium envelope, or it is a water world surrounded by a deep ocean.
"From this study we learn planets in these multi-systems are small and their orbits are flat and circular -- resembling pancakes -- not your classical view of an atom," said Jason Rowe, research scientist at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, Calif., and co-leader of the research. "The more we explore the more we find familiar traces of ourselves amongst the stars that remind us of home."
This latest discovery brings the confirmed count of planets outside our solar system to nearly 1,700. As we continue to reach toward the stars, each discovery brings us one step closer to a more accurate understanding of our place in the galaxy.
Launched in March 2009, Kepler is the first NASA mission to find potentially habitable Earth-size planets. Discoveries include more than 3,600 planet candidates, of which 961 have been verified as bona-fide worlds.
The findings papers will be published March 10 in The Astrophysical Journal and are available for download at:

http://www.nasa.gov/...-planet-bonanza

Ames is responsible for the Kepler mission concept, ground system development, mission operations and science data analysis. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., managed Kepler mission development. Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colo., developed the Kepler flight system and supports mission operations with the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado in Boulder. The Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore archives, hosts and distributes Kepler science data. Kepler is NASA's 10th Discovery Mission and was funded by the agency's Science Mission Directorate.
For more information about the Kepler space telescope, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/kepler





Michele Johnson
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
650-604-6982
michele.johnson@nasa.gov
J.D. Harrington
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-5241
j.d.harrington@nasa.gov

Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 01:50 PM.


#1311 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 01:42 PM

Could newly discovered gold coins be the haul stolen by disgraced San Francisco Mint employee in 1901? Treasure hunting enthusiasts weigh in on origins of couple's $10 million find
  • An unnamed couple in their 40s stumbled on the historic find on their property last spring
  • The gold coins dating from 1847 to 1894 were stashed in eight cans along a trail the couple had walked for years
  • Treasure hunting enthusiasts believe the coins may be have been stashed away by Walter Dimmick in 1901
  • He worked at the San Francisco Mint and was imprisoned after $30,000 worth of gold coins went missing
  • The dates on the coins fit the time frame and the type and denomination of the coins match too
  • The couple who found the coins maintain that they researched who might have hidden the coins and have come up with nothing
  • Speculation is that they haven't released their names for fear the coins could be claimed by descendants of whoever put them in the ground
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http://www.dailymail...l#ixzz2uWtDdQGp

Does matter forThe Quantum Archaeology Grid what data is recovered. Every big we find from the past helps us complete it.

Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 01:45 PM.


#1312 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 01:48 PM

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#1313 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 11:42 PM

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Nieszawa – a medieval town reconstructed by non-invasive survey.

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A lost town reborn


+ Videos shorts
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"Two seasons of non-invasive investigation including geophysics and aerial prospection have succeeded in providing new insight into the 15th century Polish settlement of Nieszawa – a town which rapidly developed into an economic rival to Teutonic Order controlled Toru&#324; (Thorn) just across the Vistula river" MORE
"

http://www.pasthoriz...invasive-survey

Alcatraz: Labyrinth of underground civil war military tunnels found
  • Radar scanning has revealed parts of a fortress that occupied Alcatraz are intact beneath the prison
  • Researchers from Texas A&M University found an underground tunnel system and other buildings
  • The military fort was built in 1850 and troops were stationed there during the Civil War
  • No shots were fired and it was converted into a prison in 1934
  • It ran as a prison for 29 years, and was home to some of U.S. history's most notorious criminals
  • Archaeologists hope to begin excavations on part of the prison soon


http://www.dailymail...l#ixzz2uZLeEIe2



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Edited by Innocent, 27 February 2014 - 11:46 PM.


#1314 Julia36

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Posted 27 February 2014 - 11:52 PM

Rare collection of almost every original First World War recruitment poster discovered


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"The archive of almost 200 posters from 1914 and 1916 were circulated to encourage British men to sign up and fight on the Western Front.

The posters also highlight the increasingly menacing tone used in the run-up to compulsory conscription, which started two years after the Great War began.

The collection was inherited by Arthur Maxted from his grandfather who worked for a printing company during the First World War." " For the past three decades the posters were stored in the loft of his Kent home which he forgot about until he realised the value of them recently.

They are being sold at auction by Onslows Auctioneers in Blandford, Dorset in the centenary year of the First World War." MORE

http://www.express.c...overed-in-attic

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Sunken medieval town of Dunwich mapped using modern archaeology

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at the edge of a British Atlantis

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Scientific Method / Science & Exploration

The British ‘Atlantis’ is mapped in detail

Using dual frequency identification sonar, the ruins of Dunwich rise again.

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Dunwich Beach

"A professor of physical geography has put together the most detailed map yet of the sunken medieval town of Dunwich using underwater acoustic imagining.
The port town, often referred to as "the British Atlantis," was a hub of activity up until its collapse in the 1400s. This was brought about after a series of epic storms battered the coastline in the 1200s and 1300s, causing repeated flooding, submerging parts of the town, and flooding the harbor and river with silt. Today it stands as a small village, but up until its demise it was around the same size as medieval London. Despite still existing at depths of just three to 10 meters (or, 9.8 ft to 32.8 ft) below sea level, the murky conditions have made investigating what lies beneath particularly tricky" MORE

http://arstechnica.c...pped-in-detail/

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Egyptian papyri discovered at American college

Read more at: http://archaeologyne...ml#.Uw_TPs6dMb4
Follow us: @ArchaeoNewsNet on Twitter | groups/thearchaeologynewsnetwork/ on Facebook

Papyri found at American College

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"Nine papyri documents almost 2,000 years old were discovered recently by a student in the Luther College Archives, where they had remained hidden in a cardboard box for decades." MORE

http://archaeologyne...ml#.Uw_TPs6dMb4


+ good article:
http://www.decorahne...ArticleID=33184

Edited by Innocent, 28 February 2014 - 12:35 AM.


#1315 Julia36

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Posted 28 February 2014 - 12:04 AM

THE PICTS WILL LIVE AGAIN!

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"Archaeologists are hoping to save ancient cave drawings from coastal erosion. Since the 5th century humans have been painting the walls of Wemyss Caves, creating a rich record of Scottish history over the past 1500 years."MORE

http://archaeologyne...ml#.Uw_SEs6dMb4

Picts - Wikipedia






#1316 Julia36

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Posted 28 February 2014 - 12:32 AM

1/2 BILLION YEAR FLIP

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""It has long been believed that the appearance of complex multicellular life towards the end of the Precambrian (the geologic interval lasting up until 541 million years ago) was facilitated by an increase in oxygen, as revealed in the geological record. However, it has remained a mystery as to why oxygen increased at this particular time and what its relationship was to 'Snowball Earth' – the most extreme climatic changes the Earth has ever experienced – which were also taking place around then.""


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The researchers, led by Dr Patricia Sanchez-Baracaldo of the University of Bristol, used genomic data to reconstruct the relationships between those cyanobacteria whose photosynthesis in the open ocean provided oxygen in quantities sufficient to be fundamental in the development of complex life on Earth.

http://phys.org/news...-life-ocean.htm

Campaign to Stop Killer Robots


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European Parliament resolution a first

The European Parliament has adopted a resolution on the use of armed drones that includes a call for a ban on killer robots. The resolution, sponsored by the Greens/European Free Alliance group of Members of the European Parliament with cross-party support, passed by a vote of 534–49 at the European Parliament in Strasbourg on 27 February.
The resolution expresses its “grave concern over the use of armed drones outside the international legal framework” and “urges the EU to develop an appropriate policy response at both European and global level which upholds human rights and international humanitarian law.”
On killer robots, the resolution calls on the European Union (EU) member states, the Council of Ministers of the EU, and the EU’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Catherine Ashton, to “ban the development, production and use of fully autonomous weapons which enable strikes to be carried out without human intervention.”
The resolution is believed to be the first by the European Parliament...more"

http://www.stopkille...peanparliament/

U.S. Border Patrol Sends Robots To Combat

Drug Smuggling


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illuistr


http://singularityhu...drug-smuggling/

Edited by Innocent, 28 February 2014 - 12:40 AM.


#1317 Julia36

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Posted 28 February 2014 - 12:50 AM

Cambridge breakthrough to reduce animal experiments



"
Millions of animals could be spared lab experimentation in future thanks to medical technology innovation from liver disease experts at Cambridge University.
Dr Meritxell Huch from the UK’s Gurdon Institute has found one of the research world’s Holy Grails – a way to test 1,000 compounds using cells that come from only one mouse.
Typically a study to investigate one potential drug compound to treat one form of liver disease would require up to 50 live animals per experiment – so testing 1,000 compounds would need 50,000 mice.
“By using the liver culture system I developed, we can test 1000 compounds using cells that come from only one mouse, resulting in a significant reduction in animal use,” said Dr Huch...." MORE

http://www.businessw...mal-experiments

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#1318 Julia36

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Posted 28 February 2014 - 12:56 AM

NANO TECH TO BE BIGGER THE INTERNET

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By about 2022 nanotechnology will dawn, enabling fast cheap, self-building technolgy.

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today

"According to a recent GAO report, many experts in industry, government, and academia anticipate that nanotech innovations could match or exceed the economic and societal impacts of the digital revolution." MORE

http://www.ipwatchdo...rends/id=48286/

Edited by Innocent, 28 February 2014 - 12:57 AM.


#1319 Julia36

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Posted 28 February 2014 - 02:22 AM

http://www.youtube.c...h?v=gRYclpiYgNs

Edited by Innocent, 28 February 2014 - 02:35 AM.


#1320 Julia36

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Posted 28 February 2014 - 02:39 AM

LEPROSY: our oldest disease
  • A University of Texas Houston study found two leprosy-causing bacteria came from a common bacterial ancestor around 10 million years ago
  • Humans carried leprosy bacteria when departing Africa around 100,000 years ago to populate the rest of the world
  • Hundreds of thousands of people around the world still suffer from the disease, which attacks a sufferer's skin and nerve
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Spinalonga on Crete, Greece, one of the last leper colonies in Europe, closed in 1957.

A scientist at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Centre in Houston found that two leprosy-causing bacteria came from a last common bacterial ancestor around 10 million years ago and that ancient humans and hominids suffered from the disease." MORE


: http://www.dailymail...l#ixzz2ua4OzqKI



Charting our history


Edited by Innocent, 28 February 2014 - 02:45 AM.





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