Water was present during Earth’s birth

Washington, May 14 (ANI): Volatile elements – most likely to include water – were present during the violent process of the Earth”s birth between 30 and 100 million years after the solar system was created – a minute period in geological terms, researchers have found.

The new research by the University of Manchester and the Carnegie Institution of Washington is to make scientists rethink their understanding of how Earth formed.

The findings mean that comets and asteroids were unlikely to have brought the bulk of volatile elements to Earth – as commonly thought.

Lead scientist Dr Maria Schonbachler from The University of Manchester, publishes her research in Science, the prestigious weekly American journal today.

The scientist based at the University”s School of Earth, Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences hit upon the findings by using high precision equipment to measure abundances of Silver isotopes contained in rocks.

The readings show that the moderately volatile element Silver was present in relatively large amounts towards the final stages of the Earth”s formation.

The radioactive isotope Palladium 107 decays to Silver 107, which was present during the formation of the solar system.

The decay of Palladium 107 creates anomalies in the abundances of Silver isotopes, which can be measured and used for dating, even though Palladium 107 is no longer present on Earth.

The findings give a new boost to a 30 year old model, which suggests that volatile elements were already present in the final stages of the Earth”s birth.

Dr Schonbachler said: “The sensitive equipment we use works in much the same way as when you might carbon date a rock or artifact – but on a scale which enables us to go back billions of years.

“And those measurements allow us to detect a transition from volatile-depleted to volatile-enriched building blocks as the accumulation of Earth proceeded.

“Because we know what happened to the moderately volatile Silver, it”s very likely that the same thing happened to the highly volatile water.

“Though I accept that about 85 per cent of the Earth”s mass was built without volatile elements the rest of it was- and that”s quite an important difference in our understanding of the Earth”s geological history.”

“We don”t now need any theories about how water came to Earth – such as comets and asteroids – it was most likely here almost from the beginning. And water is, what made Earth habitable for life. ” (ANI)

New discovery hints ancient Egypt and Israel had ties during Early Bronze Age

Jerusalem, Sept 2 (ANI): The discovery of a rare, four-centimeter-long stone fragment at the point where the Jordan River exits Lake Kinneret, has suggested a link between ancient Egypt and Israel around 3,000 BCE during the Early Bronze Age.

According to a report in the Jerusalem Post, Tel Aviv University (TAU) and University College London archeologists found the fragment.

The piece, part of a carved stone plaque bearing archaic Egyptian signs, was the highlight of the second season of excavations at Tel Bet Yerah (Khirbet el-Kerak). he site lies along an ancient highway that connected Egypt to the wider world of the ancient Near East.

The dig, carried out within the Beit Yerah National Park, was completed there last week by a joint team headed by TAU’s Raphael Greenberg and David Wengrow from England.

Earlier discoveries, both in Egypt and at Bet Yerah, have indicated that there was direct interaction between the site – then one of the largest in the Jordan Valley – and the Egyptian royal court.

The new discovery suggests that these contacts were of far greater local significance than had been suspected.

The archeologists noted that the fragment, which depicts an arm and hand grasping a scepter and an early form of the ankh sign, was the first artifact of its type ever found in an archaeological site outside Egypt.

It has been attributed to the period of Egypt’s First Dynasty, at around 3000 BCE.

Finds of this nature are rare even within Egypt itself, and the signs are executed to a high quality, as good as those on royal cosmetic palettes and other monuments dating to the origins of Egyptian kingship.

This year’s excavations also provided new insights into contacts between the early town and the distant north, when large quantities of “Khirbet Kerak Ware” (a distinctive kind of red/black burnished pottery first found at Tel Bet Yerah) were found in association with portable ceramic hearths, some of them bearing decorations in the form of human features.

“The hearths are very similar to objects found in Anatolia and the southern Caucasus, and most were found in open spaces where there was other evidence for fire-related activities,” noted Greenberg.

“The people using this pottery appear to have been migrants or descendants of migrants, and its distribution on the site, as well as the study of other cultural aspects, such as what they ate and the way they organized their households, could tell us about their interaction with local people and their adaptation to new surroundings,” he added. (ANI)

A person’s response to alcohol may help predict alcoholism risk

Washington, May 23 (ANI): A person who has a low level of response (LR) to alcohol is at a greater risk of developing alcohol-use disorders (AUDs), finds a new study.

The research team from University of California, San Diego has found that LR is a unique risk factor for AUDs across adulthood and is not simply a reflection of a broader range of risk factors.

“If a person needs more alcohol to get a certain effect, that person tends to drink more each time they imbibe,” said Marc A. Schuckit, director of the Alcohol Research Center, Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System and corresponding author for the study.

“Other studies we have published have shown that these individuals also choose heavy drinking peers, which helps them believe that what they drink and what they expect to happen in a drinking evening are ‘normal’.

“This low LR, which is perhaps a low sensitivity to alcohol, is genetically influenced,” he added.

The study involving 297 men between 18 to 25 years showed that a low LR to alcohol predicted AUD occurrence over the course of adulthood even after controlling for the effects of other robust risk factors.

In short, LR is a unique risk factor for AUDs across adulthood, and not simply a reflection of a broader range of risk factors.

“A low LR at age 20 was not just a reflection of being a heavier drinker at age 20 when we tested these men, and it wasn’t an artifact of an earlier onset of drinking,” said Schuckit.

“We showed that a low LR at 20 predicts later heavy drinking and alcoholism even if you control for all these other predictors of alcohol problems at age 20,” he added.

The study appears in Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research. (ANI)

Excavation in Turkey may re-write history of iron tool production

Tokyo, March 28 (ANI): The discovery of fragments of an iron tool in Turkey has pushed back the start of the Iron Age by several centuries, which may lead to the history of iron tool production being re-written.

According to a report in the Asahi Shimbun, the fragments were found at Kaman-Kalehoyuk, about 100 kilometers southeast of Ankara, by researchers of the Middle Eastern Culture Center in Japan.

They said that iron fragments believed to be part of a blade were found in a geological layer dating from 2100 B.C. to 1950 B.C.

Until now, the first use of man-made iron tools and weapons was believed to have been around 1500 B.C. by Hittites who lived in the Anatolian Peninsula.

The artifact, which is in pieces, would have a total length of 5 centimeters if connected. Although the tool was badly corroded, an X-ray of a cross section produced an image of a sharp edge.

Researchers believe the tool was a single-edged dagger.

Another fragment, a piece of iron slag, measures 2 centimeters in diameter. Two rocks containing iron were also found, suggesting that iron workshops existed at the site.

During excavations that wound up last year, researchers discovered iron from a geological layer from before 1500 B.C.

However, they said that there was a chance the artifact had settled from a later period.

Hideo Akanuma, a senior curator at the Iwate Prefectural Museum, began analyzing the metal fragments last year.

According to Akanuma, “The discovery of iron in different stages of processing as well as its raw materials from the same geological layer is conclusive evidence that iron processing occurred at the site.”

The Hittites are credited with being the first race of people to artificially create iron. (ANI)

More than 4,000 prehistoric artifacts of stone and bone discovered in Vietnam

Hanoi (Vietnam), March 16 (ANI): Archaeologists have found more than 4,000 ancient artifacts of stone and bone in an archaeological site in Vietnam.

The treasure trove of artifacts was discovered at the Xom Trai archaeological site in Tan Lap commune, Lac Son district in northern Hoa Binh province, by archaeologists from the Hoa Binh Museum and the Southeast Asia Prehisory Centre.

According to VOV News, scientists said that Xom Trai Cave, recognized as a national archaeological site in 2001, is believed to be a tool workshop as well as a habitat for people of the Hoa Binh civilization.

Hundreds of stone artifacts, including seats and cutting tools, weighing up to 10 kg each, and tens of millions of seashells have been discovered in 200 sqm area in the cave.

Researchers also discovered the oldest artifact of prehistoric art in Vietnam and two ancient tracks dating back 21,000 years.

The ancient roads are the first of such discovery in Southeast Asia.

Especially, a man’s skeleton was found in a stratum of between 14,000-17,000 years old. Researchers said that the man was about 35-40 years old and 1.65-1.68 m tall.

Researchers also found two kinds of mineral rock used by prehistoric people as nutrition supplements. (ANI)

13,000 yr old Clovis-era tool cache shows evidence of camel, horse butchering

Washington, Feb 26 (ANI): A biochemical analysis of a rare Clovis-era stone tool cache recently unearthed in the city limits of Boulder, Colorado, in US, indicates some of the implements were used to butcher ice-age camels and horses that roamed North America until their extinction about 13,000 years ago.

The study, conducted by University of Colorado researchers, is the first to identify protein residue from extinct camels on North American stone tools and only the second to identify horse protein residue on a Clovis-age tool.

According to CU-Boulder Anthropology Professor Douglas Bamforth, who led the study, the cache is one of only a handful of Clovis-age artifact caches that have been unearthed in North America.

“The Clovis culture is believed by many archaeologists to coincide with the time the first Americans arrived on the continent from Asia via the Bering Land Bridge about 13,000 to 13,500 years ago,” he said.

“Named the Mahaffy Cache after Boulder resident and landowner Patrick Mahaffy, the collection is one of only two Clovis caches that have been analyzed for protein residue from ice-age mammals,” he added.

In addition to the camel and horse residue on the artifacts, a third item from the Mahaffy Cache is the first Clovis tool ever to test positive for sheep, and a fourth tested positive for bear.

The Mahaffy Cache consists of 83 stone implements ranging from salad plate-sized, elegantly crafted bifacial knives and a unique tool resembling a double-bitted axe to small blades and flint scraps.

Discovered in May 2008 by Brant Turney, head of a landscaping crew working on the Mahaffy property, the cache was unearthed with a shovel under about 18 inches of soil and was packed tightly into a hole about the size of a large shoebox.

“It appeared to have been untouched for thousands of years,” Bamforth said.

Although the surface of the house lot had been lowered by construction work over the years, an analysis of photos from the Mahaffy Cache excavation site by CU-Boulder geological sciences Emeritus Professor Peter Birkeland confirmed the approximate age of sediment layer containing the Clovis implements.

The site appears to be on the edge of an ancient drainage that ran northeast from Boulder’s foothills, according to Bamforth.

“The idea that these Clovis-age tools essentially fell out of someone’s yard in Boulder is astonishing,” he said.

“But, the evidence I’ve seen gives me no reason to believe the cache has been disturbed since the items were placed there for storage about 13,000 years ago,” he added. (ANI)

History’s ancient secrets to be unlocked by new research facility in UK

Washington, Feb 16 (ANI): A new research facility opening later this year at the Diamond synchrotron in the UK is set to revolutionize world heritage science, by uncovering ancient secrets that have been locked away for centuries.

For the first time ever, cultural heritage scientists will be able to scan and image large relics and artifacts up to two tonnes in weight in incredible precision.

They will no longer be restricted to examining small items.

According to Dr Jen Hiller, Diamond’s resident archaeologist, the UK synchrotron will open a powerful new experimental station this autumn.

Called the Joint Engineering, Environmental and Processing (JEEP) beamline, it will carry out experiments in a variety of areas including the growing field of world heritage science.

“Heritage scientists across the world are able to apply to use this unique beamline to delve deep inside precious ancient artifacts to unravel their secrets in a non-invasive way. Never before has it been possible to scan and image such large relics with such precision,” Dr Hiller explained.

“Now is the time for researchers in this field to maximise this unique opportunity and consider how JEEP can help to advance their studies,” she added.

“Thanks to the intensity of the X-rays produced by JEEP and its flexible space, researchers will be able to obtain a much higher resolution image, down to the scale of a few microns, and in significantly less time than the existing methods. we are talking about a matter of minutes as opposed to a number of hours,” said Dr Hiller.

“This finely detailed picture will enable scientists to see right inside an artifact helping them to obtain crucial information to piece together the story of its origin and history,” she added.

According to Dr Janet Ambers, a scientist from the Conservation and Scientific Research Department at the British Museum, “We are very excited about having access to this innovative tool because it will allow us to look at our artifacts in a completely new way.”

“The versatility of JEEP will open up exciting new opportunities in many fields of science due to its extremely high flux, high energy X-ray beam and its two complementary experimental areas,” said Dr Michael Drakopoulos, the Principal Beamline Scientist for JEEP.

“It’s fantastic that JEEP can help not only towards major advances in the environmental sciences and the world of engineering but also can have an extremely positive impact within the field of world heritage science,” he added. (ANI)

100 new roman artifacts discovered in Macedonia

100 new roman artifacts discovered in Macedonia Sofia (Bulgaria), : A team of archaeologists has found over 100 new artifacts, which date back to the early Roman period, at the Gabrevci site in the central part of Macedonia.

According to a report in www.balkantravellers.com, 130 ceramic vessels and deformed bronze objects were discovered during initial excavations, as stated by Trayche Nachev, head of the archaeological team.

The new findings come a month after a ritual funeral coach was discovered at the site, according to media reports.

The area around the village of Konche and the town of Stip is rich in well-researched archaeological sites from different eras.

Several tombs dating to the first century AD and the late Bronze period can be found near Konche, informed the Macedonian Information Agency.

In addition, excavations of the medieval fortress of Isar in Stip yielded findings, including a one-nave church, that illustrated how life in the fortress was organised during different periods of its existence. (ANI)