Early man used crude version of ‘sat nav’ system to navigate across England

London, September 15 (ANI): In a new research, a scientist has found that prehistoric man navigated his way across England using a crude version of a satellite navigation system, which was based on stone circle markers.

According to a report in the Telegraph, the research, by historian and writer Tom Brooks, shows that Britain’s Stone Age ancestors were “‘sophisticated engineers” and far from a barbaric race.

Brooks studied all known prehistoric sites as part of his research.

He found that the prehistoric man was able to travel between settlements in England with pinpoint accuracy, thanks to a complex network of hilltop monuments.

These covered much of southern England and Wales and included now famous landmarks such as Stonehenge and The Mount.

New research suggests that they were built on a connecting grid of isosceles triangles that ‘point’ to the next site.

Many are 100 miles or more away, but GPS co-ordinates show all are accurate to within 100 metres.

This provided a simple way for ancient Britons to navigate successfully from point A to B without the need for maps.

“To create these triangles with such accuracy would have required a complex understanding of geometry,” said Brooks.

“The sides of some of the triangles are over 100 miles across on each side and yet the distances are accurate to within 100 metres. You cannot do that by chance,” he added.

“So advanced, sophisticated and accurate is the geometrical surveying now discovered, that we must review fundamentally the perception of our Stone Age forebears as primitive, or conclude that they received some form of external guidance,” he further added.

Brooks analyzed 1,500 sites stretching from Norfolk to north Wales. These included standing stones, hilltop forts, stone circles and hill camps.

Each was built within eyeshot of the next.

Using GPS co-ordinates, he plotted a course between the monuments and noted their positions to each other.

He found that they all lie on a vast geometric grid made up of isosceles ‘triangles’. Each triangle has two sides of the same length and ‘point’ to the next settlement.

Thus, anyone standing on the site of Stonehenge in Wiltshire could have navigated their way to Lanyon Quoit in Cornwall without a map.

According to Brooks, many of the Stone Age sites were created 5,000 years ago by an expanding population recovering from the trauma of the Ice Age.

“The triangle navigation system may have been used for trading routes among the expanding population and also been used by workers to create social paths back to their families while they were working on these new sites,” he said. (ANI)

Attempt to break Elvis impersonator world record bites the dust

London, September 1 (ANI): An attempt to have the most number of Elvis Presley impersonators bit the dust after only 29 people turned up.

Organisers of the event had their fingers crossed to beat a previous world record with 148 people dressed as ‘The King’ to sing ‘Viva Las Vegas’ at The Ship Inn at Par, Cornwall.

Pauline Giles, who ran the attempt, held the poor turnout on a combination of bad weather and the credit crunch responsible for the failed bid.

“It’s been raining all day which puts people off. Things are also a bit tight at the moment so all in all it was a slightly poor show,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

The existing record was set by 147 Australians eight years ago. (ANI)

Prince William’s secret vacation with old chum Lady Natasha

London, Aug 23 (ANI): Prince William has had a secret summer vacation in Cornwall without his girlfriend Kate Middleton, it has emerged.

And while Middleton was absent from the seen, Lady Natasha Rufus Isaacs – an old chum of the second in line to the throne – was often to be seen by his side, reports the Telegraph.

When asked, Lady Natasha said: “I don’t want to talk about the holiday. It was a private occasion.”

Prince Harry was also among the guests enjoying the five-day break at a house rented by Lady Natasha’s father in Trebetherick.

Lady Natasha’s brother, Viscount Julian Erleigh, 23, is one of Harry’s best pals.

One regular at the local Oystercatcher bar where the princes and their friends caroused on a number of nights during their holiday in the first week of July said: “It says a lot for the discretion of people who live here that it has remained a secret for this long.

“Sometimes there were about 20 of them in here. All of the princes’ female friends are very pretty, but I recall Natasha well. She stood out.”

Lady Natasha met William when she attended Westonbirt School, a mere five minutes from Highgrove, and was close enough to him by the time he celebrated his 21st birthday party to be seated at the top table. (ANI)

Cornish bay that inspired Virginia Woolf’s novel sells for 80K pounds at auction

London, July 14 (ANI): The Cornish bay that inspired Virginia Woolf to pen her famous novel ‘To the Lighthouse’ has fetched 80,000 pounds at an auction.

The plot, the Upton Towans beach, stretching from Hale, near St Ives, to the lighthouse on Godrevy Island, was acquired by a private buyer.

Woolf, later in life, revisited her childhood memories in Cornwall as “the best beginning to life conceivable”.

“It is wonderful that something that inspired literature is going to help provide funds to feed plays and theatrical productions of the future,” the Telegraph quoted Tim Brinkman, the director of Hall for Cornwall, as saying.

Richard Argles, the director of Colliers CRE, which handled the auction, said that the price surpassed their estimate of 50,000 pounds. (ANI)

Oil hunters started decimating whale populations as early as 1800

Washington, May 25 (ANI): One of several astonishing reconstructions of ocean life in olden days suggests that about the ocean around New Zealand teemed with about 27,000 southern right whales, about 30 times as many as today, before oil hunters started to whaling in the early 1800s.

The researchers set to make a presentation on the reconstruction at a Census of Marine Life conference, which runs from May 26 to 28, say that at about the same time, large pods of blue whales and orcas, blue sharks and thresher sharks darkened the waters off Cornwall, England, herds of harbour porpoise pursued fish upriver, and dolphins regularly played in waters inshore.

Census researchers are using such diverse sources as old ship logs, literary texts, tax accounts, newly translated legal documents and even mounted trophies to piece together images of fish of such sizes, abundance and distribution in ages past that they stagger modern imaginations.

They are also documenting the timelines over which those giant marine life populations declined.

Researchers James Barrett and Jen Harland of Cambridge University, Cluny Johnstone of York University, and Mike Richards of Germany-based Max Planck Institute reckon that a shift from eating locally-caught freshwater to marine fish species occurred around 1000 AD.

Their surmise is said to be consistent with analyses of scientifically-dated fish remains and historical data from England and northwestern Europe showing smaller freshwater fish and fewer species availability in early medieval times, likely caused by increased exploitation and pollution.

Meanwhile, Maria Lucia De Nicolo of the University of Bologna has established that new fishing boats and equipment invented in the 1500s made it possible to venture from coastal to deep sea fishing.

She says that the real revolution in marine fishing happened in the mid-1600s when pairs of boats began dragging a net.

Andy Rosenberg of the University of New Hampshire, a leader of the Census’ History of Marine Animal Population (HMAP) project and chair of the conference, says that new insights allowed by centuries of information are upending modern notions of “natural” marine life sizes, abundance, habitats and vulnerability, and causing authorities to revisit marine baselines.

The researchers believe that these insights may turn out to be useful for policy makers, who plan to use the results as a realistic baseline against which the current and future status of the marine ecosystem can be gauged.

Ian Poiner, Chair of the Census Scientific Steering Committee, says: “The insights emerging from this research of the past provide a new context for contemporary ocean management. nderstanding the magnitude and drivers of change long ago is essential to accurately interpret today’s trends and to make future projections.” (ANI)

Duchess of Cornwall’s private portrait goes on display

London, May 4 (ANI): A private portrait of the Duchess of Cornwall is going on public display this week.

The annual exhibition of the Royal Society of Portrait Painters had obtained the painting from Prince Charles.

The canvas, which usually graces the walls of Clarence House, depicts a smiling Camilla, glowing in smooth skin.

Artist Susan Crawford, whose expertise lies in painting horses and human portraits, painted the informal image last year.

“Having known the Duchess and her family for many years I wanted to bring out the informal side of her character, her adaptability and above all her sense of humour,” the Daily Express quoted Crawford as saying.

“She inherited many of these qualities from her father, Bruce Shand, of whom I was very fond,” she added.

RSPP spokesman Richard Fitzwilliams further said: “There’s a charm in this portrait, also a humanity and a sense of humour. It’s a striking image.” (ANI)

Kate Winslet says her perfect accent belies her ‘working class hero’ status

London, Apr 29 (ANI): Oscar-winning actress Kate Winslet has complained that she is wrongly perceived as middle class because of her perfect diction.

The 33-year-old stunner, who has vowed audiences all around the world with her exceptional acting abilities, insists that she was a daughter of out-of-work actors who struggled to pay the bills.

While expressing her annoyance at those who doubted her working class credentials, she told The Telegraph: “People don’t believe that. People literally think I’m lying.”

Asked why the British did not regard her as a ‘working class hero’, she replied: “Because I speak nice.”
Keeping the topic of the conversation same, Winslet recalled an audition as a teenager in which a director, upon hearing her accent, refused to believe she was from Reading.

She revealed: “He went, ‘I hope you’re not as dishonest in your work as you are about your own life.’ I was shocked. My dad was very much a struggling actor and spent more of his life as a postman, as a member of a tarmac firm, as a van driver. He’d sell Christmas trees. Anything. That was my dad.

“We had these dreadful second-hand cars that would always die a death, or we’d go on holiday to Cornwall, come back and it would have been nicked. It’s like a Joe Orton farce, my family. Honestly, it was hand-me-down shoes and 10p pocket money on a Saturday that didn’t go up until I was 11.” (ANI)

Prince Charles and Camilla to visit Berlin on German trip

London – Britain’s Prince Charles and his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, will pay a visit to Germany and Italy later this month, the royal palace said Monday.

The couple will go to Berlin and Potsdam, the historic Prussian seat of power just outside the German capital. They will also visit the Neue Museum, recently-restored by a British architect, and the Allied Museum in Berlin to mark the 60th anniversary of the Berlin airlift by western wartime allies.

A statement said Prince Charles, 60, will speak on the urgent need to address climate change, one of the issues he has warned must not be forgotten in the current pre-occupation with economic recession.

The German visit on April 29 and 30 will be preceded by a trip to Venice and Rome, where the couple – who are both divorcees – will receive and audience with Pope Benedict XVI.

G-20 ‘terrorist plot’ uncovered by UK police

London, Mar.31 (ANI): Police in London have reportedly uncovered an alleged terrorist plot to disrupt the second G-20 summit with the arrest of five people.

Those who have been arrested under the Terrorism Act live in Plymouth, Devon and the surrounding area. They are being held at a police station in Cornwall.

According to The Telegraph, police found a cache of imitation firearms, knives and a number of “suspicious devices”, besides a large amount of political material that is thought to relate to anti-capitalist protests planned to disrupt the meeting of world leaders this week.

A police spokesman said there was no suggestion of Islamic extremists being involved and added: “Those arrested are not believed, at this stage, to be part of a national or larger operation.”

Officers found a range of imitation and deactivated firearms from handguns to long barrelled rifles and a Kalashnikov-style assault rifle, police said. They also found “suspicious devices,” described as “improvised explosives made of fireworks,” that were seized and submitted for forensic examination.

The discoveries followed a number of raids in Plymouth after a 25-year-old man was caught spraying graffiti slogans in the city centre on Friday night.

One of those arrested was said to be an international student and the other four are British nationals.

Police were granted more time to question them on Monday afternoon.

The Metropolitan Police said it was liaising with the Devon and Cornwall force and added: “At the current time we have no information to suggest a change to the threat picture facing either the demonstrations or G20.

The G-20 summit, to be held at the ExCeL arena in London’s Docklands on Thursday, has been described by Scotland Yard as the capital’s most challenging police operation in a decade.

More than 3,000 police officers will be on duty when the leaders of the world’s 20 richest countries, including President Obama, descend on London, with up to 100,000 protesters expected to stage rallies and marches during the week.

Police fear the rallies will be hijacked by anarchists intent on sparking violence and riots, with thousands of hardline protesters expected to fly in from abroad. (ANI)

Environmentally friendly surfboard to revolutionize surfing industry

London, Mar 20 (ANI): An environmentally friendly surfboard made from balsa tree is set to revolutionise the surfing industry.

According to the creators from Eden Project in Cornwall, the new surfboards have been made from plant-derived material, and a resin was developed from linseed oil to coat the board.

The move is likely to replace the petroleum chemicals used in traditional surfboard production.

Eden’s retail director, Mark Beeley, called the creation as “revolutionary”.

“At last we are able to offer surfers the chance to own one of the most sustainable surfboards in the world, available right here in the UK,” the Telegraph quoted him as saying. (ANI)

UK Navy accused of racism over Mugabe nickname

London, Mar.10 (ANI): A black recruiting officer has accused the British Royal Navy of racism after colleagues nicknamed him Robert Mugabe, a tribunal has heard.

Chief Petty Officer Andrew Antrobus, 48, told the hearing he complained to his senior officers when he was introduced as Andy AKA Robert Mugabe at a meeting.

The experienced sailor was manager of the recruiting office in Redruth, Cornwall, where he worked with colleagues from the other services.

According to The Telegraph, he claimed colleagues used the Mugabe nickname after he was appointed to the post of office manager and started running a stricter regime.

He had previously complained about an army sergeant who referred to some recruits as “black bastards”, an employment tribunal in Exeter was told.

The married father is claiming racial discrimination against the Ministry of Defence, a Navy colleague Chief Petty Officer John Pinsent, and line manager Warrant Officer Robert Ewen. All three deny the claim. (ANI)

Razorlight to headline Eden Session with Oasis, Kooks, Kasabian

Washington, March 4 (ANI): Rockers Razorlight are set to headline this summer’s Eden Sessions along with fellow performers Oasis, Kooks and Kasabian.

Eden’s creative director Peter Hampel confirmed that the Anglo-Swedish group will hit the stage at the Cornish ecological park on July 9.

“We’ve had our sights on Razorlight for the last three years and they will be a real highlight,” Contactmusic quoted Hampel as saying.

“With four bands confirmed already, this year’s sessions see some of the world’s greatest guitar bands descending on Cornwall,” he added.

The tickets for the session shall be made available on March 10 at the price of 35 pounds each, without including booking fee. (ANI)

Now, a two-year course for students to learn how to ride waves

London, Feb 26 (ANI): Just imagine-a school on the beach that awards degrees. Well, that’s what a new surf course is offering students who love riding the waves.

Costing a good 100,000 pounds, the course will require students to spend much of their “study” time on the beach and to go on numerous residential trips to top surfing locations like Cornwall, Devon and possibly abroad.

And after completing the two-year course, the students will be awarded a BTEC National Certificate in Sport, equivalent to two A Levels.

The training, described by critics as a “Mickey Mouse” course that will be a waste of time and money, will cost 4,012 pounds per student.

The Surf Academy will open in September at the Bournemouth and Poole College in Dorset and will coincide with the completion of Europe’s first artificial surf reef in Boscombe, Bournemouth.

Two tutors, who would supervise the course, will help students hone their surfing technique under the guidance of experts.

They will also take theory lessons in sports science, contest tactics, coaching and other aspects of the surf industry.

“The managers looked at the new surf reef which is to be built in Bournemouth, and realised they could capitalise on it,” The Telegraph quoted Gary Hart, who will be teaching the course, as saying.

He added: “Surfing is a growing industry and there are a lot of opportunities out there. Students could go on to be surfing instructors, work in retail or go onto higher education – there are surf science courses at universities like Plymouth.”

The taxpayer will be funding the further education course via the Learning and Skills Council (LSC).
The course will provide students with a chance to obtain a beach lifeguard and an instructor’s qualification.

Terry Crump, 30, chairman of Wessex Surf Club and four times south coast champion, will be teaching the practical part of the course.

Crump said: “I think the course is a brilliant idea. Surfing is a growing industry and it’s always good to see youngsters getting enthusiastic about it. You have to be at a certain level to be able to teach, so for a beginner this course would be ideal.” (ANI)

Queen Mother’s bronze statue unveiled in London

London, February 25 (ANI): A bronze statue in honour of the Queen Mother was unveiled by her daughter Queen Elizabeth in central London.

The statue was made to stand in front of the Queen Mother’s husband King George VI as a centre-piece of a 2 million pound monument on The Mall.

The event saw the gathering of senior members of the Royal Family including Prince William, Prince Harry, the Duke of Edinburgh, the Duchess of Cornwall, the Duke of York, Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie.

The 9ft 6inch artwork was sculpted by Philip Jackson, who said he wanted to create the much-loved and inspiring royal’s sense of fun.

“The Queen Mother’s influence was felt for almost an entire century and she was well loved by a large part of the population,” the Daily Express quoted him as saying.

“I wanted to give her animation because she was a very animated person – when you met her she was the life and soul of the party.

“The wind is catching her robes, to give her a slight sense of movement, and she has the slightest vestiges of a smile,” he added.

Prince Charles also paid a touching tribute to his “darling grandmother”, saying: “At long last my grandparents are reunited in this joint symbol, which in particular reminds us of all they stood for and meant to so many during the darkest days this country has ever faced.”

“All of us gathered here today will I know miss my darling grandmother’s vitality.” (ANI)

Brit woman gives birth to triplets after being told she could never have kids

London, Jan 9 (ANI): A woman from Cornwall who was told by doctors she could never have children has given birth to triplets 14 weeks early.

Sam Paciuszko, 31, gave birth to two girls and a boy, each weighing just 2lb.

Earlier, Paciuszko was told there was only a 30 per cent chance of all three surviving but they are now gaining weight and “doing well” as they are treated in three different hospitals for specialist treatment.

This implies that the couple will have to make 400-mile round trips to see each one in turn.

The babies, Martha, Evie and Harry, are still in incubators in intensive care.

They are not expected to return home until March, the month they were originally due, reports the Telegraph.

Paciuszko was told she would never conceive because her body was not producing eggs but she began fertility treatment when she married her husband Andrew, a postman. (ANI)