View Full Version : Çatalhöyük Research Project Announces Latest Conferences and Discoveries
Joanne Shepard
6th April 2014, 16:59
http://popular-archaeology.com/issue/03012014/article/catalhoyuk-research-project-announces-latest-conferences-and-discoveries
meat suit
6th April 2014, 19:03
welcome to Avalon Joanne,
what is useful with this kind of post is a small text describing the content of what is linked and whats interesting about it....
cheers
meat
sirdipswitch
6th April 2014, 19:27
Great find Joanne!! Thanks for posting.
Earliest civilization found in Southern Turkey? Really? From a period more than "9000" years ago? Wow. But then I wonder who and where, the civilization was that they were getting their, "finely woven material" from???
It's these little things between the lines that they don't say that I look for. Summer, about 6000 years ago. Here is at least two advanced cultures, 3000 years older!!! 3000 years!! Seems the more we dig, the "older" we find. hmm.
Summer was 3000 year after this one, and yet besides this one, there was evidently another one even older than this one.
Pesky ol wabbit just keeps diggin deeper, eh??
All just goes to prove that which I keep saying: "You can't believe how many times we have just been goin round and round in circles, playin this game we call life in the physical." Have any of you read about the Norwegians that were bulding an underground city and ran into a "Tunnel Borring Machine" that they thought belonged to the United States, untill they figured out that it was more than a thousand years old. 1,000 years???!!! Tunnel boring machine??? yep.
dammwabbitanyhow. ccc.:wizard:
Gerald Paris
6th April 2014, 19:31
from the article
Scholars suggest that the finely woven material was likely traded from the Levant all the way to central Anatolia.
Thank you for sharing this article.
Much Love
G
Joanne Shepard
7th April 2014, 02:03
welcome to Avalon Joanne,
what is useful with this kind of post is a small text describing the content of what is linked and whats interesting about it....
cheers
meat
I will work on that :)
sian
7th April 2014, 04:44
There is so much in Turkey, it's a feast for the eye in every region. Worked various places there for a nearly a year. Antiquities from every region and beyond literally scattered amongst farm land to the sea bed waiting to be discovered, Unbelievable to the traveller's eye. There's a wealth of knowledge/history we can just imagine at the moment. It's a place were we could really find lost answers.:)
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