“At first I thought it was maybe 100 years old and was a snow shoe that belonged to a farmer who lost it while driving cattle. I kept it in my office as a keepsake."What wonders are found but not found, lying around in somebody's office or storeroom.
September 13, 2016
The 5,300-year-old snowshoe.
The oldest snowshoe ever found — made in the late Neolithic age out of birch wood and twine. Found in the Alps in Italy by a cartographer, back in 2003:
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16 comments:
The proverbial Ferrari in a barn except more valuable.
"surfed said...
The proverbial Ferrari in a barn except more valuable."
Probably not.
There are found finds and unfound finds...
Depends on how you value something. A Ferrari in a barn is a Ferrari in a barn. No shortage of Ferraris to humankind. On the other hand a Neo-lithic snowshoe is a one of a kind to humanity and history. Thst said I'll take the Ferrari.
Strangely, it matches the shoe Hillary lost at the 9/11 memorial.
From the article --
He is believed to have died 5,300 years ago as a result of a violent attack – he was shot by an arrow and then possibly hit with a blunt instrument such as a club.
Probably not the first drive-by, but since the beginning, there has been war and violent attacks between humans, so quit thinking that what is happening now is Bush's fault.
He is believed to have died 5,300 years ago as a result of a violent attack – he was shot by an arrow and then possibly hit with a blunt instrument such as a club.
Very early date for a Trump rally.
If a glacier recedes, exposing things there before it advanced, what size should the glacier be?
I like the story this year of the possible Caravaggio stumbled upon in the leaking attic.
"What wonders are found but not found, lying around in somebody's office or storeroom."
Like the ark of the covenant.
"The 5,800-year-old snowshoe."
"He is believed to have died 5,300 years ago..."
So he was wearing 500 year old snowshoes? Good to know, my sneakers don't last 3 years.
He spent 500 years looking for his lost snowshoe.
Every few years an ancient text thought lost is discovered on a library shelf.
From the article:
"It was unclear why people were travelling through such an inhospitable region, she said. They may have been hunting animals, fleeing enemies from a rival tribe, or visiting pagan sites of worship."
Or perhaps Because It Was There.
I doubt human curiosity was much different then.
That show was an Unknown Known until he took it to the scientists.
Rumsfeld is probably quite impressed.
Here in Central Texas, there are ancient marine fossils lying around all over.
An index fossil (i.e., really, really common at a specific age/layer of sediment) called Exogyra ponderosa is among my favorites. It is a giant spiral of an oyster shell, sometimes 9 inches across and up to 5 pounds in weight, readily found in road cuts or new construction sites around Austin.
I've given them as gifts, used them as paperweights, donated them to my kids' elementary school, and used hundreds as landscaping stones. Common as can be, they ar, and are sold on EBay for $5 to $50 if you want one. Old, yes. Uncommon, no. Valuable? High in sentimental value, if sought with one's kids.
They are from the Late Cretaceous, just over 65,000,000 years old.
http://encyclopedian-zoology.blogspot.com/2013/12/exogyra.html
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