Archive for the 'Ancient Wonders' Category

Arctic Tomb of The Female Shaman

 

One of the most remarkable recent discoveries is the Ekven cemetery in Chukotka, on the Russian side of the Bering Strait. This 2,000 year old Eskimo cemetery contains the tomb of a female shaman – did you know that the term “shaman” originated in Siberia? (Its meaning in translation from the Evenk language means “excited, frenzied person.”) Many of the artifacts in the tomb are objects that females would have used in healing, rituals, and dance.

 

 

The Tomb of a Shaman

William W. Fitzhugh, ed. J. Prusinski (The Arctic Studies Center)

 

One of the most remarkable discoveries of recent years was the find of a very large cemetery in Chukotka, right on the Russian side of the Bering Strait, called Ekven. This ancient Eskimo cemetery of the Old Bering Sea culture, almost 2,000 years old, had been perfectly preserved in permafrost. When Soviet archaeologists D.A. Sergeev and S.A. Arutiunov came to the site to excavate, among the discoveries they made was Burial 154, a stone, wood, and whalebone tomb, which held the Ekven cemetery’s major find: elaborate burial offerings and the skeleton of an elderly woman with a wooden mask at her knees.

 

This tomb is reconstructed here showing the original artifacts that were found in that burial, set symbolically within the body of a whale, as reported by Sergeev and Arutiunov.

 

In terms of arctic archaeology, the Ekven cemetery is probably the most important site; Ipiutak is the only other cemetery site that rivals it. Nearly a hundred graves were excavated, and work is continuing at the site even today by Mikhael Bronstein and colleagues. The fact that these artifacts were found in ceremonial grave contexts gives us a specific chronological marker for each one of these graves. Whereas most of the other Old Bering Sea materials have come from middens, where it is unclear whether the material has been recycled or come from other contexts, here we have burial units that are from one specific time period. Each one can be used to correlate the styles of the tools against the others to develop a highly refined stylistic sequence for this culture.

 

For the complete article, click here to go to The Hall of Masks at The Arctic Studies Center.

 

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The Mysterious and Enlightening “Lost Gospels”

Have you seen the documentary “The Lost Gospels“? It’s quite worth your time if you’re interested in religion and history. The film is a “ninety minute long BBC video documentary (released in 2008, and available in nine YouTube segments) which follows the personal quest of Anglican priest Pete Owen Jones to understand the many ancient Christian texts that didn’t make it into the New Testament. The focus is principally on the Gnostic texts found at Nag Hammadi. This is an entertaining and educational introduction to the Gnostic Gospels; it is both well researched and nicely produced, with extensive location filming in Egypt.” (Text from The Gnostic Society Library – a website you will find very interesting if you enjoy researching religious texts, apocrypha, etc.)

 

 

The first segment is posted below:

 

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El Chupa-what-a?

The internet has buzzing with fresh insight into the mystery of el chupacabra, one of cryptozoology’s most fascinating and elusive beasts. This modern day vampire of the animal kingdom, traditionally thought to be a bloodsucking, dog-like creature, with a long snout and fangs, may have recently been captured on a policeman’s mounted vehicle camera. You be the judge…

 

 

 

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