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originally posted by: Hanslune
I mean they did solid work in their careers but none made an astounding find, which leads to positions at better schools more offers of leading expeditions/programs/projects, tenure, book deals, institutes being named for you and the biggie the turning on of the grant tap.
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: Hellas
Carbon dating is still based on a Theory. Those numbers are somewhat made up.
Regarding the origin of it, most of it seems to be of ancient greek architecture.
I would venture to say that carbon dating is FAR more accurate than, say, your personal knowledge of ancient architecture.
Harte
originally posted by: Hellas
originally posted by: Harte
originally posted by: Hellas
Carbon dating is still based on a Theory. Those numbers are somewhat made up.
Regarding the origin of it, most of it seems to be of ancient greek architecture.
I would venture to say that carbon dating is FAR more accurate than, say, your personal knowledge of ancient architecture.
Harte
What do you know about my knowledge of ancient architecture? Probably nothing.
Living in the country that is responsible for all architectural achievements in the world and being surrounded by it, gives me way more knowledge that you could ever obtain from your books.
originally posted by: strongfp
a reply to: Hellas
Could you provide specific examples matching the architecture at GT to some Greek?
The ancestors of the people who built Stonehenge travelled west across the Mediterranean before reaching Britain, a study has shown.
Researchers compared DNA extracted from Neolithic human remains found across Britain with that of people alive at the same time in Europe.
The Neolithic inhabitants were descended from populations originating in Anatolia (modern Turkey) that moved to Iberia before heading north.
They reached Britain in about 4,000BC.
DNA reveals that Neolithic Britons were largely descended from groups who took the Mediterranean route, either hugging the coast or hopping from island-to-island on boats. Some British groups had a minor amount of ancestry from groups that followed the Danube route.