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Hallstatt culture – the “white gold” and floral skulls

The Hallstatt culture was the overriding centered European culture from the 8th to 6th centuries before Christ (European ahead of time Iron Age), acquiring out of the Urnfield culture of the 12th century before Christ (Late Bronze Age) and followed in much of Central Europe by the La Tène culture.

By the 6th century BC, the Halstatt culture extended for some a thousand km, from the Champagne-Ardenne in the west, through the Upper Rhine and the upper Danube, as far as the Vienna Basin and the Danubian Lowland in the east, from the Main, Bohemia and the Little Carpathians in the north, to the Swiss plateau, the Salzkammergut and to Lower Styria.

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It is named for its type site, Hallstatt, a lakeside village in the Austrian Salzkammergut southeast of Salzburg. The culture is commonly linked to Proto-Celtic and Celtic populations in its western zone and with (pre-)Illyrians in its eastern zone.

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Bizarre Rat Temple

Karni Mata was a female Hindu sage born in the Charan caste and is worshiped as the incarnation of the goddess Durga by her followers. She is an official deity of the royal family of Jodhpur and Bikaner. During her lifetime, she laid the foundation stone of two of the important forts in Rajputana. She lived an ascetic life, and most of the temples dedicated to her were dedicated during her lifetime. A temple dedicated to her during her lifetime differs from others in that it does not contain an image or idol of her but rather contains a foot-print to symbolize her visit to that place.

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The most famous of her temples is the temple of Deshnoke, which was created following her mysterious disappearance from her home. The temple is famous for its rats, which are treated as sacred and given protection in the temple. This temple is near to Bikaner and Nokha. The second name of Karni mata is (Nari bai). Contrary to some reports, the temple is of the Hindu sect and is not affiliated with the Jain faith.

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World’s oldest human remains

Israeli archaeologists have discovered human remains dating from 400,000 years ago, challenging conventional wisdom that Homo sapiens originated in Africa, the leader of excavations in Israel said.
Avi Gopher, of Tel Aviv University’s Institute of Archaeology, said testing of stalagmites, stalactites and other material found in a cave east of Tel Aviv indicates that eight teeth uncovered there could be the earliest traces so far of our species.

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“Our cave was used for a period of about 250,000 years — from about 400,000 years ago to about 200,000 years ago,” he told AFP.

oldest human remains 1 Worlds oldest human remains“The teeth are scattered through the layers of the cave, some in the deeper part, that is to say from 400,000 years and through all kinds of other layers that can be up to 200,000 years. The oldest are 400,000 years old”, he added.”

oldest human remains 2 Worlds oldest human remainsThat calls into question the widely held view that Africa was the birthplace of modern man, said Gopher, who headed the dig at Qesem Cave.

oldest human remains 4 Worlds oldest human remains“It is accepted at the moment that the earliest Homo sapiens that we know is in east Africa and is 200,000 years old, or a little less. We don’t know of anywhere else where anyone claims to have an earlier Homo sapiens,” he said.

oldest human remains 5 Worlds oldest human remainsGopher said the first teeth were discovered in 2006 but he and his team waited until they had several samples, then conducted years of testing, using a variety of dating methods, before publishing their findings.

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Digging continues at the cave, the university said, with researchers hoping to “uncover additional finds that will enable them to confirm the findings published up to now and to enhance our understanding of the evolution of mankind, and especially the appearance of modern man.”

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Bizarre Underground Hair Museum

The world of collections, and “party ” collectors are wide and varied. Thus, in the world, probably not such a subject, which would not object to collecting in one form or another. And in Turkey, in Avanos, in Cappadocia, lived a potter named Chez Galip (Chez Galip), whose studio is located in the basement of a museum … women’s hair.

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In 1979 Galip had the idea of collecting the hair of women and creating a Hair Museum. The idea received a lot of attention from both local and foreign women. This collection has found its place into the Guiness Book of Records with more than 16.000 different hair examples and their addresses.

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On the question of how to start a museum, Chez Galip says polulegendu-poluistoriyu about how 30 years ago, his girlfriend was going to go very far and very long, and that he was not sad, left him a keepsake lock of her hair. Seeing this lock of, tied with a ribbon, the grateful visitors bench Cesana Galip also have to keep him in memory of his his hair, carefully recording the wishes of its business and its coordinates on the notes, which are then attached to the left of each strand.

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