What's being described as "the second most important archaeological discovery since the tomb of Tutankhamen" and "the largest city ever found in Egypt" was discovered by a home-grown Egyptian expedition after years of failure by foreign efforts. Nevine El-Aref covers the story of the overall find, some individual surprises, and the possibility of further remarkable news. Exceptional, too, is the paper described by Greg Taylor in
The Shining Ones: Did the Egyptian Pyramids Produce Reflections That Illuminated Other Sacred Sites? And though Donald E. Jennings offers his idea with the appropriate caveats as to the archaeological record, it would be, well, "logical." A "rediscovery" due to a
Drought Reveals "Spanish Stonehenge" That Had Been Hiding In a Reservoir For Over 50 Years, per Madeleine Muzdakis. The monument is somewhat the worse for wear from a relatively short submergence. And there's something very moving in Tom Metcalfe's
100,000-year-old Neanderthal Footprints Show Children Playing in the Sand. (WM)
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from THE ANOMALIST https://bit.ly/2OU200o
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