The study of the Past's dynamic character is exemplified by a find that just may prove an old legend true...to a point. Neil Prior has the story how two scholars combined possibly to uncover "Fact within Folklore." Now a medieval map has been uncovered that seems to confirm a Welsh legend of a lost land. Elsewhere, a combination of archaeology and genetic study "rewrites the textbooks on why drinking milk was an advantage," per the lead author of a new study. What's more, as
Smithsonian Magazine Science Correspondent Brian Handwerk explains, the finding nourishes a batch of theories on just
Why Did Europeans Evolve Into Becoming Lactose Tolerant? And here's a new twist on how archaeology can help with modern problems: consult Marc Galdes'
Shipwrecks Could Act as Benchmarks to Measure Marine Litter - Maltese Marine Archaeologist. It happens that Underwater Cultural Heritage sites may presently be better gauges of submarine pollution than projected deep-water surveying. And the University of Queensland may have solved an issue that's weighed heavily on the minds of palaeontologists for decades: see
Prehistoric Podiatry: How Dinos Carried Their Enormous Weight. And we're talking
sauropods here, "like Brontosaurus and Diplodocus," for goodness' sakeĆ¢€”but the method behind this determination should have wide application to other extinct animals. (WM)
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from THE ANOMALIST https://bbc.in/3CtEPjF
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