Archaeology Morphing into Entertainment?

It’s getting harder and harder to tell the difference between science and fiddle-faddle.

OK, it costs a fortune to run an archaeological dig, and money’s always hard to come by. Turkey and Egypt are looking to tourists to pay the freight.

Zahi Hawass, long-time head of Egypt’s Antiquities Dept.–a very important post: Egypt would shrivel up and die without tourism, and that means pyramids and statues–has seen his job description change over the years. Nowadays he most closely resembles a 1960s variety show host, a la Jackie Gleason. He has to let New Agers enter the pyramids and conjure up the ghosts of pharaohs and magicians. He used to just dismiss such burlesque, but he’s not allowed to anymore. Can’t say no to the money.

Meanwhile, Turkey is turning Gobekli Tepe into a tourist mecca.

Visiting One of the World's Greatest Archaeological Sites in Türkiye - AFAR

Here’s the crowd. Next will come the rides and gift shops. “I’ve been to Potbelly Hill–and here’s the belly to prove it!”

Some scientists are worried that these famous sites might get compromised, somehow. Ya think? On the other hand, what’s the point of a “World Heritage Site” if the world isn’t allowed to come and see it? Although, speaking for myself, I think the Disney World atmosphere would probably spoil Gobekli Tepe for me.

These sites have many things to teach us… things we’ll never know unless we take some care.

‘How Did Civilization Start?’ (2019)

326 Gobekli Tepe Stock Photos - Free & Royalty-Free Stock Photos from  Dreamstime

Gobekli Tepe… It has no business being there.

I don’t know how civilization started, but one thing I do know for sure–this dagnabbed computer had nothing to do with it!

How Did Civilization Start?

I’m having rather a hard time with this machine today, it doesn’t want to cooperate in any way. Yes, I know I’ve run this post before. Crikey, I’m lucky I can run any posts at all, the way this thing is acting up.

Maybe computers made some ancient civilizations… fail. Disappear, go extinct, turn into piles of junk.

I wouldn’t be the least bit surprised.

‘How Did Civilization Start?’ (2019)

See the source image

Ruins on Potbelly Hill

I’ll return to this topic later today, when I have more time. Rodney Stark has some intriguing insights into how we ought to view the remains of extinct civilizations.

Anyhow, where did civilization come from? What got it started in the first place?

How Did Civilization Start?

That Potbelly Hill site in Turkey, Gobekli Tepe, is a gold mine–but we don’t know yet how to evaluate the treasure. It’s so far off what was expected, scientists are still trying to wrap their minds around it.

Maybe they ought to read Genesis.

‘An Archaeological Enigma: Potbelly Hill’ (2013)

Image result for images of gobekli tepe

I like to re-post this item now and then because it’s so interesting–and so challenging to the Stupid Caveman model espoused by evolution-sellers.

https://leeduigon.com/2013/01/10/an-archeological-enigma-potbelly-hill/

Let’s see a bunch of Gender Studies majors build something.

World’s Oldest Writing–and We Can’t Read It

Here it is–the world’s oldest writing… that we know about, so far. See if you can decode the secret message.

I hope you don’t mind taking a little break from watching our secular pin-head civilization destroy itself.

When was writing invented? Back when they used to teach such things in school, we were told that the ancient Sumerians invented writing, possibly as long ago as 4,000 B.C. Egyptian hieroglyphics came along shortly afterward.

In 1993, archaeologists in northern Greece dredged up a piece of wood from the bottom of a lake. The wood was carved all over with writing. Preserved in the oxygen-free environment under a layer of mud, the artifact was carbon-dated to circa 5,200 B.C. ( http://www.ancient-origins.net/ancient-writings-ancient-places-europe/dispilio-tablet-oldest-known-written-text-00913 )

Did you know that? I didn’t, and I try to keep close track of such things. This piece of wood, now called the Dispilio Tablet, is far and away the oldest known sample of writing. But of course we have no idea what it says. An unknown language written in an unknown script cannot be deciphered, as the saying goes. But we might have a slim chance of someday cracking the code, if the unknown language of the Dispilio Tablet is related to ancient Greek. For the time being, though, we have no way of reading it.

Funny things are going on in prehistory, these days. There’s the Potbelly Hill site in Turkey, where a vast, sophisticated temple complex, complete with nicely-executed sculpture in the round, was apparently in operation around 10,000 B.C (see http://leeduigon.com/2013/01/10/an-archeological-enigma-potbelly-hill/ ). And now the advent of writing has been pushed back over a thousand years.

If this keeps up, we’re going to run out of room in history for primitive, know-nothing cavemen.

Although we can always find their like in some of our more expensive public schools.