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Science
Worshipping Women: Classical Athens’ Ritual and Reality
Though historians often saw the woman of ancient Greece as an anonymous crowd politically without rights, women were the ones who dominated the spiritual realm of life. As priestesses they ...
December 25, 2008
BY
Rosemarie Frühauf
Ancient Submerged Cities: Rethinking Our Ancestry
Marine archeology has been able to flourish, treating the world to some amazing discoveries of our distant past.
December 22, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
Green Light for World’s Second Largest Wind Farm
The Gwynt y Môr wind farm, one of the biggest projects in the world to use wind power, ...
December 10, 2008
BY
Rosemary Byfield
Does the Human Body Have Limits? Part II
So what are the limits of extremes that a human organism can survive? What determines such limits?
December 9, 2008
BY
Epoch Times Staff
Irish Government Gears Up for Green Car Revolution
A country known for green landscapes is looking to revamp its floundering economy with a green car revolution.
December 8, 2008
BY
Martin Murphy
New Quotas Dangerous for Struggling Bluefin Tuna
In what many are calling a disappointing decision, the international body responsible for managing the Atlantic and Mediterranean ...
December 4, 2008
BY
Chris Wirth
Was There a ‘Before’ the Big Bang?
Despite years of scientific investigation, the phases of the universe during its first moments following the 'Big Bang' ...
December 1, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
Overcoming Gravity: The Enigma of Coral Castle
How were monuments such as Stonehenge, the Great Pyramids of Giza, Sacsayhuaman fortress and other ancient monuments built?
November 24, 2008
BY
Epoch Times Staff
The History Before History Part III, The Ica Stones
While there are reasons to believe that the famous stones are not of Pre-Colombian origin, there exist several ...
November 22, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
The History Before History II: Vestiges of a Lost Technology
Just how old is the human race? Hundreds of apparently isolated artifacts do not fit into this standard ...
November 21, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
The History Before History, Part I
The history of man such as he is known today does not exceed 10,000 years, yet evidence of ...
November 20, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
The Divine Proportion: An Indecipherable Code
Shapes that we see all around us are governed by a principle, a proportion, a harmonic value.
November 19, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
The ‘Squatter’: Ancient Symbolism of Great Cosmic Events
Proponents of the Electric Universe maintain that plasma, an energetic state of matter, is the substance and force ...
November 17, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
‘Jennifer Aniston Neuron’ May Show What’s On Your Mind
Scientists have discovered a type of neuron that indicates high-level recognition of images when viewed by a person. ...
November 12, 2008
BY
David Skoumbourdis
The Crystal Skulls: An Ancient Mystery
The Mitchell-Hedges skull is, in a certain sense, a technical impossibility.
November 10, 2008
BY
Epoch Times Staff
Critically Endangered Amur Leopard Gets Check-up
Scientists have been analysing samples taken from the world's rarest big cat
November 7, 2008
BY
Mickey Lam
Does the Soul Exist?
How does science answer the eternal question: Is there life after death?
November 7, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
White Rhino Conceived From Frozen Sperm
For the first time in conservation history, a baby rhino male has been conceived from artificial insemination using ...
October 30, 2008
BY
Mickey Lam
Mounting Space Debris Poses Danger
From spent rocket stages and old satellites to lens caps, bolts, and chips of paint, it's all up ...
October 23, 2008
BY
Cindy Chan
We Could All Be a Little Synesthetic
Studies show that everyone may have the capacity for blending the senses
October 20, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
Deepest Surviving Fish Filmed
A shoal of the deepest-living fish has been captured on film in the Pacific Ocean using high-definition cameras.
October 20, 2008
BY
Mickey Lam
Preserving Seeds for the Future
The Digger's Club located at Heronswood, 80km from Melbourne is the largest garden club in Australia.
October 14, 2008
BY
Philippa Rayment
War and Sunspot Cycles: A Form of Electromagnetic Pollution
Could cycles of war and peace be somehow tied to cycles of the sun?
October 13, 2008
BY
Buryl Payne PhD
Cargo Cults and Ancient Astronauts
Stories from native cultures complicate the simple paradigm of social and cultural development we are taught.
October 6, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
The Count of St. Germain: A brief history of an immortal
Who was the Count of St. Germain, the gifted and charismatic figure of the 18th century?
September 29, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
The Strange Inventions of Pier L. Ighina
An environmental purifier, an earthquake neutralizer, and a magnetic stroboscope are just some of the brilliant inventions produced ...
September 28, 2008
BY
Leonardo Vintini
Getting Lost: A Newly Discovered Developmental Brain Disorder
Getting lost often, even in familiar places? Your cognitive map may be out of whack.
September 25, 2008
BY
Joan Delaney
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