Showing posts with label National Geographic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Geographic. Show all posts

Friday, 8 August 2014

The Great Pyramid of Titicaca, Bolivia

Crystal Quintero, Xochitl, Pat Macpherson, Wisdom Quarterly;  "Lost Temples: Mystery of the Akapana Pyramid" (NationalGeographic.com, NatGeo)
Lake Titicaca, Bolivia, with Andes mountains in the distance (Anthony Lacoste)


LAKE TITICACA, Bolivia - Titicaca (in the hispanicized spelling) or Titiqaqa is a lake in the Andes on the border of Peru and Bolivia. By volume of water, it is the largest lake in South America. Lake Maracaibo has a larger surface area, but it is considered to be a large brackish bay due to its direct connection with the sea. Titicaca is often called the highest navigable lake in the world, with a surface elevation of 12,507 feet (3,812 m)... Bolivia has a mystery beyond the lake, that of Akapana. Scientists decode the life-giving riddle of Bolivia's great Akapana pyramid.

Thursday, 7 August 2014

Angelina Jolie in Buddhist Cambodia (video)

Amber Larson, Seven, CC Liu, Wisdom Quarterly; Nat Geo; U.N. Ambassador Angelina Jolie
Angelina Jolie meditates, contemplates, and waxes philosophical in Cambodia.

(KJ09) 3-D animation of the central temple in the massive city and suburbs of Angkor, Cambodia. Angelina Jolie appears at Min. 4:50 and talks of her son, the U.S. wars on Vietnam and Cambodia and how it now taught in American schools.

Jolie's adopted son is Cambodian, and she is the United Nation's "Goodwill Ambassador," and even a dual citizen of the U.S. and Cambodia. Her interest and/or karma brought her to the Theravada Buddhist nation when she was working on the "Tomb Raider" franchise as the character Lara Croft, which sealed her worldwide fame as a stunningly beautiful and eccentric celebrity.

 
But what's the real story of Angkor, Angkor Wat, and the ancient Khmer Buddhist and Hindu empire of modern Cambodia?
 
Some power took Buddhism and Hinduism from Afghanistan deep into the jungles of Southeast Asia and across the sea to Indonesia in the south, leaving some of the largest and most magnificent Buddhist temple complexes in the world. The largest is at Borobudur, Indonesia, but the extent of Angkor, Siem Reap, and other lost temples in Cambodia are massive beyond belief using more stone than was used for the pyramids of Egypt.

Angkor Wat (National Geographic)

Jolie's Cambodian tats
(National Geographic) Where Lara Croft raided tombs in fantasy, there really are magnificent Buddhist and Hindu temples sunk in jungle thickets once hidden to the world. Now some are exposed, as others remain lost in the jungles of Southeast Asia and the former Khmer empire that extended east of India to Vietnam.

Monday, 19 May 2014

DNA: Are Native Americans, Mexicans Asian?

Xochitl, Ashley Wells, Dhr.Seven, CC Liu, Wisdom Quarterly; Scott Neuman (All Things Considered, NPR.org, 5-16-14), "Ancient skeleton in Mexico sheds light on Americas settlement"
In this June 2013 photo provided by National Geographic, diver Susan Bird, working at the bottom of Hoyo Negro, a large dome-shaped underwater cave in Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula, brushes Naia's skull found at the site (Paul Nicklen/AP).
 
A nearly complete skeleton of a teenage girl (called "Naia") has yielded DNA clues linking her to Native Americans living today. She died 12,000-13,000 years ago in a cave in the Yucatan Peninsula (modern Mexico). 
 
The connection bolsters the prevailing theory that the sole route of human migration into North America took place over a Siberia-Alaska land bridge known as Beringia, starting 15,000-20,000 years ago.
 
NPR Science Correspondent Joe Palca says the skeleton of the girl, who died at age 15 to 16, was discovered in 2007 amid a complex of flooded caverns in Mexico known as Hoyo Negro, or "Black Hole."
 
Meditating Mayan figurine (MT)
Scientific American says, "She lies in a collapsed chamber together with the remains of 26 other large mammals, including a saber-toothed tiger, 600 meters from the nearest sinkhole. Most of the mammals became extinct around 13,000 years ago."
 
"It was impossible to safely recover the body from the cave location, so the research team dove to the cave and made bone measurements [on site]. They placed Naia's skull on a rotating tripod and set a camera on a second tripod next to it. Turning the skull slowly, they snapped pictures every 20 degrees. Later the team used the photographs to reconstruct a three-dimensional image."
 
Aztec Kwan Yin, Queen of Devas (LTG)
James Chatters of Applied Paleoscience in Bothell, Washington, led the study and published the results in the journal Science.
 
Chatters says the skeleton, known as Naia after the water nymphs (naiads) of Greek mythology, doesn't look much like modern Native Americans, who have narrower faces, different teeth, and a different palate.
 
"I could tell from the shape of the palette and some other aspects of the skull that she was similar to some of the other earliest Americans I'd seen," Chatters says. "So many differences that it seemed they must come from somewhere else." But the DNA told a different story. 
Taos Pueblo like Tibet, Southwest USA (NM)
The University of Texas at Austin's Deborah Bolnick, an expert in extracting ancient DNA from fossilized teeth and bones, got a sample of Naia's mitochondrial DNA [slower changing genetic information], which is inherited exclusively from the mother.
 
Bolnick found a lineage known as D-1 that's found in Northeast Asia (including Siberia, which is North Aisa) and also very common in Native Americans.
    What that suggests, Bolnick says, is that the girl is indeed descended from the first humans to cross the land bridge and not some later migration from somewhere else.
     
    That means the physical differences between the first "Paleoamericans" and Native Americans of today are the result of evolution since the great migration out of Asia.
     
    LISTEN (2:41), DOWNLOAD, TRANSCRIPT (All Things Considered/NPR)
    Commentary
    Dhr. Seven, Wisdom Quarterly
    From Asia (China and Afghanistan) to California and Mexico (Int'l History Channel)
    .
    World's most famous Pueblo, Potala, Tibet
    As we have noted repeatedly, the Buddhism practiced in Siberia, Russia (as well as Kalmykia, Europe) is Mongolian and Tibetan, with strong native animist and shamanistic influences, deriving from the Buddha's shramana movement in and around India.
     
    It traveled up from Central Asia, modern day Afghanistan (part of ancient Gandhara, see the pioneering work of Dr. Ranajit Pal), into ancient Greece and Northern Asia. It is startlingly similar to Native American beliefs and practices, enhanced by visits from Afghan and Chinese Buddhist missionaries to Mexico and California long before the arrival of Columbus, as documented by Edward P. Vining, Hendon M. Harris, and our research on Puebloan Peoples in America. 
     
    China's Fusang, our CA, Mexico
    The Bering Strait land bridge is not the only route of spiritual ideas, DNA, and Asiatic culture. A great deal of it came directly and intact. 
     
    One amazing "coincidence" is the similarity between the megalithic jungle cultures of Buddhist Angkor and other ancient city-states, part of the enormously successful Khmer Empire in modern Cambodia and Thailand, and the megalithic jungle empires of the Maya, Aztecs, Toltecs (see also Toltec Mounds State Archaeological Park), Olmecs, and Incas in Mexico (Mesoamerica) and South America.

    Traces of it also existed in the modern "mound building" cultures in the United States, whose enormous size and sophistication (as well as being gigantic as individuals) make them part of "forbidden archaeology" as exposed by Dr. Michael Cremo.

    Ancient Mesoamerica (pre-Spanish invasion) included parts of California, the USA, Mexico, Belize, the Mayan Empire, Guatemala (named after Gautama Buddha, according Rick Fields' accounts, Swans)... See detail

    Monday, 5 May 2014

    Cosmic winds, light, echoes (video)

    Amber Larson (ed.), Wisdom Quarterly; Nadia Drake (Phenomena, NatGeo, May 5, 2014)


    Light echoes act as astronomical time machines or portals to the past.

    On Earth, echoes are produced when sound waves bounce around like pinballs. In space, echoes are produced when light does the bouncing.
    Just as sounds can echo -- so, too, can cosmic light. But instead of ricocheting off damp cavern walls, light traveling through the universe bounces off soft, dusty clouds.
     
    Sometimes, this happens after an explosive event such a supernova. On Earth, most of the light we’d see from one of these exploding stars would have come directly here. But supernovas explode in three dimensions, sending light in all directions. Not all of that light is aimed toward Earth. If the geometry is right, some of the light... More
     
    SUTRA: In the Sky
    Nyanaponika Thera (trans.) Akasa Sutta (1) (SN 36.12); Dhr. Seven (ed.), Wisdom Quarterly
    "In the sky, O meditators, various kinds of [solar, cosmic, magnetic] winds are blowing: winds from the east, west, north and south, winds carrying dust and winds without dust, winds hot and cold, gentle and fierce.
    • ["Wind" or vayo (prana, chi, spiritus) is regarded as the source of movement, the invisible animating principle as it were, in the body.]
    "Similarly, meditators, there arise in this body various kinds of feelings: pleasant feelings arise, painful feelings arise, and neutral feelings arise."
     
    Illusion of expanding dust cloud (NASA/ESA/H.E.Bond)
    Just as in the sky above winds of various kinds are blowing:
    Coming from the east or west, moving from the north or south,
    Some carry dust and others not, cold are some and others hot,
    Some are fierce and others mild -- their varied moving style.
    So also in this body here, feelings of different kind arise:
    The pleasant feelings and the painful and the neutral ones.
    But if a meditator is vigilant and persistent
    To practice mindfulness and comprehension clear,
    The nature of all feelings will one understand,
    And having penetrated them, one will be taint-free in this very life.
    Mature in knowledge, firm in Dharma's ways,
    Then once one's lifespan ends, this body breaks,
     
    And all measure and concept one has transcended.
    [This last line is an allusion to nirvana.]

    Drake is a science journalist. Phenomena is her space to talk about space -- from other worlds to exploding stars to the fabric of time and the universe. Her work has also appeared in Science News, Nature, New Scientist, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and WIRED. She lives in beautiful, foggy San Francisco.

    Tuesday, 22 April 2014

    Mt. Everest to close for the season (audio)

    Seth Auberon, Pat Macpherson, Wisdom Quarterly; T.J. Raphael, The World (pri.org)
    Dangerous Mt. Everest (Kristoffer Erickson/news.nationalgeographic.com)

      
    Yeti hunters, Everest, 1954 (dailymail.co.uk)
    Sherpas -- members of a Himalayan ethnic group renowned for their skill at high-altitude climbing -- are crucial to operations on Mount Everest.

    They earn a mere $3,000-5,000 risking their lives helping others scale the mountain during each two-to-three-month climbing season. They do on a regular basis what others pay to accomplish just once in a lifetime, putting their lives at great risk for affluent clients due to poverty they are never able to emerge from.
     
    Last Friday, an avalanche roared down a climbing route on Everest, killing 13 Sherpa guides and leaving three others missing. When it occurred the Sherpas, who have centuries of history in Nepal's alpine region, were working at 21,000 feet, fixing ropes and preparing the path ahead of peak mountaineering season.
     
    Tibet's Rongbuk Buddhist monastery with Mt. Everest in background (wiki commons)
     
    Who climbs Mt. Everest without a Sherpa?
    As the Sherpa community mourns the loss of family members and friends, the group is considering an unprecedented move: a strike.

    On Sunday, disappointed by the Nepali government’s offer of 40,000 rupees ($408) as compensation for the families of each of the dead, some Sherpas gathered at Everest’s base camp to propose a “work stoppage” that could disrupt or cancel the 334 expeditions planned for the 2014 climbing season.

    Ellen Barry, South Asia Bureau Chief for The New York Times, says while Sherpas have lived with these conditions for many years, last week's accident changed things.

    "I think just the magnitude of the loss of life from Friday's accident has prompted very unusual decisions," she says. More

    Sunday, 9 March 2014

    "Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey" (TV)

    Pat Macpherson, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly; Neil deGrasse Tyson (cosmosontv.com)
    The new "Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey" premeires Sunday, March 9, on 10 channels
    The "cosmos" or world-system we live in is much bigger than we can imagine.
    Celestial planes in Buddhist cosmological museum, Thailand (UweBKK/flickr.com)
      
    Look up, look up, and look out over the skies. It's what any eager astrophysicist would do, from the smoky skyline of New York to the chemtrail-laden skies of Los Angeles. From coast to coast, the host with the most is no longer Carl Sagan. Now the mantle is passed onto upstart Neil deGrasse Tyson, the telegenic Michio Kaku of all things space, a media darling who knows better than to step out of line and say anything daring or beyond the pale of the gatekeepers of academe. But he does a good job, and the kids will love to be drawn out of the misery down here into the mystery of worlds above. Minds may be expanded, but the status quo will not be questioned. Stephen Hawking and his new brain implant were not available to work on the show. Carl Sagan was, but the ChronoVision is not yet what it will one day be (just ask Andrew Basiago). As for "Cosmos," even Family Guy's Seth MacFarlane is on board, having brought the show to Fox TV. More (plus video)

    Saturday, 15 February 2014

    Secrets of China's Ancient Pyramids (video)

    CC Liu, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly; National Geographic; Nick Redfern (CLE)
    Modern Chinese Buddhist pyramid structure and stupa (reliquary), Buddha Memorial Center, Fo Guang Shan Temple complex, Taiwan, Republic of China (Bernard Gagnon)
    (National Geographic) Documentary on the pyramids of China and its view of the afterlife

    http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18897314-the-pyramids-and-the-pentagon?from_search=true For decades, government agencies have taken a clandestine and profound interest in pyramids and other archaeological, historical, and religious puzzles.
     
    Why and how have they been doing this?  What profound and powerful secrets are sequestered in secret vaults and archives, and what would happen if the truth were revealed? Focusing primarily upon the classified work of the U.S. Government, The Pyramids and the Pentagon invites us to take a wild ride into the fog-shrouded past. It is a ride that incorporates highlights such as:
    •  The CIA’s top secret files on Noah’s Ark
    •  U.S. Army documents positing that the Egyptian pyramids were constructed via levitation
    • Claims of nuclear warfare in ancient India
    • Links between the "Face on Mars" and the pharaohs...
    Modern Buddhist pyramid (Zosoiv71/flickr.com)
    Nick Redfern is the author of more than 30 books, including The Real Men in Black; On the Trail of the Saucer Spies; Contactees; and The Pyramids and the Pentagon. He writes for UFO Magazine, Mysterious Universe, and Mania.com. Originally from the UK, Redfern now lives in Dallas, Texas.

    Monday, 9 December 2013

    Archeology: New finds may push Buddha's birth

    Subodh Varma (TNN, Nov. 26, 2013); Dhr. Seven (ed.), Mara Schaeffer, Wisdom Quarterly
    Maya's auspicious dream: Queen Maya, the Buddha's mother, dreamed of conception.
    Team of archeologists excavate at site of modern Maya Devi Temple, Nepal (Antiquity)
     
    Salabhanjika (Hoysala sculpture, Belur)
    NEW DELHI, India - Remains of a tree shrine found buried below the Maya Devi Temple in modern Lumbini, Nepal, may push back the date of the Buddha's birth to the sixth century BCE.
     
    The temple is located on what traditionally was thought to be the birth place of the Buddha. His mother, Queen Maya, gave birth to Siddhartha while holding on to a tree branch. [This accords with the legendary Indian motif of a Sal tree dryad or salabhanjika.]

    Excavations within the Maya Devi Temple, a UNESCO World Heritage site, uncovered the remains of a previously unknown sixth century BCE timber structure under a series of brick temples.
     
    Laid out on the same design as those above it, the timber structure contains an open space in the center that links to the story of the Buddha's birth.
     
    Queen Maha Maya, Siddhartha's mother
    This is the first archeological material linking the life of the Buddha -- and thus the first flowering of Buddhism -- to a specific century.
     
    Until now, the earliest archeological evidence of Buddhist structures at Nepal's Lumbini dated no earlier than the third century BCE, the time of the patronage of the Indian Emperor Asoka, who promoted the spread of Buddhism west from present-day Afghanistan east to Bangladesh [likely the extent of India in his day, centuries after the life of the historical Buddha, the "Shakyan Sage" or Shakyamuni].
     
    "Very little is known about the life of the Buddha, except through textual sources and oral tradition," said archaeologist Professor Robin Coningham of Durham University, UK, who co-led the investigation.
     
    "Now, for the first time, we have an archaeological sequence at Lumbini that shows a building there as early as the sixth century BC."
    The exact date of the Buddha's birth is yet to be established. In Nepal, the year 623 BCE is favored, while in other traditions more recent dates, around 400 BCE, are accepted.

    The first clear date linking Lumbini with the Buddha is 249 BCE, when Emperor Ashoka installed a pillar marking it as a sacred place. Lost and overgrown in the jungles of lower Nepal [Terai] in the medieval period, ancient Lumbini was [allegedly] rediscovered in 1896 and identified as the birthplace of the Buddha on account of the presence of a third century BCE sandstone pillar.
    The pillar, which still stands, bears an inscription documenting a visit by Emperor Asoka to the site of the Buddha's birth as well as the site's name (as determined by Asoka's men), Lumbini.

    The international team of archeologists, led by R.A.E. Coningham and Kosh Prasad Acharya of the Pashupati Area Development Trust in Nepal, say the discovery contributes to a greater understanding of the early development of Buddhism as well as the spiritual importance of Lumbini in Nepal [rather than its more likely location in the area of Seistan Baluchistan near modern Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iran.

    Their peer-reviewed findings are reported in the December 2013 issue of the international journal Antiquity. The research is partly supported by the National Geographic Society. More

    The earliest Buddhist shrine: excavating the birthplace of the Buddha, Lumbini (Nepal)
    Birth of Siddhartha, future Buddha
    Key locations identified with the lives of important religious founders have often been extensively remodelled in later periods, entraining the destruction of many of the earlier remains. Recent UNESCO-sponsored work at the major Buddhist centre of Lumbini in Nepal has sought to overcome these limitations, providing direct archaeological evidence of the nature of an early Buddhist shrine and a secure chronology. The excavations revealed a sequence of early structures preceding the major rebuilding by Asoka during the third century BC. The sequence of durable brick architecture supplanting non-durable timber was foreseen by British prehistorian Stuart Piggott when he was stationed in India over 70 years ago. Lumbini provides a rare and valuable insight into the structure and character of the earliest Buddhist shrines.
     
    AUTHORS: R.A.E. Coningham [1], K.P. Acharya [2], K.M. Strickland [3], C.E. Davis1, M.J. Manuel [1], I.A. Simpson [4], K. Gilliland [4], J. Tremblay [1], T.C. Kinnaird [5], and D.C.W. Sanderson [5].
    1. Department of Archaeology, Durham University, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, UK
    2. Pashupati Area Development Trust, Kathmandu, Nepal
    3. Orkney College, Univ. of the Highlands and Islands, E. Road, Kirkwall, Orkney KW15 1LX, UK
    4. School of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Univ. of Stirling, Stirling FK9 4LA, UK
    5. Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre, East Kilbride G75 OQF, UKPRESS 
    NOTE: This article is EMBARGOED until 17:00 GMT (12:00 EST) on Monday 25 November 2013. To participate in the National Geographic telephone press briefing at 15:00 GMT (10:00 EST) on 25 November, please contact Barbara Moffet at bmoffet@ngs.org

    Tuesday, 5 November 2013

    "Heaven" or sky means space (video)


    (Mike Gallis) An animation was rendered using the measured redshift of all 10,000 galaxies in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field image. A short script leads viewers through a quick history of both deep field images and this video. It ends with a fly-through of the Ultra Deep Field, where every galaxy in the image is in its proper distance as viewed from the telescope's line of sight. Hubble cosmological redshift animation courtesy of hubblesite.org.


    National Geographic presents the first accurate non-stop voyage from Earth to the edge of the universe using a single, unbroken shot through the use of spectacular CGI (computer-generated imagery) technology. Building on images taken from the Hubble telescope, "Journey to the Edge of the Universe" explores the science and history behind the distant celestial bodies or "heavens" in the solar system.

    This spectacular and epic voyage across the cosmos takes us from the Earth past the Moon, neighboring planets, out of our solar system, to the nearest stars, nebulae, galaxies, and beyond -- right to the edge of the universe itself.

    With the unbroken shot we are able to explore what we would find if we were able to travel the entire length of the universe. Venturing past Neil Armstrong's footsteps still sealed on the Moon, the special soars over brightly illuminated Venus onto Mercury, a small planet said to be made almost entirely of iron, which may perhaps be the remnants of a much larger planet.
     
    Mars is a planet of extremes with tornadoes, volcanoes, and canyons unlike anything seen on Earth. Jupiter's ever-present red storm is three times the size of Earth and has lasted for centuries. Reaching Saturn's moon Titan, we find a landscape closely resembling Earth. But Titan's rivers, lakes, and oceans are not made of water; they are liquid methane. Could life exist here?

    Travelling more than 90 trillion kilometers from Earth, viewers step inside the Epsilon Eridani star system, where spectacular rings of dust and ice resemble the formation of our solar system 4.5 billion years ago.
     
    Even further out is star Gliese 581, about the same age as our sun with a planet that is just the right distance to possibly support familiar life. Passing the Pillars of Creation, viewers see deep inside these clouds where huge stars are being birthed, bringing light and life to the universe.