PHILYDON

Thursday, October 08, 2009

4.4 million-year-old hominid skeleton 'Ardi' discovered in Ethiopia - Times Online


She had a stocky, ape-like form and a protruding jaw, with huge hands and a stooping gait. Beautiful she was not.

But Ardi, as scientists have christened her, has emerged as one of our oldest and most important ancestors.

The question of what our first “hominid” forebears looked like has intrigued scientists since the birth of evolutionary theory 150 years ago. But it is only now, with the discovery of a 4.4 million-year-old skeleton, that scientists have been able to paint a vivid picture of them.

The Ardipithecus ramidus fossil is the oldest specimen on the hominid branch found to date, and the closest that we have got to tracing our roots back to “the missing link” — our last common ancestor with modern apes.


Tim White, of the University of California Berkeley and a lead author of the study, said: “Darwin was very wise on this matter. He said, ‘We have to be really careful. The only way we are really going to know what this last common ancestor looked like is to go and find it’. Well, we have not found it. But we have come closer than we have ever come.”

The adult female specimen was found in 1994 in Afar, in the Great Rift Valley of northeastern Ethiopia.

It took an international team of researchers nearly three years to trawl the volcanic ash where the fossil lay and piece together the 125 fragments. The significance of the find meant that scientists took a further 13 years analysing the specimen, which is described today in intricate detail in the journal Science.

Ardi would have been about 4ft tall, and weighed about 9st, almost a foot taller and twice the weight of Lucy. Her brain was only slightly larger than a modern chimp’s and considerably smaller than Lucy’s, suggesting that our ancestors evolved an advanced intellect much later.

The angle of her head relative to her spine and the position of her pelvis and hip show that Ardi would have been able to walk with a stooped posture.

However, she retains the “grasping” big toe of our more primitive ancestors, as well as long arms and big hands, which suggest that she was an able climber, and would have spent much of her time in the trees. Unlike chimpanzees and orang-utans, though, she would not have been able to swing through the branches.

Analysis of Ardi’s teeth suggests that she lived on a diet of fruit, leaves and small mammals. Her canine teeth, and isolated male canine teeth found at the site, were similar in size and very small. This reveals an intriguing departure from modern apes, such as chimpanzees and gorillas, where males possess large canines that they bare in conflicts over females.

The comparable size of canine teeth between males and females suggests a low level of male aggression in hominid societies of the time. Males and females were likely to have had co-operative, monogamous relationships in which the males were involved in raising the young.

“This fossil suggests that the ‘feminisation’ of the canines, which is unique to humans, goes back deep into our history,” said Chris Stringer, head of human origins at the Natural History Museum in London.

The fossil also changes thinking about the habitat of early hominids. It was previously thought that our ancestors developed upright walking as a consequence of living in the grassland savannahs. However, Afar would have been a lush forest environment populated by monkeys and elephants.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

The Kings of North London

Tottenham 5-1 Arsenal
(Spurs win 6-2 on aggregate)

By Mandeep Sanghera

Spurs celebrate after Robbie Keane put them 3-0 up against ArsenalA pulsating Tottenham performance saw them run riot against Arsenal to book a place in the Carling Cup final.
Spurs got off to the perfect start when Jermaine Jenas angled in a shot to put them 2-1 ahead on aggregate.

Arsenal's Nicklas Bendtner then headed into his own net before Robbie Keane's 18-yard shot put Spurs 3-0 up.

Aaron Lennon sidefooted in for Spurs before Emmanuel Adebayor grabbed a consolation for Arsenal but Steed Malbranque's strike completed the rout.

Tottenham had been left rueing a late Arsenal equaliser in the first leg and they also had the psychological baggage of not having beaten their arch rivals since November 1999.
But with home advantage and Arsenal's penchant for fielding fringe players in the Carling Cup, Spurs scented victory and they grabbed an early lead.

Jenas was allowed time and space to drive a shot across goal and the ball went in off the post after three minutes.

Spurs gave Arsenal's defence no respite with their fluent and attacking football as they took a stranglehold on the match.

The Gunners were also starved of possession in attack and they rarely looked like levelling, due to a mixture of poor play and a determined White Hart Lane side.

Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger had kept faith with most of his second string for the game but drafted in a handful of first-team regulars in centre-back William Gallas, right-back Bacary Sagna and playmaker Alexander Hleb.

But the trio struggled to help their side break Spurs's grip and even the introduction of Cesc Fabregas for the injured Denilson did not help the visitors.
Instead, Bendtner's own goal added to the home side's lead after he headed in as he went up with Michael Dawson to meet a Jenas free-kick.

Arsenal were rattled and on the backfoot and Dimitar Berbatov should have inflicted another bodyblow to the visitors when he was clean through, only to hit the post with his shot.

Arsenal's Bendtner (left) and Gallas had a row near the end of the game Jenas poked into the side-netting just before the break but Spurs did not have long to wait for a third.

Lennon's delightful ball with the outside of his right foot sent Keane through to score with a shot which appeared to catch Fabianski by surprise and one he should have saved.

Almost immediately, Bendtner looked set to give Arsenal a lifeline, only to see his strike bounce the wrong side of the goal-line after hitting the underside of the crossbar.

It got worse for Arsenal when Lennon slotted in on the hour mark as Spurs threatened to run riot.
Adebayor's 20-yard strike was too late to give Arsenal a way back into the game and their frustration boiled over when Bendtner appeared to argue with his team-mate and goalscorer before exchanging angry words with Gallas.

Malbranque compounded Arsenal's misery as Juande Ramos secured a place in the Carling Cup final on 24 February in his first season in charge.

Tottenham: Cerny, Chimbonda, Dawson, King, Lee, Lennon (Huddlestone 74), Jenas, Tainio, Malbranque, Keane (Boateng 64), Berbatov (Defoe 64).Subs Not Used: Robinson, O'Hara.
Booked: Malbranque, Jenas.

Goals: Jenas 3, Bendtner 27 og, Keane 48, Lennon 60, Malbranque 90.
Arsenal: Fabianski, Sagna, Justin Hoyte, Gallas, Traore (Eduardo 65), Hleb, Denilson (Fabregas 18), Silva, Diaby, Walcott (Adebayor 65), Bendtner.Subs Not Used: Mannone, Flamini.

Booked: Justin Hoyte, Adebayor.
Goals: Adebayor 70.
Att: 35,979

Ref: Howard Webb (S Yorkshire).

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

My Old School

Turkish Cypriots deny school demolition claims
By Simon Bahceli
(archive article - Tuesday, May 10, 2005)

REPORTS that the Turkish Cypriot municipality of Kythrea had given permission for the demolition of a Greek Cypriot school in the village were strongly denied yesterday.
“There are no such plans, and I have no idea where such rumours began,” municipal official Sevket Oztumen told the Cyprus Mail yesterday. He hinted, however, that elements of the Greek Cypriot media could have been their source. The report was broadcast on CyBC on Sunday night

“CyBC1 came to see us and asked about rumours that the school was to be demolished to make way for a football pitch. We told them it was not true, so why they went and told the public it was true, I have no idea,” Oztumen added.

The storm over the possible demolition even drew the attention of the EU’s Ambassador on Cyprus Adriaan van der Meer who told the Mail yesterday, “We believe this building should be preserved as it is part of the cultural heritage of Cyprus and we’ll do all we can to prevent its destruction”.

But Oztumen was adamant the school was in no danger yesterday.

“We do not need a football pitch built in the village because we have a very good one already. Furthermore, building a pitch on or near the school is not a viable option as it is too rocky and hilly there.”

Copyright © Cyprus Mail 2005

Saturday, October 30, 2004

CHYTRI - Kythrea

Chytri

A titular see of Cyprus. The Greek see of similar title was suppressed in 1222 by Cardinal Pelagius, papal legate. It was beautifully located in the centre of the island, in the territory of Chytraea, west of Messaria. The flourishing modern village Kyrka (pronounced tsirka), in Greek officially Kythraia, Turkish Deirmennik has preserved the ancient name. There has been found here a pre-Phoenician necropolis. In the time of Assurbanipal, Pilagura was King of Kitrusi, one of the ten kingdoms in the island. Numerous inscriptions have been found in the Cypriot dialect, some in ordinary Greek. Chytri was noted for the worship of Apollo, Artemis, and Aphrodite Paphia. Later forms of the name are Cythraia, Cythereia, Cythroi, Chytrides; according to the late Greek work of Sakellarios (Kypriaka, 2nd ed., 202-205) Kyrka should be Cythera or Cythereia; he identifies Chytri with Palo-Kythro, a village with ruins two hours south of Kyrka. The historical texts, however, mention only one town. Chytri was at an early date an episcopal see. Lequien's list of the bishops of the see (II, 1069) is very incomplete, only eight being recorded: the first is St. Pappus, who suffered martyrdom under Licinius, Maximinus, or Constantius; the most famous is St. Demetrian, 885-912 (?).

Cyprus and the Trojan War

Large island in eastern Mediterranean, off the coast of Syria (area 5).
By its location, Cyprus was at the crossroad of many civilizations from the Middle East, Egypt and Greece, though its situation as an island and the richness of its soil (especially rich copper mines that were at the root of its prosperity and induced trade relations with most of the Middle East) allowed it to keep its specificity over the centuries. Cyprus had been populated since a very remote past. Around 1450 B. C., Greeks of the Mycenæan civilization established trade posts in the island. Yet, the kings that were reigning over Cyprus stayed in power and managed to keep their autonomy and neutrality in the power struggles that opposed the Hittites kings from Anatolia and the pharaohs of Egypt during the XIVth and XIIIth centuries B. C., and they developed privileged relations with the royal family of Ugarit on the nearby coast of Syria facing Cyprus. Toward the beginning of the XIIth century B. C., the Mycenæan civilization suddenly disappeared and Cyprus was invaded by what the ancient Egyptian documents call "Peoples from the North and the Sea", which have not been precisely identified by modern historians. Centuries later, toward the end of the IXth century and during the VIIIth century B. C., Phoenician merchants established trade posts on the southern shore of the island, in cities like Citium, as relays on their progression west. Yet, most of the island stayed under the control of kings of Salamis, vassals of the Assyrian Empire. With the fall of Nineveh (612), the Assyrian dominion over the island was replaced by that of Egypt, followed by that of Persia in the time of Cyrus the Great and his successors.
Greek mythology of classical times links Cyprus to Teucrus, son of Telamon, the king of Salamis (the island facing Athens) and father of the Great Ajax, one of the most prominent Greek heroes during the Trojan war. Teucrus was the half-brother of Ajax, born from Hesione, a Trojan princess, daughter of Laomedon and sister of Priam (the father of Hector and Paris), whom Telamon had won in helping Heracles in his expedition against Troy (an expedition that has nothing to do with the Trojan War of Homeric Poems), while Ajax's mother was Periboea, daughter of the king of Megara. Despite his family ties with the Trojan kings, Teucrus was on the Greek side during the Trojan War, was said to be the best archer of all the Greek army, and accomplished many exploits there. When he came back to Salamis after the war, where his elder brother Ajax had been killed, his father Telamon exiled him for not having protected or avenged his brother. Teucrus fled to Syria, where the king of the place settled him in Cyprus that he had just conquered. There, Teucrus founded a city that he called Salamis as well.
Back in the historical times we are dealing with, Cyprus, under the leadership of Onesilus, brother of the king of Salamis, took part in 498 in an uprising against Darius, the Persian King, along with Ionian cities led by Aristagoras, ruler of Miletus. But the attempt failed, the combined Ionian fleet and Cypriot army were defeated on sea and land by Darius' troops and his Phoenician navy near Salamis of Cyprus, and Onesilus was killed (Herodotus' Histories, V, 104-116). Yet, for Herodotus, this episode, in which the Athenians provided help to the Milesians, was the cause of Darius' attempt to invade Greece to punish Athens in what became known as the first Persian War.
It is in Cyprus, during the siege of Citium, that Cimon died in 450 (Thucydides, I, 112 ; Plutarch's Life of Cimon, 19.1). But, on their way back, the Athenians won a naval and terrestrial victory over the Phoenicians, Chypriots and Cilicians near Salamis of Cyprus, which was soon to be followed by the Peace of Callias between Athens and Persia.

Saturday, October 23, 2004

Untitled Document

Walkin' down the road

The Chorus
When I'm walking down the road, I see my life in front of my eyes, just walking down the road. From my life as a kid to where I am now, all when I'm walking down the road.
I see where I screwed up, I see where it all went wrong, I see how I got here in jail and I see how my life messed up…
Chorus
I see both good & bad, times in my life, myself as a conqueror kid, when I was a kid I used to play them games, where I killed everyone I could. All that seen just…
Chorus
Sometimes, when I walk back up, I see what I wanna see, I see, the future, it's coming, it's coming for me, I see my dreams, even my kid ones, I see all my dreams and I see what's out there. All…
Chorus
I'll be honest witchya , none of us will ever know it all , oh yeah. I'll never give up in my life, you shouldn't either, I'm the one that is called a dreamer. All because of…
Chorus
Just walking down the roaaaaaaaaad.

By Alex