Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Fantasy Ant's World

Ming Dynasty mummy in China !

Archaeologists find Ming Dynasty mummy in China
Archaeologists have discovered a well-preserved, 700-year-old, body of a woman inside a stone coffin in China The coffin was found on a building site in Taizhou, in eastern China 's Jiangsu Province . Archaeologists (above) carefully lever the lid off with crowbars The coffin was one of the three discovered in a tomb two metres underground on a construction site in the city Researchers from the Taizhou Museum carefully opened the coffins. In two they found skeletons, Ming Dynasty clothes and funerary objects. However, in the third they found the well preserved body of a woman (above) The 5-foot-long corpse was tightly wrapped in cerecloth (heavy wax-treated linen cloth used for burying the dead), quilt and clothes Archaeologists remove the body from the stone coffin The corpse has complete skin and clearly recognizable facial features, hair and even eyelashes The Mummy. Archaeologists carefully unwrap some of the cloth from around the corpse During their investigations members of the Taizhou museum team found a number of funerary objects, including a gem ring, a silver hairpin and more than 20 pieces of cotton clothing from the time of the Ming. The Gem
Ring . The Shoe.


Amazing facts (shared)



You are gonna say "I didn't know that!" at least 5 times.  Really neat stuff here:

Alaska

More than half of the coastline of the entire
United States is in Alaska. 


Amazon

The Amazon rainforest produces more than 20%
of the world's oxygen supply.

The Amazon River pushes so much water into the Atlantic Ocean that, more than one hundred miles at sea off the mouth of the river, one can dip fresh water out of the ocean.  The volume of water in the Amazon river is greater than the next eight largest rivers in the world combined and three times the flow of all rivers in the United States.

Antarctica

Antarctica is the only land on our planet
that is not owned by any country.
Ninety percent of the world's ice covers Antarctica .
This ice also represents seventy percent
of all the fresh water in the world.  As strange as it sounds, however, Antarctica is essentially a desert;
The average yearly total precipitation is about two inches.
Although covered with ice (all but 0.4% of it, ice.),
Antarctica is the driest place on the planet,
With an absolute humidity lower than the Gobi desert.



Brazil
Brazil got its name from the nut, not the other way around. 



Canada

Canada has more lakes than the rest of the world combined. Canada is an Indian word meaning ' Big Village'.



Chicago

Next to Warsaw, Chicago has the largest
Polish population in the world.


Detroit
Woodward Avenue in Detroit, Michigan,
carries the designation M-1.
So named because it was the first paved road anywhere.


Damascus, Syria

Damascus, Syria, was flourishing a couple of thousand years before Rome was founded in 753 BC
making it the oldest continuously inhabited city in existence.


Istanbul, Turkey
Istanbul, Turkey, is the only city in the world
located on two continents.


Los Angeles
The full name of Los Angeles is:
El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora la Reina de
Los Angeles de Porciuncula
-- and can be abbreviated to 3.63% of its size: L.A.


New York City
The term 'The Big Apple' was coined
by touring jazz musicians of the 1930s
who used the slang expression 'apple' for any town or city.
Therefore, to play New York City
is to play the big time - The Big Apple.

There are more Irish in New York City
than in Dublin, Ireland;
more Italians in New York City
than in Rome, Italy;
And more Jews in New York City
than in Tel Aviv, Israel.

 
Ohio
There are no natural lakes in the state of Ohio . . .
every one is man-made.

Pitcairn Island
The smallest island with country status is Pitcairn
in Polynesia, at just 1.75 sq. miles/4,53 sq. Km.


Rome
The first city to reach a population of 1 million people
was Rome, Italy (in 133 B.C.)
There is a city called Rome on every continent.


Siberia
Siberia contains more than 25% of the world's forests.


S.M.O.M.

The actual smallest sovereign entity in the world
is the Sovereign Military Order of Malta (S.M.O.M).
It is located in the city of Rome, Italy,
and has an area of two tennis courts.
And, as of 2001, has a population of 80
-- 20 less people than the Vatican.
It is a sovereign entity under international law,
just as the Vatican is.


Sahara Desert
In the Sahara Desert, there is a town named Tidikelt, Algeria, that did not receive a drop of rain for ten years.
Technically, though, the driest place on Earth
is in the valleys of the Antarctic near Ross Island.
There has been no rainfall there for two million years.


Spain
Spain literally means 'the land of rabbits'.



St. Paul, Minnesota
St. Paul, Minnesota, was originally called Pig's Eye
after a man named Pierre 'Pig's Eye' Parrant
who set up the first business there.


Roads
Chances that a road is unpaved:
in the U.S.A = 1%;
in Canada = 75%


Russia
The deepest hole ever drilled by man is the
Kola Superdeep Borehole, in Russia.
It reached a depth of 12,261 meters
(about 40,226 feet or 7.62 miles.)
It was drilled for scientific research
and gave up some unexpected discoveries,
one of which was a huge deposit of hydrogen
- so massive that the mud coming from the hole
was boiling with it.


United States
The Eisenhower interstate system requires
that one mile in every five must be straight.
These straight sections are usable as airstrips
in times of war or other emergencies.


Waterfalls
The water of Angel Falls (the world's highest) in Venezuela
drops 3,212 feet (979 meters.)
They are 15 times higher than Niagara Falls.

I have always said, you should learn something new every day. Unfortunately, many of us are at that age where what we learn today, we forget tomorrow.

But, give it a shot anyway
 (Shared)