Mysteries :
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Martin Stower Wrote:
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> > It wasn't a paper, it was a symposium. You're
> lost
> > already
MS:
> Here is the reference:
>
>
> I, unlike you, know how to read a reference. I,
> unlike you, have some acquaintance with how these
> things are done.
>
> It was a paper, presented at the symposium—and
> you are a waste of time, and a waste of space, and
> I have better things to do than further dissect
> your ignorant rant.
Wrong again.
It was a statement made at the symposium.
And that was J.O. Brew Peabody Professor of American Archaeology and Ethnology and Director of the Peabody Museum, Harvard
How many times have you been wrong in the last couple weeks.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 23-Mar-17 04:16 by Audrey.
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> > It wasn't a paper, it was a symposium. You're
> lost
> > already
MS:
> Here is the reference:
>
>
>Quote
Säve-Söderbergh, T., and Ingrid U.
> Olsson. 1970. “C14 Dating and Egyptian
> Chronology.” In Radiocarbon Variations and
> Absolute Chronology: Proceedings of the Twelfth
> Nobel Symposium Held at the Institute of Physics
> at Uppsala University, edited by Ingrid U.
> Olsson, 35–55. Stockholm: Almquist &
> Wiksell.
> I, unlike you, know how to read a reference. I,
> unlike you, have some acquaintance with how these
> things are done.
>
> It was a paper, presented at the symposium—and
> you are a waste of time, and a waste of space, and
> I have better things to do than further dissect
> your ignorant rant.
Wrong again.
Quote
Radiocarbon Dating: An Archaeological Perspective by R. Taylor
In 1969 at the Nobel Symposium on Radiocarbon Variations and Absolute Chronology, Professor Torqny Save-Soderbergh, quoting Professor J.O. Brew of Harvard, suggested that an attitude among certain archaeologists towards radiocarbon determinations could be summarized in these words:
If a C14 date supports our theories......
It was a statement made at the symposium.
And that was J.O. Brew Peabody Professor of American Archaeology and Ethnology and Director of the Peabody Museum, Harvard
How many times have you been wrong in the last couple weeks.
He who knows all the answers has not been asked all the questions - Confucius
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 23-Mar-17 04:16 by Audrey.
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