Re: Questions
- From: Eric Stevens <eric.stevens@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2006 21:54:11 +1200
On Mon, 25 Sep 2006 07:24:05 GMT, "Alan Crozier"
<name1.name2@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Inger E" <inger_e.johansson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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message
"Eric Stevens" <eric.stevens@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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On Sun, 24 Sep 2006 11:23:17 GMT, "Inger E"
<inger_e.johansson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Eric Stevens" <eric.stevens@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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On Sun, 24 Sep 2006 06:25:14 GMT, "Inger E"
<inger_e.johansson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Eric Stevens" <eric.stevens@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
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On Sat, 23 Sep 2006 18:17:29 -0500, "Searles O'Dubhain"
<odubhain@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
"Doug Weller" <dweller@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in
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On Sat, 23 Sep 2006 21:36:38 GMT, in sci.archaeology, Inger
wrote:know how
When was Orkney first 'colonized' or do someone at least
wildold
the
oldest known remain of a house is?
It's noted that the Faero Island had lots of sheeps running
Faerowhen
the
first known ships passed by.
How old is the oldest known artifact found on any of the
NeolithicIsland?
There's a UNESCO World Heritage site there, Heart of
SkaraOrkney.
I
thought everyone here might have heard of the houses at
Brae,Ring of
and of
course Maeshowe, about 5000 years old. And of course the
climateBrodgar,
but that isn't as famous.
Doug
Amazing how these sites were there so long ago. Was the
warmermuch
when they were built?
There was a particularly warm period somewhere about then,
warmerpin
than anything in the last 2000 years, but my hazy memory can't
anddown the date.
Anyhow in light of present days discussions re. global warming
risingin that
waterlevels, I think it's fair to say that during an intervall
today.....warm
period the Ocean's waterlevels were 15 meter higher than
theOooh ... I don't know about that.
Can you give a citation?
In Swedish? Remember that when my father started to work as one of
firstworks
in the global environmental problematic field, almost all important
longand studies were written in Swedish. That continued to be the case
70's.....after I myself as one of four introduced Humanecology in early
problematicThen there are of course one or two discussing the waterlevel
fromhigher and lower during periods at the same time as land in north,
time weScandinavia to Kamtjaka and from Alaska to Newfoundland rised, the
waterlevel lines can't be said to be as easy to follow. The last
hadcontinued up
a rise in the Ocean's waterlevel started around 600 AD and
tohasn't
mid 1300's. Today's so called critical Ice melting in the Arctic
aroundreached 1/3 (only 1/6) of the melted Ice -> ocean water as it was
my1100 AD......
I will return with more info but it takes some time.
All I need is a citation, not a quotation.
I am sure there are people here who can read Swedish and confirm the
accuracy of your source.
In fact, I suspect you may be recalling the substance of work the
conclusions of which have since been superceded.
No I am not. What I used when I had that part up in the pre-stage of
C-essay re. the Waterways in Ancient Age towards Lake Roxen, wereofficial
'very dry written' documentation from larger studies.thing, the
That's why I can't use the direct quotes. Lists of figures is one
possibility for others to get hold of those during study officialwritten
but edited to a minor group of scholar within the system, is an other.One
of the works I had at hand only exists in few copies outside those whohad a
need to have them for their work.proof
Now the other Swedish edited works I mentioned are written using same
'material'/sources. None of them are efficient to prove anything. The
lies in the former.Haven't
I think there is a Norwegian work that might be handy for quotes.
read it since mid 1990's but my notes seem to indicate that it is.
Inger, you can correct me if I'm wrong here. I took a quick look through
your C-essay to find references to changing water levels. The only
reference to a 'dry written' document that I can find comes under the
heading "The geological history and land-rise curve of the area", note
33, referring to Lars Håkansson and Thorsten Ahl, SNV PM740 NLU Rapport
88, Uppsala 1976. Somehow the actual title of the report was omitted,
but it's _Vättern: Recenta sediment och sedimentkemi_ ("Lake Vättern:
Recent sedimentary deposits and sediment chemistry").
I don't know if Eric can get hold of that. Nor do I know whether it says
anything of relevance to the Orkneys.
It wasn't the Orkneys which I particularly questioned. It was Inger's
statement:
"I think it's fair to say that during an intervall in that warm
period the Ocean's waterlevels were 15 meter higher than
today....."
I might accept a few centimetres at some time but 15 meters is more
tha I know about.
You can find details at the Royal
Library catalogue. Type sediment into the title field, Ahl into the
author field and 1974 as the publication year.
A second-hand copy is available here:
http://www.hjortedsantikvariat.se/booklists/vastergotland2.htm
Come now! Do you have the appropriate PGP key for an antipodean
speaker of english?
Eric could also contact one of the authors:
http://www.geo.uu.se/luva/personal.aspx?namn=lars.h%C3%A5kanson
Alan
Eric Stevens
.
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