Ah, you mean the circular platforms. I thought you mean the literal tubs like this one:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...ofors_guns.jpg
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Ah, you mean the circular platforms. I thought you mean the literal tubs like this one:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...ofors_guns.jpg
I've moved here few posts from the Identify that Tank/Ship/Plane/Artillery etc, just to keep that thread clean
please feel free to continue discussing here, thanks :lime:
Have those WW2 AA Cruisers ever been sucessful? An Aircraft attacking an AA-Cruiser will of course have a hard time, but how much of a convoi or a Fleet can a single Cruiser defend?
Just two more days to vote for POTF. Don’t forget to nominate too.
https://www.twcenter.net/forums/show...7-POTF-43-Vote
Thank you Sarin. I always thought a bunch of Destroyers were more effective than a cruiser for the same money.
Always thought Marius and Sulla get shorter shrift than they should. LCS is my favorite. Named a kid after him.
I have no prior knowledge of the subject but I thought he drew some fascinating parallels.
Oldest DNA from a Homo sapiens reveals surprisingly recent Neanderthal ancestry
Ancient human lineages interbred commonly in Europe, as well as the Middle East.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-00916-0
Thank the gods that the man didn't sold it to Scrap collector.^^
The cartographer, Thomas Karlsson, said "I first thought it might be a lamp, but when I looked closer I saw that it was old jewellery". Mr Karlsson said he had spotted the metallic glint while looking down at a map he was working on. At first he thought the ornaments were copies, as they were in such good condition. Then he emailed a local archaeologist while having a coffee in the forest, regional newspaper Goteborgs-Posten reported.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-56943432
Some idiot pretending to be a well-known archaeologist created a new academia.edu account and then contacted me trying to get my help identifying hundreds of smuggled artifacts, apparently under the assumption that I am as stupid as he is.
Is he in the slammer?
Currently I'm playing dumb, trying to get more information. Not sure what country he's in. He claims to be in Brazil, but that's where the archaeologist he's impersonating is. His visits to my profile match his claim in my analytics, but he's probably using a VPN. He has already sent me some pics. The way he's laying them out indicates to me that he probably has worked as an archaeologist. I can tell roughly where the artifacts came from - Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, northwestern Iran, and/or eastern Turkey (possibly northern Iraq).
I'm going to talk to the Antiquities Authority here, but it would be better if I could figure out what country he's in.
Unfortunately this is pretty epic.
It would be utterly irresponsible to contact the Saudis and tell Crown Prince Salman your guy claims to have Mohammed's yarmulke.
I discovered a nice tool allowing you to calculate travel distance across the Roman Empire. It includes every major urban center, from Sinjar to Morocco, and several variables, like season, budget and transport mode.
Yeah it is a nice tool to estimate how fast merchants, diplomats, commoners could travel in ancient times. And how fast communication would be. 16-17 days for Carthage - Antiochia is quite fast.
Was just looking at an analysis of all the paleoclimatic data from the Levant during the Bronze and Iron Ages. There was a significant dry phase c. 2000–1800 BCE from the Beersheba Valley all the way to the Upper Euphrates. At that time, it looks like the population density in semi-arid zones thinned out and/or completely disappeared. This coincides with the beginning of Asiatic settlement in the northeastern Nile Delta.
Of course, by Asiatic I mean these people:
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
I thought that you meant Koreans.
That actually kind of puts the collapse of "Neo-Sumer" and the Amorite invasions into context. I wonder if there were broader trends that go back to the collapse of Akkad, or heck even the rise of Akkad in the first place.
Hey while we are at it how was the Akkadian Empire even a thing? I mean literally all of it.
Where were the Akkadians even from?
Where they necessarily distinct from later invaders or were they just a group that branched off and went out on its own?
Was Akkad initially settled by these Semitic barbarians or was the king of Kish of Sumerian or Mesopotamian extraction?
How strong were the Akkadians that they managed to overrun Sumer and all of Mesopotamia within only one or two generations? Did Sharrukinu figure out a way to hack into the meta or was he literally a deity? Maybe stronger donkey vehicles?
Speaking of Mesopotamia, what people lived in Upper Mesopotamia if they were not Sumerian? Doesn't seem that they were Semites yet, with the strange exception being the Akkadians at first.
The Akkadians might be the most frustrating of the Bronze Age. Maybe only second to all of those random tribes emerging from the Zagros Mountains, and the Hurrians. By extension the Mitanni Empire due to a lack of Mitanni source material. I find it hilarious how the Sea People are pretty straight forward yet a lot of scholarship seems completely confused with regards to them.