Some recent thoughts and sites I've come up with and across. Everything on 11/26/04 and before was all entered on 11/26/04 from ClipCache Plus from XRayz Software.
Thursday, August 31, 2006
Are we destroying our water resources in our quest for development?
One man holds the key to the hottest secret in our history
Wednesday, August 30, 2006
Star Trek as a doctoral thesis
West Point Foundry Parrott Rifles Revisited
Cleaning Up the Mess - Kevin Sites
Floydians
Tuesday, August 29, 2006
Monday, August 28, 2006
PhysOrg.com Latest Physics News, Recent Technology Advances, etc.
Slate: Enter The Fray
Sunday, August 27, 2006
Downtown Express report
By Janet Kwon
Two firms have been selected to design the African Burial Ground’s interpretive center in Lower Manhattan. Roberta Washington Associates of Manhattan will design the space at the 290 Broadway federal building and Amaze Design, Inc of Boston will produce a 15-minute film for the center as well as an oral history exhibit on the creation of the national monument at Duane and Elk Sts. About 20,000 Africans are believed to be buried at the former cemetery. ... “[The Interpretive Center] will provide information about the African Burial Ground and also about the rediscovery of the site in ‘91 and the community involvement and the activism that led to the awareness that we have today,” said Tara Morrison, an African Burial Ground spokesperson, referring to when the site was first discovered in 1991 during construction work for a federal building. President Bush designated the burial ground as a National Monument February of this year.
Saturday, August 26, 2006
Historical Archaeology
Friday, August 25, 2006
I hope it's not all connected...
Today is the 90th Anniversary of the U.S. National Parks Service
My Dad was a Black Panther in Italy (WWII)
Thursday, August 24, 2006
The Expanding and Contracting Solar System
Geospatial poll
Wednesday, August 23, 2006
Why Not Impeachment?
Tuesday, August 22, 2006
This just in from 2005...
Governors Island in the New York Times
Monday, August 21, 2006
Dispatch From Ground Zero
Screenwriter Feels Rotten About U-571 Alterations
Maybe we should thank Mr. Mick Jagger for putting the facts out for us the public to think about, which is where I heard about it first. Maybe also we should thank the post office that sent an enigma to the wrong address and MI6 (?) had one for a weekend, delivered on time without suspicion. One of the American code crackers states in a book about the Norse rune stone allegedly found in Maine, that the ecclesiastics that began accompanying voyages started coding observations after Iceland became the first Christian nation around 1000 CE (Common or Christian era) and the Spirit Pond stone might be one of the as late as the early 14th century last "Norse" visits to the New World. ("Norse mythology: The mythology of Scandinavia (shared in part by Britain and Germany) until the establishment of Christianity." -WordWeb). The site was test excavated by an archaeology team and archaeologist who is a petroglyph researcher, sponsored by the State of Maine I heard. Northeast Anthropology
Sunday, August 20, 2006
Governors Island Redux
Date: Wed, 8 Mar 2000 13:10:49 EST
Sender: Archaeology List
Subject: Re: [Story taken from todays news stories.]
I thank you for the response. The questions revolve around things that are both private and public in the current political climate as you observe. The interesting points have actually resulted in progress toward the recognition of off-reservation and reservation based native Americans in the particular case I was indirectly referring to, at least according to the press I read after (I am not affiliated with any group or cause, though a former program director of an archaeological society).
My criticism, and I agree about collectors, however, is not specific. In my experience, sites have been taken away, written up by those not even on site, without consultation with those that excavated it, and the experts find the more important materials after the archaeologists are done. It's not collectors in my experience, but perhaps and in fact people who know what they're looking for so to speak. It makes me very red, on many not just a few occasions, to report here that it happens and probably will go on happening. Not the "wayward" collector wandering over the archaeological landscape, nor the local activist who wants the development that obstructs perceived serenity and contemplation from Nature, no, real experts who go on to reconstruct bateaux at Mystic Seaport (terrible fire in town there yesterday, not suspicious) naval history that would have otherwise been overlooked by archaeologists. This reflects poorly on the field, specifically when much ecological data can be ascertained with imagination and training from just about any site in my opinion, the lack thereof is mute testimony to the inroads archaeology was supposed to make for other sciences.
If this seems caustic, it is not its intent. I have watched collections go out the door over money and politics some only to be abandoned in the process. That is why some are proposing a permanent space for collections be established on Governors Island, here in NYC as a permanent repository for collected materials, to enable future, as yet unknown uses for collected material and data that researchers may need for perhaps legal and scientific evidence.
Saturday, August 19, 2006
National Aviation Day
I hear they're looking to replace the steam-driven catapult on US air-craft carriers with some sort of mag-lev device. Did you hear they found the one air-craft carrier the Nazi's built? Polish underwater geological survey, found it in deep water. The Russians claim, it was theirs after the war, used it for target practice and sunk it. Quite a ship it seems in photos and fast, it would have been, except for a fickle leader, and quite a threat. I wonder if it had any plane launchers on it?
Speaking of flight, I was once to the Wright-Patterson Air Force Museum near Dayton, Ohio, working nearby in Kettering, over some problems of a research park to be made on a former Shaker "farm" named after their original site in Watervliet, NY, "conscientious objectors" in the 18th century until even now, a few still exist in Maine. Today there is an arms research center and arsenal there, there since the 19th century.
It is amazing to think, on one of the US Apollo missions to the Moon, a small piece of wood from the original Wright Flyer that was launched and flown at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, was left there on the Moon.
Friday, August 18, 2006
Brain damage smoking those rugs...Brewer and Shipley
I once saw "Jimi Plays Berkeley" and "Pink Floyd at Pompeii" (or Vesuvius, Herculaneum?) in the Huntington Arts Center maybe there's a track from the film(s). They used to tour together in the 1960s (very tough schedule I thought having more recently read it) and thought I saw Mr. Jimi in a sidewalk cafe in Woodstock, NY in 1968, when I was washing dishes at Camp Timber Lake, Allaben, NY, (1940s USGS "Camp Allegro"). I found out later he was renting a place and a New Paltz professor's Mom, then in real estate, was showing the place, saw him and a "Janis Joplin look-a-like" she said, they thought they weren't going to be disturbed and were a little teed off. I am a recent listener and want to thank you for the effort, though then more a Jethro Tull fan at the time (TWJT on records) and Audience. I am in the Bronx, NY.
Sort of posted to "Brain Damage" the definitive Pink Floyd radio station
Thursday, August 17, 2006
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Mechanic's Institute Press Release: Historic Preservation
MECHANIC'S INSTITUTE
Founded in 1820
Supported by the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen of the City of New York
20 West 44th Street New York City, N.Y. 10036
Telephone: (212) 840-7648
Facsimile: (212) 764-5058
PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
_______________________________________________
New Tuition-Free Historic Preservation Program
New York, NY –Summer 2006. Mechanics’ Institute is now accepting applications for its new certificate program in Historic Preservation. The two-year program is open to men and women currently working in historic preservation or a related field. Instruction focuses on architectural history, preservation history and policy, methods and techniques of historic preservation and case studies of New York City buildings and landmarks. Courses include Introduction to Historic Preservation, Visual Communication, Building Typology, and Case Studies in Historic Preservation. Mechanics’ Institute also offers programs in Construction Project Management, Facilities Management, Plumbing Design, HVAC, Electrical Technology, and AutoCAD. All courses and programs are open to men and women who are currently working in the construction trades and allied trades.
Mechanics’ Institute is located at 20 West 44th Street, between 5th and 6th Avenues, in the heart of midtown Manhattan. The Mechanics’ Institute has been providing free classes in the trades since 1858. The fall semester begins on September 11. Courses are held in the evenings, between 5 and 9 pm. Registration is taking place now and space is limited. For more information visit the school website at http://www.mechanicsinstitute.org/. To register, call the Admission Office at 212.840.7648 or visit us at 20 West 44th Street, between 5th and 6th Avenues.
- - It's interesting to find that the builders of wooden ships (at least at the time of the "year without summer", "the mechanics wore their coats in July" summer of 1816 in Setauket, NY) were referred to as "mechanics" rather than perhaps, carpenters.
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
Mississippi sues Memphis for tapping underground water supplies...
March 2005
OXFORD, Miss. -- The state of Mississippi has sued Memphis for tapping into groundwater formations to serve the Tennessee city's water wells...
In its lawsuit, Mississippi claims that one-third of the water Memphis pumps -- about 60 million gallons a day -- comes from south of the state line. This water is "unreasonably and unlawfully diverted," causing harm to the aquifer, it says.
The lawsuit asks the court to order Memphis to halt its "excessive" withdrawals and "use water from other nearby abundant and available sources, such as the Mississippi River."
Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee embarked on an aquifer study in recent years and continue to pursue research."
This, reported from the hometown of the American writer William Faulkner ("United States novelist (originally Falkner) who wrote about people in the southern United States (1897-1962)") reminds me a tad about the original dispute between Iraq and Kuwait as reported in the press. Kuwait had set up oil wells right at the "line in the sand" that the British drew between Iraq and Kuwait, probably in the 1920s, and Iraq got mad because their scientists stated 80% of the underground oil field was in Iraq and Kuwait was pumping it all over to their side. When negotiations were called, it was reported, Kuwait was absent from the table, which may have led to the original invasion of Kuwait by Iraq it was thought.
Monday, August 14, 2006
Listening to...
The The's This is The The Day and
Michael Keaton reads "Mose the Fireman: The Legendary Firefighter" a Rabbit Ears Book and Cassette. The book and cassette series, narrated by many famous Hollywood actors and actresses, have received numerous honors and awards including: 2 Grammy Awards, 13 Grammy Nominations, 7 Action for Children's Television Awards, 16 Parent's Choice Awards and 4 CINE Golden Eagle Awards. Mose and Lize were "stereotype" characters referred to on the Bowery when it was New York City's Theatre District and limelights and gaslight lit the neighborhood and people strolled out at night there to visit the sites and theaters. Written by Eric Metaxas and illustrated by Everett Peck, published by Simon & Schuster, it "Relates the tall tale adventures of Moses Humphries, a nineteenth-century fireman in New York City." 1996.
Blogged with Microsoft's Windows Live Writer (Beta) Version: 1.0 (109)
Press corps moves outside White House
In a National Archives journal article the history of the White House Press Secretary was researched and presented. What it stated was that Cabinet Secretary George B. (M.) Cortelyou was considered the first, though not a title then, as he in 1901, it stated, invited the press in to discuss the condition of the President McKinley, who had been shot at the Pan American Exposition in Buffalo, NY and news of the Spanish-American War.
President William McKinley had been expected to survive, but eight days later passed away, and then Vice President Theodore Roosevelt was rushed down on a series of horse-drawn jitneys from the Tahawas Club, where he had been climbing Mt. Marcy, in New York State's Adirondacks, to the railhead in North Creek, NY to read the telegram announcing the death, and where he boarded a special train for Buffalo, NY. He empowered George Cortelyou in organizing the offices, once a shorthand teacher in New York City, and continued I guess to make announcements to the press.
I found it odd at the time that the first woman to hold that position, Dee Dee Myers under President Clinton, was not even mentioned as the article progressed through the different people who occupied the position. I hope they return soon, and this is not a permanent harbinger. Yahoo article.
"The most dangerous man in America." - President Nixon
If the man was the "most dangerous man in America" wouldn't that mean he was under surveillance most of the time (even though a British citizen was more responsible for the fanfare of LSD, invented in a Swiss pharmaceutical lab, recently, the lab, after a mismanaged fire, was responsible for killing most of the wildlife in the Rhine River in Germany through releases)? Did that mean, say a musician, playing bass guitar on his talking album would also be followed, when perhaps it was just another gig? Where does the government draw the line with its so-called experts (elected officials, who have outstanding tickets, misdemeanors and other offenses, with guaranteed outrageous pensions, for a crummy couple of years of pampered service) in the protection of personal freedom? How many goons were following him?
Comment in The Blog, Paul Krassner's report on "The Legacy of Timothy Leary" in the Huffington Post
About the following posting...
Saturday, August 12, 2006
Interesting source of information
DU : depleted uranium
Interesting news for underwater close-range photogrammetry
Friday, August 11, 2006
The Great Falls of Paterson, NJ (home of Lou Costello)
Red, White and Blueway?
Thursday, August 10, 2006
Kennewick Man revisited
Marking time the "The Wild One"
Wednesday, August 09, 2006
General William Floyd
The revolution might be televised...
The Presbyterians also backed the innocence of Professor Angela Davis, when she was "liberated" in an armed take-away in a courthouse by extremists, (part of the revolution not televised) which turned out to be true. I doubt this sceptic's "truth", however, it's strongly out there in other forms. I prefer secular vs. sectarian humanism, but humanism none-the-less should be welcomed.
The local WABC (?) local news a few days (?) prior to 9/11 had a debate among all the candidates to be voted for on 9/10/2001 (?) in the NYC primary held then. One question asked on the TV show I recall was: Now that the World Trade Center was for sale, and the City would profit a windfall from it, how would each candidate spend the money? They were commented on by "experts" as to the possibility of their proposals. One answer, was to build the 40,000 low and middle income housing units originally part of the deal for the exchange of de-mapping several city streets, not applying NYC building codes, etc., that were supposed to be built with the building of the World Trade Center. It was my favorite answer, having spent some time as a youngster in the "projects" in the South Bronx, nearby wrecking balls, and where under President Lincoln, the Capitol Dome was cast and then assembled in Washington, D.C. by the local firm, replacing the former "hat box" on the US capital. I imagine, many watched the "prime time" "debate" more an informational guide to voting that there should be more of.
Tuesday, August 08, 2006
West Point Story (not Gene Roddenberry's TV show)
Re: more re:Historical Archaeology on the big screen redux
Monday, August 07, 2006
Mini skyscraper flexes its muscles
Sunday, August 06, 2006
Where were you when the WTC was attacked?
Black Ball Line Redux
Interesting sites online:
"The Oblong Box" short story of travel on a 19th century passenger ship, by Edgar Allen Poe, with, believe it or not, a reference to DaVinci's "Last Supper". He once lived in the cottage now on the Grand Concourse in the borough of the Bronx, in New York City though he reposes in Baltimore, Maryland, his demise still a mystery.
Webb Institute: Who Was William Webb? He was a world famous 19th century shipbuilder in Manhattan, NY, who "unfortunately" built state-of-the-art vessels for foreign nations, as the US government thought otherwise. Today a small undergraduate college of naval architecture is in Glen Cove, NY on Long Island, there now for 111 years.
The Sextant | The Online Community of Maritime History and Nautical Archaeology
The Museum of Underwater Archaeology
Maritime Quest
Wreck Diving Magazine Home Page
Pride of Baltimore When Mount Tambora, in today's Indonesia, a volcano, exploded in 1815, the summer of 1816 became a "year without summer" (Wikipedia) as the ash circulated the Earth blocking the sunlight from reaching the ground. Baltimore, Maryland became an important port as the effects of the cold were not felt as extreme in the south, and many foodstuffs were traded to the north through trans-shipment in the port of Baltimore. The Yankees are playing in Baltimore today. Stony Brook University also has a yearly Alumni event there at the major league baseball field.
"Mechanics wore coats in July" it was recorded by the shipbuilders of Setauket, the "mechanics" what the people building ships were referred to. The Brookhaven Town landmarked First Congregational Church in Centereach, NY, built by transplanted "Setauketeers" to "New Village" built some of the church using nautical architecture techniques it seems. Setauket, NY is in a Brookhaven Town designated historic district, the reason I did some research on the Captain Brewster Hawkins House, there I think, new roof, septic system and sandbox for Dr. John and Deborah Lee.
I worked in 1978 in Fort McHenry in the "Inner Harbor" of Baltimore and made the yearly trip to the abandoned Fort Carroll, out under the Francis Scott Key Bridge. It was before the Rouse development, which also came later to the South Street Seaport. Fort Carroll its said, an artificial island with disappearing gun mounts, was built, its said with a steam pile driver designed by Robert E. Lee once Commandant of the West Point Military Academy, and responsible for the capture and hanging of John Brown in the raid on the Harpers Ferry Federal Arsenal, West Virginia. "A small town in northeastern West Virginia that was the site of a raid in 1859 by the abolitionist John Brown and his followers who captured an arsenal that was located there." John Brown is buried in the New York State Department of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation maintained "John Brown Farm" in North Elba, NY in the Adirondacks.
There's a photo online of a computer-generated bridge that's been proposed to span partly over Fort McHenry National Monument (and in some places "Shrine") to shorten the trip around the harbor to get from one side of the city to the other.
The English-to-American Dictionary
Saturday, August 05, 2006
Black Ball Line
Friday, August 04, 2006
Cinematical: Trek's Marina Sirtis States the Obvious
Teredo worms
Small Invasion Found On Tappan Zee Bridge (CBS/AP) TARRYTOWN, N.Y. If they ever build a new Tappan Zee Bridge, they might want to make it wormproof. The state Thruway Authority said Friday that evidence of two tiny shipworms -- underwater mollusks that chew up wood -- was found in tests conducted near the bridge that spans the Hudson River between Westchester and Rockland counties.
Thursday, August 03, 2006
Maritime Interests too in Liverpool
What was interesting about this, in West Creek, was that it was the former location of the Lord Shipyard, a family name. One of the award winners of preservation in New York State government was recently a Mr. Philip Lord, who indirectly I was connected to through Edward Johanneman, MA who used to work for the State Museums when he worked on D.O.T. projects out of Stony Brook University with Phil Weigand, Ph.D.
Historically, the shipyard was known for producing the fast ship "Paragon" which out-ran General Napoleon's blockade of Liverpool, England in 1803. The Liverpudlians cheered it's arrival. Napoleon later became Emperor. The rest is history...
In the 17th century, a woman wanted in Boston for religious beliefs (or lack thereof) escaped to Quaker "Shelter Island" and sought council there. He or they advised her to return there with her convictions. She did. They hung her, the first woman hung in New England.
Wednesday, August 02, 2006
Maritime Interests
I've done some archaeology research on the infamous "Wanderer" referred to as "the last slaver". Built as a luxury yacht in Setauket, NY, it was outfitted with water tanks in Port Jefferson, NY for transatlantic voyages, after being bought by a Louisiana cotton merchant's broker from the Captain Brewster Hawkins' ship chandler and mechanics firm, who "revived" shipbuilding there in the 1840s."Wanderer" landed on Jekyll Island, Georgia in 1858, (Wikipedia) 400 of the 600 Africans surviving the "middle passage" ordeal to be sold into slavery. It was captured by the Union, a "chess piece" in the American Civil War, very fast, only an oil painting of it survives in the Port Jefferson Yacht Club, afterward in the early 1870s it sunk in a storm off Cape Maysi, the east point of Cuba, named by Christopher Columbus (old Spanish) near Guantanamo in the fruit trade.
That said totally off-topic, "Experiment" was the second ship (sloop) (after the first, the large "Empress of China") to sail from America to China and with a total crew of 10! The small sailing sloop was built near Albany, NY the state capital of New York, USA. At a National Maritime Historical Society meeting, in Peekskill, NY, (a former member who helped research and record the remains of two wooden 40' centerboard cargo sloops in Bear Mountain State Park's tide-line, abandoned there, published in their quarterly magazine "Sea History") it was stated that a replica was being built and that perhaps a voyage recreating the second American voyage to China, not long after the formation of the United States of America, in 1785, was also to be recreated. See: "Voyage of the Sloop Experiment"
I look forward to learning more about Asian Maritime History and Archaeology since most of what I know is some of Western Maritime history. Years ago I was intrigued by an archaeology report of the excavation of a Chinese ship in the silts of a river there and the report about the various spices it held and where they might have come from, I think from around 1480 CE (?) published around 1979 or so. About that time too, an archaeologist from China, a specialist in Chinese bronze tripod "cooking" vessels spoke to an assembly at Stony Brook University, translated on the spot by the Nobel prize winning physicist, C. N. Yang. I have enjoyed the archaeology that has since, it seems, been in the press more, from Asia.