Friday, June 24, 2011
Sunday, June 19, 2011
The Complete Catalogue Of The Recent Berkley Dig
Not since the discovery of the crypt of Tutankhamen has the world been so astonished by a treasure trove of a lost culture. Dubbed the "Aquarians" by the archeologists who made the discovery on the outskirts of the ancient ruins of the City Of San Francisco, the dig has unearthed a remarkable culture whose daily life can only be discerned by these objects.
Labels:
give peace a chance,
the 60s,
the hippies,
viet nam,
woodstock nation
Monday, September 7, 2009
History Channel's "Manson" Not Totally Helter Skelter
So you want to be a rock and roll star...History Channel.
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Woodstock Remembered On VH1
Saturday, August 8, 2009
Press Release: Archeologists Discover Lost Civilization Of Woodstock People
A startling and important archaeological discovery was recently made in the area of our planet once known as California, when a cache of artifacts dating from the 1960s was unearthed, relatively intact, during the building of the transglobal tunnel. The best scholars from a score of disciplines --including archaeology, history, languages and anthropology -- have studied and interpreted these artifacts and have mounted an exhibition that will open at the Metroplex Museum of Art next year. Never has so great a body of information been available about a time and culture of which we have previously known so little.
The artifacts were uncovered by a construction crew in the ruins of a postindustrial town known as Berkeley ("zip code" coordinate 94704). The primary dig site comprised an area approximately 105 yards long by 44 yards wide. Additional objects were discovered as much as one quarter of a mile away, in an area believed to have been the location of the University of California at Berkeley. Unfortunately, practically nothing of the great institution remains, but its grandeur is legendary. The campus alone was the size of a small city, with its classrooms, laboratories, stadia and great public squares, all of which played an essential role on the dramatic events of the time
The artifacts were uncovered by a construction crew in the ruins of a postindustrial town known as Berkeley ("zip code" coordinate 94704). The primary dig site comprised an area approximately 105 yards long by 44 yards wide. Additional objects were discovered as much as one quarter of a mile away, in an area believed to have been the location of the University of California at Berkeley. Unfortunately, practically nothing of the great institution remains, but its grandeur is legendary. The campus alone was the size of a small city, with its classrooms, laboratories, stadia and great public squares, all of which played an essential role on the dramatic events of the time
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
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