The British ‘Atlantis’ is mapped in detail

Dunwich Beach Sutterstock A professor of physical geography has put together the most detailed map yet of the sunken medieval town of Dunwich using underwater acoustic imagining. The port town, often referred to as “the British Atlantis,” was a hub of activity up until its collapse in the 1400s. This was brought about after a series of epic storms battered the coastline in the 1200s and 1300s, causing repeated flooding, submerging parts of the town, and flooding the harbor and river with silt. Today it stands as a small village, but up until its demise it was around the same size as medieval London. Despite still existing at depths of just three to 10 meters (or, 9.8 ft to 32.8 ft) below sea level, the murky conditions have made investigating what lies beneath particularly tricky. Since 2010, however, Southampton’s David Sear—along with the GeoData Institute, the National Oceanography Center, Wessex Archaeology, and local divers from North Sea Recovery and Learn Scuba—has been exploring the muddy depths using dual-frequency identification sonar (DIDSON) acoustic imaging. Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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The British ‘Atlantis’ is mapped in detail

Anonymous Leaked Account Data for 4,000 Bank Executives on a Government Website

After hacking up government websites last week , and the week before , Anonymous has pulled off another hack to push their agenda of reforming computer crime law in the wake of Aaron Swartz’s suicide . This time, they’ve leaked names, addresses, and other information about over 4,000 bank executives . And they did it all on a government site. More »

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Anonymous Leaked Account Data for 4,000 Bank Executives on a Government Website

Archaeologists Mistake Viking Brewhouses For Bathhouses

For years, archaeologists studying Viking remnants and artifacts in Britain had assumed that certain stone structures were bathhouses, or a kind of primitive sauna. But a husband-and-wife team has now thrown this thinking into question by suggesting that they weren’t bathhouses at all — that they were brewhouses where the Vikings made their beer. More »

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Archaeologists Mistake Viking Brewhouses For Bathhouses

Arnold Schwarzenegger: Great Darth Vader or the Greatest Darth Vader?

No offense to James Earl Jones, but I can’t imagine how anybody could watch the above video of Arnold Schwarzenegger’s little known tryout in the role of Darth Vader, and not see he makes the superior Sith Lord. I mean, it’s not even close. Come on, George. You know you have one more Special Edition left in you before you go. Tell you what — you include this vocal track, and I’ll forgive you for inserting Jar Jar into all the Dagobah scenes, or whatever other nonsense you had planned before we fanboys drove you screaming into retirement. More »

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Arnold Schwarzenegger: Great Darth Vader or the Greatest Darth Vader?

Deformed skulls discovered in 1,000-year-old Mexican cemetery

Archaeologists digging in a 1,000-year-old pre-Hispanic cemetery in Mexico’s South Sonora have uncovered a series of skeletons featuring signs of cranial deformation. The practice, which is well documented among Mesoamerican peoples, has never been seen this far north before — a strong indication that their cultural influence was far more prominent than previously assumed. More »

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Deformed skulls discovered in 1,000-year-old Mexican cemetery

This spectacular proposed South Korean super-city will cost $275 billion

In an effort to boost its tourism industry, South Korea is considering a project that would see the construction of a $275 billion mega-city built on the islands of Yongyu-Muui in the port city of Incheon, next to Incheon International Airport. Called 8City, the attraction is expected to create 930,000 new jobs and attract 134 million tourists (mostly from China). But given the cost, it’s an open question as to whether it will ever get built. More »

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This spectacular proposed South Korean super-city will cost $275 billion

Is this the oldest d20 on Earth?

Romans may have used 20-Sided die almost two millennia before D&D , but people in ancient Egypt were casting icosahedra even earlier. Pictured above is a twenty-faced die dating from somewhere between 304 and 30 B.C., a timespan also known as Egypt’s Ptolemaic Period . More »

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Is this the oldest d20 on Earth?