Close X
Friday, December 13, 2024
ADVT 
International

World's oldest weather report found in Egypt

Darpan News Desk, IANS, 03 Apr, 2014 11:30 AM
    If you thought weather prediction was a recent phenomenon, you would be in for a surprise if told that weather prediction was done in ancient Egypt some 3,500 years ago!
     
    A new translation of a 40-line inscription on a six-foot-tall 3,500-year-old calcite block from Egypt - called the Tempest Stela - describes rain, darkness and “the sky being in storm without cessation, louder than the cries of the masses”.
     
    The inscription could provide new evidence about the chronology of events in the ancient Middle East.
     
    Two scholars at the University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute - Nadine Moeller and Robert Ritner - believe the unusual weather patterns described on the slab were the result of a massive volcano explosion at Thera - the present-day island of Santorini in the Mediterranean Sea.
     
    “This is important to scholars of the ancient Near East and eastern Mediterranean, generally because the chronology that archaeologists use is based on the lists of Egyptian pharaohs, and this new information could adjust those dates,” explained Moeller, an assistant professor of Egyptian archaeology at the Oriental Institute.
     
    The new translation suggests the Egyptian pharaoh Ahmose ruled at a time closer to the Thera eruption than previously thought - a finding that could change scholars’ understanding of a critical juncture in human history as Bronze Age empires realigned.
     
    The Tempest Stela dates back to the reign of the pharaoh Ahmose, the first pharaoh of the 18th Dynasty. 
     
    The block was found in pieces in Thebes, modern Luxor, where Ahmose ruled.
     
    Until now, the archaeological evidence for the date of the Thera eruption seemed at odds with the radiocarbon dating, explained Oriental Institute post-doctoral scholar Felix Hoeflmayer.
     
    However, if the date of Ahmose’s reign is earlier than previously believed, the resulting shift in chronology “might solve the whole problem”, Hoeflmayer commented.
    The research appeared in the Journal of Near Eastern Studies.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    No replay of Khobragade affair for Bangladeshi diplomat

    No replay of Khobragade affair for Bangladeshi diplomat
    It looks like a replay of the Devyani Khobragade affair that strained India-US relations, but it isn't. A former domestic worker has slapped a civil suit against Bangladesh's consul general in New York and his wife accusing them of keeping him in slave-like conditions.

    No replay of Khobragade affair for Bangladeshi diplomat

    Sri Lanka army admits torture of women

    Sri Lanka army admits torture of women
    The Sri Lanka army Saturday ordered strict action against soldiers found harassing female recruits in a video circulating on the Internet.

    Sri Lanka army admits torture of women

    T20 World Cup: New Zealand beat England through D/L method

    T20 World Cup: New Zealand beat England through D/L method
    New Zealand beat England by nine runs via the Duckworth-Lewis method in their opening World Twenty20 game at the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium here Saturday

    T20 World Cup: New Zealand beat England through D/L method

    40 killed in Pakistan road accident

    40 killed in Pakistan road accident
    The accident happened when the two passenger buses with over 100 people on board collided with the oil tanker near Gadani checkpost in Hub district of Balochistan province

    40 killed in Pakistan road accident

    Missing jet: Weather improves but still no trace

    Missing jet: Weather improves but still no trace
    There was no trace of the Malaysian airliner even two weeks after it went missing but searchers said Friday weather conditions have improved in the search area in the southern Indian Ocean which is making human sighting possible now.

    Missing jet: Weather improves but still no trace

    Putin signs Crimea's accession into law

    Putin signs Crimea's accession into law
    Russian President Vladimir Putin Friday signed into law legislation on the accession of Crimea after both houses of the Russian parliament unanimously approved it. Putin also said that Russia will refrain from imposing retaliatory sanctions against the US.

    Putin signs Crimea's accession into law