Showing posts with label British Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British Museum. Show all posts

Friday, January 23, 2026

The British Museum has officially posted a job opening for a dedicated stolen goods hunter.

Amazing stuff! Neither Google nor Bing found the "officially posted job opening"!

"... The role involves tracking down and recovering missing artifacts that have surfaced on sites like eBay or at private auctions."

"... The British Museum is stepping up the search for hundreds of lost antiquities by hiring a dedicated treasure hunter. The chosen candidate will be responsible for recovering gold jewelry and semi-precious stones that were allegedly stolen by the museum’s ex-curator for Greece and Rome. ...

Individual pieces have spread far and wide. The alleged perpetrator of the theft, ex-curator Peter Higgs, reportedly flogged some items online. One piece of Roman jewelry worth $60,000 was found listed on eBay for a mere $48. That gold objects are particularly vulnerable to being melted down remains “a depressing possibility,” said Harrison. ..."

Friday, January 23, 2026 - Join The Flyover

British Museum Seeks Treasure Hunter to Recover Stolen Antiquities "The sleuth will be tasked with hunting down precious gold and stones that were stolen from the museum in 2023."


The upper part of a Roman sard gem similar to some of the missing objects (Source)


Thursday, January 01, 2026

Early neanderthals made fire 400,000 years ago in the UK pushing back the origin of human fire making by over 350,000 years

Amazing stuff! Another surprising discovery about the Neanderthals!

I had previously blogged here already about this discovery, but it was only about a video!

I bet this is not the earliest ever, but other places somewhere around the world will be discovered in the future.

"... Pinpointing exactly when this kind of fire use evolved is tricky, since the traces of natural burns and human-made ones look alike. Now, a new study reports on a concentrated patch of heated sediment and burned stone tools from the East Farm Barnham archeological site.

The researchers found two fragments of pyrite, a mineral that can produce sparks when struck against flint, indicating that the early Neanderthals used them as “a fire-making kit.” These ancient deposits mark the earliest known evidence of fire-making, roughly 400,000 years ago. ..."

"A stunning discovery at an archaeological dig in the UK is rewriting the timeline of when humans first made fire.

Researchers have discovered the earliest known instance of human-created fire, which took place in the east of England 400,000 years ago.

The new discovery, in the village of Barnham, pushes the origin of human fire-making back by more than 350,000 years, far earlier than previously thought. ..."

"The discovery shows humans were making fire around 350,000 years earlier than previously known.

Research ... provides evidence of the earliest known instance of fire-making by humans – around 400,000 years ago. Previous recorded instances of fire-making date to only 50,000 years ago. ..."

From the abstract:
"Fire-making is a uniquely human innovation that stands apart from other complex behaviours such as tool production, symbolic culture and social communication.
Controlled fire use provided adaptive opportunities that had profound effects on human evolution. Benefits included warmth, protection from predators, cooking and creation of illuminated spaces that became focal points for social interaction. Fire use developed over a million years, progressing from harvesting natural fire to maintaining and ultimately making fire.
However, determining when and how fire use evolved is challenging because natural and anthropogenic burning are hard to distinguish. Although geochemical methods have improved interpretations of heated deposits, unequivocal evidence of deliberate fire-making has remained elusive.
Here we present evidence of fire-making on a 400,000-year-old buried land surface at Barnham (UK), where heated sediments and fire-cracked flint handaxes were found alongside two fragments of iron pyrite—a mineral used in later periods to strike sparks with flint.
Geological studies show that pyrite is locally rare, suggesting it was brought deliberately to the site for fire-making.
The emergence of this technological capability provided important social and adaptive benefits, including the ability to cook food on demand—particularly meat—thereby enhancing digestibility and energy availability, which may have been crucial for hominin brain evolution."

"... Sites in Africa suggest humans used natural fire over a million years ago, but the discovery at the Palaeolithic site in Barnham evidences the creation and control of fire, which carries huge implications for human development and evolution. Until now, the oldest known evidence of fire-making was from 50,000 years ago, found in northern France. ..."

Early neanderthals made fire 400,000 years ago

The moment the earliest known human-made fire was uncovered "BBC News visits the prehistoric site in Suffolk"

Groundbreaking discovery shows earliest evidence of fire-making (official news release) "Researchers led by the British Museum have unearthed the earliest known evidence of fire-making, dating back over 400,000 years, in a field in Suffolk."


The site at Barnham, where the discoveries were made


Thursday, September 26, 2024

British Museum: Smuggling Domesticated Silkworms along the Silk Roads

Very recommendable!


A princess smuggled the silkworm eggs and seeds of the mulberry tree in her headdress about 1.300 years ago


Monday, August 21, 2023

British Museum treasure thefts by insider

Museums are irresistible! Pardon my pun! 😊

Apparently, the thief was clever enough to steal rather low value items that were possibly not even catalogued. Almost a perfect crime!

"... Police are now investigating the theft of items including gold, jewelery and gems of semi-precious stones. ..."

"Peter John Higgs, a prominent curator who was employed at the British Museum for 30 years, was identified in UK press reports as the person alleged to be responsible for stealing priceless artefacts from the museum's collection. Higgs denies any wrongdoing. ...
Crucially, it is also unclear if all of the missing items had been catalogued. ..."

British Museum thefts: What we know so far - BBC News The British Museum came under pressure this week after it sacked a member of staff over treasures reported "missing, stolen or damaged".

Monday, June 13, 2022

British Museum: Feminine power the divine to the demonic exhibition

This should be an interesting exhibition. I suspect there will be some ideological overtones.

"The first exhibition of its kind, Feminine power takes a cross-cultural look at the profound influence of female spiritual beings within global religion and faith."


An introduction to Feminine power - British Museum Blog



Friday, June 18, 2021

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

British Museum: Objects of Crisis, Tomb Robbery and Climate Change in the Nile Valley

The British Museum director and keeper of the collections of the Mediterranean and Nile Valley here are explaining in this video that there was perhaps a global warming going on for about 2-3 centuries in ancient Egypt about 3,000 years ago! Global Warming is a hoax! Climate Change is a religion!

Sunday, March 29, 2020

Eighty years (and more) of Sutton Hoo

Recommendable! From the curator at the British Museum!

" ... The Sutton Hoo ship burial is one of the greatest archaeological discoveries of all time. ... Previously it was thought that post-Roman Britain descended into the ‘Dark Ages’, when these islands supposedly experienced a decline in civilisation, sophistication and cosmopolitanism in all areas of life Sutton Hoo helped to explode that myth forever. ... We now know that the mound cemetery containing the ship burial was part of a wider landscape of human activity that reached back for millennia, beyond the Anglo-Saxon era. Research on the Staffordshire Hoard, another gobsmacking Anglo-Saxon discovery made in 2009, revealed that the goldsmiths responsible for Sutton Hoo’s treasures could manipulate the material to enhance its qualities, using methods that can barely be fathomed. ... "

Eighty years (and more) of Sutton Hoo – The British Museum Blog: When I was a first-year history undergraduate, I came to the British Museum on a field trip. The Anglo-Saxon period was brand new to me at the time – the only reason I knew of ‘Sutton Hoo’ and its fame was because a helmet that had been found there was on the front of my [...]






Thursday, January 23, 2020

Tantra: enlightenment to revolution

From the exhibition introduction of the British Museum we learn:

"Explore the radical philosophy that transformed the religious, cultural and political landscape of India and beyond in this powerful exhibition. 

Originating in early medieval India, Tantra had a huge impact on Hinduism and Buddhism from the 6th century onwards."

What does the British Museum mean by "huge impact" (hint: see photo below)?



The British Museum | Just announced | Tantra exhibition

Monday, November 04, 2019

Monday, October 07, 2019

Facebook Recently Became Very Aggressive Blocking Member Postings

Posted: 10/7/2019  Amended/revised: 10/8/2019

Update Of 10/8/2019

Facebook just (10/8/2019, 10:40 AM MST) blocked me from publicly posting this Front Page magazine article on my Facebook page: Why the Syria Pullout Makes Sense America's president stands firm for America’s national interest. As usual my comment was simply “Recommendable” as I think this article captures fairly well President Trump’s latest decision to pull out of Syria.

Here are two screenshots documenting the censorship by capturing my Facebook page support inbox (the second screen shot below is an enlargement of the tiny image used by Facebook:


I thought, I had figured it out why Facebook was possibly blocking my posts. My habit is to use my Google Blogger account to publicly share YouTube videos on Facebook using Google Chrome browser. However, I tried to copy the YouTube video URL to a Chrome browser instance on my notebook, where I was logged in with my Google Gmail account and again Facebook would block these postings instantly! 

Following two posts were also blocked by Facebook in the same manner as described below in the Original Post:
  1. All I Want to Do Is Make Cookies (Prager University video, released 10/7/19). My Facebook posting comment: “Highly recommended! The insanity of excessive government regulations!”
  2. Sekulow responds to second Trump whistleblower (Fox news with Sean Hannity, 10/7/2019). My Facebook posting comment: “Sekulow responds to second Trump whistleblower”

All the incidences of censorship by Facebook reported in this blog happened within less than 2 hours between 10:30 PM on 10/7/2019 and 12:15 AM 10/8/2019 MSTD.  I have requested Facebook to review all of them!


Original Post

I have just become fully aware that Facebook has become much more aggressive in  its policies how it blocks postings in the past several weeks or so! I can trace it back to October 2, 2019. It is absolutely shameful and outrageous! 

Moreover, Facebook does it in a very stealthy way. They do not clearly tell the Facebook account holder what posting was actually blocked. You have to drill in and request a review before you find out which one of your postings was blocked! Plus, every time it happened (two times now) Facebook forces me to change the password for my account!

Today, I watched a biographic video about Pat Garett on the Biographics channel of Simon Whistler. As usual, I shared this video as public on my Facebook page with the usual comment “Very recommendable”. This triggered Facebook to block this posting as “Your post goes against our Community Standards so only you can see it.” (Facebook email language) and “This post goes against our Community Standards on spam” (Facebook account Support Inbox language).


Here is are the Facebook notifications:

Here is the email I received from Facebook:
Not only that, Facebook also blocked today a video from the British Museum that I watched and also publicly posted on my Facebook page with the same incendiary language as above. My comment for this post was “Recommendable! River dolphins transform into humans and go to a bar at night :-)”. The 7 minutes long video titled “Shape shifting Amazonian dolphins I Curator's Corner S5 Ep8”

It has been my routine for many months to watch Simon Whistler videos on the YouTube Biographics and Visual Politics channels. Many times, I recommend his videos in the same way as today by posting them on my Facebook page. In the past, I never had any issues with Facebook blocking such posts of mine.

As I wrote this post, apparently Facebook has already reviewed the two blocked videos and lifted the block as I can see it now in my Facebook Activity Log. And both videos seem now posted as public.

I am deeply shocked by such ridiculous policies enforced by Facebook! This is truly insane by Facebook!

I have been a very active member of Facebook since 2008! Since June 2018, I even manage a separate kind of social news media Facebook page. So Facebook know exactly who I am and what I post for a long time and I am a very consistent and systematic person!