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Monday, May 28, 2012

Archaeology News: May 28, 2012


In 2089 Elizabeth Shaw, an archaeologist, chips through a cave wall in the bleak mountains of Scotland and finds out that the human race is not alone. Illuminated by her torchlight is a 35,000-year-old painting of people worshiping a giant, who is pointing to a cluster of stars.





Israeli archaeologists have discovered a rare trove of 3,000-year-old jewelry, including a ring and earrings, hidden in a ceramic jug near the ancient city of Megiddo, where the New Testament predicts the final battle of Armageddon.



Bulgarian archaeologists have discovered an ornamented dagger belonging to a Western European knight during excavations of the fortress wall at the entrance of the Black Sea town of Sozopol.




Bulgarian archaeologists have found a church dating back to the late Antiquity period, which is located near the village of Sarafovo, on the Black Sea coast. The site, which is close to the Bulgarian Black Sea city of Burgas, has been excavated by the team of Prof. Dr. Lyudmil Vagalinski, who is the Director of the National Archaeology Institute and Museum at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, since the start of May 2012.

Climate change led to the collapse of the ancient Indus civilization more than 4,000 years ago, archaeologists believe. The Indus civilization was the largest - but least known - of the first great urban cultures that also included Egypt and Mesopotamia.

Archaeologists in Tianjin announced on Monday they have excavated two shipwrecks that were buried for centuries under the Grand Canal, the longest artificial waterway in the world. More than 600 artifacts have been recovered from the sunken vessels, which date back to the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), according to the Tianjin Cultural Heritage Protection Center.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Neanderthals and the Human Spark


Neanderthals were very successful in adapting to things that were presented to them. They lived in Europe much longer than us and their adaptions to their environment changed very little over the course of their lives. Even after they came to Europe they maintained a certain lifestyle and they even used the same type of tool kit they utilized while in Africa.  The Neandertal’s tool tradition consisted of the multi- part spear thrower, stone-flakes, and task-specific hand axes, referred to as the Mousterian stone tool tradition, which dates to about 300,000 years ago. Neanderthals are also associated with the Châtelperronian, Aurignacian, and Gravitation tool cultures.

The research on Neanderthal DNA at the Max Planck Institute tells us that the Neanderthals and our ancestors had contact with one another but never mated. Also, the genetic differences observed while studying the Neanderthal genome were very minute. Further research on the Neanderthal genome has yielded other interesting details about the biology and lifeway's of this early hominin. The Max Planck Institute has been studying stable isotope values from ten different Neanderthals over a 100,000-year span. The analysis of the teeth shows us that the diet of all ten Neanderthals studied consisted mainly of animal protein. There was no evidence to suggest a significant amount of plant food in the diet. There is also no evidence of fish in the diet, which is odd considering that many Neanderthals lived by a water source.

Scientists have also been using the world’s largest x-ray machine to examine the upper jaw of a Neanderthal child brought from Belgium. The teeth literally have a built in calendar. The teeth lay down a new layer of enamel everyday they are growing, therefore the amount of days a Neanderthal lived can be counted by looking at the number of layers. Effectively, the total time you are growing your teeth gives you the proximal time of your childhood. Moreover, the growth lines in the Neanderthal child’s teeth shows us that it was around six or seven when it died, meaning it developed quite quickly after birth. Humans experience a longer childhood than any other animal. Our brains our immature, as a result, the brain growth happens after birth and in the brain case. In contrast, we see more growth in the face and jaw of some of our early ancestors. Humans experience more maturation, allowing us to absorb language and the world around us.  Neanderthal children have less time to mature, learn, and experience the world around them. They are essentially thrown into adulthood without having the necessary skills for long-term survival.

I previously mentioned the examination of teeth for dietary patterns, but teeth were extracted and used as ornaments as well. Human molars were pierced and sewn onto clothing or used as jewelry. These beads are evolutionarily important because not only were they not found at any Neanderthal sites, but they started showing up over 100,000 years ago, prior to them being found in Europe. This could mean that symbolism did not exist in Neanderthal culture, but it did in the human cultures that stayed behind in Africa.

Also, it means that there is a network in place. These beads represent an extension of the social network and social organization, in that they represent not only a community of peoples, but also a group of people unknown, united under one symbolic tradition and an adaptive strategy used only by humans. The significance of the artifacts being discovered at Olorgesailie by Alison Brooks is that fact that new technology did not just appear and the human spark was not necessarily instant.  Allison Brooks explains that the complexity of the mind most likely evolved in Africa because there is no evidence for the origin of ‘the spark’ anywhere else. There is also no beginning and no end in the archaeological record. There are steps in the middle and things are changing slowly over time as far as social complexity and technology. This slow genesis can be seen at the archaeological sites, from the 150,000-year-old spear point discovered that is quite small and sharp to the 320,000-year-old site, which yielded stone flakes made out of exotic materials. The evidence suggests that our early ancestors were putting thought into the materials that they used and they were also establishing trade networks to obtain exotic resources. This behavior is pushing the human spark back even before the anatomically modern humans appeared. Essentially, we were behaving like modern humans even before we looked like them.

The article “Diatomaceous sediments and environmental change in the Pleistocene Olorgesailie Formation, southern Kenya Rift Valley” discusses the sediment layers of the Olorgesailie Basin, which show changes in hominin behavior and the distribution of artifacts, which were directly affected by environmental variability over time1. Moreover, the “variability selection hypothesis” discussed in the article explains how the replacement of habitat specific adaptations by evolutionary trends increased hominin intelligence and social complexity, thus allowing for flexible responses to complex and shifting environments 1. This assessment supports the idea that modern humans at Olorgesailie were now fully capable of adapting to extreme change by using complex analysis.

The Neanderthals and our ancestors had the spark, but only humans took this new found information and evolved into something truly distinct from other hominins. Modern humans had developed a modern mind. According to Svante Paabo at the Max Planck Institute, modern humans were very unique. We spread out across the world colonizing different locations, and we fundamentally started dominating and controlling the ecosystem, instead of the environment controlling us.



As far as “the spark’ in concerned, I believe it is a firing of information or a neurological wiring, which essentially sparked an instant idea in modern humans. We were seeking out new information and we were thinking abstractly. We also experienced a longer maturation, thus allowing us to develop cognitive processes based on environment, culture, and observation. As far as tools, the Neanderthals had a generalized technology that worked in any kind of weather. On the other hand, modern humans found ways to invent new technology for every obstacle encountered. Ultimately there was a social and technological change in modern humans and information flow between groups. According to Ian Tattersall, these true diagnostics of humanness appeared about 50 to 100,000 years ago.

Although we have some artifacts left behind that might suggest the use of language and symbolism in Neanderthal culture, we still do not have the proof. They did use advanced tools but those tools never changed. Also, Neanderthals had a human gene that allowed for advanced language, suggesting the species had the capacity for speech, but it is still debatable as to whether they actually had a complex system of linguistic exchange.

Additionally, hominins like Homo erectus did not have the software or hardware to produce language. The voice box of Homo erectus was not developed, the neural circuits were not equipped to control tongue movements, the cervical vertebrae was not shaped correctly, and also Homo erectus did not have the lung control. Additionally, the innovative tool technology used by the Homo erectus was most likely shared via a communication system based on symbols or body language instead of linguistics. I believe linguistic communication evolved when we see the presence of advanced tools and complex behavior.  Although the first tools did not appear until about 2.6 million years ago, the ability to communicate did not occur until these tools were improved upon.  Once the technology started to become more diverse, and materials were being traded to produce these tools, there had to be an exchange of language in order to negotiate terms.

Source

  1. Owen, RB, Potts R, Behrensmeyerd AK, Peter D. 2008. Diatomaceous sediments and environmental change in the Pleistocene Olorgesailie Formation, southern Kenya Rift Valley. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 469: 17-37.


Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Human Origins: Morphology of the Orrorin tugenensis Femur


This is a general synopsis of the findings examined in the article "External and Internal Morphology of the BAR 1002'00 Orrorin tugenensis Femur".

The article “External and Internal Morphology of the BAR 1002'00 Orrorin tugenensis Femur” was written by K. Galik; associated with the Orthopedic Biomechanics Laboratory, Allegheny General Hospital, Pittsburgh, PA. B. Senut who is associated with the Département Histoire de la Terre, Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle. M. Pickford, the Chaire de Paléoanthropologie et de Préhistoire, Collège de France. D. Gommery who is associated with UPR 2147 CNRS. J. Treil from the Service du Radiologie, UMR 8555 du CNRS et Service de Radiologie, Clinique Pasteur. Lastly, A. J. Kuperavage and R. B. Eckhardt from the Laboratory of Comparative Morphology and Mechanics, Department of Kinesiology, Pennsylvania State University. The article was written September 3, 2004 and it focuses on three proximal femurs, primarily BAR 1002'00 of Orrorin tugenensis, which has a thinner cortex superiorly than inferiorly. The three femurs examined were originally found at the Lukeino Formation in Kenya's Tugen Hills in the Baringo District, Kenya in 2001. The purpose of this article, albeit it is somewhat controversial, is to support the idea that Orrorin tugenensis practiced bipedalism. The authors are essentially convinced, according to the femurs discovered, that Orrorin tugenensis was a biped considering the head of the femur had a spherical orientation and was rotated anteriorly. The article essentially explains Brigitte Senut and Martin Pickford’s discovery of Late Miocene fossils from the Lukeino Formation in Kenya's Tugen Hills. Although there were 20 fossils discovered to date, the three proximal femurs are of main focus in this article. The primary fossil investigated was of BAR 1002′00, a femur comparable in size to Pan troglodytes. The issue and primary focus was that the cortex is markedly thinner superiorly than inferiorly compared to the equal cortical thicknesses observed in extant African apes, approaching the condition in later hominids, and indicating that Orrorin tugenensis was bipedal2.

The point that Eckhardt, Galik, Gommery, Kuperavage, Pickford, Senut and Treil are trying to make is that the anatomical correlates in the BAR 1002′00 femur would support its bipedal status. Several attributes were observed that are characteristic of the Plio-Pleistocene through later hominids and distinguishing them from the African Apes: a shallow trochanteris fossa, an obturator exterius groove, and long femoral neck. Furthermore, there is no evidence of deep penetration of the trochanteris fossa into the shaft, in contrast with the usual morphology observed in Pan 2. Consequently, the length of the femoral neck in the BAR 1002′00 sample indicates a reorientation of the anterior gluteal muscles, which is strongly indicative of habitual hominid locomotion. “In BAR 1002′00, the femoral neck length exceeds that of Miocene hominoid fossils attributed to Afropithecus, Dryopithecus, Kenyapithecus, Nacholapithecus, Oreopithecus, and Ugandapithecus. Among Plio-Pleistocene hominids, a long femoral neck recently has been reconstructed for the partial MAK-VP-1/1 femur”2. The CT scans did indicate that the cortex was decidedly thinner superiorly than inferiorly, differing from the approximately equal cortical thicknesses observed in extant African apes. However, it is important to take note that bipedalism places structural integrity where gravity would most affect a bipedal organism, at the superior end of the femur. This is a decisive trait of later hominids. The dimensions of bone in the superior margin of femoral neck actually exceed those of the inferior margin often associated with Pan troglodytes.

There is a problem, however. According to a questions submitted to Science Magazine about Orrorin tugenensis by James Ohman, Owen Lovejoy, and Tim White, with answers by Robert B. Eckhardt, Karol Galik, Adam J. Kuperavage, the femoral neck of sample BAR 1002′00 was actually broken and glued back together “at the exact location most needed for an accurate analysis”. Therefore measurements of actual cortical thickness should have been made prior to the bone being glued back together. Although computerized tomography scans of the neck-shaft junction of BAR 1002′00, and the cortical bone, support the idea that Orrorin tugenensis walked with an up-right posture and habitual bipedal locomotion, there still seems to be an issue with the reconstruction of the sample. “We concur that the femur's external morphology suggests some form of bipedalism. However, the original scans appear to show a distinct superior cortex distinctive from Australopithecus and humans, with the cortex distribution being more primitive than that seen in any other hominid” 3. This means that the BAR 1002′00 femur has such derived characteristics as to exclude Australopithecus from direct human ancestry.

Critical adaptive signatures such a longer femoral neck and cortical thickness supports our lineage, as well as provides a map of the internal distribution of cortical bone in the most ancient femora pertinent to reconstructing hominid origins2. Furthermore, the internal distribution of cortical bone in its femoral neck constitutes direct evidence for frequent bipedal posture and locomotion in this Late Miocene ancestor. “BAR1002′00 exhibits a total morphological pattern distinct from African apes, diagnostic of bipedal locomotion, and appropriate for a population standing at the dawn of the human lineage” 2. This means then, according to my understanding of the article, that Orrorin tugenensis would mark the earliest evidence for habitual locomotion in the human fossil record and would shed light on the evolutionary causes of the shift to bipedalism.

In “Late Miocene hominids from the Middle Awash, Ethiopia” Selasse explains that the primitive dental anatomy and postcranial characteristics indicates that Ardipithecus was phylogenetically close to the common ancestor of chimpanzees and humans 4. These new findings raise additional questions about the claimed hominid status of Orrorin tugenensis. Why exactly? I mentioned before that the examination of the femoral neck led to the assumption that Orrorin tugenensis was a habitual biped. Selasse on the other hand contends that the “locomotor anatomy of Orrorin remains uncertain at this time because its description lacked comment on characters directly diagnostic of bipedalism, such as the presence of an obturator externus groove or an asymmetrical distribution of cortex in the femoral neck” 4. I don’t fully agree with this statement as the distribution of cortical bone and the obturator externus groove were both mentioned in the article “External and Internal Morphology of the BAR 1002'00 Orrorin tugenensis Femur”. The authors explain that the obturator externus groove, present in BAR 1002’00, resulted from bone remodeling to accommodate the direct contact of the obturator externus tendon with the dorsal surface of the femoral neck at full extension of the femur 2  Furthermore, a sample of 155 African hominoids, contrary to BAR 1002’00, did not include a single example of an obturator externus groove. This doesn’t discount Orrorin from representing the last common ancestor; it might just mean “it represents a previously unknown African hominoid with no living descendants, or an exclusive precursor of chimpanzees, gorillas or humans” 4.

In “A New Hominid from the Upper Miocene of Chad, Central Africa” the authors explain that the discoveries of Ardipithicus ramidus, Ardipithicus kadabba and Orrorin tugenensis have extended the human lineage well back into the Miocene, however, the discovery of Australopithecus bahrelghazali in Chad, demonstrated a considerably wider geographic range for early hominids than conventionally expected 1. In “External and Internal Morphology of the BAR 1002'00 Orrorin tugenensis Femur”, the authors were not speaking primarily of geographical boundaries of Orrorin, but the actual morphological traits observed in the samples discovered. Also, dental measurements are looked at in depth by Burnet 1, which compare and contrast the upper and lower dentition of lineages, including Orrorin tugenensis. Consequently, “A New Hominid from the Upper Miocene of Chad, Central Africa” looks at the primitive and derived characters evident in Sahelanthropus, which indicates its phylogenetic position as a hominid close to the last common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees, similar to Orrorin tugenensis 1.

Based upon the paleoanthropological research and articles I have read so far, I am convinced that when paleoanthropologists attempt to reconstruct the lifeway's of early bipedal species, it is not always based upon the actual fossil evidence. Inferences about the missing pieces, and thinning of the cortical bone, as we saw in the BAR 1002'00 Orrorin tugenensis femur sample, are reconstructed based upon assumptions and cross comparisons. We also see these assumptions used in the Australopithecus garhi forearm sample BOU-12/1, where the top and bottom of the radius and ulna were essentially filled in, based on what, we don’t know. Although there is a degree of changeability in the species data due to new discoveries and estimations based on comparable samples, we cannot discount the significance of the fossil samples we do have from the early hominines. They provide us a glimpse into the human lineage and also create phylogenic possibilities. These possibilities help to explain the anagenesis within a lineage and the cladogenesis, which results in the splitting of a lineage. Consequently, the organization of these traits, based almost entirely on morphology, allows us to better understand evolutionary history.



Literature Cited

  1. Brunet, M., Franck, G., Pilbeam, D., Hassane, T.K., Likius, A, Ahounta, D., Beauvilain, A.,Blondel, C., Bocherens, H., Boisserie, J.R., De Bonis, L., Coppens, Y., Dejax, J., Denys, C., Duringer, P., Eisenmann, V., Fanone, G., Fronty, P., Geraads, d., Lehmann, T., Lihoreau, F., Louchart, A., Mahamat, A., Merceron, G., Mouchelin, G., Otero, O., Campomanes, P.P., Ponce De Leon, M., Rage, J.C., Sapanet, M., Schuster, M., Sudre, J., Tassy, P., Valentin, X., Vignaud, P., Viriot, L., Zazzo, A., & Christoph Zollikofer. A New Hominid from the Upper Miocene of Chad, Central Africa. 2002. Nature 418:145-151.
  2. Eckhardt, R. B., Galik, K., Gommery, D., Kuperavage, A. J., Pickford, M., Senut, B., & Treil, J. 2004. External and Internal Morphology of the BAR 1002'00 Orrorin tugenensis Femur. American Association for the Advancement of Science 305:1450-1453.
  3. Ohman, James C., Owen Lovejoy C., White, Tim D., Eckhardt, Robert B., Galik, Karol & Adam J. Kuperavage. 2005. Questions about Orrorin Femur. American Association for the Advancement of Science 305: 845.
  4. Selassie, Yohannes Haile. Late Miocene hominids from the Middle Awash, Ethiopia. 2001. Nature 412: 178-181.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Pompeii: Erotic Art and Roman Sexuality


If you missed the documentary on eros and erotic art in Pompeii , make sure you do before taking a look at this in depth study into Pompeii's sexual past. 

Pompeii is an archaeological site, which was destroyed around AD 79 by Mount Vesuvius. It was a town full of aristocrats and artisans. Artisans who were previously slaves, who gained freedom in Pompeii and became wealthy merchants.

Pompeii was a place for the super-rich! The Palm Beach of the Roman world. It was a place known for sexual indiscretions. One could choose his or her desires from a list of murals, pointing in the direction of their sexual preference.

You would hang your belongings on a peg, a peg conveniently located near an erotic scene, a reminder of where you left your things. Then you would proceed with your indiscretions in secret rooms or bathhouses.

Sex was a completely normal and fulfilling experiencing in Pompeii, and most of what we know about the eroticism that took place there was left on the walls. For 1700 years, this Greco Roman town lay buried in a blanket of ash and pumice, until archaeologists unearthed a town home to 20000 people. Beginning excavations were haphazard and damaging, yet while methods of archaeology were more refined, more artifacts more discovered. Some of the most recognizable and erotic art and archaeological finds in Pompeii were statues, large pools, and several murals of Priapus.


It is important to remember that all of the artwork in Pompeii discovered thus far has a much deeper meaning for the people that lived there. The Pompeians were enamored with eros and this obsession drove them to experiment with love, take risks with questionably clean prostitutes, and often drove men to partake in lewd acts with anything with a pulse. Is this the reason for the amount of sex that took place at Pompeii? Possibly.

Sex and pornography in Pompeii were looked at as a completely normal aspect of human nature, and yet many modern cultures were ethnocentric in their own ideals and portrayals of what was sexually accepted out in the open. So what did the people of Pompeii think about the power of eros, sex, and pornography, what did modern cultures think, and why were sexually explicit items created?

Eros is the son of Aphrodite who essentially meddles in the affairs of gods and mortals, causing bonds of love to form, often illicitly. In early Greek art, Eros is depicted as a adult male with sexual prowess, but later becomes cupid, the blindfolded and childlike boy who flies around, shooting his arrows at unsuspecting individuals destined for love, with a little push of course. Eros draws one thing to another by attraction or even gravity. Hesiod, one of the earliest poets, writes a book called Theogony. He explains that Eros existed long before the goddess of love, Aphrodite. According to many philosophers, Eros was an awe-inspiring universal force. Eros (Love), is the fairest among the deathless gods, who unnerves the limbs and overcomes the mind, and counsels of all gods and all men within them. Pre-Socratic philosophers believed Eros was a natural force responsible for creation. It was not just good or bad, but destructive. Eros was vital because it operated as a social concept, yet it had moral implications. It was hard to control because in many cases, individuals would become slaves to it. This may have been the case in Pompeii.


Sex was less inhibited in Pompeii than it is today in most countries. There were few prohibitions and sex was just one aspect, albeit a very significant one, of human nature. The motto in Pompeii, which could be found on the erotic art and walls, drinking vessels, as well as plaques, read "enjoy life while you can for tomorrow is uncertain". Sex ranked as a great way to enjoy oneself and others, and while the stereotypical Roman orgies were most likely not part of daily life, certainly sex was acceptable, practiced, and celebrated.

Sarah Robinson writes:
There may have been a wide variety of sexual images on display in Pompeii, but it was incredibly unlikely that they were used to sexually excite spectators. Sexually explicit art was found among landscapes and other mythological art in rooms off kitchens, slave quarters, and other common areas. From the Roman point of view, the sex may have been noticeable, but it was not noteworthy and it did not set these pictures apart from landscapes and ordinary mythological depictions. The Romans seemed proud of their paintings, displaying them in full view of the public because of this pride. Sometimes the pictures were meant to give a sense of life’s pleasures1.
Loth notes that, “Among the ancients, sex was unashamedly joyous, in reading as in practice. The subjects carried no more taboos than food or sports, family quarrels or international wars.” These taboos were much more than modern cultures like the Victorians could endure, with their prudish ways and undeniable attitude of perfection. The Victorians believed the art at Pompeii was “obscene” by their own standards. There were depictions of sexual acts in almost every home and bathhouse, as well as many public spaces. There were other scenes on display in Pompeii depicting homosexuality, oral sex, and variety of sexual positions. The sexually explicit pictures found all over Pompeii were, “Proper pictures to have around your house. If you have a proper picture collection, you must have some really good pictures of people doing it, and if you don’t well you just don’t have any taste and don’t understand the proper values of your society”7.



One such sculpture dating to the 1st century AD caused quite a stir in the Victorian community. The Pompeian sculpture of Pan having sexual intercourse with a goat touched very deeply on the topic of bestiality. The intention of the Romans and Roman sexuality was to create an amusing sculpture that was admirable for its wit and skill, and it was most likely displayed in full public view. The irony behind the attitudes of the Victorians towards this particular piece of art is the fact that undeniably racy subjects engulfed in a heat of passion were just an example of how unlikely it was that this act could have happened. The fact of the matter is that modern individuals, or more specifically modern American cultures, believe that all thoughts pertaining to sex or sexual acts are inappropriate. Nudity is taboo and it is taught very early on that one’s body should only be used in a biological context and not for display, especially in sexually explicit images. These images go even further when the subject of those images is children and nudity. Showing a child in this form is considered as terribly offensive but the pictures make an impact. American culture does not like to admit to the impact of sexual imagery, but every time a conversation is started about pornography, it sparks an intense reaction, which continues to prove the power of sexuality.

The 1864 edition of Webster's dictionary defined pornography as "licentious painting employed to decorate the walls of rooms sacred to bacchanalian orgies, examples of which exist in Pompeii”4. These ideas of pornography were not so much the reflection of everyday Roman life but a way to show how sex was acceptable. No matter the amount of people who engaged in the activity or the object of those pleasures, sex was always conveyed as both a pleasurable and humorous act. This is certainly the reason why we see so many phalluses in Pompeii. Not only was the phallus a symbol of fertility, but also it was used in the form of an icon, its main purpose being to ward off evil. Today, the image of a phallus is completely taboo. The erect or semi-erect penis continues to be considered utterly unacceptable in any form of media other than pornography while female nudity in various forms is rapidly becoming acceptable even in media6 . The people of Pompeii displayed and revered the phallus and were not ashamed of its meaning, because the meaning was never to be perceived as only a sexual object. In the age of “size does matter”, many often prefer a larger penis. Was this the case for Pompeians? Hardly. In Pompeii, a smaller penis was considered more attractive. A larger penis, like the one we see on Priapus, was usually found on an individual with characteristics unusual to the Roman ideal, which was amusing and worthy of a good laugh. It was never meant to cause distaste, but it demonstrates how the Pompeians were able to laugh at themselves and not take things, such as the size of ones manhood, too seriously.

Robinson described the Pompeian’s ideas about the size and meaning behind the phallic symbol:
Laughter was one way to dispel the anguish of the evil eye. Humorous, erotic art displayed around town and in your household was one way to employ the protection of laughter, and was probably the reason behind its prevalence in Pompeii. Protection against the evil eye could also be found in the many images of the phallus commonly depicted in Roman art. These phallic images range from unobtrusive stone reliefs carved into paved walkways to winged and belled hanging phalluses. Power, status, and good fortune were expressed in terms of the phallus. Hence the presence of phallic imagery in almost unimaginable varieties all around the town . . . . There are phalluses greeting you in doorways, phalluses above bread ovens, phalluses carved into the surface of the street and plenty more phalluses with bells on-and wings6 .
There are several examples around every turn in Pompeii displaying the phallus, the most notable depiction, considered to be the most obscene, is located on a life-sized fresco in a doorway into the House of the Vettii. The god Priapus holds a set of scales that weighs his phallus while he looks outward, brazenly meeting the eyes of all who pass by. If you dare walk past him or even catch a glimpse at the relative size of his not insignificant maleness, you cannot help but be impressed. This portrayal would often spark laughter to the Romans, and mere shock to the Victorians, but the meaning is so much more significant. Priapus was thought to bring luck and plentiful harvests in the garden and the bedroom. He was also a protector of the flocks and the bees and he protected people from harm and evil. As with any phallic culture, anxieties were probably created as men tried to keep up with the strength society expected of them. Mary Beard explores how these sexual anxieties manifested themselves in homophobia, “In fact, many of the insults that scholars have sometimes taken as signs of Roman disapproval of homosexuality as such are directed only at those who played the passive part”1.

Check out: The Fires of Vesuvius: Pompeii Lost and Found

Continue Reading..................

One’s first impression of Pompeii upon arrival is mostly likely embarrassment. Perhaps your heart starts racing or the images of well-endowed males throws you into doubt about your own manhood. The streets of Pompeii are a clear detour from the 20th century ideas of standards and moralities, and for the most part, the erotic art and images of Pompeii have, since its rediscovery, caused both outrage and appreciation. It is important to remember, however, that the Pompeian artifacts are valuable since they provide a source of information, and the knowledge from that information requires dissemination. These artifacts might just hold a key to understanding not only the Pompeian citizens, but also ourselves. Therefore the archaeological artifacts need to be interpreted by someone besides an archaeologist or historian in order for their true importance to be realized. Even before the world stood still in Pompeii in AD 79, the inhabitants were using these objects routinely. There was not a person alive that did not have access to them, yet when the first obscene artifacts were finally unearthed, people recognized a collision of worlds. In order to truly understand these ancient relics, one had to dive into the world of Roman sexuality to understand why they were preserved.

It is easy to imagine a Victorian digger discarding an object considered obscene in their circle. However, thankfully they realized that these items could never be destroyed. Had they been of recent manufacture, this would have been the obvious expedient; but any relic of the ancient world possessed, merely thanks to its survival, a value that superseded the nature of the relic itself. The relics of Pompeii had no rivals, no copies, and their likeness could not be found in any surrounding areas. This added value accrued principally to two classes of relics, the trivial and the obscene. Though both kinds had presumably been distributed throughout the Roman Empire, trivial things had mostly vanished in centuries of neglect, while obscene ones had succumbed to the zealous progress of Christianity. When it came to obscene objects, the more obscene an object was, the more likely it would have been destroyed anywhere but at Pompeii. Thus Pompeian preservation became a necessary evil4.

Depending on their inclinations, early critics condemned the one as immoral or the other as prudish, but all agreed that the ancient system of organizing Pompeii’s images would never do in modern times. A new taxonomic classification system was born out of Pompeii's priceless obscenities. They were to be systematically named and placed, and the final name chosen for them was "pornography," and they were housed in the Secret Museum. No one was ever allowed access to the Secret Museums’ indelicate collection, except for the archaeologists, who created one of the first pornographic experiences, in which sexually explicit portrayals of Roman sexuality were separated from all social contexts.

The Secret Museum, or the “secret chamber”, as many refer to it, is located in the Naples National Archaeological Museum, Naples, Italy, and contains some of the most erotic and unadulterated archaeological finds from Pompeii, too explicit and unsuitable for the general public. Most of what the public is allowed to see today was locked up in the beginning of the 19th century because it did not fit into the taxonomic classification of erotic. Instead, these pornographic materials were essentially locked behind a brick wall. The museum was temporally opened in the 60’s when free love laid a foundation for acceptable promiscuity, and then it was closed until 2000. Today it is open to the public. When you buy your ticket to the museum you have to ask about the secret chamber. You will then be assigned a visitation time, which is usually only 45 minutes. All tours are free and guided by someone who speaks your language but who is not necessarily knowledgeable about the artifacts.




The artifacts that are housed in the Secret Museum derived their characteristics from ritual and human nature, found to be open subjects in Pompeii. One such scene may have evolved from a location owned by Emperor Nero’s second wife, Poppaea Sabina. Poppaea owned a villa there, in which a large pool was constructed, and while her husband was away she indulged in orgies with females and males of all ages. The villa was discovered during excavations carried out by Francesco La Vega in the eighteenth century, however the swimming pool, which measures 60 by 15 meter, can only be imagined by the existence of some foundational walls, unearthed during the 1970s. This meeting place brought about a party that represented the many Bacchanalian Scenes displayed in the Secret Museum.

The abundant libations drunk in honor of the gods and the frenzy of the rituals freed the participants from moral restraint, and the ceremonies took on a licentious character2. These ceremonies of lust grew even more uncontrolled and lewd, but at the time of the Imperial period, and during the time of Christ and the early Christians, this behavior was seen as acceptable. Grant explores the modern views of sexual orgies and what exactly changed as far as acceptance of ritual, “Christian views on sex would definitely not support such iconography (and define it as the “worst” kind of evil), but Christians who chronologically lived closer to Christ did, and these were the Christians who emanated into the Catholic Church. So, something “changed.”2

If we think about this logically it is clear that Church leaders today would never admit than Christ allowed sexual orgies, but they would admit that the Early Church in Rome, and especially in Pompeii, did. When Christ began to teach his word and promote a life of servitude and morality instead of debauchery, supposedly he spoke against sexual orgies. Regardless of what initially changed in the church to dissolve these immortal ideas of what was acceptable in the bedroom or out in the open, we still have relics in the Secret Museum to prove that at one time sex was celebrated.

Not every relic in the Secret Museum is grounded in sexual indiscretions. At some point the artifacts started to reflect different ideas about gender. A ritual basin housed in the museum is a prime example of this notion. The basin is made of multiple layers of metal (bronze, copper, or sometimes tin). Archaeologists described this large ritual basin, or lebes, from Pompeii, as a representation of "Satyr and Nymph". The nymph has evident, even if a small, male genitalia, therefore the most likely sex of this individual is a hermaphrodite or more probably an adolescent male. This was hardly a sexually explicit piece; rather it was a representation of changing attitudes towards gender. Any artifacts depicting mixed sexual orientation, however, were always placed behind closed doors when they were first discovered. This was not a subject that modern individuals were ready to face, but nonetheless, in keeping with the tradition of preserving distinctive sexual relics, the basin found its home in the Secret Museum.


Several more fascinating statues were discovered at Pompeii, many in great number, most notable is the Drillopota. The Drillopota was a vessel, or obscene vase, used by the ancients to drink libations. Most undoubtedly they were used in honor of Venus, or perhaps Bacchus. Many of the vases depict men of little stature with a shaved head, shaved in fact to make them appear more ridiculous. The arms would sometimes hold tablets, which the children used at school. Some of these Drillopota are shown wearing a golden bulla around their necks, which distinguished the sons of the nobles and senators. The origin of this distinction dates from Tarquin the Elder, who awarded this mark of honor to his son for having conquered his opponent in single combat. The bulla could be opened at pleasure and was used to keep talismans in3.

Another artifact housed in the Secret Museum is a Tripod with Ithyphallic Young Pans holding up a lebes, or basin, and it is made entirety out of bronze and stands 90 centimeters high. The tripod is a pristine example of Hellenistic art. The overt pornographic nature of these young pans with their phalluses in plain view was the main reason this object was never displayed to the public. The tripod is significant because it does represent a triad of three youths. In Roman history, we see the use of a triad with Caligula’s sisters on a silver sestertius representing Agrippina as Securitas, Drusilla as Concordia, and Julia as Fortuna 8. This trinity of deities is not only associated with the number three, but it is common knowledge throughout folklore; the number three has a long history of mythical associations. Therefore the classification of the Tripod with Ithyphallic Young Pans is more so ritually based than sexual in nature.

In closing, there are several more explicitly sexualized examples of Pompeian life in the Secret Museum including but not limited to erotic art and bas reliefs. Many of the bas-reliefs and paintings contained within the walls of the Secret Chamber offer no explanation as to their representations. The limits of pornographic explanation allow visitors to garner their own opinions about the nature of the art. One’s perception of sexual imagery is dependent on how that individual was socialized to perceive Roman sexuality. In today’s modern culture, sex and gender are not subjects perceived to be outside the realm of a person’s innate sexual nature. Roman sexuality was on display in the public realm and domestic spaces as well as a prominent part of Roman art, folk culture, superstitions, and humor. While the eruption of Mount Vesuvius may have destroyed this sophisticated Greco Roman town, it did not destroy the history. Pompeii not only provides us an eye opening and revolutionizing approach to gender studies in the ancient world, but also it tells us about our own human nature.

I wanted to take the time to thank the publishers for the recent mention of this article in their books. "Pompeii: Erotic Art and Roman Sexuality" was cited in Pornography and The Criminal Justice System, by Carmen M. Cusack, and The Roman Gaze: Vision, Power, and the Body (Arethusa Books) by David Frederick.


Also check out:


Works Cited
  1. Beard, Mary. Pompeii: The Life of a Roman Town. London: Profile Books, 2008.
  2. Grant, Michael. Eros in Pompeii-The Secret Rooms of the National Museum of Naples. New York: William Morrow & Company, Inc, 1975.
  3. Hare, John B. Sacred Texts, "Drillopota." Accessed February 11, 2012. http://www.sacred-texts.com/sex/rmn/rmn12.htm.
  4. Kendrick, Walter. The Secret Museum: Pornography in Modern Culture. London: University of California Press, Ltd, 1987.
  5. Loth, David. The Erotic in Literature: a historical survey of pornography as delightful as it is indiscreet. New York: Dorset Press, 1994.
  6. Robinson, Sarah L. "Defining Pornography." Social Sciences Journal. 10. no. 1 : 1-8.
  7. Rodley, Chris, Milgrom, Marilyn, Williams, Linda, and Camille Paglia. "Pornography – The Secret History of Civilisation." Koch Vision. 2000. DVD.
  8. Wood, Susan E. "Diva Drusilla Panthea and the Sisters of Caligula." American Journal of Archaeology. 99. no. 3 (1995).
Photos
  • Mary Harrsch
  • Wikipedia
  • The Golden Rule
  • The Naples Archaeological Museum
  • scruff monkey (flickr.com/photos/cathalm/)

Friday, May 18, 2012

Egyptologist Gustave Jéquier


For many of us Egyptology enthusiasts we are often intrigued by the normalcies of architecture and pharaohs, and by normal I mean the most widely talked about subjects which make us love everything about ancient Egypt. However, there is life outside of Howard Carter and Zahi Hawass, even though we all have so much respect for both of these gentlemen. My knowledge of Egypt was very watered down prior to my Life and Death in Ancient Egypt class this past semester. I certainly have gained a mush greater respect for those men we rarely speak of, Gustave Jéquier being one of them.

Gustave Jéquier was born in 1868 in Neuchâtel, Switzerland. Jéquier began his career as an Egyptologist under the direction of Gaston Maspero and Jacques de Morgan. His primary focus was on the Predynastic Period, which runs from the earliest human occupation of Egypt to the beginning of the Early Dynastic Period of Egypt, starting with King Menes. Egyptian and temple architecture captivated Jéquier, therefore he focused his attention on the Old and Middle Kingdom pyramids. He later published several books on temple architecture.

Gustave Jéquier participated in major excavations sponsored by the Supreme Council of Antiquities including southern cemeteries of Saqqara, Aba, Dahshur, Lisht, and Mazghuna. In 1901, he joined Jacques de Morgan's Susa expedition, which led to the discovery of the famous Code of Hammurabi. Hammurabi was the sixth king of Babylonia and he created 282 laws to regulate people’s actions and relationships including work, marriage, crime, land ownership, and sex. One of his most recognizable scaled punishments was "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth", which of course depended upon social status. In 1928, consequently, he discovered the Mastabat Faraoun of Shepseskaf.

Gustave Jéquier worked on the Pyramid Texts, which are dated to the Old Kingdom and believed to be the oldest evidence of religious works in the world. His work with the Texts provided scholars with a better understanding of religion at that time. Gustave Jéquier was also the first Egyptologist to excavate the pyramid complex of Pepi II between 1926 and 1936. Pepi II was pharaoh of the Sixth dynasty in Egypt's Old Kingdom. Jéquier was also the first excavator who found remains from the tomb reliefs, and the first to publish a thorough excavation report on the complex.

Additionally, Jéquier found several food cases within the enclosure wall of Queen Oudjebten’s pyramid complex at South Saqqara, which he dated to the last third reign of Pepi II. This means the food cases were dated to the last year they were used.

Gustave Jéquier died in 1946, but not without leaving an incurable legacy of discoveries.

Photo

© Une mission en Perse, Paris 1997 p. 128.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Eroticism, Eros, and Sex in Pompeii


Imagine, my first video making experience in IMovie is centered around erotic art in Pompeii. I created the project for a Sex and Antiquity class and my goal was to share a side to Pompeii that many people mention in passing, but very few like to talk about the details openly.

This mini documentary is a culmination of sexual artifacts kept in the secret room in the Naples National Archaeological Museum, as well as an explanation of eros and ancient sexual practices.



Warning: This movie contains explicit sexual materials and artifacts.


Credits

Music

Mary Gunderson

Photos

Mary Harrsch
Wikipedia
The Golden Rule
The Naples Archaeological Museum
scruff monkey (flickr.com/photos/cathalm/)

Documentation

Sacred Texts
Colonel Fanin. The Secret Erotic Paintings: Pictures and Descriptions of Classical Erotic

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Archaeology News: May 16, 2012


New photographs reveal what lies beneath the surface of Easter Island, one of the most remote places in the world -- the carved bodies of the island's 887 famous guardians.

A massive block of limestone in France contains what scientists believe are the earliest known engravings of wall art dating back some 37,000 years, according to a study published Monday. The 1.5-metric-ton ceiling piece was first discovered in 2007 at Abri Castanet, a well known archaeological site in southwestern France that holds some of the earliest forms of artwork, beads and pierced shells.

Like a real life Indiana Jones, William Breece, the archaeology instructor at Orange Coast College, spends his time excavating prehistoric artifacts and teaching anthropology and archaeology. “Indiana Jones is no comparison to me,” Breece said. “But he has made archaeology popular.”

Archaeology and Museums Director Dr Shah Nazar Khan talked about the excavation and preservation work at various sites in the province, including Jinnah Wali Dheri, Hunad, Jamal Garhi, Aziz Dheri, Takht Bhai and Jehanabad Buddha statue and Amluk Darra stupa in Swat.

The Lost City Museum will host a free Kids Archaeology Day from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, May 19. Budding archeologists are invited to learn the process of archaeology by participating in a mock excavation and learning to analyze the artifacts they find. Students will learn about phases of an archaeological investigation from a professional archaeologist in a hands-on way, from the excavation to the analysis phase. Space is limited to 16 children ages 7 to 13, so early sign-up is suggested. For more information or to sign up, please call the museum at (702) 397-2193.

A few years ago scientists reported large quantities of sulphur and iron compounds in the salvaged 17th century warship Vasa, resulting in the development of sulphuric acid and acidic salt precipitates on the surface of the hull and loose wooden objects.

On the cliffs of Cambodia’s Cardamom Mountains, Nancy Beavan of the University of Otago is investigating the burials of an unnamed culture. The burials consist of log coffins and jars of human bones dating to between 1395 and 1650 A.D. that were left on dangerous ledges. She thinks the bones were placed on the ledges using systems of ropes and bamboo baskets after the bodies had been exposed and the bones de-fleshed.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Book Review: The Lost Worlds of Ancient America


This is not another metaphysically inspired adventure saga, based on The Lost Worlds of Ancient America. This book is meant to challenge your prior knowledge of the past; especially where academia based in faith is concerned. The author Frank Joseph urges readers to use their scientific mind to evaluate the information objectively, as this approach, as Joseph describes, is missing from Orthodox scholarship.

When I read books I always look for an angle, and needless to say, one always exists. This book is different. There’s a lesson to be learned, not just from the ancient artifacts that have turned up in the most unforeseen places, but in the presentation. It was Joseph’s intention and his hope that The Lost Worlds of the Ancient America would be…….
 “a catalyst for a new kind of research, free from the narrow-mindedness an academic mind-set that have so far hobbled the healthy growth of archaeology in our country.”
I’m not going to give you longwinded synopsis on the examinations of these ancient worlds, but I will wet your appetite a bit and tell you that you will be surprised. As many of you already know, I will be making my way to Tennessee this summer to teach. Imagine my surprise and delight to hear that the history we associate most with Tennessee, that being the Civil Rights movement is missing a few links. Imagine this movement being tied to a 1st century AD stone discovered in 1889. The Bat Creek Stone was discovered in an undisturbed grave mound and it was initially believed to contain Phoenician characters instead of Paleo-Indian. It gets even better. It is now believed that the characters carved in the stone were written in Hebrew.

At this point I was scratching my head. How did a 1st century stone, written in Hebrew, makes its way into the Americas, and who did it really belong to? Who wrote it and why? Archaeologists Mainfort and Kwas, who initially contested the Hebrew inscription, later conceded that is was Hebrew but the Freemasons carved the characters. For those of you Freemason and Knight’s Templar enthusiasts like myself you’ll agree that both “secret orders”, if you want to call them that, had a connection financially to the Jews. Mainfort and Kwas' judgment is not without merit in my opinion. This is but one story from The Lost Worlds of the Ancient America and it certainly challenged everything I knew, and studied, about American Jews and when they arrived here.

No matter if you’re reading about a Minoan Pendant discovered in Ohio to Anasazi Chocolate, this book will present some of the most surprising and compelling evidence of ancient cultures and advanced technologies that rival even days most complicated of machinery. When I mention evidence I do not mean that the author is trying to sway your opinion in an entirely new direction. Frank Joseph is attempting to give you the tools to have a new perspective, as opposed to basing everything you know, and seem to believe, about a particular subject on the censored history books you’ve previously read in school.

The Lost Worlds of the Ancient America is an easy read, it’s descriptive, simple in its scientific terminology, and there is just the right amount of visuals to spark your interest. It was a pleasure learning something entirely new, and trust me, with my head buried in archaeology and anthropology books for the past couple of years, it's a pleasant surprise to read about a subject, which has been presented in an entirely new light.



This book was presented to me by New Page Books, a division of The Career Press. I did not receive monetary compensation for my review. All opinions are mine.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

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