>> Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Space Race
from sputnik to Apollo to Neil Armstrong, the race to the moon combined politics, technology and triumphs. Relive this exciting time in our space program

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Mars Recovers
watch as two NASA revers embark on an incredible journey to uncover the secrets of mars. Discover how the martian landscape is similar to Earth's - and how its very very difficult

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Solar Blast
Powerful blast from the sun have the power to fry satellites, crash ATM's and even strand airplanes in the sky

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PIRANHA PICTURES: Yard-long "Megapiranha" Fossil Found

Eight to ten million years ago, South America's waters harbored a toothier, three-foot (one-meter) version of today's famed, flesh-eating piranhas.

Alberto Cione, a paleontologist at Argentina's La Plata Museum, first noticed the evidence of Megapiranha pananensis (pictured in an artist's rendering)--an upper jaw with three unusually large and pointed teeth--in his collection in the 1980s. The remains had been discovered half a century earlier in a riverside cliff in northeastern Argentina.

Cione and his colleagues now report that Megapiranha bridges the evolutionary gap between modern-day piranhas and plant-eating pacu fish. The new study appears in the June 2009 issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

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Egypt Asks for Loans of Artifacts Held Abroad

Egypt will request temporary loans of some of its most cherished artifacts currently on display at museums abroad, antiquities officials announced on Sunday. The requested items include the famous bust of Nefertiti currently at the Altes Museum in Berlin, Germany, and the Rosetta Stone at the British Museum in London.

Most of the items are meant for display at the 2012 opening of the new Grand Egyptian Museum, which is being built near the pyramids at Giza (see a map of Egypt).

Nefertiti's bust is requested for display at the Atun Museum, which is set to open in the Nile Delta city of Meniya in 2010, Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities announced in a statement.

All five of the artifacts are on a list of unique items that Zahi Hawass, head of Egypt's antiquities council, has said should be returned permanently to their homeland.

But in an email to National Geographic News, Hawass said that the antiquities council will request a letter of guarantee from the Egyptian government "that will secure the safe return of these objects to the lending institutions."

(Hawass is an Explorer-in-Residence with the National Geographic Society, which owns National Geographic News.)

"We are not 'Pirates of the Caribbean,'" he added. "We respect our contacts. We are in the 21st century."

Diplomatic Move

The recent statement from the Egyptian antiquities council called the requests a "diplomatic move."

Earlier this month a dispute escalated between Egypt and Germany over a previous request for the temporary return of the bust of Nefertiti.

Germany's Minister of State for Culture said the 3,400-year-old limestone bust is too fragile to travel the 3,000 miles (4,828 kilometers) to Cairo.

Hawass told National Geographic News "it will be a scientific war" if Germany refuses to loan the iconic artwork. The antiquities chief also said he would organize a worldwide boycott of loans to German museums if the request is denied.

Meanwhile, Egypt's Ministry of Culture says it will mail official letters to France, Germany, Great Britain, and the United States this week to request the temporary loans.

Hawass said Egypt will deal with each museum on an individual basis.

"If a museum cooperates with us, then we will continue our good relations and cooperate with them in a mutually beneficial, scientific manner," he said.

Hannah Boulton, a spokesperson for the British Museum, said that the museum will wait for the letter before commenting in detail and that museum policy is to consider any request.

She added, however, that any such loan would only be temporary.

"Obviously a precondition of the loan from the museum's collections is the recognition that the ownership is rested within the British Museum," she said.

Messages left with the Altes Museum and with two other institutions being asked for loans—the Louvre in Paris, France, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, Massachusetts—went unreturned.

Top Five

Hawass, who champions the repatriation of Egyptian artifacts, has previously called for the permanent return to Egypt of all five items on the list for temporary loans.

(Read "Egypt's Antiquities Chief Combines Passion, Clout to Protect Artifacts" [October 24, 2006].)

The requested items include:

• Nefertiti's bust at the Altes Museum. The painted limestone likeness of the Egyptian queen has been in Germany since 1913, a year after German archaeologists discovered it at a site 150 miles (240 kilometers) south of Cairo.

• The Rosetta Stone at the British Museum. The writing in three languages on the 1,600-pound (726-kilogram) slab of rock was essential to deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphics.

• The Zodiac ceiling from the Dendera Temple at the Louvre in Paris. Archaeologists consider the zodiac an Egyptian representation of the astrological calendar.

• The statue of Hemiunu, an architect of the Great Pyramid, at the Roemer-Pelizaeus Museum in Hildesheim, Germany.

• The statue of Ankhaf, builder of the Chephren Pyramid, at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

Hawass said the current requests for temporary loans of the five items are sincere.

"The temporary return of artifacts from museums in Europe and the United States will allow Egyptians who do not travel the opportunity of seeing wonderful masterpieces," he said.

"I believe that our request for the return of these artifacts temporarily is a fair one."



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Treasure wars Video, who owns the past?

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