Chau Chak Wing Museum
Chau Chak Wing Museum
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The Sacred Tree: Olive Tasting Event
Recorded Thursday 16 May at the Chau Chak Wing Museum
The Chau Chak Wing Museum in association with the Greek Consulate of Sydney and the Trade Commissioner for Greece in Australia invite you to a special event celebrating the olive.
Join us for a short presentation on the important history of the olive and its role in archaeology and history across the Mediterranean by Dr Tamara Lewit of the University of Melbourne, and then a discussion by the Trade Commissioner for Greece in Australia, Mrs Chrysa Prokopaki, on the olive in modern Greece's economy, culture and identity.
Guests are then invited to sample olives and olive produce in a tasting event.
According to mythology, the olive was a divine gift. It was said as the goddess Athena struck the rock of the Acropolis of Athens with her spear, an olive tree sprang up. ‘I will give you the tree. Its fruit will feed you, its leaves will give you shade, and its wood provide fuel’ she said. As a result, the olive tree has been sacrosanct since antiquity. It is a symbol of peace, wisdom and triumph.
Переглядів: 30

Відео

Presentation One: The 1933 Carnegie Report: background and overview
Переглядів 243 місяці тому
This talk was recorded 15 May 2024 at the Chau Chak Wing Museum Presentation One: The 1933 Carnegie Report: background and overview Dr Anna Lawrenson & Dr Chiara O’Reilly (The University of Sydney) Wednesday 15 May, 1-2pm Join us for the introductory talk of the series in which a historical overview of the Carnegie Report is discussed. In 1933, the Carnegie Report identified the “lack of funds,...
Photography Falls Apart: The Machine Eye
Переглядів 233 місяці тому
Recorded at the Chau Chak Wing Museum on Thursday 18 April 2023 Speakers: Julie Cairney Peter Tuthill Eleanor Zeichner Moderated by Mark Ledbury Since its inception in the mid-1800s, photography has been a disruptor technology, challenging, and reconfiguring our understanding of how we represent ourselves and our communities. Viewed through a performative lens, this series will explore photogra...
Talking back and moving forward: curating Pacific arts and culture
Переглядів 123 місяці тому
Recorded Sunday 21 January at the Chau Chak Wing Museum To celebrate the last week of the exhibition, 'Ömie barkcloth: Pathways of nioge', Aunty Sana Balai will reflect on her experience with Ömie artists and their vibrant nioge (barkcloth) in Australia, including her involvement in the first institutional exhibition of their work, 'Wisdom of the Mountain: Art of the Ömie' at The National Galle...
Being Collected 2023 Hayley Millar Baker
Переглядів 477 місяців тому
The annual lecture series ‘Being Collected’ acknowledges and celebrates the unique perspectives of curatorship from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. In 2023, artist Hayley Millar Baker was in conversation with Independent Curator Emily McDaniel. Hayley spoke about her work 'Nytinasty' premiering in Sydney at the Chau Chak Wing Museum from 28 October 2023 until 11 February 2024. Fo...
Sir Charles Nicholson Lecture 2023: Dr Anastasia Christophilopoulou
Переглядів 1539 місяців тому
Sir Charles Nicholson Lecture 2023 Recorded at the Chau Chak Wing Museum on Thursday 23 November 2023. "Islands and communities: stories of insularity and maritime heritage from the Mediterranean to the great Ocean" Dr Anastasia Christophilopoulou The 2023 Sir Charles Nicholson Lecture presents the journey of an interdisciplinary research and engagement project focused on tracing insular identi...
UMAC 2023 Keynote, Associate Professor Ali Gumillya Baker
Переглядів 339 місяців тому
The long shadows of the racist text: The complexities of truth-telling and deinstitutionalisation Keynote from UMAC 2023 Truth-telling through university museums and collections Conference, 28 August - 1 September 2023 Recorded at Seymour Centre, Everest Theatre on Thursday 31 August. In 1983 Audre Lorde wrote "The Masters Tools will never Dismantle the Masters House." This paper will reflect o...
UMAC 2023 Keynote, Professor Gaye Sculthorpe
Переглядів 689 місяців тому
Some uncomfortable truths about museum collections Keynote from UMAC 2023 Truth-telling through university museums and collections Conference, 28 August - 1 September 2023 Recorded at Seymour Centre, Everest Theatre on Wednesday 30 August. In 2023 university and other museums around the world holding colonial era collections are being ever more scrutinised by their stakeholders and various publ...
Photography Falls Apart Panel #2: The Lens
Переглядів 469 місяців тому
Recorded at the Chau Chak Wing Museum 6pm Thursday 16 November 2023 The lens is remarkable technology, one that has been used for centuries to focus, bend and abstract light. In the 19th century, however, the lens became bound to the apparatus of the camera, and its mission to document objective reality. The thickness of the lens-its function of transforming the reality it represents-disappeare...
Wild Love: Adelaide Ironside
Переглядів 10810 місяців тому
Talk recorded on Thursday 2 November at the Chau Chak Wing Museum, The University of Sydney, In her new book Kiera Lindsey uncovers the life of the exuberant colonial painter Adelaide Ironside, from her childhood on the shores of Sydney harbour to the leading artistic circles of Europe where she was celebrated as 'the impersonation of genius'. Join this special book launch and in-conversation w...
Up Close and Personal with the Past: Nanoscale Analysis of Artefacts
Переглядів 12111 місяців тому
Recorded on Tuesday 15 August for National Science Week. Hear Sophie Cottam talk about how powerful microscopes enable greater ability to understand the origins and the age of artefacts in collections. Not all artefacts tell their full story at first glance. Scanning electron microscopy allows us to reveal information down to the nanoscale, providing a perspective unachievable with standard opt...
Non-invasive Analysis of Ancient Papyri
Переглядів 4411 місяців тому
Recorded Wednesday 16 August 2023 for National Science Week. Find out how we can know that environmental and technological change in the ancient world caused changes to the creation of papyri in this talk by Arzak Mohamed. Papyrus is the first flexible writing support that was used from 3100 BC until the 11th century AD. While primarily produced in Egypt and then southern Italy, it was exported...
Collaborative conservation - Case studies in the shared care of museum objects
Переглядів 3311 місяців тому
Recorded on Friday 18 August for National Science Week In this talk Nick Flood shares the remarkable results of collaboration between conservators, scientists and other professionals. Successful conservation requires the effort of a collaborative team working to meet both the technical and ethical needs of culturally significant objects. Collaboration among conservators, scientists, engineers a...
Bringing the Laughter Home: Comic Stereographs in the Early 20th Century
Переглядів 3011 місяців тому
Recorded at the Chau Chak Wing Museum on Thursday 3 August 2023. Has humour changed in the last 100 years? Find out in this panel discussion. The existence of stereographs speaks of a world in which visual images were relatively scarce in the homes of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Among them, some obviously comic scenes stand out like a beacon, familiar yet distant to us today. As sim...
Chau Chak Wing Museum
Переглядів 506Рік тому
Explore 18 exhibitions at the Chau Chak Wing Museum, a free public museum located in the heart of Sydney's inner city. Free entry, open, 7 days. Monday to Friday: 10am to 5pm Thursdays evenings until 9pm Saturday and Sunday: 12pm to 4pm More information: www.sydney.edu.au/museum/
Chinese Toggles: Scientific Analysis of ‘Culture in Miniature’ with Vibrational Spectroscopy
Переглядів 164Рік тому
Chinese Toggles: Scientific Analysis of ‘Culture in Miniature’ with Vibrational Spectroscopy
The Hidden is Tantalising Part 2: Sāmoan Siapo (Tapa Cloth) from the Macleay Collections
Переглядів 87Рік тому
The Hidden is Tantalising Part 2: Sāmoan Siapo (Tapa Cloth) from the Macleay Collections
The Hidden is Tantalising Part 1: JW Power’s Femme à L’ombrelle with the University Art Collection
Переглядів 93Рік тому
The Hidden is Tantalising Part 1: JW Power’s Femme à L’ombrelle with the University Art Collection
Golden Maidens and Wheeled Chairs: Assistive Technology in Ancient Greece
Переглядів 229Рік тому
Golden Maidens and Wheeled Chairs: Assistive Technology in Ancient Greece
Impressions of Greece: Historic Photography
Переглядів 99Рік тому
Impressions of Greece: Historic Photography
Combating Looting and Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Heritage in Cyprus
Переглядів 158Рік тому
Combating Looting and Illicit Trafficking of Cultural Heritage in Cyprus
Artist-in-conversation: Mikala Dwyer with Guest Curator Toni Ross
Переглядів 142Рік тому
Artist-in-conversation: Mikala Dwyer with Guest Curator Toni Ross
Being Collected: Aboriginal Objects in the British Museum
Переглядів 121Рік тому
Being Collected: Aboriginal Objects in the British Museum
WorldPride: Out of the streets and into the galleries!
Переглядів 55Рік тому
WorldPride: Out of the streets and into the galleries!
Were the Anglo-Saxons "vegetarians"? Old bones meet cutting edge science
Переглядів 82Рік тому
Were the Anglo-Saxons "vegetarians"? Old bones meet cutting edge science
The Roman Conquest of Cyprus
Переглядів 211Рік тому
The Roman Conquest of Cyprus
MAARC Keynote Lecture 2023
Переглядів 248Рік тому
MAARC Keynote Lecture 2023
Warra warra wai: Understanding Dharawal spirituality
Переглядів 228Рік тому
Warra warra wai: Understanding Dharawal spirituality
Extraordinary Plants
Переглядів 225Рік тому
Extraordinary Plants
Eight Days in Kamay
Переглядів 171Рік тому
Eight Days in Kamay

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @Stupidityindex
    @Stupidityindex 9 днів тому

    The Christian archeologist is confounded by two miracles: of being the only cult in history failing to build temples or churches for 300 years, and then building in the same style as the pagan basilica of 300 years before. In the XII century significant events take place, as described in the Gospels: the coming of Jesus Christ, his life and crucifixion, although the existing text of the Gospels was edited and most likely dates to the XIV-XV cc. In the mid XII century, in the year 1152, Jesus Christ is born. In secular Byzantine history he is known as Emperor Andronicus and St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called in Russian history he was portrayed as the Great Prince Andrey Bogolyubsky. To be more specific, Andrey Bogolyubsky is a chronicler counterpart of Andronicus-Christ during his stay in Vladimir-Suzdal Rus’ of the XII century, where he spent most of his life. In fact, the Star of Bethlehem blazed in the middle of the XII century. This gives us an absolute astronomical dating of Christ’s Life. [ЦРС], ch.1. ‘Star of Bethlehem’ - is an explosion of a supernova, which at present is incorrectly dated to the middle of the XI century. The present-day Crab Nebula in the Taurus Constellation is the remnant of this explosion. Enigmatic timber scarcity in Late Antiquity and Early Middle Ages as first recognized by dender-pioneer Ernest Hollstein (1918-1988) "No sites exist anywhere with uninterrupted timber specimen from about 1000 CE backwards to Imperial Antiquity(1st-3rd c.). which is why the dendro-chronologies for Ancient Rome and, thereby the entire first millennium are in disarray. Since the very existence of the chronology periods without wood samples was never doubted by the researchers, nobody started to question our textbook chronology. Instead, out of stratigraphic context, scholars searched for wood samples in wells or moors to fill the irritating gaps. In addition, identical reign sequences were used twice in a row to gamer more years. Therefor, "all dendrochronological datings done on West Roman time wood is wrong by some unknown number of years"(") ua-cam.com/video/c876lPZ-UZU/v-deo.html&ab_channel=PlanetAmnesia

  • @jamesdavidson676
    @jamesdavidson676 Рік тому

    Most women back in the past were real ladies and very old fashioned, and they're nothing at all like that today.

  • @robwhite461
    @robwhite461 Рік тому

    Ditto, sound could be clearer as well

  • @puhigeoffreywaynefuimaonok8656

    Aboriginal People are maori in Waitahanui Times we were all one, like Afrika it was all one country one people till the west went and gave it boundaries turned them into different states the same with Te Moana Nui A Kiwa we were all one people till the western colonisers came this way and said we were different people tribes iwi culling the unwilling

  • @batoulsirees
    @batoulsirees Рік тому

    Great Work!

  • @iammaxhammer
    @iammaxhammer Рік тому

    Great presentation. I am about to film a video about the Spanish towers along the coast of Sardinia (focusing on Bosa) and reading up on the history just makes it clear that the history of this part of the world is nothing short of an absolute clusterf***! 😂 Nothing short of dizzying. I could spend a month, as you said, going into all the details! Now I need to probably re-film the video I made about the Malaspina Castle and the Chapel within it, for proper context.

  • @lisica8458
    @lisica8458 Рік тому

    Difficult to believe that Hercule Poirot was modeled on Max Mallowan. Agatha Christie first introduced Poirot in The Mysterious Affair at Styles, published in 1920; Christie did not meet Mallowan until 1930.

  • @nb4286
    @nb4286 Рік тому

    Dhapirrik

  • @mgk284
    @mgk284 Рік тому

    Amazing work!

  • @sylvianulpinditj4133
    @sylvianulpinditj4133 Рік тому

    Cross culture the best to start from

  • @MH-ms1dg
    @MH-ms1dg Рік тому

    Europeans sure had a way of psychologically projecting onto unknown things back then

  • @DasPlatforms
    @DasPlatforms Рік тому

    Important work!

  • @jaixzz
    @jaixzz 2 роки тому

    "… ah… did you record the intro… ah… at the dentist❔

  • @searoadservices5014
    @searoadservices5014 2 роки тому

    If the custom story talks about a boy travelling to Lopevi to see his uncle then WHY are there no refugees travelling North to North Epi, Paama, Lopevi, Ambrym or Makekula.

  • @davidcaldecoat7414
    @davidcaldecoat7414 2 роки тому

    Wow a very informative lecture

  • @marksmith-bi1xr
    @marksmith-bi1xr 2 роки тому

    Great contributions towards the Australian society!

  • @TheMoneypresident
    @TheMoneypresident 2 роки тому

    People actually believe the large figures are actually giants. Even if told we have that person's mummy.

  • @TheMoneypresident
    @TheMoneypresident 2 роки тому

    Chanting ohm in false doors won't open them. 🤣

  • @shumuyebelayteklebrhan8466
    @shumuyebelayteklebrhan8466 2 роки тому

    I proud of you Keith! I am really happy being you are my advisor. I always surprise when I observe your kindness and honesty. Long live Keith!

  • @kentocky
    @kentocky 2 роки тому

    17:41 the video freezes. Can the museum upload the full video? Such a pity to have it end so soon!

  • @JohnDoe-mk9nf
    @JohnDoe-mk9nf 2 роки тому

    ua-cam.com/video/gmVg3kQ01ww/v-deo.html

  • @terrydavis8451
    @terrydavis8451 2 роки тому

    1:04 stupid commie gibberish. Stop being a virtue signaling nonce....... 3:45 even more commie gibberish. Skip to 4:38 to avoid all of the indoctrination.

  • @chrisskinner6291
    @chrisskinner6291 2 роки тому

    A currently made eygpt

  • @johnschannel449
    @johnschannel449 2 роки тому

    BLOODY ccp SPY DEPORT HIM

  • @funmiokusfo
    @funmiokusfo 2 роки тому

    I don't understand what you mean by rediscovering lost ancient Egypt. Anglo saxon French and German egytologist try to destroy ancient Egypt because they want to insert themselves into especially the 18th dynasty to claim Mose. Yet Mo Se is a Yoruba name. The entire dynasty up to the 26th is Yoruba.

    • @Mariow3345
      @Mariow3345 2 роки тому

      Peace to you. As a student of African history can you reference that with a source if I may ask humbly!

  • @skattyopt
    @skattyopt 2 роки тому

    It's pains me so much for amazing content like this having so few views and the channel having very little followers. Thank for the hard work and effort put into this talk.

  • @tommybentley1314
    @tommybentley1314 2 роки тому

    Her microphone echo's.

  • @pauc9596
    @pauc9596 2 роки тому

    The poor sound quality at the start almost put me off and it took several minutes of unnecessary waffle before it started to get to the point. Very irritatingly the main speaker keeps saying umm every few minutes. If you are going to do public speaking then please learn the basics of how to speak properly, engagingly and fluently.

    • @winstonenglish285
      @winstonenglish285 2 роки тому

      I'm with you 100% on that one! having done a few lectures in public speaking myself Um's and aah's are my pet hate Greetings from the southern tip of Africa

  • @enchantedthunder5017
    @enchantedthunder5017 2 роки тому

    We like to think that the people of egypt know about and respect their own heritage. But the truth is one of wholesale corruption. I have an egyptian friend, who told be about his childhood in egypt, cairo. He told me, that even when he was growning up (1950, 1960's) bands of children used to go into the "tunnels" and explore things there. He's even produced pictures and relics to me. All of which were part of his "family heritage". However, he told me that the egyptian museum of antiquities, was rife with corruption, payoffs, and illegal smuggling of artifacts. You have to realize, that the egypt we see to day, is the just the BAREBONES of what it was in the last 2 centuries, when modern science finally started to look into egypt. Most of the good stuff, and informative evidence is gone, do to decades and decades of scavenging. Indeed, my friend told me about how the actual authorities (antiquities authorities) were all on the take, and were profitting from illegal excavations and discoveries. Reference Zawi Hawass and the criminal indictments that he was charged with.

    • @rosifervincent9481
      @rosifervincent9481 2 роки тому

      So it’s just the same as most other places in the world?

    • @Stupidityindex
      @Stupidityindex 13 днів тому

      Faith is shameless. Believers begin their crimes like Moses, becoming history's worst navigator, as if travel were best done with one foot in fantasyland. ​​Faith has always been a means for someone making a living from it. The Egyptian priests made off with the tomb goodies as fast as they were covered up. Believers fail to comprehend the saying of Jesus Christ which has lasted to this day. Believers are found among a gathering crowd, when Jesus Christ is alarmed by a wicked generation, those who seek the signs of resurrection. "The only sign given is Jonah" - who was a believer. He was outnumbered & murdered by other believers. Jesus Christ "hangeth on a tree" to celebrate the War of the Jews. I'm astounded at the farcical notion that a deity has any relationship to a believer. Men have always known God as a tool of fiction, propaganda, & rhetoric. The Christ fantasy ignores Jesus saying, "This is a wicked generation seeking signs, the only sign given is Jonah," a believer murdered by a larger number of believers. The King of the Jews is mounted on a stick, because Romans made a parody of the avatar, the icon. "Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us: for it is written, cursed is everyone that hangeth on a tree:" Galatians 3:13 How can you possibly take faith seriously? How can anyone in their right mind ask others to believe in the existence of a Deity who makes Mormons so Christians will know how Jews feel, having had their literature hijacked. Nothing fails like prayers in a children's hospital & indoctrinating children is criminal. The faith vocabulary causes the user to be avoided like the old woman with too many cats. Faith "comes not with peace, but sword." Faith comes with wolves dressed as sheep & preaching to the choir. Faith trades the last cow for a pocketful of magic beans & then expects everyone's appreciation. It is by Faith, Moses becomes the worst navigator in history. Jesus said, it is a wicked generations which seeks signs such as resurrection. Faith is as worthless as fantasyland magic, since you can't tell mountains to move. The "only sign given" in reality "is Jonah": A believer murdered by other believers because he is outnumbered. The context is Jesus seeing a gathering crowd, so it is up to us, to reject religious nonsense, nothing fails like prayers in a children's hospital. Believers have no sense of responsibility, or standards. Theologians grant each other doctorates, as if, equal to a science. It is a, have it both ways world, for the believers. It is an authoritarian, fascist world which says: "My sheep hear My voice". 1 Corinthians 9 20 And unto the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews; to them that are under the law, as under the law, that I might gain them that are under the law; 21 To them that are without law, as without law, (being not without law to God, but under the law to Christ,) that I might gain them that are without law.

  • @jodintlz5491
    @jodintlz5491 2 роки тому

    Dear God so much was lost!

  • @marvindavis8705
    @marvindavis8705 2 роки тому

    SIXTH

  • @ӇЄ0Ӈ-ф5в
    @ӇЄ0Ӈ-ф5в 2 роки тому

    5th

  • @kevinkevin-ug9po
    @kevinkevin-ug9po 2 роки тому

    These are good, maybe Chris should do a proper video series of Titankhamun like the never been bettered Christopher Frayling series. Too much is disrespectful these days, even saying king Tut is awful. So much in Howard carters books are not coverd. I have been a little disapointed by some Nauntons videos, especially about the condition of the Tutankhamun remains, as if it was new info. Its all covered in Carters books and nothing new. Tutankhamun deserves an accurate work, one going back to Armarna and into Aye or Horemheb would be good. Please do a factual video series on Tutankhamun

  • @susettesantiago5509
    @susettesantiago5509 2 роки тому

    Ummmmmm………….it was already discovered that the Sphinx was ACTUALLY A FULL LENGTH LION……………the face was carved out after the sands covered the lion up to its neck…………….most likely be peoples who had already shared dna with Neanderthals or what are known today as Europeans…………….the lion was created before the timeline of the great floods occurring throughout the northern hemisphere during the melt of the last major ice age…………it is well documented……….and they used dna……….but…….carry on……………..

  • @PaulMichaelOwens
    @PaulMichaelOwens 2 роки тому

    Chris Naunton is SO smart...even HE especially believes it. Thanks for putting this collection together but your arrogance is hard to listen to.

    • @DarrylErickson
      @DarrylErickson 2 роки тому

      This guy subscribes to Ben Shapiro. Don’t worry about it.

  • @Mairiain
    @Mairiain 2 роки тому

    I can't hear this at all :(

  • @XCOWMEATX
    @XCOWMEATX 2 роки тому

    4th

  • @TheMoneypresident
    @TheMoneypresident 3 роки тому

    Get a robot with 360 camera to drive around the museums. Like robot Sheldon from Big Bang Theory show.

  • @israelgonzalez7645
    @israelgonzalez7645 3 роки тому

    I m here because I saw dices

  • @LetiziaCamboni
    @LetiziaCamboni 3 роки тому

    Thank you for that video, it was really interesting, I'm glad I came across it today!

  • @ANGEL-bv9mr
    @ANGEL-bv9mr 3 роки тому

    Grazie molto per questo video meraviglioso! Soltanto scomponendo tutte le parti anatomiche ci si puo' rendere conto veramente dell'incredibile lavoro svolto per la realizzazione di questo corpo. In questo modo si rende onore al lavoro del dr. Auzoux e si puo' apprezzare l'opera sia da un punto di vista artistico, che da un punto di vista scientifico. Poi se consideriamo che non e' un'operazione che viene eseguita per ogni visitatore che ha il piacere di vedere il vostro o altri musei che possiedono dei reperti analoghi, direi che e' un video prezioso! Complimenti.

  • @ANGEL-bv9mr
    @ANGEL-bv9mr 3 роки тому

    Grazie molto per questo video meraviglioso! Soltanto scomponendo tutte le parti anatomiche ci si puo' rendere conto veramente dell'incredibile lavoro svolto per la realizzazione di questo corpo. In questo modo si rende onore al lavoro del dr. Auzoux e si puo' apprezzare l'opera sia da un punto di vista artistico, che da un punto di vista scientifico. Poi se consideriamo che non e' un'operazione che viene eseguita per ogni visitatore che ha il piacere di vedere il vostro o altri musei che possiedono dei reperti analoghi, direi che e' un video prezioso! Complimenti.

  • @adamselene5957
    @adamselene5957 3 роки тому

    'Amarna' has ONLY one 'r' - NOT TWO. It is sad to hear scientist and speakers MISPRONOUNCE the very NAME of which they are attempting to speak. "Ah-Marn-Ah" NOT "Are-Marn-Ah"

  • @duchamp303
    @duchamp303 3 роки тому

    Hello, I'm surprised the accompanying slides are not shown in this otherwise excellent talk.

    • @chauchakwingmuseum8438
      @chauchakwingmuseum8438 3 роки тому

      Apologies, we were not able to show the slides and have added a note to say so.

    • @nicholasnicola5852
      @nicholasnicola5852 3 роки тому

      @@chauchakwingmuseum8438 Hello, thanks for the reply. Glad I saw talk. I went to Angkor Wat in late1990 before Cambodia had officially opened up & was magnificent to see with another friend and with practically no one there except for two Frenchmen ( one the son of a diplomat once stationed in Cambodia) we met & two monks and two soldiers (one with an anti tank rifle) who were using it as a thoroughfare to their village in the vicinity of Siem Riep. All the best.

    • @chauchakwingmuseum8438
      @chauchakwingmuseum8438 3 роки тому

      @@nicholasnicola5852 fascinating! Thanks for sharing.

  • @madisonc2472
    @madisonc2472 3 роки тому

    Great talk!

  • @lisarochwarg4707
    @lisarochwarg4707 3 роки тому

    Very interesting book launch. I didn't know that women painted. I thought they stuck to weaving. The art was beautiful.

  • @andrebarbosa224
    @andrebarbosa224 3 роки тому

    3rd

  • @prensaporlaverdad1702
    @prensaporlaverdad1702 3 роки тому

    Let’s convince UNESCO. Jordan has another monument. It will be as important as Petra or even more. There are interesting ruins and reliefs on the Black Desert, dated 8,500 years old. They can only be seen from planes, drones, satellites and helicopters. Archaeologists don't exactly know nowadays what they represent. These ruins really represent embryos of several species in different stages of development and will be able to shed light on the origin of the human being and our planet. When it will be officially confirmed by biologists, this discovery will be a delight for the eyes, shed light to the origin of humanity. Activate the subtitles in English: ua-cam.com/video/rikVfTbX2Mo/v-deo.html It contains the documentation with the Jordanian authorities about this scientific and archaeological discovery

  • @kgspvgsp7569
    @kgspvgsp7569 3 роки тому

    Wow audio

  • @crow1066
    @crow1066 3 роки тому

    Well, that kicked ass.