Passing Pretty Penny by Gregory Bodenhamer PhD MIT

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PA S S I N G   P R E T T Y   P E N N Y PeopleNology Gregory Bodenhamer Ph.D. M.I.T. Passing Pretty Penny the true store of women from prehistoric times to modern times, around the world, the female species, homo sapiens, suffers from the evolutionary past and continues to pay the absolute price of being passed over, passed around, around the world. 2008 Nollijy Franklin University Research Institute Mechanicsburg Pa 17055 All Rights Reserved and Protected Powerful Humanistic Development for Women Coaching Teamwork Leadership Relationships Culture Dating Mating Adventure Evolution White Paper Free Ebook Free Download Art Masterpiece Award Winning Author Gregory Bodenhamer puts you Back in Control for Women Nudity Sexual Nature Body Image Career Marriage Divorce Naked Truth Little Miss Susie Sunshine HomeMaker Series Passing Pretty Penny PeopleNology Gregory Bodenhamer Ph.D. M.I.T.  2008 Nollijy Franklin University Research Copyrighted 2009 'Our analysis points to the local women being  y p g regarded as somehow special. They were  therefore kept alive,' he said. PeopleNology Gregory Bodenhamer Ph.D. M.I.T. Passing Pretty Penny the true store of women from prehistoric times to modern times, around the world, the female species, homo sapiens, suffers from the evolutionary past and continues to pay the absolute price of being passed over, passed around, around the world. 2008 Nollijy Franklin University Research Institute Mechanicsburg Pa 17055 All Rights Reserved and Protected Powerful Humanistic Development f Women Coaching Teamwork Leadership Relationships Culture Dating Mating Adventure h b ll h d d d f l l for h k d h l h l d Evolution White Paper Free Ebook Free Download Art Masterpiece Award Winning Author Gregory Bodenhamer puts you Back in Control for Women Nudity Sexual Nature Body Image Career Marriage Divorce Naked Truth Little Miss Susie Sunshine HomeMaker Series Prehistoric man may have executed rivals from neighboring tribes to steal their women, research has found. A study of 7,000‐year‐old skeletons, led by Durham University scientists, found that one of the burial groups consisted only of men and children. This indicated that the women were spared and their capture could have been the motive for the attack. The findings, from a burial pit in Talheim, Germany, are published in the journal Antiquity. The 34 skeletons were discovered in the 1980s, but new studies of different types (isotopes) of atoms in their teeth show that they came from three groups ‐ locals cattle herders and a "family" of a man woman and two children locals, cattle‐herders family man, children. All the skeletons bore marks to the left side of the skull showing that they were hit in the head with an axe, indicating they were executed while bound. 'Tribal warfare' The scientists concluded the absence of local females meant they were captured instead. Dr Alex Bentley, from Durham University's Anthropology Department, said: "It seems this community was specifically targeted, as could happen in a cycle of revenge between rival groups. "Although resources and population were undoubtedly factors in central Europe around that time, women appear to be the immediate reason for the attack. "Our analysis points to the local women being regarded as somehow special and were therefore kept alive." y p g g p p Dr Bentley added: "It looks like tribal warfare on a small scale. "It's crucial for a group which has a very small population to have access to mates." 'It's crucial for a group which has a very small population to h l i have access to mates. Women are needed for a group to succeed and survive. In 1980, a burial pit containing 34 skeletons was found in Talheim, Germany which date back to around 5000 BC. Now with new high‐tech research methods, scientists were able to find more information about social titi hi t i iti d t interestingly ti l competitiveness b t between prehistoric communities and, most i t of all: how they got to women. After an investigation on the skeletons, researchers found clues about the nature of their death. It seems that most of the victims were killed with a stone axe blow on the left side of their head and others received an arrow in the back, while trying to escape. This is vivid evidence that the locals were attacked by another community. As no local female bones were found, scientists concluded that this attack was aimed to capture women. Archaeologists have repeatedly argued that in prehistoric times, women may have been a reason for communities to fight each other This new other. discovery sustains this theory through its evidence. You may be thinking, that you’ve heard of numerous pistol duels and the Ancient Greeks fighting over women: Helen of Troy is the perfect example. However, scientists on previous occasions were not able to trace this kind of activity back to prehistoric times, partially because of limited technologies. Scientists from the University of Durham, who conducted the research, also say that the women in this prehistoric community were seen as special; a group with a small population needed access to mates in order to prosper and even survive This armed conflict cannot be seen as a war ‘War’ back survive. war. War then, was just relatively small groups of men battling each other – it was probably just an attack. Archaeologists have had a hard time telling the difference between weapon‐like artifacts used in the ‘kitchen’ and those used for hunting and war. As disturbing A di t bi as th execution may seem, we h the ti have t b to bear i mind th t i prehistoric ti in i d that in hi t i times, civilization and culture as we know it had not yet developed. Our concept of barbarism and theirs, was in all likelihood, extremely different. After all, there was no Geneva Convention and no rules of war. Prehistoric man simply wanted to survive.

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The word girl first appeared during the Middle Ages between 1250 and 1300 CE and came from the Anglo-Saxon words gerle (also spelled girle or gurle), likely cognate with the Old Low German word gör (sometimes given as kerl).[2] Th (More...)
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