ANST - Fwd: [TW] Research?

Ellen Ginden ginden at rocketmail.com
Wed Jun 3 10:18:08 PDT 1998


This has some very good sites on it so I thought that passing
it along to the kingdom might be in order. Hope you like
it.Lady Ellen




---owner-tavernwall at web.ce.utk.edu wrote:
>
> ------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
> Date:          Wed, 27 May 1998 18:44:34 -0700
> From:          Joy <cen41909 at centuryinter.net>
> To:            "meridies at web.ce.utk.edu"
<meridies at web.ce.utk.edu>
> Subject: [TW] [TY] Research?
> Sender: owner-tavernwall
> Precedence: bulk
> Reply-To: tavernwall at web.ce.utk.edu
> 
> here are some interesting links for research:
> http://britannia.com/history/time1.html
> 	his timeline has brief statements of historical facts
from the
> beginning of the construction of Britain's largest stone
circle at
> Avebury in c. 2300, to 1457, the year of the final
engagement of the
> War of Roses. As current scholarship generates new
information, 
> ideas and theories in their fields, the timeline is an
excellent new
> and refreshable reference for students of Celtic
literature, and of
> the early history of Britain. Many of the events and
places are 
> highlighted, providing links to elaboration. Hadrian's
Wall, for
> example, brings up a World Heritage Site introduced by
the words of 
> G.M. Trevelyan:
>    "It is the land of far horizons, where the piled or
drifted 
>    shapes of gathered vapour are for ever moving along
the farthest
>    ridge of hills, like the procession of long primeval
ages that
>    is written in tribal mounds and Roman camps and Border
towers
>    on the breast of Northumberland."
> 
> http://www.jle.lul.co.uk/arch/index.htm
> 
> 	The Jubilee Line Extension project of the London
Underground lets 
> you travel deep into the past, with Roman stops at the
London Bridge
> and Stratford, and prehistoric and Medieval stops at
Parliament 
> Square. In cooperation with the Museum of London,
excavations of the
> new subway line are being used to find and preserve a
variety of 
> ancient objects. The Website of the Jubilee Line Extension 
> celebrates the work in progress toward a major addition
to London
> transit -- and sets aside these interesting pages to take
the world
> along on its archeological side trips.
> 
>
http://www.cs.ubc.ca/nest/imager/contributions/scharein/KnotPlot.html
> 	Anyone who sees this Website will be cured of the notion
that
> mathematics is not colorful! Knot theory is a branch of
algebraic
> topology concerned with the embedding of one topological
space into
> another. A visit to this site reveals the power of
computing to 
> create images from formulas, and even to animate them.
> 	A page is included about Celtic knots, where one cannot
help but wish
> the ancient designers of the knots of illumination could
get to see 
> the 21st century knots aborning at the Knot Plot site.
These are
> Beautiful pages to explore which showcase the
visualization gifts 
> of digital imaging to mathematics -- and the site is,
quite 
> literally, mind-bending.
> -- 
> =FFO=FF=E0
> 
> 

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