05 December 2013

Notes - bones and beeswax / Mandela's transition / 5 and 6 word freq.

         Late morning. This is Carol’s day to go to lunch with her retired teacher friends. Earlier you had your fasting blood test. You still have the GMG Stats and StoryMill to do. First though, I want to clarify a point in yesterday’s posting. I, Amorella, am here because you are paying for an “accidental exposure to Transitional(s) hitherto unknown to you”. This exposure is similar to the ‘accidental exposure’ (at an early age) to your father’s hidden U.S. Army distributed photographs of dead and liberated inmates at the German Concentration Camps in 1945. I am your manifestation of the Transitional. It is that I am one-dimensional in the same way you see yourself as three-dimensional in a fourth dimensional setting (time and space). The books and blogs are manifestations of you, your heartansoulanmind, but I, Amorella, exist in the notes and books also. Take away you and I am what is left. This is a fact of your life. The fact is a conditional because it effects your thinking/writing grammar, vocabulary and finger behavior. - Amorella

         When one accidently steps on a beehive sheorhe may be stung but in the process the discovery another substance may be an extract, beeswax and honey for example. From my perspective the blog and Merlyn books are beeswax. – You understand me here. No more on it for now. – Amorella

         You found an article relating to early humankind at BBC.com. You see that your species may be much older than you had imagined. You are concerned that it doesn’t fit with what is suggested of higher consciousness and DNA in the blog and books. It makes no difference as far as the books are concerned. The books are not about science; they are about humanity and its setting in a fictional form. Add the article then post. - Amorella

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4 December 2013 Last updated at 13:32 ET

Leg bone gives up oldest human DNA
By Paul Rincon
Science editor, BBC News website

The discovery of DNA in a 400,000-year-old human thigh bone will open up a new frontier in the study of our ancestors.
That's the verdict cast by human evolution experts on an analysis in Nature journal of the oldest human genetic material ever sequenced.
The femur comes from the famed "Pit of Bones" site in Spain, which gave up the remains of at least 28 ancient people.
But the results are perplexing, raising more questions than answers about our increasingly complex family tree.
The early human remains from the cave site near the northern Spanish city of Burgos have been painstakingly excavated and pieced together over the course of more than two decades. It has yielded one of the richest assemblages of human bones from this stage of human evolution, in a time called the Middle Pleistocene.
To access the pit (called Sima de los Huesos in Spanish) scientists must crawl for hundreds of metres through narrow cave tunnels and rope down through the dark. The bodies were probably deposited there deliberately - their causes of death unknown.
The fossils carry many traits typical of Neanderthals, and either belong to an ancestral species known as Homo heidelbergensis - or, as the British palaeoanthropologist Chris Stringer suggests - are early representatives of the Neanderthal lineage.
DNA's tendency to break down over time means it has not previously been possible to study the genetics of such ancient members of the human family.
But the recent pace of progress in sequencing technology has astonished many scientists: "Years ago, geneticists said they wouldn't be able to find DNA that was older than 60,000 years old," said co-author Jose Bermudez de Castro, from the National Research Centre for Human Evolution (CENIEH), a member of the team that excavated the fossils.
"Of course, that wasn't true. The techniques have advanced hugely."
Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, under the supervision of Prof Svante Paabo, have been helping drive those advances. The success reported in Nature was the result of applying techniques developed for sequencing the degraded DNA found in Neanderthal fossils to even older specimens.
Prof Paabo, the institute's director, said: "Our results show that we can now study DNA from human ancestors that are hundreds of thousands of years old," adding: "It is tremendously exciting."
The scientists were able to stitch together a near-complete sequence of mitochondrial DNA, or mtDNA (the genetic material contained in the tiny "batteries" that power our cells) from the ancient femur. But comparisons of the genetic code with that from other humans, ancient and modern, yielded a surprise.
Rather than showing a relationship between the Spanish specimens and Neanderthals, which might be expected based on their physical features, the mitochondrial DNA was most similar to that found in 40,000 year-old material unearthed thousands of kilometres away at Denisova Cave in Siberia.
The Denisovans were a sister group to the Neanderthals, with distinct genetic characteristics. Identified only by DNA extracted from a tiny finger bone and tooth, they are, as some researchers have remarked, "a genome in search of a fossil" because there are no substantial remains representative of this group.
By using missing mutations in the old DNA sequences, the researchers calculated that the Pit of Bones individual shared a common ancestor with the Denisovans about 700,000 years ago.
So there are several possibilities as to how Denisovan-like DNA could turn up in Middle Pleistocene Spain. Firstly, the mitochondrial DNA type from the pit came from a population ancestral to both the Spanish hominids and to Denisovans.
Secondly, interbreeding between the Pit of Bones people (or their ancestors) and yet another early human species brought the Denisovan-like DNA into this western population. Prof Bermudez de Castro thinks there may be a candidate for this cryptic ancestor: an earlier human species known as Homo antecessor. One million years ago, antecessor inhabited the site of Gran Dolina, just a few hundred metres away from the Pit of Bones.
Prof Chris Stringer, from London's Natural History Museum, told BBC News: "We need all the data we can get to build the whole story of human evolution. We can't just build it from stone tools, we can't just build it from the fossils. Having the DNA gives us a whole new way of looking at it."
However, he points out, mtDNA is a small and unusual component of our genetic blueprint, from which only limited conclusions can be drawn. For example, no sign of the interbreeding we now know took place between Neanderthals and modern humans remains in the mtDNA of modern people.
To get the full picture, scientists had to sequence nuclear DNA (that kept in the nuclei of cells) from Neanderthals and compare it with that in present-day populations. Likewise, the true relationships between the Pit people and other ancient populations may only be known if and when nuclear DNA is available.
This will be a challenge given the age of the Spanish fossils, but their good state of preservation - largely a product of the fairly constant temperature inside the cave - gives hope.
"That is our next big thing here, to sequence at least part of the nuclear genome from the individual in the Sima de los Huesos," Svante Paabo told BBC News.
"This will answer definitively the question of how they are related to Neanderthals, modern humans and Denisovans."

From – bbc.co.uk. news, science, environment

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            1156 hours. I can understand beeswax. 

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beeswax  - noun

1 the wax secreted by bees to make honeycombs and used to make wood polishes and candles: turning pollen into beeswax.
2 informal a person's concern or business: that's none of your beeswax.

From – Oxford-American Dictionary Software

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         You have a tendency to be too literal, boy, but I see added dark humor in your definition, particularly if you add its historical uses from Wikipedia. – Amorella

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Beeswax

Historical uses
The oldest survived beeswax candles north of the Alps, from the Alamannic graveyard of Oberflact, Germany dating to 6th/7th century A.D.

Beeswax was the among the first plastics to be used, alongside other natural polymers such as gutta-percha, horn, tortoiseshell and shellac. For thousands of years beeswax has had a wide variety of applications, it has been found in the tombs of Egypt, in wrecked Viking ships and in Roman ruins. Beeswax never goes bad and can be heated and reused.
                Used in manufacture of cosmetics.
                As a modelling material in the lost-wax casting process, or cire perdue.
                For wax tablets used for a variety of writing purposes.
                In Encaustic paintings such as the Fayum mummy portraits.
                Used in bow making (see English longbow).
                Used to strengthen and preserve sewing thread.
                As a component of sealing wax
                To form the mouthpieces of a didgeridoo, and the frets on the Philippine kutiyapi - a type of boat lute.
                As a sealant or lubricant for bullets in cap and ball and firearms
                To stabilize the military explosive Torpex - before being replaced by a petroleum-based product.
                In producing Javanese batik.
An ancient form of dental tooth filling.

From – Wikipedia
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         Now post. – Amorella

         Dark  and telling humor, indeed. Thanks for giving me the smile, Amorella



         The highest word counts in Chapter Five according to StoryMill are: or 17; Merlyn 15; have 14; dead 14; soul 13; here 12; than 12; Richard 12; ship 11; am 10; Yermey 10; light 10; thought 10; Robert 9; has 9; good 9; human 9; all 9; cemetery 8; first – 8; one 8; matter 8; great 8; mind 8; Ezekiel 7; place 7; Khrap 7; into 7; what 7; now 7; so 7; full 7; down 7; know 6; still 6; once 6; goddess 6; who 6; earth 6;two 6; see 6; up 6; like 6; more 6; do 6; Ka 6; through 6; being 6.      
    
         After the national news. You were impressed with the way the death of Nelson Mandela was presented on NBC News. However, you turned the news off a couple of minutes ago not wanting to see any more. – Amorella

         1905 hours. He was a great man and public leader; truly the modern George Washington of his country. He was concerned about the children getting enough food for breakfast, a very practical man, a compromiser and a forgiver. I remember the photos of his jail cell taken by Kim when she was in South Africa while working with international students at Ohio State. I am glad she was able to see the man from a closer perspective and hope she bring up her boys to have her similar ideals as Mandela. I had no reason to see more of the media coverage, the first thirty minutes of news was enough for me. I remember one of the points on the show was that in South Africa they think of those dying and dead as being transitional or having been transitioned into another state of being. At the time and in context I thought of transitional and transcendental as very similar contextual words. I like the concept in a very personal way. Nelson Mandela was a great man and like many other great leaders in the world I am happy to be here and to have shared the same air for a period of time. I feel that we who share the air of the planet at the same time have a physical connection even if we do not and did not know one another personally. Alive, we are cousins who share the world together in various segments of time and space. I have no other thoughts on the subject presently. (1921)

         I stated an observation. I did not ask for your thoughts, boy. Post. – Amorella

         The words rose in a singular reflection. I am not going to apologize for them. You stopped with a period and I began with a number without the slant.

       
         2229 hours. The highest word counts in Chapter Six according to StoryMill are: Pyl 16; like 16; Bracc 14; gray 14; have 13; dead 12; Robert 12; into 12; what 12; story 12; one 11; would 11; Richard 10; plane 10; then 10; glanced 8; see 8; thought 8; black 8; before 8; up 8; left 7; who 7; heard 7; why 7; or 7; friends 7; all 7; down 7; Merlyn 7; Blake 7; living 7; right 6; Justin 6; continued 6; too 6; now 6; out 6; walked 6; chamber 6 while 6; quickly 6; Friendly 6; above 6; both 6; looked 5; will 5; love 5; marble 5; where 5; alone 5; each 5; time 5; some 5; which 5; side 5; when 5; eyes 5; light 5.

         Note the word counts five and six. – Amorella

         I use too many of the same words. I am not sure how I am going to deal with this.

         When these chapters are completed we will compile the lot and move through the top ten or twenty then let it go. The communication has to flow. No one is counting words but you. – Post. - Amorella    

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