Cool.
1 posted on
03/13/2003 1:46:22 PM PST by
vannrox
To: vannrox
Curiously, they match Vince Foster's shoe size exactly.
2 posted on
03/13/2003 1:47:02 PM PST by
ElkGroveDan
(Fighting for Freedom and Having Fun)
To: vannrox
OK ... Bipedal creatures walked along a volcanic ash shelf? floor?, and left prints that lay undisturbed by wind/rain etc. until the ash could fossilize. The ash was
then covered over and preserved for this discovery.
I believe this ... no ... really ... I do.
3 posted on
03/13/2003 1:52:19 PM PST by
knarf
(RA 11448419)
To: vannrox
I didn't realize that Helen Thomas had been in Italy.
5 posted on
03/13/2003 2:04:22 PM PST by
Maceman
To: vannrox
In a related story, the oldest known hoofprints found just outside the DNC in Washington, D.C.
8 posted on
03/13/2003 2:12:02 PM PST by
DoughtyOne
(Don't just sit there, use the links on the Graphic Teaser.)
To: vannrox
From the article in Neture,
Given that these tracks were made before the molten ash solidified, the trio that made them may have seen the volcano erupting, speculates Mietto, who works at Padua University in Italy.
Huh!?! "made before the molten ash solidified"? So these hominids were walking on molten ash? I don't THINK so. Perhaps it was ash, but not molten. I hope that's just a crappy transalation.
9 posted on
03/13/2003 2:13:29 PM PST by
clamboat
To: vannrox
Three sets coming down the volcano, none going up. Wonder why?
10 posted on
03/13/2003 2:17:09 PM PST by
templar
To: vannrox
Apparently, the footprints are those of a retreating Frenchman.
To: vannrox
Unmistakeable!! Bruno Mali loafers
To: Prof Engineer
ping
25 posted on
12/11/2003 7:31:40 AM PST by
msdrby
(US Veterans: All give some, but some give all.)
To: PatrickHenry
ping
26 posted on
12/11/2003 7:34:57 AM PST by
Dementon
(I hear the voices in my head, I swear to God it sounds like they're snoring...)
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