⚜️✴️Join 🔎🎥📚 world of quirky, wonderful and exploratory solutions in the world of wonder.
📚Knowledge 🧠Intelligent Decisions
🎯Experiment 🔬🔭Experience
🧪Exploration 💟 Life
🎯 https://t.center/+k3U6lf1B2D80Mjc1
The mysterious late Bronze Age artifact made of thin gold leaf.
The Golden Hat of Schifferstadt was discovered in a field near the town of Schifferstadt in Southwest Germany in 1835. It is a Bronze Age artefact made of thin sheet gold and served as the external decoration of a head-dress, probably of an organic material, with a brim and a chin-strap. The surface of the Berlin cone is adorned with an astonishing number of sun symbols and half-moon figures, 1,739 to be exact.
So far four golden cone-shaped hats have been discovered in Germany, Switzerland, and France. All of them appear to be adorned with symbols of astrology, and the ancients who used them had the knowledge to foretell the movements of the two most important stellar objects to us, the sun and the moon.
❇️The world's major waterways❇️🔘 Boss Water Treaty ➺ connects Tasman Sea and South Sea 🔘 Sunda Strait ➺ connects Java Sea and Indian Ocean 🔘 Tokra Strait ➺ connects the East China Sea and the Pacific Ocean 🔘 Yucatan Strait ➺ connects the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea 🔘 Strait of Oranto ➺ connects the Adriatic Sea and the Ionian Sea 🔘 North Channel Strait ➺ connects the Irish Sea and the Atlantic Ocean
Deborah Sampson became a hero of the American Revolution when she disguised herself as a man and joined the Patriot forces. She was the only woman to earn a full military pension for participation in the Revolutionary army.
Born on December 17, 1760 in Plympton, Massachusetts near Plymouth, Sampson was one of seven children to Jonathan Sampson Jr. and Deborah (Bradford) Sampson. Both were descendants of preeminent Pilgrims: Jonathan of Myles Standish and Priscilla Alden; his wife, the great granddaughter of Massachusetts Governor William Bradford. Still, the Sampsons struggled financially and, after Jonathan failed to return from a sea voyage, his impoverished wife was forced to place her children in different households. Five years later, at age 10, young Deborah was bound out as an indentured servant to Deacon Benjamin Thomas, a farmer in Middleborough with a large family. At age 18, with her indenture completed, Sampson, who was self-educated, worked as a teacher during summer sessions in 1779 and 1780 and as a weaver in winter.
In 1782, as the Revolutionary War raged on, the patriotic Sampson disguised herself as a man named Robert Shurtleff and joined the Fourth Massachusetts Regiment. At West Point, New York, she was assigned to Captain George Webb’s Company of Light Infantry. She was given the dangerous task of scouting neutral territory to assess British buildup of men and materiel in Manhattan, which General George Washington contemplated attacking. In June of 1782, Sampson and two sergeants led about 30 infantrymen on an expedition that ended with a confrontation—often one-on-one—with Tories. She led a raid on a Tory home that resulted in the capture of 15 men. Sampson—like many veterans of the Revolution—also claimed she fought during the siege of Yorktown, digging trenches, helping storm a British redoubt, and enduring canon fire. However, a neighbor's diary on Sampson's claim she fought at Yorktown.
For over two years, Sampson’s true sex had escaped detection despite close calls. When she received a gash in her forehead from a sword and was shot in her left thigh, she extracted the pistol ball herself. She was ultimately discovered—a year and a half into her service—in Philadelphia, when she became ill during an epidemic, was taken to a hospital, and lost consciousness.
Receiving an honorable discharge on October 23, 1783, Sampson returned to Massachusetts. On April 7, 1785 she married Benjamin Gannet from Sharon, and they had three children, Earl, Mary, and Patience. The story of her life was written in 1797 by Herman Mann, entitled The Female Review: or, Memoirs of an American Young Lady. She received a military pension from the state of Massachusetts. Although Sampson’s life after the army was mostly typical of a farmer’s wife, in 1802 she began a year-long lecture tour about her experiences—the first woman in America to do so—sometimes dressing in full military regalia.
Four years after Sampson’s death at age 66, her husband petitioned Congress for pay as the spouse of a soldier. Although the couple was not married at the time of her service, in 1837 the committee concluded that the history of the Revolution “furnished no other similar example of female heroism, fidelity and courage.” He was awarded the money, though he died before receiving it.
Canon Japan has unveiled the MD-100-GY Privacy Talk mask to mute speech. Users can talk with others online using the built-in microphone and earphones while the mask prevents bystanders from being disturbed by silencing voices.
The Privacy Talk mask creates a private space in any open space. Specially selected acoustic metamaterial along with the maze-like sound-guide absorbs speech before it passes beyond the mask. The result is a 20 dB reduction in speech, a difference similar to the sound level difference between a normal conversation and a quiet office.
मेने एक फ़ोल्डर बनाया है जिसमें सिर्फ 20 हजार से ऊपर ग्रुप को जोड़ा जाएगा जिसको भी अपना ग्रुप मेरे फ़ोल्डर में जुड़ना हो वो मुझे मैसेज करें @Black_heart_182