Ancient coins worth $15 million found by amateur treasure hunters after 30 year search

Thursday, June 28, 2012
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After a search that spanned three decades, two amateur treasure hunters have uncovered the biggest ever hoard of Iron Age silver and gold coins in the UK  -- weighing a full ton and valued at $15 million.
Reg Mead and Richard Miles found the stash using a high powered metal detector called a deepseeker. What they discovered was a large block of clay containing 30,000 to 50,000 gold and silver coins dating from the 1st Century BC.
The coins—which could have been buried to prevent Roman troops from getting them during Julius Caesar's invasion of the British Islands—come from Armorica, modern day Brittany and Normandy. They have been buried for more than 2,000 years.
"I have been searching for things like this since 1959 and never found anything on this scale before."
- Reg Mead, amateur treasure hunter
Each Roman or Celtic coin is said to be worth between 100 to 200 British Pounds ($156 to $311), according to Dr. Philip de Jersey, a former Celtic coin expert at Oxford University. He believes the haul is “extremely exciting and very significant.”
The trove of coins has since been transferred to the Jersey Heritage Museum, for a careful cleaning and examination by conservator Neil Mahrer.
Olga Finch, curator of archaeology at the Jersey Museum, called it a find of international importance. "The fact that it has been excavated archaeologically is also rare and will greatly enhance the level of information we can glean about the people who buried it. It is an amazing contribution to the study of Celtic coins."
Further excavation is taking place at the secret location by archeologists keen to get to the bottom of the ancient discovery, while it is kept secluded from the threat of looters.
Ownership and value of the findings could take months to determine and are subject to the island's Treasure Act. It is estimated the coins could be worth £10 million (US$15.6 million).
The coins are understood to date back to the Late Iron Age, a time when the armies of Rome's Julius Caesar were advancing north-westwards through France, driving the tribal communities towards the coast.
People escaping would have crossed the sea to Jersey, finding a place of refuge away from Caesar's campaigns. It is thought they may have buried their wealth to protect it.
"I have been searching for things like this since 1959 and never found anything on this scale before," Mead told the Daily Mail. "We had been searching that land for 30 years."
While Mead, Miles and the farmer who owns the land have an agreement over how the split the find, actual ownership of the coins is unclear.
Mead said he is following up with the States of Jersey for clarification.

Kate Upton reportedly booted from Santa Monica pier for showing too much skin

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Model Kate Upton reportedly got booted from the famous Santa Monica Pier for flashing too much flesh during a recent photo shoot.
The 19-year-old stunner and her photo crew were asked by security officials to leave after Upton suffered a wardrobe malfunction, the San Francisco Chronicle's "Daily Dish" reported Tuesday. 
'You wouldn’t think that would happen with a one-piece!'
- Model Kate Upton
The Sports Illustrated model was at the popular pier working on a photo shoot for GQ magazine. Her skimpy bathing suit reportedly snapped while she and her crew were taking a break to enjoy a fairground ride. 
"We were on that ride where the seat spins while the actual ride is spinning, and I’m wearing a one-piece. And all of a sudden the whole entire top falls off!" Upton told the newspaper. "I’m holding myself, laughing, turning bright red, but a lot of people are watching, so they kicked us out of the Santa Monica pier – it was so embarrassing. You wouldn’t think that would happen with a one-piece!"

Decades-old military plane wreckage found in Alaska glacier, may give families closure

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The wreckage of a military plane found this month on an Alaska glacier is that of an Air Force plane that crashed in 1952, killing all 52 people aboard, military officials said Wednesday.
Army Capt. Jamie Dobson said evidence found at the crash site correlates with the missing C-124A Globemaster, but the military is not eliminating other possibilities because much investigation still needs to be done.
Processing DNA samples from relatives of those on board the plane could take up to six years, Dobson said.
"We're still at the very beginning of this investigation," she said. "This is very close to the starting line, not the finish line."
The Alaska National Guard discovered the wreckage and possibly bones June 10 on Colony Glacier, about 40 miles east of Anchorage. 
The wreckage was spotted soon after the heavy transport plane vanished Nov. 22, 1952, with 41 passengers and 11 crew members, but it became buried in snow and likely churned beneath the surface of the glacier for decades, Dobson said.
"The ice gives up what it wants to give up when it wants to give it up. It's really in control."
- Army Capt. Jamie Dobson
"The ice gives up what it wants to give up when it wants to give it up," she said. "It's really in control."
The plane went down on a flight from McChord Air Force Base in Washington state.
An Associated Press report on Nov. 24, 1952, said the Globemaster was the third big Air Force transport plane to crash or vanish in Alaska that month and the sixth around the Pacific Rim.
Soon after the crash, a 12-member military team tried three times to make it to the site, but was thwarted by bad weather, said Tonja Anderson, whose grandfather Isaac Anderson was among those on board the doomed flight. The 41-year-old Tampa, Fla., woman has researched the crash for 12 years since her grandmother, now deceased, gave her details of the airman who died at age 21, leaving behind a young widow and 1 1/2-year-old son.
"I'm overwhelmed," Anderson said Wednesday about the positive identification. It's something she has tried to long get from the military, she said, only to be told that recovering the remains from the plane's hidden grave was unfeasible and would be too expensive.
"If they can bring me one bone of my grandfather or his dog tag, that would be closure for me," she said.
Days after the Globemaster went down, a member of the Fairbanks Civil Air Patrol, along with a member of the 10th Air Rescue Squadron, landed at a glacier in the area and positively identified the wreckage as the Globemaster.
According to an AP account, the civil air patrol member was Terris Moore, who was president of the University of Alaska. After returning from the site, he told reporters that the plane "obviously was flying at full speed" when it hit Mount Gannett, sliding down the snow-covered cliffs, exploding and disintegrating over two or three acres.
Only the tail and flippers of the craft were intact, but the tail numbers were enough for an identification. Moore said blood was found on a piece of blanket and there was a "sickly-sweet smell of death."
The debris was discovered June 14 while Alaska National Guardsmen were flying a Blackhawk helicopter during a training mission near the glacier. The guardsmen flew over the area several times.
Federal aviation officials implemented temporary flight restrictions over the area while the military investigation was conducted.
An eight-man Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command arrived last week, military officials said. It completed its work Tuesday at the glacier.
The team recovered materials like a life-support system from the wreckage and possible bones from the glacier. The evidence was being taken to the command's lab in Hawaii for analysis.

The 9 youngest billionaires in the world

The 9 youngest billionaires in the world
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Germany must battle Italy's trump card


Cesare Prandelli remembers where he was when Italy beat West Germany 4-3 in the semifinals of the World Cup in 1970. How can anyone forget the Partita del Secolo or "Game of the Century?"
"For us kids who were 14 at the time, it was the game," the current Italy coach recalled. "I watched it at home on TV with my father, and it was the greatest emotion I’d got from football."
That encounter at Mexico City’s Estadio Azteca remains iconic for so many reasons, such as the great Franz Beckenbauer playing with a sling after dislocating his shoulder. Then, of course, there was the incredible scoreline: Roberto Boninsegna–Karl-Heinz Schnellinger–Gerd Müller–Tarcisio Burgnich–Gigi Riva–Gerd Müller–Gianni Rivera all scored in that order. It was a thriller.
A précis of what happened is enough to give a sense of the occasion. Italy was 1-0 up but conceded an equalizer in the last minute. West Germany then went ahead 2-1 in extra time, but Italy managed to get back on level terms and restore its lead at 3-2. Digging deep within themselves, the West Germans found another equalizer and it was 3-3. Yet, Italy replied almost immediately and ended victorious.
Later generations in Italy have had their own "Where were you when we beat Germany?" moments to speak of. After all, they have provided the nation’s football history with some of its finest chapters. Leaf through it and, after 1970, there’s the 1982 World Cup final, another triumph for Italy, this time 3-1, with the memory of Marco Tardelli’s splendid goal and his overwrought celebration.
Then, more recently, there was the 2006 World Cup semifinal won in extra time again by Italy. Fabio Grosso did his best Tardelli impression after opening the scoring, and then Alessandro Del Piero made sure of the result, finishing off a wonderful counterattack. To make matters worse, it happened on German soil at the tournament they hosted. The "summer fairy tale," as they called it, was over.
"We still have that game in our heads," Germany captain Philipp Lahm admitted. Along with several of his teammates, he would have preferred to meetEngland in the Euro 2012 semifinals.
"Italy are better than England," Lahm added. "They’re more cunning, better prepared tactically, more difficult to beat. But with four wins in a row, we have shown that it’s difficult to stop us."
Italy never has lost to Germany in a major tournament. In addition to that, its record in semifinals is formidable. Taking all of the Italians' appearances at this stage of the World Cup and European Championship into account, they have played 10, won eight and lost only twice. It’s a source of confidence, for sure, but how much should be read into it?
When reminded of it at Tuesday’s news conference, Germany coach Joachim Löw said: "So what? This isn’t an issue for our young players." He has a point. Only Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Lukas Podolski and Miroslav Klose remain from the team that suffered the heartbreaking defeat to Italy six years ago. The new breed is a fearless bunch.
"They are very strong, superbly organized. . . . But if we play to our full potential, we will come out winners," Mesut Özil claimed. "We are the team to beat," boasted teammate Marco Reus.
He is not wrong. The Germans have won 15 competitive matches in a row. The style and panache with which they have gone about putting that streak together has commanded respect. Regardless of how well Italy played against England, no one is under any illusion whatsoever as to whom the favorite is for Thursday’s game in Warsaw.
Reasons for Italy to be apprehensive start first and foremost with its glaring inability to make the most of the goalscoring opportunities it creates. So far, the Italians have had 87 shots at Euro 2012, 50 of which have been on target. On both counts, that’s comfortably more than any other team. And yet, their conversion rate stands at just 4.6 percent, the worst of those left in the competition.
Another issue raised has been how Germany has benefited from two extra rest days. "It’s a big difference at this moment in time, and there’s little we can do about it," Prandelli said. "The handicap from a physical fitness point of view can’t be made up. Playing a semifinal with a similar disparity is not synonymous with entertainment. In the future, UEFA should think carefully about this schedule problem."
Prandelli is justified in feeling aggrieved. Before this tournament, there were only two previous matches in which a team enjoyed two more rest days than its opponent and those were the semifinals of Euro 2004. On that occasion, the sides that enjoyed more recovery time, Portugal and Greece, beat those who had had less, Holland and the Czech Republic.

And yet, while disadvantaged, Italy is not fixating on it.
"We can play a great game," Prandelli insisted. "They are a very strong team. They have a tried-and-tested system and more time to recover, but unbeatable teams don’t exist. We’ll study everything and try to hit their few weak points. Of course we’ll try to make the game. We won’t defend in our penalty area. I prefer to concede a goal on the counterattack than suffer in defense for 90 minutes."
Italy did well when it last met Germany in a friendly in February 2011. It showed character by rallying to come back from behind and had two clear penalties denied in a 1-1 draw in Dortmund.
While there were many changes by both teams in the second half and a bad pitch that slowed things down a bit, Italy wasn’t what Germany expected and was able to surprise with a positive approach.
Much encouragement can be drawn from that encounter, even if a lot of the personnel has changed. Still, it will be interesting to discover what either side learned from that experience. At the time, Prandelli said, "We’re not quite at their level yet, but we’ve closed the gap."
So to what extent, then, is Italy any nearer today? We’ll find the answer to that out on Thursday. As for Germany, it will no doubt be hoping that newspaper Bild doesn’t have cause to ask the same question it did of Löw after that friendly 18 months ago.
"Jogi, why can’t we beat the Italians?"

Lol Pics of Celeberties

Tuesday, June 26, 2012



For this photo of Sofia Vergara eating an ice cream cone, we asked our Facebook fans to submit a caption. This week's winner is, Madison Bailey Britt, who wrote, ‎"It's okay, this ice cream will go to my size 8 hips, not my size 2 waist.





Note to all celebrities: Pretending to be a ghost to avoid paparazzi doesn't really work. Just ask the Ghost of Alec Baldwin.





Not all people are mature enough to take care of a real pet, but practicing on an inflatable penguin is a good way to learn necessary skills, as Snooki demonstrates.







Alessandra Ambrosio models the Victoria's Secret gang look: $300 bandanna, over-sized T-shirt with your picture on it, and narcissistic hand signals.





Sorry, Heidi, no matter how much makeup and training you give to this guy, he'll just never come close to supermodel status.





Even legendary boxers get nosebleeds at inopportune times… Like when they're hanging out with Gene Simmons. Luckily, Mike Tyson brought along his Hello Kitty toilet paper.

Man restores stone house from $15K to $2M price tag

​House-flipping is an art that seems to have declined since the 2008 housing crisis, but this Nova Scotia house that's just gone to market is quite possibly the epoch's masterpiece. Sherman Heines bought an unimpressive stone house in 1982 in Nova Scotia for $15,000, and it's now on  the market for a whopping $2 million. No, it wasn't adding a pool or bowling alley that raised the market value; it was Heines' realization that the house was actually an ancient, fortified church from 1699. He dedicated himself to carefully restoring the house and tracking down period furniture (included in the asking price), a 30-year labor of love that's made the house a gem -- and may make Heines a fortune.


Built in 1699, this home known as 'The Mission' in Poplar Grove, Nova Scotia, Canada, is on the market (© Sherman Hines)

Italy's Simone Pepe Performs World Cup's First-Ever Tricycle Kick

Monday, June 25, 2012

Report: People Talking About Soccer, But There’s No World Cup This Year So It Must Be Something Else

According to a report released Friday, which noted a considerable increase in the number of people talking about soccer throughout the United States, this is not the year of a World Cup, so there must be something else going on. "Our research definitely shows a measurable increase in soccer-related conversations, Facebook updates, and tweets, which would be a perfectly natural occurrence around the time of a World Cup. However, that’s still two years away, so we’re really stumped," said Dr. Galen Clavio, a professor of sports communication at Indiana University, adding that hours of research also affirmed the increased soccer talk is not at all related to the upcoming London Olympics. "The current leading theory is that one of the famous soccer guys might have died, but the chatter only seems to be increasing rather than diminishing over time." Stating that they hope to have a definite answer within the coming week, researchers said there remains a strong likelihood that Americans were simply confusing soccer and hockey.


Topless painter shocks Thais with bare-breasted performance on TV talent show

Thailand's Ministry of Culture is investigating whether a TV talent show broke censorship laws after one of its contestants painted a canvas with her breasts, The European Pressphoto Agency reports.
Duangjai Jansaunoi, 23, drew a yellow outline of a man on a canvas, stripped off her shirt, poured paint over her breasts and proceeded to fill in the picture.

Alligator caught in Connecticut River; it's unknown where it came from


A 2- to 3-foot-long alligator wearing a collar that was roaming a residential neighborhood in Enfield, Conn., has been caught near the Connecticut River.
It was at a bus stop, according to the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.Enfield police Sgt. Mark Squires told The Journal Inquirer of Manchester that authorities were called out around 7 a.m. Friday after the alligator was seen in the Thompsonville section of town.
A representative from the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection responded to the situation, along with animal control officers and Enfield police.It was wearing a collar, but there was no leash. It was not immediately clear where the animal came from.
No injuries were reported and the animal wil be brought to Rainforest Reptiles, an education facility in Massachusetts.
It is illegal in the state of Connecticut to own alligators, crocodiles or caimans.  They are on the list of exotic animals prohibited in the state.
 

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