EarthChronicle.com
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Created April 6, 2005
Brown = Not Yet Built

Timelines
Primitive 500BC Ancient 500AD Medieval 1500 Renaissance 1750 Enlightenment 1900 Industrial 2000 Information
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Chronicle Subjects ( Alphabetical or Dewey ) Glossary   Site Index

Welcome to EarthChronicle.com...

If you have a question, hopefully we've answered it! Check our site for answers to all your questions, and if we don't have it, ask us. We take responsibility for answering your questions on ourselves.

If your internet search engine gives you 8,000,000 hits, but if you can't find what you want to know, it doesn't do you any good. At EarthChronicle.com, we'll do our best to answer all questions correctly and as quickly as we can via email. Given sufficient time we'll even be able to thoroughly research your question and add a more definitive answer to our website, where everyone will then have access to the answer. This is how we grow. If you'd like to help us answer people's questions or contribute, click here.

The first part of our mission is to provide access to public domain information that you can use in whatever way you need to. While we link freely to many different sites, any address that begins...

http://www.geocities.com/

is part of our website. Anything you find here is available free... free of charge and free for use. You can use the text and pictures you find here freely for whatever purposes you need to put it to.  No seeking permissions, no reading complicated legal jargon or website policies. However, if you plan to publish any material, for free or sale,  we do ask that you acknowledge the originator. We make it so easy by providing all references for everything on our site. So all you have to do is cut and paste to credit the hard work these individuals have made. For more information, click here to see our Philosophy.

The second part of our mission is to provide a home for a  growing community that hopes to offer everyone a glimpse into the breadth and depth of history.

What is history?

What isn't history? Politics, conquests, scientific advancment, art & culture, cooking, daily life... anything that has touched people's lives from the Big Bang to this moment as you read, is history. So anything you can see, anything you can do, anything you can know, or anything you can imagine will hopefully find a comfy place here, eventually.

But of course, you're at our starter site. We're not only inputing new content but testing our ability to actually build a website here. If you experience any glitches, we apologize but this is where we play, fail, and learn. Expect hiccups now and again, but don't hesitate to let us know if you have problems or find errors so that we can fix them ASAP.

Sadly, until we get some funding, we don't have a main site up yet. Hopefully, we'll be able to remedy this, but for now this is our website. If you'd like to send information or donations, drop a line to us at... 

So browse, enjoy, and contact us
if you have any questions. If you're interested in volunteering your time to help EarthChronicle.com grow, come learn what we need!

Have a Question? Ask Us!
Have an update, suggestion, or found an error?
We'll email you the answer and post it on our website!

Contact Info:
Name: chroniclemaster1
Email: thechronicle@thechronicle.com
Curiously Out of Place Stuff
Unanswered Questions (Updated weekly)

Top Unanswered Questions:

Answered Questions (Updated weekly)
EarthChronicle.com Central

Timelines

Map Central

Build EarthChronicle.com: Help Us Grow!

Reader's Guide to Pages of History

Annotated Bibliography / Reading List

Photo Credits


New!
The first of the SRTM maps are online! Physical Geography Maps are uploaded and located at
Map Central! (see above or click here)

Coming Soon
:D Hurray! We've found public domain Mercator maps compiled from elevation data taken by NASA and JPL's Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) in beautifully intricate color detail. The will be posted as soon as we can.
Now in New!
Fun Fact
Click Here for more Fun Facts

A Panda is a Bear.

Yes, its true. After 20 years of retraining my brain to call them "Giant Pandas" not "Panda Bears", I have to go back. *sigh* Pandas have a unique wrist and thumb structure for bears, and spots similar to red pandas around their eyes.  For years scientists thought these features put pandas closer to Family Procyonidae, which includes the raccoon and the red panda, instead of Family Ursus, the bears.

However, on a recent excursion to the San Diego Zoo I discovered that DNA analysis has now shown that Pandas really are closer to bears after all. The eye spots are not genetically related to red pandas at all but simply a parallel evolution due to environmental factors. I'm sure it'll only take 20 more years to sink in. QED.

(chroniclemaster1)

Useful Links:

Wikipedia (small search box on the left sidebar)

The Latin Libray (Ancient texts in Latin and English translations)

The Encyclopedia of Arda (great Lord of the Rings Site)

Literary Fairy Tales (Hans Christian Andersen, Arabian Nights, etc. at public domain site)

Encyclopedia Britannica Online

History Channel

Amazon.com (Online Bookstore)

CBS Sportsline

Olga's Gallery (Online Art Gallery)


You are visitor number This Day in History
10 Most Wanted List
(Our biggest questions to answer!)
For more detail - and upcoming questions - click here and see the end of the Website Log.

1. Institutional: What factors allowed Italy to generate the Renaissance, a movement so culturally advanced, that despite its political fragmentation and its depraved popes, it could bring Europe back into the front echelon of civilizations and poised to become the dominant culture that would colonize the globe?

2. Daily Life: What was housing like in various cultures and at different social conditions? (e.g. Pliny the Younger describes his Roman upper class villa in his letters)

3. Food: Trace the popularity of French high (formal?) cuisine from its origin through the present. Give special attention to its rise as an international fashion.

4. Military: Trace the inter-tribal wars of Genghis Khan prior to the tribes unification in 1206AD and how the Mongol military evolved after it embarked on its international campaigns.

5. Literature: Research Bram Stoker's writings relating to the naming of Dracula. Historical research has consistently failed in its attempts to equate Stoker’s vampire in any meaningful way with the historical Dracula, Vlad Tepes “the Impaler”, the Voivode of Wallachia. Yet it seems more than coincidence, and perhaps a sick joke that Stoker’s creature of the night which is only stopped by impaling it with a wooden stake, is named after the most infamous impaler in European history.

6. Sports: Why is the most famous and popular sport in the entire world, football, so casually disregarded and pathetically played by the US which musters world class talent in almost every other major sport? What programs (not teams) in the world today are truly world class and what do they do that makes them successful, from organization to techniques?

7. Physics: Many of the newest interpretations of the quantum mechanics of time suggest that time does not exist. What is the mechanism that causes us to think it does? What other interpretations, leave open a window for the existence of time in some form that closely resembles our experience?

8. Industrial: What kinds of studies are performed in modern industrial and commercial enterprises to optimize business performance?

9. Political: Trace the history of campaigning in the US with attention to the divisiveness of contests, especially presidential elections. How are US elections similar to and different from those of other nations? In what ways have polarization ultimately helped and hurt these countries?

10. Historical: Excluding Egypt, the development of Africa is not covered deeply in most textbooks. How did these areas develop? For the sake of a good argument ;), what level of complexity did Africa reach when it’s “natural” development was interrupted by the Europeans? Primitive? Medieval?