Archaeologists unearth the lost tomb of Genghis Khan(archaeology-world.com)
archaeology-world.com
Archaeologists unearth the lost tomb of Genghis Khan
https://archaeology-world.com/archaeologists-unearth-tomb-of-genghis-khan/
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This particular fake news was probably reposted to coincide with the anniversary of his death in August and associated search traffic.
So many red flags on that site / in that article!
Is there a better source for this? It would be a very big deal for historians and archaeologists but I just don’t trust this site.
The image they're using is from a 2013 excavation of a Sarmatian kurgan in the Urals: https://www.archaeology.wiki/blog/2013/09/12/the-life-of-the...
Wow this location was believed lost to history. If this is true it is a big deal.
https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20170717-why-genghis-khan...
https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20170717-why-genghis-khan...
Great article, thanks for sharing
Why are the fonts so strange in this article? Have we opened a tomb we shouldn’t have, summoning Zalgo?
Seriously caught off guard by this as well. It's not the fonts, it's the characters used:
- The ʀᴇмᴀιɴs of a tall male and sixteen female skeletons were identified among hundreds of gold and silver artefacts and thousands of coins.
- The women are presumed to have been wives and concubines of the leader, who were κιʟʟᴇᴅ to accompany the warlord in the afterlife. The amount of treasure and the number of sᴀcʀιғιcᴇᴅ animals and people immediately led the archaeologists to consider that the site was certainly the ʙuʀιᴇᴅ site of a really powerful Mongol warlord.
Not sure why certain "grim" words are in special characters.
- The ʀᴇмᴀιɴs of a tall male and sixteen female skeletons were identified among hundreds of gold and silver artefacts and thousands of coins.
- The women are presumed to have been wives and concubines of the leader, who were κιʟʟᴇᴅ to accompany the warlord in the afterlife. The amount of treasure and the number of sᴀcʀιғιcᴇᴅ animals and people immediately led the archaeologists to consider that the site was certainly the ʙuʀιᴇᴅ site of a really powerful Mongol warlord.
Not sure why certain "grim" words are in special characters.
It's to avoid the newspeak censorship filters.
Same reason 'unalived' is now a word.
Same reason 'unalived' is now a word.
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The fonts do not look so strange as the odd capitalisation like "The bodies BURIED at the site lukely DIED.." - really odd.
It's not just fonts or style, they're "hiding" weird Unicode code points in those words, I assume it's some form of SEO/filter-hopping technique, maybe to pass filters for shock videos (thus altering "grave" to "\u050d\u0280\u1d00v\u1d07", or Cyrillic Small Letter Komi Sje, Latin Letter Small Capital R, Latin Letter Small Capital A, v, Latin Letter Small Capital E). It makes it very hokey.
Seems fake.
The image in the header appears to have been passed around the internet and reused, but may originate here in 2013:
https://web.archive.org/web/20130912050353/http://www.pastho...
Is this algorithmic content?
There appear to be many websites copying this article and then later vanishing or redirecting to scam sites.