Dear Fred,

 

my Polish sundial friend Krzysztof Kotynia today has kindly given two Polish links to me together with some further information about today’s newspaper-message.

 

Have a look at:

 

http://www.rzeczpospolita.pl/gazeta/wydanie_051104/nauka/nauka_a_1.html

 

and

 

http://www.rzeczpospolita.pl/gazeta/wydanie_051104/nauka/nauka_a_2.html

 

Best regards

Reinhold,

 

who is, as you know, living in Kopernikusstraße…

 

 

* ** *** **** ***** ****** *******

Reinhold R. Kriegler

 53° 6' 52,6" N,  8° 53' 52,3" E, GMT + 1 (Sommerzeit +2)

Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von Fred Sawyer
Gesendet: Freitag, 4. November 2005 21:16
An: Sundial List
Betreff: Copernicus

 

Copernicus' Grave Found in Polish Church

 

- - - - - - - - - - - -

 

November 03,2005 | WARSAW, Poland -- Polish archeologists believe they have

located the grave of 16th-century astronomer and solar-system proponent

Nicolaus Copernicus in a Polish church, one of the scientists announced

Thursday.

 

Copernicus, who died in 1543 at 70 after challenging the ancient belief that

the sun revolved around the earth, was buried at the Roman Catholic

cathedral in the city of Frombork, 180 miles north of the capital, Warsaw.

 

Jerzy Gassowski, head of an archaeology and anthropology institute in

Pultusk, central Poland, said his four-member team found what appears to be

the skull of the Polish astronomer and clergyman in August, after a one-year

search of tombs under the church floor.

 

"We can be almost 100 percent sure this is Copernicus," Gassowski told The

Associated Press by phone after making the announcement during a meeting of

scientists.

 

Gassowski said police forensic experts used the skull to reconstruct a face

that closely resembled the features -- including a broken nose and scar

above the left eye -- on a Copernicus self-portrait. The experts also

determined the skull belonged to a man who died at about age 70.

 

The grave was in bad condition and not all remains were found, Gassowski

said, adding that his team will try to find relatives of Copernicus to do

more accurate DNA identification.

 

(from the Associated Press)

 

Fred Sawyer

 

 

-

Reply via email to