|  |  |  | 5-Lost and Found
 
     Here are some information about the things which have been lost long time ago, 
     but now are starting to appear.... (1) The White City of GoldFrom 
White City of Gold  6/3/2013
 According to legend, The legend of El Dorado and the "Lost City of Gold" 
       has obsessed historians and explorers for almost five hundred years. "Ciudad 
       Blanca" or the "White City" is full of gold and has been sought out 
       by explorers and treasure hunters since conquistador Hernando Cortes first made 
       reference to it in a 1526 letter to King Charles V of Spain. Texts cite it as the 
       birthplace of the Aztec god Quetzalcoatl and previous reported sightings over the 
       years have described golden idols and elaborately carved white stones, leading to 
       the lost city's name. However, no confirmation of the existence of the city has ever 
       been provided.
 
       We may never be able to tell whether any of these are Ciudad Blanca, or whether the 
       legendary city ever existed, but we can clearly see in the UTL data evidence that 
       there was a densely settled region with a human modified environment. These conclusions 
       provide important new insights into the pre-Hispanic settlement of this largely 
       unexplored region. Text's cite it as the birthplace of the Aztec god Quetzalcoatl and 
       previous reported sightings over the years have described golden idols and elaborately 
       carved white stones, leading to the lost city's name. 10,000 Years Old Mammoth Frozen Blood Found: Cloning PlanedFrom  
Mammoth Blood   6/3/2013
 It’s not April Fool’s, is it? Scientists working on an island in Siberia 
    have announced that they found a frozen woolly mammoth carcass estimated to 
    be at least 10,000 years old and, more shockingly, liquid mammoth blood. The 
    finding seems to defy reason, because conditions in the Lyakhovsky Islands, 
    off the northern coast of Siberia, were quite cold - in the low teens 
    Fahrenheit. But when one of the researchers poked at the carcass with an ice 
    axe, blood squirted out. “It can be assumed that the blood of mammoths had 
    some cryo-protective properties,” said Semyon Grigoriev, chairman of the 
    university’s Museum of Mammoths and head of the expedition. “The blood is 
    very dark, it was found in ice cavities below the belly and when we broke 
    these cavities with a pick, the blood came running out.” The Russians are 
    calling the female, who was 50 to 60 years old when she died, the best 
    preserved mammoth specimen in the history of paleontology. Their theory is 
    that she fell into water, died, and was protected when it froze.
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