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'Ferrara's book is an introduction to writing as a process of
revelation, but it's also a celebration of these things still
undeciphered, and many other tantalising mysteries besides.' The
Spectator This book tells the story of our greatest invention. Or,
it almost does. Almost, because while the story has a beginning -
in fact, it has many beginnings, not only in Mesopotamia, 3,100
years before the birth of Christ, but also in China, Egypt and
Central America - and it certainly has a middle, one that snakes
through the painted petroglyphs of Easter Island, through the great
machines of empires and across the desks of inspired, brilliant
scholars, the end of the story remains to be written. The invention
of writing allowed humans to create a record of their lives and to
persist past the limits of their lifetimes. In the shadows and
swirls of ancient inscriptions, we can decipher the stories they
sought to record, but we can also tease out the timeless truths of
human nature, of our ceaseless drive to connect, create and be
remembered. The Greatest Invention chronicles an uncharted journey,
one filled with past flashes of brilliance, present-day scientific
research and the faint, fleeting echo of writing's future.
Professor Silvia Ferrara, a modern-day adventurer who travels the
world studying ancient texts, takes us along with her; we touch the
knotted, coloured strings of the Incan khipu and consider the case
of the Phaistos disk. Ferrara takes us to the cutting edge of
decipherment, where high-powered laser scanners bring tears to an
engineer's eye, and further still, to gaze at the outline of
writing's future. The Greatest Invention lifts the words off every
page and changes the contours of the world around us - just keep
reading. 'The Greatest Invention is a celebration not of
achievements, but of moments of illumination and "the most
important thing in the world: our desire to be understood".' TLS
 This book aims to provide methods, protocols, and discussion
topics for those who wish to examine in depth the molecular
mechanisms of adaptation and versality of bacteria and would like
to envisage their evolution responses in the fast changing
Antropocene.Written in the highly successful Methods in Molecular
Biology series format, chapters include introductions to their
respective topics, lists of the necessary materials and reagents,
step-by-step, readily reproducible laboratory protocols, and key
tips on troubleshooting and avoiding known pitfalls.Â
Authoritative and cutting-edge, Pseudomonas aeruginosa: Methods and
Protocols aims to be a useful and practical guide to new
researchers and experts looking to expand their knowledge.
This volume is the first comprehensive archaeological catalogue of
all the extant inscriptions written in the un-deciphered syllabary
of Late Bronze Age Cyprus (1500-1200 BC): the so-called
Cypro-Minoan script. In conjunction with Cypro-Minoan Inscriptions
Volume 1: Analysis, this volume focuses on the physical reality of
the inscribed objects containing Cypro-Minoan and the
archaeological contexts in which they were found. Offering a
detailed, systematic, and rigorous examination of both the objects
and their functions in the material record, it proposes a new way
of examining the inscriptions. This comprehensive standpoint
therefore considers not only the inscriptions themselves, but more
importantly the contexts and functions of the inscribed objects,
which are significant for the documentary evidence they bear and
the part they play as physical entities manufactured, shaped, and
used by past peoples for a defined purpose. Organized in a
catalogue format, each object is analysed, illustrated, and
accompanied by a detailed commentary on the context of recovery and
typological characteristics with full bibliographical references.
While a standalone reference work, it aims to showcase the
inscribed objects discussed in Volume 1: Analysis, fully
illustrating them in a series of photographs, including 50 colour
plates, and drawings.
This volume offers the first comprehensive examination of an
ancient writing system from Cyprus and Syria known as Cypro-Minoan.
After Linear B was deciphered by Michael Ventris in 1952, other
un-deciphered scripts of the second millennium BC from the Aegean
world (Linear A) and the Eastern Mediterranean (Cypro-Minoan)
became the focus of those trying to crack this ancient and
historical code. Despite several attempts for both syllabaries,
this prospect has remained unrealized. This is especially true for
Cypro-Minoan, the script of Late Bronze Age Cyprus found also at
Ugarit in Syria, which, counting no more than 250 inscriptions,
remains not only poorly documented, but also insufficiently
explored in previous scholarship. Today progress in the study of
this enigmatic script demands that we direct our attention to
gaining new insight through a contextual analysis of Cypro-Minoan
by tracing its life in the archaeological record and investigating
its purpose and significance in the Cypriot and Syrian settlements
that created and used it. With a new methodology concentrating on a
ground-breaking contextual approach, Ferrara presents the first
large-scale study of Cypro-Minoan with an analysis of all the
inscriptions through a multidisciplinary perspective that embraces
aspects of archaeology, epigraphy, and palaeography.
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