PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Has the Mayan Crystal Skull Mystery Been Solved?

Wayne Sedawie, founder of Gemrockauctions.com, has been wholesaling and cut over a million gemstones and sold over 1000 crystal skulls and has an experienced understanding of all aspects of how a crystal skull could have been carved!

Has the Mayan Crystal Skull Mystery Been Solved?
2012-03-12
QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA, March 12, 2012 (Press-News.org) Gemstone dealer with over 20 years' experience investigates the mysterious Mayan crystal skull.

Wayne Sedawie, founder of Gemrockauctions.com, has been wholesaling and cut over a million gemstones and sold over 1000 crystal skulls and has an experienced understanding of all aspects of how a crystal skull could have been carved!

With in-depth gemstone knowledge and practical experience he has researched and investigated the crystal skull mystery and used his experience from operating Gemstone cutting factories, Opal mining operations and International gemstone wholesale and a recent trip to Chichen Itza in January 2012 to investigate the Ancient Mayan sites.

Firstly by studying the geography of the area he analysed where the Quartz could have been formed. This led him to some exploration findings and to the conclusion that the rough Quartz had to be outsourced out of the Mayan regions. The trail for the sourcing of Quartz lead to the investigation of the Mayan trading system and trade routes, the amazing and chilling rituals and religion of the ancient race, the ideal environmental conditions for the creation of Quartz, analysing what countries could have supplied the Quartz and where the crystal skull could have been made in the start of the century.

Other researchers failed to investigate how a crystal skull could have been made. With his knowledge and research he found out how at the start of the century craftsmen had existing techniques and were capable of cutting a crystal skull.

A skilled craftsman understands how to analyse rough quartz in a process called "stress test". This test eliminates any faults in the rough before carving commences and then with the use of pointers or calibrators the craftsman could obtain an exact copy from human skull and also with use of abrasion materials that were available at the time, so that a skull could be cut and polished. Through this information he has concluded with a high probability of who made the skull.

Website: http://www.gemrockauctions.com

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Has the Mayan Crystal Skull Mystery Been Solved? Has the Mayan Crystal Skull Mystery Been Solved? 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

After RI Supreme Court Win, Attorney Sworn into US Supreme Court Bar

2012-03-12
Rhode Island Attorney, David Slepkow, was honored to be sworn into the Exclusive United States Supreme Court Bar. This honor is a culmination of 15 years of Legal excellence by RI Auto Accident and Family Law Lawyer, David Slepkow. David is also honored to receive a Superb rating by AVVO, an industry leading Legal Information provider. This is the highest rating that AVVO awards to attorneys. Rhode Island Personal Injury Attorney David also was rated 4.9 out of 5, Preeminent by Martindale-Hubbell Client Review Rating. Martindale-Hubbell states the following on its ...

Study by UC Santa Barbara researchers suggests that bacteria communicate by touch

Study by UC Santa Barbara researchers suggests that bacteria communicate by touch
2012-03-05
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– What if bacteria could talk to each other? What if they had a sense of touch? A new study by researchers at UC Santa Barbara suggests both, and theorizes that such cells may, in fact, need to communicate in order to perform certain functions. The findings appear today in the journal Genes & Development. Christopher Hayes, UCSB associate professor of molecular, cellular, and development biology, teamed with graduate students Elie Diner, Christina Beck, and Julia Webb to study uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC), which causes urinary tract infections ...

IU biologists offer clearer picture of how protein machine systems tweak gene expression

IU biologists offer clearer picture of how protein machine systems tweak gene expression
2012-03-05
Indiana University biologists have found that specific types of RNA polymerase enzymes, the molecular machines that convert DNA into RNA, can differ in function based on variation in the parts -- in this case protein subunits -- used to assemble those machines. The new findings on the synthesis and function of different RNA polymerases (Pols), including two RNA polymerases that lead author Craig Pikaard discovered over a decade ago -- the plant-specific enzymes Pol IV and Pol V -- indicate that subunit composition of the polymerases plays a role in selecting how some ...

Vitamin D shrinks fibroid tumors in rats

2012-03-05
Treatment with vitamin D reduced the size of uterine fibroids in laboratory rats predisposed to developing the benign tumors, reported researchers funded by the National Institutes of Health. Uterine fibroids are the most common noncancerous tumors in women of childbearing age. Fibroids grow within and around the wall of the uterus. Thirty percent of women 25 to 44 years of age report fibroid-related symptoms, such as lower back pain, heavy vaginal bleeding or painful menstrual periods. Uterine fibroids also are associated with infertility and such pregnancy complications ...

Turning off small RNA

Turning off small RNA
2012-03-05
For the last dozen years, scientists have known that minuscule strings of genetic material called small RNA are critically important to our genetic makeup. But finding out what they do hasn't been easy. Now a scientist from Michigan Technological University and his team have developed a way to turn off small RNAs and find out just how important they can be. When it comes to inheritance, DNA is just the half of it. What we are is also driven by the epigenetic world of RNA: the countless, twisting molecules that DNA churns out. RNA in turn transforms the amino acid soup ...

New pathway found for regulation of blood vessel growth in cancer

2012-03-05
Researchers at Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University have identified a new function for a gene that normally prevents the development of cancer. Scientists had known that the gene, which encodes a protein called p14 ARF, works inside the cell to control proliferation and division. A team led by Erwin Van Meir, PhD, discovered that p14 ARF also regulates tumor-induced angiogenesis, the process by which growing cancers attract new blood vessels. The findings, published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, provide insight into how cancers form and progress, ...

Simulator computes evacuation scenarios for major events

Simulator computes evacuation scenarios for major events
2012-03-05
VIDEO: The new simulation program represents every individual in a ten-thousand crowd and shows color-coded crowd densities. Click here for more information. At twenty past five on Saturday evening in the German city of Kaiserslautern, 40,000 rival soccer fans pour out of the Fritz-Walter stadium after the final whistle has been blown on a league game. All of the fans are either heading to the parking lots or train stations. Even without any incidents, this is a difficult ...

March 2012 story tips

2012-03-05
ENERGY -- Designing tomorrow's water heater . . . Consumers and the environment could ultimately be the beneficiaries of a high-efficiency CO2 heat pump water heater concept being researched by General Electric and Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Through a cooperative research and development agreement, GE and ORNL are designing a prototype residential water heater that will feature an energy factor of greater than 2.0 with a first hour rating of more than 50 gallons. If the design proves to be technically and economically viable, it could ultimately result in a commercial ...

Mobile mayhem

2012-03-05
First, the bad news: all across America, trucks and tractor-trailers are transporting industrial explosives on nearly every artery of the country's interstate and highway system. That's right, volatile explosives, including munitions, rocket motors, and dynamite, are moving at a high rate of speed down a roadway not too far from you. Now, the good news: America's track record in transporting these materials is about as safe as they come. Very rarely, almost never in fact, are the potential dangers of these transports realized, largely due to instituted safeguards that ...

Research reveals first evidence of hunting by prehistoric Ohioans

2012-03-05
Cleveland . . . Cut marks found on Ice Age bones indicate that humans in Ohio hunted or scavenged animal meat earlier than previously known. Dr. Brian Redmond, curator of archaeology at The Cleveland Museum of Natural History, was lead author on research published in the Feb. 22, 2012 online issue of the journal World Archaeology. Redmond and researchers analyzed 10 animal bones found in 1998 in the collections of the Firelands Historical Society Museum in Norwalk, Ohio. Found by society member and co-author Matthew Burr, the bones were from a Jefferson's Ground Sloth. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Why a life-threatening sedative is being prescribed more often for seniors

Findings suggest that certain medications for Type 2 diabetes reduce risk of dementia

UC Riverside scientists win 2025 Buchalter Cosmology Prize

SETI Institute opens call for nominations for the 2026 Tarter Award

Novel theranostic model shows curative potential for gastric and pancreatic tumors

How beige fat keeps blood pressure in check

Fossils reveal ‘latitudinal traps’ that increased extinction risk for marine species

Review: The opportunities and risks of AI in mental health research and care

New map reveals features of Antarctic’s ice-covered landscape

Beige fat promotes healthy vascular function and blood pressure in mice

Chronic low-dose pesticide exposure reduces the life span of wild lake fish, China-based study shows

Tiny earthquakes reveal hidden faults under Northern California

Long-term pesticide exposure accelerates aging and shortens lifespan in fish

Professor Tae-Woo Lee's research group develops groundbreaking perovskite display technology demonstrating the highest efficiency and industry-level operational lifetime

The “broker” family helps tidy up the cell

Ecology: Mummified cheetahs discovery gives hope for species’ Arabic reintroduction

Researchers survey the ADHD coaching boom

Air pollution and cardiac remodeling and function in patients with breast cancer

Risk of suicide in patients with traumatic injuries

Post–intensive care syndrome

The lifesaving potential of opioid abatement funds

The Frontiers of Knowledge Award goes to Allan MacDonald and Pablo Jarillo-Herrero for their discovery of the “magic angle” enabling science to transform and control the behavior of new materials

Discovery reveals how keto diet can prevent seizures when drugs fail

JMIR Publications and Sikt announce pilot flat-fee unlimited open access partnership

Finding new cell markers to track the most aggressive breast cancer in blood

A new, cleaner way to make this common fertilizer

Fire-safe all-solid-state batteries move closer to commercialization

Disinfecting drinking water produces potentially toxic byproducts — new AI model is helping to identify them

Unplanned cesarean deliveries linked to higher risk of acute psychological stress after childbirth

Healthy aging 2026: fresh pork in plant-forward diets supported strength and brain-health biomarkers in older adults

[Press-News.org] Has the Mayan Crystal Skull Mystery Been Solved?
Wayne Sedawie, founder of Gemrockauctions.com, has been wholesaling and cut over a million gemstones and sold over 1000 crystal skulls and has an experienced understanding of all aspects of how a crystal skull could have been carved!