Search Engine Optimization (SEO) with BlogTalkRadio

Entrepreneur published a great article today, 5 Easy Ways to Improve Your Site’s Search ...

Enhancing Your BlogTalkRadio Show with Cinch

BlogTalkRadio was launched in September of 2006 as the dream of a man and his father to give ...

Celebrating Ten Years of FLYing!

In today’s speed-of-light culture, it’s not very often we get to celebrate a 10th ...

 

Your show will start playing after this message

Profile

Ozman

http://www.oopaloopacafe.com


Country: United States

Language: English

Visit on MySpace


Listeners

  • Ozman
  • Marburg72
  • Paul Edward Montador
  • THOR
  • anastasia1
  • cathies DistantEchos
  • jewel22
  • Fiona L.
  • Myron David
  • Unraveling Secrets
  • Dennis Crenshaw
  • SIR MALACHI
  • Malley
  • AfterDark Radio
  • Uziel & Leisa
  • susieq1642
  • Rrocco
  • Omshantiom9
  • ReturnGuideBook.ca
  • TV TALK

Friends (63)

  • Uziel & Leisa
  • Missa Dixon
  • Timothy Hodge
  • KY. GrassRoots Radio
  • Savage Science
  • AmericanHeroesRadio
  • Susan Star
  • Fog City Psychic
  • JustDee
  • Hidden History Hour
  • ColoredPeople.net
  • JL Botelho
  • Gene On The Scene
  • Regulo Zapata Jr.
  • Laurie Carty
  • Debbie Your Show
  • CitadelBulldogHockey
  • Devin Norris
  • WDOVE
  • Mikel Classen

Comments

ColoredPeople.net

ColoredPeople.net

Thank you for stopping by!

Judy Joy Jones Show

Judy Joy Jones Show

Tks for listening to Dr. Michio Kaku on Judy Joy Jones Show! Much Continued success, Joy

((((Heart'nArt))))

((((Heart'nArt))))

Thanks 4 the add.. & the Show (((Peace, Love & Light)))

N-Syte, Inc.

N-Syte, Inc.

OOOH, this is really neat stuff!!! --Mrs. Intimacy of www.backtointimacy.com

BTR Shannon

BTR Shannon

Thanks for stopping by! You have a great show here!

Oopa Loopa Cafe  

Investigating pre-Columbian contact, lost races, ancient astronomy, navigation, and migration, cultural oddities, associated diffusion evidence and the truly unexplainable.

  • Upcoming Episodes

    Date / Time:

    Category: Science

    Call-in Number: (646) 652-2720


    Have researchers in Spain's Basque Country made the find of a lifetime, or committed a very expensive fraud? At a series of press conferences in his hometown, Eliseo Gil announced the discovery of several pottery sherds and other artifacts dating to around the third century a.d. with some remarkable graffiti scratched into them. One sherd depicted the Calvary scene, making it one of the oldest images of Christ's crucifixion. Some animal bones were engraved with the name of Egyptian queen Nefertiti, while inscriptions written in hieroglyphics and Latin appeared on other sherds. Also found were the earliest messages written in the Basque language. Sounds a lot like Burrows Cave stuff, doesn't it?

    Upcoming Episodes

    - Brian Kannard, True tales of Skullduggery

    - 2009 in Review

  • Featured Episode

    Date / Time:

    Category: Science


    Crystal and other local researchers have documented astronomical alignments and inscriptions in Kansas, the Land of Aahs. Crystal will describe the work and what they have been able to discern. Follow the slideshow (see "Kansas" in links list)
  • On Demand Episodes

    Original Air Date:

    Dr. Tom Van Flandern , REALLY out of place artifacts

    Tom Van Flandern received his Ph.D. degree in Astronomy, specializing in celestial mechanics (the theory of orbits), from Yale University in 1969. He spent 21 years (1963-1983) at the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C., became the Chief of the Celestial Mechanics Branch of the Nautical Almanac Office. During the past decade, Tom has been a Research Associate at the Univ. of Maryland Physics Department in College Park, MD, and a consultant to the Army

  • Original Air Date:

    More Monks' Mound building discussions

    Extensive labor pool, common purpose, single event, long distance trade and travel, collateral events and activities

  • Date / Time:

    Op/Ed: Tools of the Trade

    Op/EdTools of the Trade
     
    My words and how I choose them, string them together, punctuate them, pace them, or eat them, these are my tools. Well, these are my main tools. The internet and all it offers, for good or ill, is also an important toolbox. What I see as the most important tool in that particular toolbox is the vast network of diligent researchers who are willing to share their methods, data, and conclusion with the world. I don't always agree with them, but I am always willing to spend the time to read what they have to say. Sometimes, I would like to share with them another important tool in that box called a "spellchecker", but that doesn't, for me at least, detract from the importance of their work. These folks are the heart of the diffusion "community" and they deserve accolades for their work, ingenuity, and courage. Even when they are wrong, they should be commended for trying. When they are right, the results are even more unacceptable to some folks, mostly in the academic world, than when they are not completely correct in the conclusions drawn or methods used. The data almost always speaks for itself. I say "almost" because the ability to interpret data also plays an important role. Data that can be easily misinterpreted by a lay researcher might include ground penetrating radar, magnetometer, photographs, topographical forms and geo-location, linguistic forms, and skeletal evidence to name a few. Some tasks truly are best left to the specialists. Without ever having touched one before, I'm confident I could operate a ground penetrating radar set and acquire data with it, but interpreting that data with any level of proficiency is another matter altogether.
     
    A solid background in the "hard sciences", physics, chemistry, math, astronomy, etc., is one of the major enabling factors in validating data is this general area of study, at least with certain types of data. Those backgrounds mean little when working in linguistics, for example. But having a grasp of those "core" sciences is a major contributor to being skilled at interpreting data in general. I'm weak on that linguistics thing, but I'm fairly adept at the more technical data in general and  I am expert or on the verge of expertness in some specific areas. However, if I were in a position of interpreting data for publication, whether on the internet for other diffusionists or for some formal review by academia, and even within my areas of expertise, I would recruit other folks with requisite expertise to also interpret the data, just to add a level of validation and credibility. This is not only a good practice, it is an important part of scientific method. And without practicing scientific method, we will never have the ear of academia, whether our conclusions are correct or not.
     
    The conclusions (called synthesis in educational terms) is more than just repeating the results of the data reduction and validation phase, it is also providing predictions of future events or findings based on the outcome of the present work. Even academia and formal education lose sight of this on occasion. Some, particularly in the particle physics, climatology, and cosmology arenas, take it to an extreme well beyond what the data actually indicates and the result is sometimes wild claims that can neither be validated not debunked. I don't want that for this community. Conclusions should be reserved but assertive, self-contained, but open for constructive influence, self-consistent, but acknowledge variables and contradictory findings.
     
    These are the tools of the trade for diffusion research.
     
    This section is for you, the audience. You are welcome to contribute to it either as a letter to the editor or an editorial. Submit your "stuff" to

  • Date / Time:

    Movie notes: 10,000 BC

    I finally saw the film and I enjoyed it. The special effects were amazing and the acting was more than adequate.  One thing I found interesting was how the script and the producers set up the story with North American, Central American, and North African settings without ever crossing an ocean. Columbian mammoth used as beasts of burden in the North African desert. Interesting, but fantastic. Chucking a spear two hundred yards was a little fantastic, too. Still, I recommend seeing it.

  • Original Air Date:

    OLC Cahokia and Monks' Mound construction

    Diffusion discussions, Monks' Mound building, evidence of widespread organization

  • Original Air Date:

    Hugh Fox, Phoenicians in Central & South America

    Hugh Fox, author, researcher, scholar, identified clear evidence of Phoenician influence in tribes in Mexico, Peru, and Chile. He drew together evidence from Santiago Chile to Paris. He'll tell us about it and take questions.

Extras

Cyber Nations, a nation simulation game>
Subscribe to oopaloopacafe

Powered by us.groups.yahoo.com

National Explorers Day src="http://www.thepetitionsite.com/js/widget.js?petitionID=313441467">> Please read about Rick Osmon on the new Blog Writer website that Steve is launching called Ion Leap.

Everything Else

Listen

 

Participate

 

Services and Terms

 

Corporate

 

BlogTalkRadio

 

© 2009 BlogTalkRadio.com. All Rights Reserved.