BAMBINO (BRIT-AM BIBLICAL ISRAEL NEWS ONLINE)
Discussion of the Bible, Biblical History, Lost Israelite Tribes Identity in the Light of the Bible and other matters relating to Scripture.
No.10
The name "Ephraim" in Hebrew Letters as Seen
by Satellite in the Hills of Ephraim
Present Issues
BRIT-AM BIBLICAL ISRAEL NEWS ONLINE
BAMBINO no. 10
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Contents:
1. Video Clip:
Comng
Out of Egypt and Crossing the Red Sea
2. Russ Curenton:
Geographical Physical Features can Change
3. Researchers: We know secret of Joseph's biblical pest control
4. Ancient serpent shows its leg
5. Maps for Bible Studies
1. Video Clip:
Comng Out of Egypt and Crossing the Red Sea
http://www.flix.co.il/tapuz/showVideo.asp?m=2237131
Nice, short and impressive.
Brought to our attention by Yehonatan Davidy
2. Russ
Curenton:
Geographical Physical Features can Change
Subject: Re: Brit-Am Now no. 1130
Mr. Broadbrooke says "Show me the 2 Bays mentioned in Joshua 15 if it
describes the area mentioned in Genesis 15."
present day geography, particularly dealing with rivers, shorelines, bays and
such are probably vastly different today than what they were in biblical
days...for instance, I believe Ur of the Chaldees was originally on the sea, but
nowadays, it is FAR inland, because of the land formed by the river as it erodes
into the sea...
3. Researchers: We know secret of
Joseph's biblical pest control
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/976643.html
by Ran Shapira, Haaretz Correspondent
The remains of a burnt beetle found in a grain of wheat about 3,500 years old
provided a group of researchers from Bar-Ilan University with a key to a
question the Bible left without a definite answer: How did Joseph the Dreamer,
who became the viceroy to the king of Egypt, succeed in preserving the grain
during the seven lean years and prevent Egypt's population from starving?
According to the description in the book of Genesis, during the seven years of
plenty in Egypt, Joseph had all the wheat collected in silos. "And he gathered
up all the food of the seven years which were in the land of Egypt, and laid up
the food in the cities; the food of
the field, which was round about every city, laid he up in the same. And Joseph
laid up grain as the sand of the sea, very much, until they left off numbering;
for it was without number" (Genesis 41, 48-49).
The stores of wheat and barley served the inhabitants of Egypt during the period
of drought and hunger that followed. But how did Joseph and the people of Egypt
succeed in preventing pests from destroying the inventory they had accumulated,
without any means of pest control and without being able to completely seal the
storehouses? In order to answer that question, Prof. Mordechai Kislev, Dr. Orit
Simhoni and Dr. Yoel Melamed from the laboratory for archaeological botany in
the Life Sciences department of BIU used the burnt corpse of the beetle from the
grain of wheat.
The beetle belongs to the Rhyzopertha dominica species, also known as the Lesser
Grain Borer, one of three insects that are among the most important storehouse
pests. These insects eat grain, but rather than doing so in the field, they
prefer to wait until humans harvest the
wheat or barley and store it in a silo.
The lesser grain borer can cause a tremendous amount of damage. Each female lays
between 300 and 500 eggs a month. In other words, one female can give birth to
thousands of offspring in one year. The larvae of the grain borer eat wheat or
barley. The pest can finish off a granary
within a very short time.
Fortunately, during the period when Joseph came to power in Egypt, the lesser
grain borer was only beginning its migration westward. This insect originated in
East Asia, in what is now India. It belongs to a family of insects whose larvae
bore into trees. The larvae of the grain borer changed their taste several
thousand years ago, when they began migrating westward, and since then they have
preferred wheat and barley.
The beetle studied by Dr. Simhoni and her partners was found in one grain of
wheat among several tens of thousands that were discovered in a dig at Tel Beit
She'an, conducted by Prof. Amihai Mazar of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
That granary was dated to the Middle Bronze Age II B, about the time when Joseph
was in Egypt. Various tests indicated that the
beetle from Tel Beit She'an is among the most ancient ever found in the Land of
Israel. So far, excavations have revealed only one other beetle from an earlier
period. In other words, during that period the lesser grain borer was just
beginning to spread in the Middle East.
Although their field of expertise is botany, the three researchers were familiar
with granary pests from their previous study of grains found in Tel Hadar, on
the shore of Lake Kinneret, north of Ein Gev. In the grain gathered at Tel Hadar
they found a large number of such pests.
When they examined the vestiges of the plants in the granary at Tel Beit She'an,
the three researchers came to the conclusion that the wheat had been harvested
in the Gilead region. The conclusion reminded Prof. Kislev of the caravan of
Ishmaelites that came from the Gilead, whose members bought Joseph from his
brothers and took him with them to Egypt (Genesis 36, 25-28).
Joseph, thanks to his talent as an interpreter of dreams and his cleverness,
quickly attained the rank of viceroy to the king and was appointed to run the
kingdom's food storehouses. His success at the job was based not only on his
talent for planning and his ability to see ahead, but also from the manner in
which the pests spread. The lesser grain borer was just starting its career in
Egypt when Joseph arrived there. Because of its phenomenal reproductive
capacity, storing one batch of grain containing a small population of the grain
borer was enough to bring about the destruction of the entire granary and to
threaten an entire city with starvation.
Kislev, Simhoni and Melamed believe that Joseph was aware of this and therefore
- according to the biblical description - he isolated the grain of each city in
its own jurisdiction and prevented the transfer of batches of grain from one
community to another. In their opinion,
that is the meaning of the verse: "and [he] laid up the food in the cities; the
food of the field, which was round about every city."
In spite of the lack of chemical means of pest control, they add, it is also
possible that those living in ancient Egypt were familiar with a simpler means
of pest control. They learned this from an explanation of the story by Rashi, an
11th century biblical commentator. "And people put amongst the grain some of the
earth of the place, and this prevents it from decaying," wrote Rashi.
According to the interpretation of the three researchers, Rashi was referring to
a method by which fine sand is added to the grain. The grains of sand scratch
the hard covering that surrounds the body of the beetle, and make it dry up and
die. This method is still used today by various African tribes, and we can
assume that it was sufficiently effective to exterminate a pest that had just
arrived in the region, like the lesser grain borer
4. Ancient serpent shows its leg
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7339508.stm
5. Maps for Bible Studies
http://tyndaletech.blogspot.com/2008/04/maps-geography-in-biblical-studies.html
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