Monday, July 30, 2007

East Asian Writing Systems


General History of Chinese Scripts
• A good overview of the history of Chinese (and related) scripts on Wikipedia.

A nice webpage that displays the different types of Chinese scripts.

Gallery examples of the different types of Chinese scripts.

A webpage with some references and materials about early Chinese bamboo books (pre-paper / pre-AD 100).

• Wieger, Chinese Characters: Their Origin, Etymology, History, Classification and Significance. Dover Publications, 1927, 1965. Amazon.com link (recommended by David Djerum - thanks David!)

• A nice Chinese translation page. (submitted by David Djerum - thanks again David!).


The "Jiahu Script" (written on tortoise shell) found in China, dated to ca. 6,600 - 6,200 BC
BBC News overview of the discovery


Chinese "Oracle Bone Script" - 1,200 - 1,050BC
• A nice website that describes the orthography and history of Chinese Oracle Bone Script and Modern Chinese Script. A quote from the author regarding the independent innovation of writing in China:
"There is involved here a sort of chauvinistic scholarship that seeks to prove an independent invention for Chinese writing by methodologically suspect means."

• Keightley, David N. Sources of Shang History: The Oracle-Bone Inscriptions of Bronze Age China. Univ of California Press, 1999. Amazon.com link


Japanese Scripts
Katakana - a syllabary often used for spelling (foreign words)
An interesting Wikipedia list of Japanese Katakana transcriptions of foreign words and names.

Kanji - logograms borrowed from Chinese scripts; representing word stems
A small introductory list of Japanese Kanji stems
An immense Wikipedia inventory of Kanji (ordered by the number of 'strokes').
Note: The root "mirror/reflect" has 23 strokes!

Family Tree (download)
Here's a downloadable 'family tree' I generated of this writing system family - this tree only represents a small number of the writing systems that constitute this family. Click on the image to enlarge, then right-click to download.

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Writing In Ancient Mesoamerica


The Controversial Claim (by Han Ping Chen) of a Relationship Between Mesoamerican and Chinese Writing Systems
Article by U.S. News

Academic bulletinboard discussion about Han Ping Chen's claims


Decipherment of the Recently Discovered Writing System at Teotihuacán, Mexico
• King, Timothy and Sergio Gómez-Chávez "Avances en el Desciframiento de la Escritura Jeroglífica de Teotihuacan" (pp. 201-244) in La costa del Golfo en tiempos teotihuacanos: propuestas y perspectivas - Memoria de la Segunda Mesa redonda de Teotihuacan, María Elena Ruiz Gallut and Arturo Pascual Soto eds. Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Mexico, 2004.

• Taube, Karl "The Writing System of Ancient Teotihuacan" in Ancient America1. Center for Ancient American Studies, 2000. Amazon.com link Publisher link


The Writing System of the Early Zapotecs
• Joyce Marcus. Mesoamerican Writing Systems: Propaganda, Myth, and History in Four Ancient Civilizations. Princeton University Press, 1992. Amazon.com link


The Recently Discovered Olmec "Cascajal Block" Text
A nice downloadable (PDF) overview of the Cascajal Block on Mesoweb.com

The Wikipedia article on the Cascajal Block Text (includes illustration of the glyphic text).


The Earliest (Securely) Dated Writing in Mesoamerica - Materials from the Olmec Site of San Andrés
• Mary Pohl, Kevin Pope, and Christopher von Nagy. "Olmec Origins of Mesoamerican Writing" in Science vol. 289: 1984-1987, 2002.


The Decipherment of Epi-Olmec (late Olmec) Writing at the Site of La Mojarra
• John S. Justeson and Terrence Kaufman. "A Decipherment of Epi-Olmec Hieroglyphic Writing" in Science vol. 259: 1703-1711, 1993.


Maya Hieroglyphic Writing
A good history of the decipherment of Maya hieroglyphic writing
• Michael Coe. Breaking the Maya Code. Thames and Hudson, NY, 1992. Amazon.com link

A few great books on how to read Maya hieroglyphic writing
• John F. Harris and Stephen K. Stearns. Understanding Maya Inscriptions: A Hieroglyph Handbook. The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia, 1997. Amazon.com link

• Michael Coe and Mark van Stone. Reading The Maya Glyphs. Thames and Hudson, NY, 2001. Amazon.com link

• John Montgomery. How to Read Maya Hieroglyphs. Hippocrene Books Inc, NY, 2004. Amazon.com link

Catalogs and dictionaries of Maya hieroglyphs
• J. Eric S. Thompson. A Catalog of Maya Hieroglyphs. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, 1962. Amazon.com link

• John Montgomery. Dictionary of Maya Hieroglyphs. Hippocrene Books Inc., NY, 2002. Amazon.com link

• John F. Harris. New and Recent Maya Hieroglyph Readings: A Supplement to Understanding Maya Inscriptions. The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia, 1993. Amazon.com link


Great Online Resources
• An amazing online photo database of Maya illustrated ceramics by Justin Kerr - Link

• An amazing online photo database of Mesoamerican artifacts by Justin Kerr - Link

Friday, July 20, 2007

Tattooing and Early Symbol Systems on the Human Body


Materials on the Tattoos of the Mummified Man 'Ötzi', Found in the Tyrolean Alps
• K. Spindler The Man in the Ice : The Preserved Body of a Neolithic Man Reveals the Secrets of the Stone Age. Phoenix Books, London. Amazon.com link

An article abstract on the possible medical purpose of the tattoos of Ötzi (translated from French).

An acupuncturist's analysis of the tattoos of Ötzi.


Materials on the History of Tattooing / Tattooing Across Cultures
• Steve Gilbert. The Tattoo History Sourcebook. Powerhouse Books, 2001. Amazon.com link

• Maarten Hesselt van Dinter. The World of Tattoo: An Illustrated History. KIT Publishers, 2005. Amazon.com link

Non-Linguistic Communication



Efforts at Universal (Human and Beyond Human) Communication:
The Pioneer 10 and 11 Plaques

The Arecibo Broadcast

The 'Arecibo Broadcast' - SETI Website

'Cosmic Call 2003' Interstellar Radio Message

The 'Encounter 2001 Broadcast' (perhaps the most scientific and reasonable interstellar broadcast to date; would make a great term paper subject).

The Yucca Mountain Nuclear Waste Repository
The Official Government Site

Markers For the Nuclear Waste Repository

The Desert Space Foundation's "Universal Warning Sign" Exhibition and Gallery

Science Fiction
• An image of 'Hieroglyphics' designed for the 1979 science fiction thriller 'Alien' by Swiss artist H. R. Giger [WARNING: much of Giger's artwork is quite graphic, some may find it offensive]

The Eye, Color Vision, and Color and Culture



Here is a working list of articles and resources for understanding vision, color perception, and cultural relationships with both:

The Evolution and History of the Eye and Color Vision:
• R. D. Russell, "Evoltuion of Eyes" Current Opinion in Neurobiology 10: 444-450, 2000.

• J. Neitz et al., "Color Vision: Almost Reason Enough for Having Eyes," Optics and Photonics News Jan: 26-33, 2001.

• J. Nathans et al., "Molecular Genetics of Human Color Vision: The Genes Encoding Blue, Green, and Red Pigments," Science 232: 193-202, 1986.

• C.W. Oyster, The Human Eye: Structure and Function. Sinauer Associates, Inc. Sunderland, MA, 1999. Amazon.com link

• G.H. Jacobs, "The Distribution and Nature of Colour Vision Among the Mammals," Biological Reviews 68: 413-71, 1993.

• Y. Gilad et al., "Loss of Olfactory Receptor Genes Coincides With Acquisition of Full Trichromatic Vision in Primates," PLoS Biology 2(1): 0120-0125, 2004.

• B.B. Boycott et al., Color Vision: From Genes to Perception, Cambridge University Press, New York, NY, 1999. Amazon.com link

• P. Summer and J.D. Mollon "Chromaticity as Signal of Ripeness of Fruits Taken by Primates," Journal of Experimental Biology 203: 1987-2000, 2000.


Studies on Food-Color Associations:
• H.R. Moskowitz, "Taste and Food Technology: Acceptability, Aesthetics, and Preference," Handbook of Perception, Via: 158-193, 1978.

• L.L. Garber et al., "Placing Food Color Experimentation Into a Valid Consumer Context," Food Quality & Preference 14(1): 41-43, 2003.

• T. Hine, The Total Package. Little, Brown, and Company, New York, NY, 1996. Amazon.com link


Color and Communication Among Animals (and Plants)
• M.Rodríguez-Gironés and L. Santamaria "Why Are So Many Bird Flowers Red?," PLoS Biology 2(10): 1515-1519, 2004.

• Amotz Zahavi and A. Zahavi, The Handicap Principle: A Missing Piece of Darwin's Puzzle. Oxford University Press, 1997. Amazon.com link

•Link: Zahavi's 'Handicap Principle' of costly signalling


Color, Human Communication and Color Perception:
•G. Hewes, "The Current Status of the Gestural Theory of Language Origin," Origins and Evolution of Language and Speech 280: 482-504, 1976.

• R.G. Klein and B. Edgar, The Dawn of Human Culture. John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, 2002. Amazon.com link

The Foundation Text of Human Color Perception and Terminology:
• B. Berlin and P. Kay, Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution. University of California Press, Berkeley, 1969. Amazon.com link

• E. Hering, Outlines of a Theory of the Light Sense. Harvard University Press, MA, 1878, 1964. Amazon.com link

• T. King, "Human Color Perception, Cognition, and Culture: Why 'Red' is Always Red," The Society for Imaging Science and Technology (The Reporter) 20(1): 1-7, Feb 2005.

A New and Definitive Text on Human Skin Color
• N. Jablonski, Skin: A Natural History. University of California Press, 2006. Amazon.com link