Thứ Bảy, 8 tháng 4, 2017

Waching daily Apr 9 2017

27-INTRO

Making sure more babies make it

to their first birthday.

It's an important part of

improving local infant mortality

numbers.

Today local moms were invited to

a BIG baby shower.

It was a chance for them to ask

any questions to health experts,

and learn

about the resources in the

community. 27 First News

Reporter Cameron O'Brien, picks

up the story from here.

WENDY FORD, NEW MOM: YEAH, HE'S

STARTING TO COO AND SMILE AND

HE'S JUST LIKE AWW IT'S SO CUTE.

Cameron O'Brien

That is two month-old Elijah

Ford. He spent the day strapped

to his mama,

Wendy -- at the community baby

shower...

As she paroozed more than 20

health and social service

vendors.

Wendy is a first time mom.

WENDY FORD, NEW MOM: GETTING TO

KNOW DIFFERENT THINGS IN THE

COMMUNITY THAT I CAN GO TO, AND

RESOURCES AND WHATNOT. SO, IT

HELPS OUT A LOT. Cameron

O'Brien

A number of agencies pulled

their resources together for

the city wide baby shower.

They're all trying to improve

the infant mortality rate.

It's high in Mahoning County--

Especially for babies of color.

ERIN BISHOP, YOUNGSTOWN HEALTH

COMMISSIONER:TH

E STATE OF OHIO WENT DOWN, BUT

OURS IN MAHONING COUNTY DID GO

UP.

ERIN BISHOP, YOUNGSTOWN HEALTH

COMMISSIONER:

THAT SHOWS YOU THAT THERE'S

STILL MORE PEOPLE THAT WE NEED

TO

REACH. THERE'S PEOPLE THAT WE'RE

NOT REACHING. SO THAT'S WHY I

FEEL THAT THIS EVENT IS MORE

IMPORTANT THAN EVER. Cameron

O'Brien Events like this are a

chance for mom to

ask any questions.

Cameron O'Brien And taking

advantage of community

resources...

WENDY FORD, NEW MOM: I'LL

DEFINITELY NEED ONE OF THESE.

Cameron O'Brien Is something

Wendy is going to do.

ERIN BISHOP, YOUNGSTOWN HEALTH

COMMISSIONER:

THERE'S SO MUCH MORE THAT, SO

MANY MORE PROGRAMS THAT

YOU CAN REALLY TAKE ADVANTAGE OF

AND YOU KNOW, HAVE A BETTER

PREGNANCY, AND YOUR BABY IS

GONNA MAKE IT TO YOUR FIRST

BIRTHDAY. [A14]20170408 SAFE

SLEEP-VO

A safe sleep environment is an

important part of infant

For more infomation >> Community baby shower in Youngstown provides resources for expecting mothers - Duration: 1:40.

-------------------------------------------

Angels for Animals gives hundreds rabies vaccination - Duration: 0:30.

Angels for Animals.

A rabies vaccine was only eight

dollars. It is legally

required for all dogs, cats and

ferrets three months and older.

DIANE LESS, ANGELS FOR ANIMALS:

RABIES IS COMMUNICABLE TO

HUMANS. IT IS A ZOONIC DISEASE.

AND IT IS FATAL IN ANIMALS AND

HUMANS. SO IT'S VERY VERY

IMPORTANT TO GET YOUR PET RABIES

VACCINE.

Columbiana County also held a

vaccine clinic today too.

For more infomation >> Angels for Animals gives hundreds rabies vaccination - Duration: 0:30.

-------------------------------------------

DEC denies permit for Northern Access Pipeline - Duration: 0:36.

CALL THE CONFIDENTIAL TIP LINE

IF YOU HAVE ANY INFORMATION.

THE NORTHERN ACCESS PIPELINE

WILL NOT MOVE FORWARD.. NATIONAL

FUEL WANTED TO RUN A 97-MILE

PIPELINE THROUGH CATTARAUGUS,

ALLEGANY AND ERIE COUNTIES. IT

HAS FEDERAL APPROVAL.. BUT

HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE VOICED

CONCERNS AT THREE D-E-C PUBLIC

HEARINGS OVER THE PAST FEW

MONTHS. NOW THE D-E-C HAS DENIED

WATER QUALITY CERTIFICATES

NEEDED TO MOVE FORWARD WITH THE

PIPELINE. IT SAYS IN A STATMENT

THE PROJECT FAILS "TO AVOID

For more infomation >> DEC denies permit for Northern Access Pipeline - Duration: 0:36.

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Gradual warm-up continues for the work week - Duration: 8:20.

HIGH:

78TUESDAY: PARTLY TO MOSTLY

SUNNY.HIGH: 81REST OF THE

WEEK: MAINLY DRY. SLIGHT

CHANCE OF A SHOWER BY SATURDAY.

HIGHS IN THE LOW 80S. HIGHS

RETURN TO THE 70S BEHIND A

COLD FRONT NEXT SATURDAY.

3

LADIES TAKE YOUR MARK!

TODAY WAS THE PUBLIX SAVANNAH

WOMEN'S HALF MARATHON AND 5

K... RUNNERS STARTED AT

7:30 THIS MORNING IN FORSYTHE

PARK. ABOUT 24 HUNDRED

PEOPLE TOOK PART...AND LACED

UP TO GET A FEW GOOD MILES IN!

3

) "ITS A GREAT THING TO COME

OUT AND SUPPORT ALL THESE

PEOPLE IT'S A BIG ACCOMPLISHMEN

T.THEY GET SO EXCITED TO SEE

YOU OUT ALONG THE ROUTE

CHEERING THEM ON.IT'S A GOOD

FUN EVENT...YOU'RE CELEBRATING

HEALTH AND WELLNESS.A LOT OF

PEOPLE, THIS MIGHT BE THEIR

ONLY HALF MARATHON THEY EVER

DO AND THEY CHOSE SAVANNAH FOR

IT." PROCEEDS BENEFIT THE

"LEUKEMIA AND LYMPHOMA

SOCIETY" AND THE "SAVANNAH

SPORTS COUNCIL."

3

STILL AHEAD AT 6:00--

NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN THE

SUSPECTED TERROR ATTACK IN

SWEDEN. POLICE THERE

SAYING THEY HAVE THEIR MAN.

DETAILS ON WHAT WE'VE LEARNED

ABOUT THE SUSPECT AS THE

COUNTRY TRIES TO MOVE FORWARD.

3

A MAJOR DEVELOPMENT IN

THE DEADLY TRUCK ATTACK IN

STOCKLHOLM. POLICE SAY

THEY HAVE THEIR MAN--

ANNOUNCING THE ARREST OF A

SUSPECT THEY BELIEVE DROVE A

TRUCK DOWN A BUSY STREET

PACKED WITH SHOPPERS.

INVESTIGATORS ARE TREATING

THIS AS A TERRORIST ATTACK.

ABC'S "JENNIFER ECCLESTON"

HAS MORE.

3

3

A KILLER CAUGHT ON TAPE?

POLICE IN SWEDEN CONFIDENT

THEY HAVE THE MAN RESPONSIBLE

FOR THAT TRUCK ATTACK FRIDAY -

WHICH KILLED FOUR PEOPLE.SOT -

DAN ELIASSON / SWEDEN'S POLICE

CHIEF "THE MAN ARRESTED IS

SUSPECTED OF BEING THE ONE WHO

DROVE THE CAR."POLICE DETAINED

A MAN MATCHING THE SUSPECT

SEEN IN THESE SECURITY IMAGES

IN A STOCKHOLM SUBURB JUST

HOURS AFTER THE ATTACK...LATER

ARRESTING HIM UNDER SUSPICION

OF "TERRORIST CRIMES THROUGH

MURDER." INVESTIGATORS SAY HE

IS 39-YEARS-OLD AND FROM

UZBEKISTAN?SOT - DAN ELIASSON

/ SWEDEN'S POLICE CHIEF "HE

WAS KNOWN, THERE WAS

INTELLIGENCE ABOUT HIM IN THE

SECURITY POLICE."POLICE SAY

THEY FOUND SOME SORT OF DEVICE

IN THE DRIVER'S SEAT OF THE

TRUCK - THEY DON'T KNOW YET IF

IT'S A BOMB.SO FAR, THERE'S NO

INDICATIONOF A LARGER PLOT?

BUT IT'S UNCLEAR IF ANYONE

ELSE WAS INVOLVED.ISIS HAS FOR

YEARS - ENCOURAGED FOLLOWERS

TO ACT ALONE IN THESE RAMMING-

STYLE ATTACKS.POLICE SAY -

FRIDAY AFTERNOON THE SUSPECT

STOLE A DELIVERY TRUCK FROM A

NEARBY RESTAURANT...MINUTES

LATER - THAT TRUCK SEEN ON

THIS SECURITY VIDEO BARRELING

PAST SHOPS AS PEOPLE SCATTER?

THE TRUCK EVENTUALLY SLAMMING

INTO THE SIDE OF A DEPARTMENT

STORE?SOT - ANNEVI "THERE WERE

BODIES ON THE GROUND

EVERYWHERE, AND A SENSE OF

PANIC."IN ADDITION TO THE FOUR

PEOPLE KILLED - MORE THAN A

DOZEN MORE WERE HURT.THE LOCAL

HOSPITALS AT THE READY?SOT -

LENNERT ADAMSSON / HEAD OF

TRAUMA - KAROLINSKA UNIVERSITY

HOSPITAL "WE HAVE KNOWN NOW

FOR SOME YEARS THAT THIS WILL

HAPPEN BUT WE DON'T KNOW WHEN.

SO WE TRAIN EVERY

YEAR."AUTHORITIES PUT THE CITY

ON LOCKDOWN.STOCKHOLM'S MAYOR

NOW FOCUSED ON REOPENING.

NATSOT - KARIN WANNGARD /

MAYOR OF STOCKHOLM "HASHTAG

OPEN STOCKHOLM..."REPEATING

THE COUNTRY'S NEW MANTRA -

THAT TERRORISTS CANNOT BEAT

SWEDEN.JENNIFER ECCLESTON, ABC

NEWS, LONDON.

3

TEN PEOPLE REMAIN IN THE

HOSPITAL TODAY. FOUR OF

THEM SEVERELY INJURED-- TWO IN

THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT.

3

3

IN THE NEXT MONTH OR SO,

SCHOOL WILL BE OUT, AND SOME

OF THOSE KIDS WILL BE LOOKING

FOR SUMMER MEALS. THAT'S

WHERE "AMERICA'S SECOND

HARVEST" OF COASTAL GEORGIA

COMES IN. THEY PROVIDE A

SUMMER FEEDING PROGRAM, WHERE

THEY FEED MORE THAN 6-THOUSAND

KIDS A DAY. BUT IT COSTS

MONEY, AND THAT'S WHERE THEIR

UPCOMING "JEWELS AND JEANS

FUNDRAISER" COMES INTO PLAY.

"IT'S A LOT OF FUN, WE HAVE A

SILENT AUCTION, WE HAVE LIVE

MUSIC AND WE HAVE TEN FEED

STATIONS, WHERE PEOPLE CAN

ACTUALLY COME IN, TASTE ALL

THE GREAT THINGS, SPECIALITIES

OF ALL THE DIFFERENT

RESTAURANTS IN TOWN." THE

"JEWELS AND JEANS FUNDRAISER"

IS SCHEDULED FOR THURSDAY,

APRIL 20 FROM 7PM-10PM AT

AMERICA'S SECOND HARVEST.

TICKETS ARE STILL AVAILABLE,

YOU CAN GO TO THEIR WEBSITE

LISTED ON YOUR SCREEN TO

PURCHASE THEM.

3

HUNDREDS IN SAVANNAH GOT

TOGETHER TODAY TO CELEBRATE

ART.AND HAVE FUN WHILE DOING

IT. ART RISE SAVANNAH PUT

ON THE FIRST EVER "ART MARCH

PARADE AND FESTIVAL" TODAY IN

THE STARLAND DISTRICT AN

EVENT THEY PLAN TO HAVE 4

TIMES A YEAR IN DIFFERENT

SAVANNAH NEIGHBORHOODS. AFTER

THE PARADE, PEOPLE ENJOYED,

LIVE MUSIC, FOOD TRUCKS, FACE

PAINTING AND OF COURSE LOCAL

ART ON DISPLAY.

3

3

HERE'S A LOOK FROM OUR

SKYVIEW 22 CAMERA AT THE

HOMEWOOD SUITES ON THE RIVER.)

3

ááCHIMESááWJCL 22 STORMTRACKER

CHIEF METEOROLOGIST JEREMY

NELSONTONIGHT: CLEAR SKIES

AND CHILLY. WIND: LIGHT TO

CALM. LOW: 46SUNDAY: MOSTLY

SUNNY AND MILD. WIND: E-SE

7-15 MPH. HIGH: 75MONDAY:

MOSTLY SUNNY AND WARMER. HIGH:

78TUESDAY: PARTLY TO MOSTLY

SUNNY.HIGH: 81REST OF THE

WEEK: MAINLY DRY. SLIGHT

CHANCE OF A SHOWER BY SATURDAY.

HIGHS IN THE LOW 80S. HIGHS

RETURN TO THE 70S BEHIND A

COLD FRONT NEXT SATURDAY.

3

)

For more infomation >> Gradual warm-up continues for the work week - Duration: 8:20.

-------------------------------------------

MOBIL BALAP KARTUN Mcqueen Transportasi dan Spiderman Mobil Balap Kartun CAR GAMES FOR CHILDREN - Duration: 28:59.

MOBIL BALAP KARTUN Mcqueen Transportasi dan Spiderman Mobil Balap Kartun CAR GAMES FOR CHILDREN

For more infomation >> MOBIL BALAP KARTUN Mcqueen Transportasi dan Spiderman Mobil Balap Kartun CAR GAMES FOR CHILDREN - Duration: 28:59.

-------------------------------------------

Western Mass. foster children shop for free clothing and accessories - Duration: 0:48.

HIGHS: 72-76

NEW AT TEN

TAMARA:

TEENAGERS IN FOSTER CARE GOT A

CHANCE TO SHOP FOR FREE TODAY!

NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION, "HELP

OUR KIDS," HELD THE SHOPPING

EVENT, AT

TOWER SQUARE IN SPRINGFIELD.

THE TEENS WERE EACH GIVEN A

PERSONAL SHOPPER, WHO HELPED

THEM

PICK OUT CLOTHES, SHOES, AND

JEWELRY.

THE PROJECT DIRECTOR TOLD 22NEWS

- THEY WANT ALL OF THE TEENS TO

LOOK, AND FEEL THEIR BEST, FOR

SPECIAL OCCASIONS!

THERE ARE MANY KIDS IN THE

SPRINGFIELD AREA IN

FOSTER CARE IN THE AREA. AND THE

OPPORTUNITY TO SHOP FOR CLOTHING

FOR A JOB INTERVIEW,

GRADUATION AND OTHER LIFE EVENTS

HAVEN'T HAPPENED FOR THEM TO

SHOP FREE OF CHARGE FOR

CLOTHING THEY MAY NEED IN THE

FUTURE

TAMARA SACHARCZYK:

For more infomation >> Western Mass. foster children shop for free clothing and accessories - Duration: 0:48.

-------------------------------------------

Top 10 Unexpected Discoveries That Were Incredibly Rare - Top 10 Unbelievable - Duration: 19:53.

Top 10 Unexpected Discoveries That Were Incredibly Rare

Many spend a lifetime searching for that one antique treasure. For the lucky few, historic gems are handed down as family heirlooms or snapped up at a yard sale. Success depends a lot on the trained eye and knowing an item's back story. Lacking both, rare artifacts can go unidentified or years. Some are found, others are bought for their beauty or cheap price. Every artifact reconnected with its history has an incredible story about how it escaped anonymity, some spending decades used for purposes other than what they were originally designed for.

Many spend a lifetime searching for that one antique treasure. For the lucky few, historic gems are handed down as family heirlooms or snapped up at a yard sale.

Success depends a lot on the trained eye and knowing an item's back story. Lacking both, rare artifacts can go unidentified or years. Some are found, others are bought for their beauty or cheap price.

Every artifact reconnected with its history has an incredible story about how it escaped anonymity, some spending decades used for purposes other than what they were originally designed for. 10 The Liver Jar.

When an uncle died, a family that wishes to remain anonymous inherited a lump of stone. For the next 20 years, the terracotta pot did garden duty as an ornament, occasionally forgotten in the shed.

One day, somebody realized the capsule-shaped rock had a rather Egyptian face. Removing the Pharaoh-resembling relic from its perch on a Dorset patio, it was taken for evaluation.

Surprisingly, what the family thought was just a decorative ornament, turned out to be a 3,000-year-old artifact from ancient Egypt. The face, despite sporting the iconic headdress, was not a Pharaoh, but the god Imseti.

The deity had the unglamorous task of protecting livers removed from corpses until the dead would need it back in the afterlife. The 13-inch-high vessel was designed to hold the organ.

Called a Canoptic funerary jar, the internal organs of the deceased were placed in several such pots. It remains unknown how such an old Egyptian Canopic jar (thankfully lacking a liver) came into the possession of the said uncle in England.

9 The Janus Cup.

Another human-faced relic was forgotten in a box for nearly a lifetime. John Webber from Dorchester, England, was given the cup by his grandfather.

The senior Webber was a scrap metal dealer who bought and sold mostly bronze and brass. Believing that it was wrought from those metals, his young grandson stowed it away under his bed.

In his 70s, John Webber rediscovered the small gift from his grandfather while he was preparing to move house. Realizing that the 5½-inch (14 cm) cup was not brass or bronze, he approached the British Museum.

The experts there were baffled and declared they had never seen anything like it before. It featured the double-faced Roman god Janus, his forehead decorated with braids and twisting snakes.

On their suggestion, Webber shelled out a stiff amount to have the metal tested at a laboratory. It turned out to be gold dating back to 3rd-4th century B.C.

and that the artifact was forged in the ancient Persian empire of Achaemenid. The ancient god of gates certainly opened a lucrative door for Webber—it recently sold for $100,000 at an auction. 8 The Pizza Base.

A different sort of pizza base raked in a million pounds for Sotheby's, the auction house. Near the bathrooms of Ask Pizzeria in North Yorkshire, a wooden stand patiently awaited rediscovery.

Eventually, someone thought to send a photo of the giltwood carving to Mario Tavella, Sotheby's furniture expert.

He immediately recognized the decorative theme of naked youths and garlands as the missing base of a cabinet he had personally been searching almost 20 years for.

The 17th-century Roman baroque cabinet lost its stand sometime after World War II, and hopes of ever finding it again waned with every passing decade.

The fully assembled cabinet shows an elaborate motif of a crowd being blessed in Rome by the Pope. Why the base initially vanished or how it ended up being owned by a couple in the restaurant business might never be discovered.

One clue to its origins comes from similar stands, near-identical pieces in Denmark believed to have been gifts from Pope Clement IX. 7 The Ding Bowl.

A family from New York state decided in 2007 to visit a yard sale near their home. Browsing the items on offer, they noticed a $3 bowl.

There was nothing spectacular about the white, unassuming vessel but they bought it anyway. Not knowing the immensity of what had just occurred, they took it back home and displayed it in the living room for years.

At one point, they became curious about its age and origins. The assessment report returned with a shock. The five-inch diameter vessel with its simple, leafy design was a 1,000-year-old Chinese artifact worth up to $300,000.

Called a "Ding" bowl, it is one of the finest examples of Northern Song Dynasty ceramics, and exceptionally rare.

The well-preserved antique matches only one other in size, shape, and decoration, and that bowl arrived at the British Museum sixty years ago. The family was in for a second shock when Sotheby's auctioned off the item.

Despite being valued at $300,000, four bidders tenaciously fought for the Ding bowl until a London dealer won it for $2.2 million. 6 The Sleeping Lady.

Art historian Gergely Barki wanted to cheer up his bored daughter when he switched to a channel showing the movie Stuart Little. It was Christmas Day in 2008.

The decision led to the highlight of his career. While watching, his experienced eye caught a painting hanging in the background of the movie set. It turned out to be a missing Hungarian masterpiece.

As Barki followed the trail, it became clear that the painting, Róbert Berény's Sleeping Lady with Black Vase, passed through the hands of several owners, never realizing its worth.

In the middle 1990s, an art collector paid $40 for the work after discovering it at a charity auction in San Diego, probably as a donated piece.

A Hollywood set designer bought it from the collector for $500, and by the time Barki contacted her about ten years later, it was hanging in her home.

A Berény can demand around $120,000 today. The art deco painting depicts the artist's second wife Eta, who was an accomplished cellist. Before vanishing, it was last seen in Hungary when it was sold at an exhibition in 1928.

5 The Petrie Pot.

In the 1950s, a man owed a taxi driver some fare. Instead of counting out the bills, he handed the driver a little pot.

A card attached explained it was "Libyan Pottery" from 3,000 B.C. and was discovered by Professor WM Flinders Petrie, in 1894-5. The English taxi driver, Charles Funnel, accepted.

The black and red vessel was only rediscovered in 2014, when a grandson, Guy Funnel, was clearing his father's garage in Cornwall. Recognizing the 19th-century archaeologist's name on the cardboard label, he contacted the Petrie Museum in London.

It was a rare pot with a fascinating history. It was not Libyan, but Egyptian, one of the few times when the ace archaeologist made such a blunder and said so in public later on.

The card is valuable because it shows how artifacts were distributed to individuals on a systematic scale not guessed at before.

Commercially printed, it remains the only one ever found. The unidentified taxi passenger might have been Joseph Milne, a museum curator from Oxford who met Petrie in the 1890s.

Milne owned a bowl from the same grave that produced the Funnel pot. 4 Roman Mortarium.

Ray Taylor was in his garden when he happened upon a flat bowl. The Alcester resident examined the clay vessel and thought he would treat the local birds to a bath.

Feathery visitors used the bird bath for the next few years until Taylor's daughter saw similar artifacts on display at the Roman Alcester Heritage Museum at Globe House.

Acting on her suggestion that he take the piece to the museum, Taylor was amazed to learn his improvised water bowl was a 2,000-year-old Roman artifact.

It was identified as an A.D. 2nd-3rd-century mortarium, a tool that much served the same purpose as a modern mortar and pestle.

Ingredients such as herbs and spices would have been ground to a finer quality inside of it. A mortaria pottery production center once existed in Mancetter, close to Atherstone, and that is likely where this utensil was fired.

The fact that it is complete and in good condition makes it extraordinary. Most such finds were discarded in Roman times as broken trash.

After finally understanding the rarity and worth of what he had found, Taylor kindly donated it to the Warwickshire Museum. 3 The Leicester Stone.

When a garden ornament went up for sale in Leicester, one customer immediately saw what the owner could not—potential. James Balme, archaeologist and TV presenter, could not identify with certainty what the pillar-resembling item was.

However, instinct told him the heavy stone was not merely a lawn trinket, and so he purchased it.

After cleaning it, Balme realized the markings on the artifact resembled a complex enough pattern to perhaps represent writing. Only the front side is adorned in this manner.

The 55-65 pound (25-30 kg) sandstone block tapers more narrowly towards the top and is about 18 inches (46cm) high and 5.5 inches (14cm) thick.

What it was used for remains an uncracked mystery, but Balme speculated it might be a keystone from a ceiling or archway. Who carved it and when are two more questions needing solid answers.

While not a done deal, it is possible that it was masoned sometime between the 5th-11th centuries during the Anglo-Saxon period. During that time, different cultures created notably complex stone art. 2 The Devon Moonstone.

In 1950, a four-year-old girl moved into a Sussex home her family had bought from a Sri Lankan tea farmer. On the property was a hefty stone weighing almost a ton.

They took it with them whenever they moved. Kept in the garden, they remained blissfully unaware of the true nature of the exquisitely carved 4ft by 8ft (1.2 – 1.5 m) slab.

By the time the girl was grown and married, she still had the stone she used to play with.

Now living in Dorset, Mrs. Hickmott invited an auctioneer from Bonhams to have a look at the curious surface bearing Brahim cows, elephants, birds, horses, and lions.

Used to mark the end of her garden path, the granite relic was eventually identified as a Sandakada Pahana, a Sri Lankan moonstone. It is very similar to moonstones at temples built during Sri Lanka's Anuradhapura era (400 B.C.-A.D. 1000).

Archaeologists from its native country cannot decide if the artifact is authentic, nor can they find any record of its removal from the Anuradhapura district where records were kept since 1890.

To find a moonstone outside of Sri Lanka is highly unusual and Bonhams estimated its worth at more than £30,000 ($47,500). 1 Blenheim Sarcophagus.

In 2016, an antiques expert was strolling through the gardens of Blenheim Palace in England when he noticed a flower pot. Rather, something large and ornate that was being used as a tulip bed.

Drawn closer by the familiarity of the scene depicted on the marble surface, he noticed exquisitely carved figures.

Dionysus, Hercules, and Ariadne were shown in a festive mood, along with animals. He informed Blenheim Palace, the ancestral home of the Dukes of Marlborough, that their rock garden feature was, in fact, an ancient coffin.

The partial Roman sarcophagus is lacking its bottom, sides, and back.

Even so, it remains an impressive fragment—it weighs around 550 pounds (250 kg), stretches six ft (1. 8 m) long, 2. 5 ft (80 cm) high, and has a thickness of about 6 inches (15 cm).

It took six months of careful restoration to reveal the elite artwork. Regrettably, the sculptor is unknown, and there is no way to know who the 1,700-year-old casket was for.

The expert who identified it also assessed its worth at about $121,000, but Blenheim Palace decided not to sell the antique that landed in the gardens sometime during the 19th century. It can now be seen inside one of the hallways.

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