The Terry Clarke Daily (March 19, 1015) is out!


   

The Terry Clarke Daily (Wednesday, March 11, 2015) has been published.


Thanks to everyone who has taken the time to suggest issues for potential articles for the publication. I try diligently to search for current articles on the issues suggested by the readership. Thanks to all who have helped this cross-platform publication to continue to attract and keep new readers! As usual, the link to the current publication is provided below.

The Terry Clarke Daily (March 3, 2015) is out!


 

The March 3, 2015 edition of The Terry Clarke Daily is out. I appreciate the response so far, and I have incorporated several issues into regular articles at the request of many of the publication's readers. I continue to request additional areas of interest readers would like to see in future editions.

Please click the link below to access today's edition!

The Terry Clarke Daily.

 

The Terry Clarke Daily (February 25, 2015) is out!


 

Please click on the link below for today's edition. As always, please provide any comments on any of the articles, photos and videos, and let me know other subjects you would like to see Included in future editions. Thanks to everyone who has previously suggested content for inclusion.

The Terry Clarke Daily.

 

The Terry Clarke Daily (February 19, 2015) is out!


The Terry Clarke Daily.

 

 

 

Please list in the comment section any issues you would like to see included in future editions of my virtual newspaper!

 

Scientists solve 2,000-year-old Terracotta Army mystery


Admittedly, the article cited is a bit for scientifically technical for my tastes, but the authors do a brilliant job of explaining when the army was created (210 BC), how they were formed (too technical of a description to be summarized accurately in this small pace) and how the tens of thousands of perfectly formed soldiers, more importantly, kept their precise forms in such unbelievably great shape over the millennia (Polychrome layers applied to these sculpted imperial guards were composed of natural inorganic pigments and binding media. These pigments have been identified as including cinnabar [HgS], apatite [Ca5(PO4)3OH], azurite [Cu3(CO3)2(OH)2] and malachite [Cu2CO3(OH)2], etc., but the precise composition of binding media used in the painting process had long eluded scientists until China scientists discovered a proteinaceous binding media which had been successfully made and applied for the polychrome Terracotta Army.)

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