Huntsman Appoints New President and CEO
ACCESSWIRE
VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESSWIRE / May 3, 2021 / Huntsman Exploration Inc. (TSXV:HMAN)(OTC PINK:BBBMF) (the
Company or
Huntsman ) is pleased to announce that Scott Patrizi has been appointed President and Chief Executive Officer and a director of the Company.
Mr. Patrizi is a corporate director with strong equity capital markets and project acquisition experience. Mr. Patrizi holds a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Western Australia. Most recently, he was the Executive Director of Western Australian gold explorer Caprice Resources Limited. As Executive Director of Caprice he was responsible for the successful initial public offering (IPO) of the Company in 2018 and was instrumental in overseeing the acquisition of the high-grade Island Gold Project in October 2020.
Irish Times showing an unusual rectangular object sunken into the riverbed. According to
Irish Central , the size and shape of the object has led archaeologists to tentatively identify it as a logboat, a type of simple, but sturdy, watercraft made from hollowed-out tree trunks.
The Long History of Logboats in Ireland
Logboats, also known as dugout boats, were made by hand, with axes that were used to chop out their interiors. In an article published in
, Dr. Stephen Davis, a professor from the University College Dublin School of Archaeology and expert on the subject, explained that logboats have “an immensely long history of use in Ireland, with examples known from the Neolithic [all] the way up to medieval times.”
LMFM By Simon Doyle It comes as the another ancient vessel was found earlier this week.
A second log boat has been discovered in the River Boyne.
It comes as local citizen archaeologist Anthony Murphy came across the first of the boats in Drogheda earlier this week.
Now another has been identified after a further inspection of the site by an expert in Irish log boats,
Dr. Niall Gregory.
It was determined that the second boat was a new find, however the first discovered on Monday was already reported last year.
EXPERT VIEW ON BOYNE LOGBOATS
I was delighted to meet Dr. Niall Gregory, a foremost expert on Irish logboats, in.Posted by Mythical Ireland on Thursday, April 29, 2021
Man Looking for Kevin the Dolphin Accidentally Finds Centuries-Old Logboat
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Published 1 month ago:
May 1, 2021 at 5:00 am
Hoping to find a local dolphin named Kevin, a citizen archaeologist ended up finding a medieval logboat sunk in the shallow water of an Irish river. The man, Anthony Murphy, found the vessel while flying his drone over the River Boyne. “I was actually looking for Kevin the dolphin that has been in the river in the past couple of weeks,” he told The Irish Times. Not a bad consolation prize.
It’s not Murphy’s first archaeological rodeo. In 2018, during a historic drought in Britain that exposed a number of historical sites, Murphy flew a drone near the famous Neolithic site of Newgrange and found a new henge. “What the f is that?” he said at the time.
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