Finding Genghis Khan's Tomb From Space
rossgneumann writes Genghis Khan really, really didn't want anyone to know where he was buried. The soldiers escorting his body to its final resting place killed everyone they passed, killed the people who built the tomb, and then were killed themselves. An elegant solution to this problem bubbled up from two unlikely sources: a man described as a "modern day Indiana Jones" and amateur archaeologists.
In Mongolia, today, 2% of the Y-Chromosomes alive are Genghis Khan's.
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
According to the article you linked:
Nobles were also buried in coffins, but unlike Lamaistic dignitaries, these coffins were buried with additions like weapons, horses, food and other things, which were meant to help them in the next world - in Erlik-Khans kingdom. Erlik-Khan is the god of death. The location of a nobleman's tomb was kept secret, to ensure that they rested in peace.
IMO, they've really not done much. They allowed people to tag aerial imagery for things they *think* they identify - rivers, roads, and other anomaly. That resulted in 2.3 million tags. And, well, that's it. 55 tagged areas were verified by field teams as having some interest to archaeology. However, I don't see how any of this has anything to do with Genghis Khan specifically.
Better known as 318230.
To be honest, its former self was the Hitler Channel. You could scarcely watch three shows in a row without one, usually two, being about Hitler.
Actually there are many different variations for the spelling of the Norse "All-Father" Odin, although in English Odin is most common.
On European websites it's more common to see Oden though.
But properly there was often a V sound in front of his name, for example Wednesday used to be Wodenstag (Wodens Day) in German (W being a V sound).
[https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Wodenstag]