Not exact matches
Consider this... a person goes to college, gets a four year degree in archaeology (or some antiquities preservation analog); spends summers sifting through sand and rock and gravel, all the while taking graduate level classes... person eventually obtains the vaunted PhD in archaeology... then works his / her tail off seeking funding for an archeological excavation, with the payoff being more funding, and more opportunities to dig in the dirt... do you think professional archaeologists are looking hard for
evidence of the Exodus on a speculative basis... not a chance... they know their PhD buys them nothing more than a job at Tel Aviv Walmart if they don't discover and publish... so they write grants for digs near established sites / communities, and stay employed sifting rock in culturally safe areas... not unless some shepard
stumbles upon a rare find in an unexpected place do you get archeological interest and action in remote places... not at all surprising that the pottery and other
evidence of the Exodus and other biblical events lie waiting to be discovered... doesn't mean not there... just not found yet...
It wasn't until two years later that researchers at Purdue
stumbled upon, literally,
evidence that high school football players who had not been diagnosed with concussion neverless suffered similar short - term neurocognitive impairment from the cumulative effects of RHI.
When Choong - Sik
stumbles upon Se - Jin's criminal past as a pedophile, he is sure he found the killer though there is no strong
evidence.
The details: Circa 1958, a young German prosecutor (Alexander Fehling, from Inglourious Basterds)
stumbles upon concealed
evidence of Nazi war crimes, and starts making waves when he begins to pursue former Third Reich officials who returned to their pre-war lives.
As Lucy
stumbles upon a vital piece of
evidence the case suddenly takes a new turn.
Also, as Batman you must piece together
evidence and information you
stumble upon to figure out what happened at the scene.
Further
evidence was discovered when a Twitter user allegedly
stumbled upon a special admin command in Ubisoft's UPlay client.
If you accidentally
stumbled upon any mainstream newspaper, you might learn that denying due process is sufficient to drop charges if only because it undermines the credibility of the justice system (including the quality of
evidence obtained) and risk its abuse.