of human civilization.
(Check out our complete collection of Underwater and Oceanic Oddities.)
Alexandria, Egypt: Off the shores of Alexandria, the city of Alexander the Great, lie what are believed to be the ruins of the royal quarters of Cleopatra. It is believed that earthquakes over 1,500 years ago were responsible for casting this into the sea, along with artifacts, statues and other parts of Cleopatra’s palace. The city of Alexandria even plans to offer underwater tours of this wonder.
Bay of Cambay, India:
A few years back discovered the remains of a vast 9,500 year old city.
This submerged ruin has intact architecture and human remains. More
significantly, this find predates all finds in the area by over 5,000
years, forcing historians to reevaluate their understanding of the history of civilazation in the region. The find has been termed Dwarka, or the ‘Golden City,’ after an ancient city-in-the sea said to belong to the Hindu god Krishna.
Kwan Phayao, Thailand:
In itself perhaps not unusual, a 500 year old Thai temple sits at the
bottom of lake Phayao. What makes this case strange is that the lake was
actually made intentionally about 70 years ago, and that there has been
recent discussion of potentially restoring the temple
at the cost of billions of dollars. However, the ruins serve as a
habitat for fish that many have argued should remain untouched.
Yonaguni-Jima, Japan:
Discovered by a dive tour guide some twenty years ago, controversies
have arisen around a mysterious pyramids found off the coast of Japan.
These structures seem to have been carved right out of bedrock in a
teraforming process using tools previously thought unavailable to
ancient cultures of the region.
Havana, Cuba:
A team of scientists continues to explore megalithic ruins found in the
Yucatan Channel near Cuba. They have found evidence of an extensive
urban environment stretching for miles along the ocean shore. Some
believe that the civilization that inhabited these predates all known
ancient American cultures. So far, only computer models of this
mysterious underwater city exist.
North Sea, Europe:
A lost natural landscape was found recently under the North Sea, once
occupied by human hunter-gatherers over 10,000 years ago. What were once
rivers, lakes and oceans are now all at the bottom of the sea, only
made known through digital mapping. Scientists theorize that this
amazingly well-preserved landscape was at the heart of an ancient
civilization spread across Europe.
Atlantis, Antarctica? Over
a hundred years ago, a museum curator in Istanbul made a remarkable
discovery. Examining an ancient map on gazelle skin, he found a location
marking a mountain chain where Antarctica is today. This map is,
amazingly, one of many pieces of evidence people have used to try and claim that, in fact, Antarctica is the fabled lost continent of Atlantis.
Other evidence includes the recent discovery (via sonar technology) of
land under Antarctica as well as the mapping systems used by ancient
cartographers, which suggest Atlantis might have been located far from
the Mediterranean Sea.
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