Posted on 12/11/2022 7:01:00 PM PST by SunkenCiv
The Mystery Of The 9,000 Year Old Village Hidden Under The Sea | The Mystery Of Atlit-Yam
Timeline | World History Documentaries
4.5M subscribers | 16,855 views | December 11, 2022
In 1984, off Israel’s Mediterranean coast, marine archaeologist Ehud Galili discovered an ancient settlement that had been submerged for millennia.
The site was at first a mystery, but as underwater excavations progressed, the veil was lifted.
It turned out to be the biggest and best preserved prehistoric site ever discovered along the Mediterranean shoreline. Atlit Yam – a stone age village dating from at least 9,000 years ago – stretches over more than four hectares at a depth of 10 meters, and comprises houses, altars, and numerous intact tombs containing dozens of bodies, burial objects, the remains of nets, and an altar of cut stone. This makes it an exceptional site informing us about the way of life of the coastal peoples during the Neolithic period...
(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...
Transcript 0:00 this channel is part of the history hit Network [Music] 0:16 [Music] 0:22 the coast of the Levant hides secrets that go back to the dawn of mankind 0:29 most of our distant ancestors traveled through the coastal plain at the foot of the Carmel range as our species Homo 0:36 sapiens gradually took to the four corners of the world this lateral pathway between Africa and 0:42 Asia then Europe has seen more cultures more varied living conditions and more 0:48 upheavals than any other region in the world here to travel back in time one only has 0:55 to dig 1:01 [Music] narrations of humans have left traces of their passage from crude Flint axes to 1:07 objects more elaborate and more precious foreign 1:13 yet the real Treasures of the region aren't to be found underground but underwater 1:19 we are 10 kilometers south of Haifa Israel lying offshore the little town of 1:25 athlete research vessel Medics is about drop anchor at the foot of an impregnable 1:31 Fortress built by the Knights Templars itself erected on the foundations of a more ancient Phoenician Harbor 1:41 the mystery of athletes starts with the discovery of an unusual mound of stone half a kilometer from the shore under 10 1:47 meters of water the discoverer Dr ehut khalili is an 1:52 archaeologist and an accomplished diver 1:57 [Music] 2:06 [Music] his uncanny Sixth Sense has always 2:11 helped him to discern revealing signs of a find in the strange Universe of marine landscapes 2:21 but Dr Galilei doesn't yet suspect that he is about to make the discovery of his lifetime 2:27 [Music] 2:32 first of all there was the invention of the Aquaman then I was born 2:37 for me it is a two important events [Music] I felt I started as a smoker diver I 2:45 started to I join my father in the association foreign 2:52 and very soon I realized that I wanted to explore the sea I wanted to dive and 2:58 to find things that nobody had ever thought before yeah very very rare places online well 3:04 no you can go and you know that you are the first one in the sea anywhere you go you are the first to be there 3:13 if you love history then you will love history hit our extensive library of documentary features everything from the 3:19 ancient origins of our earliest ancestors to the daring mission to sink the bismar history hit has hundreds of 3:25 exclusive documentaries with unrivaled access to the world's best historians we're committed to Bringing history fans 3:32 award-winning documentaries and podcasts that you cannot find anywhere else sign up now for a free trial and timeline 3:39 fans get 50 off their first three months just be sure to use the code timeline at 3:45 checkout first of all as a boy who was looking 3:50 for coins and artifacts or the passion of collection and fighting and then as a 3:56 researcher wanted to know the background and the story Beyond these artifacts not 4:02 only to put these nice artifacts on the television and work done but tell you where did they come from how they were 4:08 done who were the Mariners who were the fishermen what technologies 4:13 they use all these questions we can answer by studying these signs that we 4:19 found from the sea scores of relics have been retrieved by Dr Galilei or his colleagues and curse 4:26 from all eras chariot wheels ingots cannonballs 4:31 but they came mostly from the endless chain of wreckages that plagued the sailors over the centuries 4:40 on this Coast the lack of natural Harbors makes the winter Westerly winds ruthless 4:55 after every stop new areas are exposed and new delicious 5:00 Alpha the main idea is to wait for the sea to do the job of Excavating 5:10 [Music] 5:20 the day of the discovery one of those big storms had partly exposed the strange Rocky formation from the sand 5:27 our scientific treasure hunter knew immediately that this was no wreck 5:32 who could have had the motivation and means to go and build something there so deep under the sea 5:39 Phoenicians Romans Templars Arabs 5:47 this question intrigued Dr Galilei years earlier in the same area he had 5:54 helped to retrieve the ram of a war galley a half ton bronze behemoth 6:02 it's had an important Trading Post in athletes using the eyelid close to the peninsula so their boats could land with 6:08 sufficient draft 6:14 [Music] these Merchants were four-sided Mariners and Savvy Builders but none of their 6:20 structures had been found so far from the shore 6:26 the means and determination of Templars could more easily account for such a feat but to what end 6:35 [Music] during the Crusades Chateau Pelham was an imposing Fortress with many lines of 6:42 defense this Castle was so well protected that it was never taken 6:48 when the knights deserted the Levant it is said that weeks went by before the Muslims realized that the place was 6:54 empty 7:05 [Music] the first dig by Galilei and his team reveals quite a different story a 7:11 different prehistory shall we say the site predates the Iron Age the Bronze Age or even the pottery age 7:19 this is Stone Age Way Beyond 6 000 years 7:28 [Music] first of all we came to a Thomas or a 7:35 towel of about 80 centimeter High build of undressed stones without cement of 7:41 course a lion one near the other in circles 7:46 and then when we removed it and start to excavate We Came Upon A well which is 7:52 constructed from very sophisticated way and the same as well that we built today 8:05 stone age is a general term that encompasses millions of years of evolution from cavemen to civilization 8:13 the end of this long pre-history is marked by a deep Revolution the Neolithic the new stone age 8:21 Under 12 meters of salt water Dr galilei's Discovery appears to be the most ancient submerged Neolithic site 8:28 ever found at all Dr Israel hershkovitz a medical doctor 8:36 specializing in prehistoric pathology was convinced that the Stone Mound would turn out to be a burial place 8:43 he was wrong about the mound but his hopes wouldn't be dashed for long [Music] 9:00 [Music] the best moment in Atlanta was when we 9:06 activated the first human skeleton which was an outstanding experience 9:14 I mean that we knew that there is probably there is a burial pit over there and we start moving the clay 9:21 slowly slowly we expose the skull and then we expose the rest of the skeleton 9:27 but interestingly once we expose the full skull the skull had a huge hole you 9:33 know at the center probably a post-mortem damage to the skull and a 9:39 fish came out of it you know out of the skull the very fishing idea 9:49 if you take a modern skull the people of atletium would look similar to present-day 11 in population they will 9:57 look more or less the same as you and I 10:07 [Music] for only the tip of the iceberg no one could have expected what was to 10:13 follow now you see the village is 40 000 square meters now this is also covered 10:20 everything is covered all this is covered by sin this information was gathered after 25 years of exposure sure 10:29 it's like as you say it's like a jigsaw puzzle the Deep layer of sand along the coastline is always on the move this 10:36 often allows for a very short exploration window it took over 25 years of work before one 10:42 of the finest jewels of prehistory gave up all of its secrets the site was called atlet yam Athlete on 10:50 the sea in Hebrew 11:00 before these images were shot almost no one outside A specialized scientific Community was aware of the importance or 11:06 even the existence of the site 11:14 water Expeditions require much more resources than digging on firm ground 11:19 the preparation is a logistical puzzle on its own for each Mission a small village has to 11:26 be erected on the beach to accommodate the researchers the divers and their equipment 11:37 the ascent of mankind implies the whole world besides Israeli researchers scientists 11:43 convert here from Germany Scotland Ireland France Canada Scandinavia or 11:48 Bulgaria the current mission was initiated by the European Splash Coast program dedicated 11:55 to the study of Continental shelves 12:04 for the major part of prehistory during the last Ice Age Continental shelves everywhere were above water level 12:12 Mankind's first roads were never far from coastlines so up to 85 percent of all the earliest archaeological sites 12:18 are now located under the sea 12:25 the site is located about 400 meters offshore here to the West behind this 12:31 van with the boat a little about 200 meters South 12:41 [Music] in the time of atli young the levantine 12:47 coastal plains stretched up to a kilometer further west towards the sea 13:00 people 13:05 okay I'm really excited about my first dive I'm not sure what to expect how warm it 13:12 is and the visibility or condition of the remains down there 13:17 so I'm quite nervous it's my first Marine archeology dive we are now in the 13:24 North Bay of athlete we are going to die in the submerged neurithic settlement at lithium 13:30 it is a 9 000 year old settlement from the pre-protein oriented period and 13:36 at that period people didn't have Pottery of course they didn't have metal they didn't know how to write but they 13:43 produced all kind of tools from both from Stone and this is actually what we 13:49 found 13:54 underwater archeology relative to sort of traditional land archeology it is a new field like the 14:02 work that Ehud galili and his team have produced here at lithium has really helped the field of submerged 14:09 by history to be recognized on an international level and I think it's only going to expand 14:18 foreign [Music] 14:26 and it's just a question of getting a very large aluminum pipe unbalanced sort 14:32 of the head where the valve is and it's pretty heavy and so they said right 14:37 we're gonna we're gonna go down you take this end I got this and we'll go down together it gives me the super heavy end 14:42 and I went right down to the bottom and I thought yeah that was funny 14:50 foreign 14:55 so I was pretty awkward initially but then we got down uh they set up the 15:01 basically the dredge line a couple of buoys to keep it sort of buoyant it's actually a nice setup and then um that 15:08 took a while and it's our first working dive together so there's a bit of communication it's like your first day 15:14 on any job you have to figure out who you're working with and how you're working together and all of that except 15:19 you can't talk so you're trying to you do this and you watch me and all that stuff and by the end of the diet we had 15:25 it 15:32 foreign 15:40 over the years Dr galilei's teams have contributed to the fine-tuning of reliable equipment to move and sieve 15:47 through the thousands of cubic meters of sand that covered the ruins 15:57 diving with a hood is like diving with someone who has the experience of a 60 year old and the 16:02 energy of a 25 year old so archeology is the unavoidable 16:08 systematic destruction of evidence archaeologists are entitled to one 16:15 single attempt 16:22 the members are forced to work slowly with extra caution and thirdness looking for the smallest Clues 16:31 foreign 16:42 depth of the layer soil composition and even the relative position of remains are essential to recreate the past 16:51 [Music] no one knows under which Stone an archaeological find is hiding 16:56 [Music] 17:08 the Forty thousand square meters of athlete yam are an archaeological mine 17:14 architecture technology lifestyle wherever they dig Dr galilei's research 17:19 teams discover new clues about this year-round sedentary site 17:29 twice as old as the Egyptian pyramids the well-discovered by Galilei is the 17:35 most ancient example of this type of construction ever found [Music] 17:47 this first Well turns out to be an archaeologist's dream come true instead 17:52 of the expected sand and rocks that should have filled it scores of carved objects animal remains and other 17:59 man-made items were found giving a fair Chronicle of the daily life of the 30 odd families that used to live here all 18:06 year round [Music] 18:33 for archaeologists all of athlete yam artifacts are deemed in situ finds 18:39 objects found in context where they were abandoned nine thousand years ago 18:47 foreign [Music] 19:03 Pebble it looks like you have the cortex here and we have something yeah definitely yeah 19:09 these are flakes this one is slightly loaded but they're all man-made let's say that this is a 19:15 big core of Flint like this this is a call so you prepare you make some preparation and then one strike thick 19:22 and you have the blade 19:28 too much in the sole sector dedicated to Flint 19:34 tool making a sample of 8755 artifacts has been identified 19:40 from Flint flakes to functional tools 19:49 these are artifacts that we found in atletium it is only a random collection to just to demonstrate the nature of the 19:57 artifacts that we have here this for example is a beef facial you have all the surface polished with pleasure 20:03 flakes it takes a lot of skill and professional Flint Napper to do this 20:09 maybe every in any 1000 people there is only one with specialist for this and 20:15 this knowledge is was transferred from generation to generation and it is very very sophisticated very very Prestige 20:22 too they were hell ahead they have two kind of arrowheads and these are biblos these 20:29 are biblos you can see the arrowheads out nice they are work perfect they were 20:34 half dead of course and they were used for hunting and these I'll be patient access and 20:40 they were used for woodwork used for cutting Woods cutting trees and maybe 20:47 producing both who knows because we know that these people have the capability of 20:52 selling in the sea because the type of fish that we discover some of them are deep sea and deep sea fish and they 20:58 require a knowledge in selling so they probably had both but we didn't find the boat 21:05 because organic material is not always for sale the waterproofing effect of clay has 21:12 helped the archaeologists in many ways 21:18 fragile remains such as fish bones are abundant over 6 000 fish remains have 21:23 been lifted from the bottom allowing for very detailed interpretations 21:33 with its characteristic retractile dorsal spine Triggerfish is the most common species found in athletium 21:41 the average size of the specimen analyzed matches the expected type of catch using a net 21:48 [Music] they add the add the chips they were fishermen they were good fishermen we found here a lot of fisherman equipment 21:55 and also needles which they probably saw the necks and they live on the fishing 22:01 they live by the sea 22:09 you know there are no evidence for boat whatsoever you know how can you tell from the human from the pound that the 22:16 people were engaged in seafaring you know that they were really using boats you know and whether they were able or 22:23 capable of reaching the island of disciples for example and there are specific diseases you know especially in 22:30 the vertebral column that tells you the posterior part of the vertebra the 22:36 neural Arch so the there is enough evidence in in the skeleton to tell you 22:42 almost everything about the people who were living at lithium 22:47 typical wear on specific vertebraes and larger muscle attachments on high limb bones are compatible with long hours 22:54 paddling in a boat 23:01 you see if you take is mandible for example you see here we have Motors one of the 23:09 side of the crown is totally eroded this specific teeth was heavily treated 23:15 by some cultural Behavior because we know that people were using 23:23 their teeth not just to process the food but actually to prepare a fishnet for 23:29 examples or to prepare baskets for example but what you call cultural 23:36 attraction is very different from what you call Food attrition 23:42 Century cultural attrition of teeth used to weave fibers or tan skins could still be seen in some ethnic groups 23:52 to weave their nests fishermen of athlete yam relied on fiber 24:01 these types of remains are amongst the most difficult for an archaeologist to establish 24:06 but researchers in athletia were lucky enough to find carbonized plant fibers still clearly identifiable after 9 000 24:13 years [Music] 24:20 flax fiber for instance could be used for ropes Nets and maybe even clothing 24:27 [Music] such organic remains as well as charcoal 24:32 or bones can be used to obtain precise data that provides further details on the evolution of ancient settlements 24:39 the clock used here is an unstable form of carbon that decays an unknown and regular pattern 24:46 carbon 14. 24:58 this is the bone very well preserved of a small mammal probably a mouse 25:04 so this sticking have to be done very carefully and you get a lot of information 25:09 apart from hand collecting material from the surface of the site and Excavating inside the wells and in that sediment we 25:16 found animal bones which we wouldn't have collected from the sea floor without the dredger it's one of the 25:24 first sites where we have almost the full complement of domestic animals which means sheep goat cattle Pig so 25:33 that we can see within the site the complete if you like development of domestic animals beginning with animals 25:40 that are wild and hunted through to animals that are fully domesticated 25:46 so we have one of the more impressive pieces which is a horn core a horn of a 25:53 cattle and this is probably a wild uh cattle what we call an orac so this is 25:58 from before animals were domesticated [Music] 26:06 also from the surface of the site our own cause of goats and this would have 26:12 been a wild goat or a very very primitive goat we can compare it here and you can see that the horn core is 26:18 very straight and leaves the skull right above the front of the the eyes as opposed to a 26:23 domestic goat you can see that the horn cores go backwards and they also have a Twist so what we're dealing here is 26:29 really one of the earliest points in the domestication of goats 26:35 when we look at material from the wells we are dealing with the end of the site it's a later phase of occupation and 26:42 essentially the material that we find there in terms of animals is slightly different all the animals in the worlds 26:47 are domestic we see the transition within the site and that is a unique feature 26:54 [Music] pollen and seeds extracted from the sediments also reflect the agricultural 27:01 transition and give an idea of the vegetation and climate that was the norm here in prehistoric time 27:07 [Music] the average temperature was three degrees lower than today with greater 27:13 differences between the seasons and colder seawater once they reach the bottom of the well 27:19 the archaeologists had enough Clues to reconstitute the sequence of events that forced it to be abandoned 27:26 with the sea Rising salt water percolated up through the sand and contaminated the fresh water table under 27:33 the well it's very hard to abandon your house to abandon your village so naturally we 27:40 assume that they struggle to try to solve problems and actually we found evidence in the well 27:45 of trying to cope with the problems those who had spent so much effort building it tried to restore its 27:52 function by raising its base in vain she was so close so the world was no use 27:59 anymore so at that moment they still used it but as a garbage pit 28:06 the sea level kept Rising slowly but inexorably one wonders where did the water come 28:12 from ice 28:17 when ice keeps piling up on continents the world's sea level goes down 28:24 in the days of athlete yam the melting phase of the last ice age was well underway 28:30 but North America was still covered by the most imposing of the ancient ice giants 28:40 glaciers have left behind deep scars in the granite of the North Shore of the Saint Lawrence River in Quebec 28:47 they are vivid evidence of the scope of the planetary upheaval that had repercussions on early civilizations 28:54 settle near Shores 28:59 at the rate of half a meter per Century the rising sea eventually forced the people of athlete young to abandon the 29:06 land of their ancestors the Canadian Glacier would keep feeding 29:13 the sea until the Bronze Age some 3000 years later 29:20 to date on the abandoned site researchers have identified over 70 structures of various functionalities 29:26 and dwellings with rectangular foundations of which only the first row of stones 29:32 remain [Music] 29:43 thank you [Music] 30:01 at that time during the Preparatory and Neolithic period people used to bury 30:07 their dead underneath the living flow which is very interesting if you come to think about it the notion of the idea of 30:14 separating the world of the dead and the world of the living is quite a late notion 30:19 so in neolithic side it is quite easy to find human skeleton because once you find the structure you know for sure 30:27 underneath the floor you will find human skeleton [Music] 30:32 the graves at athlete yam didn't contain only bones 30:38 sealed in the anaerobic environment of clay for thousands of years these remains present the best preserved human 30:44 and viral DNA samples of prehistory [Music] 30:54 good morning everyone and today is going to be a bit of a charge day 30:59 uh first thing Jonathan is the first safety 31:06 who told me about two minutes before I went diving that we were going to start to excavate the new well the feature 31:12 number 80 which he just discovered this year 31:27 every dive over atletium brings about its share of discovery 31:34 this new structure spotted during the mission preparation may turn out to be a well a storage pit 31:40 or a burial site 31:53 [Music] 32:01 [Music] despite the risk and the long hours 32:07 spent underwater diving is a passion for underwater archaeologists 32:13 that does not relieve them from the tedious monk work generally associated with classic archeology 32:30 [Music] okay so we will use dish 32:38 ES 32:44 this is a bone tool this is a spatula from the 20 centimeters in the well so 32:51 this is the festival we have yeah 32:57 final material we put here and the organic material you put there 33:03 make sure that you don't break it while while doing it you have to feel it but there is a high probability that it is 33:10 the same out effect it was broken in Antiquity and maybe dark you see 33:17 this is the spatula and believe me I didn't dive here the last night and put it there you have to trust me 33:25 yes [Music] 33:34 the most important chapter of prehistory is surely the period that sees nomadic hunter-gatherer tribes switching to a 33:40 brand new mode of subsistence agriculture 33:51 thousands of plant seeds found there were many kilograms of domesticated wheat but also barley lentils and 33:58 chickpeas foreign 34:06 [Music] 34:13 in the beginning the inhabitants must have gathered Wild Grains as a hedge against periods of want 34:21 process of harvesting and planting in the same area slowly altered the planned characteristics domesticating them 34:33 probably without intent the early prehistoric farmers were busy fostering hybrids and artificial selection on 34:40 their seeds 34:49 these are secret blades see the shine see that it's there is a glossy here at 34:55 the edge this is the original shine created by cutting width so it stays 35:01 like this and you can still see the Polish nine times after nine thousand years 35:07 thus the small community can feed itself and prosper all year long so much so that life expectancy in 35:14 athlete yam gets a significant boost [Music] 35:39 [Music] 35:46 at the beginning of the summer a decline in fishing activity makes way for grain Harvest 35:52 followed by the slaughtering of animals born in the spring the group then moves on to fruit and nut Gathering 35:58 before a fall Seafood phase followed by the collection of wild legumes in winter 36:03 as the year passes the inhabitants so green then take to the sea fishing once 36:09 again in all practical senses Dr hershkovitz's 36:16 lab has conducted an autopsy on all human remains excavated in atlit yam 36:21 the information is coded in the balance like a huge paper folder that record almost every event in your life and you 36:29 just need to know how to read the information in the film you take a film of a male and a female 36:35 it's just that one is longer than the other it makes sense I mean bone growth pelvic bone articulations long bone fine 36:42 structure tooth attrition are all Clues to determine age sex and General Health 36:47 of individuals combining all the factors allows us to 36:52 conclude that few children reached adulthood and this was at the late 19th 36:59 to the water and he found some skeleton and he called me and then we took the 37:04 next day when I arrived I looked around and I saw there is another skull of a baby 37:11 as a in the bones you can see that he suffered from some infectional disease 37:17 bacterial DNA and Bone analysis have established the oldest cases of malaria and tuberculosis which took the lives of 37:24 this mother and her young child 37:30 foreign Improvement of food sources implied an 37:37 increase in pregnancy yet a higher mortality rate for females 37:43 while boys who did become adults could live up to 50. 37:50 this is a remarkable life expectancy considering other settlements around the same period 37:56 those living in athletes benefited from almost everything of what is now referred to as the Mediterranean diet 38:03 [Music] 38:11 mastering agriculture is the main factor by which some 7 million humans at the 38:16 time of atlib young became the 7 billion of today 38:27 is 38:36 foreign 39:00 that were found together and you can see that face of the skull of the center 39:06 were plastered basically they used some kind of limes to create a mask 39:11 and they model the face you can see the nose you can see the teeth and actually they used seashell you know to create 39:19 the eyes and the iris at the center now those cars are very interesting because 39:25 at that period people used to bury their dead within the living quarters after 39:32 several years it took just a skull to create a beautiful face probably put 39:38 some kind of a twig over the rest of of the skull so imagine to yourself that 39:44 these cars stood in it on a platform at the center of the village and together 39:50 with it they were very impressive foreign [Music] 40:02 worshiping your ancestor by saying that my ancestors were living here in my 40:09 great great ancestor they are also living here by establishing a chain of generation from present to the Past you 40:17 establish your right on the property 40:22 after years of successful digs some thought there was little chance of learning much more 40:28 but that was without factoring in the whim of winter storms [Music] 40:34 during a routine survey dive Dr galili and his father Joseph stumbled upon 40:39 three rocks protruding from the Sandy Bottom [Music] 40:45 it looked like nothing they had ever discovered so far [Music] 40:51 it was not a house not a tumulus an even less a storage pit 41:00 ER would add a whole new dimension to the richness of the sight we know one position and we make triangulations we 41:07 put the Baseline on them under the only way to get to the bottom of it is to remove the tons of sand that cover the 41:13 whole sector foreign 41:32 it is clearly man-made a megalith an erected Stone altar 41:39 this is the spiritual heart of the small Neolithic settlement 41:48 [Music] in the periphery many hearths were found 41:55 along with buildings a high concentration of burial sites and an intriguing narrow Corridor 20 meters 42:03 long 42:08 [Music] Dr Clive Ruggles is specialized in archaeoastronomy and has worked on 42:14 various prehistoric sites around the world for one point say the altar Stone 42:19 and one of the things here is that there are these two long parallel walls that 42:25 lead in the general direction of the altar Stone and very strange they seem to have built these two long walls only 42:30 a meter apart with and what appears to have been a compressed clay surface so 42:35 it seems people were walking along there and the orientation of that as far as I could discover before I came out here 42:42 just looking at the plans and the the match this was roughly oriented in the 42:47 direction of sunrise on the June Solstice so on the on the longest day of the year 42:54 survival of people living here depended more and more on agriculture had they already observed the link 43:00 between season Cycles in the Sun 43:05 one of the problems of dealing with Prehistoric sites and worrying about how 43:12 they related to the sky is that the sky has changed Dr Ruggles uses special astronomic 43:18 software that spins the planets backward 9000 times in order to see the sky the 43:24 people of atlit yam were seeing nine millenniums ago [Music] his method was already successful in 43:31 establishing a solid link between astronomy and Stonehedge the famous British circle of star 43:41 [Music] 43:49 the archaeoastronomer needs to infer position from marine charts composed with compass error and reinvent the 43:56 aspect The Horizon had from a point situated offshore 12 meters below the sea 44:04 [Music] 44:14 Dr ruggles's calculation shows that the sun did rise between the two walls once 44:19 a year but not necessarily exactly on the summer solstice a few days before or after but it did 44:27 happen within the longest days of the year luck or deliberate effort 44:34 [Music] 44:39 foreign [Music] 44:54 closer to the altar the more it is excavated the more elements and features are exposed 45:02 place that prompts respect and contemplation a few stones have fallen with time but 45:09 the two meter monoliths weighing a ton each were erected like Sentinels in an arc around a central stone with a 45:15 depression around it 45:25 vestiges of fresh water weed and mollusks were found within indicative of water symbolically surrounding the main 45:32 Stone on what is presumed to be the front of 45:37 the altar many flat stones with cup marks are deployed both for offerings for social activities one cannot say 45:48 foreign 45:53 of a mini Stonehenge 5 000 years before the erection of that great Monument 46:01 [Music] the discovery of an entire Zone 46:06 seemingly dedicated to spiritual or ritual activities is an indication that the people of atletium 46:12 gave themselves the means to preserve Collective knowledge 46:19 the agricultural tradition foreign [Music] 46:48 ends on an experiment with the hopes of making other underwater finds more predictable 46:54 we get finished to excavate everything that we planned to and even more we made 47:00 the experiments we took the call samples and we made the jet drillings 47:06 Dr galilei's team helps to help the new generation of underwater archaeologists to find other sites like this one 47:13 [Music] 47:32 foreign [Music] 47:40 has a lot to tell us the evidence for the bones testified to a very peaceful 47:46 community we don't have evidence for trauma whatsoever which is quite strange 47:51 because people were expecting at least the first farming Community to be more 47:57 aggressive protecting their territories in a way but at least for motility on we 48:05 can conclude that the level of aggression was very low 48:11 [Music] foreign 48:18 Coast the sun doesn't rise exactly at the same place it used to 48:24 at least yam findings are casting a new light on the dawn of human civilization and on people who might have been 48:32 ancestors for many of us today 48:39 whether or not we find another drowned city as old as this one atlitiamo remain an example a source of 48:47 motivation for future generations of archaeologists to look for some of Mankind's First Steps at the bottom of 48:54 the sea
The rest of the Atlit Yam keywords, sorted, duplicates out:
Numenor?
“Hail, Atlantis!”
No, Mu
I won a trip to visit Poseidonia, but I couldn’t hold my breath long enough.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/chat/4112913/posts?page=19#19
Anteliduluven for real.
OMG!!!
We had GILLS and lived under water??? This changes everything!!!
;)
That’s easy for you to type.
Carp a diem, it keeps the brain doctor away.
How very apple pro.
They used to hold a Gala every year.
See? The people in 45200 BC dud not heed alvs gorvs about global warming then their cities went underwater!
Wheat, barley, lentils and chick peas 10,000 year later, still the staples of the Mediterranean diet.
Where the pink lady sang.
Very interesting video. Thanks for posting.
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