Posted on 12/07/2013 12:44:04 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Thanks for posting this article. Look forward to all articles on archaeological finds.
Awesome....
Very; thanks for posting. I think the name of the site is Sunny Skys, rather than Sunken Skys. Come to think of it though. . .
SunkenCiv - Ping.
If the city was underwater wouldn’t everyone be wet all the time....?
I’d like to know how an entire city came to be inundated like this. Obviously the sea level rose, but how? Sport Utility Chariots belching CO2?
If the city was underwater wouldnt everyone be wet all the time....?
Just because civilization was still primitive doesn’t mean the people were stupid. They probably used umbrellas.
The pics are worth seeing!!!
This is not just any find... the statues and the massive tablets look almost NEW. I’ve never seen anything that old preserved so well.
Can’t wait to get some high res pics of those after they are brought up.
And that bronze statue... much of that stuff dates BC. Can you believe the quality of it? It’s preserved condition really shows that we underestimate what their artisans were capable of. I mean, just LOOK at that thing.
Thanks for the link. That was great.
For those of us today who follow and learn from history and not try to re write it, nice!
"An ancient Egyptian city found 6.5 km off of modern Egypt's coastline..."(LINK)
Would be nice if the article explained what causes a city to slip into a sea. What is the possibility of a modern city doing the same thing today? It just happened 1,400 years ago. Less than a minute ago in the earth’s history.
From everything I’ve been able to find so far, sea levels have been pretty stable over the last 3000 years, and around 500 AD especially. There have been some periods of slight rises, but nothing to put a city underwater as seen in the photos @ the link. I’d guess at subsidence during a large seismic event. The Mediterranean region is very active...
http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/earth/the-dynamic-earth/anatolian-history/#page=1
You know, that possibility also occurred to me. I'll bet that was what did it.
I was stationed in the Sinai desert for a year back in the late 80s and I remember the discussions that earthquakes had caused some of the port cities to submerge and others to be pushed upward and out of the sea’s reach. All along the northern Sinai there are the remains of Roman outposts between al Kantara (near the Suez Canal) and el Arish (near the Israeli border). During routine patrols in that area it was easy to find the remains of Pelusium - where Cleopatra was unrolled in front of Caesar - and Petrocine with its graving docks and baths. A short stroll unearthed lamps, small statues, coins, and bronze arrowheads. That part of the world is loaded with archeological treasures but the attitude of the Egyptian authorities was “if it isn’t Islamic, we don’t care”.
Also, the city is in the Nile Delta area. The ground was “sinking sand” to begin with, since the river constantly deposits silt, shifts its channel, and generally restructures the topography all the time. Add in earthquakes and storms, and a nice port city can easily be left submerged, like Caesaraea Maritima, or high and dry.
Think of New Orleans and the Mississippi Delta area or the river-mouths area we call Bangladesh. It doesn’t take sea-level changes to make the situation unstable.
Is that what happened in Detroit ? Heard that they are underwater too.
LOL!
Oh, sorry, I’d have included you as a recipient to my post 12, but I was on the comment page and had gone reading for a while...
As far as the “possibility” goes, I’d say it’s just a matter of time. You’ll find that article I linked to pretty fascinating, I think. Sobering, too. I sure did.
Yes. Any area with any depth of sediments is vulnerable. The New Madrid (MO) earthquake(s) were an excellent example (and will be again).
Al Gore finds proof of man made global warming when, “An Ancient City Is Discovered Underwater. What They Found Will Change History Forever”
How do you change history? Is it done by executive order?
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