Posted on 04/10/2002 5:54:43 PM PDT by Pokey78
A MYSTERIOUS settlement that sank beneath the waves at least 1,200 years ago has been discovered by divers off the south-east coast of India.
Granite blocks and walls that lie 20ft below the surface may be the remains of six "lost temples" that form part of local mythology.
The ruins came to light after the controversial amateur archaeologist and best-selling author Graham Hancock interviewed fisherman for a recent television series.
After hearing accounts of the myth of a submerged city, he and two dozen divers searched the sea bed last week.
India's National Institute of Oceanography, which was involved in the discovery, believes the ruins at Mahabalipuram in Tamil Nadu could be 1,200 to 1,500 years old.
But Mr Hancock, who argues that civilisation predates the ancient Egyptians and Sumerians by thousands of years, believes the city could go back to 3,000 BC.
The ruins were discovered half a mile off the coast by a team from the NIO and the UK-based Scientific Exploration Society. They include remains of walls and scattered carved blocks and stones and may cover several square miles.
According to local legend Mahabalipuram was once home to a great city. The gods became so jealous of its beauty that they sent a flood to swamp the city. Six temples were submerged, leaving just one on the shore.
Early copy of Modern Drummer Magazine.
They've sure come a long way. They print it on paper now.
I echo what an earlier poster felt about Hancock-he is a bit of a salesman, but he does raise fascinating points, sheds light on previously unconnected facts, and brings it to the publics attention. For that alone he deserves a lot of credit.
Heck of a lot better than Thera on the wrong side of the Pillars of Hercules.
There are a number of reference texts that explain what the problems are. Most significant technical problem is that we cannot achieve the tolerances of the block fits with carved stone and can't achieve the hardness of the blocks from any other stone based material. There are other issues but there are a number of texts out there which deal with this kind of problem.
Bunk! I have to laugh at all the people who swallow this stuff. Todays computer driven machine tools can cut materials to incredibly tight tolerances unheard of in the ancient world. If people 2,000 years ago could do it you can bet we could do it today, if we wanted to.
Other excuses given include the fact that no cranes exist with a heavy enough lift capacity to move the giant stone blocks. Of course this completely ignores the fact that modern building techniques are so much more efficient today that structural members need not be so heavy, hence there is no need for such monster cranes. Its kind of like those who say we could not go back to the moon today. Its true that we could not just dust off a rocket and push the button for lift off, but that doesnt mean we are incapable if we wanted to. Same goes for the pyramids. If we wanted to spend millions of dollars, and decades if need be, to build giant stone structures that would serve no purpose for todays world, we could.
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Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
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Just updating, not sending a general distribution.
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Just updating the GGG info, not sending a general distribution. |
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Note: this topic is from 4/10/2002. Thanks Pokey78.
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