7 Fascinating Underwater Ruins

Here are seven of the most fascinating underwater ruins! Includes Dwarka
Port and Mahabalipuram in India,  Cleopatra's Palace in Alexandria, World's
Wickedest City in Jamaica, Yonaguni-Jima in Japan, Pavlopetr in Greece & the
Lost Villages in Canada!

 [image: 7 Fascinating Underwater Ruins]





*Dwarka Port (India)*


[image: Underwater Ruins]


[image: Underwater Ruins]


Among the most exciting archaeological discoveries made in India in recent
years are those made off the coast of Dwarka and Bet Dwarka in Gujarat.
Excavations have been going on since 1983. These two places are 30 km away
from each other. Dwarka is on the Arabian sea coast, and Bet Dwarka is in
the Gulf of Kutch. Both these places are connected with the god Krishna and
there are many temples here, mostly belonging to the medieval period.

Rated as one of the seven most ancient cities in the country, the legendary
city of Dvaraka was the dwelling place of Lord Krishna. It is believed that
due to damage and destruction by the sea, Dvaraka has submerged six times
and modern day Dwarka is the 7th such city to be built in the area.

Archaeologists were keen to find out whether there were any older remains
off the coast at these places.



*The submerged temples of Mahabalipuram (India)*


[image: Underwater Ruins]


According to popular belief, the famous Shore Temple at Mahabalipuram wasn't
a single temple, but the last of a series of seven temples, six of which had
submerged. New finds suggest that there may be some truth to the story. A
major discovery of submerged ruins was made in April of 2002 offshore of
Mahabalipuram in Tamil Nadu, South India. The discovery, at depths of 5 to 7
meters (15 to 21 feet) was made by a joint team from the Dorset based
Scientific Exploration Society (SES) and marine archaeologists from India's
National Institute of Oceanography (NIO). Investigations at each of the
locations revealed stone masonry, remains of walls, square rock cut remains,
scattered square and rectangular stone blocks and a big platform with steps
leading to it. All these lay amidst the locally occurring geological
formations of rocks.



*Cleopatra's Palace in Alexandria (Egypt)*


[image: Underwater Ruins]


Off the shores of Alexandria, the city of Alexander the Great, lies what is
believed to be the ruins of the royal quarters of Cleopatra. A team of
marine archaeologists led by Frenchman Franck Goddio made excavation on this
ancient city from where Cleopatra, the last queen of the Ptolemies, ruled
Egypt. Historians believe this site was submerged by earthquakes and tidal
waves more than 1,600 years ago.


*World's Wickedest City, Port Royal (Jamaica)*


[image: Underwater Ruins]


One of the advantages of marine or nautical archeology is that, in many
instances, catastrophic events send a ship or its cargo to the bottom,
freezing a moment in time. A catastrophe that has helped nautical
archeologists was the earthquake that destroyed part of the city of Port
Royal, Jamaica. Once known as the "Wickedest City on Earth" for its sheer
concentration of pirates, prostitutes and rum, Port Royal is now famous for
another reason: "It is the only sunken city in the New World," according to
Donny L. Hamilton.

In contrast to many archaeological sites, the investigation of Port Royal
yielded much more than simply trash and discarded items. An unusually large
amount of perishable, organic artifacts were recovered, preserved in the
oxygen-depleted underwater environment. Together with the vast treasury of
complimentary historical documents, the underwater excavations of Port Royal
have allowed for a detailed reconstruction of everyday life in an English
colonial port city of the late 17th century.


*8000-year-old Yonaguni-Jima (Japan)*


[image: Underwater Ruins]


Situated 68 miles beyond the east coast of Taiwan, Yonaguni Islands are a
remarkable place for its rugged and mountainous coastlines. The special
attraction is the submerged ruins located in the southern coast of Yonaguni:
a superb 100×50x25 meters man-made artifact out of solid rock slabs stands
erect at right angles. Its is estimated to be around 8000 years old, which
is remarkably early for the kind of technology that has been used for
carving it. Different theories exist about the possible identities of this
structure.

*Pavlopetri (Greece)*


[image: Underwater Ruins]


The ancient town of Pavlopetri lies in three to four metres of water just
off the coast of southern Laconia in Greece. The ruins date from at least
2800 BC through to intact buildings, courtyards, streets, chamber tombs and
some thirty-seven cist graves which are thought to belong to the Mycenaean
period (c.1680-1180 BC). This Bronze Age phase of Greece provides the
historical setting for much Ancient Greek literature and myth, including
Homer's Age of Heroes.
*
The Lost Villages (Canada)*


[image: Underwater Ruins]


"The Lost Villages" are ten communities in the Canadian province of Ontario,
in the former townships of Cornwall and Osnabruck (now South Stormont) near
Cornwall, which were permanently submerged by the creation of the St.
Lawrence Seaway in 1958.

*
*
*േസ്നഹേത്താെട ജഗ്ഗു :)
With Love JaGGu :)*

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