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Divers Find Remains of Ancient Temple in Sunken Egyptian City

114 points| diodorus | 6 years ago |livescience.com

31 comments

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[+] LifeIsBio|6 years ago|reply
Visiting Egypt, particularly as an American, is an amazing experience. I tend to think of the American Revolution as “a long time ago”. After all, that’s when the country began.

Egypt, on the other hand, is a whole different ball game. It’s easy to recognize this on an intellectual level by reading on Wikipedia. But to see the history laid out like geological stratum is something else: layers on layers of civilization after civilization. Sometimes quite literally, like cases of hieroglyphics covered in multiple layers of graffiti, each layer in a different language.

It’s also enjoyable to see how enthusiastic Egyptians are about this history, and about new discoveries like this one. If you ever get the chance to go, go.

[+] rags2riches|6 years ago|reply
The old town of Split, Croatia, is built inside a third century Roman palace. When I visited, I was confused by all the Egyptian artefacts and artwork there. Until I realized that the Romans of course also enjoyed historical stuff from thousands of years ago.
[+] CogitoCogito|6 years ago|reply
My go to reminder of how old civilization is is the fact that the time between Great Pyramid and Jesus is longer than the time between Jesus and today. And this ignores even that we know of rather large settlements (hundreds) even twice the age of the Great Pyramid.
[+] adam0c|6 years ago|reply
this is old news, even the article is from 29th July there is actually more photos in this article about it by the sun of all newspapers! actual real factual news in the sun! (for those of you that are unfamiliar the sun is a tabloid paper in the uk that basically does boobs on page 3 and sports that's about it)

https://www.thesun.co.uk/tech/9571371/heracleion-ancient-egy...

[+] dmix|6 years ago|reply
American news sites haven't figured out these articles told via big pictures with captions the UK sites always use. It's a great format for low-density information and low cognitive effort reading.
[+] jakeogh|6 years ago|reply
Fascianting chan that catalogs old structures. No commentary: https://www.youtube.com/user/vlad9vt
[+] CaptainJustin|6 years ago|reply
Vlad's videos are amazing. I think he's explored quite a bit that is difficult to find much on.
[+] joosters|6 years ago|reply
Thanks for that link - fascinating videos, I've already lost a couple of hours browsing through them.
[+] diveanon|6 years ago|reply
45m is well within range of recreational diving, I wonder if this will become a diving destination.

Personally I would love to dive ruins like this, bit the cynic in me knows that tourists would strip the location and ruin it.

[+] nradov|6 years ago|reply
Some sensitive areas have had good results with requiring tourists to dive with licensed local guides. But 45m is a little deeper than most recreational divers can safely go. To do it safely and get a reasonable bottom time takes some basic technical dive training plus double tanks with normoxic trimix, and a decompression stage. (I know many divers have gone deeper using a single tank with compressed air but if anything goes wrong it can turn deadly in seconds.)
[+] spchampion2|6 years ago|reply
45m is well below the range of recreational diving, which has a limit of about 40m. Below that you're looking at needing multiple air cylinders, special breathing gas mixtures, and decompression stops on the way up.

On the other hand, 45m is totally fair game for technical divers, who are trained in deeper, longer, decompression style diving. Divers who pursue this training need to be tip-top recreational divers first.

[+] dgemm|6 years ago|reply
45 m is well within the range of decompression diving but is beyond the reach of 99% of recreational divers.
[+] spodek|6 years ago|reply
Ancient Egypt reminds me of Ozymandias and the humility and perspective we could learn from time or within our lifetimes we'll be able to dive to see remains of soon-to-be lost cities like Miami.
[+] darepublic|6 years ago|reply
They would find the remains of ancient basketball arenas
[+] projectileboy|6 years ago|reply
Highly recommend visiting the touring exhibit of artifacts from Thonis-Heracleion if you get a chance.
[+] cm2187|6 years ago|reply
I am curious about what flooded it. Surely the sea level didn't increase by 45m in that short amount of time.
[+] pjc50|6 years ago|reply
It looks like the sea level for the northern side of the Mediterranean increased by about 1.5 meters since Roman times, due to isostatic rebound: http://people.rses.anu.edu.au/lambeck_k/pdf/242.pdf

The wikipedia page for Heracleion attributes it to "soil liquefaction", i.e. the whole city's underlying soft soil/sand became fluid enough to wash away. It must have been eroded to other parts of the sea, leaving the inerodible stoneworks lying there.

[+] octocop|6 years ago|reply
I wonder who is doing these expeditions, is it the Egyptian government?
[+] moate|6 years ago|reply
Define "doing". Funding? Performing the exploration/excavation of these sites?