Massive Bronze Age City Discovered Underwater in Greece

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Massive Bronze Age City Discovered Underwater in Greece

We often see stories about buildings that have been left behind and forgotten. This can be due to nuclear disasters, job loss, or other sad circumstances. Recently there was a group of divers made up from experts from Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities, University of Geneva, and the Swiss School of Archaeology at Kiladha Bay. They were searching the waters near the Peloponnese Peninsula which is just south of Athens, Greece. They were searching for evidence of the oldest village in Europe. There is a rumor out there that there is a village that dates back to 8,000 years ago, but they have not been able to locate it. Rather than finding the village they were looking for, these divers came across an underwater Bronze Age city which has long been submerged in the Aegean Sea. The Bronze Age started in Europe around 2300 BC. Here is a glimpse at what these divers found.

#let_me_know #Discovered
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Awesome! Our true history that you'll never learn in public schools.
Maybe it's time for us to demand it!

TheKeenTribe
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Although in the seventies and eighties we thought we were doing a great thing by going to plastic instead of glass we should just revert back and go from plastic back to Glass again

donnysandley
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In Lefkas greece there are giant stone columns that noone knows what it is and is called stairs its between the town of Lygia and Kariotes. Seen it with goggles they should go look in the ionian sea as well

Planfromnj
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Those random people in videos are a tad dramatic. lol 😂

sandibales
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Yes and it was noticed over sixty years ago ...little late to the parade huh..!

mikebecket