Lost City of Atlantis
In the mysterious world of urbex and abandoned cities,
none are more iconic – or debated – than the lost city of Atlantis.
Described by Plato in 360BC as an island lying in front of the Pillars
of Hercules, thousands of years of searching historically found nothing
despite promising archeological discoveries. But now, researchers claim to have located Atlantis in the wetlands of southern Spain, despite the feeling among many scholars that the city was nothing more than a Greek myth or fantastical urban legend.
Lost City of Atlantis
Lost City of Atlantis
Using Plato’s writings
as his starting point, Professor Richard Freund, from Hartford
University in Connecticut, used deep-ground radar, digital mapping and
satellite imagery to locate what he called “one of the largest and most
ancient cities at the bottom of a huge marsh”, north of Cadiz in Spain’s
Donaña National Park. The resulting documentary, Finding Atlantis, was
screened by National Geographic in the U.S. on Sunday.
Lost City of Atlantis
Freund’s
theory hinges on Plato’s assertion that Atlantis was destroyed by a
“natural disaster”, believed to be a tsunami, in 9,000BC: “This is the
power of tsunamis,” Freund told the Daily Telegraph.
“It is so hard to understand that it can wipe out 60 miles inland, and
that’s pretty much what we’re talking about.” Freund also claimed that
refugees fleeing the tsunami established “memorial cities” in central
Spain.
Lost City of Atlantis
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