City Under the
Sea
B.K.
Parthasarathy writes about a spectacular underwater
archaeological find by a joint British-Indiandiving team that
could rewrite history. (10-17-02)
Who would have thought a city that could be older than the
Harappan civilization could be lying beneath water right off the
coast of Mahabalipuram?
Sometimes, it pays to listen to the stories of humble fishermen.
Local fishermen in the coast of Mahabalipuram in Tamil Nadu have
for centuries believed in that a great flood consumed a city
over 1,000 years ago in a single day when the gods grew jealous
of its beauty.
The myths of Mahabalipuram were written down by British traveler
J. Goldingham, who visited the town in 1798, at which time it
was known to sailors as the Seven Pagodas. Legend had it that
six temples were submerged beneath the waves, with the seventh
temple still standing on the seashore.
Best-selling British author and television presenter Graham
Hancock took these stories seriously. The hypothesis that there
may be ruins underwater off the coast of Mahabalipuram has been
around at least since the eighteenth century among scholarly
circles.
“I have long regarded Mahabalipuram, because of its flood myths
and fishermen’s sightings as a very likely place in which
discoveries of underwater structures could be made, and I
proposed that a diving expedition should be undertaken there,”
said Hancock.
Hancock’s initiative resulted in the Dorset, England-based
Scientific Exploration Society and India’s National Institute of
Oceanography joining hands. In April this year, the team made a
spectacular discovery
The SES announced: “A joint expedition of 25 divers from the
Scientific Exploration Society and India’s National Institute of
Oceanography led by Monty Halls and accompanied by Graham
Hancock, have discovered an extensive area with a series of
structures that clearly show man made attributes, at a depth of
5-7 meters offshore of Mahabalipuram in Tamil Nadu.
“The scale of the submerged ruins, covering several square miles
and at distances of up to a mile from shore, ranks this as a
major marine-archaeological discovery as spectacular as the
ruined cities submerged off Alexandria in Egypt.”
India’s NIO said in a statement: “A team of underwater
archaeologists from National Institute of Oceanography NIO have
successfully `unearthed’ evidence of submerged structures off
Mahabalipuram and established first-ever proof of the popular
belief that the Shore temple of Mahabalipuram is the remnant of
series of total seven of such temples built that have been
submerged in succession. The discovery was made during a joint
underwater exploration with the Scientific Exploration Society,
U.K.”
NIO said:
- Underwater investigations were carried out at 5 locations
in the 5 – 8 m water depths, 500 to 700 m off Shore temple.
- Investigations at each location have shown presence of the
construction of stone masonry, remains of walls, a big square
rock cut remains, scattered square and rectangular stone
blocks, big platform leading the steps to it amidst of the
geological formations of the rocks that occur locally.
- Most of the structures are badly damaged and scattered in
a vast area, having biological growth of barnacles, mussels
and other organisms.
- The construction pattern and area, about 100m X 50m,
appears to be same at each location. The actual area covered
by ruins may extend well beyond the explored locations.
- The possible date of the ruins may be 1500-1200 years BP.
Pallava dynasty, ruling the area during the period, has
constructed many such rock cut and structural temples in
Mahabalipuram and Kanchipuram.
The last claim is questioned by Hancock, who says a scientist
has told him it could be 6,000 years old.
Durham University geologist Glenn Milne told him in an e-mail:
“I had a chat with some of my colleagues here in the dept. of
geological sciences and it is probably reasonable to assume that
there has been very little vertical tectonic motion in this
region [i.e. the coastal region around Mahabalipuram] during the
past five thousand years or so. Therefore, the dominant process
driving sea-level change will have been due to the melting of
the Late Pleistocene ice sheets. Looking at predictions from a
computer model of this process suggests that the area where the
structures exist would have been submerged around six thousand
years ago. Of course, there is some uncertainty in the model
predictions and so there is a flexibility of roughly plus or
minus one thousand years is this date.”
If that were true, it would be a spectacular development.
Previous archaeological opinion recognizes no culture in India
6,000 years ago capable of building anything much.
Hancock says this discovery proves scientists should be more
open-minded. “I have argued for many years that the world’s
flood myths deserve to be taken seriously, a view that most
Western academics reject. “But here in Mahabalipuram, we have
proved the myths right and the academics wrong.”
Hancock believes far more research needs to be done on
underwater relics.
“Between 17,000 years ago and 7000 years ago, at the end of the
last Ice Age, terrible things happened to the world our
ancestors lived in,” he says. “Great ice caps over northern
Europe and north America melted down, huge floods ripped across
the earth, sea-level rose by more than 100 meters, and about 25
million square kilometers of formerly habitable lands were
swallowed up by the waves.
“Marine archeology has been possible as a scholarly discipline
for about 50 years — since the introduction of scuba. In that
time, according to Nick Flemming, the doyen of British marine
archeology, only 500 submerged sites have been found worldwide
containing the remains of any form of man-made structure or of
lithic artifacts. Of these sites only 100 — that’s 100 in the
whole world! — are more than 3000 years old.”
Hancock, who was understandably resentful about the NIO’s
silence in his pivotal role in making the diving expedition
happen — SES gave him full recognition — was himself quite
generous about who deserved the greatest credit:
“Of course the real discoverers of this amazing and very
extensive submerged site are the local fishermen of
Mahabalipuram. My role was simply to take what they had to say
seriously and to take the town’s powerful and distinctive flood
myths seriously. Since no diving had ever been done to
investigate these neglected myths and sightings I decided that a
proper expedition had to be mounted. To this end, about a year
ago, I brought together my friends at the Scientific Exploration
Society in Britain and the National Institute of Oceanography in
India and we embarked on the long process that has finally
culminated in the discovery of a major and hitherto completely
unknown submerged archaeological site.”
Interested readers can visit the following Web sites for
more information. The Scientific Exploration Society’s Web site
at
http://www.india-atlantis.org/
And Graham Hancock’s Web site at
http://www.grahamhancock.com/
Source:
india.krishna.org
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