'Britain's Atlantis' Found at Bottom of North
Sea a Huge Undersea World Swallowed by the Sea in 6500BC
by
Rob Waugh
Daily Mail
'Britain's
Atlantis' a hidden underwater world swallowed by the North Sea
has been discovered by divers working with science teams from
the University of St Andrews.
Doggerland,
a huge area of dry land that stretched from Scotland to Denmark
was slowly submerged by water between 18,000 BC and 5,500 BC.
Divers from
oil companies have found remains of a 'drowned world' with a population
of tens of thousands which might once have been the 'real heartland'
of Europe.
A team of climatologists,
archaeologists and geophysicists has now mapped the area using new
data from oil companies and revealed the full extent of a 'lost
land' once roamed by mammoths.
The research
suggests that the populations of these drowned lands could have
been tens of thousands, living in an area that stretched from Northern
Scotland across to Denmark and down the English Channel as far as
the Channel Islands.
The area was
once the real heartland of Europe and was hit by a
devastating tsunami', the researchers claim.
The wave was
part of a larger process that submerged the low-lying area over
the course of thousands of years.
'The name was
coined for Dogger Bank, but it applies to any of several periods
when the North Sea was land,' says Richard Bates of the University
of St Andrews. 'Around 20,000 years ago, there was a 'maximum'
although part of this area would have been covered with ice. When
the ice melted, more land was revealed but the sea level also
rose.
'Through a
lot of new data from oil and gas companies, were able to give
form to the landscape and make sense of the mammoths found out
there, and the reindeer. Were able to understand the types
of people who were there.
'People seem
to think rising sea levels are a new thing but its a cycle
of Earht history that has happened many many times.'
Organised by
Dr Richard Bates of the Department of Earth Sciences at St Andrews,
the Drowned Landscapes exhibit reveals the human story behind Doggerland,
a now submerged area of the North Sea that was once larger than
many modern European countries.
Dr Bates, a
geophysicist, said: Doggerland was the real heartland of Europe
until sea levels rose to give us the UK coastline of today.
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the rest of the article
July
6, 2012
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