
A diver explores the sunken settlement beneath the
waters off southern
Photograph: Handout
guardian.co.uk,
Friday 16 October 2009 19.49 BST
The secrets of a lost city that may have inspired one
of the world's most enduring myths—the fable of Atlantis—have been brought to
light from beneath the waters off southern
Explored by an Anglo-Greek team of archaeologists and
marine geologists and known as Pavlopetri, the sunken settlement dates back some
5,000 years to the time of Homer's heroes and in terms of size and wealth of
detail is unprecedented, experts say.
"There is now no doubt that this is the oldest
submerged town in the world," said Dr Jon Henderson, associate professor
of underwater archaeology at the
The site, which straddles 30,000 square meters of ocean
floor off the southern
What they found surpassed all expectations. Thanks to
shifting sands and the settlement's enclosure in a protected bay, the
exploration revealed a world of buildings, courtyards, main streets, rock-cut
tombs and religious structures. In addition, the seabed was replete with
thousands of shards of pottery.
"We found ceramics dating back to the end of the
stone age, which suggested that the settlement was occupied some 5,000 years
ago, at least 1,200 years earlier than originally thought," said
Henderson, who co-directed the underwater survey.
"Our investigations also revealed over 9,000
square meters of new buildings. But what really took us by surprise was the
discovery of a possible megaron, a monumental structure with a large
rectangular hall, which also suggests that the town had been used by an elite,
and automatically raised the status of the settlement."
More than any other underwater site so far, the find offers
potential insights into the workings of Mycenaean society.
"It is significant because as a submerged site it
was never reoccupied," said Elias Spondylis, who co-directed the survey as
the head of
Marine geologists have yet to work out why the
settlement sank. Theories include sea level changes, ground subsidence as the
result of earthquakes, or a tsunami.
"It is very likely a combination of the first two,"
said Dimitris Sakellariou, at the Greek Institute of Oceanography. "As the
world's oldest submerged city it is truly amazing. It not only shows how people
lived at the time is also of great interest to natural scientists because the
waters around it are so shallow."
Locals in the nearby town of
It is the first time a sunken city has been found in
"Atlantis was a myth but it is a myth that keeps
underwater exploration going," said Sakellariou. "Less than 1% of the
world's ocean floors have ever been surveyed. This is an extraordinary find but
there is still a lot more down there that has to be found."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2009/oct/16/lost-greek-city-atlantis-myth
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QE1wtNPGSwY