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posted 1 year ago by WitchHunterSiegfried on scored.co (+0 / -0 / +6Score on mirror )
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TallestSkil on scored.co
1 year ago 3 points (+0 / -0 / +3Score on mirror )
Not too much, really. It’s still “fringe” to say that there even *were* cities that long ago, despite the handful of independently funded diving missions proving that there are human constructions on the edges of the continental shelf (~400 feet underwater and ~200 miles out). The ✡official narrative✡ is that civilization began only when jews say it began and that there totally weren’t any cities before the end of the last ice age. Just hunter-gatherers (cities require agriculture), and therefore only nomadic people.

We’d have to get archaeology to dedicate itself full time to expeditions underwater (and digging deeper than they already do in very politically charged places) to get a better picture of who lived where (if that’s even possible using only the stone that’s left to us) and when places were settled. Gobekli Tepe, for example, is one of the few discovered (admitted) above-water original settlements from that time. There are records there that people believe show the comet that *caused* the Younger Dryas Event.

There’s a lot to still be discovered in this department. [Israel and Egypt work hard to cover it up.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q4NnCAZcxHg) They don’t want it know who actually lived there before them.
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