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The podcast dives into some of history’s most enduring mysteries—Atlantis, the Great Flood, and ancient technologies. The ...
Both the flood and dynasty were once thought to be fictitious, due to a lack of archaeological evidence. “An earthquake triggered a landslide that dammed the river, and when the dam broke it released ...
Altogether, this suggests there could be some truth to the stories about Yu’s heroic exploits—though no archaeological evidence of post-flood dredging has been discovered yet.
It is a powerful foundation myth, but many believed that was all it was. Some 4,000 years after the flood was supposed to have happened, historians had found no archaeological evidence of its ...
According to a report in the Chinese state-run Global Times, new archaeological evidence suggests that the world’s most ...
During excavations in the Merwede Canal area in Utrecht (Netherlands), archaeologists found evidence of a massive flood that took place shortly after the year 100 and caused severe damage in the ...
Archaeologists already have perfectly plausible explanations (based on evidence found by studying them, textual accounts, and so forth) for how the pyramids ended up looking the way they do ...
Archaeologists Think They Might Have Found the Real Noah’s Ark A mountain in Turkey shows evidence of human activity in the area around the time the Biblical flood is said to have taken place.
Archaeologists Find Evidence of Human Activity Near 5,000-Year-Old Boat-Shaped Mound in Turkey ... suggesting that the site aligns with the Bible's timeline of the Great Flood 5,000 years ago. ...
The newly unearthed ruins in the Changqing district of Jinan, East China's Shandong Province, reveal that the earliest known sections of the Great Wall date back to the late Western Zhou period ...