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originally posted by: MerkabaMeditation
There is a nice video of it here:
www.dagbladet.no...
originally posted by: stormcell
It makes me wonder about what kind of vessel it was given that it is 50 meters long and had a debris field 300 meters in diameter. Normally, ships would stay in harbor until the weather was clear. Given that it was carrying stone statues, that seems to indicate that it was a cargo ship. Could something have slipped and punctured a hole in the wooden hull? Or was it attacked by pirates?
originally posted by: Mianeye
One of the cool things about this dive is this, i want one so much...
The wreck is in 55m of water and requires divers use rebreathers. Even so, their time on the bottom is limited to just three hours.
As a consequence, the expedition witnessed the first use of a new robotic Iron Man-like diving apparatus called the Exosuit. This enables its occupants to stay down for up to 50 hours, if necessary.
originally posted by: TinfoilTP
originally posted by: Hanslune
originally posted by: lostbook
That being said, I think that our level of achievement has been reached before until the last time the Earth "recycled" itself only to start over.
Howdy Lostbook
That is not an uncommon belief, however all presently held scientific data shows that the idea of such recycling is not supported. A civilization like ourselves creates a massive and easily detected ecological and archaeological footprint. You can go for special circumstances - a new age civ that left no traces but even that requires extreme social actions that no human cultures has ever done. You can also try the 'it was destroyed' but that again runs into the problem that such destruction in itself would leaves traces.
The approach that whatever super advanced civ existed then went poof can be made that the tectonic plates recycled all evidence back into lava.
The ultimate unprovable pile of BS.
originally posted by: yorkshirelad
originally posted by: TinfoilTP
originally posted by: Hanslune
originally posted by: lostbook
That being said, I think that our level of achievement has been reached before until the last time the Earth "recycled" itself only to start over.
Howdy Lostbook
That is not an uncommon belief, however all presently held scientific data shows that the idea of such recycling is not supported. A civilization like ourselves creates a massive and easily detected ecological and archaeological footprint. You can go for special circumstances - a new age civ that left no traces but even that requires extreme social actions that no human cultures has ever done. You can also try the 'it was destroyed' but that again runs into the problem that such destruction in itself would leaves traces.
The approach that whatever super advanced civ existed then went poof can be made that the tectonic plates recycled all evidence back into lava.
The ultimate unprovable pile of BS.
Would this be the "intelligent" plates that selectively preserve dinosaur bones but completely destroy all traces of an ancient civilisation......hmmm yeah......right.
originally posted by: Hanslune
Thanks for the link I did note that they were not using a grid to map where the finds are found. I wonder why they are doing that?
originally posted by: IntastellaBurst
a reply to: lostbook
You think they had techology then that eceeds ours ?
They didnt find an ipad, just a very simple computer made with cogs and sprockers and such.
originally posted by: _Del_
originally posted by: Hanslune
Thanks for the link I did note that they were not using a grid to map where the finds are found. I wonder why they are doing that?
With a debris field hundreds of meters across, it probably isn't practical to have a grid frame. Not enough time at those depths to set up a grid on that sort of scale. Time is money, and funding might not allow it. They could be measuring the distance from finds to set landmarks and plotting the results on a plan up top with a grid (just a guess. I have no idea how they are going about it).