مدينة ضائعة
تحت
مياه الكاريبي
مشاركة : محمد الزايد / كندا
Eng/Arb
أكد باحثون أمريكيون و
كوبيون أنهم أرسلوا غواصة أتوماتيكية صغيرة سميت : (
Remotely Operated Vehicle مركبة العمليات المتحكم
بها عن بعد (
من أجل تصوير منطقة تم اكتشافها
سابقا في قاع المحيط المجاور لكوبا بمساحة ثمانية أميال مربعة تقريبا .
وأكدت الصور الملتقطة وجود أعمدة
بطول ستة عشر قدما و أهرامات و كتل حجرية منحوتة و مستديرة . و كثيرا منها
غطي بطبقة من الرمل الأبيض الدقيق فلم يظهر سوى رؤوسها .
هذا الاكتشاف المذهل أعطى دليلا
أن كوبا كانت جزءا من أمريكا اللاتينية عبر قطعة أرض من شبه جزيرة يوكاتان .
Explorers View 'Lost City' Ruins
Under Caribbean
Explorers using a miniature submarine to probe the sea floor off the
coast of Cuba said on Thursday they had confirmed the discovery of stone
structures deep below the ocean surface that may have been built by an
unknown human civilization thousands of years ago.
Researchers with a Canadian exploration company said they filmed over the
summer ruins of a possible submerged "lost city" off the Guanahacabibes
Peninsula on the Caribbean island's western tip. The researchers cautioned
that they did not fully understand the nature of their find and planned to
return in January for further analysis, the expedition leader said on
Thursday.
The explorers said they believed
the mysterious structures, discovered at the astounding depth of around
2,100 feet and laid out like an urban area, could have been built at least
6,000 years ago. That would be about 1,500 years earlier than the great Giza
pyramids of Egypt.
"It's a really wonderful structure which looks like it could have been a
large urban center," said Soviet-born Canadian ocean engineer Paulina
Zelitsky, from British Columbia-based Advanced Digital Communications (ADC).
"However, it would be totally irresponsible to say what it was before we
have evidence," Zelitsky told Reuters.
Zelitsky said the structures may have been built by unknown people when
the current sea-floor actually was above the surface. She said volcanic
activity may explain how the site ended up at great depths below the
Caribbean Sea.
In July 2000, ADC researchers using sophisticated side-scan sonar
equipment identified a large underwater plateau with clear images of
symmetrically organized stone structures that looked like an urban
development partly covered by sand. From above, the shapes resembled
pyramids, roads and buildings, they said.
.
"ULISES" ASSISTS UNDERWATER ODYSSEY
This past July, ADC researchers, along with the firm's Cuban partner and
experts from the Cuban Academy of Sciences, returned to the site in their
ship "Ulises." They said they sent a miniature, unmanned submarine called a
Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) down to film parts of the 7.7-square-mile
area.
Those images confirmed the presence of huge,
smooth, cut granite-like blocks in perpendicular and circular formations,
some in pyramid shapes, the researchers said. Most of the blocks, measuring
between about 6.5 and 16 feet in length, were exposed, some stacked one on
another, the researchers said.
Others were covered in sediment and the fine, white
sand that characterizes the area, the researchers said.
The intriguing discovery provided evidence that
Cuba at one time was joined to mainland Latin America via a strip of land
from the Yucatan Peninsula, the researchers said.
"There are many new hypotheses about land movement
and colonialization, and what we are seeing here should provide very
interesting new information," Zelitsky said.
ADC's deep-water equipment includes a
satellite-integrated ocean bottom positioning system, high-precision
side-scan double-frequency sonar, and the ROV. The company currently is
commissioning what it calls the world's first custom-designed ocean
excavator for marine archeology to begin work both at the Guanahacabibes
site and at ship wrecks.
ADC is the deepest operator among four foreign
firms working in joint venture with President Fidel Castro's government to
explore Cuban waters containing hundreds of treasure-laden ships from the
colonial era.
The Canadian company already has discovered several
historic sunken Spanish ships.
In an earlier high-profile find, ADC was testing
equipment in late 2000 off Havana Bay when it spotted the century-old wreck
of the American battleship USS Maine. The ship had not been located since it
blew up mysteriously in 1898, killing 260 American sailors and igniting the
Spanish-American War.
The rush of interest in Cuba's seas in recent years
is due in part to the Castro government's recognition that it does not have
the money or technology to carry out systematic exploration by itself,
although it does have excellent divers.
American companies
are prohibited from operating in Cuba by the long-running U.S. embargo on
the Communist-run island.