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8 results for "Yonaguni"
D_4_10 — Yonaguni Formation: Japan's Submerged Stone Controversy
The Yonaguni Formation (also called the "Yonaguni Monument" or "Yonaguni Submarine Ruins") is a submerged rock structure located off the southern coast of Yonaguni Island, the westernmost of Japan's Ryukyu Islands (24°26
M_2_03 — Yonaguni Monument — Natural or Man-Made?
The Yonaguni Monument is a massive underwater rock formation located off the southern coast of Yonaguni Island, Japan's westernmost point in the Ryukyu archipelago.
M_1_17 — Underwater City Discoveries (Dwarka, Yonaguni, Pavlopetri)
The discovery and investigation of submerged archaeological sites — cities, harbors, temples, and infrastructure now lying beneath coastal waters due to post-glacial sea level rise, tectonic subsidence, or local geologic
M_4_03 — Archaeological Dating Disputes and Controversies
Archaeological dating methods — the techniques used to determine the age of artifacts, structures, and deposits — are the backbone of all claims about the human past. Radiocarbon dating (carbon-14 analysis, developed by
M_2_08 — Underwater Structures of Lake Titicaca & Japan
Multiple significant underwater stone formations have been documented in two distant but thematically related regions: Lake Titicaca (Bolivia/Peru) and the waters surrounding the southern Japanese Ryukyu Islands.
ZF_3_02 — Maritime Archaeology: Shipwrecks, Sunken Cities, and Submerged Structures
Maritime archaeology — the study of human interaction with the sea through material remains — has matured from treasure-hunting salvage into a rigorous scientific discipline that applies the same stratigraphic principles
O_3_16 — Underwater Anomaly Catalog
Underwater anomalies range from confirmed submerged archaeological sites (Pavlopetri, Dwarka, Heracleion) to ambiguous geological/archaeological features (Yonaguni, Bimini Road, Baltic Sea Anomaly) to outright unexplaine
D_4_02 — Submerged Structures & Underwater Archaeology
Since the Last Glacial Maximum (~26,500–19,000 BP), global sea levels have risen approximately 120–130 meters, inundating an estimated 25 million km² of formerly habitable land — an area larger than North America. Any co
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