A Sunken Kingdom Re-emerges
A Sunken Kingdom Re-emerges
By KATRIN BENNHOLD JUNE 23, 2014
BORTH, WALES There is a poem children in Wales learn about the sunken kingdom of Cantrer Gwaelod, swallowed by the sea and drowned forever after. On a quiet night, legend has it, one can hear the kingdoms church bells ringing.
When the sea swallowed part of Britains western coastline this year and then spat it out again, leaving homes and livelihoods destroyed but also a dense forest of prehistoric tree stumps more exposed than ever, it was as if one had caught a faint glimpse of that Welsh Atlantis.
The submerged forest of Borth is not new. First flooded some 5,000 years ago by rising sea levels after the last ice age, it has been there as long as locals remember, coming and going with the tides and occasionally disappearing under the sand for years on end. But the floods and storms that battered Britain earlier this year radically changed the way archaeologists interpret the landscape: A quarter-mile-long saltwater channel cutting through the trees, revealed by erosion for the first time, provided a trove of clues to where human life may have been concentrated and where its traces may yet be found.
We used to think of this as just as an impenetrable forest actually this was a complex human environment, said Martin Bates, a geoarchaeologist at the University of Wales Trinity St. David, who oversees the excavation work in Borth on a beach he played on as a toddler. The floods have opened our eyes as to whats really out there.
More:
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/24/science/a-sunken-kingdom-re-emerges.html?ad-keywords=OutbrainJulySale&%20WT.mc_id=D-E-AD-RSS-JULY4SALE-MOSTSHARED-0714&WT.mc_ev=click&bicmp=AD&bicmlukp=WT.mc_id&bicmst=1404164073000&bicmet=1419975273000&_r=0