A CITY BUILT DURING THE ICE AGE?

Is it possible that a vanished civilization built a city during the Ice Age, before the glaciers melted? This is the surprising conclusion reached by analyzing the ruins of the ‘Venice of the Pacific,’ the semi-submerged city of Nan Madol. How does one come to this conclusion?
Let’s say right away that Nan Madol, like Venice, is built on a hundred islets. The city is located in the Pacific Ocean, more than 1,000 km from the nearest coastline, attached to the island of Temwen. Early investigations seemed to tell us that the builders of this city were the Saudeleurs, about 800 years ago. But subsequent investigations revealed otherwise. From what can we tell?
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In our days only a few ruins emerge from the water, as the sea has almost completely covered the city. The walls of Nan Madol are beginning to rise from below sea level. Some of the blocks used weigh up to 40 tons. It is impossible to build the walls from under the sea. Therefore, the city of Nan Madol, when it was built, must have been located higher than the sea level. How come it is now located partly below sea level? Has it perhaps sunk? No! According to geologists, the islets on which Nan Madol is located have never sunk below the sea due to geological phenomena such as bradyseism.
If the islets on which the city is located did not sink below sea level, this means that it was the sea that raised its level, flooding the city. Nan Madol, as we said, is located in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. When was the last time the Pacific Ocean rose? The last time the Pacific Ocean rose appreciably (more than 100 meters) was after the last thaw, 14,000 years ago, when the ice that covered most of Northern Europe and North America melted. The melting of ice as large as entire continents provided the oceans, including the Pacific Ocean, with the water mᴀss needed to rise.
To be partially submerged by the Pacific Ocean, therefore, the city of Nan Madol must have already been built at that time. But to claim this would be to say that Nan Madol is older than that by about 14,000 years. It would mean that it is the first city to have ever been built. For many this is simply unacceptable, which is why Wikipedia states that Nan Madol was built in the 2nd century AD by the Saudeleurs. But this is only the date of the oldest human remains found on the island, not of its construction.
How did the builders transport the more than 100,000 tons of volcanic rock “across the sea” to build the 100 or so islets on which Nan Madol stands? In fact, Nan Madol is not built on land, but in the sea, like Venice. All the rock from which Nan Madol is made is “magnetic rock.” If you bring a compᴀss close to the rock, it goes crazy. Does the magnetism of the rock have anything to do with the transportation methods used for Nan Madol?

Did A Lost Ancient Civilization Build An Advanced City During The Ice Age Before The Glaciers Melted?

Nan Madol ruins

The tranquil shores of Pohnpei, an island in Micronesia that ranks among the best places to visit in this Pacific nation, are home to rich cultures, swaying palms, and abundant wildlife. For most travelers, it’s a place known for being a tropical paradise. For others, though, it’s the location of a site where archaeologists and conspiracy theorists clash.

The site in question is Nan Madol. Often called the Venice of the Pacific, Nan Madol’s buildings seem to rise out of the ocean. Crusted with vegetation and palm trees, these basalt buildings are the remnants of a bygone era of Pohnpei’s history. Archaeologists believe that the site dates to around 1180 CE.

Such a beautiful and interesting site has garnered a lot of curiosity from archaeologists and the general population alike. However, one group has taken an interest in Nan Madol: proponents of the theory that during the last ice age, a globe-spanning civilization built most of the non-European world’s greatest monuments. They claim that Nan Madol wasn’t actually built in 1180 CE, but rather comes from the last ice age, around 20,000 years ago.

Although there’s been a lot of sensationalized media recently about Nan Madol being a city from the last ice age, does this claim hold up to scrutiny? Find out why (or why not) right here.

The sources used for this article include:

– The book Lost in the Weeds: Theme and Variation in Pohnpei Political Mythology by Glenn Petersen

– A 2024 journal article in PNAS тιтled “Links Between Climatic Historics and the Rise and Fall of a Pacific Chiefdom”

– A 2022 journal article from PNAS тιтled “Implications of Anomalous Relative Sea-Level Rise for the Peopling of Remote Oceania”

– The second Asia-Pacific Regional Conference on Underwater Cultural Heritage from 2014 (via the Wayback Machine)

– A paper published in 2016 by Quaternary Research тιтled “Earliest direct evidence of monument building at the archaeological site of Nan Madol”

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