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Computer enhanced images of the site based on the original sonar images. |
Marine engineer Pauline Zalitzki and her husband Paul Weinzweig, have discovered what may be an ancient city at the bottom of the ocean off Guanahacabibes Peninsula in the Pinar del Río Province of Cuba. Mapped by the husband and wife owners of Canadian company Advanced Digital Communications include several sphinxes and at least four giant pyramids, as well as other intriguing structures.
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Original Sonar images of the site, possibly depicting unnaturally occurring rock formations. |
“It’s a really wonderful structure which really looks like it could have been a large urban center”, remarked Paulina Zelitsky.
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Russian-Canadian oceanographer Paulina Zelitsky examining the evidence of a pyramidal structure submerged one half mile deep off the coast of Cuba. |
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The area off the Cuban coast where these ruins have been discovered. |
Could these ruins be part of the legendary lost city of Atlantis? Many researchers believe clues left in the descriptions recorded by the Greek philosopher Plato point just this area of the Atlantic Ocean. This discovery was actually made in 2000, but the story died as another expedition to the area was not planned. Reviving what may reveal itself as one of the most important, as well as spectacular discoveries of all time, is the mega popular television program Ancient Aliens.
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Sonar image of the submerged area which amazingly resembles a human looking face very similar to the rock formation on Mars photographed by NASA. |
If this find were not spectacular enough, the 2,000 foot depth of these ruins would indicate the builders of this complex lived over 50,000 years ago, which, if these images truly depict a now submerged ancient complex, would force historians, archeologists, as well as theologists, to relearn all they think they know about our ancient past.
The Russian-Canadian oceanographer Zelitsky, who has already achieved great success after a successful mission to locate the wreck of the historic sunken warship U.S.S. Main, is now seeking funding for another expedition to survey the area.
Greg Giles