Water levels receding to normal levels exposes ancient cities

water level drops and roman complexes are being found. how many more feet need to drop to expose the location of atlantis. how many other civillizations and structures are hidden underwater.
"In its prime, Aquis Querquennis housed up to 600 Roman soldiers, Atlas Obscura reported. It had multiple barracks, two granaries, a hospital, temple, and thermal baths from the area’s natural hot springs. Romans at the camp would throw offerings of spiritual significance into the hot baths, Atlas Obscura reported.
Centuries later, all of Aquis Querquennis had been thrown under water. The full complex emerged as water levels in the As Conchas reservoir fell to 49% capacity, Faro de Vigo reported in early August."

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bullshit, that's not how an untouched roman ruin looks like.

That's clearly an archealogical site that's been carefully dug up and maintained for many years

that's amazing

This.

ATLANTIS IS CALLING

>The fort was rediscovered in the 1920s and some excavations carried out by local archaeologist Florentino López Cuevillas.
>In 1949 the site was flooded by construction of the As Conchas reservoir.
>Since 1975 excavations have been carried out on the fort during periods when the reservoir level falls.
Basically the corner you see in OP got uncovered

Lots of these things are under water because of man made reservoirs. Sorry to burst your bubble.

is it the roman Fort talked about in OP or a picture of an entirely different archaeological site used for illustrative purposes?

Roman ruins are generally so old now that intact buildings dont exist from that period with some notable exceptions.

Fucking humans. Reverting progress 2000 years.

Aquis Querquennis

I suppose the only reason it looks decent is because it spent the majority of it's time under a reservoir after being dug up.

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You been to Rome? Worth a visit

That information sign there right by the guy looks like it has a QR code on the side. This shit hasn't been underwater

It's crazy how they used to build cities under the water in the past.

Perhaps the ruins are under or above water depending on how the reservoir is filled? Perhaps in recent times the reservoir has been filled above intended capacity to account for increasing demands on water?

A QR code on a metal box can be placed or removed within minutes. I assume it will take months for that resevior to refill to its working level.

Or...they just ya know....tagged the location before they took the drone photo ...

>what is a reservoir
Those cities and forts were built near the existing water level at the time dor obvious reasons.

Even if the water wasnt as deep its still crazy though they built in it

Who was burning enough fossil fuels 2000 years ago to make that area dry land, I wonder.

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A rock with some signage attached to it?

what is this blatant fuckery