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Yonaguni Monument

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Submerged Enigma: Yonaguni Monument Triggers a 10,000-Year Debate
science4 hours ago

Submerged Enigma: Yonaguni Monument Triggers a 10,000-Year Debate

A 150-by-40-by-27-meter stone formation off Yonaguni Island, discovered in 1986, has sparked a decades-long dispute between researchers who view it as a natural sandstone feature shaped by earthquakes and erosion and Masaaki Kimura’s claim that it could be a deliberate 10,000-year-old human construction with roads and terraces, though no artifacts have been found. The site lies in a seismically active region and, despite extensive exploration, lacks conclusive evidence of civilization, leaving the mystery unresolved and fueling ongoing debates in archaeology.

Yonaguni Underwater Formations Likely Natural, Not Ancient Ruins
science1 month ago

Yonaguni Underwater Formations Likely Natural, Not Ancient Ruins

New studies presented at the 2024 Association of Japanese Geographers conference argue that the Yonaguni Monument’s sea-floor terraces are natural formations created by tectonic fracturing and erosion, not evidence of ancient human construction or Atlantis; while some researchers and visitors persist in the myth, no archaeological traces of humans have been found.

Yonaguni Monument: Ocean-Eroded Geometry, Not a Lost City
science3 months ago

Yonaguni Monument: Ocean-Eroded Geometry, Not a Lost City

The Yonaguni Monument off Japan’s Yonaguni Island resembles a submerged citadel, but geologists say it’s a natural sandstone/mudstone formation shaped by fractures and erosion in an earthquake-prone area; while a small faction has claimed human modification, no archaeological evidence supports this, and ongoing surveys attribute the stepped blocks to natural tectonic and erosional processes.