What is clear is that something horrible happened around 1159 BC. At
the very least it saw Hekla in Iceland blow up and drive the Danians
out of the Baltic for a twenty year span. I also think it most
likely that it coincided with the subsidence of the Cuban island arc,
Lyonese, and the Azores complex.
The Iliad and the Odyssey were a Danian Baltic epic that landed at
the Mycenaean palaces to be inscribed and thus recorded for us.
Again these palaces were Bronze Age trade factories that used copper
ingots as currency and they were part of the Atlantean world that
ended at the same time.
Earthquakes by themselves actually do not destroy civilizations but
they do damage them and open them to attack. This was a lot bigger than that and involved an
unique crustal subsidence correcting for the elimination of the
Northern Ice Cap.
The loss of the patron client economy cut loose the local Greek
populations to build out their own city states with some of the
ancient knowledge intact as well as a large inventory of bronze armor
on hand. From that we get the natural rise of Athens in particular.
What is surprising is how much was forgotten or simply never
retained. At least we have Homer.
Did an Earthquake
Destroy Ancient Greece?
Becky Oskin,
OurAmazingPlanet Staff Writer
Date: 23 April 2013
Time: 01:18 PM ET
The grand
Mycenaens, the first Greeks, inspired the legends of the Trojan Wars,
"The Iliad" and "The Odyssey." Their culture
abruptly declined around 1200 B.C., marking the start of a Dark
Ages in Greece.
The disappearance of
theMycenaens is a Mediterranean mystery. Leading explanations
include warfare with invaders or uprising by lower classes. Some
scientists also think one of the country's frequent earthquakes could
have contributed to the culture's collapse. At the ruins of Tiryns, a
fortified palace, geologists hope to find evidence to confirm whether
an earthquake was a likely culprit.
Tiryns was one of the
great Mycenaean cities. Atop a limestone hill, the city-state's king
built a palace with walls so thick they were called Cyclopean,
because only the one-eyed monster could have carried the massive
limestone blocks. The walls were about 30 feet (10 meters) high and
26 feet (8 m) wide, with blocks weighing 13 tons, said Klaus-G.
Hinzen, a seismologist at the University of Cologne in Germany and
project leader. He presented his team's preliminary results April 19
at the Seismological Society of America's annual meeting in Salt Lake
City. [History's Most Overlooked Mysteries]
Hinzen and his
colleagues have created a 3D model of Tiryns based on laser scans of
the remaining structures. Their goal is to determine if the walls'
collapse could only have been caused by an earthquake. Geophysical
scanning of the sediment and rock layers beneath the surface will
provide information for engineering studies on how the ground would
shake in a temblor.
The work is complex,
because many blocks were moved by amateur archaeologist Heinrich
Schliemann in 1884 and later 20th-century restorations, Hinzen said.
By combing through historic photos, the team found unaltered wall
sections to test. They also hope to use a technique called optical
luminescence dating on soil under the blocks, which could reveal
whether the walls toppled all at the same time, as during an
earthquake.
"This is really a
challenge because of the alterations. We want to take a careful look
at the original conditions," Hinzen told OurAmazingPlanet.
Another hurdle:
finding the killer quake. There are no written records from the
Mycenaean decline that describe a major earthquake, nor oral
folklore. Hinzen also said compared with other areas of Greece, the
region has relatively few active faults nearby. "There is no
evidence for an earthquake at this time, but there was strong
activity at the subduction zone nearby," he said.
The Mycenaean
preference to place their fortresses atop limestone hills surrounded
by sediment would concentrate shaking, even from distant earthquakes,
Hinzen said. "The [seismic] waves get trapped in the outcrop and
this can do a lot of damage. They are on very vulnerable sites,"
he said.
The researchers also
plan to study the ancient Mycenaean city of Midea. The group has done
similar work investigating ancient earthquakes in Turkey, Germany and
Rome.
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