Video - Lost City of Krishna: Uncovering India's Ancient Mystery
In the year 2000, a group of oceanographers from the National Institute of Technology in India were surveying the Gulf of Cambay. What they discovered was about to change the history of India and the world forever. As part of their routine, the oceanographers took sonar images of the ocean floor. While analyzing these images, they found some unusual structures submerged 40 meters under the sea. Upon further exploration, the team recovered some 2,000 artifacts and man-made structures, which clearly suggested that there was a well-developed ancient city now engulfed by the sea. This discovery sent shock waves through archaeological institutes in India and abroad. The artifacts were sent to different labs for dating, and what came out from these tests shook historians and archaeologists to their cores: the artifacts were dated to be at least 9,500 years old. This meant the city must be even older and was linked to Krishna's legendary city of Dwarka. The implications of this discovery are profound, suggesting that an advanced civilization existed long before previously thought. This ancient city, submerged and hidden for millennia, aligns with descriptions found in ancient texts like the Mahabharata, which describe Dwarka as a magnificent city built by Lord Krishna, later submerged into the ocean.