Ġebel ġol-Baħar

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Ġebel ġol-Baħar
Ġebel ġol-Baħar is located in Malta
Ġebel ġol-Baħar
Shown within Malta
Location off St. Julian's, Malta
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Part of Megalithic Temples of Malta
Height 6–10 m (20–33 ft)
History
Material Limestone

Ġebel ġol-Baħar is a possible megalithic temple located underwater off the coast of St. Julian's, Malta. The site was identified in 1999 by a retired real estate investor, Hubert Zeitlmair,[1] a follower of Zecharia Sitchin, but it was never studied properly and archaeologists are not convinced that the site is actually a temple.

Site

The site is located on an underwater plateau approximately 2 km off the coast of St. Julian's. The plateau is 900 by 500 metres long, and its highest point seems to be man-made, and is 19 metres below sea level.

The site contains large boulders which Zeitlmair believed to be man-made and not natural, and which are covered in vegetation. Zeitlmair describes it as consisting of a cluster of three stone circles with 'rooms' with a diameter of 9 to 11 metres, with parts having a height up to 6 to 10 metres. An 'avenue' goes up to the entrance of the structure, which faces east. Tracks on the seabed resembling cart ruts were also observed on the site.[2]

Discovery

The site was discovered on 13 July 1999 by Shaun Arrigo and his brother Kurt, who were working under the instructions of Hubert Zeitlmair, a retired German real estate investor interested in pseudoarchaeology. The discovery was reported in the local media in October 1999, but after some time interest died down.[2] Further explorations of the site were conducted by Zeitlmair in November 1999 and May 2000.[3]

Zeitlmair believes that the temple was built by aliens in around 10,000 BC to 12,000 BC, and was submerged at the end of the Ice Age during the Genesis flood narrative.[4] He states that he has been guided by his "primeval ancestors, namely... the God Pa.tha-i-da.na Asu.ara tSi.dha, and the Goddess Ashtar-tara Queen of Atlantis" who he met on Malta.[5] His judgment does not fit within Malta's prehistoric chronology, as the earliest known human habitation of the island began in the Għar Dalam phase in around 5000 BC. According to him, the site bears similarities to the temple of Ħaġar Qim on mainland Malta.[citation needed]

The site was given the name Ġebel ġol-Baħar, meaning "Stones in the Sea" in the Maltese language. It has also been linked with the island of Atlantis,[6] and Zeitlmair has published a book about this in German.[7]

Analysis

Maltese archaeologists are not convinced that the site is a megalithic temple.[8] Other people who dived there said that the boulders which make up the site are not megalithic, but are modern ones which were dumped illegally.[2]

In 2013, marine scientists at the University of Malta discovered that 20,000 years ago, the Maltese islands were indeed much larger, and were connected to Sicily with a land bridge. However, there was no mention of Ġebel ġol-Baħar during the studies.[9]

Mark Rose, Online Editorial Director for the Archaeological Institute of America, has written that "Chronology appears to be somewhat confused in Zeitlmair's interpretation. According to the web site, he sees links between the submerged "temple" and both Noah's Flood and the rise in sea level following the end of the Ice Age (the period to which, he told Maltamag, he hopes studies will show the Maltese temples date). Furthermore, the presence of deeper sand deposits on the west side of the "ruins," the side toward Gibraltar, than on the east side is taken as an indication that the flooding of the Mediterranean by Atlantic waters (which really did occur) was involved in the inundation of the "temple." The Mediterranean flooding, however, took place some five million years ago. As to the builders of the temples, Zeitlmair defers to Zechariah Sitchin."[1]

References

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External links