A surprising archeological find in the depths of Lake Van in eastern Turkey has sparked worldwide debate, with an underwater city discovered 85 feet below the lake’s surface near the town of Gevas.

The town is only 150 meters from Mount Ararat, where the biblical Noah’s Ark is said to have rested after the great flood.

As for the ruins, they stretch over half a mile and consist of a huge stone fortress, circular templates, and a capstone engraved with the “Flower of Life” symbol previously discovered at sacred sites in Peru and Bolivia.

It also boasts tightly interlocking stone blocks with no sign of mortar.

Independent researcher Matt LaCroix believes the city could be much older than the 3,000 years some archeologists claim and could date as far back as the Younger Dryas period, whic

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