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  2. Black Sea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea

    The Black Sea deluge is a hypothesized catastrophic rise in the level of the Black Sea c. 5600 BC due to waters from the Mediterranean Sea breaching a sill in the Bosporus Strait. The hypothesis was headlined when The New York Times published it in December 1996, shortly before it was published in an academic journal . [ 85 ]

  3. Black Sea deluge hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea_deluge_hypothesis

    History. In 1997, William Ryan, Walter Pitman, Petko Dimitrov, and their colleagues first published the Black Sea deluge hypothesis. They proposed that a catastrophic inflow of Mediterranean seawater into the Black Sea freshwater lake occurred around 7,600 years ago, c. 5600 BCE. [3][4] As proposed, the Early Holocene Black Sea flood scenario ...

  4. Ancient Black Sea shipwrecks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Black_Sea_shipwrecks

    Ancient Black Sea shipwrecks. Ancient Black Sea shipwrecks found in the Black Sea date to Antiquity. In 1976, Willard Bascom suggested that the deep, anoxic waters of the Black Sea might have preserved ships from antiquity because typical wood-devouring organisms could not survive there. At a depth of 150m, the Black Sea contains insufficient ...

  5. Bosporus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosporus

    Bosporus. A map depicting the locations of the Turkish Straits, with the Bosporus in red, and the Dardanelles in yellow. The territory of Turkey is highlighted in green. Close-up satellite image of the Bosporus Strait, taken from the International Space Station in April 2004. The body of water at the top is the Black Sea, the one at the bottom ...

  6. Black Sea Germans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea_Germans

    The first Black Sea German settlements in the United States were established in 1873 near the town of Lesterville, South Dakota, but they soon spread throughout both Dakotas. Lutherans and Catholics were the largest groups among the Black Sea Germans in the Dakotas. Other settlers from the Black Sea were Russian Mennonites and Hutterites, as ...

  7. Pontus (region) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pontus_(region)

    Republic of Pontus. The Republic of Pontus (Greek: Δημοκρατία του Πόντου, romanized: Dimokratía tou Póntou) was a proposed Pontic Greek state on the southern coast of the Black Sea. Its territory would have encompassed much of historical Pontus and today forms part of Turkey's Black Sea Region.

  8. Zanclean flood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zanclean_flood

    Similar floods have occurred elsewhere on Earth throughout history; examples include the Bonneville flood in North America, [4] during which Lake Bonneville overflowed through Red Rock Pass into the Snake River Basin, and the Black Sea deluge hypothesis that postulates a flood from the Mediterranean into the Black Sea through the Bosporus. [64]

  9. Colchis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colchis

    Modern history. History by topic. In classical antiquity and Greco-Roman geography, Colchis [a] (/ ˈkɒlkɪs /; [15] Ancient Greek: Κολχίς) was an exonym for the Georgian polity [b] of Egrisi [c] (Georgian: ეგრისი) located on the eastern coast of the Black Sea, centered in present-day western Georgia. Its population, the ...