IPFS News Link • Archaeology
Scientists Discovered a 70-Meter-Wide Underwater Monument Hidden Beneath the Sea of Galilee
• https://dailygalaxy.com, by Melissa Ait LounisA huge stone monument lying under the Sea of Galilee is catching archaeologists off guard with its size and unclear origins. Weighing more than 60,000 tons, this cone-shaped structure could date back thousands of years and may be tied to early Bronze Age communities.
The discovery happened during a geophysical survey led by Israeli researchers who were initially studying sediment deposits on the lakebed. While scanning the area with sonar, they spotted a massive pile of stones rising from an otherwise flat underwater landscape.
Finds like this matter because they hint at complex construction projects in a region and time period that still hold many gaps. They also raise simple but important questions: how did it end up underwater, and what did it originally stand for?
A Massive Stone Pile That Stands Out Underwater
The monument is about 70 meters wide and 12 meters high, making it hard to miss, even beneath layers of water and sediment. According to the International Journal of Nautical Archaeology, it's built from basalt stones arranged in a clear cone shape, which points to deliberate construction.
"Close inspection by scuba diving revealed that the structure is made of basalt boulders up to 1 m (3.2 feet) long with no apparent construction pattern," wrote the authors.
They added that the monument stones have natural surfaces, with no signs of cutting or chiseling, and no clear walls or internal arrangement were identified. At the same time, sonar data shows a sharply defined formation rising from the otherwise smooth lake floor. The estimated weight, over 60,000 tons, still points to a massive undertaking.
Monument Linked To Early Bronze Age Communities
There are hints that this structure might have had a ceremonial or burial purpose. According to Dr. Yitzhak Paz from Ben-Gurion University, it resembles early burial sites found in parts of Europe, which could place it in the early Bronze Age. He also noted that the find:
"It's the most powerful and fortified town in this region and, as a matter of fact, in the whole of Israel." He added that, "there may be a connection to the nearby ancient city of Beit Yerah," even if researchers aren't ready to define it yet.




