swimmers in the Sahara desert,
back in 1933 Hungarian explorer László Almásy explored the
Sahara desert in Egypt and Libya, trying to find a legendary oasis called
Zerzura, and he thought he had found it, a cave in Egypt's Gilf Kebir mountains
had paintings of people on the walls, photograph Roland
Unger/Wikimedia Commons, the figures are estimated to be 8,000
years old. They appear to be swimming, but that was impossible in the Sahara
Desert! in his book The Unknown Sahara, he postulates that the swimming scenes
are real depictions of life at the time of painting, suggesting that there had
been a climatic change from temperate to desert, at that time it was a radical
new theory that sounded so dubious that his publisher felt compelled to add
several footnotes in the book to make it clear that they did not share this
opinion, since that time, scientists have uncovered more evidence that the
Sahara was once rather humid, and had forests and lakes that would have been
fine for swimming, the cave is now known as the Cave of Swimmers, which you can read
about at Amusing Planet, as an aside if the name László
Almásy sounds familiar, it is because you may have read or watched a film about him, The English Patient, a remarkable real life character to say the least.
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