Atlantis was in a city in Seville 100 kilometers from the coast and never on the seabed


The work has been included within the documentary Atlantis, the misplaced metropolis, which reveals the excavations carried out in recent times. The investigation led by the historian and excavation technician Michael Martínez has concluded that it was situated in Valencina de la Concepción. The filming crew has traveled for 2 years to international locations like Greece and Egypt, in the hunt for new proof that may be added to this entire story

Atlantis was not on the seabed, however in Valencina de la Concepción, Seville. This is the conclusion of an investigation led by the historian and excavation technician Michael Martínez on the legendary misplaced metropolis. He maintains that La Atlántida was within the Seville municipality the place vestiges of a prehistoric metropolis have been discovered. The work has been collected within the documentary Atlantis, the misplaced metropolis, which reveals the excavations carried out in Valencina by the German Institute of Archaeology, the place stays of a giant Chalcolithic metropolis with concentric rings have been discovered, as Plato described Atlantis. , in accordance with the historian.

Thanks to those investigations, in recent times a collection of archaeological finds have been made within the south of the Iberian Peninsula, starting alongside all the Atlantic coast, from the bay of Algeciras, to town of Seville and its environment, and between the brand new discoveries are “the seven pyramids of the Alcores” and the Chalcolithic city of Valencina de la Concepción.

greater than 5,000 years in the past

Both discoveries are associated to the geography of greater than 5,000 years in the past and to the peoples who arrived from the East to this location, “and we all know the latter thanks to things present in Valencina, whose provenance, as within the case of the Assyrian elephant ivory , is from the Middle East”, in accordance with Michel Martínez.

The documentary has the chief manufacturing of Juan Luis Canales and Jesús Camacho, and has been directed by the younger Andalusian director Cristina Rosado, primarily based on a script by David Mendoza, Ph.D. in History, and his movie crew has traveled for 2 years of filming to international locations like Greece and Egypt, in the hunt for new proof that may be added to this entire story.

Experts and historians akin to Zahï Hawass, Manuel Pimentel, Thomas Shumasher (German Institute for Scientific Research) or Elisa Blas (Universidad de Lima) intervene within the work, in a documentary “that can probably give the situation, who is aware of whether it is definitive, of a prodigious empire, which inhabited the south of the Iberian Peninsula all through prehistory”, he factors out.