Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - In the photo: the castle found under the truck in Lake Turkey.

In the photo: the castle found under the truck in Lake Turkey.

Water wall (Tahsin Ceylan photography) The diving team led by the underwater photographer Tahsin Ceylan has been recording the ruins under the Fanhu Lake in Turkey and found the remains of a castle under the lake. It is about 1 km (less than 1 mile). Last June, 1 1, the news went viral on the Internet. Some media said that a 3000-year-old castle was found underwater. The following was found at the bottom of Fan Lake. [Learn more about the discovery of underwater castles]

Further investigation (photo by Tashin Seyran) Seyran told Life Science magazine that although he thought the building was a castle built by an ancient man named Urals 3000 years ago, he was not sure. In addition, Ceylan said that there are no archaeologists in his team, and Ceylan said that they will be qualified to determine what this structure is.

Early recovery

(Photographed by Tahsin Ceylan) Some archaeologists were interviewed at the scene. They say that most of the structures seem to be composed of medieval castle walls, and some Urals can be seen. Archaeologists pointed out that these sites existed in 1950s and 1960s, and found that medieval castle builders reused stones carved by others in Gul. KDSP Stone Carvings KDSP, KDSP (photo of Tahin Ceylon), KDSP, KDSP, KDSP This picture carved on the stone can represent the lion, Ceylon said. Archaeologists are not sure what it is, but say it may date back to the Middle Ages.

It is about the history of human remains (photographed by Tasin Seyran). In 20 16, Tasin's team discovered underwater remains outside the port of Chevaz in adil, a small Turkish town that has lived for thousands of years. Tasin's team finally found that these walls extended all the way to the port. A report published in 1959 mentioned a wall, which started from land and extended to a lake with Ural mountains. Other reports dating back to the 1950s and 1960s claimed that the builders of medieval castles in Fanhu actually reused the stones carved by Urals.

Call for more exploration (Photo: Tashinseilan) Divers and archaeologists agree that more research is needed to help determine what this underwater structure is.

Fortress wall (photographed by Tashin Seyran) This is another view of the fortress wall under the lake Fanhu. Archaeologists are not sure whether this is a real castle or fortress, nor do they know when it was washed underwater. [Learn more about underwater castle exploration]