Recent historical research has proven that there was, until about the 16th century, two lost islands west of the Cardigan Bay shore, near Aberystwyth, the remnants of a lost low-lying coastal landscape that was recorded by Ptolemy's observations two thousand years ago. This landscape would have been substantial, enough to support major towns, farms, ports and coastal wildlife. This land was immortalised in medieval legend as Cantre'r Gwaelod, ruled by the morose king Gwynddo and decieved by the wicked prince Seithenn. As this legend dates from the 12th century - and recounts local tradition - the submergence would have taken place long before then. The drowning of Cantr'er Gwaelod, which possibly inspired the drowning of Númenor and the northernly region of Bereliand in Tolkein's Silmarillion. Image credit: Alan Lee. One clue we have towards this great inundation is found with Gildas, a monastic scholar probably writing from a secure abode either in Durnovaria (Dorch
Three new papers published in Science, a multi-year research collaboration by the David Reich Institute, Max Planck and several other universities, have helped to bring the murky forces of prehistoric migration into much finer focus. The first focuses on the origins of the Proto-Indo-European and Proto-Indo-Anatolian languages through new genetic data, and the last focuses on the ethnic diversity of cities around the Roman empire and in early medieval Europe, which might be the subject of a future blog post or two. The second, and arguably the most revealing, is a study on the origins of the first farmers: the Pre-Pottery Anatolian Neolithic. It's traditionally been assumed that Levantine hunter-cultivators, hailing from the Natufian culture, moved to Anatolia to build the first Neolithic societies. Gobekli Tepe, Karahan Tepe and other monumental sites have been seen as products of this transition, a 'last hurrah' of the hunters as lifestyles became more sedentary. However,