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Lost ‘Atlantis’ continent off Australia may have been home for half a million humans 70,000 years ago


About 70,000 years ago, a vast swathe of land that’s now submerged off the coast of Australia could once have supported a population of half a million people. The undersea territory was so large it could have functioned as a stepping stone for migration from modern-day Indonesia to Australia, finds a new study published Dec. 15 in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews

“We’re talking about a landscape that’s quite submerged, over 100 meters [330 feet] below sea level today,” Kasih Norman, an archeologist at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia, and lead author on the new study, told Live Science. This Australian “Atlantis” comprised a large stretch of continental shelf that, when above sea level, would have connected the regions of Kimberley and Arnhem Land, which today are separated by a large ocean bay. 

This ancient expanded Australian landmass once formed part of a palaeocontinent that connected modern-day Australia, New Guinea, and Tasmania into a single unit known as Sahul.

The sunken continental shelf sits off the northern coast of Australia.  (Image credit: Photography by Mangiwau/Getty Images)

A habitable, populated landscape?

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