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Putting Alexandria on the tourist trail

(Image: Dana Smillie/Bloomberg News)

Underwater Alexandria

IT WAS one of the original seven wonders of the world: a 135-metre-tall lighthouse that dominated the Egyptian port of Alexandria in 300 BC. Nearby, around the time of Christ, would have been Cleopatra’s palace and other monuments.

You’d be hard-pressed to gaze upon these wonders today: the city and lighthouse were submerged in the Mediterranean 1600 years ago, following a series of devastating earthquakes and tsunamis.

But tourists might yet get to walk amid the sphinxes and statues that lie beneath the waves. UNESCO and the Egyptian Ministry of Culture are planning a feasibility study for an underwater museum, allowing visitors to view these ancient treasures in situ.

I’ve dreamed of visiting Atlantis, and this is probably as close as I’m ever going to get.

Linda Geddes

Hessdalen lights

FOR ALL the rugged beauty in the forests and mountains of the Hessdalen valley, Norway, it might be better to be here after dark – when you just might catch a glimpse of the area’s mysterious light show.

For over a century, locals have reported seeing blinking and spiralling balls of light that appear from nowhere and hang, ghost-like, in the air. Prompted by a flurry of reports in the 1980s, Norwegian and Italian scientists set up an automated observatory to keep permanent watch on the valley.

Yet despite this and regular visits by research teams, it wasn’t until September 2006 that they recorded a floating light that couldn’t be explained away as a star, planet, aircraft or meteor. Experiments followed to ascertain its chemical make-up, but the jury…

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