Submitted by IslandChillin t3_yvz3k9 in history
Whoknows_nmn t1_iwirpby wrote
Reply to comment by IslandChillin in Zakhiku: The ancient city in Iraq revealed by severe drought by IslandChillin
Thank you for sharing friend :-) I'd love to know more about it
aWheatgeMcgee t1_iwjpldj wrote
Zakhiku was founded around 1,800 BC by the Old Babylonian Empire that ruled Mesopotamia between the 19th and 15th centuries BC. With only water and soil in the area, Zakhiku was established to take advantage of the traffic of caravans and a flourishing trade route in the Near East, which includes the present-day Middle East, Turkey and Egypt.
The trading post grew into an important commercial city in the region for about 600 years before it was hit by an earthquake and later abandoned.
Zakhiku disappeared altogether in the 1980s, when – as part of the Mosul Dam project, built under the late Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein – it was flooded and submerged. Previously known as Saddam Dam, it is Iraq’s largest and most important water reservoir used for downstream irrigation.
creampielegacy t1_iwky0fq wrote
So Iraq’s largest and most important water reservoir is receding due to drought? That’s not good, huh?
Whoknows_nmn t1_iwkh8ru wrote
Wow, thank you. This spot was important,I'm glad I learned about it thanks to you.
pootzilla t1_iwkvknf wrote
Copied straight from the article
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