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snowman5689 t1_j00jyjh wrote

Ship found in lake? You don't say!

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alexjewellalex t1_j00sybb wrote

“Marine archaeologists believe the ship dates to sometime between 1300 – 1850.” That’s quite the range lol

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MedonSirius t1_j01vjmb wrote

Police: Detective, we have found this dead body here

Detective: I see, i know exacppromitery when the murder happened

P: when?

D: somewhen between now and 2,000 B.C.

Narrator: what the Detective didn't knew is that the dead body is from a future where they dump the bodies to the past. So, yeah, Detective Perry is a scumbag!

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lopedopenope t1_j01whgu wrote

Someone tell Ødegård it can be done with robots. The cia raised part of a Soviet sub at like 16 thousand feet. This isn’t worth it tho because we don’t need their nuclear torpedoes or code papers. I don’t believe they had any

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Stannis2024 t1_j021jja wrote

Does anybody know the coordinates???

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CaesuraRepose t1_j048jun wrote

As with all things it depends where and when you are.

"The Tudor era" only really applies to England.

Some scholars would argue broadly the medieval period ends in 1453 because that's when the 100 Years' War ends, and when the Ottomans finally topple Constantinople. The world after that was a quite different place. Warfare also had changed drastically by then.

Some argue for 1492 as a good date.

Others say 1521 and the start of the Protestant Reformation is the end of the medieval period.

Personally I can see the argument for each but I like 1453 as the date.

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znoopyz t1_j05tt6x wrote

Forgive me if I’m mistaken it’s been a while since I learned the story. I don’t think we ever forgot the event of the sinking and I think we always knew where it sank we just didn’t have the ability to dredge it up immediately and by the time that technology was available we just assumed it would have decomposed to the point where such actions would have been pointless.

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ThatGIRLkimT t1_j0asybi wrote

I wonder what it looks like. A ship on a lake.

1