Somewhere beneath the cold, gray waters of the North Sea, a world is buried.
Not a shipwreck. Not a city. An entire landscape - hills and valleys, forests and rivers, hunting grounds and human settlements. A place where people lived, loved, and died, completely unaware that the sea was coming for them.
It's called Doggerland. And for most of human history, we didn't even know it existed.
The Land That Connected Continents
Ten thousand years ago, the world looked very different. The last ice age was ending, but vast ice sheets still covered much of northern Europe. So much water was locked in ice that sea levels were 120 meters lower than today.
Britain wasn't an island. It was a peninsula - a northwestern extension of the European continent, connected by a vast, low-lying plain where the North Sea now churns.


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