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What If What if Doggerland still existed? - Printable Version

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What if Doggerland still existed? - Kyng - 06-30-2019

A while back, we had a thread about a lost Stone Age settlement which got submerged, kind of like a northern Atlantis. It was located in a place called Doggerland, which once formed a land bridge between Great Britain and mainland Europe:

[Image: Mbs44yp.jpg]
(Source: The Oldie)

In around 6500 BC, the sea levels rose, and most of Doggerland was submerged, cutting Great Britain off from mainland Europe. A small portion did remain as an island (which would have looked something like this), but this too was flooded around 5000 BC.

So, what if Doggerland still existed? Depending on whether you want to be realistic, or whether you want to have fun changing history, there are two variations of this timeline:


  1. If you want something more realistic: what if the island still existed today?
  2. If you want to change history some more: what if the whole of Doggerland still existed today


Since this was just my own idea, I don't have an AlternateHistoryHub video this time - so, I'll start by asking a few questions:


I'd be interested to hear your thoughts!


RE: What if Doggerland still existed? - Kyng - 12-01-2020

And now, more recent studies have suggested that the island wasn't entirely destroyed by the tsunami that was thought to have submerged it. Instead, it survived as a scattered archipelago of islands - some of which still had people, who eventually settled in the UK:

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/dec/01/evidence-life-on-doggerland-after-devastating-tsunamis-study

This, therefore, raises a third possibility: what if that scattered archipelago still existed today? I can't imagine it would have had very many people still living there today (if any at all); however, it looks like it would've been of tremendous strategic value as a military base. Who grabs it first - and, are they able to hold onto it?