Brent Burns wrote:lil lady lax fan wrote:
I think the only viable option would be to rebuild on higher ground. New Orleans and its culture would be a terrible thing to lose. Kind of makes you realize why some ancient cultures chose to abandon some of their original settlements...
Let's see...
Pompeii (totally submerged by Mt. Vesvius)
the Mayan civilization in South America (the folks moved on...)
Troy (probably fictional, but there was a site similar to Troy on the western edge of Turkey which once was called Antalonia and Asia Minor)
New Orleans?? I am pretty sure the Big Easy will still be around, but the way the city looks will be much different than it used to be, e.g. the French Quarter. I even saw a picture of that street prior to Katrina's fury and the day after picture where some cars were crushed by bricks.
It is true that we humans are restless wanderers, so the folks would probably move on to other places away from the ocean.
Troy actually existed. In fact there were a whole series of Troys built on the same sight over a number of millenia. The archeologists think Troy VI--destroyed around 1250BC--was the one made famous by Homer.
Pompeii, Submerged??!! Buried under the dander of Mt. Vesuvius more like! You want a city that was submerged by a volcano try Santorini on the island of Thera and the Minoan civilizations of Crete--now THOSE were dumped in the drink.
And don't forget the Anasazi who left because of extensive drought conditions. Mother Nature likes to play mind games with human societies!!
As for the French Quarter, with today's technology we could move the whole kit and kaboodle and recreate it on a better sight--think Anwar Dam project in Egypt...