Did You Know There’s an Underwater Stonehenge Beneath Lake Michigan?
Weird things happen underwater, man.
It's a mystery that unfolded before it was completely submerged, adding to the intrigue of this underwater discovery.
I was astounded to hear and see plenty of things while watching this YouTube video about an "underwater Stonehenge" in Lake Michigan.
Yep, that iconic stone structure in England appears to have a similar style relative to the bottom of Lake Michigan.
Forty feet deep, Listverse.com says, "The formation is thought to have been assembled by the area's Indigenous people, likely created during the last Ice Age when the lakebed was dry."
The guys who took a literal "deep dive" into Lake Michigan thought they may have uncovered a "hieroglyph of a mastodon."
Archaeology News Network says, "If found to be true, the wannabe petroglyph could be as much as 10,000 years old—coincident with the post-Ice Age presence of both humans and mastodons in the upper Midwest."
This potential mastodon carving could provide significant insights into the history and culture of the Indigenous people who lived in the region during the last Ice Age.
Are we just hoping to see a mastodon in those carvings, or are those rocks just weather-beaten pieces of earth thousands of years old?
Archaeologists and historians still debate the nature of these carvings, with some suggesting they could be natural formations while others argue they are man-made.
Can you don your scuba gear and find this mysterious rock formation and potential mastodon carving yourself?
As the video and the internet remain silent on its exact location in Lake Michigan, the mystery of this discovery only deepens, leaving us with more questions than answers.
25 costliest hurricanes of all time
LOOK: The most expensive weather and climate disasters in recent decades
Gallery Credit: KATELYN LEBOFF
LOOK: The most extreme temperatures in the history of every state
Gallery Credit: Anuradha Varanasi