Bypassing the appearance of life from millions of years in Greece, for which many volumes have been written, let us take a step forward, in periods that are easier to research.
In Greece, during the Neolithic period, extremely dense habitation is observed. Many Neolithic settlements have been excavated in Sesklo and Dimini [near the area of Volos], in the Frachthi cave in the Peloponnese, in the Dispilio of Kastoria, in the Sporades islands [Gyaros] etc.
It should be noted here that the generally accepted French method of viewing history [Human evolution took place in successive steps] contrasts with the unconventional view of history accepting the existence of cultures in much earlier times that were destroyed [natural disasters ] and the restart of these cultures.
A point that supports this theory is the name THESSALY [Thesis alos = place where there is a sea] which name was used by its inhabitants from the oldest recorded history, while the sea from the area according to accepted scientific methods, has been removed here and 60.000.000 years. Then how did the inhabitants remember the sea?
Floods:
It is considered that in the region of Greece and especially in the region of the Aegean, earlier than 10.000 BC we had land [Aegis] and that in Greece there was the memory of three major floods:
1. By Titan Ogygos [Related to planetary rearrangements in our solar system, 25.000 BC]
2.Dardanos (Final melting of glaciers, increase of the water level in the Black Sea, flood of Aegis, 12.500 BC)
3. Of Defkalionos [around 14.000 to 10.000 BC. according to others much earlier] whose son was also a Greek.
(The myth of Deucalion was also the basis for the story of Noah.)
The unconventional view of history accepts the theory of floods [Plato's dialogues: Timaeus], in which successive catastrophes create corresponding genesis.
Especially from 10.000 BC. It is generally accepted and established that the Greek area is inhabited uninterruptedly [10.000-year-old settlements] and in fact with a high level of civilization [4500 murals in Strofila of Andros with fully equipped and manned ships].
After these three floods, the geography of Greece (and the Mediterranean in general) takes the form it still has today.






















