World mysteries ... Yonaguni Monument
Yonaguni Monument Japan's most mysterious dive ...
The Japanese mythology “Nirai-Kanani” is a faraway land where traditional gods of the land live and happiness abounds. .
In 1987, Kihachiro Aratake was scouting more hammerhead breading grounds for his scuba diving company tours. Instead, he discovered the Yonaguni Monument. It is a site with several underwater rock formations off Japan’s westernmost Island, Yonaguni. There is a debate about whether the site is completely natural, is a natural site that has been modified, or is a manmade artefact.
"The Arch." It's a crude arch at best, the five stacked stones impressively large but not seeming carved at all.
"Twin Towers," (matching obelisks). These do appear shaped-and very exactingly at that. Two perfect rectangles, more than 20 feet tall. They seem aligned for some purpose. The foremost expert on the Yonaguni Monument, Professor Masaaki Kimura of the University of the Ryukyus in Okinawa, believes the four-inch gap between the obelisks may have channeled a shaft of sunlight signaling the autumn equinox.
"The Chapel" Here, there is, what appears to be, a platform with an incised cross.