A 400-year-old church submerged in a reservoir in southern Mexican has emerged due to a severe drought in the region.
The ghostly shell of 400-year-old church has begun to emerge from the waters of a drought-stricken reservoir in Mexico. A water level drop of at least 80 feet in the Grijalba river which feeds the reservoir has revealed the 400-year-old roofless religious building, with its 10 metre high walls, 61 metre length and 14 metre wide hall.
The building, known as the Temple of Santiago, or Temple of Quechula, was lost to the waters of the Nezahualcoyotl reservoir in 1966 when it flooded. Except for a period in 2002 the church has remained underwater ever since.
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