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carried passengers to nearby Carhué station. Tourism was developed by an
Englishman after taking the land on lease. He marketed the lake as having healing properties, hiring Italian scientists to bolster the claim. At its height, Villa Epecuén could accommodate at least 5,000 visitors.
205:, caused by a rare weather pattern, broke a nearby dam, and then the dike protecting the village; the water rose progressively, reaching a peak of 10 metres (33 ft). The village became uninhabitable and was never rebuilt. Many of the ruins are covered by a layer of white and grey
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The town reached a population of 1,500 inhabitants at its peak. As of 2011 it had one resident, Pablo Novak, born in 1930, who returned to his home in 2009 when the waters receded after covering the town for 25 years.
209:. At the time, there were up to 280 businesses in Epecuén, including lodges, guesthouses, hotels, and businesses that 25,000 tourists visited between November and March, from the 1950s to the 1970s.
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Danny MacAskill Brings A Forgotten City Back To Life | Epecuén | 2014
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228:(season 4, episode 1). It was used as a location in the 2010 film
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300:"This Argentinian tourist village sat underwater for 25 years"
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181:. Developed in the early 1920s, Epecuén was accessible from
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Argentina's underwater town that was submerged for 30 years
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356:"Fotoreportaje: el cementerio olvidado del lago Epecuén"
388:"Filmmaker Q&A: Matthew Salleh, Pablo's Villa"
503:Buildings and structures in Buenos Aires Province
327:"The last inhabitant of Argentina's flooded city"
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242:. The city features as the backdrop to one of
189:line served Villa Epecuén station, while the
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220:The town has been featured in the TV shows
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19:Tourist village in Buenos Aires, Argentina
475:The Town That Spent 25 Years Underwater
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477:", Messy Nessy Chic, 22 December 2017
553:20th-century floods in South America
195:Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway
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508:Dam failures in South America
484:", BBC News, 11 November 2015
394:. 7 June 2013. Archived from
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364:(in Spanish). Archived from
272:"The Ruins of Villa Epecuen"
16:Tourist village in Argentina
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548:1985 disasters in Argentina
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231:And Soon the Darkness
222:Abandoned Engineering
175:Buenos Aires Province
79:37.13083°S 62.80750°W
392:Sydney Film Festival
84:-37.13083; -62.80750
528:Floods in Argentina
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368:on 3 February 2013
335:. 3 September 2019
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558:1980s floods
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513:Dam failures
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440:Ghostarchive
438:Archived at
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415:. Retrieved
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492:Categories
417:16 October
372:16 October
339:16 October
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283:16 October
254:References
240:Karl Urban
156:Population
70:62°48′27″W
45:2009 photo
361:La Nacion
148:Elevation
109:Argentina
67:37°7′51″S
442:and the
332:BBC Reel
193:and the
115:Province
456:YouTube
140:Founded
130:Partido
96:Country
203:seiche
179:Carhué
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419:2021
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238:and
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143:1920
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