Like a wraith rising from the grave, a Spanish ghost town—intentionally flooded by the Lindoso Reservoir some 30 years ago—appeared to rise from the depths late last November amidst receding water levels. The haunting apparition of a town, called Aceredo, near Lobios, Ourense province, in northwestern Spain, which reemerges every few years from its watery grave, is now a place of leisure for tourists and sightseers. The zombie town features: old-fashioned stone and wood buildings, many of which have since turned into piles of rubble; an old fountain that still flows; the skeletal remains of old vehicles; rusted metal; intact glass bottles; and other personal belongings abandoned decades ago by the town’s former residents. Deposits on the sides of buildings mark the rising and falling of water levels over the years. The flood that devastated Aceredo occurred in 1992 after statesmen Francisco Franco, of Spain, and António de Oliveira Salaza, …