The historian affirms that a small Atlantic rock is actually the tip of Atlantis
The historian affirms that a small Atlantic rock is actually the tip of Atlantis
Atlantis is the Holy Grail of the mythical islands and nations. First mentioned by Plato, his writings led those who sought him to the Atlantic Ocean, hoping to find the real island or one that might have inspired the myth. Although it has never been officially found, there is no lack of old maps showing its location in the Atlantic. Many frustrated to find it have gravitated towards other bodies of water where the lighting is better and the islands are easier to find, since it is suspected that those who made the original reports were confused, using them allegorically or committing a deception. That trend exists even today, since a historian now claims that a small rock island near Ireland is actually Atlantis that peeks out from the depths of the ocean. Is it big enough for a hotel and a cruise ship dock?
"Part of it is still above the water."
Rockall
Matt Sibson, creator of the Ancient Architects YouTube channel, claims in an interview with The daily star He believes that the small granite island of Rockall in the North Atlantic is the highest point of the sunken Atlantis. Located about 300 km (187 miles) west of Scotland, 420 km (263.0 miles) northwest of Ireland and 700 km (440 miles) south of Iceland, Rockall belongs to the United Kingdom as part of Scotland, although Ireland seems to want this place. , which is classified by the United Nations as one of those "rocks that can not sustain human habitation or economic life itself" (sounds like in some places in the United States as well). That could change with all the tourist business generated when Sibson convinces the world that it is Atlantis. If only I had an old map.
The map of Zeno showing Frisland (bottom left)
Actually, it does, but in it (and in some others, including the infamous map of Zeno which is a proven hoax) the place that Rockall currently occupies is called Frisland or Friesland (which is also the name of an unrelated province of the Netherlands).
"Friesland has never been officially identified, but appears on many maps between 1500 and 1600, before disappearing completely. Why would they make an island completely in the middle of the ocean? I think there was something huge there, and there is still something that proves it, the last remaining part of Friesland. "
Sibson also has a modern, non-mythological reason for the demise of Frisland several times that goes back to 13,000 years ago, when Plato's Atlantis was supposedly still on the water ... climate change.
"This was when the Earth was coming out of the Ice Age and everything was heating up, but suddenly, about 12,900 years ago, it was frozen again. Then, about 1000 years later, it got hot again and it's been heating up until today. "
Sibson also works on a comet attack, which is a theoretical but not yet proven occurrence almost at the same time that may have created earthquakes, tsunamis and other stresses in the Earth's crust, causing ... you guessed it ... the island of Frisland / Atlantis will sink in the Atlantic. Subsequent environmental changes could explain its supposed reappearance and subsequent disappearance in the maps of 1500s / 1600s and the existence of all that remains ... Rockall.
1623 Map of the Arctic by Gerardus Mercator showing Frisland
That is a great extrapolation (which Sibson admits) between the three remote points of Plato's writings, the old and potentially unreliable maps of a disappearing island, and a small islet of disputed rock. Some searches of Rockall and especially the surrounding area would probably solve this. Actually, they have already taken place. In 2013, studies conducted by Marine Scotland found no evidence of Frisland or Atlantis, but they discovered four new species, a sea snail, two clams and a marine worm, which live around a cold, which is a crack in the background from the ocean where it is hot. The hydrocarbons are filtered.
You do not think the crack is related to the disappearance of Frisland, right?
.
.
SOURCE LINK ERESVIRAL.COM https://www.beviral.online



Comentarios
Publicar un comentario