Treasure map
renews Atlantis hunt
Mon 27 October, 2003 07:16
By Michele Kambas and Jean Christou
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MOUNT OLYMPUS, Cyprus (Reuters) - Some say it is in the Aegean, others
in the Azores, off the Celtic Ridge of Britain or even as far as the South
China Sea, but an American researcher says everyone has been looking in
the wrong place.
Atlantis was in Cyprus and ancient philosopher Plato is about to be
vindicated, according to Robert Sarmast.
"The island of Cyprus was, or is, part of Atlantis -- a
mountaintop," Sarmast said from his home in Los Angeles. "This
region is at the heart of the ancient world."
Drawn from accounts by the ancient Athenian law maker Solon, Plato's
description of a powerful civilisation destroyed by the wrath of God has
fired the dreams of explorers for centuries.
Of late, it has inspired fantasies of webbed-limbed people living in
glass bubbles on the sea bed; of old, it was thought by some to be the
Garden of Eden, where mankind fell from God's grace.
Geologists say the land mass of Cyprus's central mountain range once
formed the ocean floor. Sarmast says the mountainous island was the tip of
the civilisation submerged in a devastating earthquake and flood thousands
of years ago.
Using deep-sea imagery, simulations of the sea bed, and following some
50 clues found in Plato's Critias and Timaeus Dialogues, Sarmast says he
has discovered a sunken rectangular land mass stretching northeast from
Cyprus, towards Syria.
"Everything matches the descriptions in the dialogues of Atlantis
to an uncanny degree," said Sarmast.
Using scientific data collected a decade ago, Sarmast says he came up
with detailed three-dimensional maps and simulated models of the eastern
Mediterranean basin.
"We lowered the sea level by 1,600 metres (5,250 feet) and an
island popped up," he said.
Having written a book about his discovery, Sarmast now hopes to
organise an expedition to the region for further research.
SCHOLARS SCEPTICAL
His theory has been challenged by archaeologists, who say the Atlantis
story is a myth.
Sarmast, however, says the sheer volume of detail found in the
dialogues is proof enough that something is lurking in the watery deep.
"The dialogues read like a treasure map," he said.
Although theories on where Atlantis was are many and varied, most
believers agree the ancient city was probably destroyed in the biblical
flood, which has its parallel in the history of the Babylonians,
Assyrians, Persians, Egyptians and South Americans.
Plato describes a series of worldwide floods culminating in the deluge
of the Deucalion, dated by Greek historians to the end of the last Ice
Age, about 10,000 BC.
According to those ancient texts, Atlantis was a powerful nation whose
residents became so corrupted by greed and power that Zeus, the king of
the gods, destroyed it.
Cypriot scholars are sceptical of Sarmast's conclusions.
"The possibility of Cyprus being Atlantis is next to zero,"
said Plato scholar Sofronis Sofroniou.
"Cyprus is mentioned by Homer and other people and there is no
mention of that.
"If Cyprus was Atlantis, it would probably have been mentioned.
There is absolutely no basis for this theory."
Sophocles Hadjisavvas, director of the Antiquities Department, agrees.
"This is mere speculation and has nothing to do with reality,"
he said.
"Atlantis is mythology, but even mythology speaks of Atlantis
being outside the Gates of Hercules in the Atlantic," he said,
referring to the Straits of Gibraltar.
"But it is good for Cyprus tourism," he added.
Sarmast won't be swayed. "Heinrich Schliemann discovered Troy by
following clues in Homer's Iliad," he said, referring to the German
explorer who found what he thought was the ancient city of Troy in 1873.
"Before that archaeologists said it was a myth. It wasn't, and nor is
Atlantis."
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