Cyprus is Atlantis, says American researcher
By Martyn Henry
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AN AMERICAN researcher claims this week that Cyprus is the
site of the lost island of Atlantis.
After nearly a decade of research, author Robert Sarmast claims
that the fabled ancient island is located on the sea floor
between Cyprus and Syria, and that the present Cyprus is merely
what remains of the mountainous region of Atlantis.
He also believes that Atlantis - and therefore Cyprus - was the
source of what the Bible calls the Garden of Eden
Now he wants to launch an expedition to explore the sea bed.
"It's one mile down, the Titanic was two miles down in cold
water and that was done 20 years ago," he said this week
from his office in Los Angeles.
He said that he believes he may find the remains of a city,
"containing buildings, roads and tunnels." He has kept
his research secret over the last decade, with everyone involved
having to sign secrecy pledges but now says that, despite not
yet finding funds for an expedition "I can't just keep
sitting on this discovery."
Bonanza
The discovery could mean a tourism bonanza for Cyprus
once word gets out, says Sarmast.
He says the site he has been investigating matches Plato's
account of Atlantis with astonishing accuracy. Plato based his
description on an account by Solon, who is said to have got his
information directly from the Egyptians.
His book, Discovery of Atlantis, The Startling Case For the
Island of Cyprus, is published this week in the US. Sarmast says
his findings match almost every clue in Plato's description of
the legendary city state.
It shows what he says is the location of the rectangular plain
of Atlantis, as well as all the other key geographic features
that Plato cites-including the precise location of its
capital-Atlantis City.
The book goes on to provide a link between this data and the
biblical legend of the Garden of Eden. "Scholars in this
field know that any credible claim to have located Atlantis must
use Plato's famed account found in his Timaeus and Critias.
these classic ancient dialogues remain the sole source for the
Atlantis legend," he says.
Technology
The book utilises state-of-the-art oceanographic
research and display technology to depict what he says is the
actual underwater site of Atlantis. The maps show the Levantine
basin and the Cyprus Arc in high-resolution detail for the first
time. The data was obtained in 1987 during a scientific survey
of the north-eastern Mediterranean by a Russian survey vessel.
While matching all the clues of the physical site, Sarmast
claims to achieve a match with nearly every other clue that
Plato lists. The nearly 50 matches he has made with Plato's
clues extend from the philosopher's claim that elephants once
lived on Atlantis, to the mineral composition of the island, to
mythological figures associated with the legend.
Among his claims are that Sarmast lends new credibility to
Plato's account of Atlantis. Crucial here is the recent
scientific proof of a catastrophic flood of the entire
Mediterranean basin due to the destruction of the Gibraltar
'dam' that closed off the Med from the Atlantic. This accepted
fact of natural history substantiates Plato's claim that an
epochal flood "swallowed up" the mountainous island of
Atlantis. It lends credence to Sarmast's contention that Plato's
overall presentation is historically accurate.
AS IT WAS: Using a Russian survey, Sarmast has mapped the sea
bed to ascertain the shape of Atlantis before much of it -
exculding the present island of Cyprus - was engulfed by the
waters of the Med.
CYPRUS THEORY: Sarmast's book, published this week