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Science News

Atlantis: Discovered at Last? 478

Henry G. writes "The BBC is reporting that recent satellite pictures may show the location of the fabled city of Atlantis, as described by Plato. It is in Southern Spain, though, and not on an island as is commonly believed. Here's an image of the concentric rings over the alleged area." This story has gotten a lot of submissions; it's worth noting that it's also shown up off Cyprus, or near Cuba, or is Crete, or... It is worth noting that that Ubar was found this way.
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Atlantis: Discovered at Last?

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  • by Three Headed Man ( 765841 ) <.dieter_chen. .at. .yahoo.com.> on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:17AM (#9355306)
    They found a number of concentric rings (from the walls) in Turkey where Troy was supposed to be. Heinrich Schliemann kind of messed up the dig with heavy machinery and falsifying finding "the jewelry of Helen", but the site still had interesting archaeological finds as well.

  • Ahead of the game (Score:3, Interesting)

    by dncsky1530 ( 711564 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:21AM (#9355326) Homepage
    This site [atlan.org] doesn't need "satelites" to prove atlantis exists

    But these days everyone's finding [science-frontiers.com] Atlantis
  • Indy anyone? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Killjoy_NL ( 719667 ) <slashdot AT remco DOT palli DOT nl> on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:25AM (#9355345)
    This article reminds me of the great Lucasgame Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis

    Screeny here: http://www.sebelinteractive.de/scummvm/images/shot s/indy4_7.jpg

    I hope there will be something interesting to find down there :)
  • Santorini? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by 192939495969798999 ( 58312 ) <info AT devinmoore DOT com> on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:27AM (#9355351) Homepage Journal
    I always thought that Santorini and its adjacent islands were "Atlantis": it was one big island,but it went pompeii and thus you get a big ring of smaller islands. They have excavated and found ancient stuff, of course, etc. Same with Crete. How far do you think the story of Atlantis travelled geographically?
  • by torpor ( 458 ) <ibisum.gmail@com> on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:28AM (#9355356) Homepage Journal
    Nope, I don't see it either. I think this is one of those BBC stories that sounded good until they started writing it ...

    What I don't get is why someone just doesn't go there and start having a look around? Great, we've got satellite images ... is that part of Spain really so inaccessible that we can't just call up the local museum operator and have 'em go see if they see Atlantis in their neighborhood... heh heh, okay, scratch that.

    Bad Idea.

    Still, this story highlights just how much we take for granted in archeology today. We can't even deal with language barriers today, here and now, and the issues they can cause for two human beings trying to understand each other ... how on Earth can we be so sure that we've interpreted a few clay tablets here and there correctly? I know this is an arcane science, with its own rules and regulations, but I can't help feeling that such fundamental issues as the difference between the word for "coastal land" and "island" could have radically confused our understanding of ancient history...

    Its like, great, we've got the source, but what the heck kind of CPU does it run on, and what version of the compiler do we use to build the project with? Give someone a "snippet of C" and have them re-build the PC with it ... hmm ... odd analogy I suppose, but I'm just too lazy to smooth out the wrinkles. Like so many archaeologists before me, perhaps?

    That, and the fact that most 'modern' schools of archaeology seem to have been founded by Christian Faith movements over the years, leads me to a very nasty suscpicion that we've completely misunderstood the Ancients, too many times to be sure ...
  • would be if we discovered a very old, very advanced civilization that threw historians a curveball. For example, what if some ancient civilization was just as advanced as us but nuked themselves out of existence? This could explain much: the gods of Greek mythology, etc. Just a thought.
  • Re:pareidolia (Score:3, Interesting)

    by deadgoon42 ( 309575 ) * on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:30AM (#9355368) Journal
    I agree. While I believe that remote sensing techniques can certainly show things like what it supposedly in these pictures, don't let someone tell you they are an expert and then believe them on that basis. If everyone did that then we'd believe all the nonsense that Richard Hoagland [enterprisemission.com] preaches about glass tubes on Mars and vast superstructures on the Moon.
  • Mediteranean Rising (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Gleef ( 86 ) * on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:32AM (#9355377) Homepage
    The Mediteranean Sea has been rising for as long as it's existed (it's essentially a big basin that's filling from the other water sources around it). Cities have been built on the coast of the Mediteranean for millenia.

    If we call any sunken city in the Mediteranean "Atlantis", we'll never get any work done. There are just too many of them.
  • Antiquity link (Score:5, Interesting)

    by rwebb ( 732790 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:40AM (#9355418)
    The original Antiquity article is here [antiquity.ac.uk].

    Aside from a great deal of speculation about correlations between Egyptian records, tales of the Peoples of the Sea, and a selective reading of the Dialogues, the only "data" the author points to are the satellite images which may be the remains of rectangular structures. Nothing in situ to indicate dating.

    As there is almost certainly evidence of Bronze Age settlements practically anywhere one cares to dig along the Mediterranean coast of Spain, this article is roughly the equivalent of speculating that an unattributed burial in a 6th century Wessex tomb must necessarily be the remains of Arthur.
  • Final truth? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Dexter77 ( 442723 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:45AM (#9355440)
    So, in near future we will have dozen places that claim to be Atlantis. Is this going to be as with Santa Claus. There are atleast ten different countries claiming to be Santa's home countries.

    How do you define which is the real Atlantis? I bet there are many forgotten cities that distantly match description written almost 3000 years ago.

    Can Atlantis be identified without a doubt? If so, then how?
  • by cardshark2001 ( 444650 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:47AM (#9355459)
    Scientists are bound and determined to place Atlantis ANYWHERE except in the middle of the Atlantic, where it is.

    There's a chain of islands called the Mid Atlantic ridge, which, if the water level were lowered 300-500 feet (as it was before the end of the ice age) would be a very large island. You could even call it an island continent.

    Plato said atlantis was 9000 years before him, or about 11,500 years ago. We've only learned in the past couple of decades that almost exactly at that time, the mean temperature of the earth raised a significant amount in a short amount of time. If a bunch of ice (North America had a mile-thick layer of ice) melted all at once, and you lived on an island continent, it would seem that your island sank into the ocean.

    Someday I'll be proven correct. I just know it.

  • Excavating the site (Score:3, Interesting)

    by cjellibebi ( 645568 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:47AM (#9355460)
    Dr Kuehne said he hoped to attract interest from archaeologists to excavate the site. But this may be tricky. The features in the satellite photo are located within Spain's Donana national park.
    Would excavating what could be a lost city really wreck a national park? Archaeologists try and be as non-intrusive as possible, and their methods of digging holes are so gentle that they use a toothbrush-like brush to move the dirt. So even if nothing was found after an extensive dig, there would be virtually no ecological damage. And if the city of Atlantis really was found and they decided to excavate everything that could possibly be in Plato's description, would that effect the ecology of the area (providing they did not turn the area into a museum)?
  • South Pole (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Onceat ( 734080 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @08:57AM (#9355515)
    I thought the land mass under the South pole was Atlantis, the piece fits into the Pangea puzzle , and it is said to have landed up there when the poles revesed there polarity around the same time the great lakes , and the scotish lochs where formed since those two places used to be the poles, I saw it on National Geographic or Discovery a while back
  • Re:pareidolia (Score:5, Interesting)

    by quixoticsycophant ( 729112 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:01AM (#9355533)
    Here's a recent and very striking example of fitting data to preconceived notions: zepplin backwards [albinoblacksheep.com] (flash link).

    As with all of these things, the trick is that you're shown the message while listening to it, and you tend to make it fit. It's even more convincing after a few listens -- it really sounds like, "There was a little toolshed where he made us suffer, sad Satan." Almost poetic.

    So, rings? They have the scientific method backwards. If, say, a meterologist was looking through some satellite photos happened to notice some rings, that is one thing. But some dude looking for rings in satellite photos is totally different.

  • by Aphrika ( 756248 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:02AM (#9355540)
    Possibly true but you're forgetting one thing.

    In ancient times, all oceans were known as the Sea of the Atlanteans, which is where the name Atlantic came from.

    As far as they were concerned, standing on the shores of the Eurasian continent and Africa, the ocean surrounded them. To them the Atlantic wasn't what we now know as the Atlantic, it constituted the whole ocean. This puts paid to the argument that Atlant-is is in the modern Atlan-tic. It could be, but there are lots of other ridges and sub-oceanic plateaus in other parts of the ancient 'Atlantic' ocean that would have succumbed at the same time as the mid-Atlantic ridge...
  • Great but... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Gadzinka ( 256729 ) <rrw@hell.pl> on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:03AM (#9355542) Journal
    It's /. so I'm too lazy to look at the article, but from the story I should point one thing:

    As little as we know about alleged Atlantis, one thing is sure from Plato's tales -- Atlantis was beyond the Pilars of Hercules (Gibraltar Strait). So anything on the Atlantic, Pacific or Indian Ocean is a good candidate, whether it is in Amercia, Asia or Antarctic.

    Anything on Mediterranean Sea, or Black Sea is NOT beyond the Pilars of Hercules.

    Robert
  • Re:Santorini? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by MaynardJanKeymeulen ( 768541 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:03AM (#9355548) Homepage
    I'be heard that too, actually, while I was there a couple of years ago. I've visited ancient Thera, which was said to be some part of Atlantis. Its beginnings predated the Minoan civilisation, and I was quite developed fot that time. However, since almost the whole island was gone during gigantic volcano eruption, there wasn't many left. (the eruption was also said to have caused the end of the Minoan culture on Crete) Check out this site [decadevolcano.net] for more information
  • by Jade E. 2 ( 313290 ) <slashdot@perlstor[ ]et ['m.n' in gap]> on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:04AM (#9355559) Homepage
    I can see what could be rings... They don't match the ones the BBC drew in, though. Here [perlstorm.net] are the ones I can make out, with the red highlights showing the areas I'm extrapolating from. They're not all that concentric... The two close together ones (3rd and 4th) might actually be just one that's farther off center... The outer two are actually clearest after looking at the image for a minute.

    Of course, the whole thing is probably an optical illusion, a la the face on mars, but I'd probably be grasping at straws too after a couple years of searching for (likely non-existent) patterns in satellite images :)

  • by kabocox ( 199019 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:11AM (#9355598)
    Shh, scientists don't really care about the Atlantis myth. They do care about the public funding for finding Atlantis. I bet once every 10-20 years some scientist gets a decent grant and alot of PR for "finding Atlantis." Does the public really want to know of all the ancient cities? Nope. Does the public really want to fund looking for ancient cities? Not really. Will the public fund looking for Atlantis each time that it generally forgets about it? Yes. That is the real reason we won't ever "find Atlantis." Actually, it would be interesting if some one would fund undersea research for sunken cities. It would have to be sold to the public as the search for Atlantis though.
  • by Darkman, Walkin Dude ( 707389 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:13AM (#9355610) Homepage

    Yeah I followed up the information on the "mysterious sea peoples" mentioned in the BBC article, apparently a crowd of raiders that made short work of most of the civilistions in the area at that period, and I was immediately struck by the similarities between stories of them and some very ancient Irish legends.

    These talk about a people called the "Fomors" (or various other names) who were also known as the "Sea Demons" from the south, who enslaved Ireland for a period, before being defeated by a coalition of tribes. The leader of these fomors was apparently one "Balor of the evil eye", whose giant evil eye could apparently turn men to ash on the battlefield with its "gaze like the sun". He was beaten by one of the warlords of the time, and the story goes that the destruction of the eye caused a great explosion, the area around which was accursed for hundreds of years afterwards.

    There are other bits and pieces like that, but it really makes you wonder...

  • by Ralph Wiggam ( 22354 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:14AM (#9355621) Homepage
    The problem is that a lot of people looking for Atlantis aren't good scientists and make stupid announcements. There are two reasons why I'm still hoping that we'll find Atlantis. Troy was assumed to be mythological right up until somebody found it. Also, Plato is very clear that Atlantis was a real place. He hears about it from an Egyptian priest who says Atlantis existed 9000 years prior. Many people assume there was a bad translation somewhere from 900 to 9000. That would make Atlantis Minoan Crete. I have faith that Plato knew what he was talking about and we'll find it someday.

    -B

  • by perly-king-69 ( 580000 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:17AM (#9355642)
    IAAA (I am an archaeologist)

    Archaeology is great for looking at the 'duree longue' ... broad sweeps of history and identifying trends therein. eg one can say that over a 100 year period this site switched from using pots made at site y to those made at site z. We can't always say why those changes occurred - although historical facts help. Looking at a single pot can't tell us an awful lot.

    With your C analogy (IAAACP - I am also a C programmer) we'd look at lots of snippets of code identify differences between them, date them (except there is no scientific method for dating code) and hypothesise as to what changes and why.

    Archaeology is not a science, certainly not an 'arcane science'. It's a discipline which employs (amongst other things) scientific techniques, such as C-14 dating.

  • Re:South Pole (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Onceat ( 734080 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:19AM (#9355660)
    Yeah I caught it on a weird time , unexpectacly , so I never paid much attention to what channel it was on anyway, it was interesting , since the Ice sheets ( or at least the ones they can get too ) date back to the same time as Plato talks about , aparently the Vickings made refrence to Atlantis aswell, then when the pole shift happend, it was " sunk " quickly, due to the sudden influx of water to re balance the globe , if that was the case the pressure of the water most probebly litleraly wiped out any evidence of it ever being there, I read some where once that , that is the reason why Illonios is so flat , cause the glaciers that formed the great lakes , melted quickly , the resulting tidal waves just flatened out everything in it's path to the sea. I cant back any of this up, but it is facinating, I wonder if that why the vikings just stopped circumnavigating the world , they could have seen this as a huge omen not to travel the seas anymore, reminds me aparently the chinesse knew about Atlantis as well , my sister is reading some book now about them discovering the owrld at the same time as the vikings
  • Re:Santorini? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by freshtonic ( 650437 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:23AM (#9355677) Journal
    I visited Santorini about 6 years ago, and our guide said that yes, the island did go Krakatoa (not in those exact words). The island is a horse-shoe shape. One side of the island got completely blown away in the erruption same as what happened to Mt. St. Helens. It's a beautiful place though and well worth checking out. Incidentally, it's also the island where Anne Rice's vampire character 'Marius' lived, and kept the King & Queen of the vampires. I was reading The Vampire Lestat whilst on the ferry from Crete to Santorini. I nearly shat myself. I read that part about Marius on the way...
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:24AM (#9355682)
    Umm...the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is kinda deep for this sort of thing. I mean, sure, the Bering Strait/Land Bridge was exposed at that time, but the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is a bit deeper. Plus, don't forget the reason the Ridge exists: It's the fault line between two major techtonic plates, and new crust is constantly erupting in the middle. Not exactly the most hospitible place for a civilization, I would think.
  • by ianscot ( 591483 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:40AM (#9355789)
    Leaving alone wannabe Heinrich Schliemanns like the "lecturer and Atlantis enthusiast" we run across in this article, you don't necessarily even have to be looking for a pattern to think you see it.

    Michael Shermer's book "Why People Believe Weird Things" does a decent job of summing up the problem and how it works with ideas like this: People's minds are wired to look for patterns. They look for patterns that relate to other patterns they're familiar with, mostly, or those are the ones they think they see anyway. Show me a Rorschach blob, or a random scattering of data, and I'm going to try to figure out what it means. Faces on Mars! My fate, written in the tea leaves! Your character, in the lines on your palm! And so on.

    In the case of Atlantis, though, it takes a special kind of thinking to ignore all the obvious political context for Plato -- his and his family's opposition to the way Athens had gone, the whole Republic-as-an-ideal-Sparta thing -- but to seize on the few physical details he describes for Atlantis. They're not missing the forest for the trees: they're imagining the forest where they imagine there's a tree. Based on two rectangles near some concentric circles, no less. Yow.

  • by Short Circuit ( 52384 ) <mikemol@gmail.com> on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:41AM (#9355793) Homepage Journal
    except there is no scientific method for dating code

    Sure there is. Look for deprecated system calls, or relatively new "requirements" (such as stdafx.h in C++ programs in Visual Studio. That really pisses me off.) ...If you're examining the raw data off the disk, look at the encoding. Is it big-endian or little-endian? Or is it ASCII or EBCDIC?

    Then there's less reliable methods such as timestamps

    It still requires some knowledge of how coding practices have changed, though.
  • by lachlan76 ( 770870 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @09:58AM (#9355919)
    The difference between coastal land and island wouldn't necessarily be very different from each other, and could be similar enough to cause translation errors when reading an eroded clay tablet. I study Japanese, so that's where i'll get my example from: the symbols related to water (such as beach, sea island, etc.) all contain the symbol: (ignore the dots, they are there for layout)
    .\|
    ./|
    /.|

    in the symbol (and no, i can't remember the rest of the symbols). So for reasons like erosion, it could be easy to misread coast as island, or similar.

    I'm not great at Japanese, but i know that there are 50,000 of those symbols, and alot are related to each other. I now know 14!
  • by Hoi Polloi ( 522990 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @10:23AM (#9356095) Journal
    I'd say that the use of concentric rings would be relatively common in very early settlements as a basic form of self defense. Hill forts with circular earthen walls are found in England and Ireland. It is simply the shortest and simplest wall you can make around a site. I wouldn't be surprised if prehistoric settlers in Spain and England were in contact and used similar construction styles. To say that this is an automatic sign that it is Atlantis is like saying everyone who wears a baseball cap must be on a major league baseball team.
  • by AftanGustur ( 7715 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @10:40AM (#9356215) Homepage


    Archaeology is not a science, certainly not an 'arcane science'. It's a discipline which employs (amongst other things) scientific techniques, such as C-14 dating.

    I almost belived you were an Archeolog up until you wrote that..

    For something to be a science, you have to be able to do studies, using methods based on theories, and to get results that can be independently verified by repeating the study by peer scientists.

    Archeology is exactly that ..

    If you want an example of something that is not science, take psychoanalysis as an example. It's not even a theory, and as such, can't be disproofed. Everything is based on two subjects of Freud that he found interesting, and used to get him out of his financial troubles.

    I'm sure he is laughing hysterically in his grave.

  • by HarveyBirdman ( 627248 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @10:44AM (#9356242) Journal
    I dunno, not to side with the woo woo crowd, but it doesn't really read as a parable or political lesson unless something gets lost in the translation. It's more like a straightforward history. Are you sure you're not thinking of Bacon's "New Atlantis"?

    Plato's work describes a rather agressive and widespread empire. Hindu legends of the Deva Nahusha also tell of a similar, widespread empire around the same time. Atlantis is not mentioned by that name anywhere outside of Plato's work, but strikingly similar entities are told of in other place under different names.

    There's lots of other myths and legends in other cultures around the world that seem to point to some sort of largish civilization at the time Atlantis was supposed to have peaks. No UFOs, no advanced technology, no silliness... just *something* that is, for the most part, still undiscovered. It's not a big deal, really. So the dawn of civilization gets pushed back a bit. So what? It'd be interesting. Look at Caral in Peru. That discovery pushed back the birth of city life and organized farming in the "New World" a full 1000 years in one shot.

    As for the features being spotted by an Atlantis enthusiast, well, use scientific method here: who else is looking for it? ;-)

  • by Etcetera ( 14711 ) * on Monday June 07, 2004 @10:52AM (#9356310) Homepage

    That "Atlantis" referred to most of Indonesia, under the South China Sea [atlan.org], since it was a full continent rather than a bunch of islands during the last ice age [atlan.org]. It's pretty novel, and I can't recall any other work putting forth this theory (ie, anything on TLC - heh).

    A Brazillian Professor has a pretty informative site about this [atlan.org] where he talks about his research. Since they added a forum [atlan.org], it seems that more other people than I realized have been following this as well.

    How does this work, you say? Well, if you consider the mediterranian philosophy of flat earths and rings going out, they considered the "Atlantic Ocean" to be a sort of "world ocean", not the specific ocean we call it today [atlan.org]. Plus, there are a whole other number of Atlantis "checklist items [atlan.org]" that the area has in its favor that really don't exist in the Mediterranian or South America (ie, lots of elephants, dual rice harvests, etc...)

    Anyway, now that it's posted... I'd be interesting in seeing some other Slashdotters' opinions about it.

    =)
  • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @10:54AM (#9356331)
    There very well might have been an ancient civilization that wiped itself out with nukes.

    There's a lot of writing within one of the Indian (Hindu?) holy books that tells of gods flying in air ships, firing thunder and other such terrifying weapons at each other. Sorry, I can't find anything in my bookmarks, or recall anything specific. However, there is evidence that there were nukes back then in india: a city was found irradiated and destroyed from 8,000 years ago. [rense.com]

    Quite fascinating, as it totally destroys our conceptions of the past. If you ask me, we're quite pompous to assume that we're evolving to be more intelligent as time goes forward, just because we don't see evidence of the ancients being as advanced as we are (ie, silicon-based electronics and other machinery). That means little - they could have been more advanced spiritually, temporally, with medicine, or any other number of things. There is evidence that ancients accomplished many great, amazing scientific and engineering feats, most of which we have little if no explanation for (the Pyrimids, some artifacts found in China, many various ruins, Stonehenge, etc.)
  • Just 2 buildings??? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by d474 ( 695126 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @11:05AM (#9356434)
    Are we supposed to believe that the some great ancient civilization that possessed mythological technologies and a naval fleet some sort lived in a city with just 2 buildings? The map says there is a temple and a castle. That doesn't sound like a city let alone a civilization to me. Please, someone tell me what I'm missing.
  • by perly-king-69 ( 580000 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @11:24AM (#9356596)
    For something to be a science, you have to be able to do studies, using methods based on theories, and to get results that can be independently verified by repeating the study by peer scientists. Archeology is exactly that ..

    No it isn't. Many aspects of archaeology are non-repeatable. Excavation is the obvious example. If you cannot have a control and it is non-repeatable then I'd argue that it is not a science.

    Secondly, although archaeology uses many scientific techniques, it is fundamentally subjective. Once you've excavated a site, got dates from objects and contexts one is still left with the subjective opinions of the primary excavator. What was Stonehenge for? Different archaeologists have different views, though they all may agree on the layout, size and age of the site. And don't even get started on Biblical archaeology!

    Even before that though subjectivity comes into play - where do we dig? where are the bounds of the excavation? what methods of excavation are we going to use?

    Check out some of the writings of Ian Hodder or Phil Barker to explore some of these ideas further.

    BTW, IAAA.

  • by The Lynxpro ( 657990 ) <<lynxpro> <at> <gmail.com>> on Monday June 07, 2004 @12:25PM (#9357171)
    "And according to him, he beleaved that in Noah's time, there was very advance people who thought they were better than god, hence the reason why god floodded the earth. Now I don't have a bible time line in front of me, but Noahs time was about 9000 years before Plato . . . And the flood would most certainly make a city sink."

    The problem with that is that Noah WASN'T Noah. The Babylonian account of the flood and the "Noah" character is far older than the Hebrew account. Moses pulled a "Puff Daddy" and sampled the Babylonian account he learned from studying in the Egyptian King's library and remixed it into a Hebrew account. Notice I didn't call the Egyptian King "Pharaoh" because that wasn't a real title. Pharaoh means "king's palace." Its a Hebrew mistranslation. Its like referring to President Bush as "White House."

    You also have to contend with the Egyptian accounts of the Great Flood as well as people like the Mayans who also claimed they were from an island to their East that sank.

  • Re:Santorini? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by babbage ( 61057 ) <cdevers.cis@usouthal@edu> on Monday June 07, 2004 @12:43PM (#9357348) Homepage Journal

    The most interesting explanation I'm aware of for Atlantis -- and all the other western flood myths (Noah's ark, Gilgamesh, etc) goes back even further, to the end of the last ice age, when sea levels were lower and the Mediterranean basin may have been a relatively small, dry basin.

    In H. G. Wells' Outline of History [amazon.com], there is this interesting passage:

    Now, this may seem all the wildest speculation, but it is not entirely so, for if we examine a submarine contour map of the Straits of Gibraltar, we find there is an enormous valley running up from the Mediterranean deep, right through the Straits, and trenching some distance out on to the Atlantic shelf. ... This refilling of the Mediterranean, which by the rough chronology we are employing in this book may have happened somewhere between 30,000 and 10,000 B.C., must have been one of the greatest single events in the pre-history of our race. ... Suddenly the ocean waters began to break through over the westward hills and to pour in upon these primitive peoples--the lake that had been their home and friend became their enemy; its waters rose and never abated; their settlements were submerged; the waters pursued them in their flight. Day by day and year by year the waters spread up the valleys and drove mankind before them. Many must have been surrounded and caught by the continually rising salt flood. It knew no check; it came faster and faster; it rose over the tree-tops, over the hills, until it had filled the whole basin of the present Mediterranean and until it lapped the mountain cliffs of Arabia and Africa. Far away, long before the dawn of history, this catastrophe occurred.

    So, we have a huge cataclysmic event that would have been common to all the people living in the Mediterranean basin, possibly going up past the Bosporous to the Black Sea.

    And because nearly all ancient communities seem to have sprung up along sea coasts and river banks, it seems reasonable to assume that the ancient coastline of the Mediterranean (and Black Sea) would have been thickly populated, while the "inland" areas that form the current coastline would have been populated sparsely if at all.

    With that in mind, it seems obvious that whatever remains of any civilizations that preceded ones like Greece & Egypt would have been in areas that are now submerged. The survivors of this cataclysm would have been dispersed across the region, where their stories may well have evolved into the various flood myths that have been handed down to us today. This would help explain why nearly all of these civilizations have flood myths, while also explaining why these stories vary so much.

    It seems reasonable to me...

  • by unicorn ( 8060 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @12:46PM (#9357383)
    Secondly, the ancient unit of measurement used by Plato - the stade - may have been 20% larger than traditionally assumed.

    If the latter is true, one of the rectangular features on the "island" matches almost exactly the dimensions given by Plato for the temple of Poseidon.


    I would love to know, if they have any particular reason for deciding that they need to redefine the size of a stade. Or if they just decided they needed to change the facts, to match the current situation.

    Sure seems like one of those cases, where you could choose to make almost anything fit the description that Plato gave, with the proper adjustment to the measure of a stade.

    Isn't Washington DC built in concentric circles too? Perhaps the Lincoln monument, or some such, can be said to match the temple, with teh proper adjustment to stade size, and we've actually recreated Atlantis w/o even trying.
  • by The Lynxpro ( 657990 ) <<lynxpro> <at> <gmail.com>> on Monday June 07, 2004 @12:58PM (#9357492)

    My $0.02 US is that the ancient city they just found is a colony of Atlantis. Atlantis was supposedly a powerhouse of a civilization. All great imperial powers set up colonies. The Greeks, the Romans, and the British. Just because this place has the rings and the temple does not mean its the *Real Slim Shady*. Think about how many places in the US are named after older cities and counties of Ireland and England (or for that matter, other cities in Europe). This could be a colony of Atlantis and the colonists chose to set up their colony just like from their homeland.

    What I do find interesting that nobody has brought up here on Slashdot that's read the article is how this explains the Basques. The "homeland" of the Basques is in portions of Spain and France. Their language is not related to any other language in Europe. They claim they are the descendents of the Atlanteans. So finding this city, whether it be Atlantis or a colony thereof, easily now explains where the Basques came from.

  • by mnemoth_54 ( 723420 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @02:59PM (#9358701)
    /begin rant The problem I have is how they choose to selectively belive whatever parts of Plato's story that suit their particular purposes. They can't accept his timescale because it flys in the face of "known" history, so the just butcher it until Atlans tis can be anywhere. It's just too hard for people to accept that the Greeks and Romans got every bit of their 'advanced' knowledege from the egyptian libraries. But if you look at every great Greek thinker, they always came back from Alexandria with thier astounding new discoveries, without fail. It's plain for me to see that these men got there grand new ideas by reading them in very old books. IMO, If you want to find Atlantis, you have to accept Plato's story as a whole, and not discount parts as it suits you. It may or may not ever be found, it may not even exist, but changing the criteria to match the find is not the way to go about it. / end rant
  • At that time in human development, "history" amounted to what we might call "mythology".

    And this is different today, how? Our culture is loaded with myths of cosmic origin (the scientic guess work doesn't change the lack of direct observation and mythic style of presentation), national origin (George Washington chopping down the cherry tree and crossing the Delaware), and story telling (Superman, Star Wars, Tolkein).

    This is greatly misunderstood- but his Dialogues were PLAYS.

    This is so true. Not only of Plato, but of the Bible and any other literature both ancient and modern. When the director of the movie "The Day After Tomorrow" was criticized for the implausibility of an ice age developing in three days, he replied, "I had only 2 hours, and the movie is fiction, not a documentary."

    It is worth noting that a story may be both myth and historical reality. A story is mythic because of the way is it told, not because it is untrue. Thus, although you might believe the story of evolution to be historically true, it is nevertheless usually told in a mythic style. "Millions of years ago, the earth was covered with a reducing atmosphere and a complex solution of dissolved chemicals - the prebiotic soup. One day ..." Similarly, I believe that the story of George Washington crossing the Delaware is historical (but not the story about the cherry tree). But both are mythic stories.

    Now having made point about understanding literature in light of its intended style, let me say that a popular style today is "historical fiction". In historical fiction, the background events and significant actions of well known characters are expected to be historical, whereas the actions of other characters and day to day actions of well known characters are fictional - although consistent with the historical background.

    In the same vein, many of Shakespeare's plays were the historical fiction of the day, and it is not unreasonable to use them as a source for what was generally known at the time about Richard III and other historical characters. Similarly, Plato's stories about Socrates are usually considered to be either historical fiction or "based on a true story" - as opposed to pure fiction like Star Wars.

  • by nine-times ( 778537 ) <nine.times@gmail.com> on Monday June 07, 2004 @05:27PM (#9360148) Homepage

    Julius Caesar was a historical figure, yet he manages to be a Shakespearian character. Maybe he would have been a more appropriate example than Hamlet.

    There are many indications that Socrates was an actual person, but that doesn't mean Plato was writing transcripts of actual conversations. Some Platonic dialogues have characters that would have been historical by the time Plato was writing, and even if any of the conversations took place, it's unlikely that Plato could have been present at more than a couple of them. I'll grant you that Plato even appears as a character in a couple of dialogues, but John Malkovich appeared in "Being John Malkovich" too.

    Plus, there are a few discussions about writing/writers in Platonic dialogues that imply he's carefully crafted each dialogue for a meaning, and that the characters in place and the words put in the mouth of each character are chosen for symbolic purposes.

    Now, if you still don't believe me, and I'd love to have a book handy so I could give you a quote, but Aristotle (who was Plato's student and knew him personally) said something to the effect of "Plato didn't really believe any of the literal meanings of his dialogues" (not meant to be a quote, but something to that effect. I think it was in the Metaphysics, if you want to look it up sometime). Plato's dialogues were meant to be very symbolic and guide you towards some more abstract philosophy that, for strict philosophic reasons, couldn't be written down.

    And on a side note, if you've ever read any Platonic dialogues in the original Greek, it's hard to miss that they're filled with jokes, puns, and sarcasm. What's described is often impossible, or at least very improbable, to the point of being rediculous. It's been said that Plato slept with a copy of Aristophanes' plays under his pillow, and if you don't know, Aristophanes is an obscene satirist.

    So yes, there was a Socrates, and there may be an Atlantis. Just like Shakespeare writing "Julius Caeser" didn't proclude the possibility of there being a real life Julius Caeser and a real life Rome. But that doesn't mean the play is accurate, and I wouldn't want to use a play as my sole source of proof.

  • by Creepy ( 93888 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @06:07PM (#9360511) Journal
    Part of the problem is that the BBC article seems to be missing some history behind the story that makes a non-island city a possibility. Plato pretty much lifted the Atlantis (city) story from the Egyptian tale of Keftiu (as well as embellished on it), a city that supposedly existed past the Pillars of Hercules (Straight of Gibraltar today, which separates Spain and Morocco). Keftiu is rooted in the Egyptian word for Pillar and was believed to be the end of the earth where the sky was held up. Atlantis means isle of Atlas - recognize the similarity? Atlas held up the world in Greek mythology. Keftiu also wasn't necessarily an island - it can either mean the Isle of Keft or the People of Keft. So, possibly due to a simple translation error, an island was born.

    This could very easily be Atlantis. Minoan Crete never made sense (it never sunk) - Santorini island made more sense as most of it blew up (flooding Minoan Crete). It seems to me, though, that it was described as "west of Egypt" and that island's really NW.
  • by PsibrII ( 671768 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @10:01PM (#9361992) Journal
    Its not exactly the ONLY story dating back to that time. India has several legends going back to that time. Most of it has been simplified over time, and a little bit too much cheesy drama added, but you still have some basis in collective BS of an event, if not fact. Sometimes the BS can tell you more than any truth anyone of the time is willing to tell.

    Was there some advanced civilization back then ? Maybe. If you look to someting in more recent history you have this massive tome by Galen that it took 1800+ years to catch up with.

    Just because you get lucky now and then with some freak talent super genius doesn't mean its will keep going.

    I hate to say it but in the end, its the lowest common denominator of a society that gets passed on as a sure thing though the ages. When the library of alexandria went it was only the most popular, and probably cheesy tales that carried on over the ages because EVERYONE retold the tales.

    Farenheit 451 was based in the purest fact. Maybe noone is trying to kill every idea, but entropy will eat up anything that isn't massively distributed and repeated. Think to your most interesting paperback in your collection. Maybe a one off book by some unknown author. It will no doubt fall apart in less than 15 years.

    Now think of some book everyone has, even though it wasn't that great. Piers Anthony and Terry Prattchet are gonna be around in some archive in 1200 years like it or not. The works of Vernor Vinge, Patrick McManus, Rudy Rucker and Bruce Sterling will be nothing but dust most likely.

    Maybe there will be some saving grace in the future and they will have some Niven, Heinlein, Clarke, and Hunter S Thompson will survive. No doubt it probably won't be their best work. Entropy sucks doesn't it ?
  • Re:Santorini? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Quelain ( 256623 ) on Monday June 07, 2004 @10:12PM (#9362047)
    It would be a good story, except that it happened ~5 million years ago. That event defines the Miocene/Pliocene boundary.

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