Read The Atlantis Blueprint Online

Authors: Colin Wilson

The Atlantis Blueprint (46 page)

BOOK: The Atlantis Blueprint
6.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

The thickest ice on Antarctica is antipodal to the thickest ice on

Greenland. The cross-polar point to the thickest ice on Greenland is on the new Siberian Islands, which were formerly the home of a host of temperate-adapted animals. The antipodal point to the New

Siberian Islands is Lesser Antarctica, which would have enjoyed a temperate climate 12,000 years ago.

world’s temperature during the late Pleistocene. But this is exactly what the ice core experts do. They assume that latitudes can change only very gradually. Sudden changes such as those envisioned with a mantel displacement are beyond their consideration. They say everything must be linked to what they find on Greenland. Russian scientists, however, have seen the remains of horses, bison, etc. in Siberia and they cannot accept that the American scientists’ methodology is sound.

And it isn’t.

What the advocates of ice core dating have been doing is extrapolating data collected on Greenland and Greater Antarctica to the rest of the world. They have replaced investigation with extrapolation. They simply assume what they are logically obliged to prove.

Appendix 7
The Mechanics of Mantle Displacement

Rand Flem-Ath

The science journal
Nature
ran a cover story on 18 July 1996 called ‘Rotation of the inner core’. Hardly a bestseller, this report nevertheless can explain the most perplexing problem for the earth crust displacement theory.

I first became aware of this problem just after Rose and I had done a publicity tour for the publication of
When the Sky Fell.
We had accepted an invitation to give a talk at the local bookstore in the small town of Ladysmith, British Columbia, where we live. After the talk and slide show we answered a few questions and then chatted with those still remaining. A man asked, ‘How would your theory explain the hot spot under Hawaii?’

After having answered literally thousands of questions about the theory this was the first time that I came across a question that baffled me. I said, ‘What do you mean?’

‘Well,’ he replied, ‘my impression was that the Hawaiian islands were formed by a hot spot beneath the crust. As the crust moves gradually over the hot spot the rising magma pushes the crust upwards, forming islands. Since this has taken millions of years to achieve it seems to contradict your idea that the crust as a whole displaces.’ I had to admit that this sounded reasonable and I said that

I would have to investigate the matter in more detail because his question went straight to the heart of the theory. It seemed to be an unfailing arrow.

I did investigate the problem but it wasn’t until 1996 when the
Nature
article came out that I thought I might have an answer to this vexing question. In 1997, Arthur Logtenberg from Eindhoven, Holland, asked on our website for my ideas on the
Nature
article, which had said that the heavy solid iron core of the earth was rotating ‘100,000 times faster than the fastest relative motion of the tectonic plates of the lithosphere’. What this meant was that the inner core had its own spin and axis that was only related to but not exactly the same as the spin and axis of the rest of the planet. It seemed to me that everything ‘above’ the inner core was vulnerable to a displacement relative to the inner core. I called this idea a mantle displacement because the mantle is the thickest part of the earth above the inner core.

This notion of a deeper level displacement offered a solution to the hot spot problem. If the displacements were that much deeper, then it didn’t matter if there was a ‘hot spot’ beneath Hawaii, because it would move along with the rest of the mass of the earth that was displacing over the inner core.

In the summer of 1997 the question of the Hawaiian hot spot came up again. Rick Monteverde of Honolulu asked, ‘Could it be that the entire globe simply shifted, interior as well as crust?’ I replied: ‘The Hawaiian island chain was produced by a “hot spot” beneath the surface of the crust. This poses a more serious problem for the earth crust displacement theory since a movement of the crust should result in the hot spot showing up somewhere else beneath the earth’s crust. It is because of this problem that I have considered the movement of the entire mantle as a solution. A displacement of the earth’s mantle (something Hapgood was considering when he wrote his last letter to me in October 1982 just weeks before he died in an automobile accident) is a much more satisfying explanation for the rapid changes and at the same time can account for the movement of the Hawaiian “hot spot” (it simply shifts along with the mantle).’

But there was still the problem of what forces might have caused the mantle displacement. In August 1997, Robert K. Morgan of San Diego asked, ‘What forces would combine to break the earth’s
crust free of the underlying mantle?’ I replied, ‘In
When the Sky Fell
(Chapter 4, “Why the Sky Fell”), we review Hapgood’s adoption of the idea that the weight of the ice caps positioned lop-sided to the earth’s axis was
one
possible force. We also put forward two astronomical factors as additional contributing forces to the displacement of 9,600
BC.
The earth’s orbit was much more elliptical than it is today and thus the gravitational influence of the sun would “pull” with greater force at the immense (antipodal) ice sheets. But perhaps most importantly, the angle of the earth’s tilt was at its extreme of 24.4 degrees (it goes through a 41,000-year cycle ranging from 22.8 degrees to 24.4 degrees – today we are at around 23.5 and
declining -
in other words it’s getting
safer).
This meant that the
entire
earth’s mass was tilted to a greater degree. This would add momentum to the centrifugal thrust of the antipodal ice sheets.’

An Extraterrestrial Solution

During the rest of 1997, while I was busy trying to unravel the Atlantis blueprint, I had temporarily to leave the question of the causes of the mantle displacement. Then in the spring of 1998 I received a letter from Donald Tim Seitz Sr, who had written a scientific paper for the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada entitled ‘A Probable Cause of Crustal Shifts of the Earth: A Comet approaching the centre of mass of the Earth–Moon Gravitational System’. This appeared in
Regulus,
the journal of the society, in April 1998.

Donald had put his finger on a solution and though I was now convinced that it was a mantle rather than a crustal displacement, his theory worked perfectly. What he argued was that we tend to forget that our moon is quite large and has its own gravitational pull. If a comet or asteroid or any other extraterrestrial object is on a collision course with the earth then the force of the object is not necessarily directed to the centre of the earth, as we would normally think. The position of the moon at the point of impact upon the earth is a very important factor because its gravitational field will redirect the main thrust of the impact towards the mantle rather than the inner core of the planet.

Let’s consider three cases.

If the moon is directly behind the earth when the comet collides then the force of the comet will be directed straight through the earth to the centre of the inner core. In effect, the moon doesn’t matter in this case.

If the moon is between the earth and the comet then the moon will take the impact, saving the earth.

Let us imagine, however, that, as the comet is approaching, the moon is off to one side of the earth. Under these conditions the force of the comet is directed towards the upper mantle, which is the centre of gravity of the earth–moon gravitational system. This could very well dislodge the entire mantle. Donald Seitz’s theory seems to be the missing piece in the puzzle of why the displacements occur.

There are a multitude of forces at work to cause a mantle displacement. The antipodal weight of the asymmetrical ice caps is one factor. The shape of the earth’s orbit is another, because it brings the planet closer to the biggest gravitational force in our area of space, namely the sun. The tilt of the earth is another factor, which like the ice sheets and the shape of the orbit is an entirely predictable phenomenon.

These factors all appeared in
When the Sky Fell
but they really only set the stage for a potential displacement that must, after all, have been a mantle displacement. These astronomical preconditions are insufficient on their own to account for all the facts. When we learn, however, that the inner core has its own rotation and its own axis then the possibility for solving the hot spot problem is at hand. The discontinuity between the inner core and the rest of the mass of the planet allows us to postulate a mantle displacement, and Donald Seitz’s breakthrough that the earth and the moon form a kind of ‘gravity well’ seems to be the final piece in the puzzle. What remains a mystery is where the comet or comets came from, where they hit the earth, how big they were, and whether others will follow in the future.

A Terrestrial Alternative

Another possibility for the cause of the mantle displacement could be the discrepancy that grows between the axis of the inner core
and the axis of the rest of the planet. Today there is a 10-degree difference between the two and it is possible that at 9,600
BC,
when the earth’s whole axis was angled at its maximum of 24.4 degrees, the difference between it and the inner core’s axis was dangerously pronounced. The earth’s axis is governed by the pull of the sun, moon and other planets and follows a regular 41,000-year cycle. The peak of that cycle was reached at 9,600
BC,
at which time the planet’s whole axis began to decline after increasing for thousands of years.

The classic work on this subject was published in
Science
in 1976: ‘Variations in the Earth’s Orbit: Pacemaker of the Ice Ages’ by J. D. Hays, J. Imbrie and N. J. Schackleton.
3
They showed that geological/climatic patterns coincide with the periods when the earth’s tilt reaches its maximum of 24.4 degrees. The last time this occurred was around 9,600
BC,
exactly the time period when Plato’s ‘legend’ of Atlantis places the flood. When we combine this theory with the recent revelations about the inner core having its own axis, we have a much simpler idea than an extraterrestrial impact theory.

After reaching its peak angle of tilt at 24.4 degrees, in a sense the axis heads back to where it had been. The inner core is very dense and thus has more mass than the rest of the planet. Perhaps when the rest of the planet’s mass starts moving towards the axis of the inner core it creates an overwhelming attraction and the mantle displaces abruptly. The axis of the inner core and the axis of the rest of the mass of the earth are reunited abruptly and catastrophically This, no doubt, would begin slowly, but would build momentum, resulting, in the final stages, in a rapid displacement. There would be plenty of warnings, observable by any scientifically advanced civilisation experiencing it.

The arguments in favour of the ‘terrestrial’ force compared to ‘extraterrestrial’ are considerable.

The ‘extraterrestrial’ impact theory of a mantle displacement is unnecessarily complex. So many factors have to coincide that one can’t help doubt that this idea is ad hoc and prone to constant revision and exceptions. How big must a comet or asteroid be to displace the mantle? Why would these extraterrestrial objects collide with earth on a regular basis? Where is the moon relative to the incoming object? More importantly, an impact theory of displacement really
doesn’t dovetail with the discoveries that the earth’s geological and climatic upheavals coincide with the earth’s axis tilt.

I feel certain Charles Hapgood would agree that the terrestrial model is the better theory. It explains the placement of the ice sheets and coincides with the timing developed by Hays, Imbrie and Schackleton. Hapgood seemed to be heading in this direction when he wrote to me: ‘I have recently concluded that a “drag effect” would operate whereby the movement of the rigid crust would set in motion movements of the deeper layers, which would continue long after the movement of the crust stops, producing long-continued turbulence at the surface.’ This indicates that Hapgood was constantly reappraising his theory and making modifications in light of new evidence. The fact that the inner core has its own axis and rotates faster than the rest of the earth’s mass would surely have been factors that he would have wanted to incorporate into his theory.

For these reasons I conclude that the force that caused the mantle displacement is tied to the dynamics of the inner core of the planet coupled with the gradual oscillations of the planet’s tilt cycle. Both factors can potentially reunite when the tilt of the outer earth reverses its gradual drift away from the inner core and results in a catastrophic reunion whereby both axes are brought together. The axis of the inner core and the rest of the planet are temporarily reunited and may even contribute to a regeneration of the earth’s magnetic field. At this point, the pull of the sun, the moon and the rest of the planets in our solar web once again begins to gradually separate the mantle’s axis from the inner core’s axis and the whole cycle begins again. If this theory is correct, we can be assured that we have thousands of years (about 29,400) before another mantle displacement occurs.

Notes
Preface

1. Pennick,
Sacred Geometry,
1980, p. 43.

2. Cathie,
The Harmonic Conquest of Space.

3. Michell,
City of Revelation,
p. xiii.

4. Knight and Lomas,
Uriel’s Machine, pp.
363–4.

5. Flem-Ath, Rose,
Field of Thunder,
Stoddart, Toronto, 1997.

Chapter 1: Hapgood’s Secret Quest for Atlantis

1. This account of Hapgood’s death is based upon a letter to Rand from Charles’s cousin Beth Hapgood (2 April 1998).

2. Hapgood,
Earth’s Shifting Crust,
Pantheon, New York, 1958.

3. ‘Plate tectonics and earth crust displacement both share the assumption of a mobile crust. The ideas are not mutually exclusive but rather complementary. Plate tectonics explains long-term, slow changes like mountain building, volcanic activity, and local earthquakes. Earth crust displacement accepts that these processes are gradual but posits a much more dramatic and abrupt movement of the crust that can explain different problems such as mass extinctions, glaciation patterns, and the sudden rise of agriculture. In stark contrast to plate tectonics’
slow motion of individual plates, an “earth crust displacement,” as postulated by Hapgood, abruptly shifts all the plates as a single unit. During this motion the core (the heavy bull’s eye of the planet) doesn’t change, leaving the earth’s axis unaltered.’ Flem-Ath, Rand and Rose,
When the Sky Fell,
p. 3.

4. Hapgood, Charles H.,
Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings: Evidence of Advanced Civilization in the Ice Ages,
Chilton Books, Philadelphia/New York, 1966.

5. Hapgood, Charles H.,
The Path of the Pole,
Chilton Book Company, Philadelphia/New York/London, 1970 (a revised edition of
Earth’s Shifting Crust,
1958).

6. Charles H. Hapgood Archives, Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.

7. Churchward, James,
The Lost Continent of Mu: The Motherland of Man,
William Edwin Rudge, New York, 1926.

8. Settegast, Mary,
Plato Prehistorian,
Lindisfarne Press, New York, 1990.

9. Donnelly, Ignatius,
Atlantis: The Antediluvian World,
Harper & Brothers, New York, 1882.

10. Donnelly, Ignatius,
Ragnarok: The Age of Fire and Gravel,
Harper & Brothers, New York, 1883.

11. Furneaux, p. 316.

12. Wegener, Alfred,
The Origin of the Continents and Oceans,
1915, reissued in 1966 by Dover, New York.

13. Albert Einstein Archives, Department of Manuscripts and Archives, The Jewish National and University Library (Hapgood Correspondence, 24 November 1952).

14. Albert Einstein Archives, Department of Manuscripts and Archives, The Jewish National and University Library (Hapgood Correspondence, 8 May 1953).

15. Einstein, ‘Confidential Report on Candidate for Fellowship’.

16. Ma, Ting Ying H.,
Research on the Past Climate,
published by the author, Taipei, Taiwan, May 1952.

17. Reprinted in full in White,
Pole Shift.

18. Mallery, pp.40–6.

19. Tompkins,
Secrets of the Great Pyramid,
p. 201.

20. Needham, Joseph,
Science and Civilisation in China
(three volumes), Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1959.

21. Hapgood,
Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings,
p. 193.

22.
Pauwels, Louis, and Jacques Bergier,
The Morning of the Magicians,
Stein and Day, New York, 1964.

23. Shklovskii, Joseph, and Carl Sagan,
Intelligent Life in the Universe,
Holden Day, San Francisco, 1966.

24. In the map on pp. 32–3 of
Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings,
Hapgood numbers this 93.

25. Berlitz, Charles,
Atlantis: The Eighth Continent,
Putnam, New York, 1984.

26. See Appendix 2.

Chapter 2: The Blueprint

1. US Naval Support Force, Introduction to Antarctica, US Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, 1969, centrepiece.

2. Plato, Laws, Vol. I, Book III.

3. Flem-Ath, Rand, ‘A Global Model for the Origins of Agriculture’.

4. Flem-Ath, Rand and Rose, ‘The Earth Science Revolution and Pre-History’.

5. Hapgood, Charles, letter to the Flem-Aths, 3 August 1977.

6. Watkins, N. D., and J. D. Kennett, ‘Antarctic Bottom Water: Major Change in Velocity during the Late Cenozoic between Australia and Antarctica’, Science, Vol. 173, 27 August 1971, pp. 813–18; Ledbetter, M. T., and D. A. Johnson, ‘Increased Transport of Antarctic Bottom Water in the Vema Channel during the last Ice Age’, Science, Vol. 194, 19 November 1976, pp. 837–9.

7. Warren, William Fairfield, Paradise Found: The Cradle of the Human Race at the North Pole, Boston, 1885.

8. Tilak, Bal Gangadhar, The Arctic Home in the Vedas, Poona, India, 1903.

9. Hapgood, Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings, see n. 23 on p. 229.

10. Kuhn, Thomas S., The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, second edition, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1970.

11. Flem-Ath, Rand and Rose, When the Sky Fell, p. 46.

12. Schwaller de Lubicz, Rene, The Temple of Man: Sacred Architecture and the Perfect Man, translated by Robert and Deborah Lawlor, Inner Traditions International, Rochester, VT, 1998.

13.
Fulcanelli, The Mystery of Cathedrals, Pauvert, Paris, 1925.

14. Schwaller de Lubicz, Rene, Sacred Science: The King of Pharaonic Theocracy, translated by André and Goldian VandenBroeck, Inner Traditions International, Rochester, VT, 1988, originally published in French in 1961 by Flammarion.

15. West, John Anthony, Serpent in the Sky: The High Wisdom of Ancient Egypt, second edition, Quest Books, Wheaton, IL, 1993.

16. Hancock, Graham, The Sign and the Seal: The Quest for the Lost Ark of the Covenant, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1992.

17. Roberts, Paul William, ‘The Riddle of the Sphinx’, Saturday Night, March 1993.

18. Hancock, Graham, Fingerprints of the Gods: A Quest for the Beginning and the End, Heinemann, London, 1995.

19. Bauval, Robert, and Adrian Gilbert, The Orion Mystery: Unlocking the Secrets of the Pyramids, Doubleday Canada, Toronto, 1994.

20. Wilson, Colin, From Atlantis to the Sphinx: Recovering the Lost Wisdom of the Ancient World, Virgin, London, 1996.

21. Hancock, Graham, and Robert Bauval, Keeper of Genesis, Heinemann, London, 1996 (in the US Message of the Sphinx, Crown, New York, 1996).

22. Barnes, John, Ancient purity and polygot programs’, Sunday Times, 4 November 1984, Computing Section, p. 13; Mylrea, Paul, ‘Computer helps preserve ancient Aymara language’, as printed in The Nanaimo Free Press, 21 November 1991, p. 8.

23. Posnansky, Vol. 1, p. 2.

24. Aveni, Anthony F, Archaeoastronomy in Pre-Columbian America, University of Texas Press, Austin and London, 1975.

25. Tompkins, Peter, with Livio Catullo Stecchini, Secrets of the Great Pyramid: Two Thousand Years of Adventure and Discoveries Surrounding the Mystery of the Great Pyramid of Cheops, Galahad Books, New York, 1971.

26. Tompkins, Peter, Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, Harper & Row, New York, 1976.

27. See, for example, Michell, John, The New View Over Atlantis, Thames and Hudson, London, 1995 (originally published as The View Over Atlantis by Sago Press, UK, 1969).

28.
Knight, Christopher, and Robert Lomas, The Hiram Key, Arrow, London, 1996.

29. Reproduced in full in Appendix 1.

30. Wilson, Colin, Alien Dawn, Virgin, London, 1998.

Chapter 3: The Giza Prime Meridian

1. Smyth, Charles Piazzi, ‘What Shall be the Prime Meridian for the World?’, Report of the Committee on Standard Time and Prime Meridian, International Institute for Preserving and Perfecting Weights and Measures, Cleveland, OH, June 1884, pp. 1–56.

2. Wilson, Colin, The Atlas of Holy Places and Sacred Sites, Penguin Studio, London, 1996.

3. Wilson, Colin, and Damon Wilson, Unsolved Mysteries Past and Present, NTC/Contemporary Publishing, Chicago, 1992.

4. Mitchell-Hedges, F. A., Danger My Ally, originally published in 1955, reissued in 1995 by Adventures Unlimited, USA.

5. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 3.

6. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 2.

7. Wilkins, Harold, Mysteries of Ancient South America, Rider & Co., London, 1946, pp. 41–6.

8. Wilkins, Mysteries of Ancient South America, p. 40.

9. Fleming, Peter, Brazilian Adventure, Jonathan Cape, London, 1933, reissued in 1999 by The Marlboro Press/Northwestern, Evanston, Illinois.

10. Fawcett, P. H., Exploration Fawcett, arranged from his manuscripts by Brian Fawcett, Hutchinson, London, 1953.

11. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 122.

12. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 263.

13. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 243.

14. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 260.

15. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 269.

16. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 269, footnote.

17. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 289.

18. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 293.

19. Fawcett, Exploration Fawcett, p. 304.

20. Wilkins, Mysteries of Ancient South America, p. 66.

21. The use of satellites for archaeology is increasing each year. See,
for example, Dowling, Kenven, ‘Secret pyramids under the sand’, http://express.lineone.net/express/00/01/10/news/n3120sands-d.html (10 January 2000).

Chapter 4: Thoth’s Holy Chamber

1. Mendelssohn, Kurt, The Riddle of the Pyramids, Praeger, New York, 1974.

2. Seiss, J. A., Miracle in Stone, of the Great Pyramid of Egypt, Porter & Coates, Philadelphia, 1877–1878.

3. Davidson, David, The Great Pyramid, Its Divine Message, Williams & Norgate, 1932.

4. West, Serpent in the Sky, p. 1.

5. Petrie, William Matthew, The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh, Field & Tuer, London, 1883.

6. Dunn, The Giza Power Plant, see all of Chapter 3.

7. The Mystery of the Sphinx.

8. West, The Traveler’s Key to Ancient Egypt, pp. 412–18.

9. Baigent, Michael, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln, The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail, revised edition, Corgi Books, London, 1996 (originally Jonathan Cape, London, 1982).

10. Dunn, Christopher, The Giza Power Plant: Technologies of Ancient Egypt, Bear & Co., Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1998.

11. Bauval and Gilbert, The Orion Mystery, pp. 45–6.

12. In a book called Hall of the Gods (1998), which was withdrawn from publication.

13. Hancock and Bauval, Keeper of Genesis, Arrow edition, 1997, p. 314.

14. Bauval, Secret Chamber, pp. 14 and 28.

15. Hancock and Bauval, Keeper of Genesis, Arrow edition, 1997, p. 285.

16. Tomas, p. 109.

17. Kronzek, p. 5.

18. Ellis, Normandi, Awakening Osiris, Phanes Press, Grand Rapids, MI, 1988, as cited in Hancock and Bauval, Keeper of Genesis, Arrow edition, 1997, p. 339.

19. Furlong, p. 111.

20. As reproduced from McCollum in Toth, pp. 35–6.

21. Temple, The Crystal Sun, plate 30 and caption on pp. 216–17.

22.
22. Dolphin, L. T., and A. H. Moussa, et al., Applications of Modern Sensing Techniques to Egyptology, SRI International, Menlo Park, California, 1977, as reproduced in Cayce, p. 137.

Chapter 5: 6,000 Degrees Celsius

1. Barnes and Barnes, pp. 10–11.

2. Clayton, P. A., and L. J. Spencer, ‘Silica-glass from the Libyan Desert’, The Mineralogical Magazine, 23, 501–8, 1934.

3. Wilson, From Atlantis to the Sphinx, p. 37.

4. Charles H. Hapgood Archives, Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (Dolphin to Lee Hammond, 24 January 1957).

5. Charles H. Hapgood Archives, Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (Dolphin to Charles Hapgood, 23 May 1957).

6. Charles H. Hapgood Archives, Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (Hapgood to Charles B. Hitchcock of the American Geographical Society, 1 January 1959).

7. White, Pole Shift, gives the entire text of the broadcast.

8. Wilkins, p. 183.

9. Charles H. Hapgood Archives, Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (Hapgood to Charles B. Hitchcock of the American Geographical Society, 1 January 1959).

10. Shawn Montgomery is currently researching the story of Royal Raymond Rife, an obscure American scientist who invented a revolutionary microscope. Details regarding his research can be sought at www.writersblot.com.

11. 1979 brochure released by Yull Brown in Christopher Bird, ‘The Saga of Yull Brown – Part III’, Explore!, Vol. 3. No. 6, 1992, p. 51.

12. Verne, Jules, The Mysterious Island, 1874, as reprinted in Bird, ‘The Saga of Yull Brown – Part I’, pp. 49–50.

13. Hapgood, Dolphin and Rennell were focused on gold (100 per cent pure) and glass (tektites). It is interesting to note that the ancient Egyptians believed that gold and glass were part of the alchemist’s trade. ‘In the ancient world alchemy was referred to
simply as “the sacred art.” It flourished in the first three centuries
AD
in Alexandria, where it was the combined product of glass and metal technology, a Hellenistic philosophy of the unity of all things through the four elements (earth, air, water, fire), and “occult” religion and astrology. How the technology of coloring glass and goldsmithing – kept secret in certain families -became involved with esoteric philosophy is a long story’ Maybury-Lewis, p. 183.

14. Bird, ‘The Saga of Yull Brown – Part I’.

15. Shawn Montgomery, ‘Notes on Brown’s Gas for Rand Flem-Ath’.

16. Sitchin, Zecharia, The Lost Realms, Bear & Company, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1990.

17. Kolata, Alan L., Valley of the Spirits: A Journey into the Lost Realm of the Aymara, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, 1996.

18. Mysterious Origins of Man, The. Hosted by Charlton Heston. B. C. Video Inc., 1-800-846–9682 or P. O. Box 97, Shelburne, VT, 05482, 1996.

Chapter 6: Ancient Voyagers
BOOK: The Atlantis Blueprint
6.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Strength of the Pack by Kendall McKenna
Shadow's Light by Nicola Claire
Supernova by Jessica Marting
Bound in Black by Juliette Cross
Barbara by Jorgen-Frantz Jacobsen
The Forgotten Girl by David Bell
By Murder's Bright Light by Paul Doherty