From: JT on
If you plot a curved equatorial like line between Xian,Cairo,
Atlantis, Vera Cruz you will probably find the city of Atlantis at the
highest crest/ridge at the middle between Cairo and Vera Cruz in the
atlantic ocean.

Maybe even the origin of the biblical story about Job and Pillars of
Stone can be led back to this place in middle of the Atlantic sea just
as Plato described it.

JT
From: JT on
On 12 Aug, 13:27, JT <jonas.thornv...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
> If you plot a curved equatorial like line between Xian,Cairo,
> Atlantis, Vera Cruz you will probably find the city of Atlantis at the
> highest crest/ridge at the middle between Cairo and Vera Cruz in the
> atlantic ocean.
>
> Maybe even the origin of the biblical story about Job and Pillars of
> Stone can be led back to this place in middle of the Atlantic sea just
> as Plato described it.
>
> JT

Dantes' Inferno
In Inferno XXVI Dante Alighieri mentions Ulysses in the pit of the
Fraudulent Counsellors and his voyage past the Gibraltars Pillars of
Hercules. Ulysses justifies endangering his sailors by the fact that
his goal is to gain knowledge of the unknown. After five months of
navigation in the ocean, Ulysses sights the mountain of Purgatory but
encounters a whirlwind from it that sinks his ship and all on it for
their daring to approach Purgatory while alive, by their strength and
wits alone.
From: JT on
On 12 Aug, 13:32, JT <jonas.thornv...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
> On 12 Aug, 13:27, JT <jonas.thornv...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> > If you plot a curved equatorial like line between Xian,Cairo,
> > Atlantis, Vera Cruz you will probably find the city of Atlantis at the
> > highest crest/ridge at the middle between Cairo and Vera Cruz in the
> > atlantic ocean.
>
> > Maybe even the origin of the biblical story about Job and Pillars of
> > Stone can be led back to this place in middle of the Atlantic sea just
> > as Plato described it.
>
> > JT
>
> Dantes' Inferno
> In Inferno XXVI Dante Alighieri mentions Ulysses in the pit of the
> Fraudulent Counsellors and his voyage past the Gibraltars Pillars of
> Hercules. Ulysses justifies endangering his sailors by the fact that
> his goal is to gain knowledge of the unknown. After five months of
> navigation in the ocean, Ulysses sights the mountain of Purgatory but
> encounters a whirlwind from it that sinks his ship and all on it for
> their daring to approach Purgatory while alive, by their strength and
> wits alone.

Those damn Norweigan whirls better stay away from them. They make
holes in the foam when a gravitational objects dissapear it takes alot
of foam to fill the void, giant vaccum cleaners sucking foam to
counteract the lost mass.

It doesn't get more scientific than this, the big attractor heads is
watching.

JT