Researcher says Atlantis was near Cyprus

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A U.S. researcher claims to have found the lost civilization of Atlantis in the watery deep off Cyprus — adding his theory to a mystery that has baffled explorers for centuries.

A U.S. researcher claims to have found the lost civilization of Atlantis in the watery deep off Cyprus — adding his theory to a mystery that has baffled explorers for centuries.

Robert Sarmast says a Mediterranean basin was flooded in a deluge around 9000 B.C., which submerged a rectangular land mass he believes was Atlantis, lying a mile (1.5 kilometers) beneath sea level between Cyprus and Syria.

“We have definitely found it,” said Sarmast, who led a team of explorers 50 miles (80 kilometers) off the southeast coast of Cyprus earlier this month.

Deep-water sonar scanning had indicated human-made structures on a submerged hill, including a 2-mile-long (3-kilometer-long) wall, a walled hill summit and deep trenches, he said. But further explorations were needed, he added.

“We cannot yet provide tangible proof in the form of bricks and mortar, as the artifacts are still buried under several meters of sediment, but the circumstantial and other evidence is irrefutable,” he claimed.

At Sunday's news conference in the port city of Limassol, Sarmast provided only animated simulations of the “hill.”

Centuries-old mystery
Whether and where Atlantis existed has captured imaginations for centuries.

According to the ancient Greek philosopher Plato, Atlantis was an island nation where an advanced civilization developed 11,500 years ago.

Theories abound as to why it disappeared, from Atlantis being hit by a cataclysmic natural disaster to Greek mythology that describes the civilization as being so corrupted by greed and power it was destroyed by God.

Skeptics believe Atlantis was a figment of Plato’s imagination.

Sarmast says he was led to Cyprus by clues in Plato’s dialogues. Plato’s reference to Atlantis lying opposite the Pillars of Hercules — believed to be the Straits of Gibraltar — have often led explorers to focus on either the Atlantic Ocean, Ireland or the Azores off Portugal.

“People who dismiss this have not really done their homework, skeptics don’t really understand. To understand the enigma of Atlantis you have to have good knowledge of ancient history, Biblical references, the Sumerian culture and their tablets and so on,” said Sarmast.

Although the most prevailing story of a world cataclysm is listed in the Biblical Old Testament, several ancient cultures do list accounts of civilizations being destroyed in floods.

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