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LOST ATLANTIS

A SCIENTIFIC SEARCH

HARVARD STEPPJNG L\

(From "The Post's" Representative.) NEW YORK, 2oth July. A scientific search has begun for the lost continent Atlantis. Harvard geographers and occanographers, sailing to the Azores, hope to determine, by study of dredgings, whether the continent of tradition and folklore really exists, and whether there was oneo a land communication between Europe and Africa and the Americas. The story of Atlantis dates back to Homer and Horace, and that passage in Plato's "Timaeus" which reads: —- "And there was an island situated in front of the straits, which you call the columns of Heracles; the island was larger than Libya and Asia put together, and was the way to other islands. Now in this island of Atlantis there was a great and wonderful empire, which had rule over the whole island, and subjected parts of Liby.'i, as far as Egypt, and Europe, as far as Tyrrhenia. Afterwards there occurred violent earthquakes and floods, and, in a single day and night, the island of Atlantis disappeared and was sunk beneath the sea." Fifty years ago. Ignatius Donnelly wrote: "Atlantis, The Antediluvian World," in which he declared the lost continent was the Garden of Eden and the Olympus of the Greeks. He even suggested that Ireland was populated by people going north from Atlantis.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19280907.2.64

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 51, 7 September 1928, Page 9

Word Count
219

LOST ATLANTIS Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 51, 7 September 1928, Page 9

LOST ATLANTIS Evening Post, Volume CVI, Issue 51, 7 September 1928, Page 9