1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:03,400 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to coast am On. 2 00:00:03,640 --> 00:00:06,840 Speaker 2: Iheartradiot's take a little bit of time to talk about 3 00:00:06,880 --> 00:00:09,280 Speaker 2: your work on Atlantis. How did you get interested in 4 00:00:09,280 --> 00:00:11,800 Speaker 2: Atlanti's Frank Well, as. 5 00:00:11,640 --> 00:00:13,480 Speaker 3: You mentioned, I was doing some pro bow and to 6 00:00:13,960 --> 00:00:17,439 Speaker 3: work for Richard Hobland a while back, and changing some 7 00:00:17,840 --> 00:00:21,239 Speaker 3: mark conferences and so on some other types of work 8 00:00:21,239 --> 00:00:27,640 Speaker 3: at times. So I ran across Professor Rico units Though 9 00:00:27,720 --> 00:00:35,200 Speaker 3: Santos's website just late nineteen ninety seven, and then contacted 10 00:00:35,560 --> 00:00:39,959 Speaker 3: his son sometimes about nineteen ninety eight and started doing 11 00:00:39,960 --> 00:00:43,400 Speaker 3: little bit more as far as getting in touch with 12 00:00:43,479 --> 00:00:46,760 Speaker 3: Professor Santos and trying to get his book out in English, 13 00:00:46,800 --> 00:00:50,640 Speaker 3: which we did. So it's been a long haul and 14 00:00:50,760 --> 00:00:53,600 Speaker 3: doing all this, just trying to keep it going because 15 00:00:54,760 --> 00:00:58,000 Speaker 3: this project is really about humanity. It's only just to 16 00:00:58,040 --> 00:01:00,640 Speaker 3: find a lot of city and continent a Lantis, but 17 00:01:01,080 --> 00:01:03,600 Speaker 3: it really has to do as humanity about for the 18 00:01:03,600 --> 00:01:07,960 Speaker 3: whole world. Our website at www dot a t l 19 00:01:08,000 --> 00:01:13,240 Speaker 3: a n dot org or else Atlantis Publications its floral 20 00:01:13,280 --> 00:01:17,200 Speaker 3: in Publications dot com. It goes to the same place. 21 00:01:18,280 --> 00:01:22,119 Speaker 2: You have been one of the most thorough investigators of Atlantis. 22 00:01:22,160 --> 00:01:25,160 Speaker 2: Frank of any guest we've ever had you do a 23 00:01:25,200 --> 00:01:25,800 Speaker 2: great job. 24 00:01:27,160 --> 00:01:32,120 Speaker 3: Well, it's not done yet, you know, I really really 25 00:01:32,400 --> 00:01:35,160 Speaker 3: never told you this before. But when it comes down 26 00:01:35,240 --> 00:01:37,600 Speaker 3: to it, we're actually going to make the actual discovery 27 00:01:37,800 --> 00:01:39,840 Speaker 3: of the lost city in continent of Atlantis. It's in 28 00:01:39,880 --> 00:01:42,080 Speaker 3: the works right now and as a lot of things 29 00:01:42,120 --> 00:01:44,480 Speaker 3: are starting to change on that. And so what I'm 30 00:01:44,520 --> 00:01:46,959 Speaker 3: telling you and your listeners is that this is not 31 00:01:47,080 --> 00:01:50,320 Speaker 3: just trying to pick some spot that might possibly be 32 00:01:50,360 --> 00:01:54,320 Speaker 3: it or something. Where we actually got the actual spot, 33 00:01:54,440 --> 00:01:57,600 Speaker 3: the actual location nailed down, and now it's just a 34 00:01:57,640 --> 00:01:59,720 Speaker 3: matter of time to bring it out. And we've got 35 00:01:59,760 --> 00:02:04,480 Speaker 3: to get and the academics and the engineers and the 36 00:02:04,480 --> 00:02:09,040 Speaker 3: scientists behind it, because what's happening is they've been led 37 00:02:09,120 --> 00:02:12,720 Speaker 3: us straight to the wrong places. Because just like finding 38 00:02:12,720 --> 00:02:14,720 Speaker 3: a neil and a haystack, as I mentioned you do 39 00:02:14,919 --> 00:02:17,639 Speaker 3: other shows, if you're looking in the wrong haystack or haystacks, 40 00:02:17,639 --> 00:02:20,160 Speaker 3: will ever find it. So what we're doing is where 41 00:02:20,440 --> 00:02:23,200 Speaker 3: we had to reverse engineer back to the true original, 42 00:02:23,240 --> 00:02:26,480 Speaker 3: real location, not a colony, not a remnant, not an outpost, 43 00:02:26,480 --> 00:02:29,440 Speaker 3: but the real location. And this way you have a 44 00:02:29,560 --> 00:02:31,520 Speaker 3: chance of actually finding something if you're looking in the 45 00:02:31,560 --> 00:02:34,680 Speaker 3: right place to begin with. And so it had to 46 00:02:34,720 --> 00:02:38,720 Speaker 3: do a lot where more than twenty five let's say 47 00:02:39,040 --> 00:02:42,919 Speaker 3: twenty five million people could live in the middle of 48 00:02:42,960 --> 00:02:46,560 Speaker 3: the Flcensing ice Age, our most recent ice age, and 49 00:02:47,440 --> 00:02:50,160 Speaker 3: support that with agriculture, which is probably one of the 50 00:02:50,200 --> 00:02:54,920 Speaker 3: biggest invention of all times, followed by animal domestication, and 51 00:02:55,000 --> 00:02:57,360 Speaker 3: eventually I think the wheel has a lot to do 52 00:02:57,440 --> 00:03:02,440 Speaker 3: with things too later on in time. This location has 53 00:03:02,480 --> 00:03:06,280 Speaker 3: been kept secret and hidden because I didn't want the 54 00:03:07,040 --> 00:03:10,160 Speaker 3: uh you know, to be a pillage and plundered and desecrated, 55 00:03:10,680 --> 00:03:13,640 Speaker 3: and also because of the riches of Atlantis and didn't 56 00:03:13,680 --> 00:03:16,320 Speaker 3: want that to be uh you know, village as well, 57 00:03:16,440 --> 00:03:19,320 Speaker 3: because a lot of they had strategic metals for wars 58 00:03:19,360 --> 00:03:22,239 Speaker 3: and battles and in fights and all these kind of 59 00:03:22,320 --> 00:03:24,679 Speaker 3: things that they had to do. So there's a whole 60 00:03:24,720 --> 00:03:27,640 Speaker 3: lot of the story and uh we we really had 61 00:03:27,639 --> 00:03:30,440 Speaker 3: to go down very deep at the professor of reseals, 62 00:03:31,680 --> 00:03:35,680 Speaker 3: the Pavilions Brazilian and professional you mentioned, uh in order 63 00:03:35,680 --> 00:03:38,200 Speaker 3: to get this actual information out. And I didn't want 64 00:03:38,200 --> 00:03:42,200 Speaker 3: to lose the information. Even though he passed away on September. 65 00:03:42,240 --> 00:03:44,400 Speaker 3: I think it was the seventh. I think it is. 66 00:03:47,400 --> 00:03:49,960 Speaker 2: Are you at Are you at liberty at this point 67 00:03:50,040 --> 00:03:51,680 Speaker 2: yet to reveal where it might be. 68 00:03:53,200 --> 00:03:55,520 Speaker 3: We can tell you the basic area. There's some more 69 00:03:55,560 --> 00:03:57,760 Speaker 3: specific things that I'm working on right now that I 70 00:03:57,760 --> 00:04:02,760 Speaker 3: don't want to just get those the vaugels at this 71 00:04:02,880 --> 00:04:05,600 Speaker 3: point in time. But some things I can tell you. 72 00:04:07,480 --> 00:04:12,480 Speaker 3: What happened is is that there's there's there's a lot 73 00:04:12,520 --> 00:04:16,520 Speaker 3: of things get changed over time, like the oceans. Like 74 00:04:16,560 --> 00:04:19,040 Speaker 3: a lot of people think that if it's Atlantis, it's 75 00:04:19,080 --> 00:04:23,440 Speaker 3: got to be an Atlantis ocean as it's called today, right, 76 00:04:23,560 --> 00:04:27,520 Speaker 3: and which is Atlantic, But it's not really the case 77 00:04:28,360 --> 00:04:31,320 Speaker 3: because the names get changed, and so it's really an 78 00:04:31,360 --> 00:04:35,680 Speaker 3: Atlantic ocean. It was called eleven thousand, six hundred plus 79 00:04:35,720 --> 00:04:41,240 Speaker 3: years ago or so. Those oceans got changed to the 80 00:04:41,440 --> 00:04:46,680 Speaker 3: Erythian Sea, and also to the Indian Ocean and and 81 00:04:46,800 --> 00:04:51,120 Speaker 3: uh and the Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Ocean and so on. 82 00:04:51,880 --> 00:04:56,680 Speaker 3: So what happened is is that these names get changed, 83 00:04:56,720 --> 00:05:01,600 Speaker 3: like basketball Bell Bolle is discovered, like the specific ocean, 84 00:05:01,600 --> 00:05:03,479 Speaker 3: but he didn't name it. It got named later on 85 00:05:03,560 --> 00:05:06,360 Speaker 3: by Ferndow Magellan when he saw it through the UH 86 00:05:06,720 --> 00:05:13,760 Speaker 3: straits of uh Magellan down between Argentinian and UH and 87 00:05:13,800 --> 00:05:16,640 Speaker 3: in Chile with the way down that area. And so 88 00:05:16,760 --> 00:05:21,680 Speaker 3: he named the Pacific car or Pacific pacific s, Pacific coups, 89 00:05:21,680 --> 00:05:24,919 Speaker 3: and the indefinitive the Pacific car, which means to be 90 00:05:25,000 --> 00:05:27,960 Speaker 3: passive or calm when you saw it, and the name stuck, 91 00:05:28,279 --> 00:05:30,479 Speaker 3: and so we dropped the a or we dropped the 92 00:05:30,520 --> 00:05:33,240 Speaker 3: opening how to use in the sentence, and he ended 93 00:05:33,279 --> 00:05:37,880 Speaker 3: up a specific ocean, but the whole ocean was really 94 00:05:37,920 --> 00:05:40,479 Speaker 3: the oceans of the Atlanteans, which was a Pacific ocean 95 00:05:40,480 --> 00:05:43,640 Speaker 3: and Indian ocean, Atlantic Ocean and so on. But the 96 00:05:44,120 --> 00:05:47,200 Speaker 3: because the scientific name for all these oceans together is 97 00:05:47,200 --> 00:05:50,480 Speaker 3: called co terminus, where you can actually sail from one 98 00:05:50,680 --> 00:05:53,560 Speaker 3: location or one sea or ocean to the other all 99 00:05:53,600 --> 00:05:58,400 Speaker 3: around the world. But uh, it would have been a 100 00:05:58,480 --> 00:06:01,880 Speaker 3: lot easier had the Atlantic Ocean is called to day 101 00:06:01,920 --> 00:06:04,720 Speaker 3: got changed to the English Ocean, and the one that's 102 00:06:04,760 --> 00:06:08,680 Speaker 3: called the Indian Ocean instead of Reethian Sea or Indian 103 00:06:08,720 --> 00:06:11,440 Speaker 3: Ocean been left at the Atlantic Ocean, and same with 104 00:06:11,440 --> 00:06:12,400 Speaker 3: the Pacific Ocean. 105 00:06:12,680 --> 00:06:15,839 Speaker 4: So the region Frank would be where though generally. 106 00:06:16,360 --> 00:06:19,800 Speaker 3: Well we did is we traced it back to the 107 00:06:19,800 --> 00:06:24,360 Speaker 3: original real location, and that area is in Southeast Asia. Okay, 108 00:06:24,480 --> 00:06:27,920 Speaker 3: it's actually where east. The phrase where east meets west 109 00:06:28,080 --> 00:06:31,200 Speaker 3: is between the Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean. And 110 00:06:31,320 --> 00:06:35,480 Speaker 3: this area is the area of Indonesia and its surround 111 00:06:35,520 --> 00:06:39,039 Speaker 3: the area of Southeast Asia. And that's the location of 112 00:06:39,279 --> 00:06:43,320 Speaker 3: the true location of Atlantis. And was more concentrate there, 113 00:06:43,480 --> 00:06:46,200 Speaker 3: the better office is going to be. We have our 114 00:06:46,200 --> 00:06:50,880 Speaker 3: book out in Indonesia two which we've got translated into 115 00:06:50,920 --> 00:06:54,280 Speaker 3: Bajacea Indonesia, and so we had it out once before 116 00:06:54,880 --> 00:06:58,840 Speaker 3: and then it got discontinued and then we read we 117 00:06:59,200 --> 00:07:04,840 Speaker 3: put it back in there too, and it's being been 118 00:07:04,880 --> 00:07:08,080 Speaker 3: a very best seller. And in Indonesia people are very 119 00:07:08,080 --> 00:07:13,200 Speaker 3: interested there and they started making some discoveries which I 120 00:07:13,280 --> 00:07:17,640 Speaker 3: mentioned to you before called the nun Pedome, which is 121 00:07:17,680 --> 00:07:26,000 Speaker 3: an ancient pyramid megalithic artificial mountain that's up in a 122 00:07:26,760 --> 00:07:30,080 Speaker 3: basic area of Tea on Zerra in Indonesia. 123 00:07:30,640 --> 00:07:32,800 Speaker 2: Frank, can you tell us what you think happened to 124 00:07:32,880 --> 00:07:35,040 Speaker 2: Atlanta's what what sunk it? 125 00:07:36,760 --> 00:07:42,480 Speaker 3: Well, first of all, it didn't sink, that's an optical illusion. 126 00:07:43,480 --> 00:07:47,960 Speaker 3: What happened is is that it's sea levels rose from 127 00:07:49,000 --> 00:07:53,400 Speaker 3: uh societemic activity from the Krakatoa volcano, which is called 128 00:07:53,440 --> 00:07:59,239 Speaker 3: Krakatile or Krakatoa or in uh. In Sanskript it's called 129 00:07:59,320 --> 00:08:04,520 Speaker 3: uh crack of cow Krakatah, and also in Drab, which 130 00:08:04,520 --> 00:08:07,679 Speaker 3: is the language we found out Atlanteans, is called krack 131 00:08:07,680 --> 00:08:15,680 Speaker 3: of cop. And But this volcano, Krakatoa, went off eleven thousand, 132 00:08:15,760 --> 00:08:19,400 Speaker 3: six hundred years ago and it ended up causing U 133 00:08:19,960 --> 00:08:25,000 Speaker 3: a tsunami that took effect and it raised up the 134 00:08:25,000 --> 00:08:30,160 Speaker 3: sea levels or excuse me, it originally rose up the 135 00:08:30,160 --> 00:08:33,160 Speaker 3: sea levels one hundred and thirty one hundred and fifty 136 00:08:33,160 --> 00:08:34,400 Speaker 3: meters in a shallow area. 137 00:08:34,640 --> 00:08:35,920 Speaker 4: Oh my god. 138 00:08:36,360 --> 00:08:38,400 Speaker 3: So what happened is is that now you see the 139 00:08:38,480 --> 00:08:42,600 Speaker 3: veget the tiptops of Atlantis. But sometimes what these tsunamis 140 00:08:42,600 --> 00:08:45,360 Speaker 3: do they do receive they're actually not a tidal wave, 141 00:08:45,400 --> 00:08:48,360 Speaker 3: but they're actually a harbor wave, very different. We saw 142 00:08:48,400 --> 00:08:51,400 Speaker 3: one in Achans and also in Japan and Sendai where 143 00:08:51,400 --> 00:08:54,000 Speaker 3: it went in and come back out. But later on 144 00:08:54,400 --> 00:08:59,400 Speaker 3: the universal flood took place too, and and so rose 145 00:08:59,400 --> 00:09:02,240 Speaker 3: the sea levels as they are basically as they are 146 00:09:02,280 --> 00:09:06,600 Speaker 3: now and to and also around other parts of the world. 147 00:09:06,320 --> 00:09:09,760 Speaker 4: Was that was that the flood of Noah. 148 00:09:09,960 --> 00:09:11,679 Speaker 3: Yeah, it has to do with that. It ties in 149 00:09:11,720 --> 00:09:16,440 Speaker 3: with it, because what happened is is that because of 150 00:09:16,480 --> 00:09:19,880 Speaker 3: all the fly ash went up in the air over 151 00:09:19,920 --> 00:09:23,880 Speaker 3: the continents like North America and also Europe, there's a 152 00:09:23,920 --> 00:09:28,679 Speaker 3: lot of glacier and ice ect ice iciclas going on. 153 00:09:28,800 --> 00:09:28,960 Speaker 1: You know. 154 00:09:29,000 --> 00:09:32,480 Speaker 3: The glaciers and ice went up about anywhere from about 155 00:09:32,480 --> 00:09:36,480 Speaker 3: seventeen hundred meters to maybe uh, maybe a couple of 156 00:09:36,520 --> 00:09:41,240 Speaker 3: miles high, you know, of a ice. And so this 157 00:09:41,360 --> 00:09:44,400 Speaker 3: ended up melting because a thing called the albedo effect, 158 00:09:44,440 --> 00:09:49,319 Speaker 3: which instead of reflecting light back into outer space, it 159 00:09:49,360 --> 00:09:55,120 Speaker 3: absorbed us absorbed because of the of the the soot 160 00:09:55,160 --> 00:09:57,960 Speaker 3: that came down from the crack of Toe volcano, which 161 00:09:58,000 --> 00:10:00,720 Speaker 3: is kind of gray or black, and so and started 162 00:10:00,720 --> 00:10:06,360 Speaker 3: mount melting all these glaciers and ice and had to 163 00:10:06,360 --> 00:10:08,600 Speaker 3: go someplace. So went into the sea and raised the 164 00:10:08,600 --> 00:10:11,720 Speaker 3: sea levels up later on, which is like your universal flood. 165 00:10:12,360 --> 00:10:16,520 Speaker 3: And so that and all the cracking and volcanic activity 166 00:10:16,600 --> 00:10:19,640 Speaker 3: under under the sea, and the pressure alleviated from the 167 00:10:19,679 --> 00:10:22,080 Speaker 3: continent and went into the ocean and put pressure there 168 00:10:22,840 --> 00:10:28,400 Speaker 3: out of equalized out over time. So that's why you know, 169 00:10:29,520 --> 00:10:32,400 Speaker 3: you have a situation in Southeast Asia where it's a 170 00:10:32,400 --> 00:10:37,959 Speaker 3: shallow area, which where it comprises of seventeen thousand and 171 00:10:38,000 --> 00:10:41,480 Speaker 3: four islands or so and uh and so they say 172 00:10:41,559 --> 00:10:43,160 Speaker 3: they see the best of these are tip tops of 173 00:10:43,200 --> 00:10:45,920 Speaker 3: those islands today. But if you if you drop the 174 00:10:45,920 --> 00:10:48,959 Speaker 3: sea levels down, the whole continent appears. 175 00:10:50,760 --> 00:10:55,920 Speaker 2: Frank, all the Hollywood movies that depict Atlanta's show that 176 00:10:56,800 --> 00:10:58,679 Speaker 2: area with high technology. 177 00:10:59,720 --> 00:11:01,520 Speaker 4: How advanced do you think they were? 178 00:11:04,640 --> 00:11:09,480 Speaker 3: Well, they had flying type machines which is like beman 179 00:11:09,600 --> 00:11:11,880 Speaker 3: us and also the ones that go on the ground 180 00:11:11,920 --> 00:11:16,320 Speaker 3: like an automobile be us. And so they did have 181 00:11:16,360 --> 00:11:19,280 Speaker 3: these type of devices and so they could carry even 182 00:11:19,880 --> 00:11:24,680 Speaker 3: parts and environmental things that you know, even aboard these 183 00:11:25,440 --> 00:11:27,360 Speaker 3: are the large ships that they had. But they had 184 00:11:27,360 --> 00:11:30,400 Speaker 3: the technology and everything that you know, very advanced that 185 00:11:31,000 --> 00:11:34,800 Speaker 3: compared to us. And also their brains are thirty percent 186 00:11:34,920 --> 00:11:37,599 Speaker 3: larger than us too. This is something Professor Stancls is 187 00:11:37,679 --> 00:11:42,160 Speaker 3: able to determine. But the time of Crocotole went off 188 00:11:42,440 --> 00:11:45,240 Speaker 3: also we lost and you know, we lost about seventy 189 00:11:45,240 --> 00:11:48,119 Speaker 3: percent of our mammals on Earth, and we almost distinguished. 190 00:11:48,520 --> 00:11:52,120 Speaker 3: They also distinguished the populations on Earth too at the 191 00:11:52,160 --> 00:11:54,880 Speaker 3: same time, because we lost twenty million people in the 192 00:11:54,960 --> 00:11:58,240 Speaker 3: day and the night in Atlantis. There's only probably about 193 00:11:58,240 --> 00:12:01,800 Speaker 3: twenty five thirty million people the whole world, but uh 194 00:12:02,080 --> 00:12:05,040 Speaker 3: maybe about five thousand or something or five million or 195 00:12:05,040 --> 00:12:07,360 Speaker 3: so ended up getting out of the area. We had 196 00:12:07,360 --> 00:12:10,520 Speaker 3: to get out as fast as they could and and 197 00:12:10,800 --> 00:12:14,880 Speaker 3: go northward and westward up towards India, and also a 198 00:12:15,000 --> 00:12:19,280 Speaker 3: sail over to South America, more Central America, let's say, 199 00:12:19,600 --> 00:12:22,560 Speaker 3: to uh and Ecuador and Peru and so on. Wherever 200 00:12:22,600 --> 00:12:24,679 Speaker 3: they could was because the flight scene I States was 201 00:12:24,720 --> 00:12:26,880 Speaker 3: still ending, so they had to go to places where 202 00:12:26,920 --> 00:12:29,960 Speaker 3: it's still had a temperate climate. So you know, this 203 00:12:30,160 --> 00:12:31,480 Speaker 3: was some of the things like this we had to 204 00:12:31,520 --> 00:12:33,800 Speaker 3: trace all the ways back, you know about trying to 205 00:12:33,800 --> 00:12:36,440 Speaker 3: figure it out, you know, where the location is. 206 00:12:36,920 --> 00:12:39,400 Speaker 2: Did they did they have any kind of warning when 207 00:12:39,440 --> 00:12:40,760 Speaker 2: Krakatoa blew up? 208 00:12:42,520 --> 00:12:45,720 Speaker 3: I think they did had some. But what happened really 209 00:12:45,840 --> 00:12:48,440 Speaker 3: it caused a lot of problems. Is that is that 210 00:12:48,679 --> 00:12:50,720 Speaker 3: some they had in the war at Lances was going 211 00:12:50,760 --> 00:12:52,560 Speaker 3: on and one side tried to get one up on 212 00:12:52,600 --> 00:12:56,000 Speaker 3: the other side, so they wanted to do is uh 213 00:12:56,520 --> 00:13:00,560 Speaker 3: as uh they're gonna they want to put a a 214 00:13:00,559 --> 00:13:05,120 Speaker 3: atomic bomb down one of the volcanoes, the Krakatoa volcano 215 00:13:05,160 --> 00:13:07,000 Speaker 3: in that area, and it went off a lot more 216 00:13:07,040 --> 00:13:09,360 Speaker 3: on they expected to, so it almost has wiped out 217 00:13:09,400 --> 00:13:12,160 Speaker 3: the whole world at the same time because it was 218 00:13:12,320 --> 00:13:17,560 Speaker 3: down a caldera volcano, super mega volcano was Krakatoa like 219 00:13:17,600 --> 00:13:18,760 Speaker 3: the one in the Yellowstone. 220 00:13:20,640 --> 00:13:23,880 Speaker 4: So it's kind of kind of inverted, right. 221 00:13:24,920 --> 00:13:27,880 Speaker 3: Yeah, I mean it's it's a huge type of I mean, 222 00:13:27,880 --> 00:13:30,000 Speaker 3: it's a lot bigger than when I hadda state of Washington, 223 00:13:30,120 --> 00:13:33,319 Speaker 3: like Mount Saint Helens, you know where it's when compared 224 00:13:33,360 --> 00:13:35,160 Speaker 3: to they had a lot of fly ash that came 225 00:13:35,200 --> 00:13:38,760 Speaker 3: out out of it too, but even more so with Krakatoa. 226 00:13:39,360 --> 00:13:41,800 Speaker 3: And also he had went up, it went up off 227 00:13:42,480 --> 00:13:45,400 Speaker 3: a lot. A lot further back, almost seventy five thousand 228 00:13:45,480 --> 00:13:48,640 Speaker 3: years ago, was Toba volcano up and was now called Sumatra. 229 00:13:49,240 --> 00:13:54,280 Speaker 3: And by the way, Sumatra and Java used to be 230 00:13:54,360 --> 00:13:57,480 Speaker 3: joined together, and it's called it was Upper Joba and 231 00:13:57,480 --> 00:14:01,800 Speaker 3: Lower Java, but all together it was Java. But it's 232 00:14:02,360 --> 00:14:04,839 Speaker 3: the word Krakatoa means the saw saw in half saw 233 00:14:04,880 --> 00:14:08,120 Speaker 3: then half the island of Java to what it is today. 234 00:14:08,160 --> 00:14:12,760 Speaker 2: Basically, how big was Atlantis compared to like Australia or 235 00:14:12,840 --> 00:14:13,679 Speaker 2: North America? 236 00:14:15,400 --> 00:14:19,160 Speaker 3: Good question, George. The size of the lances at least 237 00:14:19,240 --> 00:14:22,240 Speaker 3: La Murray Atlantis in the whole area there was the 238 00:14:22,280 --> 00:14:25,880 Speaker 3: size of the continental the United States with Alaska and 239 00:14:25,920 --> 00:14:29,440 Speaker 3: Hawaii combined, and fact probably even larger than that. 240 00:14:30,840 --> 00:14:32,040 Speaker 4: It's pretty good size. 241 00:14:33,360 --> 00:14:36,680 Speaker 3: Yeah, I show this comparisons on a PowerPoint presentation. I 242 00:14:36,680 --> 00:14:38,840 Speaker 3: do live in person. I can show you the area. 243 00:14:38,920 --> 00:14:41,720 Speaker 2: Now, how much has the water receded because is any 244 00:14:41,720 --> 00:14:43,000 Speaker 2: of it popping back up? 245 00:14:44,520 --> 00:14:46,960 Speaker 3: Well, it did on the Universal flood because of the 246 00:14:47,240 --> 00:14:50,800 Speaker 3: all of water, uh you know, going into the from 247 00:14:50,840 --> 00:14:55,080 Speaker 3: the from the what do they call the the glaciers 248 00:14:55,240 --> 00:14:59,360 Speaker 3: and the ice on the continents, and so it went 249 00:14:59,440 --> 00:15:02,400 Speaker 3: into the oceans. And of course it's pressured into the 250 00:15:02,400 --> 00:15:06,160 Speaker 3: ocean as well because we went to alleviate the weight 251 00:15:06,200 --> 00:15:08,520 Speaker 3: on the continents and also have to go into the 252 00:15:08,520 --> 00:15:11,160 Speaker 3: oceans put more pressure on the sea floor, bottom and everything. 253 00:15:11,520 --> 00:15:14,280 Speaker 3: So this sort of equalizes out over time. It took 254 00:15:14,280 --> 00:15:16,680 Speaker 3: maybe about a thousand years or so, a comeple thousand. 255 00:15:17,200 --> 00:15:20,440 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 256 00:15:20,480 --> 00:15:23,720 Speaker 1: one am Eastern and go to Coast to coastam dot 257 00:15:23,760 --> 00:15:24,560 Speaker 1: com for more