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Atlantis 2005 Conference, Milos, Greece, July 11–13 2005
A geographic comparison of Plato's Atlantis and Ireland as a test of the
megalithic culture hypothesis
U. Erlingsson
Erlingsson Sub-Aquatic Surveys, Sweden
ABSTRACT
Based on geographic similarities, Erlingsson
(2004) presented the scientific hypothesis that
the Atlantean Empire was modelled on the
megalithic culture of Europe and Northern
Africa. It follows from the hypothesis that the
island of Atlantis must have been Ireland.
This is tested scientifically using two
geographical tests, one regarding length and
width, the other regarding the plain surrounded
by mountains. Each of the tests passes at the 2
percent confidence level. In view of these
statistically significant matches, the hypothesis
is retained.
Similarities are also found with Irish
archaeology. Newgrange matches the temple of
Poseidon in several aspects, while Knowth
matches a second temple on Atlantis. In Irish
folklore Newgrange is the mansion of a river
divinity, just like Atlantis’ main temple is.
The sinking of Atlantis is found to have
parallels with how Dogger Bank sank. The time
of the disaster given by Plato corresponds to an
earlier dramatic flooding of a North Sea plain,
which has been pointed out as a promising area
for underwater archaeology.
The conclusion is that Plato rearranged
factual information to create a fictional tale of
Atlantis. The traditions can have been passed on
directly from the megalithic culture to the Old
Kingdom of Egypt, as they were contemporary.
Even though the facts are rearranged, they
are unique in providing information from the
earliest known advanced culture in Europe,
many thousands of years before the start of
recorded history.
1. INTRODUCTION
The only original source on Atlantis is Plato, in
the dialogues Timaios and Kritias (Timaeus and
Critias in Latin). If the tale is true to some
extent, it may represent our oldest extant
traditions, at least outside Mesopotamia. If it
can be deciphered, it may thus add invaluable
clues to the interpretation of the more silent
discoveries made in archaeology.
We can safely assume that not everything in
Plato’s tale matches reality, if not for other
reasons so for errors in the transmission and
translation. The name Atlantis in a strict sense
refers to Plato’s exact description. However, in
a lax sense it may be used to refer to a real
world model for only a part of Plato’s tale, just
like a modern city can function as a backdrop to
a novel (and be modified in the novel compared
to reality).
The literature on how to interpret Plato’s
Atlantis tale is huge, but often of little scientific
substance. The signal to noise ratio is very poor,
which makes it challenging to discern a research
frontier. Having said that, it is my understanding
that there does not exist any hypothesis
regarding the interpretation of the tale that has
stood up to scientific scrutiny. I therefore ask
for your indulgence when I now start a scientific
study from scratch, building on nothing but the
translated dialogues of Plato.
1.1 The scientific method
To suggest that a certain place may be a model
for Atlantis in some aspect is to suggest an
hypothesis. As a test of the hypothesis, the
student compares detail after detail. Any
similarity that the student made use of to come
up with the hypothesis, is banned for use in a
test.
If a test nevertheless can be devised using
independent data, and the result is negative, the
scientific method dictates that the hypothesis
should be dismissed. However, since we are
dealing with a potentially ancient tradition we
must allow for some errors to have entered the
tale, and can therefore not be that strict.
Unfortunately, the possibility of such errors
in the tradition largely defeats the purpose of the
hypothetic-deductive method. Clearly some
other rejection criterion is needed, lest we be
stuck with the present deluge of untested
hypotheses.
The solution is to apply the statistical
significance test on the null hypothesis. What it
amounts to is to raise the bar for a test to pass,
by requiring that it be statistically improbable
that it passes by chance.
Another benefit of using the null hypothesis
is that segments of the tale can be evaluated
independently from each other. It is not
necessary to assume that all or nothing must be
true.
This study is based on the classic scientific
hypothetic-deductive method and statistical
significance-tests on the null hypothesis. A
significance level of 0.02 (2%) was chosen as
rejection criterion. The null hypothesis is that
Plato made it all up, and that any similarity with
reality is purely coincidental.
1.2 Why the case is open
The mainstream opinion is that the Atlantis tale
is entirely fictional. However, this has not and
can not be proven.
One flawed line of argument is this: “If it is
fictional it exists to serve the story. It serves the
story. Thus it is fictional.” The logical operator
(if A so B) is false only when A is true and B is
false. When, as in this case, B is true, A can be
either false or true. Thus, the argument is
logically false (illogical). An argument has to be
both logically true and relevant to be valid, why
this one is invalid.
Christopher (2001) is another example of a
flawed argument. Plato advocated the use of lies
in the service of propaganda to maintain a
militaristic, hierarchically structured society,
and to prevent real democracy. We can
therefore not rule out that Plato may have
intended to create a political myth, but even if
that is the case, it does not imply that everything
is fiction.
However, Christopher, a linguist, considers
any partial resemblance meaningless. Given
that, as he states, all legitimate scholars have
jettisoned the conclusion that the account is
entirely factual and inerrant, it of course
becomes somewhat of a truism that Atlantis
does not exist.
Old tales like the Icelandic Sagas were
notorious for mixing fact and fiction. If we
reject all old tales as potential sources of factual
information, we loose a large part of our history.
It is by choice, not necessity, that Christopher
closes the door to the past.
Any student of prehistory is forced to lay
puzzle with incomplete data, and any piece of
information may turn out to be crucial. Even if
the only thing that can be proven from this line
of inquiry is that Plato had access to knowledge
from a specific time and place, it is still a
potentially invaluable result.
Therefore I elect to use a paradigm in which
the goal is to search for pieces of facts in the
Atlantis tale, and to use these pieces to deduce
how the traditions were transmitted and the tale
assembled by Plato.
All quotes of Plato’s dialogues are from
Benjamin Jowett’s translation unless otherwise
stated.
2. HYPOTHESIS
2.1 The empire in Kritias
The hypothesis was formulated by Erlingsson
(2004) based on information in Timaios only
(not Kritias), notably this passage: “This power
came forth out of the Atlantic Ocean, for in
those days the Atlantic was navigable; and there
was an island situated in front of the straits
which are by you called the Pillars of Heracles;
the island was larger than Libya and Asia put
together, and was the way to other islands, and
from these you might pass to the whole of the
opposite continent which surrounded the true
ocean; for this sea which is within the Straits of
Heracles is only a harbour, having a narrow
entrance, but that other is a real sea, and the
surrounding land may be most truly called a
boundless continent.”
The text seems to be referring to the North
Atlantic islands, which can be used to divide the
crossing to America into many short legs, like
the Vikings did. In my experience, it is by far
the best route to take across the ocean for a boat
without proper sleeping quarters. During the
climatic optimum in the Atlantic Period, it will
have been even easier to make a crossing at this
latitude.
The text in Timaios continues: “Now in this
island of Atlantis there was a great and
wonderful empire which had rule over the
whole island and several others, and over parts
of the continent, and, furthermore, the men of
Atlantis had subjected the parts of Libya within
the columns of Heracles as far as Egypt, and of
Europe as far as Tyrrhenia.”
Megalithic tombs (Fig. 1) are found on
several islands in the Atlantic Ocean, on parts of
the European continent, and, furthermore, the
parts of Africa inside the Straits of Gibraltar
almost as far as Libya, and in Europe as far as
the Tyrrhenian Sea and southernmost Italy (Fig.
2). Considering that “the pillars of Heracles”
was understood in Plato’s time to mean ‘the
Straits of Gibraltar’, and that “Libya” meant
‘Africa’, the extent of the empire of Atlantis in
Plato’s account matches that of the megalithic
tombs quite well.
I therefore hypothesize that the empire of
Atlantis refers to the entity responsible for the
erection of the so-called megalithic tombs in
Europe and northern Africa, an entity that I for
short call the megalithic culture. I avoid the
word tomb since they also erected standing
stones (menhirs, stone circles), and since it is far
from obvious that the primary function of all so-
called tombs were as burial places.
The construction of the megalithic tombs
ended suddenly around 2,800 BC, in connection
with a climatic deterioration. Note that the term
megalithic culture in this sense does not imply
any connection with megaliths on other
continents.
2.2 Deduction
In the hypothetic-deductive method a prediction
is made from the hypothesis, and tested using
independent data.
Plato let us understand that the empire
Atlantis was based on a large island (after which
the empire was named) along the path from the
Mediterranean to the opposite continent
(America), and that they completely controlled
that island. A quick look at Figure 2 shows that
there are only two large islands off Europe, and
that of those, only Ireland is completely within
the distribution area of megalithic tombs.
I therefore deduce that for the hypothesis to
be correct, Ireland should correspond to the
description of the island Atlantis.
2.3 Independence criterion
The test must be made using independent data.
This is satisfied since the hypothesis and the
deduction were formulated without knowledge
of relevant Irish geography, geology,
archaeology, or mythology, and furthermore
without knowing the content of Kritias. By
using only information from that dialogue, the
data are even doubly independent.
Among the geographical information in
Kritias is the following: “The whole country
was said by him to be very lofty and precipitous
on the side of the sea, but the country
immediately about and surrounding the city was
a level plain, itself surrounded by mountains
which descended towards the sea; it was smooth
and even, and of an oblong shape, extending in
one direction three thousand stadia, but across
the centre inland it was two thousand stadia.”
This information about Atlantis is compared
with modern geographic data on Ireland,
derived from encyclopedias, and from digital
geographic information system (GIS) databases
in vector and raster format.
Figure 1. The cairn at Haväng in southern Sweden. It is a
typical megalithic tomb of the type without passage.
3. DIMENSION TEST
The first test compares the length and width of
Atlantis and Ireland.
3.1 Data
On a digital chart of the world in scale
1:250,000, the longest dimension of Ireland was
measured to 490.0 km and the greatest width to
341.8 km (Fig. 3). This has to be converted to
stadia for comparison with Atlantis.
In Greece a stadion was 600 feet, while in
Egypt it was 400 Royal cubits. A cubit being 1.5
foot, it is the same thing. The Greek and
Egyptian stadion had different lengths, though.
Since Plato gave all measures with only one
significant digit, he evidently simply exchanged
the Egyptian units for the corresponding Greek
units.
If Plato’s account is correct, the Egyptians
got the measures from another country (his
alleged Atlantis). We may assume that also the
Egyptians took over the measurement values,
regardless of small differences in the
measurement units. Hence it is irrelevant how
long a stadion was in Egypt or Greece. What we
require is the length of a stadion at the time and
place we are interested in: Megalithic Ireland.
Based on the investigation of many
megalithic sites on the British Isles, Thom
(1967) found a common denominator of 0.829
m. He called it a megalithic yard. Since there
are 200 yards on a stadion, a megalithic stadion
equals 166 m. The dimensions of Ireland in this
unit are 2,950 times 2,060 stadia—within 3% of
Plato’s values. Ireland also matches Atlantis by
having the greatest width “across the centre
inland”.
3.2 Test
The real test is, though, if the correspondence is
statistically significant. The null hypothesis is
that Plato invented Atlantis, and happened to
give the dimensions of Ireland by chance.
The question thus becomes, what is the
probability that Plato would have stated the
dimensions as 3,000 times 2,000 stadia by pure
chance?
Based on the size of territories in the Antique
world, Erlingsson (2004) estimated that a
reasonable length could have been in the range
of 700 to 10,000 stadia. Assuming a width of at
least 600 stadia, the number of possible values
becomes 91. The probability that the null
hypothesis is correct is thus 0.011, well under
0.02, which means that the correspondence is
statistically significant and the null hypothesis is
rejected.
An alternative scale-independent calculation
can be made as follows. As the reasonable size
of the island varies by more than one order of
magnitude, it would be conservative to
disregard the order of magnitude in the
dimensions, and only consider the significant
digit. For each of the length and width, the digit
can be any one in the range one through nine.
This creates 81 possible combinations and a
significance level of 0.012, why the null
hypothesis still is rejected.
An assumption in both cases is that each size
or digit has the same chance of being picked. A
poll (www.macpolls.com/?poll_id=332) online
asked “Pick a number between 1 and 10”.
Removing the 10, the number 2 had a frequency
of 4.95%, and 3 had 11.21%, among the 4252
respondents. The probability that someone
would pick 2 and 3 can therefore be estimated to
Figure 2. The extent of megalithic tombs and the location
of Newgrange (star). From Erlingsson (2004), which is
largely based on Burenhult (1999, Fig. 77).
Figure 3. The elevation of Ireland with the location of
Newgrange (star). The lines show where length and width
measurements were taken. Based on ETOPO2, adopted
from Erlingsson (2004).
0.0055, which means that the null hypothesis is
rejected. (The number that most pick is 7, with
almost one third of the votes.)
3.3 Interpretation
The megalithic yard is still not generally
accepted. However, the existence of a
statistically significant smallest common
denominator in many stone monuments requires
an explanation. The megalithic yard seems to be
the best explanation offered. At any event, it is
not crucial for the statistical significance test, as
any value of the stadion between 137 m and 196
m would result in the rejection of the null
hypothesis.
Using virtually any other stadion, from the
Sumerian of 148.5 m to the Olympic of 192.3
m, the conclusion holds true. Only the Egyptian
stadion is too long with its 209.2 m.
However, as was argued earlier, even if we
do not accept the existence of a megalithic
stadion there is still no logical reason to infer
that the Egyptian one was used to measure
Atlantis (unless the hypothesis being tested is
that the Old Kingdom of Egypt was a direct
continuation of the Atlantean civilization,
which, however, would contradict what Plato
wrote about the war). Furthermore, the Egyptian
stadion seems to be an outlier, being about one
seventh longer than the average stadion—the
same relationship as between a common cubit
and a Royal cubit in Egypt. There is thus strong
reason to suspect that the unit being used,
megalithic stadion or otherwise, was less than
196 m long.
In evaluating the conclusion, another relevant
question is if the translation that was used
correctly interpreted Plato’s words.
The size and landscape of Atlantis is
primarily described in Kritias 118a. Some
translations describe the plain as rectangular,
but there does not seem to be any tangible
support for that in Plato’s text. There are also
some translations that interpret the dimensions,
3,000 x 2,000 stadia, as referring to the plain
and not the whole island. Due to the way of
writing in Plato’s time—without punctuation
marks or even spaces between words—and
since Plato lined up these descriptions without
repeating the subject of the sentence (and since
the measurements are in genitive, which is
identical in every genus), it is not completely
clear what he was referring to.
There is a detail that seems to have been
missed in translations, all of which give the
width as two thousand stadia. However, after
mentioning the length, Plato writes “κατα δε
µεσον απο θαλαττης ανω δισχιλιων”, which
I translate as ‘in the middle from the sea more
than two thousand’. Recall that the width of
Ireland is 2,060 megalithic stadia—hence more
than two thousand from sea to sea.
4. LANDSCAPE TEST
The second test compares Atlantis’ central
mountain-surrounded plain with Ireland.
4.1 Data
This is what The World Factbook (2004) has to
say about the geomorphology of Ireland:
“Mostly level to rolling interior plain
surrounded by rugged hills and low mountains;
sea cliffs on west coast”. Compare it with this
quote from Kritias: “The whole island was high
and steep on the side of the sea, but at and
around the city the surrounding was a plain,
which in turn was surrounded by mountains that
sloped down to the sea.”
Plato’s text first stresses the sheer cliffs with
a plain on top, which also exists on Ireland (Fig.
4). Just like The World Factbook, he comple-
ments that with mentioning the plain surrounded
by mountains.
The Irish “central plain” is clearly visible in
Figure 3, which is based on a digital elevation
model (DEM) of the world, with 2 minutes
resolution. The plain is roughly rectangular,
extending from the east coast to the mountains
on the west coast, between N53º and N54º.
Ireland clearly matches the description as
regards the landscape, but the question is again
if this similarity is statistically significant, or if
it could have been caused by chance.
4.2 Test
Coastal cliffs are very common on oceanic
islands, especially those with a volcanic origin.
Mountains and plains are equally common. But
how frequently is a plain, obviously of
substantial dimensions, surrounded by
mountains?
Using the ETOPO2 DEM, the landscape of
the 50 largest islands in the world was evaluated
as regards one specific parameter: If they have a
plain surrounded by mountains. All remaining
islands were too small to evaluate in a 2 minute
DEM.
A careful scrutiny of the GIS came up with
only one island that had a plain surrounded by
mountains, and that is Ireland. As expected, the
typical situation is a central mountain with a
low coastland, or a low island without
mountains.
With only 2% of the islands having a plain
surrounded by mountains the result is
significant, and the null hypothesis is rejected.
The test assumes that Plato would have
described Atlantis in a normal and typical way
for islands if he had been making it up. That is,
it assumes that the likelihood for him to
describe a certain feature is directly proportional
to the frequency of that feature on real islands.
In the view of this, it is perhaps more relevant to
look at insular geography in Plato’s part of the
world, than on the entire planet.
Such a comparison was made using a DEM
with 1 km resolution. Ireland plus the five
largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea were
analyzed as follows: The distance from the
coastline was calculated for each cell, and the
cells divided in 1-km distance classes. The
average elevation for each distance was
calculated. Both the average elevation and the
distance were normalized.
The 6 resulting curves (Fig. 5) show how
clear the distinction is between Ireland on the
one hand, and all the major Mediterranean
islands on the other. Ireland alone is lower in
the inland than near the coast.
4.3 Interpretation
A large plain surrounded by mountains violates
the normal geomorphology of islands, and
especially the situation in Plato’s part of the
world. The description of Atlantis closely
resembles that of Ireland.
5. DISCUSSION
Based on the geographical tests, the hypothesis
that Plato was describing Ireland and the
megalithic culture is retained. Before reflecting
on how Plato could have access to this
information, some other aspects than the
geography will be compared.
5.1 Archaeology
If Ireland is the island Atlantis in Plato’s tale,
and the megalithic culture is the empire, then
the finest megalithic monuments ought to be
found on Ireland. A university textbook in
archaeology provides the answer.
Burenhult (1999) writes, “Ireland possesses
the without comparison largest number of
Figure 4. Cliffs of Mohrer on the west coast of Ireland.
Composite of two photos ©Mike Goldsman 1997.
megalithic tombs in relation to the surface area
of the island” (p. 284), and “…the choicest
megalithic constructions created in Europe. To
these belong principally Newgrange, Knowth
and Dowth in the Boyne valley, richly
ornamented […] The monuments bear witness
to deep astronomical knowledge…” (p. 287; my
translation). Some of the oldest megalithic
monuments are also found on Ireland, in
Carrowmore in County Sligo, dating back to the
mid sixth millennium BC (Burenhult 1999, p.
286; Bergh 1995). Ireland is thus a likely central
region for the megalithic culture, and the
hypothesis holds up.
Newgrange is shown in Figure 6, in a frontal
view and a close-up of the entrance. Compare it
with the rather typical megalithic cairn in Figure
1, where a rectangular chain of standing stones
mark the sacred area, in the middle of which is a
tomb created by a few megaliths, with one of
them serving as roof. It is of similar age as
Newgrange.
Plato mentioned that the Atlanteans quarried
white, black and red rock, and wrote in Kritias
116b, “Some of their buildings were simple, but
in others they put together different stones,
varying the colour to please the eye, and to be a
natural source of delight.”
The end of it reads in Greek, “µειγνυντες
τους λιθους ποικιλα υφαινον παιδιας
χαριν”. According to the online dictionary of
the Perseus project, µειγνυντες means ‘mixing’
(properly used of liquids), and τους λιθους is
‘the stones’. The last three words mean that they
were ‘weaved together to a childish grace’,
literally. The remaining word, ποικιλα, means
‘many-coloured, spotted, mottled, pied,
dappled’, suggesting that in a façade of stones in
one colour, there were spots made of stones in a
different colour (the form of the word is dualis).
Compare this with the façade of Newgrange
(Fig. 6), made up of quartz (white) with spots of
granite stones (dark). The wall is a restoration,
since the original one collapsed over 4,000
years ago (the monument was built around
3,200 BC; O’Kelly 1982). The decoration is
another match between Atlantis and Ireland. It
may prove statistically significant since it is
rather unusual.
Plato mentioned two temples, one being for
both their ancestors: “in the centre was a holy
temple dedicated to Cleito and Poseidon, which
remained inaccessible”, while the other was for
their divine ancestor alone: “Here was
Poseidon's own temple which was a stadium in
length, and half a stadium in width, and of a
proportionate height, having a strange barbaric
appearance.”
As was argued in Erlingsson (2004), the
passage tomb of Knowth (Eogan 1987) with its
two chambers may correspond to the temple for
both Cleito and Poseidon, while Newgrange
may correspond to that of Poseidon alone (the
Irish monuments are about half a megalithic
stadion across). Note that while there are
hundreds of burials in Knowth, there may not be
a single one in Newgrange. This would seem to
agree with the latter being a temple for a god,
rather than for a mortal ancestor.
The single chamber in Newgrange has a
corbelled vault, whereas in Knowth there is one
chamber with a corbelled vault and one with a
flat stone slab for roof like in the majority of
megalithic tombs. When caliph Abdullah Al-
Mamun of Baghdad in AD 820 broke into the
Great Pyramid in Egypt, he first found a
chamber with gabled roof and named it the
Queen’s Chamber, since they buried their
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Crete
Cyprus
Sicily
Sardinia
Corsica
Ireland
Figure 5. Normalized average elevation plotted against
normalized cumulative distance from the coastline for
Ireland and the five biggest Mediterranean islands.
women in tombs with gabled ceilings, but men
in tombs with flat ceilings. This distinction
based on sex might be the reason for Knowth
having two chambers with different roof types,
which would be in line with it being a temple
for both the earthborn ancestral mother Cleito,
and for their divine ancestral father Poseidon.
Plato mentioned that the distance from the
sea to the city was 50 stadia (Kritias 115d and
possibly 113c). The Boyne valley monuments
are located 50 stadia from the sea (Erlingsson,
2004, p. 50).
In conclusion, there is reason to suspect that
Plato also had access to a description of the
monuments in the Boyne valley in County
Meath, Ireland.
5.2 Mythology
Ireland has a long oral tradition. The location of
Newgrange was unknown during four millennia,
after it collapsed into an inconspicuous hill
when the retaining wall gave way (it is now
concrete reinforced). In spite of this, Irish
folklore remembered it. The Irish name is Brú
na Bóinne, which means ‘Mansion of the
Boyne’. The river name Bóinne means ‘white
cow’ (a cognate to Sanskrit Govinda), and it is
related to the name of the river goddess Boann
(or Boand), whose son Oengus now inhabits the
mansion. Incidentally, the Milky Way is called
‘the way of the white cow’ in Irish.
Boann, without permission, approached a
sacred well. The well sprang up in a flood and
took her out to the sea, thus creating the river
Boyne, a most revered river on Ireland. The
well belonged to the river god Nechtan, a name
cognate to Roman Neptun, i.e., Poseidon,
originally a river god. There is thus a connection
between Newgrange and Poseidon. Since the
word that Plato used for temple also means
‘residence of a god’, the Mansion of the Boyne
is a namesake of Poseidon’s temple on Atlantis,
except for the sex of the river divinity.
Irish mythology contains elements that hint
at an ancestral homeland that was flooded by
the rising sea, and myths of sunken cities exist
on much of the Atlantic seaboard of Europe.
However, since such myths are common all
over the world they tend to be dismissed.
Nevertheless, most of the planet did experience
a significant sea-level rise after the Ice Age, so
the omnipresence of the motif is logical. The
question is, though, if the motif has a
Figure 6. Newgrange. Note the granite stones in the
quartz façade. The original façade continued straight out
to both ends of the decorated entrance stone. Above the
door there is a light opening, through which the rising
sun’s rays reach the grave chamber on Midwinter solstice.
psychological origin common to all people, or if
it is a very ancient tradition.
As a test of whether a myth about geographic
changes can survive for such a long time, we
may look at an island that has experienced the
opposite, namely rising from the sea: Gotland in
the Baltic Sea. The creation myth of that island,
preserved in the introduction to their law, recalls
how the island used to sink in the sea every
morning and rise every evening, until Tjelvar
came and brought fire.
Modern geology has shown that Gotland
melted out from the inland ice as barren rocks
barely protruding from the Baltic Ice Lake some
10,000 years ago. The core element of the
tradition is therefore correct, since the myth
reflects that this island has risen from the sea,
while the majority of coasts have been flooded.
This hints at the possibility of very ancient
memories being preserved in oral tradition,
especially on remote islands where there has
been a long continuous occupation.
5.3 Sinking
Ireland did not sink in the sea, but Atlantis did,
according to Plato. For this aspect of the tale
Ireland is obviously not the model. A distinct
possibility is that it is a memory of some other
place that was preserved in megalithic Ireland.
Erlingsson (2004, p. 22) suggested a real
world explanation for Atlantis’ sinking, namely
that Dogger Bank was destroyed by the
Storegga tsunami. By coincidence, the flood
wave came at a time when Dogger Bank was
about to sink anyway in the rising sea level.
It was a very powerful tsunami (Bondevik et
al. 2003) that may well have converted large
low-lying areas into mud banks. This is
especially true if they were protected against
storm floods by coastal dykes or natural sand
dunes, since those would prevent the sea from
withdrawing. The apparent effect would have
been that the island sank in the sea after a
dramatic natural disaster. Furthermore, it would
have created a mud bank that made the sea un-
navigable, just as the case was with Atlantis
(Timaios 25c-d and Kritias 108e).
In Timaios 24e Plato positions Atlantis
before the mouth that the Greeks call the
columns of Heracles. In this context it is worth
noting Tacitus’ report in Germany and its tribes
(XXXIV) that the columns of Heracles are
located by Friesland, which in turn is located by
the Rhine. Dogger Bank being located off the
mouth of the Rhine, one must contemplate the
possibility that it was the Phoenicians who first
applied the name pillars of Heracles to
Gibraltar, and that they did so to keep others
away by exploiting the fear connected with an
old myth (Plato apparently considered it well
known that the sea outside the pillars of
Heracles was un-navigable).
It is also worth noting that at the time when
Dogger Bank was sinking it formed a tidal bank
that covered most of the distance between the
shores of England and Denmark. It thus
effectively prevented the navigation from the
Rhine to the open North Sea—just what Plato
claimed happened when Atlantis sank. In stark
contrast, an Aegean island that sinks in an
earthquake does not create a mud bank that
hinders navigation. As Plato’s description fits
the geography of Dogger Bank of six millennia
ago well, while being so exotic to his own part
of the world, the match is noteworthy.
An alternative reason for the apparent
sinking of Dogger Bank could be the rising
world sea level after the Ice Age. It is usually
dismissed as a potential cause of disastrous
floods, since the melting of ice is a gradual
process that should not produce rapid
transgressions. However, some scientists are
suggesting multiple events of rapid sea-level
rise triggered by jökulhlaups and ice-marginal
lake bursts from the Laurentian inland ice (e.g.,
Blanchon & Shaw 1995; cf. Fig. 7). The last
cataclysmic transgression would have drowned
Dogger Bank, and the previous one would have
drowned a plain to the south of Dogger Bank,
considered to be a promising location for
underwater archaeology by Flemming (2002).
This plain, called Doggerland by Coles
(1998), would have been flooded in a rather
short time some 9,000 years before Plato. This
is precisely the number of years Plato said had
passed since the disaster. That transgression
coincided with the end of the Ice Age, and
represented a global change-event on a scale
that makes the gloomiest predictions today seem
inconsequential. Incidentally, there was a
comparable event of equally rapid sea level and
temperature rise a mere three thousand years
earlier.
The evidence for these alleged rapid
transgressions are not universally accepted,
though; nor are Laurentian jökuhlhaups,
although they appear theoretically possible
through the captured ice shelf mechanism
suggested by Erlingsson (1994a, b).
What is irrefutable is that Dogger Bank
became an island during the Holocene
transgression (Isle of Dogger in Fig. 7). The
final sinking of this island was the last great
cataclysm before Plato’s (and our) time,
whether it was caused by the Storegga tsunami
or the final drainage of Lake Agassiz through
Hudson Bay.
5.4 The origin of the Atlantis tale
The image that emerges is that megalithic
Ireland kept alive the memory of the disaster
that struck Dogger Bank, during three thousand
years (Fig. 7). After the collapse of the
megalithic culture, the memories of it, as well as
of the Dogger Bank cataclysm, may well have
been kept in Egypt just as Plato claimed.
As the insert in Figure 7 shows, there is no
gap in time between these cultures. Nor is there
any sizeable spatial gap, since the Atlantean
empire, like the megalithic culture, reached the
eastern Mediterranean.
It seems a reasonable conclusion that Plato
got hold of historic data the way he claimed,
and used it to create a political myth in the way
he himself advocated.
6. CONCLUSION
Plato based the description of Atlantis on
megalithic Ireland, which at the time appears to
have been the focal point of a large culture. It
seems feasible that the memory of the Storegga
tsunami on Dogger Bank was kept alive in that
culture, and carried from there to Egypt,
eventually to be mixed up with Ireland itself.
When Plato wrote his dialogues, he either put
the fragments together in a novel order while
adding some flair, or someone else before him
had already done that.
Although we must take into account that
Plato may have added many fantastic details to
the description of Atlantis in order to glorify
Athens’ victory over the empire, his tale can
still give us clues. Even if the tale is partly
fictional, whatever factual details can be
extracted are invaluable, since there simply is
no other source of recorded tradition from the
European Stone Age.
Incidentally, this result is also proof that
Atlantis in the strict sense never existed.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author would like to acknowledge the
assistance from friends during the long research
process that led up to this study, especially the
generously offered help from Torgny Frembäck
and Athina Tavoultzidou. Thanks are also due
to prof em J.O. Norrman, Å. Sundborg and W.
Karlén, whose critique of the analysis has been
most welcome.
The Perseus project website at
www.perseus.tufts.edu was consulted for the
original Greek and Latin texts.
Figure 7. Suggested context of the Atlantis tale in climatic
change and sea level rise. The x-scale is in thousands of
calendar years before present, defined as 1950 AD. The
thin line is the δ
18
O temperature proxy from Greenland
(GRIP Members 1993). The Ice Age ended at 11.5 kBP.
The bold line is the sea level from Blanchon and Shaw
(1995). There were drastic rises around 11.5 kBP and 7.6
kBP. The flood wave symbol marks the tsunami from the
Storegga submarine slide around 8.1 kBP. Insert: The
dashed line illustrates the drastic cultural decline ca 7.5
kBP from the Kongemose (K) to the Ertebølle (E)
Mesolithic culture. Rectangles represent the temporal
extent of Dogger Bank as an island, the megalithic culture,
Egypt, and Antiquity. The arrows show how the tradition
of the sinking may have been transmitted between them.
Since there are significant reservoir effects when
calibrating from radiocarbon years to calendar years, it is
quite possible that all events around 8 kBP occurred in a
short time span and were related in some way. The earliest
megalithic tombs on Ireland also date from that time
frame.
The paper is dedicated to my father Erling
Nilsson, and his father, Knut Nilsson, for
proving that anyone can see through propaganda
if he only uses his wits and logic.
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