Some one said the Sargasso Sea is the exact location in the Atlantic of where Atlantis once existed.
It also fits exactly the description Plato gave of the size of Atlantis.
Sargasso Sea, area of the North Atlantic Ocean, elliptical in shape and relatively still, that is strewn with free-floating seaweed of the genus Sargassum.
It lies between the parallels 20° N and 35° N and the meridians 30° W and 70° W inside a clockwise-setting ocean-current system, of which the Gulf Stream (issuing from the Gulf of Mexico) forms part of the western rim. The sea reaches depths of 5,000–23,000 feet (1,500–7,000 m) and is characterized by weak currents, low precipitation, high evaporation, light winds, and warm, saline waters, all combining with the lack of thermal mixing to create a biological desert largely devoid of plankton.
It is a mysterious place that exists where four ocean currents flow around it. And there is nowhere else on Earth like it. It acts just like some kind of ghost location.
Bio-optical algorithms rely on assumptions about the covariance of marine constituents as well as the relationships among their inherent and apparent optical properties. Validation with in situ measurements of in-water constituents and their optical properties is required to extrapolate local knowledge about ocean color variations to scales.
A memory of something that once existed there? Maybe because it is hiding something. It is also unusually warmer than the rest of the Atlantic Ocean and a place where many ships have come to a complete stop and their passengers have disappeared.
The US navy has extensive underwater sonar and laser beam maps of the Atlantic floor kept secret for a very long time. It is time for detailed scrutiny of what lies under the Sargasso Sea.
One of them spoke as if, as a matter of course, there will be the city in the bottom of the sea.
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