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Atlantis in the Caribbean: And the Comet That Changed the World

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An in-depth investigation of the mounting evidence that Atlantis was located in the Bahamas and Caribbean, near Cuba in particular• Explains how Atlantis was destroyed by a comet, the same comet that formed the mysterious Carolina Bays • Reveals evidence of complex urban ruins off the coasts of Cuba and the Bahamas• Shows how pre-Columbian mariners visited the Caribbean and brought back stories of Atlantis’s destruction• Compares Plato’s account with ancient legends from the indigenous people of North and South America, such as the Maya, the Quiché, and the Yuchi of OklahomaThe legend of Atlantis is one of the most intriguing mysteries of all time. Disproving many well-known Atlantis theories and providing a new hypothesis, the evidence for which continues to build, Andrew Collins shows that what Plato recounts is the memory of a major cataclysm at the end of the last Ice Age 13,000 years ago, when a comet devastated the island of Cuba and submerged part of the Bahaman landmass in the Caribbean. He parallels Plato’s account with corroborating ancient myths and legends from the indigenous people of North and South America, such as the Maya of Mesoamerica, the Quiché of Peru, the Yuchi of Oklahoma, the islanders of the Antilles, and the native peoples of Brazil. The author explains how the comet that destroyed Atlantis in the Caribbean was the same comet that formed the mysterious and numerous elliptical depressions, known as the Carolina Bays, found across the mid-Atlantic United States. He reveals evidence of sunken ruins off the coasts of both Cuba and the Bahamas, ancient complexes spanning more than 10 acres that clearly suggest urban development and meticulously planned road systems.Revealing the identity of Plato’s “opposite continent” as ancient America, Collins argues that Plato’s story was first carried back to the Mediterranean world by trans-Atlantic mariners, such as the Phoenicians and Carthaginians, as early as the first millennium BC. He offers additional ancient trans-Atlantis trade evidence from Egyptian mummies, Roman shipwrecks in the Western Atlantic, and the African features of giant stone heads in Mexico. Piecing together the final days of Atlantis and the wildfires, earthquakes, tsunamis, days of darkness, and advancement of ice sheets that followed the ancient comet’s impact, Collins establishes not only that Atlantis did indeed exist but also that remnants of it survive today, most obviously in Cuba, Atlantis’s original central island.

534 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 15, 2016

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Andrew Collins

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Robert Hieronimus.
Author 12 books11 followers
March 6, 2017
Important to read it all the way through. The best parts are toward the end when the conclusions are drawn, but you can't appreciate them without having read the first sections. Very good summary of the Atlantis research to date, and I highly recommend it for anyone interested in the field of ancient history and lost civilizations
1 review
January 15, 2020
Reaching

The author, in my personal opinion, reaches conclusion that use facts that are over broad and tortured to fit his pre conceived conclusions. It would be better served to take a step back and try to integrate all of the facts without pushing an end game.
1 review
July 24, 2025
Amazing !!!

I thoroughly enjoyed reading "Atlantis in the Caribbean: And the comet that changed the world". Mr. Collins is an excellent author, I've read other Andrew Collin's book all of which I love, this book had me glued to the pages.
36 reviews
August 10, 2019
Started out pretty slow for me, but started to get more interesting around 20-30% in the book. Was a great read!
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