Video URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdqX09zZNf8


the jurogan experience now i know that jimmy is quick yeah yeah and uh i don't know jimmy personally i i like the guy without knowing him you interviewed him right very nice guy yeah that's what i thought yeah i'd like to get him out in the field with me and show him some stuff firsthand i think i bet he would love that i think he's a giant fan of your work i like to hear that well i'm a fan of his work but i don't happen to agree on this one well i mean i don't even know if he agrees i think he's just speculating yeah he's not dogmatic like he doesn't have like a rigid perspective on this yeah here you can see there's the recap stroke what is interesting though is look at this you've got that uh this structure up here that terminator tendon i knew how to pronounce it but anyways that's it that's an impact crater there there's one here we can actually if we go back the the tenure crater and mauritania that's impact and the tem mimic chat i that's exactly so what's interesting though check this out there's one there's two and here's the recap structure they fall in a perfect alignment now what's the explanation there i don't know it could just be coincidence right it could be coincidence yeah one of the things that he said about the re-cut structure was that around it the white appears to be salt which could be and i mean see the rim rock of this is late cretaceous about 90 million years old so at that point it was below the ocean right so it's been uplifted i think this thing is about 14 or 1500 feet above sea level if memory serves me correct so it's been eroded you see this whole thing here is like an erosion you had a massive amount of water that came down over this and most likely is what exposed this thing to the surface it was probably buried um

let's see here um oh so right there is you know from plato that's the ring to city of atlantis the scale the concentric rings the concentric ring so that this is the actual scale superimposed onto the recap store so it's much smaller much smaller scale but plato's scale was based on what the stade it was based on the stade which is roughly 607 feet it's where we get the word stadium from oh wow yeah because that's that was the length of a stadium in ancient greece so when you look at plato's version of the sorry to take you on this detour but i was just curious when you look at plato's version of um atlantis is there an area of the world that seems likely yeah yeah yeah you better watch my six hour presentation okay i will yeah no but i i look it's detailed that's why even in six hours you know i can't really spell it i in my podcast i did the first nine episodes two hours each were devoted to i thought well let's kick it off with atlantis 18 hours of atlantis 18 hours of it the last episode 9 was devoted to the recap structure wow so i had eight eight hours so 16 hours but we had some chatter and things like that in there so maybe more like 12 or 14 hours so um you know who johanna james is no she is a uh british actress who started doing this pot she's really cool lady um she's very interested in all this kind of stuff very smart extraordinarily beautiful and um she went on and and did a uh she does these like 20-minute 30-minute little vignettes of things that she's really interested in having to do a lot with you know ancient cultures all the kind of things that you know graham hancock is you know she reads graham hancock she became a fan of mine and she devoted one

of her little 20 or 30 minute segments to she said i watched all 10 hours or 12 hours of randall carlson's programs on atlantis and so she did this like 30 minute little synopsis of it really did a great job so we reached out to her i invited her on she came on we did a live stream a couple of weeks ago with her as a guest and um just really fun lady she's uh also does comedy right yeah and she's very intelligent very gorgeous um what can i say you know and smart and interested in all this kind of stuff so you know there we go anyways um so she was very interested in the whole atlantis thing and so because of that there was a lot of feedback and people wanting to know more and so i thought okay now the the 10 or 12 hours i did what i'm going to do is i'm going to try to condense that down so a couple of weeks ago we did the first three hour live stream where i basically started breaking down plato's account line by line what did he actually say let's look at the geology let's look at the geography the oceanography the astronomy and see if it lines up if it matches up and so i think there's one place that pretty much is not all the details but when you look at all of the areas around the planet that have been proposed for atlantis i think there's one place that fits the majority of his details and that's the sunken azores plateau and i say sunken because we know it's sunken and it's right along the mid-atlantic ridge in fact since we're on this subject and i wasn't even thinking would get on this subject there's the azores plateau right there it it straddles a triple plate junction which you have the european plate the african plate and the north american plate here it's up near nova nova scotia yeah it's far north it is but notice over here it's really almost at the same latitude as spain see and i would say that if there's any place on the planet that is most consistent with

plato's account that's it right there why is that without doing an 18-hour presentation oh come on joe can't we have pizza brought in we can nah that's why in a nutshell god where do i even begin so uh i was afraid you were going to ask that but we could look very quickly i guess like give you the the five-minute version um which is that uh there is evidence that there was a massive subsidence along the mid-atlantic ridge we actually talked about this a little bit and i think in our very first uh discussion we had which was what seven eight years ago at least yeah yeah yeah because and we so we talked about this a little bit geophysics shows that there's horizontal movement lateral movement of the earth's crust because of continental drift but there's also vertical movement and that is the result of isostatic compensation that's called isostasy is the vertical movement of the earth's crust i can show you like i should have a slide right here that will help to really illustrate what it is uh let me back up to uh let's see should be right in here ah here we go okay so now this is the shore of hudson bay now this is where the ice sheet was the thickest right now what are you seeing there hudson bay is up here these are shorelines because when the ice was removed the land started rising back so here's sea level right land is rising back and the land is rising because of a lack of weight of the ice yes right so you're sitting on a soft cushiony chair right now right are you yep okay so your ass is causing isostatic depression of that cushion on your chair right right and if you sit up you'll have isostatic compensation right so that's what that is along many

many many lines yes those are all shorelines here's another view of it here's another view wow that's the land rebounding couple of thousand feet after the ice was removed now the ice was removed and all of those trillions of tons of weight where did it go in the atlantic ocean now you look the thinnest crust on the earth is the mid-atlantic ridge and if you look at it you'll see that there are transform faults which should show up right here the transform faults are these vertical fault lines that are when you would say orthogonal or right angles to the ridge itself here you can see very clearly the the the triple plate junction and how the azores plateau okay well since the 1940s the first exhibition expedition in 1948 there was a uh when they started doing uh dredge samples from the uh from the floor of the atlantic ocean which coincidentally the name of the ship was the atlantis they dredge clore samples they pull up the core samples from two miles down a mile to two miles down and they look at those core samples and what you had was for example shallow water creatures living they weren't living they were now you know they had been drowned you had creatures like uh that had that typically lived under a hundred feet of sea water and now they're a mile mile and a half below and they're on the flanks of this of this place right here so these are fossils that they're finding yes so and they're finding fossils that ordinarily you would find in some place that was very shallow very shallow very shallow yes or relatively shallow 100 feet 100 feet yes um so this is this is the basic idea here this goes back to the 60s as it says right here the possible tectonic implications of glacious static now eustatic is the rise and fall of sea level correlated with the increase and decrease of of glacial ice so if the ice is increasing sea level is falling and we call that eustatic sea level fall if the ice is shrinking melting sea levels rising so that's a eustatic rise so that's the the main the

meaning of that when you see glaciostatic that means the rise and fall of the sea level as a result of glacier growth or melting okay and it says here sea level fluctuations have received only minor attention in connection with such problems as ocean floor spreading the purpose of this report is to point out that late pleistocene sea level data suggests that the ocean basins have responded isostatically and by a significant amount particularly concentrated along the mid-atlantic ridge so um and the so i mean this i i've got so much here i'm just gonna grab a couple of these things here yeah so they they dug up these cobbles which are uh the cobbles are um so a cobble is basically a stone or anything that's lithified that's roughly between um a pebble a pebble and a boulder a boulder when you get i think to 11 inches about about the size of a volleyball now you're in the realm of boulders kabul is in between pebbles and boulders you know like you've heard of cobblestone streets you know the other fist-sized rocks basically so so they say here the atlantis crews are in great meteor sea mounts rise from a broad ridge or plateau which extends from the mid-atlantic ridge blah blah blah let's see um so about a ton of flat pteropod limestone cobbles was dredged from the summit area of one of these sunken what they're calling the sea mounts and the sea mount is like a flat top mountain right like the top of the mountain has been sheared off okay so they pulled up these limestones right these limestone cobbles they dated them one of the cobbles gave an apparent radiocarbon age of 12 000 years plus or minus 900 years the state of lithification how how much it is turned into rock of the limestone suggests that it may have been lithified under sub-aerial

conditions in other words in the atmosphere that's what that means it may have been lithified under sub-aerial conditions and the sea mount may have been an island within the past 12 000 years wow so i mean we could go through again hours of this kind of research and why it's been pushed off to the side is anybody's guess but it just doesn't fit the paradigm but yeah basically now this doesn't prove that there was any civilization there but we can make a very strong case that a large section of the azores plateau was above sea level during the late glacial maximum does it coincide with plato's account of trade and of travel and of the way well we have no way of knowing see now there we have to make a leap of faith which is this if and if we look right here you'll see uh you can see it very clearly and you can see the straits of gibraltar here which was anciently known as the pillars of heracles and you come here to a group of islands and then you get to the azores plateau and here these down here are those seamounts those truncated seamounts so really all you have to do here's the leap of faith you have to make you have to go now we don't i don't get into anything like you know whatever flying spaceships or crystal ray guns or anything like that no i just go by what plato says what he's describing is a maritime culture that had navigational abilities something along the lines of the minoan or the phoenician culture maybe by an order of magnitude right so now all we have to do really is assume this which to me is not so pseudo-scientific that we couldn't even consider which is that somebody some group in the ice age had enough navigational skills to sail from europe to islands right here