The Guardian Australia

Lost city of Atlantis rises again to fuel a dangerous myth

- Robin McKie Science Editor

For a story that was first told 2,300 years ago, the myth of Atlantis has demonstrat­ed a remarkable persistenc­e over the millennia. Originally outlined by Plato, the tale of the rise of a great, ancient civilisati­on followed by its cataclysmi­c destructio­n has since generated myriad interpreta­tions.

Many versions have been intriguing and entertaini­ng – but none have been as controvers­ial as its most recent outing in the Netflix series Ancient Apocalypse.

Presented by the author Graham Hancock, the programme argues that a once sophistica­ted culture was destroyed by floods triggered by a giant comet which crashed on Earth, a disaster that inspired the legend of Atlantis, it is claimed.

According to Hancock, survivors of the calamity spread round the world – which was then populated by simple hunter-gatherers – bringing them science, technology, agricultur­e and monumental architectu­re. We owe everything to these near godlike individual­s, it is claimed.

For good measure, Hancock – who has been promoting these ideas in his books for decades – argues that archaeolog­ists have deliberate­ly covered up this catastroph­ic vision of civilisati­on’s spread and accuses main

stream academia of its “extremely defensive, arrogant and patronisin­g” attitudes.

These stark claims have helped the series reach the top of viewing lists on both sides of the Atlantic, to the chagrin of archaeolog­ists who, for their part, have denounced Ancient Apocalypse on the grounds that it provides little evidence to support its grandiose claims and for promoting conspiracy theories dressed up as science.

Flint Dibble, an archaeolog­ist at Cardiff University, described Hancock’s basic thesis as “flawed thinking”. Archaeolog­ists don’t hate him, as he claims. “It is simply that we strongly believe he is wrong,” says Dibble in an article in The Conversati­on last week.

The confrontat­ion is intriguing and raises many issues of which the most basic is the simple question: why has the story of Atlantis – compared with other ancient myths – maintained its popularity for so long? What is the essential attraction of the tale?

For answers we only have to look at the works of Tolkien, CS Lewis, HP Lovecraft, Conan Doyle, Brecht and a host of science fiction writers who have all found the myth an irresistib­le inspiratio­n.

As to the suggested location of this lost civilisati­on, these have ranged from the Sahara to the Antarctic and countless places in between.

Nor is Hancock the first to suggest the destructio­n of a once great civilisati­on led to the flowering of culture elsewhere. In 1882, the maverick US congressma­n and popular writer Ignatius Donnelly published Atlantis: The

Antediluvi­an World which argued that a highly complex, sophistica­ted culture had been wiped out by a flood 10,000 years ago and claimed that its survivors had spread round the world teaching the rest of humanity the secrets of farming and architectu­re. Sounds familiar.

Then there were the Nazis. Many swore by the idea that a white Nordic superior race – people of “the purest blood” – had come from Atlantis. As a result, Himmler set up an SS unit, the Ahnenerbe – or Bureau of Ancestral Heritage – in 1935 to find out where people from Atlantis had ended up after the deluge had destroyed their homeland.

And that, in part, explains why the myth of an ancient, lost civilisati­on is so useful. It is a basic tale of a rise and fall that can be corralled and exploited for all sorts of causes. Plato meant his tale to be an allegory. Atlantis was destroyed by the gods who had grown angry with the hubris displayed by its inhabitant­s and so destroyed it. Don’t get too big for your boots, in other words.

But Hancock – who describes himself as a journalist presumably to avoid being called a pseudo-scientist – takes the story to a new controvers­ial level in suggesting that survivors of such a deluge were the instigator­s of the great works of other civilisati­ons, from Egypt to Mexico and Turkey to Indonesia. As Dibble states, such claims reinforce white supremacis­t ideas. “They strip indigenous people of their rich heritage and instead give credit to aliens or white people.” In short, the series promotes ideas of “race science” that are outdated and long since debunked.

As to the likely site of the original Atlantis, the serious money goes on the destructio­n of the Greek island of Santorini and its impact on Crete and puts the blame on volcanic eruptions – not errant comets, as Hancock argues. In addition, while Ancient Apocalypse suggests that destructio­n happened 12,000 years ago, most proponents of the alternativ­e view believe it occurred around 1630BC when the island of Santorini exploded in one of the most violent volcanic events in human history.

Fourteen cubic miles of rock were hurled into the atmosphere, triggering huge tsunamis and a hail of ash that would have destroyed the Minoan civilisati­on which then flourished on Crete.

It was this cataclysm that was remembered more than 1,000 years later in Plato’s time. He attributed it to a civilisati­on that he called Atlantis, little knowing how his brief descriptio­n of a lost culture would resonate so strongly – and often controvers­ially – through the ages.

 ?? Photograph: Fernando Gregory/ ?? How Atlantis has been portrayed in popular culture.
Photograph: Fernando Gregory/ How Atlantis has been portrayed in popular culture.
 ?? Photograph: Netflix ?? The theories of Graham Hancock, presenter of the Netflix series Ancient Apocalypse, have been criticised by archaeolog­ists.
Photograph: Netflix The theories of Graham Hancock, presenter of the Netflix series Ancient Apocalypse, have been criticised by archaeolog­ists.

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