Atlantis The Antediluvian World -

: He noted the existence of similar plants (like corn and tobacco) and animals on both sides of the Atlantic, suggesting they were once connected.

: He argued that the universal "Flood Myth" found in nearly every culture (Noah, Deucalion, Manu, etc.) was a collective memory of the catastrophic sinking of Atlantis.

: A large island in the Atlantic Ocean where humanity first transitioned from barbarism to civilization. Atlantis The Antediluvian World

is a seminal pseudoarchaeological book published in 1882 by Ignatius L. Donnelly , a Minnesota politician and author. The work is credited with launching the modern "lost civilization" genre and remains the foundational text for many alternative history theories. Core Thesis: Hyperdiffusionism

The book appeared during a period of rapid industrialization and social unrest in the U.S.. For Donnelly, the fall of Atlantis served as a cautionary tale: a perfect society that collapsed due to corruption and pride, mirroring his anxieties about the American Gilded Age . : He noted the existence of similar plants

Donnelly used a wide array of cross-disciplinary data—most of which has since been discredited by modern science—to build his case:

: The literal "Garden of Eden" or the original home of the Greek, Phoenician, and Scandinavian gods, who were actually the deified kings of Atlantis. Key Evidence and Arguments is a seminal pseudoarchaeological book published in 1882

: Known ancient civilizations (Egypt, Mexico, Peru, etc.) were colonies founded by Atlantean survivors who brought advanced knowledge of agriculture, metallurgy, and language.