Grid of ocean floor

Grid of ocean floor
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A recent post by CNET News' Caroline McCarthy about Google's denial that its Google Earth ocean-floor mapping software had unearthed the mythical city of Atlantis piqued the interest of quite a few of our readers.

A subsequent post on Google's explanation didn't quite quell the swell of theories about the street grid-like patterns on the ocean floor off the coast of Africa.

Andy Smith, at our sister site ZDNet, has put together a slide show of some of the images on Google Earth at the center of it all.

Last week, a grid was discovered on Google Earth at coordinates 31 15'15.53N, 24 15'30.53W on the ocean floor 600 miles off the coast of Africa, sparking rumors that spread over the Internet that the ruins of the lost city of Atlantis were found. Or maybe they were plow marks from aliens?

Google was quick to discredit the rumor, saying that these lines couldn't have been from the lost city and were created by "ship tracks."

Google was swamped by even more conspiracy-theory feedback, and ultimately it pulled in Walter Smith of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and David Sandwell of UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography, two scientists who helped gather some of the ocean-floor data in Google Earth, to clear it all up in a post on the company's official blog.

February 27, 2009 2:08 PM PST

Photo by: Google Earth

| Caption by: Andy Smith

 

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