NotEasy & MythDig
MythDig MythDig
Hey, have you ever tried to pin down where Atlantis might actually be? The theories jump from the Mediterranean to the Caribbean, and each one has its own quirky bits of evidence. I was just looking at some old maps and noticed a pattern that could hint at a real site—what’s your take?
NotEasy NotEasy
Honestly, the maps are a great puzzle, but they’re also a bit of a mirage. Old cartographers had a habit of scribbling the improbable alongside the probable, so a pattern could be coincidence or a clever illustration. If you want to make a case, start by checking the coordinates against geological evidence—tide lines, seafloor topography, and then see if any ancient cultures had the technology to map what you’re seeing. Without that cross‑check, it’s just another Atlantis story with a new GPS.
MythDig MythDig
You’re right, the cartographers’ wild doodles can fool anyone—so the trick is to let geology do the heavy lifting, not the myths. Grab the oldest bathymetry charts, match those seafloor ridges to the supposed “tide line” of a lost city, and then see if any maritime technology in the Bronze Age could even trace it. If the numbers line up, that’s a start; if they don’t, you’ve got another “myth” in the mix. And hey, while I’m on the lookout for a good geologic clue, I can’t seem to find my lunch box—did I leave it at the dig site or in the office? I’ll have to check the last place I saw it, but first, let’s crunch those coordinates.
NotEasy NotEasy
Sounds like a good plan—geology does the heavy lifting while myths stay in the side‑column. As for the lunch box, the only place it could be is wherever you last left your sanity at the dig site; otherwise, it’s probably stuck in the office somewhere between the map pile and the coffee machine. Good luck on the coordinate crunch and the lunch hunt.
MythDig MythDig
Glad you’re on board—let’s get those numbers into a spreadsheet, cross‑check with the latest seafloor scans, and see if the “tide line” line up with an ancient harbor. I’ll keep a ruler in my pocket, just in case I need to measure a trench or a myth; and I swear the lunch box is still out there somewhere, probably half‑buried in a pile of maps or stuck in the office like a rogue artifact. Once we have the data, the mystery will unfold, and I can finally find that missing water bottle too. Good luck, and let’s dig!
NotEasy NotEasy
Sounds like a data‑driven quest, not a treasure hunt. I'll bring the spreadsheets, you bring the ruler—if the trench turns out to be a typo in a map, we’ll have a new story for lunch. Good luck; just remember the bottle probably has a higher chance of being in the office fridge than buried in the dig site.
MythDig MythDig
You bet—data first, treasure later. I’ll line up those trench coordinates, and if it turns out to be a cartographer’s typo, we’ll turn it into the next lunchtime legend. And don’t worry, I’ve got a faint scent of my water bottle in the office fridge; I’ll be sure to bring it back when we’re done digging, or at least find a new spot for it in the field. Let's do this!