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Reference:Alternate Perceptions Magazine online. November 2005.Note: All photos and text 2005 by Greg Little. Redistribution and copying prohibited without authorization.
Underwater Stone Formation at Bimini: Ancient Harbor Evidence
Uncovering the Bimini Hoax
By Dr. Greg Little
hoax \ vt.: to trick into believing or accepting as genuine something false...
hoax \ n.: something accepted or established by fraud or fabrication.
Websters Collegiate Dictionary (1996)
Scientific fabricaction: Making up data or results.
Scientific falsification: Changing or misreporting data or results.
National Academy of Sciences (1995)
On Being a Scientist: Responsible Conduct in Research; Misconduct in Science
Introduction
In 1968 a 1600-foot long J-shaped formation of stone blocks was reportedly discovered
about one mile off the west coast of North Bimini, Bahamas by a Miami-based biologist, Dr. J.
Manson Valentine. The formation was initially thought to resemble a collapsed wall or a road and
the unfortunate name Bimini Road was attached to it. Media coverage speculated that the site
was associated with Atlantis and sensationalized reports about the formation were widely
disseminated. Shortly thereafter, four geologists asserted that the formation was nothing but natural
limestone. Most archaeologists and geologists have accepted the four geologists claims without
question. However, an inspection of the site shows that the skeptics most important claims about
the formation are inaccurate. More importantly, however, a careful evaluation of the prime skeptical
geologists original research results indicate that his published findings were changed, misreported,and misrepresented in later reports that presented the same data. By definition, this geologists
claims about the Bimini site, based on his later reports, constitute a hoax that has now lasted 25
years. A well-known archaeologist appears to have participated in the hoax as a coauthor.
Paradoxically, these coauthors alleged in several articles that a hoax had been perpetrated at Bimini
by others. It is demonstrated herein that USGS geologist Eugene Shinn and archaeologist Marshall
McKusick published a series of articles wherein they presented false and misleading results
summarizing Shinns research findings at Bimini.
1
Left: In the 1970s, Dr.
David Zink, an English
professor, spent severalyears examining the Bimini
Road. His research was
partly funded by the ARE.
One of most important
things Zink accomplished
was to make a map of the
formation. The map depicts
only the largest stones that
are visible from the surface.
IllustrationARE.
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The Skeptical Geologists
Not long after the discovery of the Bimini Road, a Virginia Beach, Virginia geologist, Wyman
Harrison (1971), sampled two stones of the formation and visually observed the site reporting that
all the blocks were limestone that had fractured in place. Harrison added, at no place are blocks
found to be resting on a similar set beneath.
Harrison also examined 30 cylinder-like columns found near the site. He reported that two
of the columns were fluted marble and noted they were not from the Bahamas. He wrote that
Georgia is probably not the source and there is only a small chance it could have come from
Vermont. The remaining cylinders Harrison asserted were cement noting, The cement cylinders
are also composed of material which is not indiginous to the Bahamas. Harrison believed it to be
a form of hydrated natural cement. Samples of the cement were evaluated by several others and
their conculsions were reported by Harrison. One researcher stated that the cement seemed to be a
high-temperature product resembling the overburnt product of lime kilns. The other researcher
reported that a chemical analysis found quartz and coal particles in it suggesting that it was probably
made sometime after 1800. Harrison reasoned that the cylinder-like columns were probably dumped
by modern or historic ships, but made no attempt to compare the columns to similar artifacts that
had been discovered at ancient harbors in the Mediterranean or to ancient cements.
Ball and Gifford (1980) began by relating that Harrison had shown the formation was
completely natural, based on Harrisons examination of the two small stone pieces and his visual
observations. Ball and Gifford also observed that no blocks on the formation rested squarely on
other blocks and that no regular prop stones were present under any of the large blocks. In essence,
they asserted that all of the blocks were either lying on bottom sand or on the solid limestonefoundation forming the seabed.
Another geologist, Eugene Shinn, who had worked a few years for the U.S. Geological
Surveys new field office in Miami (1978), published findings from 17 stone block cores he allegedly
made at the formation. Shinns later reports (McKusick & Shinn 1980; Shinn 2004) claimed that all
17 cores showed constant dip direction from one block to the next (1980) and that all 17 cores
tilted toward deep water (2004) essentially proving that the formation began as a single piece of
limestone that formed on an ancient beach. This type of limestone is commonly referred to as
beachrock, but according to Shinn (1978) the stone becomes as hard as iron.
2
Above: One of the piles of the columns that are located near the harbor entrance be-
tween the islands of North and South Bimini. They are located approximately a half-
mile from the far southern end of Proctors Road. Right: Close-up photos of several
cylinders. In 1971, Wyman Harrison determined that at least two of the columns were
fluted marble and samples from a few others showed that they were a form of cement.
Most skeptical reports assert that all the columns were cement ignoring the fluted marble
report. While Harrison asserted that they were dumped by modern ships, their origin is
unknown and they bear similarity to ancient columns. PhotosGreg Little, 2005.
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In the Mediterranean, beachrock was a common construction stone utilized in building
harbors (http://www2.rgzm.de/Navis2/Home/Frames.htm), but that fact is apparently either unknown
or ignored by the geologists. Few archaeologists and geologists apparently actually read Shinns
original 1978 article because the now-obscure journal, Sea Frontiers, is difficult to find. Instead,
skeptics cite Shinns later (1980; 2004) summaries of his 1978 work, which were published in
widely circulated journals. For example, Kenneth Feders popular archaeology textbook (2006)
asserts that the Bimini formation has been shown to the result of natural erosion processes, citing
only McKusick & Shinn (1980) and Harrison (1971). Feder, apparently, assumes the 1980 summary
of Shinns results originally published in 1978 was accurate.
While the idea that Harrison proved that the entire Bimini formation, comprised of thousands
of stones, was completely natural limestone from only two samples is a stretch, the coring result
from Shinn is the key to the beachrock explanation. Based on the findings of the expedition described
in this report, and also from an analysis of Shinns 2004 article, a careful examination of Shinns
actual 1978 results was made. As shall be fully documented in this article, Shinns actual 1978
results do not match what he and McKusick asserted in their 1980 article and also in later articles.
In fact, it can be statistically argued that what Shinn reported in 1978 actually supports the idea
that the Bimini Road is manmade.
Shinn alleged that a hoax was perpetrated at Bimini in his articles and Marshall McKusickpublished a later article inArchaeology relating that the Bimini hoax was perpetrated to increase
tourism at Bimini and to promote Edgar Cayce. McKusicks article was a major development in
academic archaeologys attack on what they termpseudoscience and cult archaeology. However, it
is now clear that Shinn and McKusick engaged in pseudoscience themselves by reporting a
completely misleading and inaccurate summary of results. That is, they changed the actual results
Shinn obtained. This presents an amazing twist to the entire affair. This was not an expected
development when the present project began and it took this writer by complete surprise.
The Natural Beachrock Hypothesis
To understand the geologists position on the Bimini formationthat it is a slab of natural
beachrock that fractured in placeits necessary to briefly describe how beachrock forms. Beachrock
forms rapidly in the Bahamas where constant wave motion and tidal flows push sand and small
pebbles onto the gradually rising beach. The water has a high concentration of carbonate material
in it some of which settles onto the sand and pebbles that are accumulating on the shore.
3
Left: Beachrock on the Bimini shore. Note
that the forming limestone is tipping toward
the water. Right: Close-up of a cut slab of
beachrock at Bimini. The stone is still used
for construction. The internal layering of the
stone is visible and the tilt toward the right
is toward the water. PhotosGreg Little.
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In the simplest of terms, the carbonate material chemically fuses with the sand and pebbles
creating a cemented stone that gets, as Shinn related in 1978, as hard as iron. The stone is actually
coarse limestone, but on a beach its commonly referred to as beachrock. Because the motion of the
waves pushes the sand and pebbles upward onto a beach line, the forming beachrock almost always
tilts toward the water. If the rock is cut, the interior of beachrock often shows a distinctive bedding
pattern of visible layers that tilt toward the deep water. Consistent internal bedding of the sand and
pebbles and the tilt of the internal layers toward deep water are the critical factors that are used to
determine if a beachrock formation is in its natural location or was moved. Shinns assertion that all
17 of his cores tilted toward deep water is the critical point in the geologists belief about the
Bimini formation, as Feder (2006) shows. Shinn speculated that the Bimini Road began as a massive
slab of beachrock that formed on a deep layer of sand that once extended above the surface. The
sand washed away, gradually settling the slab to the bottom. Over time, the slab fractured into
rectangular and square blocks resulting in the formation seen there today. If Shinns results actually
did show that all 17 cores dipped or tilted toward deep water, it would be a powerful argument that
the Bimini formation is completely natural. The assertion that there are no blocks set on top of each
other and that there are no regular prop stones under any blocks only serve to support the natural
beachrock idea, but these assertions are not even mentioned by Feder. The presence of multiple
tiers and prop stones would help prove that the formation had been altered. However, even if multipletiers and prop stones were present at the site, the issue of all 17 of Shinns cores dipping toward
deep water would still prevail. Later in this article it will be shown that all of the assertions made
by the skeptics (regarding Shinns core results, multiple tiers, and prop stones) are not true. In fact
the key component of the geologists claims, regarding the core results, constitutes what is by
definition a hoax.
Other Research on the Site
The Bimini formation has seen a host of other, well-qualified researchers examine portions
of the site. Dr. Dimitri Rebikoff, a famed marine engineer, retrieved micrite from the Bimini
formation (1979) noting its similarity to ancient Mediterranean harbors. Rebikoff also photographed
several prop stones under large blocks, but his evidence was ignored by the skeptics. Rebikoff
presented his findings at meetings where French archaeologists and geologists concurred with his
conclusion that the site was an ancient harbor. According to archaeologist Bill Donato, Zink (1976)
made 12 cores at Bimini utilizing a stable tripod and also found micrite in the stones. A neutron
activation analysis compared shore stone samples to cores from the formation. Results showed
fewer trace elements in the formations stones implying it was not in situ. Zink also photographed
multiple tiers at the site, but his evidence was dismissed or ignored by skeptics. In addition, ongoing
archaeological research has found numerous stone blocks at the site exhibiting mortises and tenons.
As far as is known, only three archaeologists have personally examined the site and all have the
4
Left: One of Zinks
1978 photos showing a
block squarely sitting
on top of another
block. Right: Area of
the Bimini Road that is
unusually uniform.
PhotoGreg Little.
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opinion that it is artifactual. One stone recovered from the site and later analyzed at the University
of Colorado was determined to have tool marks, deliberate shaping, functional wear, erosion features
similar to steps, was once in an area with a minimum of two seasons, and was exposed to surface
wave erosion (Donato, 2004).
May 2005 Results
In May 2005, a week long underwater and surface examination of the Bimini formation was
conducted with constant film documentation. Archaeologist William Donato, M. A. accompanied
Dr. Lora Little, Doris Van Auken, two dive operators at Bimini, and the author on the expedition.
Film was taken both on the surface, in water, and underwater.
Proctors Road Findings
In 1971, an obscurely known line of stones was reported about a half-mile closer to shore
from the Bimini Road. The discoverer, Stephen Proctor, named the site and reported that stone
circles, spaced at regular intervals, were present there. Proctors Road also was described as passing
directly across ancient shorelines (Richards, 1988) and strangely, it has been almost completelyignored.
Our May 2005 trip began with an aerial survey to identify the exact location of Proctors
Road. The area is not on any of the regular flight paths to the Bimini airport and appears to have
escaped the attention of nearly everyone. Surprisingly, the weather conditions were perfect, and all
of Proctors Road was clearly visible from an altitude of 500 feet. Using digital video and a zoom
lens, we were able to clearly identify five large stone circles in the shallow water as well as many
other partial circles.
Diving at the site the next day, we filmed the entire formation underwater as well as taking
numerous photos. What appear to be numerous ancient shorelines were clearly visible, and the
mile-long line of stones comprising the formation passed directly over many of these. We easily
found the stone circles, which were formed in two ways. Some of them consisted of large stone
blocks simply piled into a heap, forming a circle. The most curious circles consisted of large
Above left: Aerial photo of the Bimini formations taken from 6000 feet. PhotoARE. Above right: The red area
(A) is the main formation known as the Bimini Road. B (the blue line) is the shoreline when sea levels were 15-
feet below present level. C (yellow line) is Proctors Road. D (green line) is the shoreline when sea levels were 8
feet below present levels. E (light green) is the present Bimini shoreline.
5
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6
Left: Frame from aerial digital video
(utilizing a zoom lens) showing three
of the stone circles on Proctors Road.
The discoloration comes from reflec-
tions on the planes window. Bottom
left & center: Examples of the piles of
stone forming circles at Proctors Road.
Center & bottom right: Portions of large
circles formed by arrangements of
stone blocks. The blocks are all at least
a foot thick and are generally three to
four feet square. The areas between the
circles are generally covered by
smaller, flat white stones. Photos
Greg & Lora Little.
rectangular blocks arranged into a circle, where the middle of the circle was simply the seabed.
These were clearly anomalous. The circles are located at fairly spaced intervals and between them
thousands of small, flat stones cover the bottom. The large blocks forming the circles stand out in
stark contrast to the smaller stones on the bottom. Several other partial circles were found and
occasionally one of the large blocks sits among the smaller flat stones. Wedged under some of the
large blocks associated with the stone circles we found several eroded wooden beams and planks.
The dive operators, who have operated there for many years, were not aware of these formations
and were surprised by the discovery.
Associated with the stone circles we made a series of discoveries that we had not anticipated,
which took us some time to understand. We found at least eight stone anchors, varying from circular
stones with a large hole drilled in the middle to large, wedge-shaped anchors with multiple holes.
The anchors are identical to ancient Roman, Phoenician, Greek, and Egyptian anchors recovered at
numerous ancient Mediterranean harbors. All of these were left in place. Several large blocks
showed what appear to be mortise cuts and grooves.
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7
Above, left & center: Views of ancient
shorelines at Proctors Road. Above right:
Krista Brown of KnB EZ Dive examines
a wood plank under large block at Proctors
Road. Far right: Another wooden board
wedged under stones at Proctors Road.
Immediately right: Small, wedge shaped
stone anchor about 20 inches long in stone
circle at Proctors Road. PhotosGreg &
Lora Little.
Broken end
Right: Krista Brown marks large anchor at Proctors Road so GPS coor-
dinates can be taken. Bottom left: Large stone anchor showing multiple
holes with the narrow end broken off. Bottom center: One of several
wedge-shaped stone anchors at Proctors Road. It is approximately 2 feet
long. These are identical to Phoenician anchors recovered in the Mediter-
ranean, however, it is not asserted that they are Phoenician in origin.
Bottom right: Example of large circular anchor at Proctors Road. Pho-
tosGreg & Lora Little.
Unexpectedly, we also found several holes bored through large stone blocks on the far
southern end of Proctors Road. These appeared similar to some of the core holes we had seen on
the Bimini formation. In an email correspondence with Eugene Shinn (Little, 2005), he related that
any 4-inch cores that we found were his.
We have since discovered that several ancient Mediterranean harbors, especially one at
Cosa, Italy, utilized mooring circles, constructed by forming large circles of stone. These ship-
mooring areas were generally built outside of the main harbor area for ships that were only making
a brief stop or for those that were not allowed in the main harbor. Cosa had five of these and they
appear similar to the ones at Proctors Road.
Interestingly, at Cosa, the main harbor is formed by a 330-foot long breakwater that still
exists. On the Cosa breakwater, dozens of cylinders, virtually identical in appearance to those not
too far from the end of Proctors Road, have been found. The Cosa cylindersor columnsare of
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two types. They are either fluted marble or cementprecisely the same kind at Bimini that were
described by Harrison in 1971. Modern chemical analysis of the hydrated cement used by the
ancient Romans has shown that they used fires to heat limestone and added a host of other minerals
including sandy quartz from sandstone. In addition, ancient Greek cement has been extensively
analyzed (Efstathiades, 2000) and is surprisingly similar to modern cement. The presence of the
anomalous stone circles and the stone anchors are highly suggestive that the area served as a harbor
at some point in the past. The area is under about eight feet of water, less than half the depth of the
main Bimini formation. Thus, its possible use for mooring is probably more recent than the main
Bimini formation. The anchors, wood, stone circles, and the cement cylinders merit further analysis.
Bimini Road Findings
Over 14 hours of scuba diving was made by each of two divers (the present author and
archaeologist Bill Donato) to examine various portions of the Bimini Road and other areas. All of
these activities were continually videotaped by Dr. Lora Little while snorkeling on the surface.
Hundreds of photographs were also taken supplemented by bottom videotaping.
At least a dozen multiple tiers of stone blocks were easily found in direct contradiction to
the the claims of Harrison (1971) and Gifford & Ball (1980). Several of these were set squarelyon top of an underlying block, but the top blocks generally showed substantial erosion. These were
found primarily in an area of the formation that has a large amount of coral and plant growth.
Massive schools of fish were present in this area to such a degree that it was difficult to actually see
through the fish. Sharks are often present in this area of the formation, and it can be speculated that
the skeptics may have avoided this area or primarily viewed it from the surface. Bimini is an area
with numerous sharks and a Shark Lab is operated on the island.
Curiously, the multiple tiers of stone in this area cannot usually be discerned from the surface.
Indeed, all of the blocks usually appear to be resting on the sandy bottom. However, while scuba
diving on the bottom, these are very visible and were actually easy to find. In many places, it is
clear that large underlying stone blocks are present just under the sand that covers the bottom edges
of the blocks that are viewed from the surface. At other spots in this area, especially at the far
northern ends of the J, some blocks appear to be heaped on top of others in a haphazard, jumbled
manner. While some would argue this is the result of dumping, it also has the same appearance of
breakwaters where stone is simply piled and allowed to fall into place.
One intriguing set of blocks we found was three tiers high. The bottom block rested on a
large pile of rubble, which again, directly contradicts skeptics claims. The top block of the three
tiers showed a distinct U-shaped channel cut across its entire bottom. Groove marks were also
visible along the ends of this block. It is approximately 5-feet in length and nearly two feet thick.
8
Left: Stone with what
appears to be a mor-
tise cut at Proctors
Road. Right: The
side of a large block
at Proctors Road
showing what ap-
pears to be a large
groove cut. Photos
Greg & Lora Little.
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In addition, numerous cube-like prop stones were found under many blocks. This finding
also directly contradicts skeptics claims about the formation. Without external lights or a flash, its
impossible to see anything clearly under the blocks. It is reasonable to assume that the observations
made by Harrison and Gifford & Ball were primarily made from the surface or without the aid of
lights. Gifford ignored the question when it was later presented to him. We estimate that we looked
under less than 10 percent of the blocks on this end of the Bimini Road, but those that were not
covered by sand showed either prop stones or a far more intriguing leveling stone under them. In
addition, the presence of sand can certainly make it appear, from only a cursory look, that most of
the blocks are resting on the bottom.
Scattered around the entire site are numerous rectangular stones averaging about 3 feet in
length, by 2 feet in width, and 8-inches thick. Inspection of our video has shown several dozen of
these obviously cut, smoothed stones in various places. When these blocks were first encountered
during the 2005 expedition, they were intriguing, but we immediately realized there was no proof
where they came from or when they were placed there. In brief, the idea that they were dumped was
initially the most logical explanation. However, during the time we inspected under massive blocks,
we were astonished to find many of these rectangular slabs under the larger stones. In all these
cases, the massive blocks visible from the surface were literally resting on top of the smaller
rectangular slabs. In several cases, we found several of the rectangular slabs literally stacked on topof each other essentially leveling the massive block on top of them. There is no way that these slabs
9
Right: The Bimini Road from the air showing a fish
hook-like, inverted J-shape in the middle. The boat in
the photo is over 30-feet long, showing how the area
inside the J would have been large enough for a harbor
enclosure. The dark coloration surrounding the forma-
tion is primarily turtle grass. Below: an area of the
Bimini Road that I found intriguing. PhotoGreg Little.
Left: Surface video demonstrates how huge
schools of fish can obstruct the view from the sur-
face. The area shown has several multiple tiers of
blocks. Below: From the suface, it usually appears
that the blocks are resting on the bottom, how-
ever, many of them have had vast layers of sand
swept away by storms and hurricanes. Most of theexposed undersides of the blocks have prop stones
or rectangular slabs under them, apparently used
as leveling stones. PhotosLora Little.
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10
Below, right: The area showing many multiple tiers is filled with
huge schools of fish. Above, left: From the surface, when the fish
move away, it is sometimes possible to see stone blocks under the
large surface blocks.. Left, bottom: double-tiered blocks obscured
by fish. PhotosGreg Little, Lora Little, & Bill Donato.
could have been dumped from ships. It was one of the most important discoveries and it can be
asserted that it constitutes definitive proof that the hand of humans was involved in altering the
formation. To our knowledge, these rectangular blocks serving a leveling stones have never before
been reported. It took considerable effort to get under some of the stone blocks to access the underside.
A bottom surface search yielded several artifactual finds. A unique u-shaped mortise cut
into a 3-foot square stone was discovered. It is possible it could be natural, but a few ancient stone
anchors found in the Mediterranean are identical to it.
The view from the bottom (while diving) is very different from the surface view. The
simultaneous presence of both views enabled our team to discover several other important artifacts.
While snorkeling and filming from the surface, Lora Little saw a strange looking stone with a
plum-bob like shape. After gaining our attention while we were diving on the bottom, she directed
us to it. The stone, about 3-feet long, had a large hole bored through its middle. On both ends
groove marks were clearly discernable where a rope had been attached. The stone is identical to
several ancient Greek stone anchors that have been recovered at Thera. It was covered with a deep
layer of coral and carbonate crust on the exposed side and was found just to the outside of the main
J-shape, toward land. Lora also discovered another stone anchor within the main J-shaped formation.
It was a large circular stone about 4-feet in diameter with a large hole drilled through the middle.
Lora spent about 25 hours snorkeling over the formation, all the while videotaping and photographing.When necessary, she directed the boat to exact locations so GPS coordinates could be taken one
each find. All of these obviously archaeological artifacts were left in place.
One of the objectives of the expedition was to attempt to find a specific stone block that Bill
Donato photographed in 1998. Under this block, Donato found a wedge-shaped prop stone, but its
specific location wasnt noted back then. We did not find the specific stone Donato photographed in
1998 due to the presence of vast amounts of sand, but the search led us to brush sand from the sides
of several blocks.
As we began brushing sand from around one particular block, several smaller and unusual
stones became visible under a corner. As these stones were removed, more and more stones were
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11
Above: Various areas where multiple tiers are found. Since the skeptics claimed that not a single example of these exist
at Bimini, it is obvious that their claim is wrong. PhotosGreg Little, Lora Little, & Bill Donato.
Right: Triple tier of
blocks resting on
rubble. Note the in-
verted U-shaped
channel running
across the bottom of
the top block and the
cuts on the ends.
Bottom photos: Examples of
numerous prop stones found
under large blocks at the Bimini
Road. PhotosGreg Little &
Bill Donato.
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12
Below: Examples of what are obviously cut and polished rectangular slabs scattered around the Bimini Road. All of
them are about 8 inches thick and generally three feet long by two-feet wide. PhotosGreg Little & Bill Donato.
Below: One of many cube-like prop stones under massive blocks. There are many similar to this one. This is also one
that was found and reported by Rebikoff. PhotosGreg Little & Bill Donato.
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13
Above: This is probably the best photographic example we obtained of a cut and polished rectangular slab serving as a
leveling prop for a huge stone block. The underside of the surface block can be seen at the top of the photo. The huge
stone that is seen from the surface is resting on an angular, cut, smooth rectangular block identical to those scattered
around the sitethe stones some have claimed were dumped. Immediately under the large rectangular slab, portions
of two other rectangular slabs can be seen. This stack of stones serves to level the top block. Without using lights or a
flash, nothing can be seen in this areait is almost completely dark and difficult to access. PhotoGreg Little.
Left, top, bottom: Coral-coated rectangular slabs are seen underneathanother large block. The large block is not resting on the bottom, but is
on the slabsnote the light showing from the other side or the top block
in the left hand corner. Several areas show similar slabs haphazardly in
place. Bottom: Another underside of a different block can be seen in the
top of the photo. The block rests on a smoothed and cut rectangular
stone. PhotosGreg Little & Bill Donato.
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14
Left, top to bottom: Bill Donato measures the unusual square stone showing
a U-shaped cut to its middle; Close-up of the U-shaped stone; Broken artifact
found by Bill Donato showing a cut edge. PhotosGreg Little & Bill Donato.
Right top: Frame from surface video showing the unusual stone anchor found
at the Bimini Road. Bottom: Lora directed Greg to the anchor, and this frame
from surface video was taken just as Greg turned it over.PhotosLora Little.
visible. From under this block, over two-dozen black, cut stones were recovered. These varied in
size from irregularly shaped brick-like stones to highly angular triangular shapes. They appeared to
be granite and a group of geology students from an Ohio college performing a field practicum at
Bimini agreed the stones were probably granite. In the states, the stones were sent to two independent
commercial geology labs. An SEM with elemental X-ray analysis revealed that the stones lacked
one element to actually be granite. The stones were identified as contact metamorphic stones
(limestone and clay combined under heat and pressure) and fossilized limestone. In essence, they
are a type of gray marble. The stone is apparently indigenous to the Bahamas, but not to Bimini.
According to one of the labs, this type of stone was a highly desirable building material. The lab
believes that these stones were perhaps dumped ballast. An alternative is that they were discarded
because they were too small for construction. But because they were found under a large block, the
possibility they were dumped from a passing ship as ballast is improbable.
One other finding merits discussion. In his 1978 article, Shinn provided an illustration of
one area of the Bimini Road where he did about half of his cores. We searched the surface of the
stones at the Bimini site looking for all cores. Our efforts turned up no more than 10 cores on the
entire formation. But in the only location Shinn actually described and illustrated in his article, we
could not find a single core. Curiously, Shinns drawing of this area closely matches an illustration
that was included in David Zinks 1978 book, The Stones of Atlantis. Zink mentioned this areabecause he felt it was extremely important. It is possible that some of Shinns cores were deeply
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compacted with a dense sand, but even though we brushed sand off many of blocks we were unable
to find any of them. Curiously, some 4-inch cores at other places on the formation were easily
visible and quickly found.
The results of the May 2005 expedition point to the Bimini formation as once serving as an
ancient harbor. Stone anchors, quite dissimilar to historic-type anchors, are present at both the
Bimini Road and nearby Proctors Road. The main J-shaped formation appears to have been
constructed as a breakwater utilizing the same techniques that were used by Phoenicians and others
in the ancient Mediterranean. Harbors were often made at convenient shore locations where natural
beachrock had accumulated on sand bars and ridges that jutted into the water forming natural
harbor areas. Some beachrock slabs were cut and placed in areas that needed additional support.
Prop stones were placed under many large beachrock slabs to level the top of the breakwater. In key
15
Below left: Close-up photo of the unusual stone anchor. It is virtually identical to ancient Greek anchors found at
Thera. Note the rope grooves on the left end and also on the right end. Typically, large sticks were pushed through the
center hole and a rope was secured to the anchors ends and the stick. The stick was used to dig into a sandy bottom.
Below right: Round stone anchor found at Bimini Road. PhotosGreg Little & Lora Little.
Below: Photo of limestone wedge Bill Donato discovered under a stone
block at Bimini in 1998. PhotoBill Donato. Right top: Surface video
showing where the marble pieces were found. Below right: The upper
right hand corner of the photo shows the underside of the block where
the marble was removed. The marble is shown in the middle with shells
and other debris. PhotosGreg & Lora Little.
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areas, flat, rectangular slabs, called ashlar blocks, were placed on the top of the breakwater to form
unloading platforms. The rectangular slabs scattered across the Bimini site are identical to ashlar
blocks. In fact, several virtually identical J-shaped breakwaters, formed from beachrock, are at
Dor, Atlit, and several other harbors in the Mediterranean. At Bimini, the long double line of uniform
stones, located about 100 feet from the J-shape toward the present shore of Bimini, appears to have
been a quay, a paved cargo staging area that was constructed along the shoreline. The Phoenician
harbor at Atlit, has a similar quay still in existence.
Many of the first discoveries at Mediterranean harbors were stone anchors lying on the
bottom. Subsequent excavations into the silted harbor areas yielded maritime artifacts. Virtually all
of the ancient Mediterranean harbors were found with silted harbor areas. Due to annual hurricanes
that hit Bimini, small surface artifacts would have been covered or swept away. The area that would
have formed the harbor has an easily penetrated, silted, sandy bottom. No excavation has ever been
done there.
While skeptics have made much over the inaccurate fact that there are no multiple tiers of
stones at Bimini, the results from this report show that their assertions are untrue. There are numerous
double tiers of stones at Bimini. Only one of these is needed to invalidate their claim. The one
16
Below: Close-up video stills of two pieces of the marble removed from under a block at the Bimini Road. Because thestones were found tightly wedged under a block, essentially buried there, it is highly unlikely that they are ballast
dumped from a passing ship. Photos Lora Little.
Above: Surface video still showing two cores. These are depicted in
several of Shinns articles. Right: Closeups of these cores. Photos
Greg & Lora Little and Bill Donato.
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three-tiered formation we found shows what seems to be a silt-flushing channel cut across the
bottom of the top block. However, there is one other aspect to the ancient harbor theory that skeptics
have avoided mentioning. Many of the Mediterranean harbors had only one layer of stone blocks
forming a breakwater, for the simple reason that breakwaters were often built on the top of natural
ridges jutting into the water. One layer of stones was all that was often needed.
Information on Mediterranean harbors is easily accessible. The books History Under the
Sea, Under the Mediterranean, Man: 12,000 Years into the Past, Ships, Shoals and Amphoras,
Sunken History, Diving into the Past, and Phoenicians are only a few that contain relevant
information. The European Commission maintains a large and detailed website on research on
ancient Mediterranean harbors that includes the history of research at each as well as photos. It can
be accessed at: http://www2.rgzm.de/Navis2/Home/Frames.htm
The possibility that the Bimini formation was an ancient harbor is intriguing and
archaeologically problematic. The enclosure is similar in size, shape, and construction techniques
to harbors at Dor, Atlit, and many others (McKee, 1969). The stone circles at Bimini are similar to
those at Cosa, where similar marble and cement columns have also been found.
According to Shinn, carbon dates he reported on a few Bimini stones (ranging from 2000-
3000 B.P.) were done by bulk dating and are not reliable (Little, 2005; see final section); thus, the
formation date of the stones comprising the Bimini formation is actually unknown. In their 1980report, Gifford & Ball did report one Uranium-Thorium date obtained from a sample beachrock
core taken between several large blocks on the J-formation. That resulting date showed that the
stone formed about 15,000 B.P. This date doesnt allow any speculation, it only relates that the
limestone immediately under the Road formation probably formed around 15,000-years ago.
The main Bimini formation is under 15-20 feet of water while the stone circles are under
eight to ten feet. Current sea level estimates for the Bahamas (Faught & Carter, 1998) indicate that
modern sea levels were reached as early as 5000 B. C. and no later than 3000 B. C., implying that
the use of the Bimini formation as a harbor could have been somewhat earlier. But this is definitely
inconsistent with currently accepted archaeology timetables for the Bahamas. Nevertheless, the
main Bimini harbor, formed by what is commonly known as the Bimini Road, may have been
utilizedbefore 5000 B.C.the time when sea levels in the Bahamas were about 15-feet lower.
Faught & Carter have found that in 10,000 B.C., the Bahamas sea levels were no more than 90 to
110 feet lower than today.
17
Below: This is a photomosaic of three still images from digital video of a portion of the uniform row of stones running
parallel to the J-shape closer to the shore. The middle portion of the photo is distorted to make the images blend. The
row is straight and is identical to quays built along the shoreline at ancient Mediterranean harbors PhotoGreg Little.
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Above: Archaeological reconstruction artists conception of how the Bimini Road may have appeared when the sea
level was 15-feet lower than the current level. The features are scaled to the actual size of the Bimini Road, and show
the shoreline at the location where current depth charts of Bimini show 15 feet of water. The right hand side of the
illustration is to the South, and the curved J would have diverted strong currents from the Gulf Stream. However, a
small opening would have allowed flushing of silt from the harbor. The harbor area, enclosed by the J and the quay and
pier on the shoreline, is today covered by a deep layer of sand. The openings that have been noted at the Bimini Road
may well have served as boat slipways and mooring areas. At the time the shoreline would have abutted the line of
stones running along it, the area where the stone circles are currently located (Proctors Road), would have been on
land. Credit Dee Turman 2005. Reproduction, redistribution, or reuse by any means is prohibited by law without
authorization from the author.
18
Left: The Bimini Road does not rest
on a flat bottom as is sometimes as-
serted. All of the stone features, with
the exception of the double line of
uniform stones closer to the shore,
actually rest on elevated areas. This
is similar to many Mediterranean har-
bors, which took advantage of natu-
ral features that rose from the bottom
or jutted into the water. This enabled
breakwaters to easily be constructed
utilizing convenient beachrock lo-
cated nearby. This fact also meant
that many breakwaters needed only
one thick layer of stones. It is likely
that the area at the Bimini Road show-
ing multiple tiers needed additional
height to reach the needed level.
PhotoBill Donato.
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One complicating factor arises in recent findings off Floridas southern coastnot far from
the Bahamas. Geologists have found that in the past few thousand years, the sea bottom has increased
in height by 35-feet. This is due to carbonate sedimentation settling to the bottom forming a new,
progressively higher crust. The area of the harbor at the Bimini Road, shows a similar bottom
crust. Thus, the actual bottom and estimated timetable for use of the area as a harbor is problematical.
Finally, the stone circles at nearby Proctors Road bear further mention. Indications are that this set
of stone circles may have been utilized as mooring areas when the sea level was perhaps 7-8 feet
lower than today. This would have been sometime around 4-5000 B.C. While this scenario is certainly
speculative, it seems possible, based on the evidence, that the main Bimini harbor was utilized until
rising sea levels made it unusablecirca 5000 B.C. Then, the mooring circles were constructed
until they too became unusable by rising sea levels perhaps between 4000 to 3000 B.C. In fact, that
was the same time period when the Great Bahama Bank, stretching from Bimini to Andros 100-
miles away, was submerged by rising waters. For whatever reason, the maritime culture that utilized
Bimini as a port was abandoned and probably forgotten. Over the centuries of increasingly warm
weather, hurricanes increased in frequency and ferocity, and with the majority of the prior land
mass submerged under the rising seas, the area was completely abandoned by this unknown maritime
culture.
The Bimini Hoax
It should be mentioned that the Bimini skeptics have invested themselves into their assertions
about Bimini both professionally and also from an ego standpoint. In essence, they have maintained
a position on Bimini for nearly 35 years. All contradictions to their beliefs are probably perceived
as a direct threat to them professionally and psychologically. The long history of science has countless
examples of widely held beliefs that were proven wrong by research. But even in the face of
incontrovertible proof that these beliefs were wrong, many so-called scientists refused to accept the
new evidence. Most scientists are aware of such examples, and it is not necessary to detail any of
them.
What likely occurs in such situations is the employment of ego defense mechanisms that
are discussed in virtually every introductory psychology textbook. For example, ridicule is often
Below: This is another photomosaic of four still images from digital video of a portion of the uniform row of stones
running parallel to the J-shape closer to the shore. The combined photos were made relatively seamless by compuer
software. The row is straight and is identical to quays built along the shoreline at ancient Mediterranean harbors
PhotoGreg Little.
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employed as well as denial, rationalization, and projection. Eugene Shinn ridicules those who disagree
with his Bimini assertions by calling them true believers. He then asserts that true believers say
it was prehistoric archaeological site built by extraterrestrials from the Pleiades. This is explained
more fully later. In addition, rationalization has clearly occurred in the skeptics as will also be
demonstrated in this section. Rationalization is making up an acceptable excuse for something that
is inexcusable. Denial is also present. Behaviorally, a simple example of denial is when a person
closes his eyes and turns away when seeing something undesirable and then muttering the words,
this cant be true.
To summarize this brief introduction to what some will find an uncomfortable sequence of
facts, it must be stated that I have no expectation that any of the skeptics will actually change their
views or even consider any alternatives to their beliefs. In fact, what is expected is denial,
rationalization, and outright ridicule. But it appears necessary to reveal all of the following details
in order to lower the resistance of a group of scientists who need to pay attentionarchaeologists.
For obvious reasons, mainstream archaeologists have avoided Bimini as if it was infected
with a deadly virus. They have been convinced by reading others summaries of the early research
not by digesting the actual factsthat Bimini has to be nothing but natural beachrock and that a
harbor cannot be theretherefore it is not there.
Archaeologists who have a genuine sense of ethics and honor, and who have dismissedBimini based on what the geologists have written, are urged to obtain Eugene Shinns 1978 article
and actually read it. Compare the actual results in Shinns article to the 1980 report and his 2004
article. Then, understand that what has been asserted in the present article about Bimini is unrelated
to Atlantis, Cayce, or extraterrestrials from the Pleiades. Skeptics invoke emotion-laden, ridiculing
terms for reasonsone important one is that it keeps people from looking into what they have
actually done.
Shinns Sea Frontiers Article. Eugene Shinns original article was published in a now-
obscure journal called Sea Frontiers. It is difficult to find and is seemingly rarely read by skeptics
who have relied on Shinns later reports, which are more easily accessible. I assume this, because if
other geologists and archaeologists actually read all these reports, as they sometimes claim, the
discrepancies should be apparent.
Close inspection of Shinns original 1978 article revealed one serious discrepancy between
his actual findings, all of which were reported in 1978, and the later reports in 1980 and 2004.
Another, perhaps less serious discrepancy, is also present in the 1980 and 2004 articles. Again,
these facts are easily demonstrated by reading what Shinn actually wrote in 1978, 1980, and 2004.
The emphasis given to all the following bold and italicized sentences has been addedto ensure
that the critical assertions are noticeable.
In his 1978 article, Shinn explained that he did two separate sets of cores at two different
sites on the Bimini Road. He wrote, The purpose of this was to determine if the bedding in all the
blocks dips uniformly toward the sea (to the west of Bimini). If it does, then it is highly unlikelythat the blocks had ever been transported.
One area on the site had 8 cores performed and the other area had 9.He actually reported
that at the site with eight cores, no internal stratano dippingwas visible or present. He wrote:
Beach bedding was not readily visible in these cores because large pebbles prevent bedding
formation. Shinn still concluded the stones had all once been joined as a single stone because he
claimed he could trace the pebblesnot because of the tilt, which was the focus of the research.
In his results on the area with 9 cores, Shinn simply reported that many of these nine
cores were horizontal while the others dipped toward deep water. The two sentences Shinn used to
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describe his findings on these 9 cores was: Bedding in all the cores from this area was either
horizontal or dipping predominantly toward the sea. No blocks were found that dipped
predominantly away from the sea or parallel to the shore.
Shinns results did notreport that none of the blocks dipped toward the shore (away from
the sea), they relate none of them dippedpredominantly toward shore, implying something else. He
describes them as horizontalmeaning level with no dip present. I do know what he meant when
he stated that no blocks ... dipped ... parallel to the shore.
He strangely reported no actual numbers on how many of these 9 cores were horizontal
versus dipping toward sea or land. The fact that the journal would publish the paper without
having any actual numbers cited in the results is puzzling. But because Shinn specifically wrote
that many of the set of 9 cores were horizontal and not dipping, its reasonable to assume that
more than half of them were so. And it is also likely, based on Shinns descriptions, that some of
them had some tilt toward land, though not what he describes aspredominantly.
Summary of Shinns Core Findings. In sum, of Shinns 17 cores, he reported that 8 showed
no internal bedding planes and no dip. Of the other 9, a reasonable guess is that at least 5 were
horizontal. Thus, it is likely that at least 13 of 17 cores (or 76.5 percent) showed no dip toward
deep water while 23.5 percent or less actually dipped toward deep water.
In his discussion, Shinn wrote, The horizontal bedding seen in many of these cores probablyonce dipped toward sea. Of course, the way that sentence is written, it is probably correct. More
specifically, beachrock nearly always tilts toward deep water when it forms on the beach. But if the
blocks are moved, the tilt becomes more variableif any tilt is seen at all. In fact, if a flat, level
formation were under construction, most of the blocks would show no tilt at allthey would be
horizontal.
The 1980 Nature Article. As related at the beginning of this paper, the Bimini article that
influences archaeologists the most is the 1980 Nature article Shinn published with Marshall
McKusick only two years after the Sea Frontiers article came out. McKusick is, of course, held in
high esteem in the archaeological community. Thus, it is probably unlikely that the vast majority of
archaeologists will have any desire to become aware that the key finding McKusick and Shinn
reported in the 1980 article was essentially untrue. It is not just a case of a scientific field protecting
one of its own. It involves denial because the implications are unpleasant. It is similar to closing
ones eyes and looking away, muttering, It cant be, therefore it isnt. This internal psychological
trick that we play on ourselves serves as a rationalizationan acceptable reasonthat allows us to
look away and ignore something that morally and ethically we know shouldnt be ignored.
In the 1980Nature article, the only new data that was reported were a few carbon dates,
which are addressed later. The major point in the article was the summary of what Shinn found in
1978. Here is the exact quote fromNature (1980) that resummarizes Shinns 1978 findings (those
detailed on the prior page): Two areas of the formation were studied, and both show slope and
uniform particle size, bedding planes and constant dip direction from one block to the next. (p.
287)That single sentence in the article is the foundation of Shinn and McKussicks natural
beachrock hypothesis. The bulk of the article is devoted to ridiculing those who disagree with the
conclusion and mounting an attack on psychic and cult archaeology. It should be very clear that the
1980 summary of Shinns 1978 results dont match what he actually reported in 1978.
In Shinns 1978 results, less than 25 percent of the cores dipped toward deep water. The
others were horizontal or showed no slope at all. There was no constant dip direction from one
block to the next. Nor did all the cores show a uniform slope. Attempting to determine
precisely why the actual 1978 results were altered to such a degree that the 1980 summary was a
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complete misrepresentationa hoax is not as easy as it might seem. Surely McKusick read
Shinns 1978 article? And Shinn certainly had to be cognizant that there was a major difference in
what he wrote in 1978 and what he wrote in 1980?
2004 Skeptical Inquirer Article. In a 2004 article in the Skeptical Inquirer, Shinn related a
much shorter false assertion about his 17 cores writing: all the cores dipped toward deep water,
and said the stones could be traced from one stone to the next, essentially proving it was once a
single slab of natural beachrock. Shinn has also made the same assertion in newspaper interviews
over the past years. The 1980 article, published inNature, is the most cited skeptical report on the
Bimini formation, and the 2004 Skeptical Inquirerarticle has been widely disseminated. Yet it is
apparent that what Shinn actually found at Bimini and what he has since reported, are fundamentally
different. Such an alteration of results is, at the least, considered pseudoscience.
Its interesting to consider that archaeologists often bemoan the fact that cult archaeologists
who make fantastic claims often have no sense of ethics or scientific honesty. But during the past
25 years, not one single archaeologistor geologist for that matterhas apparently noted that
what Shinn reported in 1978 is very different from what he claimed in 1980 with McKusick.
Like most archaeologists apparently, I had not read Shinns 1978 article because I could not
find a copy. I relied on the 1980 report with McKusick and trusted that what was reported was the
truth. The primary reason that Shinns 1978 results were so closely inspected was because aninordinately large number of factual errors were present in his 2004 Skeptical Inquirerarticle.
Many names were misspelled, he related that Plato stated that Atlantis was a 7,000-year old story,
stated that the Bimini Road was discovered in the early 1960s, and had a completely inaccurate
account of how the psychic Edgar Cayce linked Bimini to Atlantis. In addition, Shinn dismissed
Dimitri Rebikoff, a famous marine engineer with a Ph.D. from the Sorbonne in France, as a New
Ager and stated that true believers say it was built by extraterrestrials from the Pleiades. All of
these fundamental errors and ridicule raised a host of red flags and made me want to read what
Shinn actually reported in 1978. In May of 2005, after returning from the trip to Bimini, we obtained
a copy of the article in the University of Florida library. After reading it, I began a series of email
exchanges with Shinn.
Shinns Qualifications as a Geologist. One of the major things that we (our group) were
curious about, was Shinns actual qualifications as a geologist. Surprisingly, the Sea Frontiers
article related that Shinn had only a bachelors degree in biologynot geology. After working for
oil companies for a few years after he graduated with his bachelors, he went to work for a new and
small field office in Miami for the U. S. Geological Survey.
I then contacted Shinn via email. Shinn agreed that his responses could be used in a
documentary we were making as well as for other purposes. His responses came from his official
government U. S Geological Survey email address, a branch of the U. S. Department of the Interior.
U. S. Department of Interior policies state that all employee emails that are not official statements
from the U. S. Geological Survey must have a disclaimer in them that states the email is only the
opinion of the individual and is not an official position statement from the USGS. None of Shinnsemails contained any disclaimers, nor did the emails that he also sent to a newspaper reporter in
response to some of my uncomfortable questions and earlier articles. In addition, Shinn sent me
some details of a talk he was scheduled to do on his Bimini research and mystics in October that
listed him as representing the USGS. Thus, Shinns emails appear to be an official position of the
USGS.
Asking Shinn about his education, it was clear that until 1998 he only had a bachelors
degree in biology. In response to a question, he related, I received a PH.D in Earth Sciences from
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The University of South Florida in 1998 based on my 150 some odd scientific publications. (Its the
real thing) Gene.
I found that odd, especially the statement that Its real thing. While readers can conclude
what ever they want about Shinns assertion, it was received when Shinn was about age 65. But
the findings that mattered were apparent. Shinn had only a bachelors degree until 1998, and it
wasnt in geology. The fields have similarities, but they are not the same major.
Shinns Response to Misspellings & Factual Errors. When I inquired about his many
misspellings and other factual errors, Shinns exact reply was this: Im not a verry good speller.
Indeed. In response to another question, Shinn claimed that he got the information on Edgar Cayce
from a pamphlet published by the Cayce organization (the ARE). In his article Shinn claimed that
Cayce asked a patient where Atlantis was and the patient told Cayce Atlantis was in the Bahamas
at Bimini. It is an untrue statement and the Cayce organization has never published anything
stating that. Of course, Shinn didnt remember the title of the pamphlet nor does he now have it.
I also asked Shinn why he stated that Plato related the Atlantis story was only 7000-years
old in both his 1978 and 2004 articles. His reply indicated his level of knowledge on the subject.
He asked me what Plato really said? He also admitted that he was not aware of any ancient
Mediterranean harbors, ancient harbors in the Americas, or effigy mounds.
Bimini has several land formations that, from the air, are identical in appearance to many ofNorth Americas effigy mounds. The Bimini mounds have not been validated, but they havent
been shown to be natural, either. I have no assertions whatsoever about them and did not visit them.
In his 2004 article, Shinn asserted that because the alleged mounds can be seen from the air, true
believers say it was prehistoric archaeological site built by extraterrestrials from the Pleiades.
That is another odd and inaccurate wide-sweeping claim. Dr. David Zink, whom Shinn refers to as
Edward Zink, received funding from the ARE for several years prior to the publication of his
1978 book, The Stones of Atlantis. In that book, Zink utilized a psychic to attempt to garner
information about the Bimini Road. The psychic related that visitors from the Pleiades constructed
the formation. After publication of Zinks book with the unfortunate Pleiades assertion in it, ARE
funding ceased. In truth, I am not aware of any believers in the Bimini Road who believe what
Zink stated, nor am I aware of any ARE members who make that assertion. But the Pleiades idea
Zink put forth was made was about the Road sitenot the moundsand it is Zinks idea alone.
Below: Skeptics have asserted that the only evidence the proponents of the Bimini Road cite is the regularity of the
stones. In truth, that has not been the case. It is true that many areas of the formation do show regularity, but, as has been
presented in this report, regularity is not the important issue. PhotosGreg Little.
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After I related details about effigy moundsand even the fact that the US Park Service
maintains a National Park with many effigy moundsShinn was skeptical about them. He also
implied that he thought many of the Mediterranean harbors I told him about, constructed from
beachrock, were probably natural. I found that especially interesting, because Shinn admitted that
he really knew nothing about any ancient harborshe did not even apparently know that any
existed.
For those interested, a 1000-foot long beachrock breakwater, thoroughly investigated by
archaeologists, is still in existence just off the coast of Yucatan at Isla Cerritos. We visited the island
in 2004 and filmed the entire breakwater underwater. It is linked to the Maya and is thought to have
been the main port for Chichen Itza. In 1984-85, a team of archaeologists excavated trade artifacts
from the island, which were shown to come from Florida, Cuba, the Bahamas, the Guatemalan
Highlands, and areas in Central America. The site dates to at least 400 B.C. and the small island
was covered with 29 buildings and structures. Curiously, the manner of construction of the unusual
breakwater is identical to a harbor in the Mediterranean. Large slabs of beachrock were stuck
vertically into the bottom forming a curving parallel set of two rows of stones creating an enclosure.
The enclosure was then filled with small stones and rubble. The top of the breakwater was then
covered with flat slabs of stone to create a long platform extending above the water. The breakwater
had several entrances that had movable barriers. Perishable structures believed to be guart towersor lighthouses were built on the side of the main entrance. The island has restricted access because
so many artifacts and huge beachrock slabs have been looted. Many of the looted slabs are in use at
modern port facilities near Cerritos.
Strangely, Shinn wrote that there has long been an aura of suspicion between geologists
and archaeologists. He then gave an example how archaeologists will make silly future mistakes
interpreting ruins and artifacts that are really completely natural. I found his assertions bizarre.
Researchers who have worked in the Mediterranean at the ancient harbors have included both
geologists and archaeologists. It may be that Shinns assertion is valid in the United States, but
what he seemed to be saying in round about way is that only geologists are qualified to make
genuine archaeological interpretations. As that idea pertains to Bimini,it does appear that
archaeologists have accepted, without question, the assertions of a few geologists.
In an overall response to my questions about his factual errors and misspellings, Shinn
simply replied that they were irrelevant.
Shinns Responses to the Discrepancy in His Results. One of the most interesting exchanges
was when I asked Shinn about what he published in 1978, using exact quotes from his article. It is
important to keep in mind that in his 1980 and 2004 articles Shinn essentially asserted that all the
cores consistently dipped toward deep water. I wrote, In your initial article (regarding the
northern site) you wrote that Beach bedding was not readily visible in these (8) cores.
His reply was befuddling: You can not see bedding/layers in a core only 4 inches in
diameter. That was more than confusing. All of Shinns cores were 4-inch cores. If you cant see
bedding in 4-inch cores, why did he do them, and how did he then discern bedding in the other 9cores? He never addressed this issue, nor did he specifically address why his 1980 and 2004 articles
related that all 17 cores showed an internal strata dipping toward deep water.
Then I asked him about the 9 cores from what he called the southern site. I related that in
his 1978 article he stated that, Bedding in all the cores from this area was either horizontal or
dipping predominantly toward the sea. How could he then say that they all dipped toward deep
water?
His reply was evasive: the critical point was that none dipped toward land. But that was
not what he asserted in 1980 or 2004. In fact, a careful reading of his 1978 article suggests some of
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his cores did dip to the shore, but not predominantly so. Shinns critical point was a rationalization
that doesnt explain why he changed his results to all the cores dipped toward deep water.
Directly addressing the discrepancy between his actual 1978 results and what he wrote in
1980 with McKusick, I asked how his 1978 results changed to: Two areas of the formation were
studied, and both show slope and uniform particle size, bedding planes and constant dip direction
from one block to the next.
Shinn replied, You are very astute to note that statement. I should have said only at the
south site. But even at Shinns south site, as mentioned in a prior paragraph, less than half of his
cores actually dipped toward deep water. His south site assertion wasnt true, either.
Then I asked about the inaccurate results and misleading statements he made in theSkeptical
Inquirerarticle wherein he wrote, Sure enough, all the cores showed consistent dipping of
strata toward the deep water...
He replied, It had been almost 30 years since the first study when I wrote the Skeptical
Inquirerarticle. I suppose I could have been a little more precise. Shinns admission that he
should be a little more precise is a rationalization. It creates an acceptable excuse for him that
says he was only a little imprecise. But the alteration of his resultsgoing from less than 25
percent of his cores showing a dip to 100 percent of them showed a dipisnt imprecise. It is
misleading and inaccurate and fundamentally altered what he actually found. And a poor memoryprobably wasnt the cause. The same inaccurate claims were made in the 1980 article, written only
two years after his initial article.
The Second DiscrepancyThe Marble Columns. In 1978, Shinn briefy discussed the columns
at Bimini, investigated earlier by Harrison writing that they turned out to be cement barrels... He
described the two marble pillars Harrison found as lengths of marble... but Harrison implied they
were essentialy the same size and shape as the cement cylinders.
In McKusick and Shinns 1980Nature article, they began by describing Harrisons 1971
observations about Bimini. When summarizing the cylinders Harrison investigated, they stated,
some submarine structures described as pillars were hardened concrete originally stored in wooden
barrels and dumped overboard in recent times at the harbor entrance. They didnt mention that
marble columns were also found and reported by Harrison, and the assertion that they were dumped
overboard in recent times is totally speculative. In McKusicks 1984 article discussing Bimini, all
he wrote about the cylinders was, temple pillars are merely hardened cement in discarded barrels.
In Shinns 2004 article, he wrote, (Harrison) showed that so-called columns on a site about two
miles from the stones were made of Portland cement.
Nowhere in Harrisons 1971 article does he state the cement was determined to be Portland
cement, nor was it even suggested. Shinn has either badly and sloppily misread Harrisons report or
did something worse. In addition, none of the three articles after 1978 mention the fact that Harrison
reported that two marble cylinders or pillarswith fluting, were also found with the cement
ones. The omission of the marble cylinders in these articles has apparently led to acceptance by the
archaeological communityas factthat all of the cylinders were cement. Proof of this is found inFeders (2006) archaeology textbook. Feder writes: Analysis of the so-called columns shows that
they are simply hardened concrete of a variety manufactured after A.D. 1800. Strangely, Feder
references only Harrisons article for this false and misleading assertion. There are several possible
explanations for this, but only Feder knows how he came to that conclusion.
Shinns Carbon Dates From Bimini. Another area of interest was the carbon dating Shinn
and McKusick reported from several stone blocks allegedly cored on the Road. All of Shinns
articles cite carbon dates ranging from about 2000 to 3000 years ago. Thus, Shinn asserts that the
stones could not have possibly been related to Platos Atlantis, whether its the 9000 year old Atlantis
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Plato actually discussed or the non-existent 7000-year old Plato story Shinn references. I mentioned
to Shinn that I was not asserting the site was related to Atlantis nor did I know its age. I then wrote
to Shinn stating Id read a recentMarine Geology article about Florida beachrock, which stated that
carbon dating of beachrock using whats called a bulk dating methodwas unreliable because of
contamination from recent carbonate material. Shinn wanted to know who wrote the article and
where it was published.
Strangely, when I first found this article I was befuddled by one of the authors names. It
was Eugene Shinnu. Shinnu had the same snail mail USGS address and title as Eugene Shinn. The
article had direct implications on the reliability of the Bimini carbon dating Shinn performed, but
Bimini wasnt mentioned in it. The article clearly reported that utilizing the bulk carbon dating
method on beachrock tended to result in dates that are often too recent. The method was described
as unreliable in the article. This is due to the constant contamination created by carbonate in the
seawater. It was obvious that Shinn was one of the authors, but how or why his last name had a
different spelling is unclear (Spurgeon, Davis, & Shinnu, 2003).
I sent Shinn the reply just stating that he was one of the authors of it. He explained how the
study took place and even mentioned that hes found that natural beachrock sometimes actually
tilts toward land. He admitted, you are right, dating of beachrock is not very precise especially if
it is a bulk sample. The dates listed in the nature article were bulk dates done at a later date by astudent learning the carbon 14 method.
Not one of Shinns articles on the Bimini Road cites any limitations on the reliability of his
bulk carbon dating, and the fact that a student learning the method did the carbon dating is certainly
important. In truth, it appears none of the carbon dates he took at Bimini appear to be reliable.
Shinns Final Explanation Attempt. In an attempt to explain the major discrepancies and
inaccurate statements in his professional articles, Shinn wrote: You must realize that because of all
the craziness surrounding the Bimini site and the unusual people, it was hard to take the exercise
with the same seriousness we would have employed with our regular research. We did it for fun.
There was not the peer review usually associated with our real jobs. The details you have pointed
out are evidence of minimal peer review. I got a little carried away to make a good story ...
So there is Shinns explanation. Shinn says his peers and the journalsNature and the Skeptical
Inquirerare responsible for all the mistakes and errors he made as well as whatever you wish to call
the alteration of his results. He got carried away, but no one called him on it. Nor have any
archaeologists apparently ever questioned Marshall McKusicks role in this. It is hard to believe
that other scientists have not noted this discrepancy before.
All in all, it was an amazing exchange with Eugene Shinn in his official capacity with the
USGS. In essence, what Shinn actually found in his cores found is simple. In his 17 cores, Shinn
found perhaps four ( 23.5 percent) that dipped toward deep water. The remaining 76.5 percent of
his cores showed no dipping at all.
There are three possible outcomes in the internal strata of the cores:1) a dip to deep water;
2) a dip toward land; 3) no dipping present or visible. Thus, by chance alone, one would expect tofind about 33.3 percent that dipped to the deep water. Shinns reported outcome was actually less
than what would be expected by chance. Those of you with a statistical background should understand
the implications of this. And in the 1978 and 1980 articles, the decision between the two explanative
alternatives for the Bimini Roadnatural versus manmadewas stated to be determined by the
outcome of the dip shown in the cores. As related previously, Shinn wrote in 1978 that The
purpose of this (the coring) was to determine if the bedding in all the blocks dips uniformly to
the sea (to the west of Bimini). Shinns core results showed that the vast majority of the stones
did not dip toward the sea. This fact actually argues for the artifactual nature of the formation.
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Shinn presents one additional finding that he believes supports his conclusions, and while
it was previously discussed, merits mention again. He asserts that he could trace small and large
pebbles in the stones from one to another, but the descriptions he presented are not adequate and are
at variance with his core results. His conclusion from the pebblesthat the stones were formed in
roughly the same areashas nothing to do with the primary issue about the dipping of the Bimini
Road stones or the hoax. They also rely upon his actual expertise in 1976-7 and the degree to which
others are willing to trust his assertions. In essence, it is concluded that Shinns research on the
cores and the pebbles he allegedly took from 17 beachrock stones demonstrated that 17 of the
stones comprising the Bimini formation are actually beachrock stones. His findings also indicated,
based on the criteria he specified, that the site was artifactualnot natural.
Conclusion
Normally, such details and minute examination of others work would not be offered in a
report on an expedition. But as skeptics are quick to say,extraordinary claims require extraordinary
proof.That, in essence, is why the unpleasant details are provided herein. The Bimini Road has
been one of the most controversial issues to ever be addressed by archaeologists attempting to
counter what they have described as fantastic claims. If the skeptics claims were not directlyexamined, no matter what was uncovered at Bimini, mainstream archaeologists would assert that
McKusick and Shinn proved the formation was a single piece of natural beachrock. But what has
been asserted about the Bimini formation in this article is not fantastic at all. It is certainly unusual
and it goes against what mainstream archaeology believes and wants to believe. There certainly
have been fantastic claims made about the site, and those can probably be blamed for the site
becoming a pariah. But those who carefully consider the evidence presented herein, and who also
discern the truth about the claims made by skeptics, will probably come to the conclusion that the
most fantastic thing about this entire affair is how the archaeological and geological community
have let a hoax continue for so longseemingly even actively supporting it.
According to Websters Collegiate Dictionary (1996), a hoax (verb) is: to trick into believing
or accepting as genuine something false. TheDictionary defines the noun hoax as: an act intended
to trick or dupe; something accepted or established by fraud or fabrication. According to the National
Academies of Science (1995) definition of falsification established in a section titled, Misconduct
in Science, it is the changing or misreporting of data or results. Since the reports by McKusick
and Shinn contained completely inaccurate summaries of what Shinn actually found, and science
accepts their conclusion based on the inaccurate summaries as fact, the conclusion should be obvious.
Kenneth Feder, for example, has accepted the inaccurate statements, and the idea that all the cores
at Bimini had the same tilt to deep water has been accepted by the scientific communityto the
extent that it is incorporated in textbooks and formal archaeological training. So too is the idea that
all the cylinders, pillars, or columns at Bimini are cement.
Clearly, false reporting of previously published data has taken place in the Bimini affair.And by definition, a hoax has taken place, because certain untrue statements have been accepted as
factual based on the false reports.
In truth, I was initially somewhat understanding of what Shinn and McKusick could have
reasoned when they wrote their inaccurate 1980 report. It is certain that both Shinn and McKusick
fully believed that the Bimini Road was natural, although McKusick apparently never went there to
look. Shinns 1978 results did not support the conclusion that was asserted and that should now be
obvious to all readers. I wont speculate on how and why the results were falsified.
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The same idea can be said for the omission about the marble pillars in the articles. The
presence of the marble pillars was a complication, especially since Harrison asserted that they did
not come from the Bahamas nor probably even from the United States. Mentioning that marble
pillars from some unknown location were also there would make the results less than unequivocal.
So after Shinns 1978 report, the marble columns were simply dropped from all discussions and
the false and misleading assertion that the cylinders were cementstrangely Portland cement
were made and acccepted.
Of course, making their assertions more unequivocal required entering a realm of scientific
inquiry known aspseudoscience. Stephen Williams archaeology textbook,Fantastic Archaeology
(1991), defined a person who engages in pseudoscience as a crank. He adapts the definition from
Martin Gardners definition of a man persisting in advancing views that are contradicted by all
available evidence. But it is also likely (see below) that those who engage in pseudoscience, and
those who support its conclusions, really dont see anything wrong with it. And the most important
thing is that it has worked in this case. Archaeology students are still formally taught that McKusick
and Shinn demonstrated that the Bimini site was just the result of natural erosion processes shown
by the totally consistent coring results. Archaeology students are also taught that all the pillars
found at Bimini were cement. They are also taught that the cement cylinders were manufactured
after 1800, but thats a mere speculation presented as a textbook related fact. Contradictory claimsare typically ridiculed as pseudoscience, cult archaeology, psychic archaeology, and baseless fantastic
claims.
In an article entitled, Scientific fraud and the power structure of science (Martin, 1992),
it is related that, Probe a bit more deeply into scientific activities, and you will find that fraud is
neither clear-cut nor rare. Martin asserts that the social definition of fraud is one which is convenient
to most of the power groups associated with science. Martin defines fraud as deceit, trickery, or
the perversion of truth. He sadly adds that for the most part they are tolerated or treated as standard
practice. The reaction to fraud depends upon who is damaged or attacked by the conclusions.
Those who speak out about against dominant interests come under severe attack. Thus, the
prevailing view of a given issue within a particular scientific discipline, and the perceived importance
of the issue, determines the response. Whistle-blowers he asserts, are often subjected to severe
damage even when what they have asserted is true. On the other hand, scientific fraud that supports
the established view is often tolerated.
I invite those who have an interest to verify the facts detailed herein. I realize that
archaeologists and geologists may not appreciate or like the truth. While Williams textbook (1991)
contains factual errors, he does have several important issues he raises. One of the most important
is this. He asks, So what and whom do you believe, and why?
As I perceive the state of ethics of American archaeologists and the support in scientific
disciplines for their own , it is not expected that much will change in this. The sad part of it doesnt
relate in any way to Edgar Cayce, Atlantis, or any fantastic claims. Such claims will undoubtedly
continue to be made whether archaeologists like it or not. What has been discovered about theancient past in the Americas since 1997 has almost completely altered the history that had been
accepted since the 1930s. The discoveries from 1997 to the present have created turmoil within
archaeology. Clovis-first has crumbled. Mitochondrial DNA results have made shambles out of
cherished beliefs held for over 70 years. South American discoveries have pushed civilization back
in time in the Americas. But given what is now known, it is not at all unreasonable to hypothesize
that a maritime culture was in the Bahamas five or six thousand years ago. An 11,000-year old
maritime culture has been verified on the coast of Ecuador and South America certainly had some
sort of maritime movements on its coasts in truly ancient times. The idea that the Bahamas had a
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now-forgotten maritime culture using its shores isnt far-fetched. Of course, it can be said that,
perhaps up until now, there is no evidence of it. And thats the real point here. The truth is that
largely because of the Bimini hoax affair, no one with adequate credentials has looked. I admit
Im not an archaeologist, but I am a social scientist. But William Donato does have archaeological
credentials and so did Dr. Dimitri Rebikoff.
There is no indication that the Bahamas maritime culture built huge advanced cities anywhere
and such an idea isnt proposed here. But there is highly suggestive evidencewhich some educated
people will accept as definitivepointing to a maritime culture present at Bimini in ancient times.
That evidence has been presented here, and the coordinates of all the underwater features, film and
photo documentation, are available.
Note: A 73-minute DVD documentary of the Bimini expedition, including the interactions and investigations
of Shinn, has been produced. The documentary contains video footage of the discovery of Proctors Road, the stone
circles, the anchors, the anchors on the Bimini Road, the multiple tiers, prop stones, various artifacts, and the discovery
of the gray marble under a large block. It also contains footage from Isla Cerritos and Andros. The documentary is
titled, The Ancient Bimini Harbor: Uncovering the Great Bimini Hoax and is available from Amazon and AUP (815-
253-6390).
References
DONATO, W. 2004. TOA News December: 18-30.
FAUGHT, M. & CARTER, B. 1998. Early human occupation and environmental change in northwestern Florida. QuaternaryInternational49/50: 167-176.
FEDER, K. L. 2006. Frauds, Myths, and Mysteries: Science and pseudoscience in archaeology (Fifth Edition). McGraw-Hill:NY.
GIFFORD, J. & BALL, M. 1980. Investigation of submerged beachrock deposits off Bimini, Bahamas. National GeographicSociety Research Reports 12: 21-38.
HARRISON, W. 1971. Atlantis undiscoveredBimini, Bahamas.Nature 230: 287-9.
LITTLE, G. June 2005. Personal communications with E. Shinn.
LITTLE, G. & LITTLE, L. 2003. The AREs Search for Atlantis. Eagle Wing Books, Inc.: Memphis, TN.
MARTIN, B. 1992. Scientific fraud and the power structure of science.Prometheus 10 (1): 83-98.
McKEE, A. 1969.History under the sea. Dutton: NY.
McKUSICK, M. 1984. Psychic archaeology from Atlantis to Oz.Archaeology Sept./Oct: 48-52.
McKUSICK, M. & SHINN, E. 1980. Bahamian Atlantis