Archive for the ‘ Triangle ’ Category

Online Archaeology

I’m sure you’ve heard of “armchair quarterbacks” but what about “online archaeologists?” National Geographic and a team of explorers led by Dr. Albert Lin are conducting a noninvasive survey in the region of the lost tomb of Genghis Khan in Mongolia. And they’ve asked YOU to join their team!

Lin’s project is groundbreaking, because they never break ground. He uses noninvasive computer based technologies to gather, synthesize, and visualize data without disturbing a blade of grass and that’s where you come in. By visiting the website hosted by NatGeo at

 http://exploration.nationalgeographic.com/mongolia/home

you can sign up to tag clues and artifacts on satellite images. Your discoveries are transmitted in real-time to the team on the ground in Mongolia and they physically visit the most promising finds. Once onsite, they use modern digital tools from a variety of disciplines, including nondestructive surveying, ground-penetrating radar and on-site digital archaeology. The goal of the search is to identify archaeological sites without disturbing them–in the area of Mongolia’s most sacred heritage–Genghis Khan’s homeland.

If you’ve read my novels or follow my blog, you know that satellite imagery is becoming an important tool in many areas of research, including underwater archaeology. One of the “pioneers” in this field is Angela Micol, of Satellite Discoveries, and she has recently teamed up with our friend William M. (Bill) Donato and his APEX Institute to continue the amazing research taking place off the coast of Bimini, less than 60 miles from Miami Beach. Here, Donato and others have discovered conclusive, physical evidence of an advanced maritime culture that existed in the “new world” more than 12,000 years ago!

Fact meets Fiction (again!)

If you follow my archaeology blog at http://www.TheMegaBlog.com you’ll know that I just posted some very exciting news about recent discoveries near the Bimini Islands in the Bahamas. If you don’t follow my blog, here’s the news in a nutshell: Physical evidence now confirms that a previously unknown advanced maritime culture existed in the Bahamas at least 12,000 years ago!

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The underwater research is being carried out by Dr. Greg Little and associates and it’s based on the pioneering side-scan sonar work of William M. Donato.  In Dr. Little’s most recent paper on the investigations (Alternate Perceptions, Issue # 149) he makes a first-time-ever connection between the ruins he’s examined near Bimini  and those reported at a site known as “the Lost City of Cuba.” The Cuban site, discovered by Zelitsky and Weinzweig in the summer of 2000, went largely unnoticed by the mainstream media but is covered extensively on my blog. What’s amazing (to me) about Little’s connection is that I used these same two sites – AND CONNECTED THEM – in my novel, Triangle, more than two years ago! Granted, my novel is fiction and my “connection” is much more physical than Little’s references, but once again, FACT MEETS FICTION and my readers were there two years ahead of the rest of the world!

Triangle is part of my Seeds of Civilization series and is available online and everywhere books are sold. Ask for ISBN number  0977910938 (ISBN-10) or 978-0977910939 (ISBN-13).

Rewriting History

While researching locations for Triangle, the third and final novel in my Seeds of Civilization series, I “accidently” got interested in underwater archaeology and some very interesting research taking place in the Bahamas.

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Just west of the Bimini Islands, on the eastern edge of the Gulf Stream, there is a feature called “Bimini Road” that’s clearly visible from the air. It was originally reported to be a “naturally occurring rock formation” but investigators William M. (Bill) Donato and others have since proved that the structure is a man-made breakwater built to protect an ancient harbor. And by ancient, I mean somewhere between 3,000 and 15,000 years old! That’s far older than any seafaring culture known to exist in the “new world.”  Even more mysterious is the fact that the Bimini Road structure is identical in design and construction to several breakwaters built by the Phoenicians in the eastern Mediterranean about 3,000 years ago.

Recently, Donato’s APEX Institute released information about their discovery of megalithic structures on the ocean floor not far from Bimini Road. I’ve seen the side-scan sonar images and these anomalies appear to be well-organized, rectangular foundations laid out in a grid. Based on their depth, Donato has estimated that these structures are about 12,000 years old.

With all the mystery surrounding the Bimini area, you probably won’t be surprised to learn that it found its way into Triangle. But you may be surprised by the discovery Frank and his friends make 350 feet below the surface just off the islands’ southern-most coast!

Where in the World is Andros?

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On the western edge of the Bahamas, 130 miles from Miami and a mere 90 miles from Cuba, sits Andros Island, the largest island in the Bahamian chain. Andros is a unique place: it’s situated on the third largest barrier reef in the world and it’s adjacent to the Tongue of the Ocean, a 6,000-foot deep natural “hole” in the ocean floor. Andros supplies most of the fresh water to the other islands of the Bahamas, delivering 19 million liters a day to Nassau alone. And yet, Andros is the least densely populated island in the Bahamas, with a population of just over 6,000. Most of these people live along the eastern coastline and much of the island’s interior is still unexplored.

Andros Island serves as the “base camp” for the second half of Triangle, the third and final novel in my Seeds of Civilization series. It’s where the NWIDI team first meets Miles Adderly, a retired Navy SEAL turned hotelier, and it’s where Frank first experiences diving with a specially modified rebreather device.

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Andros is also the home of the U.S. Navy’s Advanced Underwater Testing and Evaluation Center (AUTEC) and the Deep Water Weapons Range. This facility is essentially the Navy’s version of Area 51 and it figures prominently in the latter chapters of the book as Jim and his recently acquired triangles must be “locked down” in the interest of national security.

Frank, Tony and Jim arrive on Andros after hitching a ride aboard a government-contracted undersea cable maintenance ship but you’ll have to read Triangle to learn how Linda and Javier make the trip from Cuba’s western tip to the Bahamas!

2,100 Feet Under the Sea

“In the summer of 2000, a team of researchers discovered what appear to be the submerged ruins of an ancient city covering more than seven square miles. The site lies just a few miles off the western tip of Cuba and is now more than 2,100 feet below the surface.  Some of the giant structures are reported to be more than 1,000 feet long and made from giant blocks of granite weighing several tons each. Other structures appear to be pyramids similar to those built by the mysterious Olmec civilization of Veracruz, Mexico. Still other structures are stone monoliths bearing symbols and inscriptions of an unknown origin.”

If this sounds like something right out of a fiction novel, it is, because the site now known as “Mega” figures prominently in the early chapters of Triangle, the third novel in my Seeds of Civilization series. However, the account above is taken directly from interviews with Paulina Zelitsky and Paul Weinzweig, real underwater explorers who claim to have made this discovery!

While Zelitsky and Weinzweig have been unable to return to fully explore the site due to Cuban politics, many details have leaked out in the 10 years since the discovery and I’ve reported many of these on my non-fiction blog at http://www.TheMegaBlog.com. You can also read articles on a number of websites – just Google “Zelitsky” – but be forewarned that many of the sites who picked up this news specialize in sensationalism and don’t bother checking facts. In my case, I have communicated directly with both discoverers and I believe that they saw what they reported.

In Triangle, Frank, Tony, Linda and Jim explore the ruins with the help of an unmanned submarine (an ROV) brought to the site aboard a European undersea cable maintenance ship. During my research, I had the opportunity to tour such a vessel and see first-hand an ROV capable of carrying out all the tasks I describe in my novel. However, in my fictional account, a discovery made at the ruins sets the stage for the rest of the story and leads Frank and his teammates across the Caribbean to the stunning conclusion of the novel and the series.

I’m often asked how I came up with the titles for the three novels in my Seeds of Civilization series so I thought I’d take this opportunity to explain both the titles and the large symbols you see on each cover. (Click the images below to view the full-sized, original artwork of each object)

When I started writing Tractrix, I didn’t really know where the story was going – heck, I didn’t even know I was writing a novel until about a month into the project! But before my first novel even had a title, a mysterious baseball-sized sphere emerged as a significant object in the storyline. The sphere’s dull black finish and the strange raised figures on its surface made it look both ancient and futuristic and that was enough to intrigue Frank Morton, my main character. When it came time to pick a title, I knew I wanted something unique that referenced the spheres but also sounded mysterious. Calling on my background in mathematics, I came up with the word tractrix. Technically a tractrix is the mathematical inverse of a circle, not a sphere, but that was close enough for me!

By the time my wife and our good friend Alvaro had the dramatic cover of Tractrix finished, I was already sold on the idea of doing a follow-up novel with a different mysterious object at its core – and on its cover. Once I had decided on Japan’s Yonaguni Island as the second book’s location, I began researching ancient Japanese history and that’s where I ran across the word Tsubute (pronounced sue-boo-tay, with the “ts” having the same sound it does in tsumani). A tsubute was an ancient Ninja throwing weapon that’s a distant relative of the modern-day throwing star. Tsubutes were 8-sided objects made of hardened clay and they were used to render an opponent unconscious. In my novel, the tsubutes found deep under Yonaguni’s Mt. Urabu have a much more important purpose than just simple throwing disks.

With a pattern clearly established, I started the third novel knowing I would have to come up with an object for the title and the cover that was as interesting as those in Tractrix and Tsubute. And to make my job even more difficult, I now felt obligated to find a word that began with “T” to complete the trilogy. While the name I chose isn’t exotic, or even unique, the title Triangle has significance on several levels. It’s the third novel (“tri”), it takes place largely in the area known as The Bermuda Triangle and the objects at the center of the story are mysterious triangle-shaped coins discovered on the ocean floor off the northwest tip of Cuba.

As much fun as it was to incorporate inanimate objects into each of my first three novels, I did not carry that practice into the follow-up Parallel Ops series. In the new series, each book “stars” one of the main characters from Seeds and my “variation on a theme” titles hint at the role of each character: The Scientists, The Informants, The Guardians and The Teachers.

Today I’m going to describe – very briefly – a few of my favorite minor characters from the Seeds of Civilization mystery/adventure novels.

Jill Harris is actually a main character during the first half of Tractrix, until a government agent suggests she “disappear” for her own safety. Frank meets the tough ICU nurse when he first arrives in Las Vegas and he soon learns that her family and his investigation are intertwined. However, it is Tony who’s attracted to Jill and they develop a relationship that lasts through the end of the series.

Ben Kingston is an exobiologist employed by the Department of Defense who is brought in late in Tractrix to help Frank, Tony, Linda and Jim investigate the mysterious spheres that are the basis of the novel. Any more information about Ben would reveal too much of the plot, but suffice it to say that his isolated lab, dug into a hillside overlooking Area 51, contains an “out of this world” artifact.

Fitz” and Susan Fitgerald, along with their dog Sandstrom, join the NWIDI team in the opening pages of book 2, Tsubute. Fitz and Susan are private jet pilots and Sandstrom’s primary role seems to be to pester and annoy Tony! Grrrr!

Bill Ito is a Japanese-American exchange student working in a small hotel on Yonaguni Island when the NWIDI team blows into town in Tsubute. Because of his perfect English and his extensive knowledge of the island, he becomes an unofficial team member until I’m forced to write him out of the story line in chapter 14.

Javier Reyes is introduced in chapter 1 of Triangle and remains a secondary character throughout the rest of the novel. Javier’s experience with a Mexican environmental group buys him a spot on the NWIDI team as they take to the ocean in search of the source of strange signals emanating from deep below the surface near Cuba. However, it is his resourcefulness that saves Linda’s life when they are sent on a covert mission deep into the island nation’s interior.

Miles Adderly is a retired U.S. Navy SEAL who owns and operates a hotel on Andros Island in the Bahamas. When Frank, Tony, and Jim show up, Miles seems to be both an ally and an adversary but a book in his library provides Jim with important clues about the origin of artifacts found near Cuba. After teaching Frank how to use exotic rebreather diving equipment, Miles remains with Frank “to the very end” of Triangle – and the series.

Tomorrow we’ll take a look at some of the characters you’re going to meet in my second series, Parallel Ops.

This is the last of a 4-part series in which I hope to (re)introduce you to the main characters in my Seeds of Civilization and Parallel Ops series of mystery/adventure novels.

    

Professor Jim Barnes makes a brief appearance in Chapter 3 of Tractrix, the first book of my Seeds series, but he officially joins the “cast” in Chapter 10 when Frank summons him to Las Vegas. Within hours, he and Frank are off to Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula to investigate an underground cavern complex that has been known to the Maya for more than a thousand years.

Jim BarnesAfter successfully deciphering the messages on the mysterious black spheres in Book 1, Jim is instrumental in determining the origin and purpose of some ancient objects his team discovers deep inside a Japanese mountain in Tsubute. But it’s his brilliant work with the submerged artifacts of Triangle that finally brings him the public recognition that has eluded him in the previous missions.

 In the fall of 2002, after three highly successful missions with NWIDI, Jim resigns from the university to become a scientist at one of the U.S. Government’s top research facilities. Based on his work with NWIDI, he is also a sought-after speaker on the subject of ancient lost civilizations.

To help you better understand Jim, here’s his back story prior to the Seeds series:

Jim Barnes was born in 1968 in Spokane, Washington where he attended grade school and high school. He graduated first in his class from Washington State University, in Pullman, with a degree in Anthropology. He went on to earn his doctorate in Sociocultural Anthropology from the University of Washington in Seattle where he taught for a number of years. As part of his post-graduate work, Jim learned to read and write Mayan and its ancient predecessor, Olmec. It is at a series of university seminars on these languages that Jim first meets Frank Morton.

I’ll see you tomorrow with a little about several of my “minor” characters from the first series.

This is the third of a 4-part series in which I hope to (re)introduce you to the main characters in my Seeds of Civilization and Parallel Ops series of mystery/adventure novels.

    

Although Linda McBride is introduced early in Tractrix, book 1 of the Seeds series, she doesn’t become a “main character” until she’s reintroduced in Chapter 26. By this time Frank, Tony and Jim are working together as an informal team and Frank asks Linda to join them as their principle researcher.

Linda becomes a much more prominent character in Tsubute, my second novel, when she’s inadvertently stranded on a remote beach in southern Japan and must make her way back to civilization through an underground cave system. She plays an even larger role in Triangle, the third book, when she and a Mexican national named Javier Reyes are asked to sneak into Cuba undercover and investigate strange happenings on the northwestern tip of the island. Later in Triangle, Linda finds her soul mate and her life forever changes.

In the Parallel Ops series, Linda is the main character in The Informants where her newspaper background becomes her new team’s weapon in their efforts against The Six.

To help you better understand Linda, here’s her back story prior to the Seeds series:

Linda McBride attended high school and college in Seattle’s prestigious East Lake area. Although Linda studied journalism at the University of Washington, she was more interested in investigating than writing and after graduation she took a position as a staff researcher with Seattle’s largest daily newspaper. In 2001 Linda was asked to assist Frank Morton and Tony Nicoletti as they investigated mysterious artifacts near Las Vegas that seemed to originate in Mexico’s Mayan ruins. When Frank formed a non-profit group to investigate other archaeological anomalies, Linda immediately signed on and remained an active member of NWIDI until its dissolution.

I’ll see you tomorrow with a little about NWIDI’s “Chief Science Officer,” Professor Jim Barnes.

This is the second of a 4-part series in which I hope to (re)introduce you to the main characters in my Seeds of Civilization and Parallel Ops series of mystery/adventure novels.

    

Tony Nicoletti is probably the most colorful of my four main characters and the only one based on a real person. He and Frank first met in the jungles of Southeast Asia where they formed a bond that has survived the years even though they are very different people with very different experiences. Where Frank is a strategist and a planner, Tony tends to take the shortest path to an objective, leveling anything that gets in his way.

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Although a softie at heart, Tony’s Special Forces background makes him a tough adversary. As Frank’s “Number 2,” Tony is often called upon to work solo on high-risk tasks or to lead the rest of the team out of imminent danger. In the Parallel Ops series, Tony once again has the most perilous mission and must confuse and harass the very people that want him dead.

We don’t know much about Tony’s years after the military except that he worked as an independent trucker hauling classified cargos between military bases in the continental United States. Although we never know what he carried in his eighteen-wheeler, we do learn that his contract with the government required that he maintain a Top Secret security clearance.

To help you better understand Tony, here’s his back story prior to the Seeds series:

Tony Nicoletti was born and raised in the suburbs of south Los Angeles. He enlisted in the Army in 1972 and served as a forward air controller in Southeast Asia from 1974 to 1976. Tony and Frank Morton met in June, 1975, when they were both assigned to a covert military operation in Laos, and they remained close friends until they formally joined forces in 2001 to create the non-profit investigative group called NWIDI. Tony was discharged from the Army in 1976 and returned to southern California to become a long-haul truck driver. When his 5-year marriage ended in a bitter divorce, Tony moved to Atlanta where he was recruited into a civil service job by his former Viet Nam commander.

I’ll see you tomorrow with a little about NWIDI’s female team member, Linda McBride.

This is the first of a 4-part series in which I hope to (re)introduce you to the main characters in my Seeds of Civilization and Parallel Ops series of mystery/adventure novels.

              

Frank Morton appears on Page 1 of Book 1 and he remains the main character throughout the entire first series. When you first meet Frank, he’s a grieving widower who has just experienced a very positive, life-changing event. He decides to use his good fortune to do something positive with his life and, coincidently, his old friend, Tony Nicoletti, shows up with a mysterious black sphere he acquired in a bar north of Las Vegas. Intrigued with the sphere and its cryptic symbols, Frank sets off for Las Vegas to learn more and the rest, as they say, is history.

While in Las Vegas, Frank begins to assemble his team – the characters you will meet over the next three days – and he eventually forms a non-profit organization called NWIDI to pursue his life-long interest in ancient archeological mysteries. After their successful mission in my first novel, Tractrix , they head off to a tiny Japanese island in the China Sea to explore a 9,000-year-old underwater pyramid  in Tsubute, and then to the Caribbean to explore the submerged ruins of an ancient city in Triangle, the third and final book in the Seeds series. While Frank is mentioned numerous times in the first three books of the Parallel Ops series, he doesn’t really have a speaking part. Maybe he’ll return in The Teachers, the final book of this series!

To help you better understand Frank, here’s his back story prior to the Seeds series:

Dr. Frank Morton grew up as a military “brat” and traveled from base to base until he joined the Air Force himself at 18. Trained as a Pararescueman, Frank is experienced in both sky diving and SCUBA diving. After an extended tour in Viet Nam, Frank graduated from the University of Washington and went to work for Boeing as an engineer. He married Donna Sommerset in 1982 and the couple settled in Seattle’s trendy Waterfront district.

 Frank earned his Ph.D. in aerospace engineering through a work-study program and in 1999 he was picked to lead a team of Boeing scientists and engineers developing components for the International Space Station. Two days after Christmas, 2000, Donna was killed in a freak automobile accident near the couple’s condo and Frank spiraled into a period of deep depression. On June 13, 2001, Frank was the sole winner of an $86 million lottery jackpot.

I’ll see you tomorrow with a little about NWIDI’s “Number 2,” Tony Nicoletti.

The Seeds of Civilization SeriesOne of the things I like most about my writing hobby is the fact that I get to “visit” so many interesting places. By the time I’ve researched a location on the Internet, looked at dozens of photos and studied the terrain in detail using Google Earth, I actually feel like I’ve been there. While writing the first series, Seeds Of Civilization, I learned about the Nellis Bombing Range, the vast military complex north of Las Vegas that contains the site where the U.S. did much of it’s atomic and nuclear bomb testing. Nellis is also home to the Yucca Mountain project and the infamous Area 51. I also studied the region in Mexico’s Yucatan where the Maya made their last stand against the Mexican Army in the late 19th century. And that was just in Tractrix, the first book!

Tsubute, my second novel, was set almost entirely on a tiny Japanese island 1,200 miles southwest of Tokyo. I chose this location because of the famous Yonaguni Monument, an underwater structure that some believe is more than twice as old as the pyramids of Egypt. Although I’ve never been to Yonaguni, I was fortunate to hook up with a dive shop on the island and one of the employees went to the local visitors’ center and mailed me several very detailed maps of the island. The Yonaguni Monument has become a popular scuba diving destination, so I was able to use photos posted on the Internet to get a feel of what it was like “on the ground.”

Triangle, the third novel in the Seeds series, begins in Cancun, sails east to a site off the northwest tip of Cuba and then moves on to Andros Island, in the Bahamas, for much of the story (although Linda and her new friend do make a side-trip to Cuba). While “on” Andros, my readers and I learn all about the Advanced Underwater Testing and Evaluation Center (AUTEC) which is actually the U.S. Navy’s version of Area 51.

Fortunately, not all of my travel has been virtual. After Tractrix was off to the printer, my wife, Marty, and I had the great pleasure of traveling to Mexico’s Yucatan and following the footsteps of my characters from Cancun inland to the city of Merida then on to the amazing Maya ruins at Uxmal. We even toured the Loltun Caverns, where the Maya held off the Spanish Army for months before finally surrendering in 1901. You’ll learn all about these places when you read the book yourself.

In a later post I may let you in on some of the places I’m “visiting” during the writing of the Parallel Ops series. With all four characters traveling independently, I am virtually traveling around the world!