At the beginning of the 18th century, a series of ancient maps created by the Turkish Navy Commander – Ruis, stored in the Tokabi Palace, were discovered. Among these, the maps depicting the topography of the Mediterranean region and the Dead Sea were drawn with remarkable accuracy. All of these maps were entrusted to American cartographer Melerui for examination and study.
During the research process, Melerui uncovered an astonishing and significant fact. All geographical locations in the world today have already been mapped out; they are just slightly misaligned. Melerui enlisted the help of Watts, a U.S. Navy cartographer specializing in sea level mapping, to assist in the research. Together, Melerui and Watts measured coordinates, transforming the maps into a modern Globe tool. They both discovered that these maps depict geographical locations around the globe with extreme precision, not just the locations of the Mediterranean and the Dead Sea.
The coastlines along South America and North America, and even the shape of the South Pole, were meticulously drawn in Ruis’s maps. These maps not only replicated the continental shapes but also detailed the terrain distribution on land, including highly accurate representations of mountains, mountain ranges, islands, rivers, streams, and plateaus.
What is astonishing is that the mountain range in the South Pole was not discovered until 1852, yet it was fully illustrated in Ruis’s maps. These are the mountain ranges that had been covered in ice and snow for hundreds of years, which today we can only map with the assistance of sound recovery technology.
In 1957, a year significant for global physics, all these ancient maps were handed over to Father Linnihan, a priest of the Catholic Church. He was a U.S. Navy cartographer and the director of the Weistón Observatory. After meticulous study, Father Linnihan also had to acknowledge that these maps were extraordinarily accurate, even in areas that remain difficult to explore to this day.
The maps of the Turkish Navy Commander are not the oldest or most original documents; they are merely reproductions. According to the latest research by Professor Hatous, comparing them with the latest satellite imagery of Earth, it is evident that the original data in Ruis’s maps must have been captured from a very high position. This is difficult to explain.
Could it be that geologists have turned these maps into mythical tales just to be listened to? Or is it that these maps do not align with those we imagine, causing us to overlook their miracles? Or were these maps captured from an aircraft flying at high coordinates or from a spacecraft looking down?