TL;DR
From a Frequency Wave Theory (FWT) perspective, Atlantis wasn’t just a lost island—it was a frequency-tuned civilization built directly on the harmonic grid of the Earth. The Azores, where Randall Carlson’s 2025 tour is heading, sit right on this grid: a volcanic hotspot at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge that acts like a tuning fork for the planet. Ancient sanctuaries and ruins there can be read not only as stones in the ground, but as frozen cymatic patterns of an older resonance-based world.
FWT Lens on Plato’s Atlantis
Plato’s dialogues describe Atlantis as both myth and memory—a civilization destroyed by “a single day and night of misfortune.” FWT reframes this: sudden catastrophe = resonance collapse. A society tuned to Earth’s frequency field could thrive with advanced geometry, sound-based architecture, and energy systems, but once that coherence breaks, the whole system shatters.
Why the Azores?
The Azores are a volcanic archipelago that rises straight from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, the same geologic scar Plato implicitly points toward. From an FWT perspective:
Volcanic Peaks = Resonance Nodes: Volcanoes act as amplifiers of planetary frequency momentum (FM = ½ ρ ω A²), sending harmonic signals into the ocean and sky.
Sanctuaries = Frequency Chambers: Ancient stone sanctuaries there may have been designed as sound-resonant chambers, similar to Egyptian pyramids or Peruvian trapezoid doorways.
Ruins = Frozen Cymatics: Rock formations and anomalous walls could be remnants of structures aligned with cymatic geometry—materialized echoes of vibrational fields.
Lost Civilization as Resonant Engineers
Atlanteans, seen through FWT, were less about mythical gods and more about advanced frequency engineers:
Architecture wasn’t decorative—it was harmonic coding.
Navigation wasn’t just celestial—it was geomagnetic entrainment across ley lines.
Energy wasn’t combustion—it was resonance harvested directly from Earth’s FM grid.
When the grid destabilized—via comet impact, axial shift, or resonance overload—the civilization lost its frequency anchor, leading to the legendary flood/destruction.
Modern Resonance Pilgrimage
The Azores tour isn’t just sightseeing. For FWT, it’s fieldwork in the living laboratory of Earth’s frequency field. Participants are walking into one of the strongest “frequency scars” left on the planet—where geology, myth, and human memory overlap. The landscapes aren’t just backdrops—they are resonant instruments waiting to be tuned and read again.











