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The Maracot Deep is a short 1929 novel by Arthur Conan Doyle about the discovery of a sunken city of Atlantis by a team of explorers led by Professor Maracot. He is accompanied by Cyrus Headley, a young research zoologist and Bill Scanlan, an expert mechanic working with an iron works in Philadelphia who is in charge of the construction of the submersible which the team takes to the bottom of ...
The Maracot Deep by Arthur Conan Doyle (1929) Attack from Atlantis by Lester del Rey (1953) The Deep Range by Arthur C. Clarke (1953 short story; 1957 novel) The Kraken Wakes by John Wyndham (1953) [1] The Dragon in the Sea by Frank Herbert (1956) [1] Dolphin Island by Arthur C. Clarke (1963) The Drowned World by J. G. Ballard (1966)
Warlords of Atlantis (aka Warlords of the Deep, though see below for further variant titles) is a 1978 British adventure science fiction film directed by Kevin Connor and starring Doug McClure, Peter Gilmore, Shane Rimmer, and Lea Brodie. The plot describes a trip to the lost world of Atlantis. The screenplay was by Brian Hayles. It was filmed ...
Chilling video shows a wealthy California businesswoman being chased around her car and then gunned down in a parking lot — in what cops call a “murder-for-hire scheme” orchestrated by her ...
According to OpenAI, Deep Research has already achieved a new high score of 26.6% on "Humanity's Last Exam," an AI benchmark of expert-level questions, beating GPT-4's 3.3% score.
Dame Jean Conan Doyle in the uniform of an Air Commandant of the Women's Auxiliary Air Force, 1963. Air Commandant Dame Lena Annette Jean Conan Doyle, Lady Bromet, DBE, AE, ADC (21 December 1912 – 18 November 1997) was a British Women's Royal Air Force officer.
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J. Francis McComas, writing in The New York Times, panned the anthology as "the most routine of scissors-and-paste jobs, done without any editorial skill whatsoever." [3] P. Schuyler Miller similarly declared "I don't, for the life of me, know who this anthology is for", faulting its editor's selection of "overly familiar," sometimes "archaic" stories.