The Dragon in the Lake
North America's Most Controversial Underwater Archeological Discovery of the 20th Century
by
Book Details
About the Book
The Dragon in the Lake takes readers on a wild ride
to the coastal waters of Honduras, into Mexico,
Canada and the United States to explore one of
North Americas most enigmatic underwater
archeological sites. Investigated and researched by
many in the past, none have covered this
underwater archeological mystery first hand like
archeological researcher Archie Eschborn.
Learn of the mysterious mathematical relationships
that the ancient underwater pyramidal structures in
Wisconsin have with their larger pyramid neighbors
south of the border at Teotihuacan. Where these
ancient Wisconsin stone monuments actually
navigational beacons for trade and commerce for
the pure copper from Michigan's upper peninsula?
Learn the explosive truth about the possible
origins and connections between the pyramid
builders of ancient Mexico and the links to
America's prehistoric Mound Builders..
Eschborn and his research team spent 5 years
investigating the ancient stone structures at the
bottom of Rock Lake Wisconsin, in hopes of
separating fact from fiction. The author's "out of
the box" approach to explain the archeology of
this site and by using a new method of Landscape
Archeology to prove the manmade nature of
Wisconsin's submerged prehistoric rock structures
is fascinating.
The author's unique background in history and
archeology coupled with his project management
skills have allowed him to tackle this controversial
site and understand its complexities beyond
looking at conventional archeological artifacts like
stone arrowheads or pottery shards to determine
the origins of these underwater rock structures.
In the cold murky depths of a Wisconsin lake lay mysterious rock structures wrapped in Native American folklore and local legend. These ancient underwater manmade structures maybe the most significant and controversial North American archeological discovery of the 20th century. Follow a small band of amateur archeologists armed with the latest technology as they strive to bring new research into the open against entrenched academic agenda’s and Mother Nature‘s attemps to prevent them from documenting and preserving these submerged structures before time and man erase them from existence.
The author provides compelling new evidence along with countless professionals, scientists, geologists, researchers, archeologists, anthropologists and divers, who have challenged the status quo of the Wisconsin Historical Society who have clung to their erroneous pronouncements about the fabled “Rock Lake Pyramids” in the first half of the twentieth century.
Take a journey every armchair adventurer/archeologist has dreamed of taking. Weaving a tale that takes the reader from Honduras, to Mexico, to Rock Lake and beyond, delving into the little known world of the pyramids and effigy mounds of Southern Wisconsin. Discover ancient copper mining in northern Michigan, to the trade routes that reached deep into Mesoamerica and to early Aztecs who once lived near the sacred shores of this lake. The reader will discover the overwhelming similarities between these North American “pyramid builder cultures” that can no longer be dismissed as coincidence. This exciting, educational ride may soon have some Wisconsin state institutions in turmoil due to the explosive nature of these findings and their potential impact to change the thinking about pre-columbian migration and trade routes between present day Mexico and Wisconsin.
“The Dragon in the Lake is an up to date report of dramatic new information altering or expanding the panorama of American prehis