Atlantica Continent World Map
This is the first public world map of the Atlantica Continent, an ancient landmass set between Africa and South America. This is the Atlantica Continent as it stood before the Great Flood, an immense landbridge-kingdom set between Africa’s western shores and South America’s eastern capes. This is the motherland of the Atlantica Worlds before the ancient continent sank.

A natural-color world map showing an extra green landmass centered in the tropical Atlantic, midway between Brazil and West Africa.
Where Atlantica Stood
Latitude and Currents.
- Anchored in the equatorial Atlantic, Atlantica rode the warm gyres that braided trade winds from both hemispheres.
Gateways
- Its capes faced the Old World and the New World alike, making it the landbridge of antediluvian (pre-Flood) travel and covenant-keeping between distant peoples.
The Gates in the Time Before
In the prime years of the continent, the Stellargates stood as sanctuaries at the northwest edge of the landmass. When the waters rose, they served as corridors of rescue for fauna and flora, bearing life toward promised worlds beyond the familiar stars.
After the Great Flood
From this once-continuous land, only the northwestern highlands of the continent, in the southwestern end of the Bermuda Triangle, endured above the receded waves in the centuries that followed. Those surviving heights formed the Atlantica Islands, in a different age with its own laws and wonders.
Navigator’s Note
Every voyage begins with a coastline. Today we set the outline; next we’ll mark the ports and settlements, and tell why each bend matters. Fold the map and stow it dry; the atlas continues in the next chapter.
Until then, keep this chart as a quiet thing: a reminder that before the waters, the world was closer than we remember, and Atlantica Continent stood between the dawn and the dusk like a landbridge.
