The extensive ruins submerged far out in Aboukir Bay of Egypt at the mouth of the now extinct Canopic distributary of the Nile are said to be of Canopus, Thonis-Herakeion, and Menouthis, yet Canopus was named for the pilot of the Trojan Paris’ ship, and Thonis was named for the Egyptian authority who allowed them to land, and Herakleion was named for Herakles (Hercules), all who lived a few centuries after the Ice Age had ended, so the submerged ruins are not those cities rather of Menouthis, named for Sidon’s son Mneseus (Menoutios), who built those now submerged structures during the Ice Age. Refer to the book Canopus Menouthis Aboukir Pagan Memories Christian Memories Battle Memories by J. Faivre (complete with maps) to see that the community of Menouthis, just north of Thonis-Herakleion on the Aboukir Peninsula, was named in remembrance of the city consumed by the sea circa 1400 b. c.