Checkout the book online “Canopus Menouthis Aboukir Pagan Memories . . . ” by J. Faivre, specifically to pages 1 to 34 in which he lays out the histories of Canopus, (new) Menouthis, and Thonis-Heracleion, all said to be submerged in Aboukir Bay by scientists and historians these days, yet those towns were (and the remnants still are) on dry land, on the Aboukir Peninsula of Egypt as noted by many Classical Greek scribes and Christian historians following, that therefore the extensive ruins on the shallow seafloor are of names unknown, or perhaps all having been named for Mneseus (Menoutios) a grandson of Canaan and son of Sidon (Poseidon), the small town of Menouthis between Heraklion-Thonis and the tip of the peninsula named in memory of the great city which had been consumed by the sea circa 1400 b. c.