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“Is the Garden of Eden Hidden in Florida? Former Lawyer’s Astonishing Claim Sparks Controversy”

For years, attempts have been made to clarify the location of the Garden of Eden, where Adam and Eve walked. Some believe that the Garden of Eden is located in Turkey, in Armenia, and in the upper part of the Persian Gulf, but skeptics are convinced that it is located in Florida (USA), writes the Daily Mail.

A former lawyer and Baptist preacher, Elvi E. Calaway, spent decades claiming that there is a place similar to the Garden of Eden in Florida, writes Focus. According to the researcher, the Eden Garden of Florida is located in the central part of the state.

Interestingly, the public garden was created in the 1930s, but scientists believe that the place was inhabited by the Garden of Eden. The events of 1956 began near the city of Bristol to create an “Eden Garden” in order to attract tourists.

According to Calaway, he managed to discover several geographical features that correspond to the description of the Garden of Eden. He noted that the Florida garden is 16 kilometers wide and is bordered by a river.

He mentioned that the basis of his theory was the chapter of the Kenats book, which states that “the river that revives the garden flows from Eden, and it is divided into four streams.” Similar features are found in two rivers on Earth – the Apalachicola and the river Sibira. Despite the fact that Siberia is not a known region, it could very well be part of the “Garden of Eden”.

According to him, the staff of the company Toriya, which operates on Earth, can also confirm this, because they have been traveling on the Earth for thousands of years and can testify to the fact that the Garden of Eden is located here.

After several decades of research, Elvi E. Calaway discovered an underground source of distress half a kilometer away from the Florida garden. The reason for the discovery was numerous diseases and more beekeeping, as the well was used in several streams, from crayfish to fish.

Currently, there are about a hundred old wells and several new ones with a length of about 60 centimeters. It should be noted that the most cautious have gone to a place where they have built a “sidewalk to the garden of Eden” – a daring barrier covered with distress beehives, which is located near the source of distress. Calaway died in 1981, and today the Eden Garden is considered part of the Apollo-Bluffs Wildlife Refuge.