People have been able to restore half-sunken ships with a telescope, demonstrating that they were not hidden by "hills of water," but obscured by natural perspective.
And yet no one has been able to provide photographic evidence to support this claim. Why do you suppose that is, Tom?
There was some time ago a RE forum member who admitted that photos taken showed a degree of restoration, but deemed it inconclusive.
link, please
I see it's not flat, otherwise I would be able to see europe from here(canada).
You must have some pretty good eyesight if you expect to see a thin landmass several thousand miles away.
Also, if you say "bendy light" that means you cannot believe everything you see, so looking out a window does not constitute proof.
I don't believe in bendy light.
OK, Mt. Logan is 5959m high (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Logan), and the distance according to a flat earth map is 4028.632 km.
now, the height is more than the distance, so the arc-cosine, and the angle should be at more than 45º
still can't see it...