It would be an anomalous proposition for the Fryas to calculate time in relation to the destruction of the land of a foreign populace.
In 7b, the sinking of Aldland is described. It is peculiar that such a significant amount of wistful prose was dedicated to the sinking of land belonging to a foreign people. Aldland and "the lands of Finda" are mentioned separately. The R1a haplogroup, which comprises a significant number of Findas, appears to have originated from the Altai Mountains. This region, however, is not an island that can sink.
In 8c, Inka, having grown weary of the Findas, embarked on a maritime expedition in the Atlantic Ocean, seeking the lost land of Aldland, which was believed to be situated near the former island of Frisland. It is implausible that he would have undertaken such a quest if he had even the slightest suspicion that the Findas might have inhabited the area.
In 3c, Aldland is depicted as the homeland of the Findas, situated beneath the sea and considered to be distant and inaccessible. The notion of a submerged homeland appears to be an assumption, given the Findas' presumed origin in the Asian steppes. The Fryas, having witnessed the submersion of numerous lands and the subsequent exodus from their own Aldland, might have deduced that the waves of Findas invading Fryasland were also driven by such a phenomenon.