Tin was the etruscan name for the roman god Jupiter, who was the god Iapetus in ancient Greece, whose son Iawan (Javan, he’s in my college greek history textbook from Dartmouth) was the father of the Ionians, and his son Elisha of the Hellenes; the earliest settlers in what are now known as the greek isles and mainland (named Greece after the graikos tribe which settled in Italy circa 1200 b.c.), and with bronze a mainstay of early Greece (noted by Plato in his Atlantis story but with the egyptians foolish timeline), made with copper, and the hard to find tin, it seems that Japheth, father of many of the ancient european tribes, was a real tin god, probably having carried out much of the exploration and mining of that valuable material during the Ice Age, which followed Noah’s Flood, a warmer ocean for the Ice Age.
The roman god Hercules is from the etruscan word name Hercle, and Hercules helped Atlas found what would become Seville, Spain, (anciently known as Ilipa) according to spanish legend, some of the ruins of their sun temple still seen there, so since Atlas was a son of Lord Sidon (Posidon), a son of Canaan, then who was this Hercules dude? Perhaps it was a nother name for Atlas, or maybe it was Nimrod, set back at Babel, but who came on strong as a legend in his own mind, and many of the other ancients, wielding great physical strength and charisma, but now just really a footnote in history, surely no god, ‘though many of the ancients certainly were big on ancestor worship in lieu of the creator God, such as Atum in Egypt, biblical Adam.
And see http://genesisveracityfoundation.com.