Today I visited with Una Marcotte who is writing a fantastic book about Lemuria. Today we talked about the cover of her book and looked at images she had found online that looked like the kind of cover she would like. We had fun.
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Yesterday’s post with that amazingly dramatic photograph of lava spewing out of the side of a cliff into the Pacific Ocean in Hawaii brings to mind not only the sinking of Lemuria Mu, but also the recent speculation about the 2012 prophecies and the end of the world. Could the world end on December 21, 2012 from dramatic volcanic activity?
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Check out this amazing photograph of a lava flow from the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii National Park. Credit: AP Photo/David Jordan

Another map, this time, of the Panthalassa Ocean during the time of the megacontinent Pangaea. This article at Ars Technica describes how geophysicists “analyzed seismic velocity data from the mantle beneath the Pacific” and found that the Panthalassa Ocean was not as featureless as previously theorized. They concluded that:
In addition to working out the location of these volcanic arcs, the study will also help researchers reconstruct the history of the Pacific plate. “[F]or any future model of the Panthalassa Ocean, the presence of the Telkhinia subduction zone needs to be taken into account,” wrote van der Meer. “Previous models simply extrapolated the spreading ridges until they [encountered] a continent. We have now proven that it was not that simple, and the tectonic history was complicated.”
On November 18 and 21, 2011, I wrote about the megacontinent Gondwana in this blog. In those posts, I wondered if Lemuria Mu could have been a part of Gondwana. Well, in these maps of the earth, posted as illustrations of the U.K. The Telegraph‘s online article ‘Lost” continent Gondwana sheds light on formation of world today,” there does not appear to be any room for the lost continent of Lemuria. All the present-day landmasses of Antarctica, Australia, and India, which today are separated by the Indian Ocean, were at one time scrunched together to form the megacontinent. Although, I must admit, it is difficult to sort out the land masses from the present-day coastlines of continents. What do you think? Can you see a place, in the ancient maps, where a lost continent could have been located?

Graphic shows how Gondwana broke into present-day Australia, Antarctica and India between 80 and 130 million years ago
I’ve just enjoyed a YouTube movie called, “The Real Lost Continent of Mu, Lemuria.” It refers to ruins found off the coast of Yonaguni Island. This movie also mentions August Le Plongeon (I mentioned him in yesterday’s post), saying that he is the first person to have connected the Yucatan Maya with Lemuria.
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In looking for information on Lemuria, I just came across the e-book of the 1926 book by James Churchward, The Lost Continent of Mu. I like that I can easily ready the book online. It even has links to the chapters of the books. Right away, I am interested because I see references to August and Alice LePlongeon who explored Mayan ruins in Yucatan.
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Buried somewhere in the Indian Ocean, in the vast 4,200 mile expanse between Madagascar and Australia, is supposed to be the resting place of the lost continent of Kumari Kandam, which, according to ancient Tamil literature, some believe is the lost continent of Lemuria.
Continue readingIn the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Tamil nationalists came to identify Kumari Kandam with Lemuria, a hypothetical “lost continent” posited in the 19th century to account for discontinuities in biogeography. In these accounts, Kumari Kandam became the “cradle of civilization”, the origin of human languages in general and the Tamil language in particular.
Kumari Kandam- The Lost Continent
Since finding that information about Lemurians existing within Mount Shasta in California, I’ve been curious to find out more. On The Lemurian Connection website I found an article that says that survivors of the sinking of Lemuria exist in the physical but, although they are not beings of the fourth dimension, since they are in the three and a half dimension, they can become invisible at will. Here’s an excerpt from the article:
Continue readingStrange lights and sounds are often seen or heard on the mountain. Lenticular clouds, shadows and outstanding sunsets add to the mystical aura of the mountain. Several tunnels stretch far into the interior of this majestic mountain. Mount Shasta is also the home of the present-day Lemurians, survivors of the sinking of the continent of Lemuria over 12,000 years ago. Yes, our Lemurian brothers and sisters are real; they are well and physically alive, living in the subterranean city of “Telos” underneath sacred Mount Shasta.
A MtShastaNews.com article reports that author and historian Bill Miesse spoke about the connection between Mount Shasta in California with the lost continent of Lemuria.
Continue readingToday, the legend of the lost continent of Lemuria being inside Mt. Shasta is one of the mountain’s most well-known legends, Miesse said. The connection between the two is something he’s been researching in the past months.