Quoting from the previous post, The Last Great Upheaval:
“Then came the last
great upheaval. The Earth’s ring of fire consumed most portions of the eastern
hemisphere including their great city leaving it hidden miles beneath the ocean
floor. Those who survived were dispersed out in all directions. The portals were
closed and the Great City of Mu had gone until this days, awaiting for the
proper time to resurface for the greatest revival of mankind.”
Although the theory of a submerged continent purportedly called
Mu in the Pacific did not gain strong backing and reference from the scientific
community, the recent conclusion as a result of a long continuous geological research
and study by a group of scientists led to no other theory that indeed somewhere
in the Pacific region lies a submerged continent which now called Zealandia by
the Geological Society of America. The announcement somehow had shifted the
old mythical theory to another yet scientific name that might be referring to the
same continent of Mu.
Zealandia |
“This is not a sudden discovery
but a gradual realization; as recently as 10 years ago we would not have had
the accumulated data or confidence in interpretation to write this paper. Since
it was first proposed by Luyendyk (1995), the use of the name Zealandia for a
southwest Pacific continent has had moderate uptake (e.g., Mortimer et al.,
2006; Grobys et al., 2008; Segev et al., 2012; Mortimer and Campbell, 2014;
Graham, 2015). However, it is still not well known to the broad international
science community. A correct accounting of Earth’s continents is important for
multiple fields of natural science; the purpose of this paper is to formally put
forth the scientific case for the continent of Zealandia (Figs. 1 and 2) and explain
why its identification is important.” (Zealandia: Earth’s Hidden Continent)
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