Monday 11 January 2021

Lemuria

Lemurian Gardens


In the mid-1800s, a few scientists working from scant evidence decided there must have been a lost continent in the Indian Ocean and they called it Lemuria.


 
On this lost continent, some even thought, there once lived a race of now-extinct humans called Lemurians who had three eyes four arms and enormous bodies but nevertheless are the ancestors of modern-day humans

The first half of the Lemurian race were one eyed giants - cyclops

The second half of the Lemurian race were three eyed four armed giants

And as absurd as this all sounds, the idea flourished for a time both in popular culture and some corners of the scientific community. Of course, modern science has long since debunked the idea of Lemuria altogether.

 But in 2013, geologists discovered evidence of a lost continent precisely where Lemuria was said to have existed and the old theories started cropping up once again.


 Lemuria connects Madagascar Australia and India together and explain how certain species of lemurs can be found scattered across all three of these continents


In Helena Blavatsky's idea of the root races Lemuria comes third in line of the seven root races


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1 comment:

  1. A very interesting compilation; I always wondered where Lemuria was supposed to be. Helena Blavatsky's information about root races isn't irreconcilable with Radu Cinamar's book, Forgotten Genesis, The Only Planet of Choice, The Law of One, Matrix II and Stewart Swerdlow's Blue Blood, True Blood. There should be an encyclopedia of the history of the Terran race.

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Lemuria

Lemurian Gardens In the mid-1800s, a few scientists working from scant evidence decided there must have been a lost continent in the Indian...