(Please read from the start)
“There is also no conceivable event that could have "destroyed" a continent, since its huge mass of sial rocks would have to end up somewhere—and there is no trace of it at the bottom of the oceans. The Pacific Ocean islands are not part of a submerged landmass but rather the tips of isolated volcanoes.”
>> Hm! I’m not so sure about this conclusion of theirs. A cataclysm occurred and we know a lot of “geological” changes happened. So destruction of land is possible during a GREAT CATACLYSMIC EVET. It’s incredible how (((they))) always sweep things that doesn’t fit (((their))) narrative under the rug.
“This is the case, in particular, of Easter Island, which is a recent volcanic peak surrounded by deep ocean (3,000 m deep at 30 km off the island). After visiting the island in the 1930s, Alfred Métraux observed that the moai platforms are concentrated along the current coast of the island, which implies that the island's shape has changed little since they were built. Moreover, the "Triumphal Road" that Pierre Loti had reported ran from the island to the submerged lands below, is actually a natural lava flow.[23] Furthermore, while Churchward was correct in his claim that the island has no sandstone or sedimentary rocks, the point is irrelevant because the pukao are all made of native volcanic scoria.
Archaeological evidence
After the Pleistocene, cultures of the Americas and the Old World developed social complexity independent of each other,[24]:62 and, in fact, agriculture and sedentism emerged in multiple locations around the world after the inception of the Holocene at 11,700 BP. The emergence of Pre-Pottery Neolithic A sites such as Göbekli Tepe and Neolithic villages such as Jericho and Çatalhöyük in the Levant and Anatolia, respectively, result from local processes of cultural evolution, not colonization by individuals from elsewhere.
Easter Island was first settled around AD 300[25] and the pukao on the moai are regarded as having ceremonial or traditional headdresses.
Archaeologist Robert Wauchope noted sarcastically that "One exasperated anthropologist wondered whether it would not be more reasonable to suppose that it was less the cataclysms of nature that wiped out these civilizations than a possible head-on clash between the eager colonizers of Mu and those of Atlantis.”
>> Let’s gather all the pieces of the puzzle before making up our minds on what happened. Shall we?
“In popular culture
Film/television
• In the 1935 movie The Phantom Empire, the inhabitants of Murania are the lost tribe of Mu.
• In the 1963 movie Atragon, Mu is an undersea kingdom.
• In the 1970 kaiju film Gamera vs. Jiger, Jiger originates from the lost continent of Mu.
• In the 1982–1983 French-Japanese animated series The Mysterious Cities of Gold, Tao is the last living descendant of the sunken empire of Mu (Hiva in the English dub).
• In the 1983 Doraemon film Doraemon: Nobita and the Castle of the Undersea Devil, Doraemon and friends meet a young boy from Mu who is an undersea person. They set out into the Bermuda Triangle to stop the army inside it.
• In the 1983–1984 anime Super Dimension Century Orguss, the main antagonists are robots that were built by the ancient civilization of the Mu that turned on their creators and tried to annihilate all remaining life on Earth. Throughout the series, the robots are referred to as the Mu.
• In the 2001–2002 anime RahXephon the inhabitants of Mu, which are referred to as Mulians, serve as the show's primary antagonists.
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