Was the Continent of Lemuria Buried in the Sea, and was it really there?

The answer to that question is ‘no’ if the continent of Lemuria really existed. Scientists have named one of the continents around the islands of Mauritius ‘Mauritius’ buried in the Indian Ocean. Some say that this is the continent of Lemuria, in the hope that it will bring credibility to the truth. Before the human race began, it sank into the sea. Scientists have said.

Particles were found underground off the coast of Mauritius when the volcano erupted 90 million years ago. The period of Mauritius was discovered by the study of those particles. Nature Geoscience estimates that it lived between 200 million and 8.5 billion years ago.

Fossils of Lemur are found in the Indian Ocean island of Madagascar and in the Indian subcontinent. But Madagascar is not the mainland of the African continent, but part of it. So in the past there may have been a continent connecting the two lands of Madagascar and India. Lemur then said that the animals may have gone to both areas.

Continent of Lemuria – submerged in the Sea

Philip Schetler, a nineteenth-century English zoologist, published this article entitled Madagascar’s Mammals.

There are fossils of lemons on the Indian Ocean island of Madagascar and on the Indian mainland. But Madagascar is not the mainland of the African continent, of which it is a part. So in the past there may have been a continent connecting the two lands of Madagascar and India. Lemur then said that the animals may have gone to both areas. Philip Shetler said the continent was named Lemuria and then sank in the sea.

Facts that emerged due to Scientific Development

When Philip Shatter stated that there was a ‘Continent of Lemuria’, it was assumed that an animal was unlikely to live on the different lands separated by the sea, except that there was one land. Therefore, it was accepted by the scientific world. It was a time when earth science was underdeveloped to this extent.

Abraham Artelius, a 17th-century European geographer, proposed the theory that all continents moved from one place to another and then to different continents.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, the German geologist Alfred Wegener proposed the theory of continental drift.
Although this was not accepted at the time, discoveries about the movement of tectonic plates added strength to and prove it.

Due to the movement of the earth’s plates
Billions of years ago all the existing continents proved to be the same landmass, and later different continents formed due to the movement of the earth’s plates beneath the earth’s surface.

Thus the landscape where all the continents were together, split and reunited many times before the present formed into separate continents.

Rodinia

About 75 million (750 million) years ago the entire continent of the present world was one of the great continents of Rodinia.The lands of India and Madagascar are close by in Rodinia.

The two began to separate about 8.5 billion years ago due to a continental shift. The ‘Mauritius’ mentioned earlier began to sink in the sea.

The gap between India and Madagascar was caused by a continental shift caused by the movement of the Earth’s plates.

Continent of Lemuria – Continent of Kumarik

Continent of Lemuria

Some scientists have suggested that the continent of Lemuria may have been in some parts of the Pacific Ocean after finding evidence that the same species lived on the continents of Asia and the Americas during the period when ideas about the continent of Lemuria were accepted.

Continent of Kumarik

Some claim that the Kumarik continent is real, citing literary sources as evidence of submerged cities.It is said that there were 49 countries on the Kumari continent. But it should be noted that in historical times the word country has been used in the sense of city and some cities were nations together.

The technology of satellite imagery has been found underground and underwater for many years. No image of the Kumari continent, which is said to be under the sea, has yet been found on the south Indian coast.

Perhaps such a landscape no longer exists, but it is unlikely to have sunk into the sea after the historical period of human civilization as stated in Tamil literature. Like Mauritius, it is millions to billions of years old.

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