The Lost Civilization of Lemuria By Frank Joseph Contents Introduction: Terra Incognita 1 6 ONE A Lost Superscience 00 TWO The Giants Speak 00 THREE Navel of the World 00 FOUR Ancient Oceanic Technology 00 FIVE The Colonel of Mu 00 SIX The Garden of Eden? 00 SEVEN Hawaiian Motherland 00 EIGHT Lemurians in America 00 NINE Asia’s Debt to Lemuria 00 TEN What’s in a Name? 00 ELEVEN The Sleeping Prophet of Lemuria 00 TWELVE The Destruction of Lemuria 00 THIRTEEN The Discovery of Lemuria 00 6 Summary: Two Hundred Thousand Years in a Thousand Words Afterword: The Real Meaning of Lemuria Bibliography F O U R Ancient Oceanic Technology We all agree that your theory is mad. The problem that divides us is this: Is it suffi ciently crazy to be right? Niels Bohr In our last several chapters, we described archeological ruins on the islands of Pohnpei (part of Micronesia) and Rapanui (Easter(Easter Island)Island) as the remains of power stations erected by the Lemurians millennia ago to effect seismic and meteorological change. If these sites were the only evidence, they might be dismissed as the lonely outposts of some foreign civilization that established itself in isolation, utterly alien to anything known elsewhere. But additional evidence on behalf of that lost science has indeed been found, most dramatically at another obscure speck of territory in the southwestern Pacifi c. Known until 1978 as the Isle of Pines, Kunie (pronounced KOO-nya) is inhabited by 1,500 Melanesian residents living on fi fty-eight square miles of French Polynesia. The eight-by-ten-mile island has bewildered investigators since its discovery in 1774, because it is the only place in Oceania with stands of ancient pine trees (Araucaria cooki) named after the famous English explorer Captain James Cook. How they got there and why they continue to thrive on Kunie, but nowhere else throughout the vast Pacifi c, is an enigma that still eludes scientifi c explanation. They must have been brought to and planted at this Melanesian outpost in prehistory. But by whom, and for what purpose? The trees are gigantic, 2 Ancient Oceanic Technology 3 towering from heights of 90 to 135 feet, although their branches are only about six feet long. The titanic pines guard Kunie’s rocky coastline and sprout from the tops of small hills. The curious little island suddenly multiplied its mystery in 1961, when a university-trained archeologist excavated some of the mounds that dot the Isle of Pines. They had never been professionally examined before, largely because the hillocks were presumed to be natural for- mations of some kind. Directors at the Museum of New Caledonia in Moumea, the capital city, wanted to know if the tumuli might have been used by native ancestors for burial, so Luc Chevalier was dispatched to retrieve what, if any, artifacts he might be able to fi nd inside them. Digging into the fi rst mound he approached, Chevalier was surprised to discover a cement cylinder, two feet wide and seven feet long. Com- posed of an extremely hard, homogeneous lime mortar containing innu- merable bits of shell, its exterior was speckled with silica and iron gravel fragments that appeared to have hardened the mortar as it set. Chevalier was inclined to dismiss the obviously manmade cylinder as a remnant of some modern historical, albeit unknown but prosaic infl uences and went on to excavate another earthwork. In it he found a cement drum virtually identical to the fi rst. With some astonishment, he gazed across the Kunie landscape, which rippled with 400 such tumuli, resembling a colony of giant ant hills. Could they all hide such anomalous cylinders? he wondered. Chevalier hurried back across the forty miles of open water to Moumea with his specimens, where they were analyzed at the museum laboratories. Researchers there verifi ed that samples from both cylinders were artifi cial, but they were not prepared for the results of radiocarbon dating of Kunie’s lime mortar. Repeated tests confi rmed that the cement was nearly 13,000 years old. Chevalier was sent back to the Isle of Pines at the head of an archeological team intent on a more thorough excava- tion. As he suspected, each of the 400 mounds contained cement pillars all alike in construction, differing only in their dimensions. They ranged in size from forty inches to more than two feet across, with lengths from three feet to in excess of nine feet. Seventeen similar mounds were 4 Ancient Oceanic Technology known to exist on New Caledonia itself, in an area known as Paiita, and Chevalier dug into them as well, scarcely able to imagine that they, too, might conceal such strange objects. He was not disappointed, however. At the center of each earthwork was entombed a column of cement. Incredulous academicians refused to accept the artifi ciality of what Chevalier had discovered, simply because they were convinced that human habitation in the southwestern Pacifi c before 3,000 years ago was “ridiculously impossible.” Skeptics endeavored to explain away the cement cylinders by arguing they were actually nests made by some hypo- thetical species of extinct giant birds, a wildly ludicrous attempt to buoy up already moldy dogma banishing all considerations of early humans from Oceania. The skeptics insisted that the earliest use of cement went back hardly more than 2,000 years ago, to the engineers of ancient Rome. Yet here, in the southwestern Pacifi c, some maverick archeologists were spouting scientifi c heresy by claiming the natives of little Kunie had been mass-producing mortar cylinders at the end of the last ice age. Neither Chevalier nor his detractors, however, were able to pos- tulate the original utility of the lime-mortar columns. Childress, who visited the Isle of Pines in the mid-1980s, estimated their number at 10,000. While that amount seems excessive, they might approach a tenth as many. But again, why did someone go to the trouble of mak- ing hundreds of cement columns on this tiny backwater of an island? What purpose could they possibly have served? Their total lack of any adornment, ritual items, or human and animal remains proves they had no funereal or ceremonial functions. However, a clue may be found in those other anomalies shared in common at Kunie. Could its tall, deep- rooted pines have been deliberately planted along the coast by the same people who made the cement cylinders as an effective shield to protect their tumuli against the typhoons still known to ravage the island? It does at least seem oddly coincidental that two sets of features other- wise unique throughout the entire Pacifi c should be found together on the same obscure island, unless they were specifi cally intended from the beginning to compliment each other. Bronze emblem at Tokyo’s Shinobazu Temple portraying the lands of Mu engulfed by the sea. California’s Hemet Maze Stone emblazoned with the sacred symbol of Mu. The symbol of Mu copied by Col. James Churchward from monastery records he studied while serving with the British Army in India during the 1870s..
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