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I wanted to know if there has been any recent discovery supporting its existence. I’ve always been fascinated by Mu more than Atlantis for some reasons, maybe cuz I have grown up in the Pacific.

wherebouts in the pacific?
I dunno about recent developments.
My theory is that there WAS a civilization (dunno how advanced) that lived on the continental shelf

closer to the 'slope' than we are now.
when the ice age glaciers melted...the continental shelves got flooded.
all around the world...hence the 'great flood myths'...which actually happened...kinda sorta.

you gotta remember that the flooding occured REAL FAST...
not much time to pull up stakes and leave.
hence there were most likely refugees like you would NOT belive..

Grew up in New Caledonia but I now live in Australia. Yes the bought of them being wiped out by a flood totally makes sense.

Ideally memory serves, the first time I heard of Mu was when I was kid watching The Mysterious Cities of Gold.

Ah I have found the scene on YouTube:

And there were stories saying our pacific islands could be the tips of the highest mountains of Mu.

But do you know where the theory of the existence of Mu came from?

Oddly enough..many of the pacific islands ARE the tips of seamounts..

Interestingly, Putin has just announced submarine nuclear powered drones capable of creating tsunamis 500 meters high.

Perhaps we are about to join Atlantis and Mu in legend.

Whether we do or not, sooner or later society will either surpass this nuclear threshold, or perish once and for all. I vote for surpass now. =)

Well, there's Sundaland.

Sundaland_rivers_IceAge.gif

that was a remarkably POORLY written article..even by wikipedia standards.
I wonder why the author felt the need to be so repetitive.
oddly enough...most other places in the world the sea level was 400 ft lower..why was sundaland so different?

The region is seismically very active. While generally sea level has risen 400 feet, the actual difference is modulated regionally by tectonics and rebound, and all sorts of things.

I don't even want to contemplate crustal shifting, as that just makes everything we think we know about tectonics somewhat moot. Not that I can disprove it. I just don't WANT to have to complicate things that much.

There's also Zealandia, nearby. I'm pretty sure there was (at least one) Mu, it's just we have no Plato relating it to us.

Dwaraka, off the west coast of India, is perhaps the best shot we presently have of turning our idea of history and development on it's head. There's no doubt it's a city, and predates every other example we know about and can reach soon.

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