Mu (mythical lost continent)

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 129.130.8.44 (talk) at 00:54, 7 February 2006 (Movies, TV serials, and animations). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Mu is the name of a Lost Land, or hypothetical vanished continent, located in the Pacific Ocean but now, like Atlantis and Lemuria, believed to have sunk beneath the waters.

Current knowledge of the mechanisms of plate tectonics rules out the possibility of a major continent having existed in the Pacific. Continental masses are composed of the lighter SiAl (silicon/aluminium) type rocks which literally float on the heavier SiMg (silicon/magnesium) rocks which constitute ocean bottoms. The Pacific basin is noticeably lacking in SiAl rock.

History of the concept

Augustus Le Plongeon

The idea of Mu first appeared in the works of the antiquarian Augustus Le Plongeon (18251908), a 19th century traveler and writer who conducted his own investigations of the Maya ruins in Yucatán. He announced that he had translated the ancient Mayan writings, which supposedly showed that the Maya of Yucatán were older than the later civilizations of Atlantis and Egypt, and additionally told the story of an even older continent of Mu, which had foundered in a similar fashion to Atlantis, with the survivors founding the Maya civilization. (Later students of the Ancient Maya writings have found that Le Plongeon's "translations" were based on little more than his vivid imagination.)

James Churchward

This lost continent was later popularised by James Churchward (18521936) in a series of books, beginning with The Children of Mu(1931), The Lost Continent Mu (1933), and The Sacred Symbols of Mu (1935). The books still have devotees, but they are not considered serious archaeology, and nowadays are found in bookshops classed under 'New Age' or 'Religion and Spirituality'.

Other authors

H.P. Lovecraft mentions the mysterious and long lost continent of Mu in several of his works.

Mu is identified with Lemuria in the Illuminatus! trilogy of Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson, and Martin Gardner did the same in his book Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science.

Recently there have been claims of "pyramids" found underwater near Japan, which have been conjectured to be part of some "lost continent" like Mu.

Mu in politics

In the late 1930s, Turkey's Independence War leader Ataturk promoted research on Mu and other lost continents, in the hope of establishing connections betwen the Turkish civilization and other ancient cultures, such as the Uyghur, India, Maya, and Aztec [1].

Mu in the arts and entertainment

Books and comics

Movies, TV serials, and animations

Video games

Music

See also