"Even more bizarre was a report in the 30th October 1955 edition of the San Francisco Examiner, which linked the American ‘Bigfoot’ or Sasquatch with a sunken Lemuria, suggesting that he was a highly developed survivor of that lost continent!"
Source: atlantipedia.ie/samples/lemuria
TRACING THE ORIGINS OF BIRDS AND MAN
According to THE ATLAS OF WORLD HISTORY (Penguin), Man is 600,000 years old. Our closest competitors are Mammals (apes, monkeys, lemurs, lorises, tarsiers, bears, elephants, big cats, bats, dogs, mice, moose, aardvarks, beavers, gorillas, sloths, pandas, hamsters, horses, whales and dolphins.) Mammals are 200 ml years old. However our closest relatives are avian creatures (yes as in Birds.)
Reptiles come third after Mammals and Amphibians come fourth before the Insect Kingdom.
I trust my fathers knowledge as he has read more books than me and has gone through university and has a doctorate in teaching & education. He gave me this book to read and after my mother brought up the subject of the origins of Man, I commented; "Scientists don't know for certain where we came from or what we came from but they speculate and estimate that we transformed from Homo-sapiens (mammals) hundreds of thousands of years ago."
Or are we directly descended from Birds? You decide!...I'll leave you with this video
Mu is the name of a suggested lost continent whose concept and name were proposed by 19th-century traveler and writer Augustus Le Plongeon, who claimed that several ancient civilizations, such as those of Egypt and Mesoamerica, were created by refugees from Mu—which he located in the Atlantic Ocean. This concept was popularized and expanded by James Churchward, who asserted that Mu was once located in the Pacific.The existence of Mu was already being disputed in Le Plongeon's time. Today scientists dismiss the concept of Mu as physically impossible, arguing that a continent can neither sink nor be destroyed in the short period of time required by this premise.
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