Is the island of Madagascar a part of the deceased continent of Lemuria?

The amazing discovery of scientists on the island of Madagascar proves that the forefathers of man were the demigods-atlantes!

The luminaries of science for many years are trying to find evidence of the existence of the lost continent - Atlantis, revealing its remains in the Arctic, then off the coast of the Greek islands. And if it is believed that Atlantis sank completely, then another ancient continent called Lemuria left a proof of its presence on Earth. His name is the island of Madagascar.

Evidence that Madagascar broke away from some major continent can be found on the island itself. Its flora and fauna consists of unique animals and plants that are recognized as endemic, i.e. uncharacteristic for this part of the planet. It is beyond the power of any biologist or geneticist to explain their appearance on the island, which seems rather strange at the present level of knowledge. The number of endemics is so great that its biosphere simply can not be considered an accident. A lot of questions are raised by the ethnicity of its inhabitants: while they should treat the Negroid race, they are similar in ethnic style to the people of Indonesia.

These two discoveries led scientists to develop a theory about the Indo-Madagascar land, which stretched from Africa to Java and India. The first bold assumptions about it were voiced in 1838 by the British zoologist Philip Latley Sclater. As arguments that Madagascar is a site of a continent that has sunk into oblivion, he used several facts. The first is its magnitude: Madagascar is one of the four largest islands in the world.

Secondly - Madagascar is surrounded by volcanic islands, while itself has a non-volcanic origin. Analysis of the deep layers of its soil proved that it broke away from some large piece of land and drifted several centuries, until it "stopped" in the Indian Ocean. The island is in an active tectonic zone, so if it was located in its modern place at the beginning of our era, then on its surface there would necessarily have been "scars" from the eruptions of local volcanoes.

Since the first unusual animals, met by Philip Skljterom, were animals, leading night mode of life. They are called lemurs, so the continent, of which Madagascar was a part, was called Lemuria. The words of Sclater were supported by the largest geographer-revolutionary Jean-Jacques Elise Reclus, who called the obvious proof of his statements the fact that:

"... Madagascar possesses not less than 66 of their species, than in sufficient measure and it is proved that this island was once the mainland."

The French geologist Gustave Emil Oga went even further: he believed that the Hindustan peninsula and Seychelles are "brothers" of Madagascar, because they have a common origin. He believes that after the death of Lemuria, a deep depression formed - the Sunda Trench. Ancient historical texts of Sri Lanka agree with him - they contain records:

"In times immemorial, the citadel of Ravan (the lord of Sri Lanka) represented 25 palaces and 400 thousand inhabitants, swallowed up by the ocean."

In the myths of the mongash, it is written:

"Madagascar was a large land, but over time almost all disappeared under water."

The Tamil people have a myth about the ancestral home, which they fled because of the flood and later settled in the surrounding lands. "They called the vast land" Kumari Nala - it stretched in the Indian Ocean, which identifies it with Lemuria. In the Indian epic "Mahabharata" it is said that in the 5th millennium BC. Rama climbed onto a high mountain and watched from it the flood that covered the homeland of the Tamils. By the way, the Indians are sure that the inhabitants of Lemuria were highly developed people, because they had flying vehicles, controlled by the power of thought and weapons, superior to nuclear power.

The occultist Elena Blavatsky, whose support scientists did not expect, wrote:

"Lemuria was then a gigantic country. It covered the whole region from the foot of the Himalayas to the south through what is known to us now as South India, Ceylon and Sumatra; then, covering on its way, as it moved to the south, Madagascar on the right and Tasmania on the left, it descended, not reaching several degrees to the Antarctic circle; and from Australia, which at that time was an internal area on the Mainland, it went far into the Pacific beyond Rapa Nui. Sweden and Norway were an integral part of Ancient Lemuria, and also Atlantis from Europe, just as Eastern and Western Siberia and Kamchatka belonged to it from Asia. "

She called the inhabitants of the disappeared continent Lemurian-Atlanteans. Proof of her words are at once 92 islands, artificially created by the inhabitants of Lemuria in the Pacific Ocean.

A year ago, in the authoritative foreign journal Nature Communications, an investigation was opened by the South African paleogeologist Luis Eshval and his co-authors, forcing humanity to reconsider its views on its own history. It states that Madagascar separated from Lemuria at least 86 million years ago. Errors can not be: the age of the tectonic plates of the island and the presence in it of the continental zircon mineral exclude the misinterpretation of scientific data.

In the near future, Louis plans to descend to the bottom of the Indian Ocean to prove that the natural anomalies of the island are associated with the fragments of Lemuria lying beneath it. Will humanity be able to reconcile with its discoveries?