The Lost LemuriaTheosophical publishing society, 1904 - 44 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 10
Page
... surface of our globe , was once the ocean floor , and that what is now the ocean floor was once dry land . Geologists have in some cases been able to specify the exact portions of the earth's surface where these subsidences and ...
... surface of our globe , was once the ocean floor , and that what is now the ocean floor was once dry land . Geologists have in some cases been able to specify the exact portions of the earth's surface where these subsidences and ...
Page 1
... surface of our globe , was once the ocean floor , and that what is now the ocean floor was once dry land . Geologists have in some cases been able to specify the exact portions of the earth's surface where these subsidences and ...
... surface of our globe , was once the ocean floor , and that what is now the ocean floor was once dry land . Geologists have in some cases been able to specify the exact portions of the earth's surface where these subsidences and ...
Page 4
... Surface . " London : Macmillan & Co. , 1876. Vol . I. , pp . 76-7 . † Ceylon and South India , it is true , have been bounded on the north by a considerable extent of sea , but that was at a much earlier date than the Tertiary period ...
... Surface . " London : Macmillan & Co. , 1876. Vol . I. , pp . 76-7 . † Ceylon and South India , it is true , have been bounded on the north by a considerable extent of sea , but that was at a much earlier date than the Tertiary period ...
Page 5
... surface , as well as the inferences which he draws from the acknowledged relations of living and extinct faunas as above stated , remain of course unaltered . The following extracts from Mr. H. F. Blandford's most interesting paper read ...
... surface , as well as the inferences which he draws from the acknowledged relations of living and extinct faunas as above stated , remain of course unaltered . The following extracts from Mr. H. F. Blandford's most interesting paper read ...
Page 11
... surface of the Indian Ocean , which extended along the south of Asia , as it is at present ( and probably in direct connection with it ) , towards the east , as far as Further India and the Sunda Islands ; towards the west , as far as ...
... surface of the Indian Ocean , which extended along the south of Asia , as it is at present ( and probably in direct connection with it ) , towards the east , as far as Further India and the Sunda Islands ; towards the west , as far as ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Africa ages Alfred Wallace animals and plants Anthropoid apes Archipelago astral Atlantean Atlantis Australia became bodies Book of Dzyan cells coast continent of Atlantis continent of Lemuria course Cretaceous developed distribution of living divine earth earth's surface Easter Island Eocene Ernst Haeckel Ernst Haeckel's eruptions evidence evolution fauna and flora feet Fifth Root Race formed fossil Fourth Root Race fructified geological germ-cells gigantic ground Haeckel hermaphrodites human race Indian Ocean Indo-Oceanic inhabitants islands Jurassic kingdom lakes land Lemurian continent Lemurian map Lemurian period Lemurian race living and extinct Lunar Pitris Madagascar Malay Peninsula Manu Manvantara Mesolithic Mesozoic mindless Miocene period Mont Pelée mountain peninsula Permian physical sight present probably Ray Lankester reference region reproduction reptiles rocks Sclater second map period Secret Doctrine series of India seventh sub-race sexual South Africa straits submerged subsidences and upheavals Tertiary Third Race Third Root Race tion to-day Triassic Venus volcanoes
Popular passages
Page 27 - HAVE DEFILED OUR FUTURE ABODES. THIS is KARMA. LET us DWELL IN THE OTHERS. LET us TEACH THEM BETTER, LEST WORSE SHOULD HAPPEN.
Page 9 - But there are a number of circumstances (especially chorological facts) which suggest that the primeval home of man was a continent now sunk below the surface of the Indian Ocean, which extended along the south of Asia, as it is at present (and probably in direct connection with it), towards the east, as far as Further India and the Sunda Islands ; towards the west, as far as Madagascar and the south-eastern shores of Africa.
Page 2 - ... is of tertiary formation, with a few isolated patches of secondary rocks. It is evident therefore, that during much of the tertiary period, Ceylon and South India were bounded on the north by a considerable extent of sea, and probably formed part of an extensive southern continent or great island. The very numerous and remarkable cases of affinity with Malaya, require however some closer approximation to these islands, which probably occurred at a later period.
Page 1 - Wallace has furnished, by the help of chorological1 facts, that the present Malayan Archipelago consists in reality of two completely different divisions, is particularly interesting. The western division, the Indo-Malayan Archipelago, comprising the large islands of Borneo, Java and Sumatra, was formerly connected by Malacca with the Asiatic continent, and probably also with the Lemurian continent just mentioned. The eastern division, on the other hand, the Austro-Malayan Archipelago, comprising...
Page 9 - Permian, belonging to the Jurassic series, and probably to the Oolite. Mr. Woodward was pleased to find that the author had added further evidence, derived from the fossil flora of the Mesozoic series of India, in corroboration of the views of Huxley, Sclater, and others as to the former existence of an old submerged continent ("Lemuria"), which Darwin's researches on coral reefs had long since foreshadowed.
Page 8 - The position of the connecting land was said to be indicated by the range of coral reefs and banks that now exists between the Arabian Sea and "West Africa. Up to the end of the Nummulitic epoch, except perhaps for short periods, no direct...
Page 26 - But it is evident that the units of the Third Race humanity began to separate in their pre-natal shells, or eggs, and to issue out of them as distinct male and female babes, ages after the appearance of its early progenitors. And, as time rolled on its geological periods, the newly born sub-races began to lose their natal capacities. Toward the end of the fourth sub-race...
Page 26 - How " of the generation of the distinct sexes must, of course, be very obscure here, as it is the business of an embryologist and a specialist, the present work giving only faint outlines of the process. But it is evident that the units of the Third Race humanity began to separate in their pre-natal shells, or eggs...
Page 3 - In the Southern Hemisphere there appear to have been three considerable and very ancient land masses, varying in extent from time to time, but always keeping distinct from each other, and represented, more or less completely, by Australia, South Africa, and South America of our time. Into these flowed successive waves of life, as they each in turn became temporarily united with some part of the northern land.
Page 27 - TOOK HUGE SHE-ANIMALS UNTO THEM. THEY BEGAT UPON THEM DUMB RACES. DUMB THEY WERE THEMSELVES. BUT THEIR TONGUES UNTIED. THE TONGUES OF THEIR PROGENY REMAINED STILL. MONSTERS THEY BRED. A RACE OF CROOKED RED-HAIR-COVERED MONSTERS GOING ON ALL FOURS. A DUMB RACE TO KEEP THE SHAME UNTOLD.