That’s a rough approximation of Mu’s coastline superimposed upon a map with modern shorelines to anchor ourselves. Obviously the shorelines elsewhere would have been different from what they are today and this is an educated guess by, I believe, James Churchward.

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Seems... Ambitious. The ocean there is very deep. To have that and it sink would require not only a sea level rise, but so very big and sudden tectonic shifts - which may be possible, idk. Maybe that pole shift could do it. But for comparison, the mountain that becomes Hawaii's Big Island is taller than Mr. Everest

Well, maybe only ambitious in the north and west parts 🤔

Given that the “Pacific ring of fire” is a thing and it’s all trenched suggests displacement of tectonic plates away from the Pacific plate.

If the pole flip hypothesis is valid and something triggers induced fluidity in the asthenosphere, during such events, the asthenosphere would conceivably yield very easily to persistent or even fleeting forces.

Churchward’s research suggests that Mu was very flat. Also lot of water weight from the oceans inundating the lands during the pole flip could contribute heavily (pardon the pun) to pushing the land mass down into the asthenosphere.

The other factor at play here is that Mu apparently existed 53,000 years ago and based on Ben Davidson’s research, geomagnetic excursions occur every 6000 years or so, meaning there have been a number of cataclysms between the first one and today that have further shuffled the deck so to speak.

Very interesting... Anything is possible on this very mercurial/protean planet of ours... And seeing the stone carvings of the dude with 6 or seven snakes on either side of his head, found in both central america and India, is quite persuasive that something was going on.