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The remains of a micro-continent scientist call Mauritia might be preserved under huge amounts of ancient lava beneath the Indian Ocean, a new analysis of island sands in the area suggests. These ...
A geoscience paper by Jothi Jayaraman of the Leibniz Institute for Applied Geophysics, posted on ResearchGate under the title “Unraveling the Mystery of the Lost Continent: The Science Behind Lemuria ...
It’s a chapter of history nearly forgotten: Intrepid merchants and explorers traveled thousands of miles, not along storied caravan routes, but across the great blue expanse of the Indian Ocean, ...
A huge, mysterious so-called “gravity hole” under the Indian Ocean might have been formed from the remnants of an ancient sea, according to a new study. Researchers recently offered the ...
Ancient Lost Continent Discovered in Indian Ocean New evidence of old rocks further demonstrate the landmass "drowned" during continental breakup about 85 million years ago.
A so-called "gravity hole" in the Indian Ocean, where the gravitational pull is weaker than other places on Earth, could be the result of magma plumes from deep within the planet, scientists ...
The Indian Ocean "gravity hole" is a region where Earth's mass is reduced, leading to weak gravitational pull, lower-than-average sea levels and a puzzle scientists have only just begun to solve.
Unguja Ukuu, an archaeological settlement located on the Zanzibar Archipelago in Tanzania, was a key port of trade in the Indian Ocean by the first millennium when the island was populated by ...
Ports of the Ancient Indian Ocean; ed Marie-Francoise Boousasac, Jean Francois Salles & Jean-Baptiste Yon, Primus, Rs. 2,195.
The remains of a micro-continent scientist call Mauritia might be preserved under huge amounts of ancient lava beneath the Indian Ocean, a new analysis of island sands in the area suggests.
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