Long-Lost Continent Found Under the Indian Ocean 168
ananyo writes "The drowned remnants of an ancient micro-continent may lie scattered beneath the waters between Madagascar and India, a new study suggests. Evidence for the long-lost land comes from Mauritius, a volcanic island about 900 kilometers east of Madagascar (abstract) The oldest volcanic rocks on the island date to about 8.9 million years ago. Yet grain-by-grain analyses of beach sand collected at two sites on the Mauritian coast revealed around 20 zircons — tiny crystals of zirconium silicate that are exceedingly resistant to erosion or chemical change — that were far older. One of these zircons was at least 1.97 billion years old. The researchers that made the discovery think that geologically recent volcanic eruptions brought shards of the buried continent to the Earth's surface, where the zircons eroded from their parent rocks to pepper the island's sands. Analyses of Earth's gravitational field reveal several broad areas where sea-floor crust at the bottom of the Indian ocean is much thicker than normal — at least 25 to 30 kilometers thick, rather than the normal 5 to 10 kilometers. Those crustal anomalies may be the remains of a landmass that researchers have now dubbed Mauritia, which they suggest split from Madagascar when tectonic rifting and sea-floor spreading sent the Indian subcontinent surging northeast millions of years ago."
Everyone was thinking it, I Just said it. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Everyone was thinking it, I Just said it. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Everyone was thinking it, I Just said it. (Score:5, Funny)
Of course it's not Atlantis. Everyone knows that the continent of Atlantis was an island which lay before the great flood in the area we now call the Atlantic Ocean.
Re:Everyone was thinking it, I Just said it. (Score:4, Funny)
No, Atlantis is in another galaxy and we need a Zed Point Module to get there.
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It's Zero you twit. You're nerd credentials are hereby revoked.
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Great, now that they found Numenor... (Score:2)
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I thought Lemuria was far more recent, and more to the east. Atlantis, on the other hand, seems to fit pretty well with the google maps find, especially when you consider that the original Atlantis had a moat within a moat within a moat, all carved out of mountains, and --- looking at the same location in Yahoo maps -- you see that very feature just to the west.
Now, this one is more interesting, in that it might also imply that we could find major parts of the old continent in the Himilayan mountains, all
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Although sunken continents do exist – like Zealandia in the Pacific as well as Mauritia and the Kerguelen Plateau in the Indian Ocean – there is no known geological formation under the Indian or Pacific Oceans that corresponds to the hypothetical Lemuria.
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This story is getting amazing exposure because of that. The problem is... it predates the Plato-described Atlantis by... oh, I'd say 88 million years and change. The destruction of this thing predates modern humans, thus civilization. It's so old it wouldn't even be in the collective consciousness of early early early man. Atlantis was most likely either the ancient Minoan civilization or Santorini, which were both destroyed when the volcano at Santorini completely destroyed the place. It probably didn't
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europe has a regular cycle of being invaded by "barbarians" from the eurasian steppes. i haven't done any hard research into the subject but it seems to average every 800 years or so.
mongols, the Great Migration period and the fall of the roman empire, the hunnic invasion. they all come through south eastern europe, conquer the existing civilization and then take on their customs and live in the area.
same with greece, around 800bc there was an invasion of barbarians who became what we consider the classical
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"The problem is... it predates the Plato-described Atlantis by... oh, I'd say 88 million years and change. The destruction of this thing predates modern humans, thus civilization"
The Old Ones are oooooold.
C'mon, aeons old and in the middle of the Pacific Ocean? That's obviously neither Atlantis nor Lemuria: It is R'lyeh!
Don't go to that deep land, for you will awake the horrors of the past... PhÂnglui mglwÂnafh Cthulhu RÂlyeh wgahÂnagl fhtagn
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Given the time-frame, I'm thinking closer to R'lyeh's true location. How about we all just leave this continent alone, 'kay?
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Have you seen the mess we're making of the place? We'd be better off with The Ancient Ones coming up to shake some sense into us.
Step away from that Necronomicon... (Score:2)
...and keep your hands and other appendages where we can see them. Beardo.
If that is really your name...
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I'm pretty sure what the Old Ones are known for doing is shaking the sense OUT of people. Roll d100 for SAN loss.
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Cthulhu Ftagn!! Iá! Iá!
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Wrong ocean. This would be Mu.
Found = Not yet found? (Score:4, Insightful)
Not really found. This is like trying to find a lost child, and your search dog picks up a scent, or you find a child size shoe.
Still lost. Not found.
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Furthermore, I wonder what the impact this discover has, other than "hey, we know one more thing that nobody's ever going to use or ask about. Ever. Again." Pardon my bluntness, but this is right there in top 5 of most arid, useless discoveries I ever heard about.
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Pardon my bluntness, but this is right there in top 5 of most arid, useless discoveries I ever heard about.
I'm sure that there's plenty of geologists and paleo-geologists who will disagree.
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I'm sure that there's plenty of geologists and paleo-geologists who will disagree.
I work with paleogeologists and there are lots of cool discoveries every day. I don't see what's special about this one, beyond the hype of calling a destroy microplate a "lost continent".
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Re:Found = Not yet found? (Score:4, Funny)
If you ever drop your continent into a river of molten lava, let it go, because, man, it's gone.
Mauritia? (Score:2)
Surely you mean Atlantis.
Re:Mauritia? (Score:4, Funny)
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Yeah, like every single road being named Peachtree something-or-other.
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It's not that bad. Probably not more than a dozen or so named Peachtree.
Or were you including the ones outside the downtown area too?
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[Ab]Using google maps I get 23. I'm not sure what you call outside downtown - I'm a country boy - it's ALL downtown to me!
Peachtree St NE
Peachtree St NW
Peachtree Rd NE
Peachtree Center Ave NE
Peachtree Ave NE
Peachtree Battle Ave NW
Peachtree Circle NE
Peachtree Dunwoody Road
Peachtree Dunwoody Road Northeast
Peachtree Dunwoody Circle
Peachtree Dunwoody Court NE
Peachtree Drive
Peachtree Rd NW
Old Peachtree Rd NW
Peachtree Hills Ave NE
Peachtree Hills Circle NE
Peachtree Industrial Blvd
Peachtree Industrial Court
Peachtree
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Alas, it was meant as a joke - used to live in Atlanta, and everything being named "Peachtree" was a running gag then (probably still is)....
Not Atlantis (Score:2)
Interesting fact (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Interesting fact (Score:5, Funny)
Sounds like a Surface problem.
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The proper term is Surface Tension.
Re:Interesting fact (Score:4, Funny)
According to the article, they entire civilization was using Windows 8 right before it sunk. Their continental IT department tried to roll out touchscreens and then the whole place sank into the sea. Strange, but not unexpected.
Microsoft's blue screen of death was meant to honor all those that sank into the blue sea with no hope of survival.
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Wow. Think about MS much?
I've always known it: (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Plate tectonics (Score:4, Funny)
Yes, that is an unfortunate effect of dealing with stupid people all day, you end up feeling really smart when you are really just a step above those you help.
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Yes, that is an unfortunate effect of dealing with stupid people all day, you end up feeling really smart when you are really just a step above those you help.
You can call them stupid all you like, I call them customers and they pay the bills nicely.
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Very true.
I know the people I help are not stupid, they just don't have the same knowledge I have, much like I don't have the same knowledge they do.
Doesn't make me smarter than them.
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And, the definition of what constitutes a continent is rather subjective. Any definition one tries to establish has many leaks that result in either very few continents or dozens of them.
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And in the desert, like the The Silk Road, a merchant route between Europe and China. If the archeologists are really lucky, there are also remains of pottery and artwork, grafitti and once, even a diary carved into a soft clay pot (even 6000 years, people wanted to keep track of personal events).
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Someone just discovered geology. Amazing.
Which of course is such a horrible thing and must be discouraged? If we let geology become too interesting, lay people might get interested... then what?
DIY geology like what happened on Mars?
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"This also further confirms our knowledge on biogeography, plate tectonics and other areas."
But, but, but... this could have not happened in only 6000 years!
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So, you are willing to abandon your "the Earth is only 6000 years old" hypothesis?
So THAT'S where they go (Score:1)
Found!, along with 200 million unmatched socks
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Found!, along with 200 million unmatched socks
All left feet?
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Found!, along with 200 million unmatched socks
All left feet?
You didn't think very hard on that, did you? I've never seen socks that were left vs. right dependant, other than those funny Japanese slippers with toes (cf. gloves).
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Found!, along with 200 million unmatched socks
All left feet?
You didn't think very hard on that, did you? I've never seen socks that were left vs. right dependant, other than those funny Japanese slippers with toes (cf. gloves).
Left vs. right socks was a gag played on a blind person.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/If_You_Could_See_What_I_Hear [wikipedia.org]
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Chick flick. I'm not surprised I've never heard of it.
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"Dior" monogrammed socks distinguish left and right socks BTW.
Slightly OT: How do continents survive? (Score:2)
So, if continents are floating in the Earth's crust that is forming at the Atlantic ridge for one and submerging at the Pacific ridge, why isn't the surface being completely reformed and continents regularly melted completely and recycles? Do the major continents float on top of the crust?
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My understanding (and I am not a geologist) is that this is what happens. It's just that "regular cylces" on the timeline are very long.
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its called subduction, the continents are on the tectonic plates which float and move around. The San Andreas fault in California is a prime example of subduction, the pacific plate is subducting and recycling the north american plate.
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The the San Andreas [wikipedia.org] is a strike-slip fault, not a subduction fault.
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Maybe he had in mind the Juan de Fuca Plate [wikipedia.org].
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Yes.
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I'm not a geologist ...
Not to be cruel, but it shows (however I admire your interest). This is cool stuff once you get the bug. Your account reads plausible but somewhat confused. I'm not a geologist either. I did spend about a decade as a geophysical tech. My understanding is the mid-Atlantic ridge is opening up and pushing the North American plate away from the European plate, and the Pacific plate is subducting under the Western side of the North American plate. It's convection, but the geologic timescale dwarfs that pro
Opened Pandora's box: (Score:2)
The Sleestak there are demanding reparations for disturbing their peace.
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Very confusing (Score:5, Informative)
I am bracing for another assault from the Tamil literature majors. There are references to sea level rise and lost cities (South Madurai) and lost rivers (Pahtruli) and lost temples (near Mamallapuram) and lost harbours (near Poompuhar) and lost grammar books (by Agastiyar ) in Tamil. Best explained by the ending of last ice age some 9000 years ago and the seas coming in a few kilometers and probably flooding a large river delta. But these guys postulate a "lost continent" of Lemuria, exactly in the Arabian Sea./Indian Ocean. Now they are going to come on like a ton of bricks claiming vindication and "proof" that the Tamil language is 1.9 billion years old. Especially since there is a literary reference that translates as, "after the rocks have appeared, but the sand has not yet been formed, [Tamils] were born with swords, the eldest civilization". That would gel with a 1.9 billion year old language.
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21551149 [slashdot.org]
Researchers have found evidence for a landmass that would have existed between 2,000 and 85 million years ago.
This potentially places the landmass above sea level during a time when humanity could have been present on it.
Alternatives? (Score:2)
Also, it does not seem as if the zircons rode to Mauritius on the wind, says Robert Duncan, a marine geologist at Oregon State University in Corvallis. âoeThereâ(TM)s a remote possibility that they were wind blown, but theyâ(TM)re probably too large to have done so,â he adds.
How big is too large? Apparently dust gets blown quite far: http://www.nature.com/news/2010/100809/full/news.2010.396.html [nature.com]
Or could they be from an asteroid?
Microcontinent or a dwarf continent? (Score:4, Interesting)
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This is why I like geologists, they are logical people. Astronomers never thought to call Pluto a microplanet.
That was bureaucratic BS. Pluto's a planet, and a damned interesting one.
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Neil Tyson is not a bureaucrat. Hopefully you know who that is and why he made that call.
Funny. I was going by this [wikipedia.org]:
On August 24, 2006, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) defined what it means to be a "planet" within the Solar System. This definition excluded Pluto as a planet and added it as a member of the new category "dwarf planet" along with Eris and Ceres.[18] After the reclassification, Pluto was added to the list of minor planets and given the number 134340.
Sadly... (Score:3)
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Tasha26, you are giving inaccurate information to Slashdot readers. This is not the 90s anymore; the national telecommunications operator no longer holds a monopoly on internet connectivity. You can get an Internet subscriptions from other providers like ADBN, Emtel, DCL, MTML and soon. ADSL is available up to 4 Mbps (Unmetered). I am myself subscribed to a 2 Mbps unmetered connection for about USD 45/month. It is more expensive than what you would get in developed nations but keep in mind that we're on a t
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I find it absolutely astounding that you list "upto 4 MBps" but not the actual speed delivered at the end user level. Don't you think that this is more
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My 2 Mbps ADSL gives me a stable 200 KB/s at pretty much any time of the day. At least one of my customers in the capital city gets an average of 3.2 Mbps on his 4 Mbps subscription. I do have some customers who complain of their line speeds but they're mostly on the last mile so they're hitting a technological limit.
Emtel is part of the consortium of operators of the LION2 project and as such are hooked to LION2 independently of Mauritius Telecom. When MT's infrastructure goes down, Emtel happily keeps chu
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Sadly everyone I know (non-business users) hates Mauritius Telecoms with a vengea
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I do not work for Mauritius Telecom. I have no motivation to lie about the yield of my residential ADSL 2 Mbps.
To illustrate, I have uploaded some June 2012 bandwidth graphs [imgur.com] saved from my old firewall for your review.
Regards
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My oh my, resorting to name-calling and racial slurs when you run out of arguments. Well, I'll give you fodder to insult me now.
On your twitter, you wrote that you're in paradise when you visited Mauritius a few weeks ago.
On slashdot, you write, this 'wretched island' 'pathetic and 'backward island'. How do you explain this discrepancy.
Also, judging from your Twitter feed, it shows you have lived mostly in England for the past few years. Technically, you don't live in Mauritius and in England; you've just c
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If that was a discussion about the state of ADSL (now that we've established MT is not the monopoly you wanted it to be portrayed as), how about you stuck to the tech nature of the discussion and not resort to racial slurs? Regarding the discrepancy of the service, I wrote in my lots earlier post that I have some customers complain about the speed but it was due to limitations of the technology itself (e.g. being on the last mile) You were attempting to portray Mauritius as being a really backwards nation w
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P.s. A country is not a race, learn to differentiate between the two.
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So are you at least going to admit you were wrong on your claim that MT is a monopoly and all other ISPs go through MT, when I have provided the ICTA document that it is not the case and another reader just provided BGP route tables to support this?
Agreed I got the part on 'being in mauritius a few weeks ago' wrong (it was more in beginning of 2012). It further strengthens that you DON"T live in Mauritius like you originally claimed.
We're not talking about state of mind and thinking process anymore at this
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You have provided no evidence at all that Mauritius is under a telecommunications monopoly when it comes to the Internet and that the state of connectivity is as you want to portray it to be. Who is being juvenile here? The person who is staying on-topic or who is name-calling. You don't get to call the case closed. Things don't work this way. It it way too easy to say I have troll accounts when you're unable to provide data to sustain your claims. But on go on, I'm eager to know what are my troll accounts.
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Now take the answers to these and shove it in your dumb brain. Do you now understand what you units I meant to say or do you pester your fee-paying clients in the same way, you daft Indian idiot? Wowee *sigh*
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Bad headline, of course (Score:2)
Headline: Long lost continent found
Article: Long lost micro-continent found
Next headline: New startup sells $5 cars
Next headline's article: New startup sells $5 toy cars.
I mean, come on.
Namor... (Score:2)
I was going to moderate in this discussion but (Score:2)
93 posts and nobody mentioned EDEN! And Atlantis was in the "Atlantic" ocean, duh.
I fear for the education of today's children on mythology. You are all making me feel old.
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I'm not sure how non-fictitious this part of the Bible is, but yes, the Indian Ocean is where the four ancient rivers that are said to connect at Eden meet.
A more informative article on the discovery (Score:2)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-21551149 [slashdot.org]
Researchers have found evidence for a landmass that would have existed between 2,000 and 85 million years ago.
This potentially places the landmass above sea level during a time when humanity could have been present on it.