Lemuria.7z

Since you are looking for a "paper" and provided a ".7z" (compressed archive) extension, you may be searching for a specific archived collection of documents or a foundational academic text on the subject.

The most influential "paper" that defined the concept of Lemuria is by Philip Lutley Sclater, published in 1864 in The Quarterly Journal of Science . Foundational Academic Papers

: While the "Lemuria" of myth does not exist, scientists have found evidence of a "microcontinent" called Mauritia under the Indian Ocean, which may be what remains of the land mass that once connected these regions. LEMURIA.7z

: Philip Sclater's original paper proposed a sunken land bridge in the Indian Ocean to explain why lemur fossils were found in both Madagascar and India but not in Africa or the Middle East.

: Occultists like H.P. Blavatsky and W. Scott-Elliot (author of The Lost Lemuria ) adapted the scientific theory into a spiritual narrative involving "root races" and ancient civilizations. Since you are looking for a "paper" and provided a "

: German biologist Ernst Haeckel expanded on Sclater's idea in 1870, suggesting Lemuria was the "cradle of humanity" to explain missing links in the fossil record. Spiritual and Mythological Perspectives

: In Tamil nationalist literature, Lemuria is often associated with the mythical lost continent of Kumari Kandam , described as the cradle of Tamil civilization. Modern Scientific Standing : Philip Sclater's original paper proposed a sunken

The Lost Lemuria by W. Scott-Elliot - Fact or Fiction? - Louis Wolf