The Atlantis Encyclopedia

(Nandana) #1

194 The Atlantis Encyclopedia


bio-rhythms in accord with so-called “Earth energies.” Its name, Mu-tubu-udundi,
or “the Self-Disciplined Way of Mu,” derives from the lost Pacific civilization
of Mu, similarly known for the spiritual disciplines and peaceful worldview of its
inhabitants.

Mu-tu-hei


In Marquesan cosmology, the worldwide void or “silence” that existed
during the remote past immediately after the annihilation of a great Pacific
kingdom, an apparent reference to the disappearance of Mu.

Mu-tul


A Mayan city founded by Zac-Mu-tul, whose name means, literally, “White
Man of Mu.” The name “Mu-tul” seems philologically related to the Polynesian
“Mu-tu” (Tahiti) and “Mu-tu-hei” (Marquesas), all defining a Lemurian common
denominator.
(See Mu, Mut-t, Mu-tu-hei)

Mu-yin-wa


The Hopi “maker of all life,” he appears during ritual events known as
Powamu, every February. A white line signifying his skin color appears down
the front of his arms and legs. Mu-yin-wa’s personification of the Direction
Below (sunken Mu?), and the recurrence of “Mu” in his name, to say nothing of
the suggestive Powamu, define him as a mythic heirloom from the lost Pacific
civilization.

Mu-yu-Moqo


Site of the earliest known working of precious metal in the Andes. Located
in the Andahualas Valley, archaeological excavations at Muyu-Moqo uncovered
a 3,440-year-old stone bowl containing metallurgical tools and gold beaten
into thin foil. The Lemurians were renowned metalsmiths, and the discovery
of fine gold work at Muyu-Moqo echoes not only the site’s derivation from
Mu, but coincides with the probable destruction of the island civilization,
around 1628 B.C.
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