Maps of Atlantis
The two islands into which Atlantis was now split were known by the names of Ruta and Daitya.
Daitya, the smaller and more southerly of the islands, has almost entirely disappeared, while of Ruta there only remains the relatively small island of Poseidonis.
The Story of Atlantis
The two islands into which Atlantis was now split were known by the names of Ruta and Daitya.
Daitya, the smaller and more southerly of the islands, has almost entirely disappeared, while of Ruta there only remains the relatively small island of Poseidonis.
On the island of Ruta however, in the third map period, a Toltec dynasty again rose to power and ruled through its tributary kings a large portion of the island.
August 2024 Update
200,000 B.C.: Second great catastrophe leads to the fragmentation of Atlantis into the islands of Kuta and Daitya.
The Fourth Root Race
200,000 B.C.: Second great catastrophe leads to the fragmentation of Atlantis into the islands of Kuta and Daitya.
C., which left as remnants of the great continent which had joined Europe and Africa to America the huge islands of Kuta and Daitya.
Beginning of the 5th Root Race
A tribe from the fifth sub-race, described as the "moon-coloured race," was isolated in the mountains north of Ruta.
The isolation of a tribe from the white fifth subrace (the moon-coloured race, as the Stanzas of Dzyan poetically describe it) which lived in the mountains to the north of Ruta, was the first decisive step in the building of the Race, and this took place about 100,000 B.
But the emigrants did not much like their new quarters, and while the majority of the people, who had been prepared by Vaivasvata Manu in Ruta, were even fanatically devoted to Him, the younger generation did a good deal of grumbling, for it was pioneer work, not a 'personally conducted Cook's tour'.
Characteristics of Atlantis
In chapter IX, the authors wrote about Atlantis that “explosions of gas, floods, and earthquakes” razed Ruta and Daitya, the great islands left from the cataclysm of 200,000 B.C., and only the island of Poseidonis remained, the last vestige of the once grand continent of Atlantis.
Atlanteans
In chapter IX, the authors wrote about Atlantis that "explosions of gas, floods, and earthquakes" razed Ruta and Daitya, the great islands left from the cataclysm of 200,000 B.C., and only the island of Poseidonis remained, the last vestige of the once grand continent of Atlantis.