- Home
- What is it?
- The history of archaeology
- Bad data
- Bad Archaeology’s special data set
- Exotic places
- Out-of-place artefacts
- Anomalous human remains
- Footprints and the like
- Anomalously old technology
- Mysterious objects
- Very ancient artefacts
- The Nampa figurine
- A ‘carved’ fossil shell?
- Letters inside marble?
- A chalk ball from Laon
- A mortar & pestle from Tuolomne
- Sling stone from the Red Crag
- Metallic tubes from St-Jean-de-Livet
- A ‘crystal lens’ from…
- Gold thread from Rutherford Mill (UK)
- Gold chain from Morrisonville, Illinois
- Carved stone from Lehigh, Iowa
- Iron cup from Wilburton, Oklahoma
- Hieroglyphs in a coal mine at…
- Nail in sandstone from Kingoodie (UK)
- Metallic vase from Dorchester,…
- A medallion from Lawn Ridge, Illinois
- An iron nail in Californian quartz
- An iron object in Scottish coal
- Tools in rock at Aix-en-Provence
- Eoliths: tools or naturally fractured…
- The ‘London hammer’ (Texas)
- Petroglyphs, inscriptions and reliefs
- Unusual structures
- Old maps
- Religious texts
- Conspiracy theories
- Lost civilisations
- Extraterrestrials
- Other chronologies
- Controversies
- Other dimensions?
- Religious delusions
- Frauds and hoaxes
- In the service of politics
- Dubious methodologies
- Explanations
- Reference material
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Links
- Contact the authors
Lost continents
‘Lost’ continents and islands – land masses that no longer exist, having sunk beneath the surface of the sea – have long been discussed in literature. As fictional places, they can be settings for paradise or for hell; as hypotheses for the origins of known human cultures, they have the advantage of no longer being available for inspection and so can be populated by all manner of people with any variety of culture that takes the writer’s fancy.