Travel

Atlantis & Lemuria Revisited

Long before recorded history, our planet held civilizations that lived in harmony with the stars. Atlantis and Lemuria were not myths but echoes of a time when human consciousness and cosmic knowledge were one. Their wisdom was written into stone, aligned with the constellations, and carried across oceans that once united the continents.

Today, as ancient sites reveal their astronomical precision and new evidence emerges beneath the soil and ice, we begin to remember what was once forgotten — that humanity itself is part of a greater cosmic design, now reawakening.

About my Research

What if the story of humanity began long before history remembers?
Across the globe, ancient monuments align with the stars, echoes of civilisations that understood the harmony between Earth and the cosmos. From Egypt to the Andes, from the Bosnian pyramids to the lost temples of Lemuria, a silent network of knowledge emerges, woven through stone, geometry, and myth.

This research explores that forgotten network, the remnants of a pre-cataclysmic world that once flourished along an ancient equator. It invites us to look beyond the boundaries of accepted history and remember a time when consciousness, science, and nature were one.

Paper Desiree van Toor

Tracing the Memory of a Lost World

This map is part of an ongoing research project exploring the forgotten alignments of Earth’s ancient civilizations.
Across continents, sacred sites and megalithic structures appear to share one invisible line — a remnant of an older equator that existed before the great cataclysm 12,800 years ago.

By connecting these points — from Egypt’s pyramids and the Bosnian Valley of the Pyramids, to the Nazca Lines, Paracas Skulls, and the temples of Angkor Wat — a pattern emerges that challenges our understanding of human history.
It suggests that what we call Atlantis or Lemuria may not be myth, but memory — fragments of a once-unified world that understood the harmony between Earth and the stars.

MY
Reflections

Desire van Toor-Peru

There comes a moment when you realise that much of what we’ve been told about our past simply doesn’t hold.
The timelines, the explanations, the neat stories about our origins, they no longer fit the evidence rising from the Earth.
Many discoveries that don’t match the accepted view are quietly ignored. Yet the Earth keeps speaking  through stone, alignment, and memory, reminding us that the truth is far older and wider than we think.

When I stood among the ancient structures of Egypt, Bosnia, and the Andes, I felt something stir not as a theory, but as a memory.
It was as if the land itself whispered that we’ve known this before. The builders of these places understood the connection between Earth and sky. They lived in harmony with the greater design of the cosmos, a knowledge we’re only beginning to remember.Astronomers say that more than half of all stars exist in pairs, yet our Sun appears alone, a solitary star in the Orion Arm. That makes us unusual, and I’ve never believed it’s by chance.
Perhaps the Sun, Sirius, and the Pleiades are linked in another way, through movement, resonance, or the subtle magnetic currents that run through our galaxy. When I trace those patterns, I don’t see isolation; I see connection.

Many of us feel this same pull researchers, artists, dreamers  finding ourselves drawn to certain places and times, as if responding to an ancient call.
As our awareness expands, so does our sense of what’s real. What once seemed impossible begins to make sense. And in that quiet shift, we remember: our story has never been only human. It has always been part of something far greater, and it’s finally coming back into view.

 Desirée van Toor