Lemuria: Its Sundaland origins and influence on Papua New Guinea

Featured Image: Author’s own photo, view from the Rabaul Volcanological Observatory 2024

In June this year I will be joining others on the Cosmic Consciousness Cruise to Papua New Guinea. As part of our cruise experience, there will be an Onboard Conference Component. Organised by Kathryn Hand and Mick Turner, this will not be the first of their Cosmic Consciousness conferences that I have attended and I am very much looking forward to the event. In preparing for the experience, I prepared this paper which I will have an opportunity to chat about with other interested participants during the cruise.

On our Cosmic Consciousness Cruise to Papua New Guinea (PNG) we will be travelling to three amazing destinations – Alotau, Kiriwina Island (the largest of the Trobriand Islands) and Rabaul.

I have marked on the map below our three destinations.

Public Domain map of Papua New Guinea (https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=480208), edited using Perplexity AI (perplexity.ai) and Microsoft Designer

Rabaul is my birthplace. I am also an initiated member of the local Tolai community there. My family association with the area dates back around 100 years: my grandfather moved to the area in his late teens in the 1920s, and my father, who was born in Wau in the Morobe Province in the 1930s, moved to Rabaul as a child. I am very excited to be returning to PNG and, in particular to Rabaul and to share a little of my experience and understanding of where we are travelling in the hope it may help enrich our cruise experience.

Continue reading “Lemuria: Its Sundaland origins and influence on Papua New Guinea”

At the Heart of the Matter

Dr Philip Jamieson (with Marianne Schmidt)

Feature image by Oliver Peters from Pixabay

This is the original version of the paper that Marianne and I wrote considering the ancient origins of the classic heart symbol published with some editorial changes in Ancient Origins on 27 October 2025 under the title, Tracing the Ancient Spiritual Journey of the World’s Most Popular Emoji. The paper as published is available at https://www.ancient-origins.net/tracing-ancient-spiritual-journey-worlds-most-popular-emoji-00102251

On World Emoji Day 2025, the classic red love heart was identified as the most popular emoji used by the global online community. One of the most well recognised symbols on the planet today, it is commonly associated with love and romance. This association is normally identified as developing only from the 13th century. There are however some ancient representations of the now classic heart shape that appear not only to share at least some relationship with the modern image, but that we believe may ultimately link to a profound spiritual truth.

Sexual association

The heart shape is found in antiquity most commonly depicting various seeds, leaves and other botanical forms with which it has a close visual appearance. One commonly referenced example is the heart-shaped seed of the silphium plant. Alkaloid substances in its seed were effective in ancient Greece and Rome as both a contraceptive and aphrodisiac, with the suggestion that this association with sex may have been a foundation for the heart shape’s later romantic association.

An association of the heart symbol with sex may actually be of far more ancient origin. Palaeolithic rock art from central Sahara includes examples of what have been described as a “simple heart-like sign” (similar in styling to the modern heart symbol) which are thought associated with an erotic (or sexual) meaning.

Anatomical inspirations?

The shapes of various aspects of female and male anatomy resembling the heart symbol have also been suggested as providing its foundation.

One such anatomical relationship is the similarity of the heart shape to the heart-shaped pelvis (more prominent in males). Marianne also points to the energetic association of the pelvic girdle with the Sacral chakra, the location of both the female and male reproductive organs, the ovaries and womb in women and the testes in men. The Sacral chakra is connected with fertility, the creative impulse and emotions such as joy, care and love.

Continue reading “At the Heart of the Matter”