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[[Image:Lost-season2.jpg|thumb|220px]]This article contains episode summaries for the second season of Lost.
 
  +
[[Image:foot-statue.jpg|thumb|right|The Statue]]
The new episodes began airing September 21, 2005. The original airdates in the U.S. are listed here for each episode. For airdates on other networks and in other countries, see [[Airdates of Lost]].
 
  +
[[Image:voetbeeld.jpg|thumb|right|The Statue]]
===Season Two Episodes===
 
  +
[[Image:footboat.jpg|thumb|right|The Statue]]
<table width="83%">
 
<td width="32%" valign="top">
 
'''--''' "[[Destination Lost]]"<br>
 
'''01''' "[[#Man of Science, Man of Faith|Man of Science, Man of Faith]]"<br>
 
'''02''' "[[#Adrift|Adrift]]" <br>
 
'''03''' "[[#Orientation|Orientation]]"<br>
 
'''04''' "[[#Everybody Hates Hugo|Everybody Hates Hugo]]"<br>
 
'''05''' "[[#...And Found|...And Found]]"<br>
 
'''06''' "[[#Abandoned|Abandoned]]"<br>
 
<td width="23%" valign="top">
 
'''07''' "[[#The Other 48 Days|The Other 48 Days]]"<br>
 
'''08''' "[[#Collision|Collision]]"<br>
 
'''09''' "[[#What Kate Did|What Kate Did]]"<br>
 
'''--''' "[[Lost: Revelation]]"<br>
 
'''10''' "[[#The 23rd Psalm|The 23rd Psalm]]"<br>
 
'''11''' "[[#The Hunting Party|The Hunting Party]]"<br>
 
'''12''' "[[#Fire .2B Water|Fire + Water]]"<br>
 
</td>
 
<td width="35%" valign="top">
 
'''13''' "[[#The Long Con|The Long Con]]"<br>
 
'''14''' "[[#One of Them|One of Them]]"<br>
 
'''15''' "[[#Maternity Leave|Maternity Leave]]"<br>
 
'''16''' "[[#The Whole Truth|The Whole Truth]]"<br>
 
'''17''' "[[#Lockdown|Lockdown]]"<br>
 
'''18''' "[[#Dave|Dave]]"<br>
 
'''19''' "[[#S.O.S|S.O.S]]" *<br>
 
</td>
 
</table>
 
''* denotes info based on unconfirmed spoilers. May be subject to change.
 
   
  +
A statue of a four-toed left foot seen from the [[sailboat]] by [[Sayid]], [[Sun]] and [[Jin]] as they were sailing in [[Live Together, Die Alone]].
See Also: [[Lost Season 1]]
 
   
 
==Facts==
==Man of Science, Man of Faith==
 
  +
* 35-40 feet tall.
:''See main article at [[Man of Science, Man of Faith]].''
 
  +
* Consists of a single, four-toed left foot.
*'''Original air date:''' September 21st, 2005
 
  +
* Is ostensibly from a colossal statue that was never finished or has since crumbled or been destroyed.
*'''Flashback''': [[Jack Shephard]]
 
  +
* Sayid comments: "I don't know what is more disquieting; the fact that the rest of the statue is missing or that it has four toes."
*Written by [[Damon Lindelof]]
 
  +
* From the 5/27 podcast, we learn the statue predates the arrival of the Dharma Initiative on the island.
*Directed by [[Jack Bender]]
 
   
==Adrift==
+
==Theories==
  +
*The statue may have been from the [[Wikipedia:Colossus of Rhodes|Colossus of Rhodes]], one of the Seven Wonders of the World.
:''See main article at [[Adrift]].''
 
  +
**"To celebrate their victory and freedom, the Rhodians decided to build a giant statue of their patron god Helios. They melted down bronze from the many war machines Demetrius left behind for the exterior of the figure and the super siege tower became the scaffolding for the project. According to Pliny, a historian who lived several centuries after the Colossus was built, construction took 12 years. Other historians place the start of the work in 304 B.C."
*'''Original air date:''' September 28th, 2005
 
  +
**The Colossus of Rhodes was made of bronze, and the metal wasn't wrapped around with stone. It was a wooden frame and rocks thus making this theory unlikely.
*'''Flashback:''' [[Michael Dawson]]
 
  +
***The Colossus was also melted down as scrap, according to legend.
*Written by Steven Maeda and Leonard Dick
 
  +
**In the book [[Bad Twin]] there is a reference to the [[Helios Foundation]], which may support, or at least connect to this theory.
  +
**The Colossus is a statue of the greek god [[Apollo]], like the chocolate bar, altough the foot doesn't belong to Rhodes's.
   
  +
* The statue may be in reference to a story "[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/12803 Headlong Hall]" by Thomas Love Peacock, chapter 4 notes:
==Orientation==
 
  +
:''"Here you see is the pedestal of a '''statue, with only half a leg and four toes remaining''': there were many here once. When I was a boy, I used to sit every day on the shoulders of Hercules: what became of him I have never been able to ascertain.''
:''See main article at [[Orientation]].''
 
*'''Original air date:''' October 5th, 2005
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[John Locke]]
 
* Directed by Jack Bender
 
* Written by Javier Grillo-Marxuach, Craig Wright
 
   
  +
* The foot bears a strong resemblance to the [http://www.stoa.org/gallery/album221/P1030671?full=1 Foot of Colossal Statue in Via Piè di Marmo]. While their is no shin on this statue and the toes are angled differently, the criss-cross of the sandals is almost exactly the same. In the picture of the real statue, the pinky toe is almost hidden in edge of the sandal. Perhaps on closer inspection the island's statue would reveal another toe.
==Everybody Hates Hugo==
 
:''See main article at [[Everybody Hates Hugo]].''
 
*'''Original air date:''' October 12th, 2005
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Hugo "Hurley" Reyes]]
 
* Written by Edward Kitsis and Adam Horowitz
 
* Directed by Alan Taylor
 
   
  +
* There is an [http://www.bermuda-triangle.org/html/bigfoot_print_comparisons_.html article here] where the last 2 or 3 entries talk about Bigfoot only having 4 toes. The website is bermuda-triangle.org - isn't one of the Bermuda Triangle theories that [[electromagnetism]] makes people and boats vanish?
==...And Found==
 
  +
**The actual location of [[the island]] has never been revealed, however the island seems to be in the South Pacific, as that was where Flight 815 was traveling through. The bermuda triangle is in the Atlantic Ocean.
:''See main article at [[...And Found]].''
 
*'''Original air date:''' October 19th, 2005
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Jin-Soo Kwon]] and [[Sun-Soo Kwon]]
 
* Directed by Stephen Williams
 
* Written by Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse
 
   
  +
*The Island may have been inhabited in times previous to that of the Dharma Project. The four-toed foot may be due to a race of people with four-toed feet, or it may even be an error on part of the builder. Or perhaps they believed in a god/dess with four-toed feet.
==Abandoned==
 
  +
**In Asian mythology, Korean dragons have four toes. There have been several other references to Korea in the show (the design of the Dharma logo, Paik Heavy Industries, etc)
:''See main article at [[Abandoned]].''
 
*'''Original air date:''' November 9th, 2005
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Shannon Rutherford]]
 
   
  +
*A race of people with a total of 8 toes would probably use a base 8 (octal) numbering system. This may have implications in [[the numbers]] and ties to 8-sided dharma [[symbols]].
Sawyer's wound becomes life-threatening as he, Michael and Jin make their way through the interior of the island with the tail section survivors. Meanwhile, Shannon is once again haunted by visions of Walt, and Charlie becomes jealous of Locke's interest in Claire.
 
   
  +
*The Island may have been inhabited, but isolated, since prehistoric times (maybe due to an extreme continential drift sceneario), allowing for a slightly different evolutionary course to create a race four toed humans, with other physical differences being possible as well (we've only seen a foot!).
''This episode was originally scheduled to air on October 26, but was replaced by "Adrift." [http://www.abcmedianet.com/pressrel/dispDNR.html?id=102405_15 Source]''
 
   
  +
*The number of toes incorporates one of [[the numbers]] ([[4]]).
==The Other 48 Days==
 
  +
** Perhaps the statue is of a forgotten deity, who is the source of the numbers, and had 4 toes, 8 arms, 15 fingers, 23 eyes, etc.
:''See main article at [[The Other 48 Days]].''
 
*'''Original airdate:''' November 16, 2005
 
*'''Flashback:''' ''None''; the narrative breaks chronology to tell the story of the tail-section survivors from the day of the crash.
 
*Written by: Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse
 
*Directed by: Eric Laneuville
 
   
  +
*Several Asian and Egyptian deities have four toes, such as Bast, the Cat-Goddess.
The harrowing first 48 days in the lives of the tail section survivors are revealed.
 
  +
**The statue could be part of one depicting Anubis which is one of the Hieroglyphs found on the countdown past zero.
   
  +
* The statue could have been being transported somewhere in pieces when one of the previous [[Incident]]s happened, which caused the foot to be drawn to the island.
==Collision==
 
:''See Main Article on: [[Collision]]''
 
*'''Original airdate:''' November 23, 2005
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Ana-Lucia Cortez]]
 
*Written by: Javier Grillo-Marxuach and Leonard Dick
 
*Directed by: Stephen Williams
 
   
  +
*The sandal the foot is wearing does look a very old style like Roman, or ancient Greek. It is possible that the island is Atlantis, which supposedly rose out of the sea thousands of years ago, and was the home of an entire, very advanced, civilization that was completely cut off from the outside world. This would explain the statue having 4 toes - the entire civilization evolved seperate from the rest of the world. Atlantis sunk back into the sea, and may now be rising again. This would require the island to be part of some kind of underwater volcano, which would explain all the black rocks everywhere. This would also explain why the [[Black Rock]] (the ship) is so far inland - it may be that 200 years ago the island was almost completely underwater, and the ship could have run aground then, and been raised up with the island since. However, the statue doesn't really look like its been underwater for thousands of years.
Tempers flare when Ana Lucia and her group stumble upon Sayid and the other castaways, on "Lost."
 
  +
**Traditionally, Atlantis is between the North American and European Continents.
  +
***Actually, according to Plato, Atlantis was either larger than or in between Libya (African continent) and the European continent (translations vary).
  +
**** Actually, according to Plato, the island was 'greater' than Asia Minor. The Greek word μεζον (mezon) is usually employed to describe strength rather than size. According to Plato, the island was located "beyond the Pillars of Heracles," which are traditionally located at the Straits of Gibralter, between Spain and Morocco.
  +
**The probable South Pacific location of the island would allow for some link to the legendary lost continent of Mu.
  +
***Mu or Lemuria are better choices than Atlantis at this point. Have they found Oranbega?
  +
**I like the idea of it being Atlantis because supposedly the Atlanteans were much more technologically advanced than the rest of the world, and completely shut off from the rest of the world, and this is similar to what is happening on the Island. I've never heard of Mu or Lemuria though, and if they are closer to where the plane likely crashed then obviously they seem more likely.
   
  +
* The rest of the statue was blown away on another 'system failure'.
==What Kate Did==
 
''See Main Article on: [[What Kate Did]]''
 
*'''Original air date:''' November 30, 2005
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Kate Austen]]
 
*Written by: Steven Maeda and Craig Wright
 
*Directed by: Paul Edwards
 
   
  +
* Former natives built it.
Kate's original crime that started her life on the run is revealed. Meanwhile, the survivors lay one of their own to rest, Kate sleeplessly watches over a feverish Sawyer, and Mr. Eko has a surprise for Locke regarding the hatch, on "Lost."
 
   
  +
* The Hanso Foundation built it.
==The 23rd Psalm==
 
''See Main Article on: [[The 23rd Psalm]]''
 
* '''Original air date:''' January 11, 2006
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Mr. Eko]]
 
* Written by: Carlton Cuse and Damon Lindelof
 
* Directed by: Matt Earl Beesley
 
   
  +
*The statue is the remnant of an ancient civilization, perhaps similar to Atlantis, or Lemuria. This would mean that the island has been inhabited long before even the Black Rock washed onhsore.
Mr. Eko interrogates Charlie about the Virgin Mary statue, Claire begins to lose faith in Charlie when she discovers his secret, and Jack is an interested observer when Kate gives the recovering Sawyer a much-needed haircut, on "Lost."
 
   
  +
* Formerly a gigantic statue of Alvar Hanso. This may be what [[Magnus Hanso]] refers to because of its immense size.
==The Hunting Party==
 
''See Main Article on: [[The Hunting Party]]''
 
*'''Original air date:''' January 18, 2006
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Jack Shephard]]
 
*Written by: Elizabeth Sarnoff and Christina M. Kim
 
*Directed by: Stephen Williams
 
   
  +
* The statue consists of only a foot and is not part of a larger structure that may have been destroyed.
Jack, Locke and Sawyer pursue a determined Michael after he heads into the jungle toward the dreaded "Others" in search of Walt. Meanwhile, Sun has a surprising reaction to Jin's desire to join the search party, and Hurley and Charlie commiserate over the age-old conundrum of "what women want," on "Lost."
 
   
  +
* Arrived via a wrecked freighter that was shipping it elsewhere - perhaps a giant movie prop.
==Fire + Water==
 
''See Main Article on: [[Fire &plusmn; Water|Fire + Water]]''
 
<br><sup>note: use of plusmn (&plusmn;) instead of plus (+) in the title is intentional, wiki doesn't like a '+' in a link or page name</sup>
 
*'''Original air date:''' January 25, 2006
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Charlie Pace]]
 
*Written by: Adam Horowitz, Edward Kitsis
 
*Directed by: Jack Bender
 
   
  +
* Could be a reference to the Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole. In the book giant stone limbs suddenly appear from nowhere.
When Charlie's vividly surreal dreams lead him to believe Claire's baby, Aaron, is in danger, Locke suspects Charlie may be using again. Meanwhile, Sawyer encourages Hurley to act on his attraction to Libby.
 
   
  +
* The statue was of an anthropomorphic orangutan creature, and the "thumb" toe was simply not visible as it was too far back to be seen by Sayid, Sun, and jin from their vantage on the boat.
==The Long Con==
 
''See Main Article on: [[The Long Con]]''
 
*'''Original air date:''' February 8, 2006
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Sawyer]]
 
*Written by: Steve Maeda, Leonard Dick
 
*Directed by: Roxann Dawson
 
   
  +
* The statue contains one of the unexplored hatches.
Survivors fear that "The Others" may have returned when Sun is injured during a failed kidnapping attempt.
 
   
  +
* It seems an unlikely theory, but the little toe can been considered a vestigial organ and future versions of humanity may find the little toe has evolved away completely. If The Dharma Initiative is about human advancement, perhaps the statue is/was a tribute of humanity to come?
==One of Them==
 
  +
* One of the toes contains a hatch?
''See Main Article on: [[One of Them]]''
 
*'''Original air date:''' February 15, 2006
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Sayid Jarrah]]
 
*Written by: [[Damon Lindelof]] and [[Carlton Cuse]]
 
*Directed by: [[Stephen Williams (director)|Stephen Williams]]
 
   
  +
==Trivia==
When Rousseau leads Sayid to a mysterious captive in the jungle, he becomes determined to find out if he is one of the "Others." Meanwhile, Sawyer discovers Hurley's potentially devastating breech of the survivors' trust and blackmails him into helping track an elusive island creature that won't leave Sawyer alone.''
 
  +
* The coastal placement is reminiscent of the Easter Island [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moai moai] - of course many moai are simply heads, rather than feet
  +
* The poem [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozymandias Ozymandias] by Percy Bysshe Shelley references ''"Two vast and trunkless legs of stone"'' in its ironic picturing of the monument to Ozymandias ''"King of Kings"'' Horace Smith's poem on the same subject from the same time as Shelley's, begins ''"In Egypt's sandy silence, all alone,/Stands a gigantic Leg"''
   
==Maternity Leave==
+
==External Links==
  +
* The ebook of "[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/12803 Headlong Hall]" by Thomas Love Peacock.
''See Main Article on: [[Maternity Leave]]''
 
*'''Original air date:''' March 1, 2006
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Claire Littleton]]
 
*Written by: Dawn Lambertsen Kelly, Matt Ragghianti
 
*Directed by: Jack Bender
 
   
  +
[[Category:Island location]]
A desperate Claire, along with Kate and Rousseau, attempts a return to the scene of her kidnapping where she believes she might find the cure for Baby Aaron's mysterious illness. Meanwhile, Jack and Locke must keep their prisoner a secret from the rest of the survivors. This episode is unique in that all of Claire's flashbacks were her experiences on the island while she was abducted by Ethan, not of her life before the crash.
 
  +
[[Category:Unsolved]]
 
==The Whole Truth==
 
''See Main Article on: [[The Whole Truth]]''
 
*'''Anticipated Air Date:''' March 22, 2006
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Sun]] and [[Jin]]
 
 
Sun wrestles with the thought of telling Jin a newfound secret that threatens to upset the entire balance of the survivors' community. Meanwhile, Locke enlists Ana Lucia to interrogate the prisoner in order to extract more information than he, Jack or Sayid could.
 
 
*According to the promos, Sun thinks she is pregnant
 
*This episode will include a "love triangle"
 
*Daniel Dae Kim: "I can tell you on March 22 there's a flashback episode that involves Jin and Sun, and you're gonna find out a lot more about how they got together and the troubles they had before they got to the island."
 
 
==Lockdown==
 
''See Main Article on: [[Lockdown]]''
 
 
*'''Anticipated Air Date:''' March 29, 2006
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Locke]]
 
* Written by: [[Carlton Cuse]] & [[Damon Lindelof]]
 
* Directed by: [[Stephan Williams]]
 
 
When the hatch suddenly takes on a life of its own, Locke is forced to enlist the help of an unlikely ally. Meanwhile, Ana Lucia, Sayid and Charlie go off into the jungle to find out the truth about Henry.
 
 
* This episode will feature a kindly Latino priest named [[Father Chuck]]
 
* A surprising connection between [[Locke]] and [[Sawyer]] will be revealed
 
* This episode ''may'' reveal how Locke became paralyzed
 
* [[Katey Sagal]] is scheduled to return as [[Helen]]
 
* [[Kevin Tighe]] is scheduled to return as [[Anthony Cooper]]
 
* [[Andrea Gabriel]] is scheduled to return as [[Nadia]] (possible Locke/Sayid connection... Nadia is supposed to be living in Southern California)
 
 
''ABC Medianet photos for this episode shows [[Locke]] attending a funeral in the flashback. [http://www.abcmedianet.com/ph_search/search_lv.htm?prog_num=PH7175&day=29&month=3&year=2006&leftcol=cal Source]''
 
 
==Dave==
 
''See Main Article on: [[Dave]]''
 
 
*'''Anticipated Air Date:''' April 5, 2006
 
*'''Flashback:''' [[Hurley]]
 
 
Libby lends Hurley support when he begins to think the island is having a strange effect on him, and Locke's sense of purpose is shaken when the prisoner provides new information about the hatch
 
 
''[Jorge] Garcia says Lost fans eager to learn more about Hurley’s backstory will be treated to another Hurley flashback episode this season that depicts his time in a mental institution. "The episode is really interesting," he says. "[What happened to him while he was in the institution] was even a question I had."'' [http://www.the-trades.com/article.php?id=4082 Source]
 
*When [[Hurley]] flashes back to his mental-institution days next month, we're going to meet an old friend of his who looks a lot like Charlotte's husband on Sex and the City (Portrayed by Evan Handler).
 
** Evan Handler guest stars as someone Hurley knew during his days in the mental institution.
 
*Bruce Davison [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001117/] will also in this week's cast.
 
* Ron Bottitta returns in his role as [[Leonard Sims]]
 
[[Category:Episodes|*]] [[Category:Season 2|*]]
 
 
==S.O.S==
 
*'''Flashback:''' (unknown)
 
 
''Eps 219 is called " S.O.S." , featuring Isaac, a well regarded physical therapist who lives in Australia. I don't know who-centric this one is and I'm not going to guess.' [http://forums.televisionwithoutpity.com/index.php?showtopic=3119603&view=findpost&p=4613466 Source]
 
__NOTOC__
 

Revision as of 16:27, 28 May 2006

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Foot-statue

The Statue

Voetbeeld

The Statue

Footboat

The Statue

A statue of a four-toed left foot seen from the sailboat by Sayid, Sun and Jin as they were sailing in Live Together, Die Alone.

Facts

  • 35-40 feet tall.
  • Consists of a single, four-toed left foot.
  • Is ostensibly from a colossal statue that was never finished or has since crumbled or been destroyed.
  • Sayid comments: "I don't know what is more disquieting; the fact that the rest of the statue is missing or that it has four toes."
  • From the 5/27 podcast, we learn the statue predates the arrival of the Dharma Initiative on the island.

Theories

  • The statue may have been from the Colossus of Rhodes, one of the Seven Wonders of the World.
    • "To celebrate their victory and freedom, the Rhodians decided to build a giant statue of their patron god Helios. They melted down bronze from the many war machines Demetrius left behind for the exterior of the figure and the super siege tower became the scaffolding for the project. According to Pliny, a historian who lived several centuries after the Colossus was built, construction took 12 years. Other historians place the start of the work in 304 B.C."
    • The Colossus of Rhodes was made of bronze, and the metal wasn't wrapped around with stone. It was a wooden frame and rocks thus making this theory unlikely.
      • The Colossus was also melted down as scrap, according to legend.
    • In the book Bad Twin there is a reference to the Helios Foundation, which may support, or at least connect to this theory.
    • The Colossus is a statue of the greek god Apollo, like the chocolate bar, altough the foot doesn't belong to Rhodes's.
  • The statue may be in reference to a story "Headlong Hall" by Thomas Love Peacock, chapter 4 notes:
"Here you see is the pedestal of a statue, with only half a leg and four toes remaining: there were many here once. When I was a boy, I used to sit every day on the shoulders of Hercules: what became of him I have never been able to ascertain.
  • The foot bears a strong resemblance to the Foot of Colossal Statue in Via Piè di Marmo. While their is no shin on this statue and the toes are angled differently, the criss-cross of the sandals is almost exactly the same. In the picture of the real statue, the pinky toe is almost hidden in edge of the sandal. Perhaps on closer inspection the island's statue would reveal another toe.
  • There is an article here where the last 2 or 3 entries talk about Bigfoot only having 4 toes. The website is bermuda-triangle.org - isn't one of the Bermuda Triangle theories that electromagnetism makes people and boats vanish?
    • The actual location of the island has never been revealed, however the island seems to be in the South Pacific, as that was where Flight 815 was traveling through. The bermuda triangle is in the Atlantic Ocean.
  • The Island may have been inhabited in times previous to that of the Dharma Project. The four-toed foot may be due to a race of people with four-toed feet, or it may even be an error on part of the builder. Or perhaps they believed in a god/dess with four-toed feet.
    • In Asian mythology, Korean dragons have four toes. There have been several other references to Korea in the show (the design of the Dharma logo, Paik Heavy Industries, etc)
  • A race of people with a total of 8 toes would probably use a base 8 (octal) numbering system. This may have implications in the numbers and ties to 8-sided dharma symbols.
  • The Island may have been inhabited, but isolated, since prehistoric times (maybe due to an extreme continential drift sceneario), allowing for a slightly different evolutionary course to create a race four toed humans, with other physical differences being possible as well (we've only seen a foot!).
  • The number of toes incorporates one of the numbers (4).
    • Perhaps the statue is of a forgotten deity, who is the source of the numbers, and had 4 toes, 8 arms, 15 fingers, 23 eyes, etc.
  • Several Asian and Egyptian deities have four toes, such as Bast, the Cat-Goddess.
    • The statue could be part of one depicting Anubis which is one of the Hieroglyphs found on the countdown past zero.
  • The statue could have been being transported somewhere in pieces when one of the previous Incidents happened, which caused the foot to be drawn to the island.
  • The sandal the foot is wearing does look a very old style like Roman, or ancient Greek. It is possible that the island is Atlantis, which supposedly rose out of the sea thousands of years ago, and was the home of an entire, very advanced, civilization that was completely cut off from the outside world. This would explain the statue having 4 toes - the entire civilization evolved seperate from the rest of the world. Atlantis sunk back into the sea, and may now be rising again. This would require the island to be part of some kind of underwater volcano, which would explain all the black rocks everywhere. This would also explain why the Black Rock (the ship) is so far inland - it may be that 200 years ago the island was almost completely underwater, and the ship could have run aground then, and been raised up with the island since. However, the statue doesn't really look like its been underwater for thousands of years.
    • Traditionally, Atlantis is between the North American and European Continents.
      • Actually, according to Plato, Atlantis was either larger than or in between Libya (African continent) and the European continent (translations vary).
        • Actually, according to Plato, the island was 'greater' than Asia Minor. The Greek word μεζον (mezon) is usually employed to describe strength rather than size. According to Plato, the island was located "beyond the Pillars of Heracles," which are traditionally located at the Straits of Gibralter, between Spain and Morocco.
    • The probable South Pacific location of the island would allow for some link to the legendary lost continent of Mu.
      • Mu or Lemuria are better choices than Atlantis at this point. Have they found Oranbega?
    • I like the idea of it being Atlantis because supposedly the Atlanteans were much more technologically advanced than the rest of the world, and completely shut off from the rest of the world, and this is similar to what is happening on the Island. I've never heard of Mu or Lemuria though, and if they are closer to where the plane likely crashed then obviously they seem more likely.
  • The rest of the statue was blown away on another 'system failure'.
  • Former natives built it.
  • The Hanso Foundation built it.
  • The statue is the remnant of an ancient civilization, perhaps similar to Atlantis, or Lemuria. This would mean that the island has been inhabited long before even the Black Rock washed onhsore.
  • Formerly a gigantic statue of Alvar Hanso. This may be what Magnus Hanso refers to because of its immense size.
  • The statue consists of only a foot and is not part of a larger structure that may have been destroyed.
  • Arrived via a wrecked freighter that was shipping it elsewhere - perhaps a giant movie prop.
  • Could be a reference to the Castle of Otranto by Horace Walpole. In the book giant stone limbs suddenly appear from nowhere.
  • The statue was of an anthropomorphic orangutan creature, and the "thumb" toe was simply not visible as it was too far back to be seen by Sayid, Sun, and jin from their vantage on the boat.
  • The statue contains one of the unexplored hatches.
  • It seems an unlikely theory, but the little toe can been considered a vestigial organ and future versions of humanity may find the little toe has evolved away completely. If The Dharma Initiative is about human advancement, perhaps the statue is/was a tribute of humanity to come?
  • One of the toes contains a hatch?

Trivia

  • The coastal placement is reminiscent of the Easter Island moai - of course many moai are simply heads, rather than feet
  • The poem Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley references "Two vast and trunkless legs of stone" in its ironic picturing of the monument to Ozymandias "King of Kings" Horace Smith's poem on the same subject from the same time as Shelley's, begins "In Egypt's sandy silence, all alone,/Stands a gigantic Leg"

External Links