Lex Fridman Podcast - #446 – Ed Barnhart: Maya, Aztec, Inca, and Lost Civilizations of South America
Episode Date: September 30, 2024Ed Barnhart is an archaeologist and explorer specializing in ancient civilizations of the Americas. He is the Director of the Maya Exploration Center, host of the ArchaeoEd Podcast, and lecturer on th...e ancient history of North, Central, and South America. Ed is in part known for his groundbreaking work on ancient astronomy, mathematics, and calendar systems. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep446-sc See below for timestamps, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. CONTACT LEX: Feedback - give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA - submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring - join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other - other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: Ed's YouTube: https://youtube.com/@archaeoedpodcast Ed's Website: https://archaeoed.com/ Maya Exploration Center: https://mayaexploration.org Ed's Lectures on The Great Courses: https://thegreatcoursesplus.com/edwin-barnhart Ed's Lectures on Audible: https://adbl.co/4dBavTZ 2025 Mayan Calendar: https://mayan-calendar.com/ SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: MasterClass: Online classes from world-class experts. Go to https://masterclass.com/lexpod Shopify: Sell stuff online. Go to https://shopify.com/lex NetSuite: Business management software. Go to http://netsuite.com/lex AG1: All-in-one daily nutrition drinks. Go to https://drinkag1.com/lex Notion: Note-taking and team collaboration. Go to https://notion.com/lex OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (08:59) - Lost civilizations (16:04) - Hunter-gatherers (19:36) - First humans in the Americas (29:28) - South America (34:57) - Pyramids (42:01) - Religion (55:05) - Shamanism (57:02) - Ayahuasca (1:03:15) - Lost City of Z (1:08:09) - Graham Hancock (1:15:11) - Uncontacted tribes (1:21:12) - Maya civilization (1:37:00) - Mayan calendar (1:52:17) - Flood myths (2:20:46) - Aztecs (2:38:12) - Inca Empire (2:56:13) - Early humans in North America (3:02:10) - Columbus (3:06:46) - Vikings (3:10:55) - Aliens (3:15:23) - Earth in 10,000 years (3:31:33) - Hope for the future PODCAST LINKS: - Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast - Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr - Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 - RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ - Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 - Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips
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The following is a conversation with Ed Barnhart,
an archeologist specializing in ancient civilizations
of South America, Mesoamerica, and North America.
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And now, dear friends, here's Ed Barnhart.
Do you think there are lost civilizations in the history of humans on Earth,
which we don't know anything about?
Yes, I do.
And in fact, you know, we have found some civilizations
that we had no idea about just in my lifetime.
I mean, we've got Gobekli Tepe,
and we've got the stuff that's going on in the Amazon,
and there are some other less startling things that we had no idea existed
and push our dates back and give us whole new civilizations we had no idea about.
So, yeah, it's happened and I think it'll happen again.
Do you think there's a lost civilization in the Amazon that the Amazon
jungle has eaten up
or is hiding the evidence of?
Yes, I do.
And we're beginning to find it.
There are these huge, what we call geoglyphs,
these mound groups that are in geometric patterns.
I think that the average Joe,
when they hear the word civilization,
they think of something that looks
like Rome. I don't think we're ever going to find anything that looks like Rome in the Amazon.
I think a lot of things there, I mean, wherever you are on the planet, you use your natural
resources. In the Amazon, there's not a whole lot of stone. What stone is there is deep, deep, deep.
What stone is there is deep, deep, deep. So a lot of their things were built out of dirt
and trees and feathers and textiles.
But is it possible that all that land
that's not covered by trees is actually hiding stone,
for example, some architecture,
some things that are just very difficult
to find for archeologists?
I think at the base of the Andes, where the Amazon connects to the Andes,
there's a lot of potential there, because that's where the stone actually starts poking up. When
you get down into the basin, stone is meters and meters under the ground, except for a stray
cliff here and there where the river dug deep, and even then only in the dry season.
Because that river rises like over a hundred feet every year.
That's one of the things having visited that area, just interacting with waterfalls and
seeing the water. I was humbled by the power of water to shape landscapes and probably erase history in the
context that we're talking about of civilizations.
Water can just make everything disappear over a period of centuries and millennia.
And so if there's something existed a very long time ago, thousands of years ago, it's
very possible it was just eaten up by nature.
Absolutely.
In fact, in my opinion, that's almost a certainty in a lot of places.
The Grand Canyon was dug by water.
There's this wimpy little river in it right now and you can't possibly imagine that it
dug that, but it did.
The power of nature and geology is really kind of magical.
When it comes to ancient civilizations that
could be from a long time ago, there's probably a lot that are just under the ocean and just the
wave action have destroyed them and what they haven't destroyed buried deep.
Under the ocean? So you think Atlantis ever existed?
So you think Atlantis ever existed?
I don't think that Atlantis existed. I do think it was one of Plato's many parables talking about,
putting it in an interesting story
as a teaching device in his school.
If one did exist or a shadow of it,
my money would be on Akrotiri.
Akrotiri is what's left of a big city that was on the island of Santorini.
When their volcano blew up,
it blew up most of the city and shot chunks of it so fast that 70 miles away in Crete,
there are chunks of Santorini in their cliff.
It blasted what was ever there, but what's left
on the side of the crater, Akrotiri, is strangely advanced for its age. And so if there's anything
that's a model for Atlantis, as Plato explained it, it's Akrotiri, the ancient Greek city. So it says the settlement was destroyed in the Theran
eruption sometime in the 16th century BCE and buried in volcanic ash, which preserved
the remains of the frescoes and many objects and artworks. So we don't know how advanced
that civilization was.
No, but we can walk around the ruins and see that it's got streets, it's got plumbing,
it's got little sconces for torches at night.
It was a vibrant city with a lot of, especially in terms of hydraulic engineering, it's very
advanced for being 3,500 years old.
So if you check out here's an image of the excavation,
shh, what a project.
It's an amazing place.
And you can tell that it's just part of it
because it's pretty close to where the crater began.
So the city itself was probably much larger.
So in this case, there's a lot of evidence,
but like we said, there could be civilizations
that there is no,
there's very little evidence of because of the natural environment that destroys all the evidence.
Right. And I think Equitiri is actually a great example of that because here we have
the side that did preserve that looks amazing, but we know there was more of the city that was
completely obliterated. It was shot, chunks of that city are probably
in the walls of Crete, 70 miles away.
And you know, Plato says that it sunk,
it was on an island and it sunk.
Well, that's exactly what happened to Akrotiri.
I think this is what Plato was referring to.
If it does exist, at least the model of it,
I think this is probably what he was talking about.
And there could be other civilizations of which Plato has never written, right?
Absolutely.
That we have no record of.
And it's humbling to think that entire civilizations with all the dreams, the hope, the technological
innovation, the wars, the conflicts, the political tensions, all of that, the social interactions, the hierarchies, all of that.
The art can be just destroyed like that and forgotten completely, lost to ancient history.
I reflect upon that often as an archeologist. I think about this great country that I live
in and love and all the things we've achieved. But but you know, we're a baby historically speaking.
We've been around 200 years.
Heck, a lot of the cities I study in Central
and South America, they had a run of 800, 1,000 years,
and now they're ruins, but we're barely getting started
in terms of historical civilizations.
So humans, homo sapiens evolved,
but they didn't start civilizations right away.
There's a long period of time
when they did not form these complex societies.
So how did we, let's say 300,000 years ago in Africa,
actually go from there to creating civilizations?
I think that a lot of human evolution
had to do with the pressures
that their environment put upon them.
And a lot of things start changing
right around 12,000 years ago.
And that's when our last ice age really ended. I think there was a whole lot
of things that just pressured them into especially finding new ways of subsistence. Here in the
Americas, a huge thing that happened was all the megafauna went away. When the climate changed
enough, the mammoths died out and the bison died out, and there was just, they had
to come up with different ways of doing things. We were hunters and gatherers, and we had things
we got from hunting and we got things we got from gathering. And in the Americas, when the things
that they were used to hunting went away and they had to make do with rabbits, the gathering started to be a much more
important thing. I think that led to figuring out, hey, we could actually grow certain things.
Gardens turned into crops, turned into intensive crops, and then people were allowed to gather in
bigger groups and survive in a single area. They didn't have to
roam around anymore. That's where we get the first sedentary communities, which means they
stayed in the same place all year long. For the vast majority of human existence,
we've been nomadic and we've done these kind of wider or tighter nomadic circles, depending on the geographic
region where they'd know, okay, in the mountains, we'll be in the summer in the mountains because
there's berries and things, and then in the winter we'll be down here and we'll hunt.
But they'd move.
So, once humans figured out how to stay in a place, I think that's the initial trigger
to what would become civilization.
What do you think is, there's a lot of questions
I wanna ask here, what do you think is the motivation
for societies, is it the carrot or the stick?
So you said like, is it like when resources run out,
when the old way of life is no longer feeding everybody,
then you have to figure stuff out,
or is it more the carrot of like,
there's always this kind of human spirit
that wants to explore, that wants to maybe
impress the rest of the village or something like this
with the new discovery they made and venturing out
and coming out with different ideas
or technological innovation, let's call it.
Well, you know, I have an explorer's heart,
so I'm kind of, you know, I'm biased.
Right.
You know, I do think that we have an innate desire
to see what's on the horizon.
And to impress other people with our achievements,
things like that.
We're social beings.
That's really the edge that humans have
is our ability to work together.
So I think that it's much more the carrot than the stick.
When things get ugly, the stick comes out.
But usually the carrot does the job.
The really interesting story is how the first people
came to the Americas.
I mean, to me, that's pretty gangster to go from Asia,
all the way, potentially during the Ice Age,
or maybe at the end of the Ice Age,
or during that whole period,
not knowing what the world looks like,
going into the unknown.
Can you talk through that process?
How did the first people come to the Americas?
Well, first off, I agree with you.
That was pretty gangster.
I mean, that's a hard place to live.
I listened to some of your podcasts as that guy, Jordan Jonas, cut the mustard,
but I wouldn't have made it crossing there. Well, there you go. The fact that those guys exist,
that somebody like Jordan Jonas exists, people that survive and thrive in these harsh conditions. That's an indication that it's possible.
But yeah, so when do you think
and how did the first people come?
The traditional theories are still somewhat valid,
or at least on the table,
that when that land bridge occurred,
that nomadic hunters just followed the game
like they always had and the game
went across there because there was no barrier and they followed them across.
The thing that has changed is how early that happened.
DNA has been a total game changer for archaeology.
We get all these evolutionary tracks that we could never see before. When I was a young
archaeologist, I would have never dreamed we'd have the information we have now. And
that information, a lot of it's coming out of Texas A&M. We see the traditional like
12,500 years ago that there was a migration. But now we're seeing one that's almost certainly happening
closer to 30,000 years ago. And now the thing that seems like madness but might be true is
that it could have been as early as 60. A lot of the DNA things are suggesting that the very first
migration could have come across as early as 60. And when I was a younger archeologist,
it was heresy to go beyond this 12,500.
You were a wacko if you said that.
But now it's really very clear that they came over
at least by 30,000.
And the bridge opened and closed and opened and closed.
That's during the Ice Age.
Right.
I mean, that's crazy, right?
That is crazy.
Yeah, I mean, they didn't roll in
and immediately make New York, but there were people.
And there were definitely not people here before that,
which is fascinating.
When the bridge closed, DNA mutated.
And so we have specific kinds of haplogroups that are here
in the Americas that don't exist otherwise. And that same haplogroup game has been showing us
more and more that people came across Siberia. It's not Africa, it's not Western Europe. Those
are still, you know, they've become kind of fringe theories, but they're not totally eradicated.
I have, DNA is developing science as well, and I think we all need to keep that in mind.
It's not like they just cracked the code and now we know all the answers.
And sometimes, like in any science,
a breakthrough puts us two steps backwards, not forwards.
So I think, you know, we don't need to have too much faith
in the models that are now being created through DNA,
but they are pointing in the direction
of everybody came across from Siberia
that all Native American people are of Asiatic descent.
Do you think it was a gradual process?
If it's like 30 to 60,000 years ago, was it just gradual movement of these nomadic tribes
as they follow the animals?
Or was it like one explorer that pushed the tribe to just go,
go, go, go, and go across maybe across 100 years,
travel all the way across maybe into North America,
into North America, where Canada is now,
and then sort of like big leaps in movement
versus gradual movement.
I think it was big leaps in movement versus gradual movement? I think it was big leaps.
Now this is just, you know, mostly guess, I'll admit.
But I think that it, much in the way
that a lot of our evolutionary models
talk about punctuated equilibrium,
that there are big moments of change,
and then it settles out into a more slow and steady pattern, and
then something big will happen again.
I do think that the early people went as far as they could go, and there were certain colonies
that just got isolated for thousands of years.
One of the fascinating things that DNA is showing us, which actually blood types were showing us way before that,
is that the oldest people in the Americas
are in South America.
The ones that got separated early
and didn't mix their DNA like the people in the Amazon,
most of those guys have O blood type
and their haplogroup D,
which is the oldest one that entered the US.
And what are they doing down there?
I do believe they came across the Bering Strait.
I don't think it's very,
we have no real evidence to say
they came in mass across Oceania.
So they made it probably by boat along the coast
all the way to South America.
So there's some kind of cultural engine
that drove them to explore.
So if you had to bet all your money,
it happened like tens of thousands of years ago,
but at a very rapid pace.
There's these explorers that went all the way
to South America, and there established their kind of
more stable existence, and from there,
South America, Mesoamerica, North America
was kind of gradually expanded into that area.
I think the next waves came down and did North America and Central America.
The very first wave made it all the way down to South America and got isolated there.
Then mixed in with the next groups that came.
That's fascinating.
There's an interesting correlate in Europe where today everybody feels like Celtic people are from Ireland.
But actually, Celtic people started in Eastern Europe and it was the entire area. And when Rome
kind of swept everything and Rome was now the ruler of the day, it was only that far edge of the Celtic world, Ireland, that they were like,
ah, we're not gonna mess with those guys on that island,
we'll leave them be.
So now it looks like that's the heart of Celtic tradition,
but actually it's the fringe.
So if it is 60,000 years ago, these are really early humans.
Yeah, and there were consistent things
that have been coming out for decades
about very old carbon-14 dates in the Amazon
and in the Andes area that everybody just dismissed.
It's now, you didn't get a date of 40,000 years.
But I think we're gonna come back around
to start readdressing some of these based on new evidence at hand.
And that's the interesting thing is, you know, the early humans spread
throughout the world and then, like you said, perhaps they've gotten isolated
and then civilizations sprung from there and they all have similar
elements, even though they were isolated.
That's really interesting.
That's really interesting that That's really interesting,
that there's multiple cradles of civilization,
not just one, like one good idea.
Those ideas naturally come up.
Those structures naturally come up.
And I wonder whether the similarities
that all those cradles have,
it could be a shared much deeper
past that they all have. Or it could be a more kind of Star Trek thing where Captain Kirk was
always talking about the theory of parallel human development, that humans across the universe go
through certain stages of development and that that humans across the universe go through certain stages
of development and that that could be the answer to it.
Which one do you lean on?
Which one do you lean towards?
I think it's a case by case thing.
I think if we look globally,
I'd lean much more towards the human parallel development.
But if I look just to the Americas
and we have a shorter time period where the things that become
major civilizations now, now I'll say up to 30,000 years ago, which is still a blip in the time of
humans, I think that there were shared things that those people came over with from Asia, and that as they got separated,
that they had core values that then turned into things
like religion and cultural customs that we can see.
I'm a big proponent that there are commonalities
in all the cultures of the Americas that lead back to
and point to a single distant
origin.
You've spoken about the lost cradle of civilization in South America.
So South America is not often talked about as one of the cradles of civilization.
South America, Mesoamerica, can you explain?
Well we have very early stuff in South America.
You're right.
I mean, especially as an American, our country's so big and we are so far removed from these
places.
We don't even think about it.
But more and more, we're seeing things that predate the earliest stuff that we like to
talk about, like Egypt and Mesopotamia. It's all on the Peruvian
coast that we have these cradles of civilization. Someday we might start talking about the Amazon
more and more. But right now what we've got are things that date back into the 3000s BCE along the coast of Peru. There are big stone-built pyramids and
temples. They're amazingly isolated, even now that we've found them. Some of them, like Kerala is one
of the most famous ones just north of Lima. We've known about it for a couple decades now,
how old it is, but every time I visit there,
it's like I visited the moon.
There's absolutely nobody there, not for miles.
It's amazing how such a discovery was made
and yet still nobody goes to see it.
It's not easy to get to.
So you think there's a bunch of locations like that,
some may not have been discovered in the Peru area?
Oh, there are so many.
Peru has tons.
That desert gets really ugly quick
and it buries things completely.
There are so many pyramids out there
that are still completely untouched.
When people hear the name pyramids,
they think of Egypt immediately.
But Egypt has got about 140 pyramids, and we have pretty much found them all. Peru has thousands,
thousands of pyramids. And now they weren't built of a lot. Not all of them were built of stone.
Some of them were adobe bricks, which have weathered terribly. So now they're not exciting places to visit today.
You know what's funny too? We started off talking about whether I think there's a lost
civilization out there. There are definitely things that are still to be discovered, but
there are some things that were discovered 100 years ago and archaeologists
or back then they called themselves antiquarians just kind of passed over. Coral was one of these
sites because the coast of Peru has some of those pyramids that were made by the Moche are full of
gold and beautiful ceramics and things that you can sell for big money. But Corral was
found a long time ago, but the archaeologist was like, God, no gold, no ceramics. Forget about it.
This place is no good. We can't sell anything here. And then about the 1970s or 80s, somebody said,
70s or 80s, somebody said, hey, no ceramics?
Is that older than the invention of ceramics? Shit, we better go take another look at that place.
So what's the dating on Kerala?
Kerala, I think, starts at about 3200 BCE,
and it lasts as a major civilization
with a lot of other cities around it until about 1800 BC.
So what's the story behind looking at some of these images?
What's the story about constructions like that?
What was the idea?
That thing, isn't that amazing?
Yeah.
Oh, that, gosh, I mean, it should be some sort of,
I'll be a flaky archeologist like me.
This is a place where rituals took place.
So many things we say are so just painfully vague
and that's about what we got.
And a place like this, I know the one we're looking at here,
I've been here a couple of times,
in the pyramid behind it, the rubble's built in a way
where the building won't rock apart.
This is a very earthquake-prone
place, but the buildings haven't fallen because they make these net baskets of rocks inside that
all kind of wiggle around and don't allow the building to fall down. And inside these,
we've also found a couple of things that were babies, human babies that were
buried in there. And I don't think there's a lot of people that see that and go, oh, look at that,
they were sacrificing babies, these monsters. I think a lot of the things that are interpreted
as baby sacrifices, Keral's evidence being one of them. I think it's more about the tragic nature
of infant mortality. In the past, it was a lot more common. There were cultures that didn't even
really properly name their kid until they got to five because chances were they were going to die.
I think a lot of these babies that we find in these ceremonial contexts that are interpreted as sacrifices,
I think they're putting them in special places because they mourn the death of their kids.
And it just happened a lot more frequently then.
One of the things you said that really surprised me is that pyramids were built in Peru
possibly hundreds of years before they were built in Egypt. Is that true?
Absolutely. Absolutely. In fact, there's one that's now pushing 6,000 BCE. That's thousands
of years before the stuff in Egypt. That one's called Waka Prieta. And it was not an Egyptian pyramid.
But it was a pyramid and it was thousands of years before.
What do you think is the motivation to build a pyramid?
The fact that it can withstand the elements,
structurally, that kind of thing?
Is it, yeah, why do humans build pyramids?
And why do they build it in all kinds
of different locations in the world?
Well, you know, my rude answer is pretty boring, really.
A lot of people ask me,
why are there pyramids all over the planet?
How is that, is that a coincidence?
I mean, who, I think that when people wanted to build a big building
without rebar or cement, you end up building something with a fat base that goes up to a
skinny top and that turns into a pyramid. Any kid who's playing with blocks on the floor builds
a couple of towers and his brother knocks them down and if he wants one that's going to stay and be tall, he ends up making something with a
fat base and a tiny top. And I think that building something big and tall together is one of those
human things. We built that. That will be here after we're gone. People will remember who we were. We are all,
if there's any human commonality, it's fear of our own deaths and that we were nothing and no one
will ever remember us. I think that the first big monuments like that were probably a group of people
saying, we're going to do something that people will remember forever. Now, that being said,
something that people will remember forever. Now, that being said, remember we were just talking about
Huaca Prieta and this one that's almost 6,000 BC now is the first one.
That one's a funny case.
We just talked about all these lofty goals,
but actually I'm pretty sure that Huaca Prieta's first pyramid
was about capping a smelly pile of trash. I think everybody piled up their
trash in the middle of town and it stunk. It's on the coast. It stunk like fish. And somebody said,
if we just bury this thing with dirt, it won't smell anymore. And then it was a big mound where
people could get up and talk to everybody and then said, well, it's squishy. If we cap it with clay, then it will really not smell.
I really think that the very first pyramids in Peru were about trash management.
Talk about deflating, huh?
Yeah, but then they probably saw it and they were impressed and humbled by the
enormity of the construction. And they're like, oh, we should, maybe the next guy thought maybe we should keep building
these kinds of things.
Yeah.
And not to jump ahead, but in North America, you know, where they also made pyramids, there's
this interesting evolution where there were these piles of shells along rivers and along
the coastlines. People ate a lot of shells.
That was an easy thing to collect and eat. So these piles of shells would be near communities
and they probably became landmarks, but eventually they started burying their dead inside those too.
Probably again, about stink and about, you know, well, we don't want the dogs to eat them.
Maybe we'll put them in the middle of the shell pile.
But then that all of a sudden became this like,
that's where my grandfather's body is.
That's where great grandfather's body is.
And all of a sudden people started being attached to place,
not just for the resources,
but for the shared memories of their ancestors.
So when the very first pyramid was built in Ohio area
by the Adena people, it was built out of dirt,
but it's full of bodies.
And I think it's an echo of a old thing
where they used to be putting bodies in shell mounds.
So where and who were the first civilizations in South America?
Well, I think we're still piecing that together. Coming back to the first things we talked about,
I think we're still missing a lot of stuff, especially in South America. It just keeps
getting older and older. Part of the reason it's hard to answer that question is,
at what point do we consider people a civilization or a culture? We have in the Americas this
long period of time that we call the Paleo-Indian time where they were hunting mega fauna. And then when those went away, we get into this even longer period of time called the
archaic, where they're just hunters and gatherers.
Sometimes somebody's coming up with a cool different kind of arrowhead.
They go back and forth with different hunting tools, but really nothing changes for thousands
of years.
And then finally, they start developing into these larger groups, which for the most part has to do
with agriculture. It used to be archaeology. That was just the end all be all. Civilization starts
with the invention of agriculture, and we can't have sedentary communities until people learn how
to farm. But that's been discounted. Peru was a big part of that. That area of Corral, it's connected to another city
on the coast called Aspero.
And Aspero starts about the same time,
but they're all about fishing.
They have no farming.
And Corral, who's upriver from them, is farming,
but funny enough, they're not really farming food.
They're farming cotton, and they're making nets, and they're trading the nets with the people on the coast for the fish.
So it's not as simple as it's just agriculture anymore, but it is, I think, still rooted in how
can we feed more people than just our family? How can we together create a food abundance so
we're no longer scared about running out of food? So is it possible, which is
something you've argued, that civilization started in the Amazon, in the
jungle? I just think so. I think religion in South America began in the Amazon. I
think there were people there very old.
There's actually the earliest pottery
in all of the Americas,
all these places that we have civilizations that grew up.
You know where the oldest pottery is?
The middle of the Amazon.
So there's interesting cultures developing in the Amazon.
So religion, you would say,
preceded civilization. In South America, the Corral and Aspero that I was just talking about,
it's weird what a dearth of art and any evidence of religion we have. We have those pyramids and
things that we call temples, but we don't really know what went on in there. And there's no hints of religious iconography,
ceremonies, nothing like that.
The first stuff that we get is right when that culture ends,
about 1800 BCE, this culture called Chavine starts up.
And their main temple is up in the Andes in this place of
path of least resistance between the Amazon and the coast. It's about three days walk either way
from this place where this temple is. That's where we start seeing the very first religious
iconography and it's all over the temples. There are things that
are definitely from the coast, but the iconography are all jaguars and snakes and crocodiles,
and those don't come from the coast. All of those things are coming out of the Amazon.
I mean, religion is a really powerful idea. Religions are one of the most powerful ideas.
They're the strongest myths that tie people together.
And to you, it's possible that this powerful idea
in South America started in the Amazon.
I do, I do think it did.
And you're right.
Ideas are more powerful than weapons, but archaeology can't see them
at all.
We can see, sometimes we can see ideas manifesting in the things they create and lead to, but
there's an interpretation problem.
Are we right about what idea created this?
Those are things that archaeology just can't get at.
That's one of the challenges of archaeology and looking into ancient histories. You're
trying to not just understand what they were doing in terms of architecture, but understand
what was going on inside their mind. That's really what I'm in it for,
trying to understand these people and it's real detective work. And we know we're dealing with
and these people and it's real detective work and we know we're dealing with a totally flawed record.
We only have what could preserve the test of time.
If we look around this room here,
if 2000 years of weathering happened in this room,
what would be left?
And what would we think happened here?
Right, right, right.
But there's not in this room, but if you look at thousands of rooms like it, maybe you can
start to piece things together about the different ideologies that ruled the world, the religion,
the different ideas.
Tell me about this fanged deity. One of your more controversial ideas is that you believe that the religions,
there's a thread that connects the different civilizations,
the societies of the Andean region.
And the religion that practiced is more monotheistic
than is currently believed in the mainstream.
That is exactly what I think.
I think it's all about this fang deity who somewhere thousands of years ago crawled his
way out of the Amazon up into the Andes and a religion took hold.
That could have been kind of a combination of ideas from the coast and the Amazon, but
he is the one creator deity, in my opinion, through all of these cultures.
And the people in the Amazon still talk about him.
There, his name is Vihomase in some groups, but they say that his emissary is on Earth
of the Jaguars and that he is the creator deity.
Why is the current mainstream belief is that a lot of the religions are not monotheistic?
Well, there are bona fide pantheons.
Greece had one, Egypt had one, Mesopotamia had one.
Lots of the early religions of the old world were pantheons.
And I think that was part of the problem.
The earliest archaeologists walked in there with a
preconceived notion that ancient cultures have pantheons, and so they went to the art looking
for them. And they came up with things like the shark god and the moon goddess and the sun god
and all these things. But when I look at the art, and I was trained by a person right here in Austin,
Texas as an art historian, you follow certain diagnostic traits through art to see the development
over time.
And when I look at it and use that methodology, there's a single face with goggle eyes and
fangs and claws on his hands and feet and snakes coming off of his head
and off of his belt.
He's got really identifiable traits.
He also likes to sever people's heads off and carry them around.
But he's the fanged deity and he's there.
He shows up in Chavín de Juantar, the capital of that Chavín culture, and he keeps showing up through every culture, even
thousands of miles away, throughout the next two millennium, right up to the Inca. The
Inca have a creator deity they call Viracocha, but Viracocha is the Fang deity. When we do see him, by the time we get to Inca, they do this
kind of almost Islamic thing where they say you can't understand the face of Farakotcha.
So when they do put him in a cosmogram, they'll make him just a blob, like he's just unknowable,
but he's at the very top. I think we're misunderstanding a
lot of things that we used to say were deities as just supernatural beings. If we flip the mirror
on Christianity and take a look at it, which of course Christianity is monotheistic, right? It
would be heresy to say otherwise. But who are all these other characters? Who are all these angels
and demons and, you know, Jesus Christ? And I mean, I don't even know who the Holy Spirit
is, but He's some sort of supernatural being, but it's that monotheistic system has lots
of things that have supernatural powers that are not God. That's where I think the crux of us misunderstanding ancient Andean
art is.
So what is the process of analyzing art through time to try to figure out what the important
entities are for that culture? Do you just see what shows up over and over and over and
over? Well certainly without the advent of writing, depictions in art have all sorts of meanings
encoded in them, and there are certain, you know, what we call diagnostic elements. Like,
we can pull apart the same sort of thing in, like, in the Greek pantheon. You know by their dress and what
they're holding what the different gods are. You can tell Hades from Zeus by the different
things they're holding, you know, lightning bolts or tridents or whatever it is. So they
all have these diagnostic elements to them. So that's how art history goes about analyzing art over time. Once we can put it in
a chronological sequence, then we can say, okay, here's a deity here in Chavín culture. Now we
move forward 500 years. Now we're in Moche and Nazca culture. Where are the deities here?
culture. Where are the deities here? And what I see is that same guy with not just one or two traits, but a whole package of them that shows up again and again and again for thousands
of years in each one of these cultures. He's got circular eyes, he's got a fanged mouth, he's got claws on his hands and feet, he's a humanoid, but he also has
snakes coming off of his head like hair and snakes coming off of his belt. And then, not so much in
Chavín, but as it goes forward, he starts carting around severed heads, human severed heads. So, like in the old literature,
the Moche will call him the decapitator deity. But then they have these other like, oh, here's
the crab deity and here's the fox deity. But if you look at them, like the crab deity is just that
guy's face coming off of a crab and the fox deity is that guy's face coming off of a crab and the fox deity is
that guy's face coming off of a fox.
So I think on that particular instance, I explain it similar to what Zeus did.
You know how Zeus was able to like, you know, turn into whatever animal he wanted to get
with the woman he wanted and he showed up in all sorts of forms, but he was always Zeus. I think that the fang deity manifests himself
through people and animals throughout the art and that there are missing stories of mythology
that we don't have anymore. And across hundreds of years, thousands of years, from Chavín to Mocha
to Inca, as you're saying. Right. Wari has them too, Tiwanaku,
that's that famous place, Puma Punku, he's all over there.
I wonder how those ideas spread and morph of this fanged deity.
I think people walked and proselytized and places like Chavin, there's a later one in Inca times called Pachacamac that are pilgrimage
places where people come in to be healed if they're sick, but also just to pay homage to
the powers that be. So Chavin was a place where people from the Amazon and people from the coast
were all coming together. In fact, we saw it in the archaeology there. There's these interesting
labyrinths under the pyramids with the fang deity all over them that have like one labyrinth will
have all pottery. The next labyrinth will have a bunch of animal bones. The next one will have
a bunch of things made out of stone. So, people are showing up and giving this tribute,
and they're learning, and then they're going back to their
community. So, I think it dispersed from certain pilgrimage spots and became just like pilgrimage
spots do. Somebody goes back and they build a temple to the Fang deity.
Do we know much about the relationship they had with the Fang deity and like their conception
they had with the Fang deity and like their conception of the powers of the Fang deity, is it, were they afraid of the Fang deities and all knowing God?
Is it something that brings joy and harvest or is it something that you're supposed to
be afraid of and sacrifice animals and humans too to keep it, keep it bay.
I think he had two sides of the coin. Like a lot of the Hindu gods are, you know,
one aspect is terrible, the other aspect is lovely. I think he had that same sorts of qualities,
because we do see him as a fierce warrior taking people's heads off and he is a jaguar,
which in and of itself implies a certain
power and ferocity. But then there are other funny things about him. He is definitely involved in a
lot of healing ceremonies, and a lot of those healing ceremonies are involved with sex acts
when it comes to the moche. There's this whole group of sexual pottery where priests are having sex with women or men. And some of
them show their faces transforming into that fang deity, like he is acting through them.
But the thing that most cracks me up that shows his softer side is the fang deity has
a little puppy. He has a puppy that's just dancing around his feet
and jumping up on him in various scenes. They see him again and again. Sometimes he's in
these healing sex scenes. In fact, I tracked that puppy from other contexts to these sex
scenes where a priest was having sex with somebody in a house and the fang deity.
And there's a puppy just scratching at the door like,
hey, you forgot me.
And then finally one day I found one with the puppy
having sex with the woman instead of the fang deity.
I was like, no, he really is very involved in this.
What is this weird puppy?
So he's, yeah, he likes to take heads off,
but he also has a puppy he adores.
This actually, this is awesomely makes sense now,
because I saw the opening of a paper you wrote
30 years ago on shamanism and the Mocha civilization.
It reads, the Mocha are the major focus of this paper.
Sex, puppies, and headhunting will be shown to be related
to ancient Mocha shamanism.
So now I understand, I was like, well, the puppies.
Puppies, yeah, it's true.
And the headhunting, that's the decapitator.
And I've added rock and roll to that list since actually. Rock and roll, music is also
a big part of it.
Oh, interesting.
They call spirits down. There's this whole spirit world. There's the ancestors.
And the people that drink San Pedro cactus juice kind of, they don't talk about the Fang deity anymore. I think Christianity in 500 years has somewhat put him in the back. It was unpopular
to have a pagan deity. So, they don't talk about him much anymore that he's still around.
They're in like around Trujillo, they call him Ai-Apec. But music, in the Amazon, they play
flutes, sometimes a chorus of women sing, and that's supposed to bring the spirits down into
the ceremony. There's a spirit that's hurting the person that's sick, and then the
priest or the shaman or the corundero, whatever you want to call him, has his own posse of
spirits that are going to help him figure out what's going on. So when the music starts,
that's bringing those spirits in. And people don't see them unless they've imbibed the San Pedro cactus juice, which is the solution again, which is in the Amazon side, it was ayahuasca on the Amazon, on the coast.
It was San Pedro cactus, but that's what allows you to actually see that other world.
Yeah, I went to the Amazon recently,
did ayahuasca, very high dose of it.
Bold move.
When in Rome, how far back does that go?
Oh, I think longer than anybody can remember,
but I mean, it's a natural plant that's been there forever.
I think that it's thousands and thousands of years.
That's another thing, Chavín de Juantara I was talking about, where I think the things came,
the religion came from the Amazon. There's this wall on the back side that faces the Amazon side.
So if you're entering the city from the Amazon path, you see this wall first. And it's a bunch
of faces that some of them are human,
some of them are total jaguar, and some of them are trans forming in between, but there's a group
of them that are midway through transformation, and they show their nostrils leaking out this
snot that's coming down their face. San Pedro doesn't do that to you, but Ayahuasca does.
Ayahuasca, traditionally, they'd take a blow gun
and just shoot it up your nose or up your ass.
But a lot of times, up your nose,
and when it shoots up your nose,
the first thing that happens is just this gush
of snot comes out of you.
And there are stone depictions of people
uncontrollably snotting on the backside of this temple
from, you know, 3000 years ago.
So that you think could have been a big component
of the development of religion and shamanism.
I think that hallucinogens opened the mind then
like they opened the mind now.
Do you think that, you know, the stone ape theory,
do you think that actually could have been
an actual catalyst for the formation of civilization?
In the Americas, yes, I do.
Though, you know, hallucinogens are not part
of every ancient tradition in the world.
In fact, strangely, the majority of plants that are actually psychotropic, not just mood
altering are from here in the Americas.
There are very few drugs that will make you hallucinate outside of the Americas.
Of course, now they're global and they can be grown
all over the place, but originally speaking,
very, very few were outside of the Americas.
So they were part of the experience here
in a way that they just couldn't be in other places.
I wonder to what degree they were just part of a ritual
and the creative force behind sort of art versus like literally the method
by which you come up with ideas that define a civilization.
Like the degree to which they had a role in the formation of civilizations.
It's kind of fun to think about psychedelics being like a critical role in the formation of civilizations?
I think in terms of South America, they probably really were. In North America,
where we're in a more northern climb here and there are less of them, not so much,
at least in terms of psychedelics, things like tobacco was always a big part of it.
Now, tobacco was always a big part of it. But a lot of the, you know, there's more than one way to reach a hallucinatory state.
The hard way is starvation, sleep deprivation.
And for the Maya, for example, would go sleep deprivation, starvation, and then they'd cut
themselves very badly.
And that loss of blood, we believe triggered hallucinations
and visions. Nothing to do with drugs. I much prefer the drugs route.
It's the result, not the... The tools aren't the thing that creates insight. It's the result.
That getting to... Hallucinogens are poisoning us. They're killing us. It's a near death state,
and people of the Americas believed sleeping was entering that other world, death, you entered
this other world, and that when you took this mighty dose of poison, it was helping you enter
that other world for a period of time. Yeah, as Tom Wade said in that one song, I like my town with a little drop of poison.
So maybe that poison is a good catalyst for invention.
So who were the early first sort of mother cultures, mother civilizations in South America. If we look chronologically,
is there a label we can put on the first peoples that emerged?
That picture is evolving. I mean, forever, it was just the Chavine people that we've
been talking about, the ones with all the first depictions of religious art, were the
mother culture.
They certainly did transmit a lot of stuff, but then all of a sudden we find Kerala.
The next one that we've barely even begun looking at, but it's probably older than
Kerala, is Sachin culture.
I was just poking around there last year, and just from the bus on the highway, I could see that's a pyramid out
there. Oh, there's another one. I know how old the stuff we have studied there is. It's
again, 3000 BC. We're just barely beginning to understand them. Corral frustrates me to
no end, the lack of art there. We's, we've got, you know, stones and bones
and not even ceramics to go on.
And they didn't have the courtesy to leave me
a bunch of art I can interpret.
So I don't know what those people believed.
Right, so one of the ways to understand
what people believe is looking at the art,
the stories told through the art,
and then hopefully deciphering
if they were doing any kind of writing. That's our most fruitful place to try to get at this elusive ideas.
Yeah, and it sucks when they don't have art.
If we just go back to the Amazon, you've mentioned that it's possible
that there's a law civilization that exists in the Amazon.
So it's carried a lot of names, the law city of Z or El Dorado.
Do you think it's possible it existed?
Well, city of Z and El Dorado are in pretty different places.
El Dorado, the ideas of where it is kind of center around towards Columbia.
And the city of Z is named after a region of Brazil called the Shingu. And so those are an America worth
of distance apart. People don't really think about it on the map, but the entire United
States would fit inside the Amazon. That's how big that place is. And these two are on
either end, but both of them have evidence of civilizations. It's lowland and
it floods all the time. So what they did is they'd make these big mounds and then they'd make huge
causeways between mounds so they could walk through their cities while they were seasonally
inundated. And a bunch of that stuff has been found in the Shingu area,
like huge areas that would support
tens of thousands of people.
Again, you know, it's not stone built
and it's been under the forest forever.
So it's very torn up, but it's there.
Now, you know, Brazil is big on cattle farming
more than ever now.
And a thing that I think is completed now is Brazil
and Bolivia partnered together and built a highway
all the way across and opened up a whole bunch more land,
which has found more of these,
what we call like geometric earthworks.
So there's more and more evidence of these civilizations.
It's not a, it's not a could be there, it's there, for sure.
By the way, the people who are trying to protect
the rainforest really hate the highway.
One of the things I learned is if you build a road,
loggers will come.
Yep.
And they will start cutting stuff down.
Now from an archaeology perspective,
if you cut down trees, you get to discover things. But from a sort of protective, very
precious rainforest perspective, it's obviously the opposite way. But it is interesting. I've
seen where loggers cut through the forest and then they, and when they leave, the forest heals itself very quickly.
So quickly.
And you just think that across decades,
you expand that to centuries and it's like,
you could see how a civilization
could be completely swallowed up by the rainforest.
And it happened for sure in the Amazon.
You know, one of the ways that we're trying
to push the frontier of where people were in the Amazon,
because yes, the trees and just the biomass
have eaten so much evidence,
but they're finding more and more of these places
that they call terra preta, which is black earth,
and there are huge swaths of it. So I guess the anthropology term is anthropogenic landscapes.
And what they're saying is that that really dark earth couldn't have just got that way
through natural forest processes, Then sometime in the distant
past that forest wasn't there and there was major farming and human activity to the point
where they totally turned the soil black and it's much more enriched. When I took a trip into the
Amazon, I went from Manaus up the river, the Black River a couple of days,
and went and met some different communities.
And I asked them about this Black Earth.
And they were like, yeah, that's why we're here.
Sometimes we move our village,
but when we move, we look for the Terra Preta.
And that's where we're gonna put our village
because that's a place that all of our gardens work.
The other places, they don't.
One of the things you talked about literally just,
you have to ask the right question.
And the stories, all the secrets are carried by the people
and they will tell you.
Yeah, there's so many of them.
You know, the thing that excites the world
about archeology right now is Gobekli Tepe.
And this, you know, 10,000, now Koran
Tepe is 11,000, the whole area is called the Tos Tepler. We only found it a couple of decades
ago. But it was just, you know, archaeologists rowing through the area and ask a sheep herder,
hey, you know, you guys know where anything ancient is? Oh, yeah, let me show you this.
And then all of a sudden, we've got a lost civilization.
And the shepherds always knew where it was,
just nobody asked them.
So speaking of Gobek'e Tepe,
what do you think about the work of Graham Hancock,
who also believes that there's a lost civilization
in the Amazon?
Well, I've met Graham and personally I like him.
He's a nice guy, got a nice sense of humor, and I think he's smart.
And I also think he is a very good researcher.
He and I are working on the same set of facts.
The differences are interpretations.
I do not believe Graham's idea that a single now lost ancient civilization seeded the rest
of them.
I just don't see that on a number of levels, artifact-wise, technology-wise, art-historical
analysis.
So I think his research is great.
I think that he's very well read, in fact, better read than a lot of my colleagues.
But his conclusions I disagree with. And he and I have talked about this and had a very
civil and normal conversation about it and agreed to disagree without spitting any venom
at any point in the conversation.
That would be a fun argument to be a fly on the wall for.
So he believes he's proposed as possible that the Amazon jungle is a man-made garden, so
it was planted there by advanced ancient civilization.
Is there any degree to which that could be possible?
Frankly, I agree with him.
It's just like what I was just talking about. It's the conclusion
part that we differ from. But the facts that he's basing that on are that terra preta,
are the huge geometric earthworks, are the ever-increasing evidence of them. They are now
from the bottom of Bolivia to Guyana.
They're everywhere.
Every time we open up the jungle, we find these big works.
So yes, there was a vast civilization that was there.
How advanced they were is a question,
and also a perspective thing.
Graham really focuses in on what we don't know
and what could be.
What's the, just to educate me,
what's the key idea that he's proposing
that you disagree with?
Is it, it was the level of advancement
that the civilization was
or how large and centralized it was?
My main point of disagreement is that his,
and his ideas evolved like everybody's,
you know? No scientist or researcher or anything has an idea at the beginning of their career and
holds it till the day they die. His ideas are evolving, but his ideas remain, a core of them are,
that there was a very advanced single ancient civilization that was utterly
destroyed by climactic conditions. And the Younger Dryas hypothesis is part of that most recently.
He used to not say that. Now he's into this meteor thing. But he believes that that civilization was destroyed, but that
members of it escaped this cataclysm and then spread out all over the world to seed all of
the world civilizations for the next revival. There's where I disagree with him. I think these were independent civilizations that grew up in their own ways, that they
were not seeded by some more advanced civilization from the past and that they all hold things
in common because they have this common ancestry of a, you know, in his early books he suggested
it's Atlantis. I don't think he suggests that anymore,
but he still hangs on to the single advanced,
now completely lost civilization.
And archeology, we don't have,
all of our ideas are theories, very few of them are facts.
And we're not, we could have the story wrong,
but one thing we're real good at is finding stuff.
I mean, we find fish scales.
So I find it just too big a pill to swallow
that there was a civilization
that was that technologically advanced and that large
that we can't even find a potsherd from.
Yeah.
And of course it is a compelling story
that there's a single civilization
from which all of this came from.
Because the alternative is, you know,
the idea that we came across the Bering Strait from Asia,
went all the way down to South America,
and got isolated, and created all these marvelous,
sophisticated civilizations and ideas, including religious ideas, that look similar to other,
you know, everybody has a flood myth.
Right.
Right.
So like there's a lot of similarities, everybody building pyramids.
Yeah.
But there could be a lot of other explanations. And for, even if it's a simple, compelling explanation,
there has to be evidence for it, right?
Now what would that evidence look like?
Well, that's the bottom line.
That's tough.
I mean, everything's theories,
and as responsible scientists,
we're trying to disprove our theories.
We are not supposed to be trying to prove our theories.
That's one more foot out of the science box that archaeology often steps.
We're supposed to be disproving what we think is happening, not proving it.
Yeah, you don't want to lean into the mystery too much.
Most of it's such a weird discipline
because you're operating in a,
it's like really in a dark room.
You're feeling around a dark room.
So it's mostly mystery.
I would say a lot of sciences operate
in a mostly well lit room.
It's like a dark corner
and you're kind of figuring out a way to light it.
But in, yeah, in archeology,
most of it is a mystery, right?
Yes, it's job security.
I like that part.
You know, but I do also try to always remind myself
that every paradigm shifting idea
that humans have ever had began as heresy and lunacy.
You know, that guy was crazy up to the second, he was brilliant.
And so we got to keep our minds open to the things that sound outlandish because one of them
eventually is going to lead us to the big paradigm shift. And if we're busy burning books of ideas
that we don't like, that's where we close our minds
to the possibility of advancing things.
I really love that, and I really appreciate
that you're saying that.
One of the fascinating things about just the Amazon to me
is that there's still a large number of uncontacted tribes.
And to rewind back into ancient history, you can imagine all of these
tribes that existed in the Amazon that were isolated, very sort of distinct from
each other. Can you speak to this, your understanding of these tribes and their
history that are still here today? Well, a lot of them are these, you know, by
uncontacted,
we mean we don't know anything about these guys.
We know roughly where they are, but places like Ecuador
have very responsible policies where no one's allowed
to go contact them.
So we have a dearth of information.
If they walk out of the jungle and talk to us,
that's one thing, but we don't go out there
looking for them. But they do
seem frozen in time and I don't think any of us have a good estimation of how long they've been
like that. But we were saying earlier that humans change based on pressures of their environment.
Mother necessity is oftentimes how we invent things or why we change its
pressure.
And one thing the Amazon is, once you figure out how not to die in it, it's a paradise
of food.
Food's fallen from the sky all the time there.
And if once you learn to adapt to that environment, you've got very little need.
There's no pressure to make anything else.
Things are working.
So for the modern humans that come across
these uncontacted tribes,
one of the things they document and notice
is the propensity of these tribes for violence.
So they get very aggressive in attacking
whoever they come across.
And not just foreigners, they attack each other.
The Yanomamo are famous for just having
never-ending feuds with each other.
What do you think is the philosophy behind that?
I don't, you know, I'm a relatively peaceful person,
but I've got, you know, I've got the monster in me
like everybody does. And I think that these, you know, it's cultural norms that become institutionalized.
For the Yanomamo, they really, part of the rite of passage to be a man is to go kill or maim somebody from an outer village. And they go in there, they oftentimes,
the way they don't let inbreeding set in
and ruin everybody, not that they think of it scientifically,
but they typically go and steal women
from far off communities.
And that starts a big fight.
Another thing that starts fights
that when nobody even fought is illness. Illness
in the Amazon and all of the ancient Americas wasn't seen as a biological thing, it was
a spiritual thing. So if somebody in your village gets sick, the question is asked,
well, what spirit is menacing him and who called it out on him?
And then the rumor starts,
well, I bet you it was Joe over there
and that other community still passed off
for that time when we stole his daughter.
And we ought to go over there and kill Joe.
And then he'll get better.
And so this round of never-ending violence
like Hatfields and McCoys had that thing
and the people of New Guinea also do that.
So it's not, you know, there are certain areas, mostly wooded areas now that I think about it,
where people just hide out and they attack each other as a cultural institution.
It's such a tricky thing to do to study an uncontacted tribe without obviously contacting
them to figure out their language, their philosophy of mind, how they communicate, the hierarchy
they operate under.
And yeah, you know, there was a fascinating story in Peru, I guess it was probably like
eight years ago or something, but there was a ranger from one of the biology stations who just in the by and by of protecting his area, met one of these uncontacted tribes
and befriended someone, not the whole tribe, but he made some friends who would meet him
in the woods, not in their community.
And he started to learn their language over a couple of years.
And so he was this kind of important guy
who actually could be the first translator
to talk to these people.
And one day a couple of them just came out of the woods
and just plugged him with arrows and just killed him.
And then they went back in the woods.
Like that's the one guy who understands what we're saying.
We should kill him and move our village.
So those folks really lean into the, as you said,
the monster versus the puppy.
You know, everybody's got it, I think.
I think, you know, we need to listen to our better angels
because if we don't, we as a human species
can easily devolve into just using violence against others to get what we want.
It's a daily choice we make not to be savages.
Which is a fascinating thing to remember.
We're kind of thinking civilized society, we've moved past all that.
But it can be summoned.
It can be summoned, like in 1984, the two minutes of hate. With the right words, that primal thing can be summoned and directed and lead to a lot
of destruction.
And, you know, our sports are really based on taking those kinds of urges and channeling them positive
where somebody's not dead at the end of it.
Yep.
So at which point did what we now call the Maya civilization arise?
Ah, that's another complicated one, another group living mostly in a jungle that we have
barely begun to explore.
You know, the truth is a lot of the questions in the Amazon and what we're talking about
now is the Patan and the mountains there.
Those aren't places archaeologists want to live.
They're horrible.
I mean, I've been there.
I don't want to live in a tent and eat rations.
I want to live in a nice town. So a lot of the places where the answers are, we still really
haven't gotten there because it takes a special person to be educated enough to know what they're
looking at and tough enough to want to be there. I've done my tour of duty. I'm now in a nice little
podcast studio. But seriously, the Maya, the first hint that we see people
who are culturally Maya, very close to where the time period for the Chavin culture is,
about 1800 BCE, there's a culture that some call the Mochaia, not Maya, but they're on
the Pacific Coast where Guatemala and Mexico connect. It's called the Soconusco.
And those are the first people that are really going to be culturally Maya. And they're interacting
with the culture that has traditionally been seen as Mexico's mother culture, which is the Olmec.
They're kind of the same thing as we were talking about in South America, where
which is the Olmec. They're kind of the same thing
as we were talking about in South America,
where the original Maya are not,
there's not a whole lot to indicate
that they have a religion.
But the Olmec have this religion they develop
and they start exporting it.
And you see the Maya become more and more involved
in the religion that's being created by the Olmec,
who are to the north of them, in the swamps of what we by the Olmec who are to the north
of them in the swamps of what we call the Isthmus of Tehuantpec.
I have a lot of questions to ask here about just the natural stupid confusion I have.
So first, did the Maya or the Olmec come first?
And are they distinct groups? Like how do you maintain a distinct civilization when you're so
close together? I just finished filming a whole thing on the Olmecs and their interaction with
the Maya for the great courses. I'm thrilled for it to come out next spring. I think they co-evolved.
Archaeology in this regard is the worst enemy of this.
We put these names on cultures,
we talk about how they evolve from one to another,
we draw these lines where there aren't any,
we make these time periods that a culture
magically transforms into somebody with another name
where I'm pretty sure they didn't care
about any of those names.
But the Maya and the Olmec are
two parts of a larger interaction sphere that's happening in Mesoamerica, a very dynamic time.
The Olmec are really bringing the religion part, but the other areas are bringing technology, ceramic technology, making hematite mirrors, making tools out of obsidian and
other stone types.
So you've got the Olmec in the middle where Mexico gets skinny and it gets swampy down
there, that's called the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.
That's where the Olmec are.
Then you've got the Maya to the east of them.
Then you have the Valley of Oaxaca,
where the people called the Zapotecs, they're rising up.
And then you have the Valley of Mexico,
which will eventually become the Aztecs,
but not for millennia.
All those areas are interacting with each other.
Can we just also draw some more lines? Yeah, sure. So what is Mesoamerica and what
is South America? And what you just said to Olmec and the Maya, like can we just linger on the
geography that we're talking about here in the, what is this like a thousand BC? Yeah the time
period we're talking about where the the Olme are there, 1,000 BC is a great
midpoint of it.
I'd say it starts about 1800 BCE and by 500 BCE, the Olmec are gone and a whole new wave
of civilization and population increase happen.
In terms of Mesoamerica, looking at your map here, I'd say about halfway
through the Chihuahua Desert up there in the top left. That's about the boundary of Mesoamerica.
There's this big desert where almost nobody lives, and once you get north enough, you
get into the ancestral Pueblo people of what's now America,
the Four Corners area. They're not Mesoamerican. They have different lives.
Where does modern Mexico end?
Modern Mexico ends, right? You see the name Maya there with the white line around it,
that's Guatemala. So Guatemala cuts off most of Mexico from Central America.
But Mesoamerica only goes about halfway through Honduras.
And then it's really kind of a no man's land.
Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, they really,
they're neither.
They're not Mesoamerica, they're not South America.
They're more South America
because they've got some gold there.
But then basically you get on the other side of Panama
and you're fully in South America
with two distinct groups too.
You've got the guys that are on the Andes,
on the West Coast, and then you have the Amazon.
So the Andes and the Amazon are very distinct.
So when you refer to the Andean region, is that referring to the Andes and the Amazon are very distinct. So when you say, when you refer to the Andean region,
is that referring to the Andes and the Amazon or just the Andes?
Just the Andes, and the coast to the Pacific there. That's Andean civilization.
So did Maya make it to the Andes, the Andean region?
Not that archaeology can prove, but it's almost
certain that they interacted with each other. Number one, it's just, you know, it's biased to
think that these people couldn't travel as widely as people on the other side of the planet did.
But there's all sorts of hints, like that first ceramics I was talking about that the Maya made.
that first ceramics I was talking about that the Maya made, they show up strangely sophisticated technologically already.
And down in Ecuador, they had them for a thousand years
before, so a lot of people, myself included,
think that the idea of ceramics actually came
from South America to the Maya.
Did the Maya get seeded by the second wave
across the Bering Strait,
or did that initial wave of people that came
and populated South America,
were they the ancestors of the Maya?
Like how did the migration happen here?
Do we understand that?
We're still piecing it together.
I don't think, you know, I'd be lying
if I told you I had the answers,
but we do have evidence of Maya stature people.
They're a small people.
Generally speaking, people that grow up in the forest
are smaller and people that grow up
in the open plains are taller, probably about, you know,
just generations of people that hit their head
on a branch or not.
You're joking, but you know but there could be something to that.
I think there's some truth to it.
I mean, the Pygmies are small
and the people on the plains in Africa are big.
The North American Indians are tall and the Maya are small.
There's definitely a pattern of smaller people
in the forests.
But anyway, there's a cave in the Yucatan
called Loltun Cave that has handprints in the cave. It's somebody who put their hand on the cave and
spit charcoal around their hand like a negative print. We can date that charcoal and it comes from 10,000 years ago. And the hands are all small. It's, you know, typical
old Mexico. I walked right up to these things and could put my hand, I didn't, you know, mess with
them, but I put my hand next to these hands. And they're all smaller than my, you know,
Northern European hand. And so either it was a bunch of kids who were in this cave 10,000 years ago,
or it was people of Maya stature who did it.
So cool that you can date the charcoal.
And it's so cool that 10,000 years ago
there were people leaving.
And actually we have one that's, I think,
2,000 years older now, just a couple years ago.
Again, in Yucatan in a cave,
they found a woman they named Naya now.
And she's like 12,000 years old.
So the best guess maybe that you have
is it goes across the Bering Strait to South America,
possibly the Amazon, develop a lot of cool ideas
in the Amazon
and start drifting back up into Mesoamerica.
Was kind of a co-evolution.
The technology of ceramics, I think,
got there through an interaction with.
See, the interesting thing is that
Maya didn't really have religion,
didn't have as a vibrant religious set of ideas
and they borrowed it from the Olmec.
I've been doing a deep dive on this for this Olmec course that I just did.
And it really does seem like these other cultures that have jade and hematite and obsidian,
the Olmec had none of that stuff.
They were living in a swamp and building things out of dirt,
but they were importing those materials from those areas,
carving them into all sorts of religious iconography,
and then exporting them back to them.
And still the Fang Deity show up there?
No, the Fang Deity is nowhere in Central America
and Mesoamerica.
That's why there's Jaguars, there's Jaguar iconography,
but it's not the same thing.
This whole Jaguar transformer deity does not exist there.
They do have a pantheon.
So the Maya, the Almecs,
are the interesting peoples of the regions.
What was their,
I'd love to ask questions about who were they?
So one question I'm curious about,
what was their sense when they looked up at the stars?
What was their conception of the cosmos?
That's a question I've spent my entire career
trying to answer.
I think that they saw it as proof
of the cyclical nature of life. And certainly they saw like every ancient
group did, like are those the gods? Why are those things so far away? But I think that
the Maya especially looked at it with a much more mathematical mind than most did. And
so they watched these things move every night. And if you do that even today,
you notice that all the stars move in tandem. They're just this blanket. They're like this
curtain behind me. They're the stage upon which some very important players are dancing.
And that's the moon, the sun, and the planets.
There's five planets we can see visibly.
So they started watching like, why are just those seven
moving differently than the rest?
And those are the things that they keyed on mathematically.
The sun, of course, was also involved
in the agricultural cycle, so that was important
in and of itself, but the planets, we can see them coming up
with ideas, definitely doing the math and seeing that there is a repeated cycle and then coming up
with mythology around them. Venus for them was associated with war. they had very ritualized times to go to war that had something to do with Venus.
Sometimes in the classic period, Maya, it was the first appearance of Venus as the morning star.
That was a good time to go to battle with your neighbors. And when it became the post-classic
with like Chichen Itza being the capital of the Yucatan, then it looks like if you
watch Venus day after day, it goes slowly up every day and then when it hits its highest
point as Morning Star in the morning, it goes down to the earth like three times as fast.
All of a sudden it just shoots down and hits the earth. And so the people of post-classic
Maya civilization saw that as the gods shooting a spear into the earth. And that was a good time
to attack your neighbors. That was like war time when the spear is going to hit the earth.
All right. So this is fascinating. They just had at the foundation a sense that life existence
at the various time scales is cyclical.
Yeah.
That's the starting point.
And then you just look out there
and if you're extremely precise,
which is fascinating how precise they were,
you can just measure the cycles.
Yeah, and they did it really well.
Now, of course, they are the only ones to develop
a fully elaborated writing system in all of the Americas.
The South America had the Kipu,
but it's so different than our writing,
we're still trying to figure out what the heck it is.
We know there's math there too.
But they had the ability to take a lifetime worth
of measurements and hand it to the next
generation who would then do it more and do it more. That's how they figured out kind of the
holy grail of ancient astronomy. How good were they? Was whether they could see the procession
of the equinoxes, the fact that we're just barely wobbling and there's a 26,000-year period where the stars as that backdrop will spin all
the way around and come back. It's 26,000 years. But the Maya were able to figure out, wait, it's
moving one degree every 72 years and did a calculation based on where it should be in the
ancient past. And they're using constellations.
They're showing us they know by saying like,
this planet's in this constellation right now.
And 33,000 years ago, it would be in this constellation.
It's just fascinating
that they were able to figure this out.
I would love to sort of understand the details of the scientific community, if you can call it that.
I think we absolutely could and that's actually one of the things that I'm
hoping to move the needle on in my generation with my career is to give
these cultures the respect they deserve as standing toe to toe with the rest
of our ancient civilizations we respect.
There are things that should be called science that are not being called science at the moment.
Their math is incredible.
Their hydraulic engineering is incredible.
Their chemistry is incredible, their chemistry is incredible. And so I hope to talk about these things differently
as a way to get people to recognize the achievements
in a different way.
Yeah, I mean, unquestionably incredible scientific work
in the astronomy sense, especially here.
Can you speak to all the sophisticated aspects
of the Mayan calendar
that they've developed? I know you got another five hours.
Yes, go. No, I'm kidding. I should say that you also gave me
the 2024 Mayan calendar. Yeah, I do this just to show the world that that calendar system
just to show the world that that calendar system is evergreen. It can go into the future or the past for billions of years in the system they made, just like our system is.
So can you speak to the three components here as I'm reading? The tzolkin, the hab, and
the long count. What are these fascinating components of the calendar?
It's neat how obsessed they were. They were really math nerds.
It wasn't good enough for them to just make one cycle
to describe time.
They had all these cycles that interlocked into each other
like cogs in a machine,
though they never thought of it like that.
But the sulcine's their oldest one
and the one that still endures today.
There are millions of Maya people that are living their lives based on a 260 day count.
No weeks, no months.
It's just 13 numbers combined with 20 day names for a total of 260 days.
And then it goes again.
Everybody in the highlands knows what their birthday is in that
calendar, knows what it means about their personality and the kind of jobs that they're
supposed to do. Each one of those days has their own spirit and what's supposed to happen in those
days. The Maya collectively call them the mom, the grandmother-grandfather spirits, and they talk to each one of those days and they pray
to them.
There's now an association of some 8,000 people that are called Aki that are daykeepers
who are keeping the days, and they're also like community psychologists almost.
People come to them and say, you know, my life is mixed up. What's wrong here? Well, let's ask the mom like,
okay, well, it looks like you're not doing this or that or you know what? You're an accountant.
You're not supposed to be an accountant. You're supposed to be a midwife. What are you doing?
You're living your life wrong. You're a Kib. You need to start being a Kib.
So they take extremely seriously the day on which you're born, what that means,
like the spirit that embodies that day.
Right. Like I'm Keeb, I'm 13 Keeb, and it says, it's funny how accurate a lot of them are. Mine is
basically as I'm an irresponsible husband and parent, but people like me, so my family still prospers.
Like, oh God, that's horribly accurate.
I mean, some of it is also the chicken or the egg.
If you truly believe, so if you've structured society
where this calendar is truly sacred,
then it kind of like, you manifest a lot of the,
the spirit does manifest itself in the life of the
people that is born on that spirits day. Absolutely. It's interesting. And then
and the Maya really feel this in this system. So that's the core system. This
260 day calendar was the very first calendar they made thousands of years
ago and it's the one that's most important today. Why 260 days, by the way?
Is there a reasoning behind it?
From, most Maya agree with this today,
and who knows what the original architects
thousands of years ago were thinking,
but it's nine months.
It's the human gestation period.
So if you conceived on the day 13 monkey, chances are your kid's coming
out on or near 13 monkey. And I think it's beautiful. I mean, if that's right, that means
the Maya and the people of Mesoamerica will all share it together. When they thought about,
we need a count of time that's for us. They didn't look up into the heavens,
they looked into their bodies. What's the first cycle that we actually go through as humans?
And they picked this nine-month thing. It really is our cycle. And no other culture on the planet
looked inside themselves to create their calendar like that.
looked inside themselves to create their calendar like that.
So that's the oldest one and the sacred one that still carries through to today.
What's the second one, the hab?
The hab is the solar calendar,
the one that everybody on the planet
eventually comes up with.
We know it's second though,
because when they start talking about it,
they use all the symbols and the numbers from the 260 one.
They say, well, we need a solar one too.
Let's just keep counting this another 105 days
and we'll get to 365.
Oh, interesting.
They kind of carry the same, got it, got it, got it, got it.
And that's useful because for all the sort of agriculture
all this kind of reasons.
Right.
Though interestingly, they never put a leap year in.
The HAB is also called the vague year
because it's just 365,
which means every year they're off a quarter of a day
and eventually it starts really adding up.
In fact, it's even caused modern problems.
In this calendar here, I just do the straight math from a thousand years ago.
And so I place the beginning of the solar year differently than some Maya groups do,
especially the guys in the highlands of Eastern Guatemala.
They write me nasty emails saying, I don't know what time the year is. But their relatives changed it in the 1950s
because their agricultural cycle was so far off,
they moved it 60 days back to make it in the spring again.
But it drifts, which is strange,
because it's not a very good thing
for the agricultural cycle.
It's one of these mysteries
we still don't have an
explanation for. So that's the hob. And then what's the long count? The long counts, they're really
mysterious, cool one, because it's a linear count of days, which are not like them. It's a bunch of
cycles like ours. You know, our weeks are a cycle, our months are a cycle. But it's weird in that its estimation of the year in the long count
system is only 360 days. So it's miserably off a solar year. They count in base 20. So like we
count in tens, we're decimal, they count in base 20, the decimal. And so, it
should be, there's ones, there's 20s, there's 400s, there's 8,000s, there's 160,000s. It
goes just like our tens, hundreds, thousands, 10,000s, but it's times 20. So, they have days, months of 20 days, and then they have
these years that are, should be by their math, 400, but it's only 360. And that throws the
whole thing out of whack going further up. Then they have a 20-year period and a 400-year
period. 400 years to their calendar, but it's only, by that time, it's
only 396 years in our period, in our reckoning. So it's mysterious that it's, why did they tweak it
at the year to be only 360 days? That doesn't follow any astronomy, that doesn't,
that's not the human cycle. Yeah, but they're, I mean, it's interesting that they build up towards thinking about
very long periods of time, like, Bakhtuns is 144,000 days.
Right.
Or a Bakhtun is 400 of the long counts years.
So it's kind of like our millennium.
You know, we think it's a big deal when we hit a millennium
or a century. They have a 20-year period that they do a lot of celebrations on called a cartoon,
and then they have the 400-bac-tune, which is the big one. That's like their millennium.
And 13 of those bactunes occurred in the creation before us. They also think that the world has had
multiple creations. They're not alone in that. There's lots of ancient civilizations who say
that, but we're technically in the fourth creation. And they have a creation story called the Popal Vuh. And the Popal Vuh is clear as day
that the third creation ends with the help of these heroes called the hero twins, and
the fourth creation begins. And so on the Maya monuments, we see them doing the math
through the long count. And we can calculate it back very exactly. It happened, the fourth
creation started on August 11, 3114 BC. And it says, it doesn't say it's day one, it
says it's the last day of the 13th boctune of the third creation, which leads us to believe
that a creation is only 13 bactunes long.
Right, so, and this would be the fourth creation.
The calendar starts-
This is the fourth creation.
But if you do the math going from 3,114 BC
and count 13 bactunes forward, you get to 2012.
count 13 Bakhtuns forward, you get to 2012.
And hence the very popular notion that 2012,
whenever that was, December, something like that. December 21st, 2012.
Will be the end of the world.
Right.
So can you explain this?
Oh, those were very fruitful years for me.
I had so many lectures around the country
that was, it's like Garrett Morris in
Saturday Night Live. The apocalypse was very, very good to me.
I mean, but that is pretty interesting. So that will be, so technically it would be in the fifth.
Yeah, technically we'd be in the fifth. Though my argument was that actually, if you look through all the corpus of my mathematics
and calendars, they never say anything like that.
In fact, there's a handful of dates that tell us that the fourth creation does continue farther on, that that Bakhtun place should have 20 Bakhtuns in it, like
their counting system would dictate, not 13.
And there's a place in Palenque, there's a place in the Dresden Codex, and one other
place I'm forgetting, that all'll talk about time after 2012.
So how does that happen?
It's a conflict.
Is there supposed to be an overlap of the,
so it's like 13 is the core of it and it's 20 long?
They love the number 13.
It's all over the place.
It's a magic number to them.
My explanation, which I admit is not very
solid, but I think that the magical deeds of the hero twins in their creation story at the end of
the third creation hit the magical reset button and that it just restarted time right there because
of their magic. But that was not to say that the natural Bakhtun cycle should be 13. And there are
certain texts that go way forward in time or way backward in time. And whenever they want to do that,
there are higher increments than just the Bakhtun.
Above that, there's the Pikhtun,
then there's the Kalabatun, then there's Alawatun,
and it goes on and on.
And these are like 160,000 years, huge increments of time.
Whenever they want to do that,
and they talk about a long period of time,
they start putting 13s in all of those increments, those higher increments. And I think what
they're saying is they're making an esoteric statement about the never-ending nature of
time. That's what I think they're telling us in those texts, that time goes on forever,
magically. But they still had a conception
that it didn't go on forever before, right?
That there was other civilizations that came before
and this is the fourth creation.
This is the fourth creation.
And the gods made everybody.
The first ones were made of mud and they melted.
The second ones were made of sticks,
but they were jerks to the animals.
The third ones were like us, but flawed in some other way. And then we're finally made of
the blood of the gods and corn. We're made out of corn, so we're perfect. And as it explains to us, the popal voodoo
does, we got it right this time. There's no reason to believe that this creation has a set duration.
One of the weird things is that the Aztecs, who we talked to a lot at contact,
things is that the Aztecs, who we talked to a lot at contact, they also had the concept of multiple creations before us, but they were real clear to the Spanish that they weren't all the same time
element. Some of them were in the 300s of years, some of them were in the 700s of years, but they were not the same time period. So our mathematical logic that if
the third creation was 13, this one must be third creation, or also be 13, it's in direct opposition
to what the Aztecs told us about the nature of creations. They're different time periods.
Why do you think there was the myth of the previous creations?
Did they have some kind of long, multi-generational memory
of prior civilizations?
It may have had some echo in the flood myths.
Right, it's the same.
It's the same kind of major myths
carried through long periods of time.
There's a lot of different opinions about it.
If they were all 13, if we have five creations like the Aztecs said, and they were all 13,
they would come up to roughly 25,000 something years, which is very close to that processional
cycle. So some people are like, they designed it all to be one completion of the procession of the equinoxes.
And I mean, that, the,
I don't believe that one, but that one sure sounds good.
Doesn't it?
That's going to get a lot of internet hits.
And one of the things I do obviously wonder about is
why the flood myth is part of like most societies and
most religions. I think that one's pretty easy. It's the end of the Ice Age when
the bathtub filled back up. Huh, so it's just the Ice Age. It's the seas filling
back up. And they, without really understanding what happened,
they just carried that story.
Everybody knows that everybody's nice coastal village
went underwater.
And they had to seek higher ground.
And then just like people like talking about the weather,
everybody was talking about the weather
for many generations as the sea level was going up. And then that myth carried. Why do we live here, grandpa? Well, we used to
live over there, but then the water came. And then many grandpas later, it just kind of permeates
every idea. It becomes mythology, but global mythology. So that one, you know, there's a lot of things I don't have a reasonable explanation for,
but the flood myth is almost certainly
the rise in sea level.
So this idea that every day represents,
that it carries a spirit,
you know, there's modern day astrology.
You know, most people kind of consider astrology this,
maybe a bit unscientific, woo-woo type of set of beliefs. But do you think there's some wisdom
that astrology carries from your scholarship of the Maya calendar? Do you think if we carry that to
the astrological perspective on the world, do you think there's
some wisdom there?
I don't know.
You know, I have a woo-woo part of me.
I would like to believe that stuff, but I don't think as a scientist, I cannot come
up with a biological scientific reason why that would be true.
And when you look at it objectively, I mean, really is everybody born with the sign Scorpio
a moody person?
That's just objectively not true.
But it is funny how oftentimes these Maya horoscopes,
for lack of a better word, do hit the mark. There was some student who surveyed like 300 people
with the app I made and asked them about their Greek sign
and their Maya sign, and his conclusion for his term paper
was that the Maya one was
working way better, which that's fascinating.
At least that's fun.
But no, I think I'm too much of a scientist to believe that I just don't have any foundation
in science that would allow us to believe that the month in which we were born in a cycle
sets our personality and destiny.
I agree.
And yet there's so much mystery all around us
that what I do like is the inbuilt humility
to that worldview, that there's this whole,
you can call it a spiritual world, but a world that we
don't quite understand.
And then you can wander about what is the wisdom that that world carries.
And then you can construct all kinds of systems to try to interpret that.
And then there is where the human hubris can come in.
But it's good to be humbled by how little we know,
I suppose.
I do love the mysteries of the world,
and I would love to find an ancient civilization,
but I don't want to solve the mysteries of the world.
I think they're one of the things
that make life worth living.
That's true, that's true.
You mentioned the Maya writing system. What are some interesting
aspects of their language that they've used and the written language that they used?
Well, you know, one of the things that confound me as a guy who's spent, you know, a better portion
of my life studying it, I had the honor of being the student of Linda Shealy right here at the University of Texas at Austin.
She got the group together who broke the Maya code of hieroglyphics in the 1970s. So I learned
from the best and loved every minute of it. I miss Linda.
Can you speak to that code actually, the hieroglyphic code and what it takes to break it?
Oh boy. I mean, what a thing. We had kind of a Rosetta Stone. We had a page out of
Diego de Landa's book, a priest who was converting the Maya in Yucatan, asked his informants about
their writing system and what every sound meant. And he was convinced they had an alphabet like we do. So, he got this Maya
guy, sat down in Spanish and he said, okay, you're going to write all the symbols right here in my
book. Write an a here, write a be here, write a se here. And that guy just wrote all of the sounds
that the priest told him to write. They were actually syllables. They were vowel consonant
combinations. They weren't an alphabet. But that turned into our Rosetta stone of sorts.
The big key is that the Maya still speak that same language. There are millions of Maya people
who are speaking a version of Maya. Now, there's where I get confused,
that we've got a single writing system
that is intelligible, we've broken the code,
so we know that it's basically the same writing system
from the top of the Yucatan into Guatemala and El Salvador,
but we have 33 Maya languages today that are mutually unintelligible. And we backwards
project the language of what they spoke back then that the glyphs are in to something called
Chol-Ti, which is a combination of Chor-Ti and Chol, two of those languages. But it doesn't work
for me at all. How did, if there was one language, maybe two back then, how did it flower into 33 mutually
unintelligible languages in just 500 years during acculturation and horrible infectious
diseases that killed 90% of the population?
How did that happen?
So we're missing something
huge here. I think it's more like Chinese, where Chinese letters, writing can be read
in multiple languages and still understood. I don't know exactly the mechanics of how
that would happen, but it just seems impossible that there are more languages, not less languages in the Maya area
after the last 500 years that they've been through.
So you think that there's some kind of process
of either rapidly generating dialects
or there always has been these dialects,
or I should say, their distinct languages,
even though there's a common writing system.
There must have been a way that multiple languages understood the same writing system.
Or maybe there was something like Latin, you know how there was a period in Europe where
most people were illiterate and there was this priesthood who all understood Latin and they wrote in Latin.
Maybe the hieroglyphs represent a kind of Latin
in the ancient Maya world.
But we don't really know.
And there's not clear evidence to fill in the gaps
of how it's possible to have that.
Right.
But we did realize it was actually a Russian scholar
named Yuri Konorosov who broke the code.
The Americans and the Europeans were absolutely sure that the written language was a dead
language.
But Yuri, not knowing any of that, not being filled with all of those thoughts from America
and Europe, went about it in the way that he was taught in his
grad school in Moscow and just went to the dictionaries and he looked at
Yucatec language that they're speaking today and he applied it to the symbol
system and he knew that there were certain sounds he used lambda's
alphabet and he found there was the his two key examples were a picture of a dog with
a symbol over it and a picture of a turkey with a symbol over it.
And the dog, a dog in Yucatec is tsuul.
So he saw two symbols and he said, this one's probably tsuul and this one's probably Tsu and this one's Ul and then the
Turkey was Kuts, so it would be Ku ending in Tsu and he showed how look, you know, this is Tsu, this is Tsu,
those two things that should be Tsu are the same symbol and that began this process of
unraveling the syllables that we're still working on today.
That's fascinating. Just that decoding process is fascinating. of unraveling the syllables that we're still working on today.
That's fascinating. Just that decoding process is fascinating.
Like how do you even figure that out?
And there's probably still, is there still,
are you aware of any written languages
that haven't been decoded yet?
Yeah, yeah, there's a number of them.
There's Easter Island script I was just talking to.
We've apparently made a few advances there
now. It's called Rongo Rongo, and we only have about maybe 25 examples of texts,
but we're beginning to break that. There's also… The big one is Harappan. Harappan,
for a long time, we used to say there were five independent scripts on the planet,
and those were Chinese cuneiform, which is Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Maya, and then Harappan,
which is from northern India.
That's the only one that we've never cracked. And now all the epigraphers, the
people, that's the term, epigraphy is translating these languages. They're all ganging up on
Harappan and want to kick it off the list because we can't break it. It had a big enough
symbol set, but no one's been able to crack it. And now they're saying it's just an elaborate
symbol set and doesn't reflect the spoken word.
That's a hypothesis,
but we just would explain why it's so difficult to break.
But we could just be faced with a quitter generation.
Maybe somebody will pick up the baton next generation.
Kids these days with their...
The other one that fascinates me is from the Americas.
It's the kipu.
The Inca had the kipu, this knotted string records,
but it was definitely encoding more than just math.
We know the math.
I know lots, I can do the math khipus
and figure out what they're totaling and things.
Yeah, there's a khipu right there.
Khipu are recording devices fashioned from strings
historically used by a number of cultures
in the region of Andean South America. A khipu usually consists of cotton or cowlite and fiber strings.
So there's a set of strings and they're supposed to what? To be saying something?
There's one long string that the little ones dangle off of and each one of the dangling strings
have sets of knots on them. And the knots, some of them are mathematical kippus, and those, we can
just do the math. We can prove that it's math. They also encoded language in there. They
had entire libraries in Cusco where Spanish conquistadors were brought through and the
caretakers of the libraries would just put, they'd say, pull that one down, read that
one to me. And he'd pull it out and just read a history of something that happened 200 years earlier. So it was definitely
writing. But in the 1570s, one head of the church there had all of the people that could read them
called kipu kamayaks gathered up, had them read all of their khipus and transcribe them into
Spanish books, and then had the khipus burned and those people murdered.
Well, there you go.
And so we can't break the code still today, but we know it was absolutely a written language,
though it wasn't written, it was weaved or knotted.
And there's still some khipus available that could be.
I think now we've just crossed the 1,000 mark.
So we have 1,000 khipus, there's enough to break the code.
And I think this generation might be the one that does it.
It's sad that so few have survived.
Yeah.
I mean, a thousand is good, but it's...
But see, there's, Peru has barely scratched the surface
with archeology.
There's so much out there.
There was a priest I read about named Diego de Pores,
who was one of the early people in Peru
converting communities.
And his chronicle is real clear that
he wanted to teach this community of 3,000 people all the Spanish prayers, the important ones
for them to be converted into Christianity. And he had the communities, kipu-kma'yaks, not
kipus for each person that told them that they could read them out and memorize the prayers.
And if they were caught without their khipu in town, they were flogged.
So, he had 3,000 of the same khipu made and handed out to this community.
If we find that community and find its cemetery, there is a Rosetta Stone.
You know, it is probably the case
that there is somebody in Peru,
and maybe a large community that knows this language,
that understands, and like you just have to show up
and ask them, and it's like, they're like, oh yeah, yeah.
There are some communities that are using them.
There's a couple of them that we had high hopes for,
and then it was apparent that they were just making shit up.
They didn't actually know how to read it,
they just knew it used to be read,
so they like made a bunch of stuff about what it says,
and they bring it out and they act like they can read it,
but then when you ask them the details, they don't know.
But then on a much simpler level,
there's llama herders who keep a string in their pocket,
and they've got the knots equaling how many llamas they have, and then they have subcategories of information like this one's
sick, we've lost these ones, this one's pregnant.
So they have these more simple and more mathematical kippus, but they're using them to affect
as a record.
Is it possible through archaeology to know what the social organization of the Maya was?
Maybe if there was a hierarchy, maybe what the political structure was, if there was
a leader, different roles, priests, or who had the power, who was powerless,
who had certain kinds of roles, is it possible to know that?
Actually, because of hieroglyphs, yeah, we know a whole lot.
There's basic things that archeology,
which is a very blunt tool, can figure out,
like this guy lives in a rich house,
this guy lives in a poor house.
But the hieroglyphs tell us specific stuff
about who can rule, that it was hereditary,
that that hereditary rule was based on royal blood that could be burned and connect to the ancestors
that lived up in the sky versus the one that's lived in the underworld. It also told us things about hierarchy, like that there were councils of
lords underneath the king who each represented clans who had their own neighborhoods and that
there were revolving positions of authority. There was the site that I mapped for my dissertation
and spent years in the jungle there, Palenque had a lord's title named Fire Lord.
That was one of the generals of their army.
And we could tell that position changed over time.
So there was one guy named Chakzuts,
who was the Fire Lord for the early part of a reign of a king called the Kalmonob.
And then by the time he carves this other panel, there's another guy in the position
of Kok Ahau, which was the fire lord.
And so he had-
Got promoted?
Well, he could have been killed in the case of that.
But then we have the interesting case of in the post-classic, they shed the idea of
kings.
They don't like kings anymore.
That's probably a big part of why the classic disappearance and the abandonment of all those
cities happened.
People just got sick of kings.
And so they turn into this more council system at Chichen Itza. But then when Chichen Itza falls, there's a new city that's architecture looks a lot
like Chichen Itza.
It's called Mayapon, but it has what is called the League of Mayapon.
And it has a council of representatives from the communities from all around the Yucatan. And it is basically a democracy.
It is a Maya democracy that happens. The individuals from all around the Yucatan are there.
Each family has their own council house at Maya Pond, though they live back at their place. It's
kind of like a Maya Congress. A representative of democracy.
It really was. I mean, and this happens in, I guess, 1250 AD, that this Maya democracy
happens and we know the names of them, we know the families, and of course, they were
humans. So eventually, they screwed it all up. One family murdered another family
and the whole city burned.
Yeah, and of course it's probably some fascinating corruption
which is hard to discover through.
Part of it was the Aztecs screwing things up.
The Aztecs came down with all sorts of,
like, we'll buy everything you're making.
And then eventually they were like,
could we maybe buy some humans?
And then one family was like, no.
And the other family was like, I don't know, they're making us a lot of money.
So then they murdered each other and the water supply got polluted and then the city burned.
It seems like slavery, murder, and disease is a large component of the story of humans. You mentioned different periods in the Maya, the
classic, the post-classic, the pre-classic, the archaic. Can you just speak to that? So
archaic is before there was really a civilization that was...
Yeah, archaic is pretty much when everybody's hunter gatherers.
So the classic period was the golden age, and then the pre-classic is the interesting
time that we were talking about, and the post-classic is when the democracy came about.
Well, midway through it.
Yeah.
Reverted back to council systems.
The Maya loved to be part of councils.
So yeah, we have pre-classic is like the origins of civilization.
They're starting to build cities.
They're starting to create their calendar.
They're starting to create these wonderful works of art.
The classic period, if you look at 10 different textbooks for the Maya, you'll get 10 different
dates that wiggle around in there.
But basically, that's the age of kings to me.
That's when these cities decide that they're going to organize themselves around
elite royal families that have this magical blood that can contact their ancestors that
are directly in contact with the gods. The Maya never contact their gods directly. They
contact their ancestors who are up there who act like liaisons to the gods. And so the Maya age of kings has these dynasties
sprouting up where these people have basically snowed the rest of the people that they've got
a special quality of their blood and only their offspring can do the same trick and talk to the
gods where everybody, every Jomaiiah can let their blood and burn it and
contact their ancestor. But Jomiah's dad is just a corn farmer who lives down below
and he's got no influence over the gods. But the rulers, their spirits go down briefly,
but then they go up into the heavens and reside where the gods are and can act as liaisons.
So that's the validation for this kingship that happens for about 400 years.
I know we say 250 to 900, which is kind of the encompassing edges of it, but it's interesting
that it's actually specifically the ninth Bakhtun of their history. The ninth Bakhtun
begins in like 426 and it ends in like 829. So it's a 400 year period of time. And before
that there were no kings. And after that, there really aren't kings. They're heads
of councils.
So I call it the age of kings, where everybody's following the directives of basically a despot.
And for a while, that's great.
I mean, cities build up, populations happening.
I see it as kind of a cult of personality moment too.
Strong, charismatic leaders inspire people to do great
things together. But eventually, like happens all the time with power, too much power corrupts,
all of a sudden there's this unwieldy, huge elite class that has to be treated special
by everybody else. And they start saying, well, I think we should fight with those guys and you guys should
go take these things. And people eventually get sick of it and they walk away from these cities
and that's how we get the mysterious Maya collapse where all these cities are just gone.
That's one of the great mysteries of the Maya civilization is that over a very short period
of time, what, like a hundred years, it seems to have declined
very rapidly. It collapsed. What do you think explains that? What happened?
I think it's a failing of archaeology to properly see what was happening. I think that most
of those cities' populations moved no more than 20 to 40 kilometers out and started their own farm. They lived in perishable
houses and all archeology's signature sees is that nobody lives in the city center anymore.
We don't see a bunch of mass bodies. There's no evidence of people getting sick. There are
certain cities that fought with each other at the end, and we see that signature plain
as day. We know when a city was attacked and burned. Mostly that didn't happen. People moved
and migrated. And it seems like right there around between 800 and 900, a lot of the elites that were
on top, most of it was in the rainforests of northern Guatemala, they
move. They move in two directions. Some of them move into the highlands of Guatemala
and some of them move up into the Yucatan. The city of Chichen Itza becomes the next
big capital in Yucatan, but the word Itza is actually a word describing the people
who lived around Lake Pten Itza in northern Guatemala. And all of the Maya are super clear
about that, that the Itza came in as immigrants with these new ideas and created Chichen Itza. So that the elites who were no longer welcome in their cities
just moved and set up shops somewhere else.
So why was there a decline?
What was maybe the catalyst?
Was there a specific kind of events that started this?
Was this an idea that kind of transformed the society?
We are still debating that.
I don't think there is a single reason. I think
humans are complicated. I think a lot of things led to this. One thing we can see archaeologically
is that every one of the cities became overpopulated. They were too popular and
we think that they pushed the limits of their capacity to feed and house people.
the limits of their capacity to feed and house people. We see it in lots of the cities at the end of the classic period that people are seasonally starving. I remember really stark
evidence in Copan Honduras. Copan was this beautiful city, lineage of 17 kings, but the last kings and the last elite burials that we dig from the
city center, the teeth are the telling part.
They get this thing when you're growing up and you're not getting enough food seasonally,
it shows up in the enamel of your teeth.
It's called dental hypoplasia.
And if somebody's seasonally starving, it gets these lines in their teeth.
And that last generation of Maya before they left Copan, even the rich people are seasonally
starving. So there's a problem there for sure. But I also think it's a weird thing. It was not
an empire. It was a group of independent city states like Greece.
Some of them were allied, some of them were enemies.
There was a huge civil war that settled out
about the end of the classic period.
So if it was Europe, you know,
the victors would have taken over,
the losers would have beat it and gone wherever they went.
But when they abandoned
these cities that were independent still, they all left, both the guys that won and the guys that
lost the war. So it couldn't be just as simple as spoils go to the victor. It's such a wide area,
not everybody was starving like the people in the Copan Valley. So I personally think
like the people in the Copan Valley. So I personally think it was calendrically timed.
It is interesting to note that that ninth period,
that ninth 400 year period ends right then.
And I think a lot of people,
I can't prove it archeologically,
but I think a lot of people said,
we're coming to the end of a great cycle
and we need to renew, we need to change what we're doing.
When you talk to the Maya today,
like at the end of this 2012 thing,
if you actually talk to Maya,
say, you know, what happens at the end of a big cycle here?
They say cycles are a time of renewal and transformation,
that it is all of our obligation to change our lives at the end of
cycles, that change is coming, we can either be part of it or we can get steamrolled by it.
The Aztecs did this neat thing called the New Fire Ceremony. Every 52 years, which was the biggest
their calendar would go, they'd burn down perfectly good temples and they'd burn down perfectly good temples, and they'd burn down their houses sometimes,
and they would just, everybody in society
would perform this, what they called the new fire ceremony,
and they would renew the world.
So I think my personal theory is that the Maya
decided at the end of the ninth bhaktun
that it was time to renew the world.
I think this theory makes sense
because they really internalized the calendar.
I mean, it was a really big part of their culture,
the sense of the cyclical nature of civilization.
That's what I think.
I think that they created that calendar
to perceive the cycle and to harmonize with it.
Yeah. You mentioned the Aztec. What was the origin of the Aztec?
Where did these people come from? At what time and how?
You know, almost every one of the cultures we're talking about now, we have two different versions
of the answer to that question. We have the archaeology version,
and we have the Aztecs themselves. The Aztecs have this wonderful migration story where they say
that they came from a place well to the north called Aslan, and that they had this migration
that went through kind of a hero's journey where they
go to this snake mountain place and they encounter the birth of the war god that they'll worship
after this and how they stepped into the Valley of Mexico as the last, the lost brothers of
everyone in the Valley of Mexico. They said that they all came from the north,
near Aslan as a place, a cave with seven different passages called Chiquimostac,
and that all the people who spoke the language Nahuatl came from the cave, and most of them
went early to the Valley of Mexico. And in the Aztecs story, they were just the lost
tribe. They were the last brothers to come in. But then they show up late game and they become
mercenaries. They just start working for communities in the Valley of Mexico. And this takes place
in the Valley of Mexico. And this takes place in the 1300s.
So about 200 years before Cortes shows up,
the Aztecs show up to the Valley of Mexico.
And they make themselves this indispensable group
of mercenaries.
They do the dirty work.
All the civilized communities around Lake Texcoco,
which is in the middle of the, which is now Mexico City, it's all dried up.
But those guys were too civilized to fight with each other.
But they could hire the Aztecs to do their dirty stuff.
So the Aztecs did that and really changed the politics and the game of the Valley of
Mexico.
The dirty stuff, those are the muscle.
Yeah, they'd go in and they'd kill whoever you wanted killed and now you're the king
of this area.
So one of these kings that they were working for really liked them and decided, I'm going
to make the Aztecs part of our ancestry. I'm going to give them my daughter to marry the head of the Aztecs. And the Aztecs
sacrificed her. And that really pissed that guy off. So, he took his whole army and ran
the Aztecs out. For a while, they say they live in this horrible desert section, eating
lizards. But then one of their priests say,
we're going to walk around the lake and my visions say that where we see an eagle sitting on a
cactus with a snake in its mouth is where we will build our capital. And they see that, but it's out
on an island in the lake. And he said, well, I don't know, that's the place. So they build up an island,
they go to that island, and then they just start piling up lake mug until they make a whole city
there in the middle of the lake. They make an island city. And all of this occurs in about a hundred years. So they show up about 1300. The capital
of Tenochtitlan, as they called it, is really established. And from there, they quickly take
over the entire valley. They make what they call the Triple Alliance, which is the two other big
communities of the lake are now their allies, but they're
not really allies.
The Aztecs were brutal.
They were just, those guys agreed to shut up and let the Aztecs run the show.
And then the Aztecs spread like a wildfire all the way down into the Maya area.
Everywhere they go, they rename everybody's towns and make them pay tribute. Pretty short last thing civilization, spread
extremely quickly, famous. What are some defining qualities that explain that?
I think they were very much like they had an attitude like Attila the Hun. They just had no
problem ripping your skin off. Everybody else had become too comfortable
and too civilized, and the Aztecs were just mercenary.
They told everybody, you know,
we can either rip your heart out or you can work for us.
And if you work for us, you'll be just fine.
They'd go to every town they'd go to.
The first thing they'd do is they'd show up
with a bunch of merchants.
There was a
merchant class who were also military. They were really the people who assessed where they were
going to attack next. They'd go in with a bunch of Aztec products and say, we'd like to trade with
you. But all the time they were assessing their military prowess, what products they had that they could take. And then
soon after the Pochteka were there would come the military with the
reconnaissance. So the Aztec had a huge warrior class as you're saying. So
what was there just, can you linger on their whole relationship with war and violence. They worshiped a war deity.
Their main temple was the Temple of Mayor.
It had two temples up on top.
One was Tlaloc the rain god, who liked a lot of sacrifice himself.
But then the other one was Weisila Poshli.
That translates the hummingbird on the left, but he's the war god.
I love that he's a hummingbird.
Maybe he's fast and he comes from the magical side or something.
Then right next to the temple on either side were the two temples of the warriors.
One was the eagle warrior clan, the other one was the Jaguar Warrior clan.
They were symbolically in competition with each other, though a unified force. I guess,
probably an analogy between the Navy and the Air Force. They had a good-natured competition of who was better, but they were the same force. So those were their symbolic warriors dressed up in all of their finery.
And they would come at people with these two forces. And it was very unlike
anything that had happened before in Mesoamerica. Again, I think I could draw a parallel to what
happened in Europe. You know, the famous Henry V moment in Agincourt where his kind of ragtag army wipes out half of
France's aristocracy with the longbow.
Up until that moment, Europe had a very wars for the elite classes kind of attitude.
Then after France lost half their aristocracy,
then I was like, maybe we should be hiring
from the villages.
The same sort of thing happened with the Aztec
that there was a, Mesoamerica really didn't have
huge standing armies, but the Aztec put this army together
and they intimidated people.
They didn't actually have to use it a lot.
It was used to great effect in the Valley of Mexico.
And for the rest of Mesoamerica,
it was mostly the fear factor.
But there also seemed to be a celebration of violence.
I think you said that beauty and blood
went hand in hand for the Aztec.
Maybe like the Roman Empire,
they just had maybe a different relationship
with what violence, where that stood
in the purpose of life, purpose of existence.
Is that fair to say?
I would hypothesize so.
I mean, I think it's one of the wonderful things about studying these ancient
cultures, you know, knowing what our human capacity is.
And the Aztecs, when I said that statement, what I meant by that is they were absolutely
comfortable with human sacrifice and, you know, ripping people's hearts out. They had this just grotesque violent bent,
but in the same way, they also absolutely loved
flower gardens and poetry and music and dance.
The same Aztec king who would order the hearts of a thousand people extracted also would
stand up at dinner parties to recite his own poetry or the poetry of famous statesmen that
had come before him.
And they spent money on things like flower gardens.
All of the causeways leading to the Aztec capital
had beautiful flower gardens, and they had a museum,
and they had an aquarium and a zoo,
and they had an opera, and they had a ballet.
And these things existed together.
There was not in the Aztec mind any conflict between witnessing someone's heart
getting ripped out one moment and the evening we'd go to the ballet.
How does that contrast the relationship with war and violence with the other civilizations of
Mesoamerica and South America, maybe the Maya? What was their relationship like with war? The Maya were certainly influenced by the Aztec at the end, so we get a skewed perspective
from the contact period accounts because the Maya were much more violent and sacrifice-oriented
in their post-classic rendition. But in the classic period, it was mostly the priests and the king who were doing
the sacrificing of themselves. We know that the Maya kings would cut their penises and then bleed
that blood onto paper, and the paper would burn and become the smoke through which they'd commune with their ancestors.
But they'd actually tie this paper onto their penis, cut it, and then dance so the blood
splattered.
But it was them cutting themselves.
It was different than killing a bunch of other people for it.
It was an auto-sacrifice, we call it.
Still very macabre, but very different than deciding a whole bunch of other people for it. It was an auto-sacrifice, we call it. Still very macabre, but very different
than deciding a whole bunch of other people should die. It was a self-sacrifice thing.
Can you speak to sacrifice a bit more? Animal sacrifice, human sacrifice, what role did
that play in, for the Maya, for the Aztec, for the different cultures here? Was that
religious in nature?
It was absolutely religious in nature.
The Aztecs were of the opinion that the war god demanded people were captured and sacrificed.
It had to be valuable people.
Before they made that big standing army, they had just ritual battles that they would have
and they'd take captives. In fact,
all around Mesoamerica, they wanted captives so that they could bring them back and sacrifice
them for the gods. And the Aztecs deciding to specifically follow the war god did this more
than anybody. They did it so much and so successfully that they didn't
have any enemies nearby. So they decided this one poor sucker group not that far away called
the Tlaxcollens that they were never going to make peace with them so that they could
go close by every year and just have a little symbolic war with the Tlaxcalaans
and haul them back for a sacrifice.
Cortez met those guys and he was like,
here are people who hate their guts.
I'll just use these guys.
So, you know, we say, oh, Cortez took over the Aztec world.
It was Cortez and 20,000 super pissed off Tlaxcalaans.
And they actually sacrifice what? So there would be kind of these ritual battles It was Cortez and 20,000 super pissed off Tleshcaldans.
And they actually sacrifice what?
So there would be kind of these ritual battles or is it chopping off people's heads?
Is there some interesting rituals around the sacrifice?
It's mostly heart extraction, sometimes heads, but they bring them up on top of the temple
so everybody can see it.
And they had a specific stone where they would bend them over
so their rib cage would come out.
And they'd use like a thick obsidian knife.
And they had a really just like tried and true way to do it.
They'd stab it in in a certain place close.
And then they'd push down on the sternum
as they ripped up on the rib cage.
And they just,
so they just make a place where they could just rip it right out with their
hand. Yeah, with their hand. But they were really just surgical about it.
They'd use a thick obsidian knife where they could just break the ribs
right along the sternum and then push the sternum down, pull up and just,
while the person was alive.
Yep. While the person was alive. Yep, while the person was alive.
And the Aztecs had this idea,
like there was a horrible drought that went on
that almost ruined the entire valley.
And they came to this conclusion
that it's because we haven't been killing enough people.
We've got to bump this up.
And then when they did, and they decided,
they really took it out on the Tlaxcalaans,
it rained again.
So it was proof positive that they should
just keep doing that.
And they ate people as well, they really did.
As part of the sacrifice or is this?
After the sacrifice, then they would eat them.
And this was part of the drought and the famine thing
that started, but then it was just kind of the thing to do.
When Cortez got there, they were still having certain
special feasts that involved humans.
And it really upset the Spanish,
that they would be like tricked into eating human,
like, hey, you liking dinner?
That was a human.
So the idea, was it actually having a taste for human flesh, or is it just these kinds
of ideas of like if you eat a person's heart, then you can get their spirit and their strength?
In the case of the Aztecs, it seemed like they just liked it.
This guy Sahagun, who was a very responsible chronicler, was pretty specific that like there was a distribution
thing. Like the elites got butts. The butts were the best part. So the butt cheeks, those are the
best parts to eat. And then like it went down the chain until some people just got like fingers and
toes. Literally bought taste for the Aztecs. Yeah. Boy.
All right.
They really did.
They really did.
In fact, that's what caused the,
have you heard of the Noche Trieste, the sad night?
The night that the Aztecs really go nuts on the Spanish
and kick them out?
It's all triggered by this one guy, Pedro de Alvarado,
who's left in charge by Cortez. As Cortez goes to the coast
and tries to talk to the new force, talk him into being for him, which he does. But Pedro Alvarado's
left back in town in charge, and they're doing another one of these huge Aztec buffets and
another one of these huge Aztec buffets and parties to honor them. It happens, the guy says,
''Hey, do you like dinner?''
''Oh yeah, it's a nice dinner.''
''Well, it's humans. You're eating humans.
See, I told you they were good.''
Alvarado just freaks out and he has the guards close the doors,
and he murders everyone in the party, women,
children, nobody has weapons. He just murders everyone in the party, women, children.
Nobody has weapons, he just murders everyone.
And that's what spazzes the Aztecs out
to eventually murder Montezuma, who was their captive,
and then try to murder all of them.
And it was all Pedro Alvarado's fault
for freaking out about eating humans.
Just a little practical joke.
Yeah, it was just, they thought it was funny.
He did not.
That's fascinating.
I didn't realize.
So I kind of assumed that some level of cannibalism would have to do with eating the heart to
gain the spirit of the person or something like this.
In certain deer hunting rituals things for sure, but the Aztecs, no, they just liked eating humans.
It was part of the fear factor too.
I mean, they could walk into a new town and be like,
you guys could either send us a number of quetzal feathers
every month, or we could eat you.
So that's psychological warfare and actual warfare.
They worked, and that's how they spread quickly.
And they were just about to take over the Maya
when the Spanish came and messed everything up.
They had the Maya surrounded
and they were about to take over the whole Yucatan.
So you think without the Spanish,
there would be this Aztec empire
that would last for a very long time?
I think there would have been an Aztec empire.
I think they would have finished dominating everybody,
but they did it through hate and everybody hated the Aztecs.
So it wouldn't have lasted forever.
They were not ruling justly.
They were ruling by force and that can only go on so long before revolution happens.
The Inca Empire, I think that would have gone on forever because they were really community
oriented. Once the Inca took over, no one in the Inca Empire starved. They built architecture,
everyone was safe. It was a society that could have lasted a long time.
What was the origin of the Inca Empire?
Well, it was bloody at first, like most of them are, but once they started taking over,
what they did is they empire built.
Everybody else had just raided their neighbors to get the resources, but everybody they raided,
they turned them into the Inca Empire and they created this incredible Mita system where
you took turns working.
They created the road system so they could get groups of workers back and forth.
So a town of, let's say, 5,000 people.
The Inca would roll up with an army of 100,000, 200,000 people and say,
''Would you guys like to be part of the empire or would you like us to
escort you to the edge of the empire?
And if your mayor here agrees, then he can have a town, he can have a house in Cusco.
But then the very next month, a big work crew would show up and they'd start
building agricultural terraces and storage units.
And every month with the agricultural excess,
they would have big parties and everybody would eat.
So people lived well in the Inca empire.
It was a rough beginning,
but everybody who agreed to be part of it
immediately had access to a whole bunch of resources
and security they never had.
So they started in South America and Peru and Cusco.
Cusco was like the center of it.
Cusco in their language, Quechua,
it means naval or belly button.
And it's up in the mountains, but there's four quarters,
they called their empire Tiwantinsuyu,
the land of four quarters.
And the center of those four quarters was Cusco.
It sprung to life in like 1200 AD.
Yeah, we backwards project what it was,
but it was probably mid 1200s when the first Sapa Inca,
the first ruler came in.
But it was the, I think it's the ninth one is Pachacute,
who really started being an empire builder.
And part of that, I mean, what really defined empire?
As you said, roads, they build a massive road network.
Roads and in the same way that the Roman strategy
of building roads and infrastructure and then
every place they took over, they'd create certain key pieces of Roman architecture that
kind of made that city Roman and they'd rename it something.
The Inca did the same thing.
They had certain signature Inca architecture that they would build in as the administrative part.
They'd send the kipu kumayak, the guys who would weave the, or not the kipus,
as accountants. And they would go through and say what everybody did, okay, you know,
you're a good farmer, you're going to farm. you are a good weaver, you're going to weave, all the men here are going to take a turn at being part of the
army. And they sent independent kipu-kamaeaks to that every community had like five or six
that were not allowed to work with each other. And they all had to independently send their
kipus back to Cusco. And if there were accounting discrepancies, they were called to Cusco to figure out
who was lying about what.
So there's like a super sophisticated
record keeping system.
Yeah, and that was the quipu.
And the Spanish recorded what they could
and then burned them all.
But that's an interesting development for an empire
because that allows you to really expand
and have some kind of management, some level of
control.
Yeah, they couldn't.
At the end, they were at least 10 million people.
And there was just no way to do that without some sort of sophisticated record keeping
system.
If the Inca had to face Aztec, who wins?
Inca.
Inca.
I mean, the Aztecs were psychotic, but the Inca had just reserves for miles.
And they had that essential hearts and minds.
There was only one thing that everybody got pissed off about when they joined the Inca
Empire.
For some reason, everything was owned communally except the llamas.
The llamas were the kings.
And so that was one thing that like,
some of them would stay in town just to be work llamas,
but you know, you don't own your llama anymore.
And people are really attached to their llamas.
To this day, they are like family members.
So it'd be like everybody walked in and said,
everybody's family dog is now mine.
It like really upset people on an emotional level.
Well, I mean, so llamas got domesticated at some point,
probably early, I don't even know when, but early on.
It's, we have rock art that progresses to make it see
like a progression from people depicted hunting them
to people depicted standing next to pregnant
ones. So it was still in that archaic period at least that they became friends.
Yeah, but if you're rolling and you own them, that's...
Yeah, that pissed everybody off. For some reason, the Inca owned everybody's llama instantly,
and he would take anything he wanted. A lot of them would just get carted away that day, just sent to Cusco.
They'd also take their mummies.
That was a weird thing.
Everybody mourns they're dead, but the Inca just like ceased to accept it.
They would just, the mummies were still there.
Okay, he's dead, but look, he's still got clothes.
He's at the party.
Let's put a beer in front of him.
They just like, they just kept people as mummies.
And so the ancestral mummies of every town,
part of the being absorbed into the empire was,
okay, your most important mummies are now gonna have
their own beautiful house in Cusco,
but they would physically bring those mummies to Cusco
to make now Cusco the spiritual heart of their belief system.
I mean, I can see how that would piss people off, but it's also a pretty powerful way to say like,
the ancestors that you idolize, that you respect are now in the capital.
They've been elevated.
They've been elevated. We didn't steal them.
We have given them a new place of honor.
And you're welcome to come visit them all the time.
And they did, they have these festivals
where everyone from all corners of the Inca world
would come to Cusco.
And which of the civilizations mummified people?
Is it, is it-
The Incas for sure mummified people? Is it? The Incas for sure mummified people
and even did some of that kind of like Egyptian-esque
taking out of organs and preparing the body.
They put like straw inside the cavity and mummify them.
But the Maya didn't do it at all.
The Maya in fact on purpose would flood tombs with water so that the skin would float
off the skeletons faster and then they'd get back in there.
It was jungly, so I think the bugs probably had part of it too.
But then they would get back in there to get the bones.
They'd open it back up and take the bones out and paint them with red cinnabar.
The one that I was in in Copan, we had evidence that they had gone in there four different
times and the last couple of times they only took the skull out and repainted it and then
put it back in articulated on the skeleton.
But they didn't mummify.
They on purpose would like grossly float the bodies so they could get the skin off faster
and get to the bones.
But would they keep the bones?
Yeah, they'd keep the bones.
And they'd pull the bones out occasionally and do rituals to them or commune with them
and then put them back in.
So there's still a deep connection to the ancestors through the physical manifestation
of the ancestors then.
Yeah.
Whether mummified or bone.
And to this day, like if you do an excavation
here in the United States,
Native American people don't like it.
They don't like their graves, which is fine enough.
I wouldn't want somebody digging up my grandma either.
But the Maya, they love it.
They love it.
Every Maya person, if we find a grave,
they're like, yeah, look at that, bones, cool, can I touch?
Yeah, great.
They're not spooked about it at all.
They think it's exciting.
I one time helped out a physical anthropologist
in town in Copan to get a osteology collection together
of various animals so if we got bones from
an excavation, we could see what kind of animal it was based on the collection.
And this family said, well, our family dog died last year and buried him in the backyard. You go
dig him up. And so we were like, okay, yeah, I mean, we do need a dog. We'll go
dig up your dog. And then they were like, but the kids really want to help you. So their kids came
out and this was like their puppy. And it died, you know, less than a year ago when we got to it,
like one of them just like grabbed up a bone and he was like, we see, see, see those like little
bitty bones. Yeah. Like, what a weird attitude. That's your dead dog there,
but they just, they have a different relationship
with the dead.
It's some sense that's a beautiful attitude, right?
Yeah.
Why pretend like we're not mortal
and there's not, this is just the process of it.
It's kinda, as you say it now, it kinda would be cool.
That's what Day of the Dead is all about,
and I love Day of the Dead.
You know, Halloween's this creepy thing where they're all monsters.
But Day of the Dead is this beautiful time where we remember our ancestors.
I convinced my kids after the movie Coco came out, now we have an altar with all of our
great grandparents on the altar, and we talk about who they were and how they lived, and
we put things on the altar that mattered in their life and we remember them on that
day.
And it turned something that was a weird eat too much candy and wear a monster mask thing
into something beautiful where we discuss where we came from.
I have to ask about the giant stones that Inca has been able to somehow move and fit
together perfectly.
Do you understand, is it understood how they were able
to do that so well?
No.
You know, the moving of it,
I think that we have reasonable theories.
You know, there are ways to pivot large weights. There's a great guy
named Wally Wallington, a retired contractor here in the US, who built Stonehenge in his backyard
in Minnesota single-handedly, showing how you can move big stones. So I think Wally's already figured out how to move them.
It's the perfectly fit, so carefully fit together
that you couldn't even put a dime in between the stones.
That's the one that I think still has people baffled.
The common archeological wisdom that you'd find out
of a textbook is that they just kept packing away at
it with hammer stones and setting them and resetting them until they were perfect, which
has to be bullshit. That is, there is no way that they just were that meticulous. I mean,
everybody's got a hammer stone. I personally think it's acids. I think they melted them together.
And there are weird places when you really look at
closely to these stones, which I've done a number of times.
I'm going back next month to Machu Picchu
and especially Cusco.
I walk around in the alleys where these 500,
you know, to a thousand year old walls are still there. And you see, I see things like
the crystals in the andesite are almost stitched together along the seams. Like there's the
andesite around it is melted and the crystals haven't. And there are other places where there are weird wipes on the wall, like it's just melted,
like somebody took a rag and wiped it while it was soft.
Lots of talk about soft stones turning hard too.
I haven't been able to prove it.
This is one of these, you know, end of my archaeological career chapters. I'm either going to prove myself able to prove it. This is one of these end of my archeological career chapters.
So I'm either gonna prove myself wrong or prove it,
but I think they used acids.
My dad's a chemist and he told me a long time ago
that there's no way, there's no naturally occurring acids.
But my current theory, actually I got the idea initially
from the show Breaking Bad.
I don't know if you ever saw that show, but there's a point in which they're trying to
dissolve a body and they're using hydrofluoric acid and it goes right through the ceiling.
That hydrofluoric acid is so fascinating.
It won't go through plastic and you can also bring it in inert parts and then combine it.
The Inca made tons of jewelry out of fluorite.
Fluorite is big in the Andes.
And they also mined a lot of things for gold and silver.
And the byproduct of that mining is sulfuric acid. You put sulfuric acid and fluorite together and it's hydrofluoric
acid and that will burn through andesite or anything. If you learned how to do it judiciously
and you didn't care whether servants lost an arm or two, then you could actually use
them to fuse these together. And I think they're
fused together. I asked the city of Cusco if I could take some core samples, and they
said, go away, gringo, don't touch our walls. So this actually, this next time, I'm going
to go try to talk to the more Quechua authorities in a place called Olian-Taitombo,
and maybe I can convince them.
But right now they just think I'm a weird-ass gringo who wants to put holes in their walls.
That's a fascinating theory.
And so how could you get to the bottom of that?
So getting core samples and see if there's some kind of trace.
Chemists I'm working with say that
if there was hydrofluoric acid in between these,
that a core sample right along a seam,
they can separate out the elements in there
and detect whether there was actually elements
of hydrofluoric acid.
I wanted to go straight to burning rocks,
but they were like, no, I mean, we already know that's true. I mean, yeah, we can burn some rocks, but it would happen. That's just
chemistry. We got to prove that it would happen in the walls. So go get us samples. And that was
before COVID and all sorts of, you know, you know how it is. You probably are the same guy where
you've got a thousand ideas and the ones that are fruitful you run with
and the other ones you'll get back to.
That'd be fascinating if true
and I hope you do show that it's true or follow either one.
I'll try to disprove it.
Disprove it, yeah.
I wonder if we discount how much amazing stuff
a collection of humans can do.
Because it just feels like if a large number of humans
are just working a little bit, chipping away at stuff,
at scale they can do miraculous things.
So the question is, how can a large number of humans
be motivated to do a thing?
Because when we think about like Stonehenger,
some very challenging architectural construction,
we don't think about a large number of humans
working together.
Well, you know, that large number of humans
are motivated to work together by a small number
of administrators who are dynamic and convincing
in some way or another.
One of my favorite quotes is, and I'm probably gonna misquote it here, administrators who are dynamic and convincing in some way or another. Right.
One of my favorite quotes is, and I'm probably going to misquote it here, but I think it's
Margaret Mead who said, never underestimate the power of small groups working together.
And the truth is that those are the only people that have ever changed the world.
That small dedicated groups of people are what changed the world. And they inspire big groups of people to embrace their vision.
Yeah. Yeah. I think we sometimes underestimate how much humans can do across time.
And we are way less capable than we used to be. I mean, the average human had all sorts of skills
that at least I personally do not.
You know, I'm wearing a shirt, but I can't make a shirt.
That's for somebody else to do.
You've also lectured about, which I really enjoyed, about North America and also helped
teach me that there was a lot more complex societies going on here for a long period of time.
So maybe can we start at the beginning, who were the early humans in North America?
Well, we go through that Paleo-Indian and archaic period for thousands of years, as we started this conversation, probably 30,000 years as a conservative now,
humans first entered the Americas.
But the first cultures we get here are mound builders around the Mississippi and to the
East, and then also a totally separate group in what we call the American Southwest now, the Four Corners,
who will develop into mostly the people
we call the Pueblo people, who are still there today,
like Zuni and Hopi people.
So we've got these two clusters.
The very first major community in North America
is in the most unlikely place. It's in northern Louisiana. People think I'm crazy
when I say this, but there is a pyramid in northern Louisiana, a big one at a site called
Poverty Point that is 3,500 years old, so it's the same age as the pyramids in Egypt.
So it's the same age as the pyramids in Egypt. And it is a giant thing just poking out of the bayous of Louisiana.
And people don't believe me when I say it, but it's there.
The mound builders.
What was that society like in comparison to everything else we've been talking about in Mesoamerica?
They evolved over thousands of years.
We call them mound builders.
This is something I object to. I think we should have a better... The last version of them we call the
Mississippians now. But generally speaking, we call all these guys mound builders. But what they
built were pyramids. They look like mounds now. And they didn't build them out of stone. That's kind of our just inherent Western bias.
Something that's built out of stone is sophisticated, and something that's built out of dirt is
rudimentary.
But in their full living form, they did have cores of dirt, but then they also had kind
of clay caps.
So they had terraces, they had whole complexes of
buildings up on top.
There were kings that lived up there.
The biggest of the Mississippian cities is called Cahokia, and it's right outside of
St. Louis.
And it was huge.
It had a population of 20,000 people
and pyramids all over the place,
a huge palisade wall around it.
It was absolutely gigantic, a thriving metropolis.
And we in America have kind of a collective amnesia.
Like we never hear about these massive civilizations.
Cahokia was the big first city,
but then it spread from the Mississippi
all the way to the Atlantic.
There were hundreds and hundreds of these big cities
that had five to 10,000 people each.
Were they their own thing,
or was there some kind of thread connecting all of them?
They had a unified religion and culture. They were again not an empire. So they were warring
city states. There were kind of territories that were owned by big kings and then the
cities around them were kind of the subsidiary lords and kings. And then one kingdom could either ally with a neighbor or have a fight.
So they were kind of countries, I think, for, yeah, we could safely say there were different
countries within this patchwork that was Eastern United States.
And it's so weird that we don't know this because it was clearly documented by
the Spanish. I'm not talking about just archaeology. We find them in archaeology now, but
Hernando de Soto landed in Florida and went for three years from, he went up into the Carolinas
and over down into Alabama and Louisiana,
and he's the first one to see the Mississippi up there.
But for three years, he went through city after city after city,
unfortunately decimating them, eating all their corn, giving them diseases.
But the documentation is clearly there.
He met collectively millions of people
in a very sophisticated and uniform civilization.
So it was disease and stealing of resources,
but was there like explicit murdering going on?
Unfortunately, yeah.
He was a murderer and a psycho and a liar. He snowed them that he was
some kind of deity, actually learned a trick from the Inca. He was with Pizarro in his first run
and went back to Spain, was rich, had a wife, a castle. Then he got bored and he decided to have a reign of terror on Northern America for three years. But he had people
burned at the stake. He had his dogs ripped them apart. He was very, very brutal. He ruled that
area through fear and had absolutely no respect for anybody. He made promises and broke them
absolutely no respect for anybody. He made promises and broke them all the time. He was really,
he was a brutal man. So this whole period when Christopher Columbus came, how did that
change everything? Well, you know, there's a great anthropological body of literature. It's called the Columbian Exchange based on Columbus,
but it's all this trade back and forth
between the New World and the Old World.
The Old World got just wonderful stuff.
All of a sudden, their diet didn't suck.
All these vegetables came in.
The New World got herd animals.
It got pigs and cows and goats that it didn't have,
but it also got 13 infectious diseases.
Europe had had wave after wave
and kind of had herd immunity on a lot of things,
but it didn't actually go away.
It just couldn't spread like a wildfire
through the community.
So when they arrived to the Americas, all of a sudden, these just, a pile of horrible diseases
hit people. I think in the first 20, 30 years, there were people who had contracted multiple
deadly diseases at once and died of them. But the numbers, it's a shameful
part of history and it wasn't something that Europe perpetrated on them. The medical science
at that time was still the Four Humors theory that people were made of yellow bile, black
bile, blood and phlegm. And we did things like, well, you've got to bleed him, he'll
feel better then. So we had no idea what an infectious disease was. But the reality was that this horde of
diseases hit everyone. And the numbers are now saying in the first 50 years that 90% of everybody
was dead. And that the number of people has increased as well as far as our estimates.
We're thinking it's somewhere around 150 million people, and 90% of them died.
And with them all their knowledge, just imagine the moment where, you know,
who dies when things get bad? It's the young and the old. So all the knowledge keepers die suddenly.
The children die. This next generation that's half taught and now completely demoralized,
thinking that this is a spiritual attack, that their gods hate them, that the only way out of
it is to accept this new Christianity. But they don't bring kids
into this world where everybody's dying, and even if they do, they can't teach them what
the old people were going to teach them because the old people are gone and didn't finish
the transmission. So in a single terrible moment in human history, you know, the generation loses all their knowledge.
So a lot of the things that these people knew
just blipped out.
But with that also just the wisdom of
the entire civilizations.
So much of what they knew was just lost at that moment.
We have the Maya who had those hieroglyphs
and that we've learned a lot from that.
Yeah, but not a significant integration
of that wisdom in two.
So it wasn't when the Europeans came,
it wasn't like the cultures were integrated.
It was a story of domination, of erasure essentially.
In North America, there's a new term in the literature that I like.
We call it the the Mississippian Shatter Zone.
That Mississippian civilization was millions of people, but they got spread out all over
the place over the next centuries.
And now we have this Shatter Zone where we have ruins and the people that were actually
from those ruins are somewhere else on
a reservation far away. I'm just about to talk to a Cherokee man who listened to some of the things
I had to say and says, all those Ho-Chunk things you were saying from that Ho-Chunk culture,
my grandparents talk about this sort of thing too. Can I talk to you by phone and tell you
about these things? So we've got this shatter zone where we're going to try to put the puzzle
back together, especially in terms of Mississippian religion. I really think we're making headway
in this generation and it's exciting to be part of piecing this old religion and its
mythology back together.
Just as a lot of people kind of refer to Christopher Columbus
as the person who discovered America,
I read that the Vikings reached North America much earlier
in 1000 CE.
And why do you think they didn't expand and colonize?
Cause they got their ass kicked.
It's the truth.
It is absolutely true that the Vikings were here.
There's a great site in Nova Scotia called Lensoul Meadows, which definitely has what's
left of a Viking colony.
It was Leif Earek and his, Erek the Red, who they got kind
of kicked out of Europe because they apparently couldn't stop murdering people. And so, they went
to Greenland and then kind of island hopped over to Canada. But I think the culture that was in
that area was named the Dorset. But they would have nothing to do with the Vikings. They attacked the Viking settlement every day and did not give them an inch until they decided it was just worthless and
they left it. The Vikings attacked Ireland and they just found a bunch of monasteries full of
gold with a bunch of guys going, we're men of God, we don't fight. And the Vikings were like,
this is great, that's great, this will be easy then. We'll just loot all these Easter eggs. But the Native Americans in Canada were like,
not having it. They kicked their ass. In fact, Leif Erikson's brother, Thor, died there.
The Natives killed him. He was supposed to be in charge of expanding the settlement,
but they just killed him. So a lot of the Native American cultures were also, I mean, they're sophisticated, warring
cultures also.
Yes, they fought, especially the Mississippians.
Boy, they were tough.
And so were the Five Nations, the Mohawk, the Huron.
The ones that kicked the Vikings' ass up there. They were probably
Algonquin speakers, but they were connected like, you know, just above the the Great Lakes
But they were all a very tough people
when you think about the Spaniards and the the Portuguese and
Over a hundred million people that were killed
Do you see that as a tragedy of history or is it just the way of history? and the over 100 million people that were killed.
Do you see that as a tragedy of history or is it just the way of history?
I think that the epidemics, I consider it a tragedy.
That did not have to happen.
And that was not a fair fight.
Nobody knew what to do about it.
There was just a tragic, perfect storm of events. I think that the Spanish and the Portuguese get
unfairly maligned in what's been called the Black legend that they just marched into America and
murdered everyone. That's not the fact. It was the diseases that murdered everyone. In fact, there was a really poignant story I read of a Spanish
priest in the Amazon, in the Brazilian northern part of the Amazon, where he made this utopian
community and he was bringing people in that were getting sick. And he wrote, you know,
I'm baptizing everyone. You know, I have baptized 10,000 people a day, and yet God's still killing them. Why is
He doing this to them? They're doing everything that I ask them to do. They are submitting to the
will of God. But this guy doesn't realize that the same bowl of holy water that he's baptizing them
in, he's just wiping the disease on everybody's faces. He's accelerating it when he doesn't even realize
he thinks he's saving them, but he's actually killing them.
Yeah.
That's a tragedy, you know?
That's not just like spoils go to the victor stuff.
That's just straight up tragedy.
Yeah.
Yeah, but that one is hard to know what to do
with like black death.
It's, I
mean, infections, they don't operate on normal human terms, right? They just, they just go
through entire populations. Back to wild ideas.
All right. Just my style.
I mean, we didn't really talk about how life originated on Earth or how humans have evolved.
And we did talk about that there could be just a lot of stuff in ancient history we
haven't even uncovered yet. Do you think it's possible that other intelligent civilizations from outside of Earth, aliens, ever visited?
You had me right until the ever-visited thing. That one I'm not entirely sure about. I'm
not sure whether we have any, we certainly have no archaeological proof that I would
cite or contemplate as the evidence of such. But the guys that discovered DNA, Watson and Crick,
Watson who actually habitually used
hallucinogens to invigorate his thinking,
he said that he thought that DNA on this planet was way
too complex to have developed over the time period that it
had at its disposal and that his guess was that our DNA was somehow seeded from outside
of our planet.
And, you know, take that for what it is, but the guy who we respect on many other levels
also said that.
So that's interesting.
But in terms of aliens visiting us, I don't know.
It does smack of a kind of human hubris
that we think were important enough
for some advanced species to give a shit about us.
Statistically speaking, the universe is way too big.
We can't be the only sentient beings.
There's gotta be somebody else out there.
Whether they care about us, that's a question.
I've been on ancient aliens a number of times.
I show up and I'm an educator.
I mean, refusing to be part of the conversation is an immediate fail in my book.
But there was one time where they asked me at the end, you know, do you have anything
else that you want to say?
And I said, well, you know, y'all's premise is that aliens came down a long time ago and
they gave humanity these wonderful gifts of, you know, science and medicine, engineering,
all these things.
Today we also have a lot of stories of the aliens coming down, but now,
all they're doing is mutilating cows and sodomizing rednecks. Like, whatever we did,
we super pissed them off, apparently. The quality of the gifts has decreased rapidly. It's an interesting thought you've mentioned.
What archeologically would you have to see
to be like, this might be an alien?
A technology that doesn't belong there, first and foremost.
I mean, we got to, if we just run with the premise
that somebody was capable of making a vehicle that could
get them from somewhere far away to here, that was almost certainly mechanical.
Now, I love the aliens thing where biomechanical is something that certainly could be, and
that would disintegrate.
We wouldn't see that at all, But I would expect some kind of technology
that showed up out of the blue and changed things.
That would be something.
But I would think, you know, mechanical.
Or, you know, a substance that's not from here.
But of course we would only see
the results of that mechanical.
You mean like literally a mechanical thing. Right, some sort of thing like that. The typical thing people say is like, you know,
how did they move these giant stones? Right? But, you know, just look at that on the face
for a second. Aliens come from across the universe to meet humans. And the thing they tell them is how to move rocks?
Are you fucking kidding me?
I mean, you know, like, give them antibiotics
or a combustion engine or something.
You're gonna, they came across the universe
and they showed them how to move big rocks.
I mean, that doesn't make any sense.
That just doesn't make any sense.
What do you think Earth will look like 10,000 years from now?
That's an interesting question.
I think it will be a lot more automated or it'll be a smoldering pile.
There is a possibility we could end ourselves.
There's always that possibility that we've really
opened Pandora's box in some regards. I did listen to one of your podcast guests with
the what would happen in the case of nuclear war. That was chilling. Her opinion was certainly
we would burn everything to a crisp within minutes, apparently. So we have that capacity.
That's scary,
that's a possible future for us.
But I'm an optimist, I'd like to think that guys like you
are gonna make friendly robots who make my job better.
But a thousand, 10,000 years is a long time.
And technology is improving and becoming more advanced
rapidly and the rate of that improvement technology is improving and becoming more advanced rapidly
and the rate of that improvement is increasing ever more.
That's the part that frightens me actually.
Does that frighten you?
Yes, terrifying.
You know, I heard somebody say, I forget who it was,
but systems of any kind, human systems,
biological systems can be put on a graph that's change over time.
And any graph that the change is way faster than the time and the line starts going straight up, that is a system in crisis. In almost any biological system that has that fast a change
over that little a time, any other thing,
you'd describe it as a crisis.
When you apply that chart to technology's change,
it's a crisis.
From that perspective, absolutely.
But I also have a faith in human ingenuity that we humans like to create a really difficult situation and then come up with ways to get out of that difficult situation.
And in so doing, innovate and create a lot of awesome stuff and sometimes cause a lot of suffering. But on the whole, on average, make a better world.
But yeah, with nuclear weapons,
the bad stuff might actually lead to the death of everybody.
I guess there's always that chance, but I am an optimist.
I think you're an optimist too.
I think exactly as you just said,
I think that the greatest capacity of humans
is our ability to innovate.
And we are never more innovative
than when we're under distress.
I think that a lot of the developments of humans
over the last thousands of years have been about,
we didn't change the world when we were comfortable.
It was when we were in crisis.
Mother necessity is the mother of invention. And I think we'll be all right. I think that
this impending climate crisis is real and happening. I actually personally think that
– I'm going to answer a question that you didn't even ask me. I think we're wasting our
time thinking that we can reverse this. We're delusional. I'm all for electric cars and being
good stewards of the environment, but we are wasting our time not technologically adapting to what's about to happen. We're spending too much time pretending
the average American thinks if we all just drive electric cars, we'll be okay. That's bullshit.
That's not going to happen. We need to start making technologies that desalinize water,
that a host of things that we need to use our technological capacity to accept it and adapt
instead of Pollyanna thinking we can make it go away.
Yeah, kind of accept that the world will change and a lot of big problems will arise
and just develop technology that addresses them.
I think you have some guys that have their finger on the pulse there
We need to start thinking about how we're gonna survive this not that we're gonna make it go away and that just survive thrive
Again, we're pretty innovative in that regard
But if some catastrophic thing happens, or we just leave this planet
what
What do you think would be found by aforementioned alien civilizations when they visit the anthropologists,
the grad student anthropologists that visit Earth and study? How much of what we now have and love
and think of as human civilization will be lost, do you think?
human civilization will be lost, do you think? Well, you know, time moves on and things that are perishable perish. So, you know, you didn't put a time element in there, but I would say that,
you know, everything that can perish will and whoever shows up here will be stuck with only
the things that didn't perish. So we'll have, you know, buildings, plaques, but they won't have any books, they
won't have any billboards. They'll have the incomplete record I have. I one time did a
talk in Sioux Falls and I said, you know, I drove in here and there was a big obelisk in front of the town.
And everywhere I go, I see the names Lewis and Clark.
And a thousand years from now, if I was an archaeologist investigating this place, I
would think that it was founded by the Egyptians and their kings were named Lewis and Clark.
But the truth is, you know, Lewis and Clark stayed one night here. But
it's just a big deal. So I would be so wrong about what I thought about your town based
on what preserved.
It's so beautiful as a thought experiment. Like what would archaeologists be really wrong
about and what would they could possibly be right about?
Washington DC was clearly made by a combination of the Egyptians and the Greeks and the Romans
because that's what all the architecture is.
Yeah, and would they be able to reconstruct the important empires, the powerful empires
and the warring empires?
For that matter, have me and my colleagues done that at all?
I'm almost certain that the Maya would just gut laugh at what I think I know what they
were.
I wonder, do you ever think about like what we just as a human civilization are wrong
about the most, like mainstream archeology?
Just like a suspicion, what could we get completely wrong? Well, one way to get something wrong is
totally like lost civilization, like an obviously gigantic civilization that was there along with
the Maya or something like this in the 10,000 years ago. There's certainly that. There could be
things that were either wiped away or still hiding under the oceans that would completely change the way we think about things.
And everybody knew they existed
and everybody interacted with them.
It was a lot interactive.
I think it's our estimation of their motivations
that we're probably most wrong on.
My teacher, Sheila, a long time ago said,
I've come up with all sorts of theories.
I was always thinking about stuff.
And she looked at me and she said,
if you don't stop thinking like a Western European
and start trying to put yourself in the mindset
of these people, you will never understand any of it.
Which I've always taken to heart.
I mean, I really do when I approach these things,
I try to step out of my cultural assumptions,
try to think like they would think is the best I could.
And it's very different.
I mean, this whole, you know, the Maya are cyclical,
you know, the whole sacrifice,
we're so, you know, obsessed with that.
But, you know, that wasn't a austere actual sacrifice
on their part.
They weren't just, you know,
hey, let's all get together
and kill that guy that's pissing us off. I mean, they were like, you know, giving the best
of them. There was a different mentality. This was not brutal. This was a bona fide
sacrifice on their part, a loss.
Plus the whole mystery of the puppy that eventually starts having sex with this.
I tell you, that one, I'm going gonna unweave that one one of these days.
One of these days.
Now, that puppy appeared on Pottery.
All over Pottery.
He's everywhere.
I gotta write this book.
This next year is the year I'm gonna write my Fang deity book and I will have a whole
chapter dedicated to the puppy.
Thank you. The mystery solved. I mean, it could just be the birth of memes of humor. I will have a whole chapter dedicated to the puppy.
The mystery solved.
I mean, it could just be the birth of memes of humor.
I don't know.
I mean, again, humor.
You don't know what the nature of their humor, of what their jokes are.
Oh, that's a neat one too.
And that's so human.
I'll tell you a little side story here that when I worked with the Maya people in Palenque, I spent three years
making this map of the city and hiking through the jungle every day.
They would talk to each other in their own language.
Seltal was the group I was working with.
But I noticed after a while, they were big jokers.
They loved to make jokes and they would laugh at jokes, but then they would also, one of
them would say something and the other ones would go,
and I eventually asked, you know, what is that? Why do you guys always make that who who noise?
And he said, that's because he made a really smart pun. It was like he said three different
things at once. It was a turn of phrase that was smart and they didn't make laughs at that.
It was a turn of phrase that was smart. And they didn't make laughs at that.
It was there, they had a noise for when somebody said
something just super clever.
So there's also that, like, you know,
just clever turn of speech.
Yeah, wit.
And I think about that when I'm a hieroglyphic translator,
like here's a beautiful thing that's gonna be like a poem
or a political statement, like,
and I'm just plottingly looking in a dictionary of what that word means.
There's probably double, triple, untandras all through this text, and the real meaning
is the subtext.
And I'm thinking they're talking about corn and they're talking about the nature of life.
Yeah, it could be satire, it could be, you know, as it was in the Soviet Union
when there's a dictator, maybe there's an overpowering king,
you're not allowed to actually speak.
You have to hide the thing you're actually trying to say
in the subtext.
So, and all of that.
There was a funny Maya ceramic that had,
the ceramics are neat because they don't, the
monuments can be kind of broken records. I'm the king, I was born this time, I beat these
people up, I married this woman, I died. But the ceramics will tell us like things out
of mythology stories. And there was this one with a rabbit looking at the merchant god
and nobody could translate the text. And finally,
this Eastern European, actually a Ukrainian guy, translated it. And the rabbit's saying
to the merchant god, bend over and smell my ass. And like, oh man, we were expecting this
wonderful piece of mythology, but no, it translates bend over and smell my ass.
That's great.
That's human.
As we mentioned previously, human nature does not change.
You mentioned applying can mapping it.
It's just out of curiosity.
What is that process like?
It seems fascinating.
Oh, it was a great adventure.
I loved it, but it was difficult.
I woke up every morning thinking,
I will be hurt today somehow. I don't know how. I don't know how badly. Where? On my body it will
occur, but it's going to happen because it was the jungle. So in the jungle, what's the process
like? What do you have to do to map it? Well, it was tricky too because it was also a national forest.
So the forestry department didn't want us to cut down
anything more than we had to.
So we basically just cut tunnels through the foliage
and I would, we'd map everything twice.
The first thing we'd do is I'd go in, find a building,
draw it on a piece of graph paper.
And I'd say like, you know, you guys go north,
you guys go east, west,
find other buildings and when you find them, pace back to this one.
And so I'd start making a map and I'd make the whole,
one piece of graph paper was enough to, then we bring the machine in, we bring the laser theodolite and get really accurate information.
But on that piece of paper, I would write like,
really accurate information. But on that piece of paper, I would write like, don't bring the machine this way, there's a tree fall. Or stand on top of this building and you'll see four different
buildings at once from this one. And all of this is in dense jungle. Right. And the deeper we got
off the road, the deeper it was. Sometimes it would clear out, but certain places, if it was low, it would be such thick vegetation
and it would grow back so fast.
Sometimes we would cut just tunnels through tall grass
and we'd come back like five days later and they were gone.
Like we couldn't even find where our trails were.
They would grow back that fast.
But you see the buildings, so you could see.
Right. And that was the fun part. I mean, sometimes it would just be like a little
neighborhood with a little low building so bigger than this table. But sometimes,
you know, just five more meters in and I'm standing under a pyramid that nobody had ever mapped. Like,
wow, I've just found another one. And some days, you know, on good days, we'd find three pyramids.
And I felt that's such a more exciting job
than the typical excavations.
My buddies were all just in a hole for the whole week
in the middle of the city,
and where I'm dancing around through the jungle,
I could find 10 buildings today.
I might find a pyramid today, who knows?
What's it feel like might find a pyramid today, who knows? What's that feel like to find like a pyramid or buildings
that you're one of the only humans
that are not from that civilization to ever see this thing?
What's that feel like?
It's great, I love that feeling.
I'm an explorer at heart, so finding something like that.
When I was 25 years old, I found a whole Maya city.
I got to name it.
Its name is Moshnah.
It's off in the Belizean jungle.
And that was just outrageous.
I mean, that one almost depressed me.
I had this great life ambition that I would find a lost city. And then I
did it at 25 and I was like, God, now what do I do? I thought that was supposed to take
me my whole life. I actually, I wrote a bunch of letters to NASA trying to get them to let
me be the first archeologist on Mars. I never got a single reply back. I'm sure I'm on NASA's
list as some weirdo. How did you find a Mayan city?
I used a topography map of the area and I played the game.
If I was a Maya, where would my favorite place to live in this big area be?
I looked for the biggest mountain because they call all of their pyramids,
tun, wheat, stone mountains.
I knew they loved mountains.
And when I found that mountain,
there were two others right next to it that made a triangle
and they love those triads
and there were rivers in between them.
And I thought, that's it.
That's where I would build the city.
And I hiked out there over two seasons with students.
The other grad students were like, he's just having his students just wander in
the jungle all day, but I came back with the city.
So given that you've looked into the deep pasts of humanity, what gives you hope
about our future, maybe our deep future of this human civilization?
That's a good one. And I do have hope. I do have hope. I believe in the spirit of humankind.
I as a person who have studied history, I kind of feel like history does kind of a sine
wave. There's highs and there's lows, but no matter how low we go, we get up again and we climb.
And I think that humanity will continue that.
We will rise to the challenges.
Now, some of the challenges may be created
by ourselves as well, but we will adapt and overcome.
That's what we do.
Yeah, humans find a way, right?
That's like a thing you see with history.
You know, when the empires collapse,
the humans that come out of that,
they pick themselves up and find another way.
They build a new thing.
And the people I study believe
in the cyclical nature of life,
that you really can't,
life can't continue without death being part of the cycle.
We get our lows, we get our highs,
but the cycle continues forever.
I should mention that you have a lot of great lectures
on the great courses,
but you have also an amazing podcast, RKO Ed.
If people wanna listen to it,
this is a tough question, but what would you recommend?
What episodes should they listen to?
What's the answer?
Oh, that is a tough question.
What is the sampling?
You know, it's like asking a chef,
like what's the best stuff on the menu?
Well, different strokes for different folks.
You know, I do two different things on that podcast.
Sometimes I just teach about cultures
that you've never heard about.
I love, I start off by saying it's my podcast
and I'll talk about whatever the heck I wanna talk about.
Sometimes I talk about really specific things,
like a tool type or an animal type,
but my favorite ones have become when I just
tell my stories of my adventures. I've got a lot of weird adventure stories and it's
been fun and they've been very well received. I've got, you know, I can put my humor in
there and I can talk about, you know, the things that went right, the things that went
wrong, the adventures that I had are all part of this
archeo-ed thing. Archeo-ed is kind of a double entendre. It's me, I'm just Ed, but it's also
education. What I'm really trying to do with this too, it's specifically the Americas.
I want to be part of the reawakening that there were these great civilizations here, especially North America.
I think that we have a group amnesia that there was no great civilizations here before
Europe showed up.
That's simply not true.
I think it should be part of our history books.
In fact, I have a program called Before the Americas that would introduce as part of American history,
the part before European contact.
And I think that kids in the K through 12 level
should grow up not being told this fallacy
that no one was here before we showed up in 1492.
And one of these days, I'm gonna find a funder
to help us put together before the Americas,
and we're gonna make it part of the curriculum
for every kid in the US to know the full history
of this country.
That's a great project.
Thank you so much.
Thank you for talking today.
Thank you for all the fascinating ideas
that you put out into the world.
And I can't wait to hear your new course.
Thank you so much, Lex. It was a real pleasure.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Ed Barnhart.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you with some words from Joseph Campbell.
Life is but a mask worn on the face of death. And is death then
but another mask? How many can say, asks the Aztec poet, that there is or is not a truth beyond?
and hope to see you next time.