Lex Fridman Podcast - #449 – Graham Hancock: Lost Civilization of the Ice Age & Ancient Human History
Episode Date: October 16, 2024Graham Hancock a journalist and author who for over 30 years has explored the controversial possibility that there existed a lost civilization during the last Ice Age, and that it was destroyed in a g...lobal cataclysm some 12,000 years ago. He is the presenter of the Netflix documentary series "Ancient Apocalypse", the 2nd season of which has just been released. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out our sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep449-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: Graham's Website: https://grahamhancock.com/ Ancient Apocalypse (Season 2): https://netflix.com/title/81211003 Graham's YouTube: https://youtube.com/GrahamHancockDotCom Graham's X: https://x.com/Graham__Hancock Graham's Facebook: https://facebook.com/Author.GrahamHancock Fingerprints of the Gods (book): https://amzn.to/4eM3QXC SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: Notion: Note-taking and team collaboration. Go to https://notion.com/lex Riverside: Platform for recording podcasts and videos from everywhere. Go to https://creators.riverside.fm/LEX LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix. Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex Shopify: Sell stuff online. Go to https://shopify.com/lex BetterHelp: Online therapy and counseling. Go to https://betterhelp.com/lex OUTLINE: (00:00) - Introduction (09:58) - Lost Ice Age civilization (17:03) - Göbekli Tepe (29:07) - Early humans (34:07) - Astronomical symbolism (45:36) - Younger Dryas impact hypothesis (1:03:55) - The Great Pyramid and the Sphinx of Giza (1:24:29) - Sahara Desert and the Amazon rainforest (1:33:49) - Response to critics (1:57:56) - Panspermia (2:05:22) - Shamanism (2:29:22) - How the Great Pyramid was built (2:36:41) - Mortality 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 Graham Hancock,
a journalist and author who for over 30 years
has explored the controversial possibility
that there existed a lost civilization
during the last Ice Age,
and that it was destroyed in a global cataclysm
some 12,000 years ago.
He is the presenter of the Netflix documentary series
Ancient Apocalypse,
the second season of which has just been released.
And it's focused on the distant past of the Americas,
a topic I recently discussed
with the archeologist Ed Barnhart.
Let me say that Ed represents the kind of archeologist,
scholar I love talking to on the podcast,
extremely knowledgeable, humble, open-minded,
and respectful in disagreement.
I'll do many more podcasts on history,
including ancient history.
Our distant past is full of mysteries,
and I find it truly exciting to explore those mysteries
with people both on the inside
and the outside of the
mainstream and the various disciplines involved.
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This episode is also brought to you by Better Help, spelled H-E-L-P help. They figure out what you need and match you with a licensed therapist in under 48 hours. I think at the end of the podcast, Graham called death a leap into the next great adventure.
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And now, dear friends, here's Graham Hancock. Let's start with a big foundational idea that you have about human history, that there was an advanced Ice Age civilization that came
before and perhaps seeded what people now call the six cradles of civilization, Mesopotamia, Egypt,
India, China, Andes, and Mesoamerica. So let's talk about this idea that you have.
Can you at the highest possible level describe it?
It would be better to describe it as a foundational sense of
puzzlement and incompleteness in the story that we are taught
about our past, which envisages more or less, there have been a
few ups and downs, but more or less, a straightforward
evolutionary progress. We start out as hunter-foragers, then we become
agriculturalists. The hunter-forager phase could go back hundreds of thousands of years.
I mean, this is where it's also important to mention that anatomically modern humans,
and we're not the only humans. We had Neanderthals from, I don't know, 400,000 years ago to about 40,000 years ago. They were certainly human
because anatomically modern humans interbred with them and we carry Neanderthal genes.
There were the Denisovans, maybe 300,000 to perhaps even as recently as 30,000 years ago.
And again, interbreeding took place. They're obviously a human species. So, you know, we've got this background of humans who didn't look
quite like us. And then we have anatomically modern humans. And I think the earliest
anatomically modern human skeletal remains are from Jebel Irhoud in Morocco and date to about
hood in Morocco and date to about 310,000 years ago. So the question is, what were our ancestors doing after that? And I think we can include the Neanderthals and the Denisovans
in that general picture. And why did it take so long? This is one of the puzzles, one of
the questions that bother me. Why did it take so long when we have creatures who are physically identical
to us? We cannot actually weigh and measure their brains, but from the work that's been
done on the crania, it looks like they had the same brains that we do with the same wiring.
So if we've been around for 300,000 plus years at least, and if ultimately in our future was the process to create civilization
or civilizations, why didn't it happen sooner? Why did it take so long? Why was it such a
long time? Even the story of anatomically modern humans has kept on changing. I remember
a time when it was said that there hadn't been anatomically modern humans before 50,000 years ago.
And then it became 196,000 years ago with the findings in Ethiopia, and then 310,000
years ago.
There's a lot of missing pieces in the puzzle there.
But the big question for me in that timeline is why didn't we do it sooner?
Why did it take so long?
Why do we wait until after 12,000 years ago, really after 10,000 years ago, to start seeing
the beginnings, what are selected as the beginnings of civilization in places like Turkey, for
example.
And then there's a relatively slow process of adopting agriculture, and by 6,000 years ago,
we see ancient Sumer emerging as a civilization. And we're then in the pre-dynastic period
in ancient Egypt as well, 6,000 years ago, beginning to see definite signs of what will
become the dynastic civilization of Egypt about 5,000 years ago. Interestingly,
round about the same time, you have the Indus Valley civilization popping up out of nowhere.
By the way, the Indus Valley civilization was a lost civilization until the 1920s, when railway
workers accidentally stumbled across some ruins. I've been to Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro,
and these are extraordinarily beautifully centrally planned cities. Clearly, they're the
work of an already sophisticated civilization. One of the things that strikes me about the Indus
Valley civilization is that we find a steatite seal of an individual seated in a recognizable yoga posture. And
that seal is 5,000 years old. And the yoga posture is mula bandhasana, which involves
a real contortion of the ankles and twisting the feet back. It's an advanced yoga posture.
So there it is 5,000 years ago. And that then raises the question, well, how long did yoga
take to get to that place when it was already so advanced 5,000 years ago. And that then raises the question, well, how long did yoga take to get to that place when
it was already so advanced 5,000 years ago?
What's the background to this?
China, the Yellow River civilization.
Again it's around about the same period, 5,000 to 6,000 years ago, you get these first signs
of something happening.
So it's very odd that all around the world we have this sudden upsurge of civilization about 6,000
years ago, preceded by what seems like a natural evolutionary process that would lead to a
civilization. And yet, certain ideas being carried down and manifested and expressed
in many of these different civilizations. I just find that whole idea very puzzling
and very disturbing, especially when I look at this radical break that takes place in
not just the human story, but the story of all life on Earth, which was the last great
cataclysm that the Earth went through, which was the Younger Dryas event. It was an extinction level event. That's when all the great megafauna of the
Ice Age went extinct. It's after that, it's after that event that we start seeing this,
what are taken to be the beginnings of the first gradual steps towards civilization.
We come out of the upper Paleolithic as it's defined the end of the old Stone Age and into the Neolithic. And that's when the wheels
are supposedly set in motion to start civilization rolling. But what happened before that? And
why did that suddenly happen then? And I can't help feeling, and I've felt this for a very
long while, that there are major missing pieces in our story. It's often said that
I'm claiming to have proved that there was an advanced lost civilization in the Ice Age,
and I am not claiming to have proved that. That is a hypothesis that I am putting forward
to answer some of the questions that I have about prehistory. And I think it's worthwhile to inquire
into those possibilities
because the Younger Dryas event
was a massive global cataclysm, whatever caused it.
And it's strange that just after it,
we start seeing these first signs.
So the current understanding in mainstream archaeology is that after the Young Gajras
is when the civilizations popped up in different places of the globe with a lot of similarities,
but they popped up independently.
Yeah, independently and by coincidence. And by coincidence, those big civilizations
that we all remember as the first civilizations,
Sumer, Egypt, the Indus Valley Civilization, China,
they all pop up at pretty much the same time.
That is the mainstream view.
And they don't just pop up,
they kind of build up gradually.
First, there's some settlements.
Oh, definitely, yes.
And then there's different dynamics
of how they build up and the role of agriculture
and that is also not obvious, but it's just, there's a first a kind of settlement, a stabilization
of where the people are living, then they start using agriculture, then they start getting
urban centers and that kind of stuff.
It seems like an entirely reasonable argument.
Everything about that makes sense.
There is no doubt that you're seeing evolutionary progress,
social evolution taking place in those thousands of years before Sumer emerges.
But what's happening now, really, I spent much of the 90s and the late 1980s investigating this issue
of a lost civilization. I wrote a series of books about it. But by 2002, when I published a book called Underworld,
which was the most massive and most heavy book
that I've ever written
because I was writing very defensively at the time.
By the time I finished that book,
my wife, Santa, and I spent seven years
scuba diving all around the world,
looking for structures underwater,
often led by local fishermen or local divers
to anomalies
that they'd seen underwater. By the time that book was finished, I thought, actually, I've
done this story. I've walked the walk. I really don't have much more to say about it. And
I turned in another direction and I wrote a book called Supernatural Meetings with the
Ancient Teachers of Mankind, recently retitled Visionary. And that was about the role of fundamentally about the role of
psychedelics in the evolution of human culture. And I didn't think that I would go back to the
lost civilization issue, but Gobekli Tepe in Turkey kept on forcing itself upon me. The more
and more discoveries there, the 11,600 year date from Enclosure D, which has the two largest
megalithic pillars. I reached a point where I realized I have to get back in the water,
and I have to investigate this again. Gobekli Tepe was a game changer, but I think it's a
game changer for everything because Gobekli Tepe, the extraordinary nature of it. We're looking at a major megalithic site,
which is at least five and a half thousand years older
than say Gigantia in Malta,
which was previously considered
to be the oldest megalithic site in the world.
And this led of course to a huge amount of interest
and attention, both from the Turkish government,
who see the potential, tourism potential of having the world's oldest megalithic site, and from the Turkish government, who see the tourism potential of having the
world's oldest megalithic site, and from archaeologists.
This in turn has led to exploration and excavation throughout the region and what they're finding
throughout that whole region around Gobekli Tepe.
Going down into Syria and further down into the Jordan Valley as far as Jericho and even across
a bit of the Mediterranean into Cyprus is what Turkish archaeologists are now calling
the Tas-Tepeler civilization. They're calling it a civilization, the Stone Hills civilization
with very definite identifying characteristics, semi-subterranean circular structures, the
use of T-shaped megalithic pillars, sometimes not anywhere near as big as those at Gobekli
Tepe. It's clear that Gobekli Tepe now was not the beginning of this process. It was
actually in a way the end of this process. It was the summation of everything that Stonehill's
civilization had achieved. But what is becoming clear is that this is a period before the foundation of Gobekli
Tepe.
As far as we know, that date of 11,600 years ago is the oldest date for Gobekli Tepe.
But of course, there's a lot of Gobekli Tepe still underground.
So we can't say for sure that that's the oldest, but it's the oldest so far excavated. What
we're seeing is that in that whole region around there, something was in motion, and
it began to go into motion round about the beginning of the Younger Dryas. This is where
these two dates are really important. The Younger Dryas, I'll round the figures off, begins around 12,800 years ago, and it ends around
11,600 years ago. So Gobekli Tepe's construction date, if it is 11,600 years ago, if they don't
find older materials, marks the end of the Younger Dryas. But the beginning of the Younger
Dryas, we're already seeing the stirrings of the kind of culture that manifests in full form
at Gobekli Tepe.
After the construction of Gobekli Tepe, in fact, even during the construction of Gobekli
Tepe, we see agriculture beginning to be adopted.
The people who created Gobekli Tepe were all hunter-foragers at the beginning. But by the time Gobekli Tepe was finished,
and it was definitely deliberately finished,
closed off, closed down, deliberately buried,
covered with earth, covered with rubble,
and then topped off with a hill,
which is why Gobekli Tepe is called what it is.
Gobekli Tepe means pot-bellied hill, or the hill of the naval. For a long time, Gobekli Tepe is called what it is. Gobekli Tepe means pot-bellied hill
or the hill of the naval.
For a long time, Gobekli Tepe was thought to be just a hill
that looked a bit like a pot belly.
Can you say how it was discovered?
I think this is one of the most fascinating things
on earth, period.
So maybe can you say what it is and how it was discovered?
Well, Gobekli Tepe is first of all all the oldest fully elaborated megalithic site that we know
of anywhere in the world.
It doesn't mean the older ones won't be found, but it is the oldest so far found.
The part of the site that's been excavated, which is a tiny percentage of the whole site,
we do know.
My first visit to Gobekli Tepe was in 2013 and Dr. Klaus Schmidt, the late Dr. Klaus Schmidt who died a year later, was very generous to
me and showed me around the site for over a period of three days. And he explained to
me that they've already used ground penetrating radar on the site and they know that there's
much more Gobekli Tepe still underground. So anything is possible in terms
of the dating of Gobekli Tepe. But what we have at the moment is a series of almost circular,
but not quite circular enclosures, which are walled with relatively small stones. And then
inside them, you have pairs of megalithic pillars. And the archetypal part of that site is enclosure
D, which contains the two largest upright megaliths, about 18 feet tall and reckoned
to weigh somewhere in the range of 20 tons, if I have my memory correct. They're substantial,
hefty pieces of stone. It isn't some kind of extraordinary feat to create a 20-foot tall or 20-ton megalith,
nor is it an extraordinary feat to move it. There's nothing magical or really weird about
that. Human beings can do that and always have. Besides, the quarry for the megaliths
is right there. It's within 200 meters of the main enclosures. So that's not a mystery.
But the mystery is why suddenly this new form of architecture, this massive, massive megalithic
pillars appear. And the pillars, one of the things that interests me about the pillars
is their alignment. And there is good work that's been done which suggests that enclosure
D aligns
to the rising of the star Sirius. The rising points of the star Sirius appear to be mapped
by the other enclosures, which are all oriented in slightly different directions. It was the
work entirely of hunter-foragers, but by the time Gobekli Tepe was completed, agriculture was being introduced
and was taking place there. Now you asked how Gobekli Tepe was found. The answer to
that is that there was a survey of that pot-bellied hill in the 1960s by some American archaeologists,
and they were looking, absolutely looking for stone age material from the Paleolithic.
And they had found some Paleolithic flints, upper Paleolithic flints around there, so
it looked like a good place to look. But then they noticed sticking out of the side of the
hill some very finely cut stone, bits of very large and very finely cut stone. And looking
at that, the workmanship was so good
that those archaeologists were confident that it had nothing to do with the Stone Age. And they
thought they were looking at perhaps some Byzantine remains, and they abandoned the site and never
looked at it further. And it wasn't until the German Archaeological Institute got involved,
and particularly Klaus Schmidt, who I think was a genius, had real insight
into this and started to dig at Gobekli Tepe that they realized what they'd found, that
they'd found potentially the oldest megalithic site in the world. And they'd found it at
a place where agriculture, according to the established historical timeline, that's where
agriculture at any rate in Europe and Western Asia begins.
It begins in Anatolia in Turkey and then it gradually disseminates westward from there.
And yet the understanding is it was created by hunter-gatherers.
It was created by hunter-gatherers, yeah. There was no agriculture 11,600 years ago in Gobekli Tepe,
but by the time Gobekli Tepe was decommissioned,
and I use that word deliberately,
was closed down and buried, agriculture was all around it.
And this was agriculture of people
who knew how to cultivate plants.
Do we have an understanding when it was turned into,
if I could say, a time capsule,
so protected by forming a mound around it? Is it around that similar time? when it was turned into a, if I could say a time capsule,
so protected by forming a mound around it.
Is it around that similar time?
It stood from roughly 11,600 years ago
to about 10,400 years ago, to about 8,400 BC.
So around 1200 years, it was there
and it continued to be elaborated as a site.
And while it was being elaborated as a site. And while it was
being elaborated as a site, we see agriculture. I'm going to use the word being introduced.
There'd been no sign of it before and suddenly it's there. And to me, that's another of
the mysteries about Gobekli Tepe. And then with the new work that's being done, we realized
that it's part of a much wider phenomenon, which spreads across an enormous distance. The puzzling thing is that after Gobekli Tepe, there almost seems to
be a decline. Things fall down again, and then we enter this long, slow process of the
Neolithic, thousands of years, gradual developments until we come to ancient Sumer and Mesopotamia. But agriculture has
taken a firm route by then. Actually, one other thing, I'll just say this in passing.
When I talk about a lost civilization introducing ideas to people, I'm often accused of stealing
credit from the indigenous people who had those ideas in the first place. So I do find it slightly hypocritical that archaeology fully accepts that the idea of
agriculture was introduced to Western Europe from Turkey, and that Western Europeans didn't
invent agriculture.
It was absolutely introduced by Anatolian farmers who traveled west.
So the notion of dissemination of ideas perhaps shouldn't be so annoying to archeologists as it is.
And perhaps we should also state,
if you look at the entirety of history of hominids,
humans or hominids have been explorers.
I didn't even know this when I was preparing for this,
looking at Homo erectus.
1.9 million years ago, almost right away,
they spread out through the whole world.
And we, Homo sapiens evolved from them.
And we should also mention, since we're talking about
sort of controversial debates going on,
as I understand, there's still debates about
the dynamics of all that was going on there,
like we mentioned in Africa, that it's the, you know, I think the current understanding we didn't come from one particular
point of Africa, that there's multiple locations.
This is the out of Africa theory. I think it's more than a theory. It's really strongly
evidenced. Why? Because we're part of the great ape family and it's an African family.
There's no doubt that human beings, our deep origins
are in Africa. But then as you rightly say, there were these very early migrations out of Africa
by species that are likely ancestral to anatomically modern humans, including definitely
Homo erectus and the astonishingly distant travels that they undertook. Yes,
I think there is an urge to explore in all of humanity. I think there is an urge to find
out what's around the next corner, what's over the brow of the next hill. And I think
that goes very deep into human character. And I think it was being manifested in those
early adventures of people who left Africa
and traveled all around the world.
And then settling in different parts of the world, I think a lot of anatomically modern
human evolution took place outside Africa as well, not only in Africa.
So I guess the general puzzlement that you're filled with is given that these creatures explore and spread and try out
different environments, why did it take hundreds of thousands of years for them to develop
complicated society settlements? That's the first big question. Why did it take so long? And that
raises in my mind a hypothesis, a possibility. Maybe it didn't take so long. Maybe things were happening
that we haven't yet got hold of in the archaeological record, which await to be discovered. And
of course, there are huge parts of the world that have not been studied at all by archaeology.
But the fact that huge parts of the world have not been studied at all by archaeology
is not on its own enough to suggest that we're missing a chapter in the human story. The reason that
I come to that isn't only puzzlement about that 300,000 year gap. It's also to do with
the fact that there's common iconography, there's common myths and traditions, and there's common spiritual ideas that are found all
around the world.
They're found amongst cultures that are geographically distant from one another, and that are also
distant from one another in time.
They don't necessarily occur at the same time.
This is where I think that archaeology is perhaps desperately needing a history of ideas
as well as just a history of things, because an idea can manifest again and again throughout
the human story. So there are particular issues. For example, the notion of the afterlife destiny
of the soul, what happens to us when we die.
And believe me, when you reach my age, that's something you do think about what happens.
I used to feel immortal when I was in my 40s, but now that I'm 74, I definitely know that
I'm not. Well, it would be natural for human beings all around the world to have that same
feeling, that same idea. But why
would they all decide that what happens to the soul after death is that it makes a leap
to the heavens, to the Milky Way, that it makes a journey along the Milky Way, that
there it is confronted by challenges, by monsters, by closed gates. The course of the life that
that person has lived will determine their destiny in that afterlife journey.
And this idea, the path of souls, the Milky Way is called the path of souls. It's very
strongly found in the Americas, right from South America through Mexico, through into
North America, but it's also found in ancient Egypt, in ancient India, in ancient Mesopotamia,
the same idea. And I don't feel that that can
be a coincidence. I feel that what we're looking at is an inheritance of an idea, a legacy
that's been passed down from a remote common source to cultures all around the world, and
then has taken on a life of its own within those cultures. So the remote common source
would explain both the similarities and the differences
in the expression of these ideas. The other thing, very puzzling thing, is
this sequence of numbers that are a result of the precession of the equinoxes. At least, I think that's the best theory to explain them. Here, I think it's important to pay tribute to the work of Giorgio
de Santillana and Hertha von Deschend. Giorgio de Santillana was professor of history of
science actually at MIT, where you're based, back in the 60s. Hertha von Deschend was professor
of the history of science at Frankfurt University. They wrote an immense book in the 1960s called Hamlet's Mill. Hamlet's Mill
differs very strongly from established opinion on the issue of the phenomenon of precession.
I'll explain what precession is in a moment. Generally, it's held that it was the Greeks
who discovered the precession. And the dating on that is put back not very far, maybe 2,300
years ago or so. Santillana and Vandesan are pointing out that knowledge of precession
is much, much older than that, thousands of years older than that. And they do actually
trace it,
I think I'm quoting them pretty much correctly, to some almost unbelievable ancestor civilization.
Reading that book was one of the several reasons that I got into this mystery in the first
place. Okay, now, the procession of the equinoxes, to give it its full name, results from the fact that our planet is the viewing platform
from which we observe the stars. Our planet, of course, is rotating on its own axis at
roughly a thousand miles an hour at the equator, but what's less obvious is that it's also
wobbling on its axis. If you imagine the extended north pole of the earth pointing up at the sky in our time, it's pointing at the star Polaris.
And that is our pole star.
But Polaris has not always been the pole star precisely because of this wobble on the axis of the earth.
Other stars have occupied the pole position and sometimes the extended north pole of the earth points at empty space.
There is no pole star.
That's one of the obvious results of the wobble on the Earth's axis. The other one is that
there are 12 well-known constellations in our time, the 12 constellations of the zodiac,
that lie along what is referred to as the path of the Sun. The Earth is orbiting the
Sun and we are seeing what's behind it, what's in direct line with the Sun in our view.
The zodiacal constellations all lie along the path of the Sun, so at different times
of the year, the Sun will rise against the background of a particular zodiacal constellation.
Today we live in the age of Pisces, and it's definitely not an accident that the early
Christians used the fish as their symbol.
This is another area where I differ from archaeology. I think the constellations
of the zodiac were recognized as such much earlier than we suppose. Anyway, to get to the point,
the key marker of the year, certainly in the Northern Hemisphere, was the Spring Equinox.
of the year, certainly in the Northern Hemisphere, was the Spring Equinox. The question was what constellation is rising behind the sun? What constellation is housing the sun at dawn on the
Spring Equinox? Right now, it's Pisces. In another 150 years or so, it'll be Aquarius. We do live in
the dawning of the age of Aquarius. Back in the time of the late ancient Egyptians,
it was Aries going back to the time of Ramesses or before. Before that, it was Taurus and
so on and so forth. It's backwards through the zodiac until 12,500 years ago, you come
to the age of Leo when the constellation of Leo houses the Sun on the spring equinox. Now
this process unfolds very, very, very, very slowly. The whole cycle, and it is a cycle,
it repeats itself roughly every 26,000 years. Put a more exact figure on it, 25,920 years.
That may be a convention. Some scholars would say it was a bit less than that, a bit more, but you're talking fractions.
It's in that area, 25,920 years.
And to observe it, you really need more than one human lifetime,
because it unfolds very, very slowly at a rate of one degree every 72 years.
And the parallel that I often give is, hold your finger up to the horizon, the distant
horizon. The movement in one lifetime in a period of 72 years is about the width of your
finger. It's not impossible to notice in a lifetime, but it's difficult. You've got
to pass it on. What seems to have happened is that some ancient culture, the culture
that Santiyanand and Vandesan call some almost unbelievable ancestor culture, worked out the entire process of procession and selected
the key numbers of procession, of which the most important number, the governing number,
is the number 72. But we also have numbers related to the number 72. 72 plus 36 is 108. 108 divided by 2 is 54. These numbers
are also found in mythology all around the world. There were 72 conspirators who were
involved in killing the god Osiris in ancient Egypt and nailing him up in a wooden coffer
and dumping him in the Nile. There are 432,000 in the Rig Vezor, 432,000 is a multiple of
72. And at Angkor in Cambodia, for example, you have the bridge to Angkor Thom, and on that bridge you have
figures on both sides, sculpted figures, which are holding the body of a serpent. That serpent
is Vazuki, and what they're doing is they're churning the milky ocean. It's the same metaphor
of churning and turning that's defined in the story of Hamlet's Mill,
of Amladi's Mill.
There are 54 on each side.
54 plus 54 is 108, 108 is 72 plus 36.
It's a precessional number according to the work that Santillana and Von Deschen did.
And the fascination with this number system and its discovery all around the world is one of the puzzles that intrigue
me and suggest to me that we are looking at ancestral knowledge that was passed down and
probably was passed down from a specific single common source at one time, but then was spread
out very, very widely around the world.
So one of the defining ways that you approach
the study of human history that I think contrasts
with mainstream archeology is you take this
sort of astronomical symbolism and the relationship
between humans and the stars very seriously.
I do, as I believe the ancients did.
I think it's important to sort of consider what humans would have thought about back then.
Now we have a lot of distractions.
We have social media, we can watch videos on YouTube, whatever.
But back then, especially before sort of electricity, the stars is like the sexiest thing to talk about.
There's no light pollution.
There's no light pollution, so there's that.
There's the majesty of the heavens.
Every single night, you're spending looking up at the stars
and you can imagine there's a lot of sort of status value
to be the guy who's very good at studying the stars
and sort of the scientists of the day.
And I'm sure there's going to be these geniuses that emerge
that are able to do two things.
One, tell stories about the gods or whatever,
based on the stars.
And then also, as we'll probably talk about,
use the stars practically for navigation, for example.
And so like, it makes sense that the stars
had a primal importance for the ideas of the times, for the status, for religious
explorations.
It was an ever-present reality.
And it was bright, and it was brilliant, and it was full of lights.
It's inconceivable that the ancients would not have paid attention to it.
It was an overwhelming presence.
And that's one of the reasons why I'm really confident that the constellations that we now recognize
as the constellations of the zodiac were recognized much earlier, because it's hard to miss when you
pay attention to the sky, that the sun over the course of the solar year is month by month rising
against the background of different constellations. And then there's a much longer process, the process of precession, which takes that journey backwards and where we have a period
of 2160 years for each sign of the zodiac. I think it would have been hard for the ancients to have
missed that. They might not have identified the constellations in exactly the same way we do today.
That may well be a Babylonian or Greek convention, but that the constellations
were there, I think was very clear, and that they were special constellations, unlike other
ones higher up in the sky, which were not on the path of the sun, that people paid attention
to.
Well, but detecting the procession of the equinox is hard, because especially they don't
have any writing systems, they don't have any mathematical systems, so everything
is told through words.
Yeah. Well, let's not underestimate oral traditions. Oral traditions, that's something we've lost
in our culture today. One of the things that happens with the written word is that you
gradually lose your memory. Actually, there's a nice story from ancient Egypt about the god Thoth,
the god of wisdom, who is very proud of himself because he has invented writing. Look at this
gift he says to a mythical pharaoh of that time. Look at the gift that I am giving humanity
writing. This is a wonderful thing. It'll enable you to preserve so much that you would otherwise
lose. And the Pharaoh in this story replies to him, no, you have not given us a wonderful
gift. You have destroyed the art of memory. We will forget everything. Words will roam
free around the world, not accompanied by any wise advice to set them into context.
And actually, that's a very interesting point.
And we do know that cultures that still do have oral traditions are able to preserve
information for very long periods of time.
One thing I think is clear in any time, in any period of history is human beings love
stories.
We love great stories.
And one way to preserve information is to encode it, embed it in a great story.
And so carefully done that actually it doesn't matter whether the storyteller knows that
they're passing on that information or not.
The story itself is the vehicle.
And as long as it's repeated faithfully, the information contained within it will be passed
on.
And I do think this is part of the
story of the preservation of knowledge. So that's one of the reasons that you take
myths seriously. I take them very seriously. And the other, there's many reasons, but
I can't help being deeply impressed and deeply puzzled by the worldwide tradition of a global cataclysm within human
memory. I mean, we know scientifically that there have been many, many cataclysms in the
past going back millions of years. I mean, the best known one, of course, is the KPG event,
as it's now called, that made the dinosaurs extinct 65 million or 66 million years ago. But has there been such a
cataclysm in the lifetime of the human species? Yeah, the Mount Toba eruption about 70,000 years
ago was pretty bad. But a global cataclysm, the Younger Dryas really ticks all the boxes
as a worldwide disaster, which definitely
involved sea level rise, both at the beginning and at the end of the Younger Dryas.
It definitely involved the swallowing up of lands that previously had been above water.
I think it's an excellent candidate for this worldwide tradition of a global cataclysm,
of which one of, but not the only distinguishing
characteristics was a flood, an enormous flood, and the submergence of lands that had previously
been above water, underwater. The fact that this story is found all around the world suggests to
me that the archeological explanation is, look, people suffer local floods all the time.
I mean, as we're talking, there's flooding in Florida.
But I don't think anybody in Florida is going to make the mistake of believing that that's
a global flood.
They know it's local.
But that's the argument largely of archaeology dealing with the flood myths, that some local
population experienced a nasty local flooding event and they decided
to say that it affected the whole world.
I'm not persuaded by that, particularly since we know there was a nasty epoch, the Younger
Dryas, when flooding did occur and when the earth was subjected to events cataclysmic
enough to extinguish entirely the megafauna of the ice age. So there is the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis that provides an explanation
of what happened during this period that resulted in such rapid environmental
change. So can you explain this hypothesis?
Yes. The Younger Dryas impact hypothesis, YDIH for short, is not a lunatic fringe theory as its opponents often attempt
to write it off. It's the work of more than 60 major scientists working across many different
disciplines including archaeology and including oceanography as well.
They are collectively puzzled by the sudden onset of the younger dryers
and by the fact that it is accompanied 12,800 years ago
by a distinct layer in the earth.
You can see it most clearly at Murray Springs
in Arizona, for example.
You can see it's about the width
of a human hand. And there's a draw there that's been cut by flash flooding at some
time. And that draw has revealed the sides of the draw. And you can see the cross section.
And in the cross section is this distinct dark layer that runs through the earth. And
it contains evidence of wildfires. There's a lot of soot in it. There are also nanodiamonds
in it. There is shocked quartz in it. There is quartz that's been melted at temperatures
in excess of 2,200 degrees centigrade. There are carbon microsperules. All of these are
proxies for some kind of cosmic impact. I talked a moment ago about the extinction of the dinosaurs.
Lewis and Walter Alvarez, who made that incredible discovery, initially their discovery was based
entirely on impact proxies, just as the Young Godryases.
There was no crater.
For a long time, they were disbelieved because they couldn't produce a crater.
When they finally did produce that deeply buried chicks-glued crater, that's when people started to say, yeah, they have to be right. But they weren't
relying on the crater, they were relying on the impact proxies. And they're the same impact proxies
that we find in what's called the Younger Dryas boundary layer all around the world.
So it's the fact that at the moment when the Earth tips into a radical climate shift, it's been warming up for at least 2,000 years before 12,800 years ago.
People at the time must have been feeling a great sense of relief. We've been living through this really cold time, but it's getting better. And then suddenly around 12,800 years ago, some might say 12,860 years ago, there's
a massive global plunge in global temperatures and the world suddenly gets as cold as it
was at the peak of the ice age. And it's almost literally overnight. It's very, very, very
rapid. Normally in an epoch when the earth is going into a freeze, you would not expect
sea levels to rise,
but there is a sea level rise a sudden one right at the beginning of the younger dryers and then you have this long frozen period from twelve thousand eight hundred to eleven thousand six hundred years ago.
suddenly, the younger dry ice comes to an end and the world very rapidly warms up and you have a recognized pulse of meltwater at that time as the last of the glaciers collapse
into the sea, called meltwater pulse 1b, around about 11,600 years ago.
So this is a period which is very tightly defined. It's a period when we know that
human populations were grievously disturbed. That's when the so-called Clovis culture of North
America vanished entirely from the record during the Younger Dryas, and it's
the time when the mammoths and the saber-toothed tigers vanished from the
record as well. Is there a good understanding of what happened geologically,
whether there was an impact or not? What explains this huge dip in temperature and
then rise in temperature? The abrupt cessation of the global meridional overturning circulation,
of which the Gulf Stream is the best known part. The main theory that's been put forward up to now,
and I don't dispute that theory at all, is that the sudden freeze was caused by the cutting off of the Gulf Stream, basically,
which is part of the central heating system of our planet.
No wonder it became cold.
But what's not really been addressed before is why that happened, why the Gulf Stream
was cut, why a sudden pulse of meltwater went
into the world ocean. It was so much of it and it was so cold that it actually stopped
the Gulf Stream in its tracks. That's where the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis offers
a very elegant and very satisfactory solution to the problem.
Now, the hypothesis, of course, is broader than that. Amongst the scientists working on it
are, for example, Bill Napier, an astrophysicist and astronomer. They have assembled a great
deal of evidence which suggests that the culprit in the Younger Dryas impact event or events
was what we now call the torrid meteor stream, which the Earth still passes through twice a year.
It's now about 30 million kilometers wide. It takes the Earth a couple of days to pass through
it on its orbit. It passed through it in June and it passes through it at the end of October.
The suggestion is that the torrid meteor stream is the end product of a very large comet that entered the
solar system round about 20,000 years ago, came in from the Oort cloud, got trapped by the gravity
of the sun and went into orbit around the sun, an orbit that crossed the orbit of the Earth. However,
when it was one object, the likelihood of a collision with the Earth was extremely small.
But as it started to do what all comets do, which was to break up into multiple fragments,
because these are chunks of rock held together by ice, and as they warm up,
they split and disintegrate and break into pieces. As it passed through that,
its debris stream became larger and larger and wider and wider.
The theory is that 12,800 years ago, the Earth passed through a particularly dense part of
the torrid meteor stream and was hit by multiple impacts all around the planet, certainly from
the west of North America as far east as Syria.
We are by and large not talking about impacts that would have
caused craters, although there certainly were some. We're talking about air bursts. When
an object is 100 or 150 meters in diameter and it's coming in very fast into the Earth's
atmosphere, it is very unlikely to reach the Earth. It's going to
blow up in the sky. The best-known recent example of that is the Tunguska event in Siberia,
which took place on the 30th of June 1908. The Tunguska event was nobody disputes. It
was definitely an airburst of a cometary fragment. The date is interesting because the 30th of June is the height of the beta torids.
It's one of the two times when the Earth is going through the torrid meteor stream.
Well, luckily that part of Siberia wasn't inhabited, but 2,000 square miles of forest
were destroyed.
If that had happened over a major city, we would all be thinking very hard about objects
out of the torrid meteor
stream and about the risk of cosmic impact.
So the suggestion is that it wasn't one impact, it wasn't two impacts, it wasn't three impacts,
it was hundreds of air bursts all around the planet coupled with a number of bigger objects
which the scientists working on this think hit the North American ice cap largely. Some
of them may also have hit the Northern European ice cap, resulting in that sudden, otherwise
unexplained flood of meltwater that went into the world ocean and caused the cooling that
then took place. But this was a disaster for life all over the planet. And It's interesting that one of the sites where they
find the Younger Dryas boundary and where they find overwhelming evidence of an air
burst and where they find all the shocked quartz, the carbon microspherules, the nanodiamonds,
the trinitite and so on and so forth, all of those impact proxies are found at Abu Huraira. That was a settlement within 150 miles of
Qobayqli Tepe, and it was hit 12,800 years ago, and it was obliterated. Interestingly,
it was re-inhabited by human beings within probably five years, but it was completely
obliterated at that time. It's difficult to imagine that the people who lived in that area would not have been very
impressed by what they saw happening by these massive explosions in the sky and the obliteration
of Abahurera. Now, this is a theory. The Younger Dryas impact is a hypothesis, actually. It's not
even a theory. A theory is, I think, considered a higher level than a hypothesis. That's why it's
the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis. And of course, it has many opponents, and
there are many who disagree with it. And there have been a series of peer-reviewed papers
that have been published, supposedly debunking the Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis. One,
I think, was in 2011. It was called a requiem for the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis.
And there's one just been published a few months ago or a year ago called a complete
refutation of the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis, something like that, some lengthy title.
So it's a hypothesis that has its opponents.
And even within those of us who are looking at the alternative side of history, there are different points of view. Robert Shock from Boston University,
the geologist who demonstrated that the erosion on the Sphinx may well have been caused by
exposure to a long period of very heavy rainfall. He doesn't go for the Younger Dryas impact
hypothesis. He fully accepts that the Younger Dryas was a global cataclysm and that the extinctions
took place, but he thinks it was caused by some kind of massive solar outburst.
What everybody's agreed on is the Younger Dryas was bad, but there is dispute about
what caused it.
I personally have found the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis to be the most persuasive, which most effectively explains all the evidence.
How important is the Impact Hypothesis to your understanding of the Ice Age advanced
civilizations? So is it possible to have another explanation for environmental factors that
could have erased most of an advanced civilization during this period?
In a sense, it's not the impact hypothesis that is central to what I'm saying.
It's the Younger Dryas that's central to what I'm saying.
And the Younger Dryas required a trigger.
Something caused it.
I think the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis, the notion that we're looking at a debris
stream of a fragmenting comet comet and we can still see that
debris stream because it's still up there and we still pass through it twice a year is the best
explanation. But I don't mind other explanations. It's good that there are other explanations.
The Younger Dryas is a big mystery and it's not a mystery that's been solved yet. And that word
advanced civilization, this is another word that is easily misunderstood.
I've tried to make clear many, many times that when we consider the possibility of something
like a civilization in the past, we shouldn't imagine that it's us, that it's something like
us. We should expect it to be completely different from us, but that it would have achieved certain things. So amongst the clues that intrigue me are those precessional numbers
that are found all around the world and are a category of ancient maps called Portolanos,
which suddenly started to appear just after the crusade that entered Constantinople and sacked Constantinople, the Portolanos suddenly
start to appear. They're extremely accurate maps. Most of the ones that have survived
are extremely accurate maps of the Mediterranean alone, but some of them show much wider areas.
For example, on these Portolanos style maps, you do find a depiction of Antarctica again and again.
Another thing that these maps have in common is that many of the mapmakers state that they based their
maps on multiple older source maps, which have not survived. These maps are intriguing
because they have very accurate relative longitudes. Our civilization did not crack the longitude
problem until the mid-18th century with Harrison's
chronometer which was able to keep accurate time at sea.
So you could have the time in London and you could have the local time at sea at the same
time and then you could work out your longitude.
There might be other ways of working out longitude as well, but there it is.
The fact is these Portolanos have extremely accurate relative longitudes. Secondly, some of them show the world to my
eye as it looked during the Ice Age. They show a much extended Indonesia and Malaysian
peninsula and the series of islands that make up Indonesia today are all grouped together
into one landmass. And that was the case during
the Ice Age. That was the Sunda Shelf. And the presence of Antarctica on some of these
maps also puzzles and intrigues me and is not satisfactorily explained in my view by
archaeology which says, oh, those mapmakers, they felt that the world needed something
underneath it to balance it. So they put a fictional landmass there. I don't think that
makes sense. I think somebody was mapping the world during the last Ice Age, but that doesn't
mean that they had our kind of tech. It means that they were following that exploration instinct,
that they knew how to navigate. They'd been watching the stars for thousands of years before.
They knew how to navigate and they knew how to build seagoing ships. They explored the world and they mapped the world. Those
maps were made a very, very long time ago. Some of them, I believe, were likely preserved
in the Library of Alexandria. I think even then they were being copied and recopied.
We don't know exactly what happened to the Library of Alexandria except that it was destroyed.
I suggest it's likely this was during the period of the Roman Empire.
I suggest it's likely that some of those maps were taken out of the library and taken to
Constantinople.
And that's where they were liberated during the crusade and entered world culture again
and started to be copied and recopied.
So from this perspective,
when we talk about advanced Ice Age civilization,
it could have been a relatively small group of people
with the technology of their scholars of the stars
and their expert seafaring navigators.
Yes, that's about as far as I would take it.
And when I say that it, as I have said on a number
of occasions, that it had technology equivalent to ours
in the 18th century, I'm referring specifically
to the ability to calculate longitude.
I'm not saying that they were building steam engines.
I don't see any evidence for that.
And perhaps some building tricks and skills of how to...
Well, definitely.
And this again is where you come to a series of mysteries,
which are perhaps best expressed on the Giza Plateau
in Egypt with the three great pyramids
and the extraordinary megalithic temples
that many people don't pay much attention to on
the Giza Plateau and the Great Sphinx itself.
This is an area of particular importance in understanding this issue.
Well can you actually describe the Sphinx and the Great Pyramids and where you find
most mysterious and interesting about them?
Well, first of all, the astronomy. And here,
I must pay tribute to two individuals, actually three individuals in particular. One of them is
John Anthony West, passed away in 2018. He was the first person in our era to begin to wonder if the
Sphinx was much older than it had been. Actually, he got that idea from a philosopher called Swallow de Lubix, who'd noticed what he thought was water erosion on the body of the Sphinx.
John West picked that up and he was a great amateur Egyptologist himself. He spent most
of his life in Egypt and he was hugely versed in ancient Egypt. And when he looked at the
Sphinx and at the strange scalloped erosion patterns and the vertical
fishes, particularly in the trench around the Sphinx, he began to think maybe Schwalow was
right. Maybe there was some kind of flooding here. And that's when he brought Robert Schock,
second person I'd like to recognize, geologist at Boston University. He brought Schock to Giza.
And Schock was the first geologist to stick his neck out, risk
the ire, the ire of Egyptologists and say, well, it looks to me like the Sphinx was exposed
to at least a thousand years of heavy rainfall. And as Shock's calculations have continued,
as he's continued to be immersed in this mystery, he's continuously pushed that back. And he's
now again looking at the date of around 12,000, 12,500 years ago during the
younger dryas for the creation of the great Sphinx. And then, of course, this is the period
of the wet Sahara, the humid Sahara. The Sahara was a completely different place during the
Ice Age. There were rivers in it, there were lakes in it, it was fertile, it was possibly densely populated,
and there was a lot of rain. There's not no rain in Giza today, but there's relatively
little rain. The next person, not enough rain to cause that erosion damage on the Sphinx.
The next person who needs to be mentioned in this context is Robert Boval. Robert and
I have co-authored a number of books together. Unfortunately,
Robert has been very ill for the last seven years. He's got a very bad chest infection.
I think also that Robert became very demoralized by the attacks of Egyptologists on his work.
Robert is the genius. It does take genius some time to make these connections because
nobody noticed it before that the three pyramids of Giza are laid out on the ground in the
pattern of the three stars of Orion's belt.
And skeptics will say, well, you can find any buildings and line them up with any stars
you want, but Orion actually isn't any old constellation.
Orion was the god ofiris in the sky. The ancient Egyptians called the
Orion constellation Sahu, and they recognize it as the celestial image of the god Osiris. So
what's being copied on the ground is the belt of a deity, of a celestial deity. It's not just a
random constellation. And then when we take precession into account, you find something else very intriguing happening.
First of all, you find that the exact orientation of the pyramids as it is today and pretty
much as it was when they're supposed to have been built 4,500 years ago, it's not precisely
related to how Orion's Belt looked at that time. There's a bit of a twist.
They're not quite right. But as you precess the stars backwards, as you go back and back and back
and you come to around 10,500 BC, 12,500 years ago in the younger Dryas, you find that suddenly
they lock perfectly. They match perfectly with the three pyramids on the ground.
And that's the same moment that the great Sphinx, an equinoctial monument aligned perfectly
to the rising sun on the spring equinox.
Anybody can test this for themselves.
Just go to Giza on the 21st of March, be there before dawn, stand behind the Sphinx and you
will see the sun rising directly in line with the gaze of the Sphinx. But the question is what constellation was behind the Sphinx? And 12,500 years ago,
it was the constellation of Leo. And actually the constellation of Leo has a very Sphinx-like
look. And I and my colleagues are pretty sure that the Sphinx was originally a lion entirely.
And that over the thousands of years it became
damaged, it became eroded, particularly the part of it that sticks out the head. There
were periods when the Sphinx was completely covered in sand, but still the head stuck
out. By the time you come to the fourth dynasty, when the Pyramids are supposedly built, by the time you come
to the fourth dynasty, the head of the lion, original lion head would have been a complete
mess. And we suggest that it was then re-carved into a pharaonic head. Egyptologists think
it was the pharaoh Khafre, but there's no real strong resemblance. But it's definitely
wearing the nemes headdress of an ancient
Egyptian pharaoh. And we think that that's the result of a recarving of what was originally
not only a lion-bodied, but also a lion-headed monument. It wouldn't make sense if you create
an equinoctial marker in the time of Khafre, 4,500 years ago, and the Sphinx is an equinoctial
marker. I mean, it's 270 feet long and 70 feet high
and it's looking directly at the rising sun on the equinox. If you create it then, you'd
be more likely to create it in the shape of a bull because that was the age of Taurus,
when the constellation of Taurus housed the sun on the spring equinox. So why is it a lion? And again, we think that's because of that
observation of the skies and putting on the ground as above, so below, putting on the
ground an image of the sky at a particular time. Now, the fact that the Giza Plateau
– it's a fact, of course, that Egyptologists completely dispute, but the fact that the
principal monuments of the Giza Plateau, the three great pyramids and the great Sphinx
all lock astronomically on the date of around 10,500 BC, to me is most unlikely to be an
accident. Actually, if you look at computer software at the sky at that time, you'll see
that the Milky Way is very prominent
and seems to be mirrored on the ground by the River Nile. I suggest that may be one
of the reasons amongst many why Giza was chosen as the site for this very special place. So
the point I want to make is that an astronomical design on the ground which memorializes a very ancient date does not have
to have been done 12,500 years ago. From the ancient Egyptian point of view, you're there 4,500
years ago and there's a time 8,000 years before that, which is very, very, very important to you.
You could use astronomical language
and megalithic architecture to memorialize that date on the Giza Plateau, which is what
we think we're looking at, except for one thing, and that's the erosion patterns on
the Sphinx. We're pretty sure that the Sphinx, at least, does date back to 12,500 years ago. And with it, the megalithic temples, the so-called valley temple,
which stands just to the east and just to the south of the Sphinx, and the Sphinx temple,
which stands directly in front of the Sphinx. The Sphinx temple has largely been destroyed,
but the valley temple attributed to Khafre on no good grounds whatsoever is
a huge megalithic construction with blocks of limestone that weigh up to 100 tons each.
And yet it has been remodeled, refaced with granite.
There are granite blocks that are placed on top of the core limestone blocks.
Those core limestone blocks were already eroded when the granite blocks were put there.
Why?
Because the granite blocks have actually been purposefully and deliberately cut to fit into
the erosion marks on the, we believe, much older megalithic blocks there.
I think Giza is a very complicated site. I would never seek to divorce the dynastic
ancient Egyptians from the Great Pyramids. They were closely involved in the construction
of the Great Pyramids as we see them today. But what I do suggest is that there were very
low platforms on the Giza Plateau that are much older and that when we look at the three great
pyramids, we're looking at a renovation and a restoration and an enhancement of much older
structures that had existed on the Giza Plateau for a much longer period before that.
Actually the Great Pyramid is built around a natural hill and that natural hill might
have been seen as the original primeval mound to the
ancient Egyptians.
So the idea is that the Sphinx was there long before the pyramids, and the pyramids were
built by the Egyptians to celebrate further an already holy place.
Yeah, and there were platforms in place where the pyramids stand, not the pyramids as we see them today,
but the basis, the base of those pyramids
was already in place at that time.
So what's the case, what's the evidence
that the Egyptologists use to make the attributions
that they do for the dating of the pyramids and the Sphinx?
Well, the three great pyramids of Giza
are different from later pyramids. This is another
problem that I have with the whole thing, is the story of pyramid building. When did
it really begin? The timeline that we get from Egyptology is the first pyramid, is the pyramid of the pharaoh Zoser, the step pyramid at Saqqara,
about a hundred years or so before the Giza pyramids were built. And then we have this
explosion in the fourth dynasty of true pyramids. We have three of them attributed to a single
pharaoh, Sneferu, who built supposedly the
pyramid at Maidum and the two pyramids at Dashur, the Bent and the Red Pyramid. And
then within that same 100-year span, we have the Giza pyramids being built. This is according
to the Orthodox chronology. And then suddenly, once the Giza project is finished, pyramid
building goes into a massive slump in ancient Egypt.
And the pyramids of the fifth dynasty are, frankly speaking, a mess outside.
They're very inferior constructions.
You can hardly recognize them as pyramids at all.
But what happens when you go inside them is you find that they're extensively covered
in hieroglyphs and imagery repeating the name of the king
who was supposedly buried in that place. Whereas the Giza pyramids have no internal inscriptions
whatsoever. What we do have is one piece of graffiti about which there is some controversy.
Basic statistics, it's a six million ton structure. Each side is about 750 feet
long. It's aligned almost perfectly to true north, south, east and west within three sixtieths
of a single degree. Sixtieths because degrees are divided into sixties. It's the precision of the orientation and the absolute massive size of the thing,
plus it's very complicated internal passageways that are involved in it. In the 9th century,
the Great Pyramid still had its facing stones in place, but there was an Arab caliph, Caliph al-Mamun, who had already realized that
other pyramids did have their entrances in the north face. Nobody knew where the entrance to the
Great Pyramid was. But he figured, if there's an entrance to this thing, it's going to be in the
north face somewhere. So he put together a team of workers and they went in with sledgehammers and
they started smashing where he thought
would be the entrance. They cut their way into the Great Pyramid for a distance of maybe
a hundred feet. Then the hammering that they did dislodged something. They heard a little
bit further away something big falling and they realized there was a cavity there and
they started heading in that direction. And then they joined the internal passageway
of the Great Pyramid, the descending
and the ascending corridors that go up.
When you go up the ascending corridor,
every one of the internal passageways
in the Great Pyramid that people can walk in,
slopes at an angle of 26 degrees.
That's interesting because the angle of slope
of the exterior of the Great Pyramid is 52 degrees. That's interesting because the angle of slope of the exterior
of the Great Pyramid is 52 degrees. So we know mathematicians were at work as well as
geometers in the creation of the Great Pyramid. If you go up the Grand Gallery, which is at
the end of the so-called ascending corridor and it's above the so-called Queen's Chamber,
you go up the Grand Gallery, you're eventually going to come to what is known as the King's Chamber in which there
is a sarcophagus. And that sarcophagus is a little bit too big to have been got in through
the narrow entrance passageway. It's almost as though the so-called King's Chamber was
built around the sarcophagus already in place. Above the King's Chamber are five other chambers. These are known as
relieving chambers. The theory was that they were built to relieve the pressure on the
King's chamber of the weight of the monument. But I think what makes that theory dubious
is the fact that even lower down where more weight was involved, you have the Queen's
chamber and there are no such relieving chambers above that. In the top of these five chambers,
a British adventurer and vandal called Howard Vise, who dynamited his way into those chambers
in the first place, allegedly found, well, he claims he found the graffiti, a piece of graffiti
left by a work gang, naming the pharaoh Khufu. And it's true, I've been in that chamber and there is
the cartouche of Khufu there, quite recognizable. But the dispute around it is whether that is a
genuine piece of graffiti dating from the old kingdom or whether Howard Weiss actually put it
there himself because he was in desperate need of money at the time. I'm not sure what the answer
to that question is. Another reason why, but it's one of the reasons that Egyptologists
feel confident in saying that the pyramid is the work of Khufu. Another is what is called
the Wadi al-Jaraf papyri, where on the Red Sea, a diary, the diary of an individual called
Meraire was found, and he talks about bringing
highly polished limestone to the Great Pyramid. And it's clear that what he's talking about
is the facing stones of the Great Pyramid. He's not talking about the body of the Great
Pyramid, he's talking about the facing stones of the Great Pyramid during the reign of Khufu.
So that's another reason why the Great Pyramid is attributed to Khufu. But I think that Khufu was undoubtedly involved in the Great Pyramid and in a big way, but
I think he was building upon and elaborating a much older structure.
And I think the heart of that structure is the subterranean chamber, which is 100 feet
vertically beneath the base of the Great Pyramid.
Anybody who suffers from claustrophobia will not enjoy
being down there. You've got to go down a 26-degree sloping corridor until a distance
of about 300 feet. It's 100 feet vertically, but the slope means you're going to walk a
distance of about, not walk, you're going to ape walk. You're almost going to have to crawl.
I've learned from long experience that the best way to go down these corridors is actually
backwards.
If you go forward, you keep bumping your head on them because they're only three feet, five
inches high.
You get down to the bottom, you have a short horizontal passage, and then you get into
the subterranean chamber.
The theory of Egyptology is that this was supposed to be the burial place of Khufu. But after cutting out that 300 foot long,
26 degree sloping passage, a lot of which passes through bedrock, and having cut the
subterranean chamber out of bedrock, gone to all that trouble, they decided they wouldn't bury him
there. And they built what's now known as the Queen's chamber as his burial chamber. But then
they decided that wouldn't do either,
so they then built the King's Chamber,
and that's where the Pharaoh is supposed
to have been buried.
Those Arab raiders under Khalif Mahmood
didn't find anything in the Great Pyramid at all.
So your idea is that the Sphinx
and maybe some aspects of the pyramid were much earlier,
and why that's important is in that case, it would be evidence of some transfer of technology
from a much older civilization.
The idea is that during the Younger Dryas, most of that civilization was either destroyed
or damaged and they desperately scattered across the globe.
Seeking refuge.
Seeking refuge and telling stories of maybe one, the importance of the stars, their knowledge
about the stars and their knowledge about building and knowledge about navigation.
That's roughly the idea. So it's interesting that the ancient Egyptians have a notion of
an epoch that they call Zeptepi, which is the first time. It means the first time. This
is when the gods walked the earth. This is when seven sages brought wisdom to ancient
Egypt. And that is seen as the origin of ancient
Egyptian civilization.
There are king lists, by the ancient Egyptians themselves, there are king lists that go back
way beyond the first dynasty, go back 30,000 years into the past in ancient Egypt, considered
to be entirely mythical by Egyptologists, but nevertheless, it's interesting that there's
that reference to remote time.
Now, what you also have in Egypt are what might almost be described as secret societies.
The followers of Horus are one of those specifically tasked with bringing forward the knowledge
from the first time into later periods.
The souls of Pei and Necen are another one of these mysterious secret society
groups who are possessors of knowledge that they transmit to the future. And what I'm broadly
suggesting is that those survivors of the Angadrias cataclysm who settled in Giza may have been
relatively small in number. It's interesting that they
are referred to in the Edfu building text as seven sages, because that repeats again
and again. It's also in Mesopotamia, it's seven sages, seven Apkalu, who come out of
the waters of the Persian Gulf and teach people all the skills of agriculture and of architecture and of astronomy. It's
found all around the world that there was a relatively small number of people who took
refuge in Giza, who benefited from the survival skills of the hunter-foragers who lived at
Giza at that time and who also passed on their knowledge to those hunter-foragers. But it
was not knowledge that was ready to be put into shape at that time.
That knowledge was then preserved and kept and handled within very secretive groups that
passed it down over thousands of years, and finally it bursts into full form in the fourth
dynasty in ancient Egypt. And you know, the notion that knowledge might be transferred
over thousands of years shouldn't be absurd. We know, for example, in the case of ancient
Israel, it goes back to the time of Abraham, which is pretty much, I think, around 2000
BC. And knowledge has been preserved from that time right up to the present day. So
if you can preserve knowledge for 4,000 years, you can probably preserve it for eight.
Now, of course, the air bars on us are quite large, but if an advanced Ice Age civilization existed,
where do you think it was? Where do you think we might find it one day if it existed?
And how big do you think it might have been?
Well, this is where I'm often accused of presenting a God of the gaps argument that I think there
was a lost civilization because there's lots of the earth that archaeologists have never
looked at. Of course I'm not thinking that. These are very special gaps that I'm interested
in and I'm interested in them because of all the curiosities and the puzzlement that I've
expressed to you before. It's not just because there are gaps in the archaeological record. It's because those gaps involve places that
were very interesting places to live during the Ice Age. And they specifically include
the Sahara Desert, which was not a desert during the Ice Age and went through this warm,
wet period when it was very, very fertile. Certainly some
archaeology has been done in the Sahara, but it's fractional. It's tiny. And I think if
we want to get into the origins, true origins of ancient Egyptian civilization, of the peoples
of ancient Egypt, we need to be looking in the Sahara for that. And the Amazon rainforest is another example of this.
I think the Sahara is about nine million square kilometers.
The Amazon that's left under dense canopy rainforest
is about five million square kilometers,
maybe closer to six.
And then you have the continental shelves
that were submerged by sea level rise
at the end of the ice age. Now, it's well established that sea level rose by 400 feet, but it didn't
rise by 400 feet overnight. It came in dribs and drabs. There were periods of very rapid,
quite significant sea level rise, and there were periods when the sea level was rising
much more slowly. So that 400 foot sea level rise is spread out
over a period of about 10,000 years,
but there are episodes within it like Meltwater Pulse 1B,
like Meltwater Pulse 1A, when the flooding was really immense.
How big do you think it might've been?
And do you think it was spread across the globe?
So if there were expert navigators, do you think they spread across the globe. So if there were expert navigators, do you think
they spread across the globe?
Well, the reason that I'm talking about the gaps is I don't know where this civilization
started or where it was based. All I'm seeing are clues and mysteries and puzzles that intrigue
me and which suggests to me that something is missing from our past. And I'm not inclined to look for that missing something in, for example, Northern Europe,
because Northern Europe was not a very nice place to live during the Ice Age.
I mean, nobody smart would build a civilization in Northern Europe 12,000 years ago.
It was a hideous, frozen wasteland.
The places to look are places that were hospitable and welcoming
to human beings during the Ice Age. And that of course includes the coastlines that are
now under water. Of course it includes the Sahara Desert and of course it includes the
Amazon rainforest as well. All of these places I think are candidates for quote unquote my
lost civilization. And because I think largely from those ancient maps that
it was a navigating, seafaring civilization, I suspect that it wasn't only in one place.
It was probably in a number of places. And then I can only speculate. Maybe there was
a cultural value where it was felt that it was not appropriate to interfere with
the lives of hunter-foragers at that time.
Maybe it was felt that they should keep their distance from them.
Just as even today, there is a feeling that we shouldn't be interfering too much with
the uncontacted tribes in the Amazon rainforest. Although interestingly, some of those tribes are now using cell phones.
That possibility may have been there in the past.
And only when we come to a global cataclysm does it become essential to have outreach
and actually to take refuge amongst those hunter-forager populations.
That is the hypothesis that I'm putting forward.
I'm not claiming that it's a fact,
but for me it helps to explain the evidence.
So that speaks to one of the challenges
that archaeologists provide to this idea,
is that there is a lot of evidence of humans in the Ice Age,
and they appear to be all hunter-gatherers.
But like you said, only a small percent of areas where humans have lived have been
studied by archaeologists. That's right. Very tiny percent. And even a tiny percent of every
archaeological site has been studied by archaeologists too. Typically, one to five percent of any
archaeological site is excavated. I mean, that's why Gobekli Tepe fills my mind with imagination,
I mean, that's why, uh, go back to the type. It fills my mind with imagination, especially seeing as a time capsule, you know, it's almost
certain that there is places on earth.
We haven't discovered that once we do, uh, even if it's after the ice age, we'll change
our view of human history.
Do you think there is going to be a place like what will be your dream thing to discover?
Like go back to the type A that says a definitive like perturbation to our understanding of ice age history
Some kind of archive some kind of hall of records. There's uh, both mystical
associations with the hall of records at Giza from people like the Ed Kasey organization. There's also
ancient Egyptian traditions which suggest that something was concealed beneath the Sphinx.
This is not an idea that is alien to ancient Egypt. It's quite present in ancient Egypt.
So far, as far as I know, nobody has dug down beneath the Sphinx. And of course, there's
very good reasons for that. You don't want to damage the place too much, but let's call it the
Hall of Records. I'd love to find that. But I think in a way, that's what Gobekli Tepe
is. Gobekli Tepe is a Hall of Records. You know, it's interesting that just as I've tried
to outline, I hope reasonably clearly that the
three great pyramids of Giza match Orion's belt in 10,500 BC, just as the Sphinx matches
Leo in 10,500 BC, 12,500 years ago or so.
Pillar 43 in Enclosure D at Gobekli Tepe contains what a number of researchers, myself included,
regard as an astronomical
diagram. Martin Swetman of Edinburgh University has brought forward the best work in this
field, but it was initially started by a gentleman called Paul Burley, who noticed that one of
the figures on pillar 43 is a scorpion, very much like we represent the constellation of
Scorpio today, and that above it is a vulture with
outstretched wings, which is in a posture very similar to the constellation that we call
Sagittarius. On that outstretched wing is a circular object. The suggestion is that it's
marking the time when the Sun was at the center of the dark rift in the Milky Way at the summer solstice
12,500 years ago. That's what it's marking. It's interesting that the same date
can be deduced from Pillar 40. Of course, it's controversial. Martin Swetman's ideas
are by no means accepted by archaeology, but he's done very, very thorough detailed statistical work on this, and I'm personally convinced. So we have a time capsule at Gobekli Tepe, which
is memorializing a date that is at least 1,200 years before Gobekli Tepe was built, if that
dating of 11,600 years ago proves to be absolutely the oldest date, as it is at present. The
date memorialized on Pillar
43 is 12,800 years ago, the beginning of the Younger Dryas, the beginning of the impact
event. And then Giza does the same thing, but in much larger scale. It uses massive
megalithic architecture, which is very difficult to destroy, and a profound knowledge of astronomy to encode a date in a language that any culture, which is sufficiently
literate in astronomy, will be able to decode. We don't have to have a script that we can't
read, like we do with the Indus Valley civilization or with the Easter Island script. We don't
have to have a script that can't be interpreted. If you use astronomical language, then any astronomical literate civilization will be
able to give you a date. The Hoover Dam has a star map built into it, and that star map
is part of an exhibition that was put there at the founding of the Hoover Dam. What it does is it freezes the sky above the Hoover Dam at the moment of its completion.
Oscar Hansen, the artist who created that piece, said so specifically that this would
be so that any future culture would be able to know the time of the dam's construction.
You can use astronomy and architecture to memorialize a particular date.
Quick pause, bathroom break?
Sounds good.
So to me, the story that we've been talking about, it is both exciting if the mainstream
archaeology narrative is correct and the one you're constructing is correct. Both are super
interesting because
the mainstream archeology perspective means that there is something about the human mind from which
the pyramids, these ideas spring naturally. You place humans anywhere, you place them on Mars,
it's going to come out that way. So that's an interesting story of human psychology that
then becomes even more interesting when
you evolve out of Africa with homo sapiens, how they think about the world.
That's super interesting.
And then if there's an ancient civilization, advanced civilization that explains why there's
so many similar types of ideas that spread, that means that there's so much undiscovered
still about the sort of the spring of these ideas of civilization that spread, that means that there's so much undiscovered still about the spring
of these ideas of civilization that come. So to me, they're both fascinating. So I don't
know why there's so much infighting.
But I think it's partly territorial. I can't speak of all archaeologists, but some archaeologists feel very territorial
about their profession and they do not feel happy about outsiders entering their realm,
especially if those outsiders have a large platform. I've found that the attacks on me by archaeologists have increased step by step with the increase
of my exposure.
I wasn't very interesting to them when I just had one minor bestseller in 1992 with a book
called The Sign and the Seal.
But when Fingerprints of the Gods was published in 1995 and became a global bestseller. Then I started to attract their
attention and appear to have been regarded as a threat to them. And that is the case
today. That is why Ancient Apocalypse Season 1 was defined as the most dangerous show on
Netflix. It's why the Society for American Archaeology wrote an open letter to Netflix, asking Netflix
to reclassify the series as science fiction.
It's why they accused the series of antisemitism, misogyny, white supremacism, and a whole bunch
of other things.
There's nothing to do with anything that's in the series. It was like,
we must shut this down. This is so dangerous to us. There are many more dangerous things in the
world than a television series going on right now. But maybe it was seen as a danger to archaeology,
that this non-archaeologist was in archaeological terrain and being viewed and seen
and read by large numbers of people. Maybe that was part of the problem. And human nature being
what it is, I noticed that two of my principal critics, John Hoopes from the University of
Kansas and Flint Dibble, who's now teaching at the University of Cardiff in Wales in the UK, are both people
who like to have media exposure.
John Hoopes has just recently started his YouTube channel.
Flint Dibble has had one for quite a while.
Pretty small number of followers.
I think that they feel that they should be the ones
who are getting the global attention
and that it's not right that I am and that the best way to stop that is to stop me, to
shut me down, to get me cancelled.
And basically requiring Netflix to relabel my series from a documentary to a science
fiction, which is what they actually had the temerity to
suggest to Netflix, if that had gone through, if Netflix had listened to them, that would
have effectively been the cancellation of my documentary series. It would no longer
have been ranked under documentaries. So it was a deliberate attempt to shut me down.
I see that going on again and again, and it's so unfortunate and so unnecessary.
I've become very defensive towards archaeology. I hit back after 30 years of these attacks
on my work. I'm tired of it and I do defend myself and sometimes I'm perhaps over vigorous
in that defense. Maybe I was a little bit too strong in my critique of archaeology in the
first season of Ancient Apocalypse. Maybe I should have been a bit gentler and a bit kinder. And I've
tried to reflect that in the second season and to bring also many more indigenous voices into the
second season, as well as the voices of many more archeologists. Yeah, in general, I got a chance to get a glimpse of the archaeology community. And in archaeology,
in science in general, I don't have much patience for this kind of arrogance or snark
or dismissal of general human curiosity that I think your work inspires in people. So that's why people like Ed Barnhart,
who I recently had a conversation with,
you know, he radiates sort of kindness and curiosity as well.
And it's like that kind of approach to ideas,
especially about human history, it inspires people.
It inspires millions of people to ask questions.
I mean, that's why you had Keanu Reeves on the new season.
He's basically coming to the show from that same perspective of curiosity.
Keanu is genuinely curious about the past and very, very interested in it.
And he's bringing to it questions that everybody brings to the past.
He's speaking for every man in the series. So given that, can you maybe steelman the case that archaeologists make about
this period that we've been talking about? Can you make the case that that is indeed what happened
is it was hunter-gatherers for a long time, and then there was a cataclysm, a very difficult
period in human history with the younger Dryas, and that changed
the environment and then led to the springing up of civilizations at different places on
earth. Can you sort of make the case for that?
No, I completely understand why that is the position of archaeology, because that's what
they've found. Archaeology is very much wishing to define itself as a science, and it uses the techniques of weighing
and measuring and counting are very key to what archaeology does. And in what they've found and
what they've studied around the world, they don't see any traces of a lost civilization. And the idea that besides the, we live in a very politically
correct world today, and the idea that some kind of lost civilization brought knowledge
to other cultures around the world is seen as almost racist or colonialist in some way.
It triggers that aspect as well. But basically, I think majority of archaeologists
are in complete good faith on this. I don't think that anybody's really seeking to frame me. I think
that what we're hearing from most archaeologists, some much more vicious than others, but what we're
hearing from most archaeologists is this is what we found and we don't see evidence for a lost civilization in it.
To that, I must reply. Please look at the myths. Please consider the implications of the Younger
Dryas. Please look at the ancient astronomy. Please look at those ancient maps and don't just
dismiss them and sneer at them. And for God's sake, please look more deeply at the parts
of the world that were immensely habitable and attractive during the Ice Age and that
have hardly been studied by archaeology at all before you tell us that your theory is
the only one that can possibly be correct. In fact, it's a very arrogant and silly position
of archaeology because archaeological theories are always being overthrown.
It can take years, it can take decades, it took decades in the case of the Clovis first
hypothesis for the settlement of the Americas. But sooner or later, a bad idea will be kicked
out by a preponderance of evidence that that idea does not explain.
If we can just look back at your debate with Flint Dibble on Joe Rogan experience,
what are some takeaways from that? What have you learned? Maybe what are some things you like
about Flint? You said that he's one of your big critics, but what do you like about his ideas and
what what were you maybe bothered by? First of all, just very recently, and it can be found on my YouTube channel and it's signaled
on my website, I have made a video, runs about an hour, which looks at a series of statements
that Flint made during the debate, which I was not prepared to answer.
And it turns out that some of those statements are not correct.
The notion, for example, that there were three million shipwrecks that have been mapped,
Flint actually uses the word mapped, three million shipwrecks that have been mapped at
one point in the debate.
And I've put that clip into the video that I brought out.
That is not a fact.
That is an estimate, a UNESCO estimate.
And actually in the small print on one of the slides that he has on the screen, you can see the
word estimate, but he never expresses that word out loud. So those who are listening to the podcast
rather than watching it wouldn't even have a chance to see that. And I sitting there in the studio
didn't see that word estimate either. And I didn't know that. I thought, my God, Flint has a point here. If there'd been three million shipwrecks
found and mapped, if that's the case, the absence of any shipwreck from a lost civilization of the
ice age is a problem. But then I discovered that it isn't three million shipwrecks that have been
mapped. It's much, much less than that. And maybe it's 250,000, still a large number, but most of them from the last thousand years. Unfortunately,
what Flint didn't go into, and perhaps he should have shared with the audience, and
again I go into this in the video, is that there is indisputable evidence that human
beings were seafarers. as much as 50 or 60
thousand years ago. The peopling of Australia involved a relatively short
90 kilometers, 100 kilometer ocean voyage, but nevertheless it was an ocean
voyage and it must have involved a large enough people, a large enough number of
people to create a permanent population that wouldn't go extinct. The settlement
of Cyprus is the same thing. It was always an island even during the ice age.
And no ships have survived that speak
to the settlement of Australia,
and no ships have survived that speak
to the settlement of Cyprus either,
but that doesn't mean that that thing didn't happen.
I should just like linger on this
because for me it was the shipwrecks thing was convincing.
And then looking back, first of all watching your video,
but also just realizing the people in Australia part,
that's my impolognes.
Yeah.
50,000 years ago.
Yeah.
Just imagine being the person standing on the shore,
looking out into the ocean,
standing on the shore of a harsh environment,
looking out to the ocean, you know, a harsh environment,
and deciding that, you know what,
I'm going to go towards near certain death.
I don't know what's on the other side of that water.
You can't see 90 kilometers.
And humans did it.
Yeah.
I love humans so much.
Again, it's that urge to explore.
And I suggest that it probably began with a few pioneers who made the journey there
and back.
They ventured into the water.
They definitely had boats.
And lo and behold, after a two or three day voyage, they ended up on a coastline.
You're an individual.
You've got my relatively straightforward island hopping where each island is within sight
of each other as far as Timor.
And when you get to Timor, suddenly you can't island hop anymore.
There's an expansive ocean that you can't see across. But that urge to explore, that curiosity that is central to the human condition
would undoubtedly have led some adventurous individuals to want to find out more and even
be willing to risk their lives. And that first reconnoitering of what lay beyond that strait
would have undoubtedly been undertaken
by very few individuals.
Not enough to create a permanent population in Australia.
But when they came back with the good news
that there's a whole land there.
That's the land that geographers call Sahul,
which in just as Sunda was the Ice Age, Indonesian and Malaysian peninsula all joined
together into one landmass.
So Sahul was New Guinea joined to Australia.
So they would have made landfall in New Guinea.
And then they think, well, here is this vast, open, incredible land.
We need to bring more people here.
And that would have involved larger craft. You need
to bring people with resources and you need to bring enough of them, both men and women,
in order to produce a population that will not rapidly become extinct. It's the same
in Cyprus. There, the detailed work that's been done suggests very strongly that we're looking at
planned migrations of groups of people in excess of a thousand at a time, bringing animals with them.
And this certainly would have involved multiple boats and boats of a significant size.
And there's no archaeological evidence of those boats?
None whatsoever. The oldest boat that's ever been found in the world is the Dokos Shipwreck
off Greece, which is around 5,000 years old, if I recall correctly.
So everything that makes a boat is lost to time?
Yes, boats can be preserved under certain circumstances. There's a wreck at the bottom
of the Black Sea, almost two miles deep. I didn't know the Black Sea was that deep,
but there's a wreck and there's no oxygen down there.
That is more than 2,000 years old and is still in pretty much perfect condition. But in other
conditions, the structure of the ship evaporates. Sometimes what you're left with is the cargo of
the ship. You could say there was a ship that sank here, but the ship itself has gone.
The fact is, we know that our ancestors were seafarers as much as 50,000 years ago, and
no ship has survived to testify to that, yet we accept that they were.
Do you think one day we'll find a ship that's 10, 20, 30, 40, 50,000 years old?
It's not impossible.
I think it's quite unlikely given the very thin survival
of ships, the further back you go in time with the oldest, as I say, being about 6,000 years old now.
And then the other thing to take into account is the Younger Dryas event itself and the
cataclysmic circumstances of that event and the roiling of the seas that would have taken place then.
How much would have survived in a boat accident
at that time would have survived
for thousands of years afterwards, I'm not sure.
But I don't give up hope, it's possible.
So, okay, so that's back to the three million shipwrecks.
Yeah.
So what's your takeaway from that debate?
Well, my takeaway from that debate is
that I should have been better prepared
and I should have been less angry.
I have to say that Flint had really disturbed me
with these constant snide, not quite exact references to racism and white supremacism in my work.
I detest such things. And to have those labels stuck on me.
He's always avoided taking direct responsibility, pretty much always avoided.
There's one example that I include in the video I've made where he really hasn't successfully avoided it. But
in most cases, he's trying to say that I rely on sources that were racist, but that he's
not saying that I myself am a racist. But the end result of those statements is that
people all around the world came to the conclusion that Graham Hancock is a racist and a white
supremacist. And that really got under my skin and it really upset me. And I felt angry about it. And I felt that I was there to defend ancient apocalypse season one.
Whereas in fact, what I was there to do was to listen to a series of lectures where an
archaeologist tells me what archaeologists have found and that somehow I'm to deduce that from
what they have found, they're not gonna find anything else.
At least not anything to do with the lost civilization.
Listen, I feel you, I've seen the intensity of the attacks
and the whole racism label is the one
that can get under your skin.
And it's a toolbox that's been prevalent
over the past, let's say decade,
maybe a little bit more as a method of cancellation.
When a person is the opposite of racist very often,
it's kind of hilarious to watch,
but it can get under your skin,
especially when you have certain dynamics
that happen on the internet,
where it seeps into a Wikipedia page,
and then other people read that Wikipedia page,
and you get to hear it from like friends,
oh, I didn't know you're, whatever,
and you realize that Wikipedia,
description of who you are actually has a lot of power,
not by people that know you well,
but by people that just kind of are learning about you
for the first time.
And they can really start to annoy you
and get onto your skin when the people
are kind of indirectly injecting,
they're writing articles about
you, they can then be cited by Wikipedia.
It can really bother a person who is actually trying to do good science or just trying to
inspire people with different ideas.
I felt that my work was being deliberately misrepresented and I felt that I as a human
being was being insulted and wronged in ways that are deeply hurtful. My wife and I have six
children between us and we have nine grandchildren. And of those nine grandchildren, seven are
of mixed race. And this is my family. And these are kids who are going to grow up and
read Wikipedia and learn from reading Wikipedia that grandpa was some kind of racist.
This is a personal issue for me and I'm afraid I carried that personal anger into the debate and
it made me less effective than I should have been. But ultimately, I do want to pay tribute to Flint.
He is an excellent debater. He's got a very sharp mind. He's a very clever man, and he's very fast on his feet. And I recognize
that. I was definitely up against a superior debater in that debate. I'm not sure that
I have those debating skills, and I certainly didn't have them on that particular day.
I also admire about Flint something else, which is that he was willing to be there.
Most archaeologists don't want to talk to me at all. They want to insult me from the sidelines. They want to make sure that Wikipedia keeps on calling
me a pseudo-archaeologist or a purveyor of pseudo-archaeological theories. They want
to make sure that the hints of racism are there, but they actually don't want to sit
down and confront me. At least Flint was willing to do that, and I'm grateful to him for that.
I think in that sense, it is an important encounter between people with, let's say, an alternative view of history
and those with a very much mainstream view of history that archaeology gives us. And
he's also a very determined character. He doesn't give up. So all of those things about
him I admire and respect. But I think he fought dirty during the debate
and I've said exactly why in this video
that I now have up on YouTube.
To say a positive thing that I enjoyed,
I think towards the end,
and him speaking about agriculture was pretty interesting.
So the techniques of archeology are pretty interesting.
Like where you can get some insights
through the fog of time about like what people were doing,
how they were living.
That's pretty interesting.
It's very interesting.
It's a very important discipline.
And I've said many times before publicly,
I couldn't do any of my work
without the work that archeologists do.
I emphasize very strongly in this video
that I don't study what archaeologists
study. But nevertheless, the data that archaeologists have generated over the last century or so
has been incredibly valuable to me in the work that I do. But when I look at the great
Sphinx and the studies of archaeology saying that this is the work of the pharaoh Khafre,
despite the absence of any single contemporary inscription that describes it to Khafre. And in fact, the presence of other
inscriptions that say that it was already there in the time of Khufu, I am not looking
at what Egyptologists study. They just dismiss all of that and lock into the Khafre connection.
At Gobekli Tepe, I'm not really looking at what archaeologists look at. I'm looking at
the alignments of the megaliths and how they seem to track procession of the
star Sirius over a period of time.
Archaeologists aren't interested in any of that.
So I value and respect archaeology.
I think it's an incredible tool for investigating our past, but I wish archaeologists would
bring a slightly gentler frame of mind to it and a slightly
open-air perspective.
And also that archaeologists would be willing to trust the general public to make up their
own minds.
It's as though certain archaeologists are afraid of the public being presented with
an alternative point of view, which they regard as quote unquote dangerous because they somehow
underestimate the intelligence
of the general public and think the general public are just going to accept that much.
Actually by condemning those alternative point of view, archaeologists make it much more
likely that the general public will accept those alternative point of view because there
is a great distrust of experts in our society today and behaving in a snobbish, arrogant
way.
We archaeologists are the only people who are
really qualified to speak about the past and anybody else who speaks about the past is dangerous.
That actually is not helpful to archaeology in the long term. There could be a much more positive
and a much more cooperative relationship. And I can see that relationship with a gentleman like
Ed Barnhart. It was very much the case with archaeologist Marty Parsonin
from the University of Helsinki and with geographer Alceo Ranze, a Brazilian geographer,
very, very senior figure, who I worked with in the Amazon for season two of Ancient Apocalypse,
looking at these astonishing earthworks that have emerged from the Amazon jungle and which more and
more are now being found with LIDAR.
Indeed, we found some of them ourselves with LIDAR while we were there.
Yeah, that was an incredible part of the show that I got a chance to preview.
It's like there's all this earthworks, yeah, the traces of things built on the ground
that probably you can only really appreciate when you look from up above.
That's right.
So the idea that they build stuff that you can only appreciate when viewed from up above means
they had a very kind of deep relationship with the sky.
With the sky.
And a very good knowledge of geometry as well, because these are geometrical structures.
Some of them even seem to incorporate geometrical games, almost like squaring the circle. It's
not quite that, but you have a lovely square earthwork with a lovely circle earthwork right
in the middle of it. Whatever else they were, they were geometers. They were not just builders
of fantastically huge earthworks that nobody expected in the
Amazon, not just builders of cities that we now know existed in the Amazon, but that they
were astronomers and mathematicians as well.
Everything we're talking about is so full of mystery.
It's just fascinating, especially the farther back we go.
That's what I love about the past is the mystery that's there.
And that's another thing that
I regret about some archeologists is that their mission seems to be to drain all mystery
out of the past, to suck it dry like some kind of vampire, sucking the blood out of
the past and to reduce it to a series of numbers that appear to be scientific. I think that's most unfortunate. The past is deeply mysterious.
The whole story of life on Earth is deeply mysterious. I mean, we were talking about
the timeline of human beings, but you know, if you go back to the formation of the Earth
itself, if I've got the figures right, it's about four and a half billion years ago that the Earth supposedly
formed. It was then incredibly hot and inhospitable to life for the next several hundred million
years. But it was actually Francis Crick who pointed out something odd that within a hundred
million years of the Earth being cool enough to support life, there's bacterial
life all over the planet.
And Crick wrote a book called Life Itself that was published in 1981.
And he suggested that life had been brought here by a process of panspermia.
Now that's an idea that's around in circulation, that comets may carry bacteria which can seed
life on planets.
But Crick actually in life itself was talking about directed panspermia.
He envisaged, this is Crick, not me, he envisaged an alien civilization far away across the
galaxy which faced extinction.
Perhaps a supernova was going to go off in the neighborhood. They were highly advanced.
Their first thought might have been, let's get ourselves off the planet and go and populate
some other planet, but the distances of interstellar space were so great. So their second thought was,
let's preserve our DNA. Let's put genetically engineered bacteria into cryogenic chambers and fire
them off into the universe in all directions.
And bottom line of Crick's theory in life itself is one of those cryogenic containers
containing bacterial life from another solar system crashed into the early earth.
And that's why life began so suddenly here on Earth. If we as a human civilization continue,
I think that is the one way to create backups of us,
elsewhere in the universe,
given the space is to do a life gun
and shoot it everywhere.
And then it just plants.
And you kind of hope that whatever is the magic
that makes up human consciousness,
and if that magic is
already there in the initial DNA of the bacteria.
The potential for that magic is there.
The potential is there.
And evolutionary forces will work upon it in different ways in different environments.
But the potential is there.
Yes, it's something that we would do.
If we were facing a complete extinction of life
on planet Earth, a major global effort would be made
to preserve it somehow.
And that might well include firing off cryogenic chambers
into the universe and hoping that some of them
would land somewhere hospitable.
And as you were mentioning,
there's just so many interesting mysteries
along the way here. For example, I mean, it's like, I think like three billion years, it was single cell organisms.
So it seems like life was pretty good.
Single cell organisms that there was no need for multicellularity that like for animals,
for any of this kind of stuff.
So why is that?
It seems like you could adapt much better
if you're a more complicated organism.
It took a really long time to take that leap.
Is it because it's really hard to do?
And what was the forcing function to do that kind of leap?
And the same, I mean, for us to be selfish
and self-obsessed, for us humans,
like what was the magic leap to homo sapiens from the other hominids?
And why did homo sapiens win out against the Androthals and the other competitors?
Why are they not around anymore?
So those are all fascinating mysteries.
And it feels like the more we.
Proposed sort of radical ideas
about our past and take it seriously and explore,
the more we'll be able to sort of figure out that puzzle
that leads all the way back to homo sapiens
and maybe all the way back to the origin of life on Earth.
Yeah, I think that homo sapiens is the tail end
of a very long, deep series of mysteries
that goes back right to the beginning of life
on this planet and probably long before actually,
because this planet is part of the universe
and God knows what else is out there in the universe.
Why do you think homo sapiens evolved?
Like what was the magic thing?
So there's a bunch of theories about fire
leading to meat to cooking, which can fuel the brain.
That's one.
The other is like social interaction.
We're able to use our imagination to construct ideas
and share those ideas and tell great stories.
And that is somehow an evolutionary advantage.
Do you have any like favorite conception of?
Well, it's interesting.
There's no doubt that anatomically modern humans and Neanderthals
coexisted in Europe for at least 10,000 years, probably more than that. And yet one of the
popular views is that anatomically modern humans wiped out the Neanderthals, that we
killed them off. But at the same time, we were into breeding with the Neanderthals. In a sense,
the Neanderthals are not gone. They are still within us today. We are part Neanderthal.
There's another theory that I've read about. There is some evidence that Neanderthals were
cannibals, that ritual cannibalism took place amongst Neanderthals, and particularly the eating of human brains.
And this can cause kuru, which can kill off whole populations. That's another suggestion
of whether Neanderthals died out. There's lots of possibilities that have been put forward.
Maybe we just out-competed them. Maybe anatomically modern humans had some brain connections that
they didn't have, even though the Neanderthal brain was bigger than the brain of anatomically modern humans had some brain connections that they didn't have, even though the Neanderthal brain was bigger than the brain of anatomically modern human beings, as the old saying goes, size isn't everything.
Maybe we just had a more compact, more efficient brain. The fact of the matter is that Neanderthals and Denisovans did not survive the rise of homo sapiens.
For our discussion though, what is interesting is all the hominids seem to be explorers.
Yes.
They spread.
I mean, I didn't know this fact.
The fact that Homo erectus was all over the planet more than a million years ago is testament
to that.
And I do think that exploration urge is fundamental to humanity.
And I would like to say that's what I think I'm doing.
I'm, I'm exercising my urge to explore the past in, in my own way, making my own path
and defining, defining my own route.
That's the leap from non-human to human.
Uh, one of the things you've discussed is your idea of what was thehuman to human. One of the things you've discussed is your idea
of what was the leap to human civilization.
What is the driver?
What is the inspiration for humans to form civilizations?
And for you, that's shamanism.
Definitely.
Can you explain what that means?
I think that shamanism is the origin of everything,
of value in humanity. I think it was the earliest form of science.
When I spend time with shamans in the Amazon, I observe people who are constantly experimenting with plants in a very scientific way. They're always trying a pinch of this and a pinch of that in different forms,
for example, of the ayahuasca brew to see if it enhances it or makes it makes it different
in any way. The invention of curare is a remarkable scientific feat, which is entirely down to
shamans in the Amazon. They are the scientists of the hunter-forager state of society. And they were the ancient
leaders of human civilization. So I think all civilization arises out of shamanism.
And shamanism is a naturally scientific endeavor where experimentation is undertaken and exploration
and investigation
of the environment around us. And what I'm suggesting is that one group, perhaps more
than one group, went a bit further than other groups did and used that study of the skies
and developed navigational techniques and were able to sail and explore the earth. But that ultimately
what lies behind it is the same curiosity and investigative skill that shamans are still
using in the Amazon to this day. And I do see them as scientists in a very proper use
of the word.
But do you think something like ayahuasca was a part of that process?
Yes. Ayahuasca is the result of shamanistic investigation of what's available in the Amazon.
Of course, ayahuasca is all the fad in Western industrialized societies today. And some people
see it as a miracle cure for all kinds of ailments and problems. And perhaps it is,
perhaps it can be in certain ways. Ayahuasca itself is not an Amazonian word. It comes from
the Quechua language and it means the vine of souls or the vine of the dead. But the ayahuasca
vine is only one of two principal ingredients in the ayahuasca brew. And the other ingredient are leaves
that contain dimethyltryptamine. And there are two sources of that. One is a bush called
Cicotria viridis, that's its botanical name. They call it chacruna in the Amazon. And its
leaves are rich in dimethyltryptamine DMT, which is arguably the most powerful psychedelic known to science. The other source comes from
another vine, Diplopteris cabrirana, which the leaves of that vine also contain DMT.
The ayahuasca vine on its own is not going to give you a visionary journey. The leaves that contain
DMT on their own, whether they come from diplopteris or whether
they come from chacruna, are not going to give you a visionary journey.
The reason they're not going to give you the visionary journey is because of the enzyme
monoamine oxidase in the gut that shuts down DMT when absorbed orally.
Basically DMT is not accessible orally unless you combine it with a monoamine oxidase inhibitor
And that's what I mean when I'm talking about science in the Amazon because there's so many tens of thousands hundreds
Thousands different species of plants and trees in the Amazon and they've gone around and they found
Just two or three of them that put together can produce these extraordinary visionary experiences
Imagine the number of plants they had to have eaten.
It consumed and smoked, all kinds of combinations to arrive at that.
Exactly.
To realize that this is something very special.
And then to use the principles there to find another form of it.
So ayahuasca is the form that is made with the ayahuasca vine and
the leaves of the chacruna plant. But yaha is made from the ayahuasca vine and the leaves
of another vine, Diplopchuris cabrera, which contain not only NNDMT, which is the DMT that
everybody's pretty much familiar with these days, but also 5-MeO DMT. And the Yahé experience,
which I have also had, in my view, is more intense and more powerful, almost to the point
of being overwhelming than the Ayahuasca experience. But the result of this sophisticated chemistry that we find taking place here is a brew, which is hideous
to drink.
The taste, I find it quite repulsive.
I almost retch just smelling it in the cup, but then unleashes these extraordinary experiences.
And it isn't just pretty visuals.
It's the sense of encounters with sentient others, that there are sentient beings, that
somehow we're surrounded by a realm of sentience that is not normally accessible to us.
And that what the ayahuasca brew and certain other psychedelics like some psilocybin mushrooms
in a high enough dose can do it as well. LSD can do it. But Ayahuasca is the master in
this of lowering the veil to what appears to be a seamlessly convincing other realm,
other world. And of course, the hardline rational scientists will say that's just all fantasies of your brain.
But I don't think we fully understand or even close to understanding exactly what consciousness
is.
And I remain open to two possibilities, that consciousness is generated by the brain, is
made by the brain in the way that a factory makes cars.
But I also am open to the possibility that the brain is a receiver
of consciousness, just as a television set is the receiver of television signals. And
that if that is the case, then we locked into the physical realm, we need our everyday alert
problem solving state of consciousness. And That's the state of consciousness that Western civilization values and highly encourages. But these other states of consciousness
that allow us to access alternative realities are possibly more important. It may be apocryphal, but it was reported after Francis Crick's
role and his Nobel Prize for the discovery of the double helix that he finally got it
under the influence of LSD. There's the classic example of Kerry Mullis and the Polymerase
chain reaction. He said he got that under the influence of LSD. So the notion that the
alert problem-solving
state of consciousness is the only valuable state of consciousness is disproved by valuable
experiences that people have had in a visionary state. But the question that remains unresolved
is those entities that we encounter, and not everybody encounters them, and you're certainly
not going to encounter them on every ayahuasca trip. There are ayahuasca journeys where nothing seems to happen. I
suspect something does happen, but it happens at a subconscious level. I know that shamans
in the Amazon regard those trips where actually you don't see visions as amongst the most
valuable, and they say you are learning stuff that you're not remembering, but you're learning it anyway.
These sentient others that are encountered, what are they? Are they just figments of our
brain on drugs? Or are we actually gaining access to a parallel reality, which is inhabited
by consciousness, which is in a non-physical form? And I'm equally open to that idea. I think that may be what
is going on here with ayahuasca. But the other thing is that there is a presence within the
ayahuasca brew, and she is present both in ayahuasca and in yaha. And that's one of the
reasons why the shamans say that actually the master of the process is the ayahuasca and in Yahe. And that's one of the reasons why the shamans say that actually
the master of the process is the Ayahuasca vine, not the leaves. It's as though the vine
has harnessed the leaves to gain access to human consciousness. And there, if you have
sufficient exposure to Ayahuasca or Yahe, you drink it enough times. I've had maybe
75 or 80 journeys with Ayahuasca. You definitely start to feel an intelligent
presence with a definite personality, which I interpret as feminine and which most people
in the West interpreted as feminine and they call her Mother Ayahuasca. There are some
tribes in the Amazon who interpret the spirit of ayahuasca as male, but in all cases, that spirit is seen as a
teacher. That's fundamentally what ayahuasca is. It's a teacher and it teaches moral lessons.
And that's fascinating that a mixture of two plants should cause us to reflect on our own
behavior and how it may have hurt and damaged and affected others and fill us with a powerful wish not to repeat
that negative behavior again in the future.
The more baggage you carry in your life, the harder the beating that ayahuasca is going
to give you until it forces you to confront and take responsibility for your own behavior.
And that is an extraordinary thing to come from a plant brew in that way. I think
ayahuasca is the most powerful of all the plant medicines for accessing these mysterious
realms, but there's no doubt you can access them. They're all tryptamines. They're all
related to one another in one way. You can access them through LSD, and you certainly can access them
through psilocybin mushrooms as well,
in large enough dose.
Both possibilities, as you describe, are interesting,
and to me they're kind of akin to each other.
I wonder what the limit of the brain's capacity
is to create imaginary worlds and treat them seriously,
make them real
and in those worlds explore and have real sort of moral deep brainstorming sessions
with those entities. So it's almost like the power of the human mind to imagine taken to its
power of the human mind to imagine taken to its limit.
It is. And the curious thing is that the same iconography,
people paint their visions after ayahuasca sessions.
People were painting in Europe,
in the cave of Lascaux, for example,
and of course they had access to silicide mushrooms
in prehistoric Europe.
There's a remarkable commonality in the imagery that is painted. I like to give credit to where credit is due and there are
two names that need to be mentioned here. One is the late great Terence McKenna and
his book Food of the Gods where he proposed the idea very strongly that it was our ancestral
encounters with psychedelics
that made us fully human. That's what switched on the modern human mind.
And very much the same idea began to be explored a bit earlier by Professor David Lewis Williams
at the University of Witwatersrand in South Africa, a fabulous book called The Mind in
the Cave, where he is again arguing that these astonishing similarities
in cave art and rock art all around the world can only be properly explained by people in
deeply altered states of consciousness attempting to remember when they return to a normal everyday
state of consciousness, attempting to remember their visions and document them on permanent media
like the wall of a cave.
So typically you get a lot of geometric patterns, but you also got entities.
And those entities often are therianthropes, part animal, part human in form, might have
the head of a wolf and the body of a human being, might have the head of a bird and the
body of a human being and so on and so forth, and that they communicate with us in the visionary state.
Interestingly, although this sounds like woo-woo, and it is an area that most scientists would
steer clear of at risk of their careers, there is very serious work now being done at Imperial
College in London and at the University of California at San Diego,
where volunteers are being given extended DMT. There's a new technology, DMTX, where
the DMT is fed directly into the bloodstream by drip, and it's possible to keep the individual
in the peak DMT state, which normally when you smoke or vape DMT,
you're looking if you're lucky at 10 minutes or if you're unlucky if it's a bad journey
because those 10 minutes can seem like forever. But with DMTX, with the drip feeding of DMT
into the bloodstream, these volunteers actually could be kept in the peak state for hours.
Unlike LSD, where you rapidly build up tolerance, nobody ever builds up tolerance to DMT.
It always hits you with the same power.
Even if you took it yesterday and the day before and you're taking it tomorrow as well,
it's still going to have that same power.
There's no tolerance there.
That's how they can use that lack of tolerance to keep volunteers in this state.
Then when they debrief those volunteers,
they're also putting them in MRI scanners
and looking at what's happening in the brain.
But when they debrief them, they're
all talking about encounters with sentient others.
There's even a group now called Sentient Others,
where people are exchanging.
Volunteers are now exchanging their experiences.
They weren't allowed to do so at the beginning
of the experiment, but now that most of them have left it, they're exchanging their experiences. They weren't allowed to do so at the beginning of the experiment, but now that most of them have left it, they're exchanging their experiences. And it's all about
encounters with insentient others who wish to teach them moral lessons. Now, to me, that's wild.
What is going on here? How do we account for this? Yeah, I get the notion of hallucinations and
brightly colored visuals,
but the moral lessons that come with it,
those are very odd.
Yeah, and would you say that the reason
that could give birth to a civilization
is it because such visions can help create myths,
and especially like religious myths,
that would be a cohesive thing
for a large group of people to get around.
Yeah. And can help us to be better members of our own community.
Right, with moral lessons.
Yeah. More contributing members of our community, more caring,
more nurturing members of our community. That's got to be good for any community.
I've said this a dozen times, but I'll say it again. If I had the power to do so, I would make it a law, an absolute law, that anybody running
for a powerful political position, particularly if that position is president or head of state
in any kind of way, that that person has to undergo the ayahuasca ordeal first. They have to have 10 or 12 sessions of ayahuasca as
a condition for applying for the job. I suspect that most who had had those experiences wouldn't
want to apply for the job anymore. They would want to live a different kind of life. And
those who did want to carry on being a leader of a nation would be very different people from the people who are leading the nations of the earth into
chaos and destruction today.
Yeah, they'll be doing it for the right reasons. I mentioned to you,
I recently interviewed Donald Trump and actually brought up this same, uh,
same idea that, uh,
it would be a much better world if most of Congress and most politicians would
take some form of psychedelic at the very least.
I have no doubt that it would be a better world. I mean, this raises an interesting point, which is
the role of government in controlling our consciousness. And in my opinion, the so-called
war on drugs is one of the fundamental abuses of human rights that have been undertaken in the past 60 years.
It should be a Republican issue.
If I understand the Republican party correctly,
the Republican party believes in individual freedom
for adults as much as possible,
and particularly the freedom to make choices
over their own bodies.
But in the case of even cannabis,
I know that's one of the great things that's happening in America.
It's happening state by state where cannabis
is being legalized and that draconian hand of government
is being taken off the back of people
who are consuming a medicine that is far less harmful
than alcohol, which is glorified in our society.
We cannot say that we are free if we allow a government
to dictate to us what experiences we may or may not have
in our inner consciousness while doing no harm to others.
And the point there is we already have a whole raft of laws
that deal with us when we do harm to others.
Do we really need laws that tell us what we may or may
not experience in the inner sanctum of our own consciousness? I think it's a fundamental
violation of adult sovereignty. We would have much less drug problems if these drugs were
all legalized and made available to people without shaming them, without punishing them in any way, but
just part of normal social life. And then you could be sure that you were getting good product
rather than really shitty product, which has been cut with all sorts of other things.
Ultimately, the way forward is for adults to take responsibility for their own behavior and for
society to allow that to happen and not to have big government
taking responsibility for decisions that should be in the hands of individuals.
And for me also it's exciting some of these substances like psilocybin are being integrated
into scientific studies, large scales.
It's really interesting.
We've seen a revolution in the way science looks at psychedelics in the last 20, 25 years.
They were in that highly demonized
category. But again, it's one of those paradigms which gets overwhelmed by new evidence and
it began to be realized that psilocybin and other psychedelics are very helpful in a range
of conditions from which people suffer, post-traumatic stress disorder, the fear of death when you're suffering
from terminal cancer can be overwhelming.
And it's been found that psilocybin can remove that.
Deep depressions can be evaporated
with one single massive psilocybin journey.
They just go away.
There's really good science on this.
And they are being integrated into conventional medicine more and more.
We'll see it happening. I'm not sure if it'll happen as much as as fast as I
would like to see it happen in my lifetime but it is gonna happen.
Yeah actually just recently found out that you had a TED talk, war on
consciousness, that was taken down. Yeah. And that was just part of just the
general resistance.
Cause it was a pretty, it wasn't a radical,
it wasn't really a radical talk.
I was talking about ayahuasca and I was talking about
the view that I hold very strongly,
that as long as we do no harm to others,
sovereign adults should be allowed to make decisions
about their own bodies and not face a jail sentence
or shaming as a result.
But this, so it was a Ted X talk, not a TED talk, organized by a local TED group, they call them TEDx
talks.
And I gave this talk about the war on consciousness.
And it was immediately pulled down from TED's main channel with all kinds of bizarre reasons
being given.
But unfortunately, it was too late
because a number of people had already downloaded the talk
and then uploaded it onto other YouTube channels.
And actually their banning of it made it go viral
in a way that would not have happened otherwise.
But again, it's a sign that points of view
that are not acceptable to those in positions of power
are simply dismissed and shut down, or at least attempts are made to do so.
In general, just along that line of thinking,
I'm pretty sure that what we understand
about consciousness today will seem silly
to humans from a hundred years from now.
You bet it will.
Especially if we harness psychedelics
to investigate consciousness.
And you know, that is what
is happening at Imperial College right now is the investigation of the experience. They're not
looking, there are other trials that are looking for the therapeutic potential of DMT, but in this
case, they're looking entirely at the experiences that people have and why they're so similar
from people from different age groups and different genders
and different parts of the world
are all having the same experiences.
And for me, from an engineer perspective,
it's interesting if it's possible to engineer consciousness
in artificial beings.
Yeah.
It's another way to approach the question
of how special is human consciousness.
Yeah.
How, from where does it arise?
Is it something that permeates all of life?
And then in that case, what is the thing
that makes life special?
Like what is life?
What is these living organisms that we have here
and that evolved to create humans?
What is truly special about humans?
And it's both scary and exciting to consider
the possibility that we can create
something like this. Yeah, but why not? We're a vehicle for consciousness, in my view. I think
consciousness is present in all life on earth. I don't think it's limited to human beings. We
have the equipment to manifest and express that consciousness in the way that a dog, for example,
doesn't have, or a snail doesn't have, or a pigeon doesn't have. But when I look at two pigeons sitting on my garden fence and
rubbing up close to each other and enjoying each other's company and taking off together
and hanging out together, I think they're conscious beings. And I think consciousness
is everywhere. I think it's the basis of everything. And I suspect that fundamentally consciousness is non-physical and that it can manifest in
physical forms where it can then have experiences that would not be available in the non-physical
state.
That's a guess.
That'd be fascinating because then you can construct all kinds of physical forms to manifest
the consciousness.
And see if consciousness enters, if they become consciousness.
Isn't there some suggestion that artificial intelligence is already becoming conscious?
That makes humans really uncomfortable.
Because we are at the top of the food chain, we consider ourselves truly special.
And to consider that there's other things that could be special is scary.
Well, look how other people make us uncomfortable too.
I mean, look at the state of the world
today. All the conflicts that are raging, that's because we're afraid. When I say we,
I'm speaking nation by nation. We are afraid of other people. We fear that they're going
to hurt us or damage us in some way. And so we seek to stop that. It's the root of many,
many conflicts, this fear. And so fear of AI may
not be such a good idea after all. It might be very interesting to go down that route
and see where it comes. Certainly in terms of exploring consciousness, it is very interesting.
Yeah, fear is a useful thing, but it can also be destructive.
Well, it can be destructive and it can shut you down completely.
If you look into the future, maybe the next hundred years, what do you hope are the interesting
discoveries in archaeology that we'll find?
Well, I'd really like to know how the Great Pyramid was built.
We now have, with new tech, with scanning technology, it's now become apparent that
there are many major voids within the Great Pyramid.
Right above the Grand Gallery,
there's what looks like a second Grand Gallery that has been identified with remote scanning.
New chambers, one of them has even been opened up already, are being found as a result of this.
It may be that the Great Pyramid will ultimately give up its secrets. I often think that the Great Pyramid is partly designed to do that. It's designed to invite its own initiates.
Some people aren't interested in the Great Pyramid at all, but some people are fascinated
by it and they're drawn towards it. And when they're drawn towards it, it immediately starts
raising questions in their minds and they seek answers to their questions. So it's like saying, here I stand, investigate me, find out about me, figure out what I am. Why
have I got these two shafts cut into the side of the so-called Queen's chamber? Why do they
slope up through the body of the Great Pyramid? Why do they not exit on the outside of the
Great Pyramid? Why when we send a robot up those shafts, do we find them after about 160 feet blocked by a door with metal handles? Why when we
drill through that door to see what's beyond it, three or four feet away, we see another
door? It's like very frustrating, but it's saying to us, keep on exploring. If you're
persistent enough, we'll eventually give you the answer.
So I'm hoping that that answer will come as to how this most mysterious of monuments was actually built and the
inspiration that lay behind it. Certainly, I'm sure it was never a tomb or a tomb only.
The later pyramids might have been. Actually, no pharaonic burial has been discovered in any pyramid, but nevertheless, it's pretty clear that the later pyramids, with the pyramid texts written on the make it a scale model of the earth, to orient
it perfectly to true north, to make it six million tons. This is not a tomb. This is
something else. This is a curiosity device. This is something that is asking us to understand
it. And I hope we will understand it. And I hope Egyptologists will be willing to set
aside that prejudice that they're only looking at a tomb and consider other possibilities and as new tech is revealing these
Previously unknown inner spaces within the Great Pyramid. I think that's going to become more and more likely
So not just the how it was built but the why but the why and to you it seems
Obvious that there will be a cosmic motivation. Yeah, very very much so as above so below
You know which is which is an idea in the Hermetica. The god Hermes for the Greeks was the Greek version
of Thoth, the wisdom god of ancient Egypt. And that's where that saying comes from. It
comes from the Hermetica. But it's expressing an ancient Egyptian idea to mirror the perfection
of the heavens on earth. So you think there's something interesting to be discovered about the how it was built?
You mean beyond the sort of the ideas of using ramps and what's...
Yeah, ramps won't do it. Ramps won't do it, nor will wet sand. It's true that the ancient
Egyptians did haul big objects on sleds on wet sand. There are even reliefs that show the process where an
individual is standing on the front of the sledge pouring water down to lubricate the
sand underneath. That's a perfectly respectable way to move a 200 ton block of stone across
sand, flat sand, if you have enough people to pull it. But that is not going to help you get
dozens of 70 ton granite blocks 300 feet in the air to form the roof of the King's Chamber
and the floor of the chamber above it and the roof of that chamber and the floor of
the chamber above that and so on and so forth. Wet sand never got those objects up there.
Somehow they were lifted up there. Now, yeah, ramps are proposed as the solution,
but where are the remains of those ramps? If you're going to carry blocks weighing
up to two or three tons right to the top of the Great Pyramid to complete your work, you're
going to need a ramp that's going to extend out into the desert for more than a mile at
a 10 degree slope. And it's calculated that a 10 degree slope is about the maximum slope that human labor can haul objects up a ramp. That ramp can't
just be compacted sand since heavy objects are being hauled up. It's going to have to
be made of very solid material, almost as solid as the pyramid itself. Where is it?
We don't see any trace of those so-called ramps that are supposed to have been involved in the construction of the pyramid. I think we don't know. I think
we have no idea it's built. That's why there's so many different theories. We haven't got
the answer yet, but the how of it is one of the big mysteries from our past.
I love the Great Pyramids as a kind of puzzle that was created by the ancient peoples to
be solved by later peoples.
I mean, this is, I don't know if you're aware
of the 10,000 year clock.
I don't know.
That was built by Jeff Bezos and Danny Hillis
in Sierra Diablo mountains in Texas.
So they're building a clock that takes once a year
for 10,000 years.
Oh wow.
So it's talking about, and it's supposed to sort of run,
you know, if there's a nuclear apocalypse, it just runs.
And it's an example of modern humans thinking like,
okay, if 10,000 years from now and beyond,
if something goes wrong,
or the future humans that are way different come back
and they analyze what happened here.
How can we create monuments that they could then analyze
and in that way be curious about, in their curiosity,
discover some deep truths about this current time.
It's an interesting kind of notion of like,
what can we build now?
That would last.
And the answer is that the majority of what we build now wouldn't last.
It would be gone within a few thousand years. But what would last is massive megalithic structures
like the Great Pyramid. That would last. And it could be used to send a message to the future.
I think Gobekli Tepe serves a similar function. I
mean, there it was. It was buried 10,400 years ago. And then for the next 10,000 years, nobody
touched it. Nobody knew it was there. It took the genius of Klaus Schmidt, the original
excavator to realize what he'd found and what it was.
But the great thing about the sealing of Qubekli Tepe,
the deliberate burial of Qubekli Tepe,
is it means that no later culture trod over it
and imposed their organic materials on it
and messed up the dating sequences and so on and so forth,
or vandalized it or used it as a quarry.
It's all there intact.
So you mentioned that the pyramids
and some of the other amazing things that humans have built
was the results of us humans struggling with our mortality.
That's the ultimate goal.
That seems to me what's at the heart
of many pyramids around the world
is that they're connected in one way or another
to the notion of death
and to the notion of death and to the notion of
the exploration of the afterlife. And this is, of course, the fundamental mystery that
all human beings face. We may wish to ignore it. We may wish to pretend that it's not going
to happen, but we are, of course, all mortal. Every one of us, all eight billion or however
many of us that are on the planet right now,
we're all going to face death sooner or later. And the question is, what happens? And there
are a few cultures that really intensely, deeply studied that mystery. We are not one
of them. The general view of science, I think, is that we're accidents of evolution. When
we die, the light blinks
out. There's no more of us. There's no such thing as the soul. But that's not a proven
point. There's no experiment that proves that's the case. We know we die, but we don't know
whether there's such a thing as a soul or not.
Yeah, it's the great mystery.
It's a great mystery that we all share. And those cultures that have investigated it,
and ancient Egypt is the best example,
have investigated it thoroughly and map out the journey that we make after death. But
that notion of a journey after death and of hazards and challenges along the way, and
ultimately of a judgment, that notion is found right around the world and it even manifests
into the three monotheistic face that are still present in the world today.
Well, you're one such human.
And you said you contemplate your own death.
Yeah.
Are you afraid of it?
No, I'm not afraid of death at all.
I'm curious about death.
I think it could be very interesting.
I think it's the beginning of the next great adventure. So I don't fear
it. And I would like to live as long as my body is healthy enough to make living worthwhile.
But I don't fear death. What I do fear is pain. I do fear the humiliation that old age
and the collapse of the faculties can bring. I do fear the cancers that can strike us
down and riddle us with pain and agony. That I fear very, very much indeed. But death is going
to come to all of us. I accept it. It's going to come to me. And I'm not going to say I'm looking
forward to it, but when it happens, I'm going to approach it, I hope, with a sense of curiosity
and a sense of adventure, that there's something beyond this life. It isn't heaven, it isn't hell, but there's
something. The soul goes on. I think reincarnation is a very plausible idea. Again, modern science
would reject that. But there's the excellent work of Ian Stevenson, children who remember past lives,
But there's the excellent work of Ian Stevenson, children who remember past lives, who found that children up to the age of seven often have memories of past lives.
And in cultures where memories of past lives are discouraged, they tend not to express
that much.
But in cultures where memories of past lives are encouraged, like India, they do express
it.
And he found several subjects, children under the age of seven in India, who were able to remember specific details of a past life, and he was able to go to the
place where that past life unfolded and validate those details. So if consciousness is the
basis of everything, if it's the essence of everything, and consciousness benefits in
some way from being incarnated in physical form, then reincarnation makes a lot of sense.
All the investment that the universe has put into creating this home for life may have
a much bigger purpose than just accident.
What a beautiful mystery this whole thing is.
We are immersed in mystery.
We live in the midst of mystery.
We're surrounded by mystery.
And if we pretend otherwise, we're deluding ourselves.
And Graham, thank you so much for inspiring the world to explore that mystery.
Thank you for talking today.
Thank you, Lex. It's been a pleasure.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Graham Hancock. To support this podcast,
please check out our sponsors in the description. And now, let me leave you with some words from
Charles Darwin. It is not the strongest of the species that survives,
nor the most intelligent.
It is the one that is the most adaptable to change.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.
you