Stuff You Should Know - Gobekli Tepe
Episode Date: October 8, 2024Gobekli Tepe is a profoundly ancient spiritual site that shouldn’t exist, according to conventional wisdom. The massive site of columns and pictograms was built thousands of years before humans were... thought to have been able to create anything like it.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey everybody, the time has finally come.
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and Chuck's here, and it's just and that's fine and this is stuff you should know.
One of my favorite types of editions, the distant past let's figure it out edition and it's so surprising edition.
Oh man, you have always loved this stuff, huh?
I certainly have. It jazzes me at least as much as earth science. Yeah. I think, you know, the age-old question,
like, if you could, you know, have a real wayback machine
and go back and go to, like, any concert,
your answer would be like,
mm, something where Tuk-Tuk, like, took bones
and banged it on rocks just so I could see what was going on.
Uh, yeah, from a distance,
as long as he didn't know I was there,
because I assume I would get beaten to death
by that same guy, you know?
You're like that in Kraftwerk's first tour.
I saw Kraftwerk at the Disney concert hall in LA.
I know, I'm very jealous of that show.
I'll tell you about that every time, man.
That was a great show.
Looks amazing.
Yeah, they had like a 3D light display and everything.
Oh man, one day.
Yeah, one day.
They're still touring as far as I know, so why not?
They don't get around here that much, you know?
No, but when they do, go see them.
No, for sure.
Also, while we're on recommendations,
I watched a movie that I'd just been passing over for
years now that was actually worth the watch.
It's a mind-bending horror movie called Triangle.
I think it's Australian, because I'm pretty sure just about everybody in it's Australian,
but they're pretending to be American.
But it's, you know how often like mind bending movies
that like mess with like just reality and stuff
like just fall apart at some point?
This one stayed tight from beginning to end.
It was, yeah, it was a good movie.
I would definitely recommend it.
I mean, I don't think it won any Oscars
or anything like that,
but it was definitely worth watching.
You know what?
You can take the Oscar award and stick it right up the collective butt of the world.
There you go.
This is just called Triangle?
Just Triangle, yes.
All right.
Okay.
Never heard of it.
You all hang out here, you go watch it
and then come back and we'll talk about it.
2009 British film is what it says, is that possible?
I thought it was like 2018.
Does it look like there's a person wearing like a bag
over their head in the, on the poster?
Oh, no, that's another one.
Triangle.
I wanna say 2018.
Fear comes in waves?
Probably, yes.
All right, it looks very B movie,
but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt here.
That's what I thought too.
That can be good.
I totally thought it looked B too,
and then I was like, this is really good.
This movie hasn't gotten enough credit from me.
Okay.
All right, I'll check it out.
Okay, so all of the archeology and anthropology fans
are like, shut up and start talking about
Gobekli Tepe.
I don't know why that was hard.
It's really actually a very easy word to say, or a pair of words. Yeah, I saw Tepe. I don't know why that was hard. It's really actually a very easy word to say,
or a pair of words.
Yeah, I saw tepe, actually.
I don't know how specific that gets, though.
Ooh la la.
That's spoken by people who raise their pinkies
when they drink their tea.
Yeah, but a tepe is like a mound or a hill, correct?
Yeah, and gobekli means belly, so people take it
to basically mean potbelly hill. Yeah, and thisbekli means belly, so people take it to basically mean potbelly hill.
Yeah, and this is a place in Turkey, and it is a place where a lot of archaeological
digging is still going on.
And it was one of these places that is, and I know you love this kind of thing more than
anything, but like when an archaeological find kind of upends traditional thought of how we thought things were, and this is one
of the great examples of that.
Yeah, especially when it's true and not like pseudoscience, like somebody's like, it was
ancient aliens.
Right.
Where's the proof?
They're like, it was ancient aliens, man.
Don't, don't harsh my mellow.
Well, you want to hear something funny?
What?
Part of what I watched on YouTube about this was from the show Ancient Aliens.
Yeah, yeah.
There's a lot of like pseudo-archaeology that surrounds this that you have to kind of be careful of.
Yeah, for sure.
This is like true.
Like this truly has upended our current or yeah, I guess still basically our current understanding.
And that is thus. We've told the story many, many times on this podcast.
And it turns out that it's probably at least oversimplified if not just outright incorrect.
But the whole basis of what we're talking about has to do with the Neolithic Revolution,
which says that somewhere around 10, 11,000 years ago, people in the Fertile Crescent Mesopotamia
started to settle down, raise crops,
and as they were able to support more people,
more and more people came and moved to that area.
They domesticated animals, cities sprung up,
and then from the cities, hierarchies grew,
and then we had kingdoms and wars and all sorts of stuff,
and also arts, culture, architecture,
all that stuff developed from the people
first settling down and domesticating crops,
becoming sedentary, like transitioning
from hunter-gatherers to farmers, essentially.
And that was the start of all the other stuff that followed.
Gobekli Tepe turns that on its head, essentially.
That's right, and this was one of those discoveries
that, like I said, really sort of upends everything
that we thought to be true.
The real discovery, and we'll kind of get
to what had happened before this,
but the big, big find was in 1994,
and that's when archaeologists started really literally digging
into it.
It had been known to locals there, you know, for a while, obviously, because it's sort
of like the Sherpa that are like, I climb this mountain all the time.
There were people living nearby in Turkey in the 1960s even that were finding pretty
cool stuff here, but it wasn't until 1994 that they made the big, big discovery and really, like I said,
started digging in and forming opinions over, and you know, we'll get to these because they
still haven't settled on exactly what Gebekeli Tepe was.
No, they haven't, which explains why we haven't said what it is yet, but that that 1960 survey
Found a bunch of slabs of limestone, but they mistook what they were they mistook their significance. They thought they were
gravestones from a medieval cemetery and it would turn out that they were about
11,000 years older than that
Because what go back go back like Tepe was when they started digging it up in the 90s
Under the leadership of a guy named Klaus Schmidt who was the guy who saw this and was like this is not a natural formation
This is clearly human made. Let's see what's underneath this hill
He found that this is essentially a
Neolithic settlement that dates back at its earliest spot, as far as we know,
to about 11,600 years before today.
Yeah.
And, you know, the significance of all of this, if we haven't been clear enough, is
that basically they're dating this long before, like hundreds, maybe even a thousand years
before what we thought was when people started
settling down and becoming farmers, which led to all
the, you know, modern advances eventually that we
know today that, like you mentioned.
Right.
So this was a long, long time before that when we
were like, no, no, no, at the time people were
just moving around, hunting and gathering and kind
of just, I don't know about struggling to survive,
but subsistence living, you know, from season to season,
that kind of thing.
And 94, like you said, was when Schmidt came in there
and he got pretty excited, like so excited
that he bought a house nearby and set up camp
and said, all right, this is gonna be the base
for me and my small team. Anytime students are coming over here, they can stay here.
And this is now the official home base of this extraordinarily interesting archaeological
site.
Yeah. And he would go on to lead the dig at Gobekli Tepe until his death, I think at age
60 in 2014, if I'm not mistaken.
He died early.
Why go anywhere else, you know?
Well, this was like, he was like,
well, here's my career, this is what I'm doing
for the rest of my life.
Like there's- Totally.
They've been digging at Gobekli Tepe now
for what, 30 years?
They've easily got another 50 years of excavation left,
unless some huge new technological advance
in archeology comes along.
But using current practices,
they have decades left of exploration to do of this site.
But what Schmidt found from the outset
just didn't make sense.
Because like you said,
they think that they were building this
before people even started to settle down
and start farming,
which means it was thousands of years
before people should have been able to create
things like this, like massive structures,
that it takes a lot of people in a coordinated manner
to come up with a coherent plan and then build this stuff,
and then also imbue it with symbolism as we'll see.
It just did not make sense.
But the date, the radiocarbon dating was right.
And so, Klaus Schmidt was smart enough to be like, we might have this whole Neolithic
Revolution story wrong.
Yeah, for sure.
So just sort of brass tacks, it is in southern Turkey.
It's located at the highest point of the Jermis, G-E-R-M-U-S, unfortunately
named Mountain Range, which is right on the edge of the Fertile Crescent there, not coincidentally.
And the mound itself is about 50 feet tall, covers about 22 acres. And it was kind of
one of these things where basically he had gone there, he knew that people nearby
had dug up some things that looked like tools and stuff like that.
He was like, well, this is pretty interesting.
And when he stood back and looked, he was like, that hill up there doesn't look like
the rest of these sort of flattish plateaus.
It's more rounded and it looks like clearly formed by humans.
And that's when everyone, you know, all the locals in their language
said, no, duh, we've known this for a while. So he said, all right, you know, I'm going
to set up shop here. And they got to work starting with that uppermost level, which
was, what did we figure? It was like 10,000-ish years ago?
Yes. So the most recent use of it was 10,000 years ago. And, um, Livia helps us with this and she pointed something out
that I thought is definitely worth, um, mentioning.
The, the Gobekli Tepe site was older to the people who built the pyramids at Giza and Stonehenge
than the people who built the pyramids in Stonehenge are to us.
It's that ancient.
That's one of those brain breakers.
Yeah.
Thousands and thousands of years old, that ancient when the people
started building the pyramids.
It's just, yeah, like you said, it's a brain breaker, like how old this thing
was and then what they were able to do and what they were able to do.
So by the way, no one knows what culture this is.
Because again, it's not supposed to be a culture
from our understanding of people at the time.
I've seen interpretations of communities
at around this time, what's called the pre-pottery
Neolithic, which is a specific era in the Fertile
Crescent where there wasn't pottery.
Pottery existed elsewhere in the world, like Japan was making amazing conch shell pottery
around this time.
China has 20,000 year old pottery, but just in the Fertile Crescent they hadn't started
making pottery yet.
So they're called the pre-pottery Neolithic group, essentially.
But suffice to say, this group got together and decided to build this at least as far
back as 11,600 years ago, and they stopped using it about 10,000 years ago.
Yeah, so they started top down.
Like you said, the most recent use would be the stuff on top, obviously. And they started
to notice, wow, there are actually buildings here with straight walls. So that means that
somebody shaped those. It wasn't just by pure chance or luck that those walls ended up being
straight. They found these limestone pillars that were about two meters high on this upper
level. Some of them had decorations on them.
These upper ones had etchings of lions.
And then they started going down.
Obviously things are getting a little bit older.
And then they said, wow, these pillars are getting
a lot bigger than the ones on top.
Some of these things are 15 to 18 feet high,
weigh about 10 tons.
And they look like they're arranged in very specific ways.
There were at least 20 circles or ovals that had these, that basically made up
these enclosures, and there were, you know, some of them actually were shaped in such
a way that they wondered like it's no accident that they're shaped in the form
of a triangle if you connect them. Like it might be like a Stonehenge kind of
thing happening.
Yeah, that's definitely one theory is that at least part of this was a cosmic observatory.
And yeah, like you said, the settlement overall, the site forms,
like some of the columns form an equilateral triangle,
and then the center of the site bisects that triangle perfectly.
So it's just, it's not accidental.
And again, people weren't supposed to be using geometry, even rudimentary geometry at this
point for thousands of more years, and yet these people were doing it.
Some of the other things that they figured out is the limestone did come from the area,
but it still came from hundreds of meters away, right? So these, you said 16 feet, about five and a half
meters, 10 tons of rocks carved out of the limestone
bedrock and then carried over to this site and then
raised, that takes a lot of people, even using like
logs and rollers and things like that, it still
takes a lot of coordination.
And yeah, it takes a lot of determination too.
And to me, the fact that those columns are smaller and smaller, the more recent you get
and then bigger further down, almost suggests that there was like a loss of enthusiasm over
time.
They got worn out.
I think so, yeah. Over 1300 years.
They were like, hey, those inner levels look great,
but do we really need that much headroom?
That's right.
The tallest one among us is five and a half feet.
Right. Yeah, they were shorter back then, I think.
But here's the thing. Everything you mentioned there is possible.
That limestone is pretty soft as stone goes,
and the flint tools that they had
back then could have been used to do something like this. And depending on who you talk to,
some people will say, like, you know, it may have taken a few hundred very determined people to
move these things. Other people, Olivia found this one guy, an archaeologist named Edward Banning
from the University of Toronto that
said, nah, give me 20 grown men and I could do this even without rollers.
Yeah, watch.
Yeah.
No one ever called us bluff.
Should we take a break?
Yeah, let's take a break.
All right.
Great setup.
Everyone's on the edge of their limestone seat and we'll be right back. Hey everybody, the time has finally come.
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Okay, Chuck. So one of the things that I mentioned earlier is that these people not only created
these huge pillars and walls and enclosures, they also put, they carved them.
There's a lot of symbols on this stuff and essentially they're pictograms, like they're
symbols that directly represent
the thing they are.
There's not any encoded meaning to it.
Like if it's a bird, it's supposed to be a bird.
And there's a lot of really readable symbols.
Like it's not like, wow, it's photo realistic,
but you can clearly see this is a bird.
This is a gazelle.
This is a fox. this is a scorpion.
And they started to notice that some of the enclosures
were essentially dedicated to one kind of animal.
But the biggest enclosure, enclosure D,
was there's a bunch of different animals on it,
like scratched or carved into the different kind of pillars
and walls and everything.
And there's a lot of interpretation just in that stuff alone.
Yeah, for sure.
The ones where it's just like nothing but foxes, they think could have been a specific
clan because it was part of the clan system like Clan of the Cave Bear.
It would have carved a bunch of cave bears.
So if it was a fox clan, they may have just carved Foxes, but it might make sense that the biggest one,
because you know, they're still, you know, as we pointed out,
guessing as to what even was going on
and what all this stuff was used for and what it all meant.
So I think it just sort of makes sense that maybe the biggest one
was maybe where groupings of clans came.
So they were all represented by their favorite football team.
Pretty much, yeah.
One of the things also that gave away that Fox enclosure
is that one of the carvings says Fox's rule,
and it's F-O-X-Z.
So clearly they were pretty in the Fox's.
Yeah, exactly.
So those pillars too, 16 feet, 5 and 1 half meter, 10 ton
pillars at the largest,
if you look at them, they actually represent people,
but they represent like a really
nondescript type of person.
So these are T-shaped pillars.
So at first I just assume, well, that's like, you know,
shoulders and then like the head's carved into the middle
of the shoulders, wrong. The T itself is actually the head viewed from the side,
so that when you look at the narrow ends on each side of that top of the T,
that's the face in the back of the head.
I thought that was a really strange artistic decision.
Yeah, for sure.
The other thing too is, I don't think we mentioned that kind of one of the first theories was that, or maybe we did, that it was kind of ritual-based because
I think when they find anything from this time, they think, well, this wasn't a permanent
settlement because they didn't have those. So, this was just a place where they did rituals
and maybe sacrifices or whatever, prayed to whatever God. They did find things like masks that maybe were ceremonial,
at least lent itself to the idea that that could have been going on there. They did find some other images that weren't as straightforward as the sort of clear ones that you described, like birds with human legs, and they speculate. That could have been like maybe people in costume at a ritual or a rite that we're displaying here in this little story.
And the fun part about all of this is that they seem to have been drinking beer at the time,
because there were beer brewing vats nearby.
Like huge vats. They could brew tens and tens of gallons at a time.
And that supports this idea that this was a ritual place. like huge fats. They could brew tens and tens of gallons at a time.
And that supports this idea that this was a ritual place.
I mean, just the fact that they went to the trouble
of making this.
And then the fact that they added these symbols
to these huge monoliths that they raised.
And then the fact that there was beer strongly supports
that they were essentially partying in one way or another
at Gobekli Tepe, right?
But in addition to that, in those very obvious pictograms or pictographs, there's also some straight-up symbols that are not immediately obvious that does suggest that there was
meaning encoded in it, which would make it writing. There's what looks like a capital I that keeps
popping up here and there.
There's also a capital H that's usually associated
with the capital I, and they think it's possible
that represented the summer solstice and the winter
solstice or day and night, because it's just used
so repeatedly.
One of the other reasons they think that
is a guy named Martin Swetman,
who's an engineering researcher
from the University of Edinburgh.
He analyzed one of the pillars,
and there's a bunch of different markings on them,
and he interpreted them as essentially a calendar
that not only you could track the year with,
but he took it to be like a time stamp for a potential
common impact that allegedly set off the younger,
driest mini Ice Age.
So if that's true, that means that they were proto-writing
7,000 years before the Sumerians came up with what's considered
the first alphabet.
7,000 years.
And then in addition to that, they were able to track the procession of Earth.
They were able to account for the wobble that changes the time and days throughout the year,
enough that they could create a lunar calendar.
And they supposedly, if this actually is a time stamp, they were able to date things
that were like major celestial events, like meteor showers, or again, a potential comet
strike.
Yeah.
And this is like, I mean, I guess we'll talk about the significance of calendars in a couple
of ways here and later.
But one thing to think about is like, if you're hunter-gatherers and you're not around very
long, like, what do you need a 12-month calendar for?
Another way of looking at it, and this kind of lends itself to some of the later theories,
is that, well well maybe we'll hold
on to that. That'll be a nice little teaser actually. Even I'm teased. But we
can talk about this right now, which is the fact that they found remnants of
bones and wild plants and things that pretty much clearly indicate that they
had been butchered and cooked there. Mostly gazelle, about 60% were gazelle,
but they also had sheep and deer and wild boar and birds like geese and ducks and cranes and
things like that. So they were, it seems like they were eating and drinking pretty well here.
– They were. This also supports Chuck because if they were not farmers and they were just hunter-gatherers who would come to this area,
you know, occasionally, and they were making beer, that supports that idea that we talked about
before that bread was actually invented as a portable beer starter. Oh yeah, I remember that
old gem. This says that beer came before farming then, if this is what's going on here, if we're interpreting this
correctly.
So, that is very significant too.
The bones in the plants that they found at the site are all wild.
And that strongly suggests to researchers, not just us, that these were hunter-gatherers.
They weren't farmers at all.
There was no sign of domesticated animal bones.
And even more, if you look at all of the animals,
any of the engravings or carvings or sculptures,
they are all wild animals too.
There's not a single sheep or pig or anything like that,
any domesticated animal to be found.
Like even the pig is the wild boar.
They're just all wild animals.
And that will become a little more significant in a second.
Yeah, the other thing too we didn't mention is that lends itself to the idea that things are still very transient,
was they didn't find things that you normally find, at least at this point, as a permanent settlement,
like trash, like big buried mounds of trash, or any indication that there were
homes there, or like a hearth where, you know, someone might have burned a fire repeatedly
over and over in the same home-like place.
So they're not finding that stuff.
They're finding other things that kind of contradict that.
You mentioned those human-like carvings. There were other ones that had,
like, pretty clear symbolism of death, like a fully carved human sculpture where they
intentionally cut off the head so it wasn't just like, you know, hey, look, it's a person
without a head. They would carve it into a person, cut off the head,
and then place that head somewhere else
that was significant to them.
Clearly, symbolization.
Symbolization?
Symbolizing something?
Yeah.
Sure.
Yeah, so you put all that stuff together,
and what you have is this hypothesis
that what Klaus Schmidt came up with.
Remember, he's the guy who essentially
discovered this place and kept going until 2014. this hypothesis that Klaus Schmidt came up with. Remember, he's the guy who essentially discovered
this place and kept going until 2014.
His hypothesis was this, because there's no evidence
of permanent habitation, right, like you were saying,
because all of this stuff is wild game
and wild plants that's left over,
and because these structures don't appear
to ever have been roofed,
like these enclosures were always open air,
you put all that together,
this was not a permanent settlement.
It was a settlement that was created
for religious purposes or spiritual purposes
or something like that, symbolic purposes,
by hunter-gatherer groups.
And every year, a, couple years or whenever,
a bunch of them from all around the area
would come together and they would party,
they would eat, they would drink a bunch of beer,
and they would carve out these pillars and raise them.
And then, weirdly, Schmidt also added,
they would fill these enclosures in with rubble
ceremonially.
Because when they discovered them, all the enclosures were, well, filled in with rubble.
So he interpreted that to mean that that was part of the ceremony.
They would cover one up and then they build another one on top.
He said it was Coachella.
Did they fill things in with rubble at Coachella?
No, of course not.
The Indio Polo grounds are very nice actually,
but he did sort of say like,
hey, this is the kind of thing that we think
they just met here occasionally over decades,
maybe even hundreds of years.
Maybe these rituals sort of evolved over time
to maybe, you know,
cause there's clear sort of death symbolism in places
to honor people that were
important to the community, maybe help establish their identity somewhat as wandering tribes.
And that's what he thought, you know, one of the keys to this whole thing was that to do something
like this, they would have had to, you know, even if they were hunters and gatherers, they had to have had a lot of people there that stayed there for long enough time to get this done.
Yes, and that over time, over those decades or centuries, it just attracted more and more and
more people to the area. And so rather than the monumental structures and religion arising from farming,
Klaus Schmidt said coming together to create this religious structure
actually essentially trapped people in the area where they became farmers.
We had it totally backwards. That was Schmidt's hypothesis.
Yeah, it was like a geological chicken or the egg, or I guess archeological chicken or the egg?
Or I guess archeological chicken or the egg?
Yes, but the chicken came first.
That's right.
You know that's the answer to that question.
Oh yeah, we've covered it.
Okay.
We're not going to again, though, I'll tell you that.
No, heck no.
Why retread something?
So, do you wanna take another break or is it too soon?
Well let's take a break right after this because there was one other thing that we should point
out is some of the other things sort of supporting this idea of Schmidt was they didn't see a
water source anywhere which wouldn't be a good place for people to permanently be. And what else? I already mentioned the garbage dumps and the lack of houses. So I
guess the only thing I didn't mention was the water source.
Right. The thing is, Klaus Schmidt was, I think he formed this hypothesis, you know,
within a couple of years of starting excavation, And it held up, at least until his death,
but after his death, some new evidence came to light
that caused people to go back and re-look
at some of the original evidence too,
or some of the original artifacts and data.
And they were like,
we're not quite sure Klaus Schmidt had it right.
And we'll talk about what they came up with,
the new hypothesis, right after this.
Hey everybody, the time has finally come.
This week, starting Monday, October 7th, going daily through Friday, October 11th,
Bowen Yang and I, Matt Rogers,
are unveiling the iconic 400.
Yes, these are the top 400 people in all of culture,
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Number 372, Nancy Kerrigan.
Why?
We will never really know.
Why?
We have worked tirelessly on this list.
I'm Michael Bhabaro.
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Once you hear I'm Michael Bhabaro,
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And we really think it's gonna resonate.
Christina!
She is not a Christian!
What?
She's not happily flying a pride flag.
Also, there might be a little bit of a surprise or two in there, so listen carefully.
Hint hint Friday.
Listen to Lost Culture East us on Will Ferrell's Big Money Players Network on the iHeartRadio
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In a galaxy far, far away.
No, babe, that's taken.
We're in our own world, remember?
Right, in our own world.
We're two space cadets.
And totally normal humans.
Sure, totally normal humans.
Embark on a journey across the stars,
discovering the wonders of the universe
one episode at a time.
We'll talk about life, love, laughter,
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Especially when she's always right.
Right.
And if we hit turbulence, just blame it on Mercury retrograde.
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Hey!
Join us on In Our Own World for cosmic conversations, stellar laughs, and super corny dad jokes.
Listen to In Our Own World as a part of the My Kultura podcast network available on the
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And don't worry, we promise to avoid any black holes.
Most of the time.
How do you feel about biscuits?
Hi, I'm Akilah Hughes, and I'm so excited about my new podcast, Rebel Spirit, where
I head back to my hometown in Kentucky and try to convince my high school to change their
racist mascot, the Rebels, into something everyone in the South loves, the Biscuits.
I was a lady rebel.
Like, what does that even mean?
I mean, the Boone County Rebels will stay the Boone County Rebels, but the image of
the Biscuits...
It's right here in black and white in Prince, a lion.
An individual that came to the school saying that God sent him to talk to me about the
mascot switch is a leader.
You choose hills that you want to die on.
Why would we want to be the losing team?
I just take all the other stuff out of it.
Segregation academies, when the civil rights said that we need to integrate public schools,
these charter schools were exempt from it.
We're not bigger than a flag or mascot.
You have to be ready for serious backlash.
Listen to Rebel Spirit on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts. One person we need to shout out besides Olivia is a journalist named Andrew Curry, by the
way.
He's kind of the guy that has invested, he's kind of like the Schmidt on the journalism
side.
For decades and decades, this guy's been writing about
most of the popular stories about the
Keb-blecky, Keb-bleck, Keb-bleck.
Glavin'.
The Keb-bleck.
The Schenectady Tepe.
Sure.
Schenectady.
It's a big shout out, big shout out there.
But before we broke, you mentioned new ideas
coming along post Schmidt.
In 2017, his successor won Lee Clare of the German Archaeological Institute, or the DAI. Don't ask.
They built a – just the German shorthand for that.
They constructed a big old canopy over the whole thing so they could dig more, because
I don't think we mentioned for many, many years they were digging in the spring and fall
because summer was too hot, winter was too wet.
Yeah, just four months a year, right?
Yeah, so they could dig more with this big canopy over it,
shielding from the sun and rain.
And in order to build, I mean, this is kind of one of those
dumb luck kind of things that they probably would have
gotten to eventually, but it expedited the situation
when they realized to make this big canopy, but it expedited the situation when they realized
to make this big canopy,
not just like a pop-up with sandbags,
they needed to like root this thing into the ground.
So they dug down deeper than they ever had before
to make supports and had some interesting finds down there.
Yeah, and not just, not deeper than anyone
in the world ever had before, Just in this area, right?
Oh yeah.
Did you think I meant,
they dug the deepest hole ever?
Yeah, they just kept going.
They're like, well, we're already this far.
We might as well set a record.
Wow.
So they found, they were able to take samples
from those pillar holes.
I think they went down even below the lowest layer they could possibly find.
So when they took those samples, they were like,
oh, here's all the stuff that Klaus Schmidt
based his hypothesis on because they were missing.
Garbage dumps, hearths, evidence of homes.
We found a cistern eventually, like a 30 foot diameter
cistern that held a bunch of rainwater, all the stuff you would
need to support a permanent settlement.
Yeah, I can't decide.
When I read this part of the story, I immediately was like, oh no.
Like I wonder if, because Schmidt died a few years earlier, I wondered if he, because at
first I was like, I'm glad that he wasn't around to see that, because it was kind of proved him wrong. But then I thought, no, Schmidt seems like
the kind of guy that would have like loved knowing that he was wrong. Well,
maybe not loved it, but loved knowing that they were on the right track to
getting the accurate, you know, picture there.
So that's funny. I interpreted him differently. I imagined him showing up at
Lee Clare's tent
in the middle of the night as a ghost going,
Lee, how could you betray me?
Oh, maybe.
I think that actually happened too.
I saw it on Ancient Aliens.
Oh, okay. Perfect.
So here's the new hypothesis.
They're like, okay, Klaus,
he was working with what he had to work with at the time,
but now that we have all this other stuff, what we realize is that part of this site
might have actually been permanently occupied by some people, but that doesn't mean that
it wasn't also like a ritual site.
Like clearly it was.
This is not just how people built houses back then.
People weren't even supposed to build these kind of complexes back then.
One of the things that they're like,
okay, Klaus definitely got this wrong,
was the idea that part of the rituals were filling
these enclosures in with rubble
and then starting a new one on top.
Somebody noticed that if you look uphill,
the walls that are on the uphill side of the enclosure
are usually damaged, whereas the walls opposite are fine,
which strongly suggests landslide damage.
There's also a lot of earthquakes in that area,
so they're like, actually, we think that this stuff
just kept getting destroyed, but the site was so important
that for 1,300 years, after an earthquake came through, they would come and rebuild. That's how important the site was so important that for 1,300 years, after an earthquake came through, they
would come and rebuild.
Like, that's how important the site was to them.
Yeah.
And, and this is where it gets super interesting to me.
Claire and some other people, some of her colleagues and others thought, hey, maybe
what this was, was a, was something created because agriculture and people
settling down may have already been happening.
And this was sort of created as part of the backlash
against that.
So people were domesticating plants and animals nearby,
and they were still like, no, we want to be hunter
gatherers, but we want to have this place maybe where
we come and meet seasonally.
Yeah, or this is where we live.
Like, this is our settlement, but we're not going to farm.
We're still going to, you know-
Hunt and gather.
Exactly.
And one interpretation by a guy named Thomas Zimmerman,
who is an archaeologist from Bill Kent University, he sees this as a place that
was populated by staunchly conservative, male-dominated population.
And there's a lot of stuff to support that, right?
So first of all, if you have a group of people who are railing against these new sweeping
changes to society that's going in ways they don't like it,
and they're going against that
that automatically makes them conservative.
And then also if you look around
at the iconography and imagery,
it is very male-centric.
There's a lot of phalluses sticking up,
there's all of the figures that are depicted are men.
I read that wherever a wild animal that's carved into one of the pillars
is gendered, it's invariably male. And it makes a lot of sense. And then simultaneously,
Thomas Zimmerman is like, I think that this was meant to be a place of, it was kind of
aggro place where like you would come and like put some young hunters
through their scary first rites.
Like it was not a place of peace.
It's a, if you look at most of the animals,
they're snarling, they're dangerous.
This is not meant to be a calm place.
And Thomas Zimmerman, I hope he can unwind one day.
Right.
For his sake and the sake of people around him.
Yeah, he kind of described it as, I don't know, like the birthplace of MMA and like,
you know, kind of a lot of stuff we're seeing in the news today.
Yeah, the birthplace of people who watch ancient aliens.
Yeah, pretty much.
Here's the thing though, we still don't know so much.
I believe over 50% of it has still not been excavated.
Oh no, 90 to 95% is unexcavated.
Oh, I thought that was just 90% was underground
and they had been doing stuff underground, no?
So, yeah, so it's kind of confusing, and maybe you're right,
but what I saw is that the whole site is 90 to 95% unexcavated,
but that the enclosures that they've been able to find,
only half of them are even partially excavated.
So they know that there's enclosures down there,
they just haven't gotten to them yet.
Yeah, all right.
I like this last theory.
In 2021, there was a book called The Dawn of Everything
by an
anthropologist and an archaeologist, David Graeber and David Winn-Grow,
respectively, and they said, all right, here's what we think, is that maybe it
was just a non-agricultural society, and maybe they were just a lot more diverse than we
thought they were. We kind of had this locked-in idea that everyone was like this and then
everyone was like this. And they were like, maybe there was just a lot more overlap and
sort of a spectrum of rituals and behaviors and things that people did.
And it's just not so clear that things were like this until they stopped and then they were like this.
Yeah, and now I remember I got off track earlier when I was talking about the pre-pottery Neolithic group
that I have seen that this era of people and earlier human beings,
their culture essentially likened to that of like bonobos or chimps.
That that's like the level of like introspection or material culture or contributions that
they would make.
That they were that backwards.
And yeah, Graeber and Wenger are like, we got this all wrong.
And so one of the things, the ways that Gabkeli Tepe ties into this is those, the two
Davids, that's what I call them.
Yeah.
They looked.
David and David.
Yeah. They looked at some current hunter-gatherer
groups, which are obviously not perfect
analogies. But what they found is that some
groups have hierarchical structures during some parts of the year,
where they're sedentary, and then in other parts of the year, where not times of plenty,
where you have to like spread out and go find food, they break up into smaller bands of hunter-gatherers.
And they suspect that Gebekli Tepe was a place where they all came together again and enjoyed
times of plenty, like where there were tons of gazelles to hunt, lots of nuts
and grains and stuff, just for the picking, and that they didn't have to
farm, but that they were capable of being sedentary while they were also hunter-gatherers
for the other part of the year.
Yeah, and not only capable of being sedentary,
but capable of having a fairly complex society
as they settled for that season,
before they went out.
And I love this idea because you picture them
just sort of barely surviving and moving on
until they find better places to hunt or a source of water.
Whereas this posits just sort of a better way of life that anyone thought they lived,
to such that they could be like, hey, we're going to brew beer and we're going to party
and we're going to have fun because, you know, we're all doing pretty well out here, guys.
Look around. Let's like like, enjoy this season of
settlement, I guess.
Yeah, or plenty, right?
Yeah.
And that's, there's a lot of feasting season still today in human culture around this time of year, around late fall, like after the
harvest, say.
Yeah, Christmas.
Even through winter, exactly. And I don't know if it was from the two Davids or somebody interpreting their work,
but they were saying there's a really good chance, or at least a chance, that our
holiday seasons, right, is an ancient or remnant of that ancient seasonality.
Where we would come together and share in times
of plenty and then when, you know, throughout the
rest of the year, we'd spread out and go do our
own thing.
But during those times, community is emphasized,
family is emphasized, coming together is all very
much emphasized during that time of year.
And they wonder if that's just a, like, we're just
unaware that that is a really ancient tradition
that we're taking part in still.
We just kind of transmuted into our own thing.
You know, I really missed a great opportunity
for a deep, deep cut.
What?
David and David joke.
What?
I could have said David and David looked around
and they were like, hey, welcome to the Boomtown.
What is that? It's the only hit song by David and David looked around and they were like, hey, welcome to the Boomtown. What is that?
It's the only hit song by David and David.
What's Welcome to the Boomtown?
The only hit song by David and David.
Okay, well, let's hear some of it.
Sing it.
Sing it like Sammy Davis.
Oh, I said welcome, babe.
Welcome to the Boomtown, man.
Still don't have it.
All those, uh, all those what makes such a succulent sound,
welcome to the Boomtown.
I half suspect you're making this up as you go along.
It was a great, great one-hit wonder from back in the day by...
By David and David?
David and David, that's what I've been talking about this whole time.
And now it makes sense that you never knew what I was talking about this whole time.
No, I did. It's still a good joke just because I got you to sing like Sammy Davis Jr.
We all appreciate that.
It's a great song. It really is.
Um, so I'm gonna go listen to that.
But first, there were just a couple of more things I wanted to say about this.
Um, the David and David interpretation of how people were way, way more complex than we give
them credit for in the, in the past.
Uh, one of the things they point to are ancient
burials like 26, 30,000 years old where there's
like grave goods and people in beaded headdresses
like clearly being treated differently than other
people would have been buried.
So obviously, there are hierarchical structures, um, like maybe they were mystics or shaman or something like that.
And then there was another interpretation of Gabekli Tepe itself that I thought was
worth mentioning by archaeologist Anna Fagan from the University of Melbourne. And she
was like, slow your roll Thomas Zimmerman. I actually think that all these depictions of death
and mayhem and scary animals is actually symbolic
of life and death and regeneration.
And she makes some pretty good points.
And I like her interpretation a little more
because it doesn't alter anything else.
This is still a hunter gatherer tribe
and they could still even be railing against farming
but that doesn't mean that they have to be like aggro and and
You know want to just kill everybody essentially
Yeah, I love it. I do too. Let's just keep talking about go black. Go back Lee tepee forever
It's a good one. And but now all I can think about is getting
That theory officially named the Welcome to the Boomtown Theory.
Okay.
I think that's correct.
Because it fits in every way.
Yeah, for sure.
It really does, Chuck.
I think if the two Davids hear this, they're going to be into that.
You remember that song?
Miss Christina drives a 944.
No.
That's the first line.
No idea what you're talking about.
Well, I just sent it what you're talking about.
Well I'll just send it to you, it's a great song.
Okay, thanks man.
Well, since Chuck sent me a song, obviously he's just triggered Listener Man.
That's right, this is from Ciara and it's about the Ford Motor Company.
Because Ciara works there as a Michigander.
Hey guys, one thing I thought I'd mention about that is you mentioned that the Ford Motor Company
has been around since 1903 and is still standing,
but I think one of the coolest things about our company
is that the, what was it, the Rouge site?
Mm-hmm, Rouge River, I think?
Yeah, the Rouge River site that you also mentioned
in the episode is still standing,
and today builds F-150s.
In its history, the Rouge has built the Model B,
the Mercury, the Thunderbird,
and multiple generations of the Mustang.
The site itself has so much history
in the Henry Ford Museum
that the Henry Ford Museum offers a Rouge
factory tour that actually
takes you into one of the manufacturing
buildings of the site to see the
assembly line from a set of mezzanines.
One last thing you
didn't mention was that he was a set of mezzanines. One last thing you didn't mention was that
he was a supporter of prohibition, and it always reminds me of this funny quote from
him, if booze ever comes back to the United States, I am through with manufacturing. I
wouldn't be interested in putting automobiles into the hands of a generation soggy with
drink. Thanks for all the knowledge that you share in keeping me company on my compute.
That is from Ciara.
Thanks Ciara.
That's awesome.
We appreciate all the extra info.
If you want to be like Ciara and show off your knowledge of extra info by sharing it
with us, we would love that.
Just send it off to stuffpodcastatihartradio.com. Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeart Radio.
For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey everybody, the time has finally come. This week, starting October 7th through October 11th, that's Monday through Friday everybody,
we are revealing the Iconic 400.
Yes, Bo and Yang and I famously missed our 400th episode here on Los Culturistas, but
we are ready to reveal the Iconic 400.
Who is on the list?
Does it matter? No. Will it be fun? Yeah.
There might even be a surprise or two in there, so listen carefully. Listen to Lost Culture
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Renee Stubbs and I'm obsessed with sports, especially tennis.
Tune into my podcast each week to hear me and my friends in the community break down
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Plus hear from some of the biggest names in the sport about what the future holds.
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Listen to the Renee Stubbs tennis podcast every Monday on the iHeart Radio app, Apple
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Presented by Elf Beauty, founding partner of iHeart Women's Sports.
What does the heartbreaking fate of the cheetah tell us about the way we raise our children?
Why was Los Angeles the bank robbery capital of the world?
What exactly happened in the Marriott Hotel in downtown Boston in March of 2020?
I'm Malcolm Gladwell.
In my new audiobook, Revenge of the Tipping Point,
I'm looking at these questions
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You can hear a sneak peek of the audiobook
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Listen on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
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