556: Compilation: Ancient Mysteries vol 1
Explore a possible underground city in the Grand Canyon, rumored to be filled with ancient artifacts and enigmatic writings that defy explanation.
Discover the alleged subterranean world of Agartha, where a technologically advanced society might reside beneath our feet, untouched by time.
Consider the theory of a hollow Earth, supported by anomalies in seismic data and strange compass readings from the past.
Learn of lost continents and advanced prehistoric cultures that raise questions about humanity's origins and the knowledge we've lost over millennia.
Each story offers a glimpse into a world where myth and reality intertwine, urging you to question what lies beneath our known world.
Press play and read along
Transcript
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Speaker 5 Hey, thanks for clicking on a compilation episode.
Speaker 8 I know, I know another compilation, but I promised you a new video last week and you got it, and you're getting a new one next week.
Speaker 6 I promise. We're getting caught up.
Speaker 13 In the next few weeks, we'll have more CIA cover-ups, some UFO stories.
Speaker 15 I'd also like to talk about portals and stargates.
Speaker 17 Yes.
Speaker 16 I think you're going to like what's coming.
Speaker 22 So today we're revisiting ancient mysteries, and we do a lot of those on the channel, but I try to keep these compilations under or about three hours, so maybe we'll have to follow up with part two at some point.
Speaker 26 Yeah, we're going to need more than that.
Speaker 15 We probably are.
Speaker 27 All right, we're going to start with the ancient city found in the Grand Canyon.
Speaker 29 A man named G.E.
Speaker 3 Kincaid allegedly found an ancient underground city full of relics that he thought looked Egyptian or maybe from the Far East, but they were definitely thousands of years old.
Speaker 35 It was even covered in local newspapers, but then Kincaid called the Smithsonian, then suddenly the story disappears.
Speaker 38 And Smithsonian covers up a lot of stuff.
Speaker 39 They do.
Speaker 6 Their shenanigans are sprinkled all over the channel, and they have millions of artifacts that we're just not allowed to see.
Speaker 45 And don't try to visit the part of the canyon where this ancient city allegedly is, because if you do, out of nowhere, you're going to see unmarked planes and black helicopters.
Speaker 12 And I'm going to show you this in the episode.
Speaker 38 Hey, since we fund the Smithsonian, shouldn't we be able to audit them anytime we want?
Speaker 37 Well, I think we should be able to audit any part of the government we want.
Speaker 50 It's our money.
Speaker 38 Audit the Smithsonian and audit the Fed.
Speaker 51 Amen, brother.
Speaker 52 In 1908, President Teddy Roosevelt wanted to declare the Grand Canyon off-limits to all timber and mining operations.
Speaker 52 It would take another 11 years for Congress to designate the Grand Canyon a national park. Sensing a final opportunity for adventure, explorer G.E.
Speaker 52 Kincaid took a boat down the Colorado River and through the Grand Canyon.
Speaker 52 The canyon was rich in minerals like gold, silver, and copper, and Kincaid wanted to see what he could find before the area was closed off for good.
Speaker 52 About 40 miles upriver from the El Tovor Crystal Canyon, Kincaid saw stains in the sediment formation about 2,000 feet up. He tied off the boat and got out to investigate.
Speaker 52 Kincaid couldn't find a trail, but after a short hike, he found something interesting covered in desert brush. Steps, hundreds of them, carved in sandstone.
Speaker 52 steps that wound their way up to a high shelf on the side of the canyon. He followed the steps until he came across a cavern entrance, an entrance that was clearly man-made.
Speaker 52
Kincaid entered the cavern and turned on his flashlight. On the walls, he saw writing, but it wasn't English or Native American writing.
It was ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics.
Speaker 52 Kincaid lifted his flashlight and saw that the tunnel ran far into the distance. He didn't realize it at the time, but this was only the beginning.
Speaker 52 When G.E. Kincaid tied off his small wooden boat to investigate the strange coloration coloration of the rock wall, he was hoping to find clues that would lead him to a mineral deposit.
Speaker 52 He wasn't expecting to find hieroglyphics. When Kincaid noticed chisel marks in the walls, he drew his pistol, turned on another light, and slowly walked deeper into the gloom.
Speaker 52 He kept detailed notes of everything he saw.
Speaker 54 The main passageway is about 12 feet wide, narrowing to 9 feet toward the farther end.
Speaker 54 About 57 feet from the entrance, the first side passages branch off to the right and left, along which on both sides are a number of rooms about the size of ordinary living rooms of today, though some are 30 by 40 feet square.
Speaker 54 These are entered by oval-shaped doors and are ventilated by round air spaces through the walls into the passages. The walls are about 3 feet 6 inches in thickness.
Speaker 54 The passages are chiseled or hewn as straight as could be laid out by an engineer. The ceilings of many of the rooms converge to a center.
Speaker 54 The side passages near the entrance run at a sharp angle from the main hall, but toward the rear they gradually reach a right angle in direction.
Speaker 52 G.E. Kincaid now realized he was in a huge complex.
Speaker 57 He estimated that as many as 50,000 people could have lived here.
Speaker 52 In some rooms, he found granaries with shelves of glazed pottery, many of which still contained seeds. He found cooking areas and a huge dining hall.
Speaker 61 The rooms were full of ancient artifacts.
Speaker 52 Kincaid carefully wrapped a few small metal and ceramic objects for later study.
Speaker 52 Another large room, Kincaid described as an area for metalwork, a technology that should not have existed existed in this area.
Speaker 54 Here are found tools of all descriptions made of copper. These people undoubtedly knew the lost art of hardening this metal, which has been sought by chemicals for centuries without result.
Speaker 54 On a bench running around a workroom was some charcoal and other material, probably used in the process.
Speaker 54 There's also slag and stuff similar to mat showing that these ancients smelted ores, but so far, no trace of where or how this was done has been discovered, nor the origin of the ore.
Speaker 52 G.E. Kincaid explored the underground complex for several hours, still having no idea when this place was used, what it was used for, or who the builders were.
Speaker 52
Then he came across another large room, a crypt. The crypt had shelf upon shelf and row upon row of mummies, dozens of them.
At this point, G.E.
Speaker 52 Kincaid realized that if he was going to explore this entire underground city, he was going to need help.
Speaker 52 G.E. Kincaid sent a few artifacts to the Smithsonian along with his notes of what he found.
Speaker 52
He requested financial and logistical support for what he felt was the most significant archaeological discovery ever made. The Smithsonian agreed.
A few weeks later, Professor S.A.
Speaker 52 Jordan arrived with a team of about 40 scientists, researchers, and laborers to excavate and explore the ancient underground city.
Speaker 52
Now with more lights and manpower, the scientists realized that the cave system layout wasn't random. It was a symmetrical, deliberate design.
The tunnels all led to a central chamber.
Speaker 44 In the chamber was a large statue of what Kincaid thought looked like Buddha.
Speaker 55 Like Buddha?
Speaker 51 Buddha.
Speaker 38 What I say.
Speaker 54 Over a hundred feet from the entrance is the crosshall, several hundred feet long, in which are found the idol or image of the people's god sitting cross-legged with a lotus flower or lily in each hand.
Speaker 54 The cast of this face is oriental, and the carving in this cavern. The idol almost resembles Buddha, though the scientists are not certain as to what religious worship it represents.
Speaker 54 Taking into consideration everything found thus far, it is possible that this worship most resembles the ancient people of Tibet.
Speaker 38 No, I didn't think we were allowed to say Oriental. Are we bringing it back?
Speaker 52
We're not. This was written over 100 years ago.
Oh, right, when we had freedom of speech. No, Oriental in this context just means Eastern.
Ah.
Speaker 52 Because of this discovery, Kincaid's team started calling the complex the Citadel. The crypt was one of the bigger rooms discovered.
Speaker 52 Now, with enough light, Kincaid was able to fully describe what he saw.
Speaker 54 stage of civilization. It is worthy of note that all the mummies examined so far have proved to be male, no children or females being buried here.
Speaker 54 This leads to the belief that this exterior section was the warriors' barracks.
Speaker 52 Kincaid, Jordan, and the Smithsonian team explored the entire cave complex. They were overwhelmed with evidence that this was not some faraway temple occupied by a few priests.
Speaker 52 This was a huge city lived in by thousands of men, women, and children for hundreds or possibly thousands of years. The question nobody could answer was, who were they?
Speaker 18 By the end of the expedition, G.E.
Speaker 52 Kincaid and Professor Jordan's team had discovered hundreds of rooms, barracks, granaries, metalworking shops, temples, and many, many living quarters.
Speaker 52 Though most of the rooms were empty, thousands of artifacts were found. They found swords and shields made of copper, bronze, and a gray metal that scientists couldn't identify.
Speaker 52 They thought it looked like platinum. They found pottery, urns, utensils for cooking, small yellow stones called cat's eyes, and large stone tablets, all engraved with hieroglyphics.
Speaker 54 On all the urns or walls over doorways and tablets of stone which were found by the image are the mysterious hieroglyphics, the key to which the Smithsonian Institute hopes yet to discover.
Speaker 54 The engraving on the tablets probably has something to do with the religion of the people. Similar hieroglyphics have been found in southern Arizona.
Speaker 54 Among the Pittori writings, only two animals are found. One is of prehistoric type.
Speaker 52 Even with all the relics and all the writing Kincaid and Jordan found, they were still no closer to determining who built the citadel in the Grand Canyon.
Speaker 52 They thought some of the statues looked Tibetan, but they weren't quite right.
Speaker 44 They thought the writing looked Egyptian.
Speaker 52
Again, that wasn't quite right. There were experts on site, none of whom could identify the statues or translate any of the text.
But there were two things that the researchers could agree on.
Speaker 52 One, the civilization that built the citadel was very advanced, far more advanced than the native tribes that occupied the area for a few thousand years.
Speaker 52 This now lost civilization worked bronze many years before the Bronze Age began.
Speaker 52 They understood division of labor and agriculture when every other society on Earth was presumably still hunting and gathering.
Speaker 52 These are discoveries that went against everything that was taught in mainstream archaeology and anthropology. A civilization like this shouldn't exist.
Speaker 77 What was the second thing? What?
Speaker 38 Ooh, you said the
Speaker 55 Right.
Speaker 52 They agreed that the civilization that built the citadel in the Grand Canyon didn't emerge there locally. This civilization arrived there from the other side of the world.
Speaker 52 Kincaid and Professor Jordan sent boxes of artifacts and books full of notes and drawings back to the Smithsonian, along with their hypothesis that an ancient civilization existed in the Grand Canyon thousands of years before Native Americans arrived in North America.
Speaker 52 These people were technologically advanced, educated, skilled, and spiritually complex. And these people originated somehow in Egypt or Asia.
Speaker 52 Kincaid wanted more resources and a larger team to help them research the citadel and search the Grand Canyon for more evidence of this lost civilization. Their request was denied, and G.E.
Speaker 77 Kincaid and Professor S.A.
Speaker 46 Jordan were never heard from again.
Speaker 52 In northern Arizona, it is one of the most spectacular natural wonders on Earth, the Grand Canyon.
Speaker 52 Carved over millions of years by the Colorado River, the Grand Canyon is more than just a pretty landscape and a spot for tourists to take selfies.
Speaker 52 It's a place of deep spiritual significance for the people who've lived in the area.
Speaker 52 The Hopi, Navajo, Zuni, Apache, and several other tribes have lived around the Grand Canyon for several thousand years. They still do.
Speaker 52
Hopi mythology says that from the Grand Canyon, the first people of the world entered. The story says that many thousands of years ago, a reptilian race emerged.
Lizard people!
Speaker 38 Yep. Hey, how many times do lizard people have to come up in these stories before you believe in him?
Speaker 52 I guess I'm gonna need a few more.
Speaker 38 Lizard people are gonna keep popping up. You'll see.
Speaker 80 Thousands of years ago, a reptilian race.
Speaker 23 Lizard people.
Speaker 52 Lizard people emerged from the Grand Canyon and changed into humans.
Speaker 16 Lizard people are shapeshifters.
Speaker 52 That would seem to be true. Other Pueblo cultures like the Zuni and the Acoma have similar legends that there were people there before the tribes.
Speaker 52 Other legends say a race of giants were there.
Speaker 52 And there are rumors that skeletons of giants have been discovered all over the western United States, but the evidence has been suppressed.
Speaker 81 The Smithsonian.
Speaker 38 Of course.
Speaker 52 Something I've learned from doing the show is that all myths and legends do carry a little bit of truth. We already have evidence that people landed in North America before Columbus.
Speaker 52 The Vikings famously explored and settled parts of Newfoundland Newfoundland 500 years before the quote-unquote New World was quote-unquote discovered.
Speaker 52 And there's growing evidence that ancient Chinese explorers landed in North and South America before the Vikings. But landing on the east or west coast of America is one thing.
Speaker 52 Getting to the Grand Canyon is a whole other thing. How could people get there?
Speaker 52 And even if they could, how did they have the technology to excavate millions of tons of rock in order to build an entire underground city?
Speaker 52 Well, we may have known the answer to that question for a thousand years.
Speaker 72 Traveling from Europe and Asia to America thousands of years ago was almost impossible.
Speaker 56 Almost.
Speaker 52
Many brave people did it. But traveling to the Grand Canyon is a much more difficult task than landing on a California beach.
To get to and build in the Grand Canyon requires technology.
Speaker 52 The Hopi have a very intriguing legend about the ant people. These are humanoid creatures that are smaller than humans with pale skin and large eyes like an insect.
Speaker 55 Aliens.
Speaker 52 According to legend, a series of cataclysms hit the earth many thousands of years ago.
Speaker 84 The Hopi were on the verge of being destroyed.
Speaker 52 A sky god emerged from what they called a moving star.
Speaker 55 UFO.
Speaker 52 The sky god brought the Hopi to the ant people who escorted them to underground caves for protection. The sky god then got back into his moving star and flew off above the clouds.
Speaker 52 The Piote have a legend about the Hav Musuvs. They're usually described as being humanoid in shape with golden skin and large eyes.
Speaker 58 Aliens.
Speaker 52 They lived in a vast underground city and traded with faraway people. They possessed weapons that the Piute described as silver tubes that shot lightning and can kill a man instantly.
Speaker 52 And the most interesting part of the Havmusuv legend, they supposedly flew silver canoes in the sky.
Speaker 38 UFOs.
Speaker 52 These craft made a humming sound and could maneuver like an eagle and move at great speeds. Most ancient cultures have a flood myth.
Speaker 52 They describe a global disaster that melted the ice caps and caused sea level to rise 400 feet. Entire cities were wiped out, maybe even entire continents.
Speaker 38 Atlantis.
Speaker 52 Most of these flood myths also talk about how, after the waters receded, a god-like people came down from the sky.
Speaker 52 These gods gave humans the gift of civilization and taught them things they had forgotten before the great flood. Things like writing, astronomy, and agriculture.
Speaker 52 Could the city in the Grand Canyon be evidence of this time in history? And if it is, why would anyone want to suppress it?
Speaker 52 All the information in today's episode comes from two front-page articles from the Phoenix Gazette published in 1909.
Speaker 52 In the years since, mainstream researchers have decided that the articles were a hoax, a fantastic story designed to sell newspapers.
Speaker 38 A 19th-century clickbait?
Speaker 55 Yep.
Speaker 38 The media hasn't changed much.
Speaker 52 Unfortunately, that's true. But many people believe the story is real, and the Smithsonian is covering it up.
Speaker 52 Smithsonian Public Relations, Marion's speaking.
Speaker 86 Hold on, hold on, hold on. Hello? Hello?
Speaker 51 Hello. Hello.
Speaker 52
I'm here. I'm here.
Sorry. I was on hold a long time.
How can I help you?
Speaker 22 They transferred me to Marion.
Speaker 52 Yes, this is Marion. Okay, great.
Speaker 65 My name is AJ, and I'm with The Wife Files.
Speaker 52
We're a YouTube channel that covers mysteries. Do you say you're from YouTube? The Y Files is a channel on YouTube, yes.
Okay.
Speaker 6 Okay, I wanted to talk to you about an article that was in the Phoenix, Arizona Gazette in 1909,
Speaker 6 and they sent me to you.
Speaker 52 I was hoping to ask you a couple of questions about that.
Speaker 54 Okay, let me stop you.
Speaker 87 No Egyptian artifacts of any kind have ever been found in North or South America.
Speaker 88 Sounds like you've given that speech before.
Speaker 87 Yes, I get this call a couple of times a year. I can tell you that the Smithsonian has never been involved in anything like this in the Grand Canyon or anywhere.
Speaker 3 So, G.E. Kincaid?
Speaker 87 There's no record of anyone by that name ever working for the Smithsonian. The whole thing is a hoax.
Speaker 52 Yeah, that's the prevailing belief, but the Smithsonian has been accused of covering this up, so.
Speaker 20 Yeah, I don't have a response to that you probably don't want to talk about giants or giant skeletons huh
Speaker 52 goodbye that's the official story kincaid's cave is a hoax so no reason to try and find it nothing to see here even kincaid himself wanted to keep people out First, I would impress that the cavern is nearly inaccessible.
Speaker 54 The entrance is 1,486 feet down the sheer canyon wall. It is located on government land, and no visitor will be allowed there under penalty of trespass.
Speaker 54 The scientists wish to work unmolested without fear of archaeological discoveries being disturbed by curio or relic hunters. A trip there would be fruitless, and the visitor would be sent on his way.
Speaker 52 Whether at the request of the Smithsonian or just to protect his find, it was clear that Kinkade wanted to dissuade people from finding the citadel.
Speaker 52 But even over 100 years later, that wouldn't stop people from trying.
Speaker 45 And some of those people
Speaker 52 say they found it.
Speaker 52 Jerry Wills and his wife Kathy have been studying the Kinkade cave mystery for years. Their approach was find the original base camp of the explorers, which would lead them to the cave.
Speaker 52 After years of research and exploring the area where G.E. Kinkade said he found the cave, Jerry and Kathy found a location covered in artifacts from that time.
Speaker 52 And on the canyon wall, just below this area, they believe is the entrance to the underground city. Exploring is difficult, though.
Speaker 52 The entire area where the cave is supposed to be is designated off-limits by the federal government.
Speaker 52 About a thousand caves have been discovered in the Grand Canyon, many of them man-made, but only about 30 have been mapped, and many of those have been sealed.
Speaker 52 Oh, for your safety.
Speaker 77 Oh, that's a bunch of bullshit.
Speaker 52 Yeah, I don't buy the safety excuse either.
Speaker 52 There are plenty of people who'd be willing to take the risk, and they'd be willing to sign a waiver that says the government isn't responsible if something happens. In fact, people have tried this.
Speaker 66 The government still says no, it's too dangerous.
Speaker 38 How nice of the government to look after us?
Speaker 52 Isn't that nice? Then why is it legal to jump out of a plane or ride a roller coaster or drive a car? Some things in life are dangerous, but they're still worth doing.
Speaker 52 Some other caves in the Grand Canyon have been blocked by steel gates. They say this is to protect the bat population.
Speaker 38 Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, did you say bats? We have to protect the bats.
Speaker 51 That's what they say.
Speaker 38 Well, having bats caused enough problems these last few years, allegedly.
Speaker 52 Still, people are willing to risk a fine or imprisonment to find the lost city in the Grand Canyon. But anyone who goes looking should expect a response.
Speaker 52 When Jerry and Kathy's team tried to explore the area, suddenly an unmarked plane appeared. Clearly, they were being watched.
Speaker 52 Despite this part of the Grand Canyon being a no-fly zone and the fact that no aircraft is allowed to fly below the rim, a plane appeared. Jerry Wills is convinced this was a warning.
Speaker 52
His team was unable to continue their expedition. Exploring the cave from above is almost impossible.
But what about exploring it from below as GE Kinke did? Another group of explorers tried this.
Speaker 52 As they approached the location, a black helicopter showed up. Not a tourist helicopter, not even a black civilian helicopter, an Apache combat helicopter.
Speaker 52 When this team explored the area above looking for the ventilation shafts Kincaid wrote about and possibly a way down, they found cement blocks in the middle of nowhere.
Speaker 52 Some of these blocks are platforms near the edge of the rim with hardware and anchors that would be used to assist mountaineers.
Speaker 52 When asked about this, the authorities authorities say these are reinforcing structures to prevent rock falls. Also in this forbidden zone, rock formations have unusual names.
Speaker 52 There's Isis Temple, Tower of Set, Horus, the Cheops Pyramid, and Ra. There's also the Manu Temple, the Buddha Temple, the Krishna Temple, and the Shiba Temple.
Speaker 52 And many more names that refer to ancient Egyptian and Hindu cultures, cultures that specifically have myths about a god helping civilization after the Great Flood.
Speaker 52 The official word is, the fact that these names exist within the Grand Canyon's no-go zone is a coincidence. But I don't really believe in those.
Speaker 92 Do you?
Speaker 52 David Hatcher Childress is a French author who's published 200 books.
Speaker 19 He often covers ancient mysteries.
Speaker 52 He believes the United States government is actively suppressing archaeological discoveries.
Speaker 52 He mentions that, While the film Raiders of the Lost Ark is fiction, the final scene showing the warehouse is close to reality.
Speaker 52 That the Smithsonian, an independent federal agency, is hiding some of the most important discoveries made in the Americas. He says the cover-up began in 1881 with famous geologist John Wesley Powell.
Speaker 52 Powell appointed Cyrus Thomas the director of the Eastern Mound Division of the Smithsonian Institution's Bureau of Ethnology.
Speaker 52 When Thomas came to the Smithsonian, he believed there was a race of mound builders that were distinct from and arrived before the American Indians.
Speaker 52 This school of thought is called diffusionism, which says throughout history, there's been a widespread dispersion of culture and civilization, even across great distances.
Speaker 52 The Smithsonian took the opposite approach.
Speaker 52 It promoted isolationism, which says most civilizations are isolated from each other and have little contact, especially when separated by large bodies of water.
Speaker 52 It was held that the advanced and highly populated civilizations of the Ohio and Mississippi valleys were rare, and that they didn't have contact with other advanced cultures like the Aztecs, the Toltecs, or the Maya.
Speaker 52 But the Mississippi River runs from Canada all all the way to the Gulf of Mexico.
Speaker 52 To say these cultures were isolated is like saying that people in the Black Sea had no contact with people in the Mediterranean. That's ridiculous.
Speaker 52 When ancient mounds of the American Midwest are examined, they show the existence of a complex culture, cities larger than those in Europe at the time.
Speaker 52 They also show burials of extremely tall people, sometimes seven or eight feet tall.
Speaker 52 When the Spiro mounds were excavated in the 1930s, seven and eight foot tall skeletons were found, at a time when the average height of a human male was about five foot six.
Speaker 52 Those skeletons have been lost. In 1892, stone coffins were discovered in Alabama by Frank Burns during a geological survey.
Speaker 52
The coffins were about seven and a half feet long, hollowed out by fire and metal chisels. The findings were sent to the Smithsonian.
In 1984, this report was found by researcher Frederick J.
Speaker 93 Pohl.
Speaker 52 He asked the Smithsonian about this. They said, we have not been able to find the specimens in our collections, though records show that they were received.
Speaker 38 Well, how do you lose giant stone coffins?
Speaker 52 That weighed several tons? I don't know.
Speaker 38 And never underestimate the incompetence of the federal government.
Speaker 52 Eight years later, the Smithsonian said they found the coffins, but they were stored in a warehouse that was contaminated by asbestos, so nobody could go in there to see them.
Speaker 52 During World War II, a crew was building an airship in Alaska. They excavated a mound that had gigantic human remains, skeletons twice or three times the size of a normal normal human.
Speaker 52 This report has been confirmed by multiple sources. The Smithsonian collected the findings, and that was the last anyone heard about it.
Speaker 52 There were stories like this from Alaska all the way down to Mexico City. An amazing discovery is made, the Smithsonian steps in, the story disappears.
Speaker 52 The saying, skeletons in your closet, means you have secrets you don't want revealed. Secrets that, if discovered, would be embarrassing and possibly dangerous.
Speaker 52 In the case of the Smithsonian, skeletons in the closet could be taken literally.
Speaker 52
But the government literally has evidence that an advanced race was in North America long before the native tribes arrived. Evidence they don't want revealed.
Mainstream science says this is nonsense.
Speaker 52 But the Hopi and other Grand Canyon tribes do believe this.
Speaker 52 The Hopi say that when the first people emerged from the Grand Canyon, they sent a message to the Temple of the Sun asking for a blessing of peace. That messenger hasn't returned.
Speaker 52 But even today in Hopi villages, at sundown, tribal elders can be seen on rooftops gazing toward the setting sun, waiting for the messenger to come home.
Speaker 52
And when he does, the ancient land will be returned to the first people. Now, that's an optimistic belief.
The United States spent 200 years taking land from the first people.
Speaker 52 You really think they're going to give it back?
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Speaker 6 Okay, I admit that the story does sound far-fetched, but it is true that there is a no-fly zone over that part of the Grand Canyon.
Speaker 129 And even in the public areas, you can't fly beneath the rim of the canyon.
Speaker 130 But when people go searching for the cave, unmarked planes show up almost immediately in the no-fly zone below the rim.
Speaker 16 Below the rim.
Speaker 28 Don't be an infant.
Speaker 131 Next up is the hollow earth theory and the story of Agartha.
Speaker 133 Agartha is a hidden city inside the earth.
Speaker 134 Now, I don't want to give too much away, but they ended up there after losing a war with Atlantis.
Speaker 132 This is a good one.
Speaker 136 Cultures around the world have myths that speak of a mysterious underground kingdom that exists deep within the earth, hidden away from the primitive and violent surface dwellers, which is us.
Speaker 30 Picture a society untouched by time, unscathed by war, and unaffected by natural disasters, a culture thriving in the vast open spaces inside the earth.
Speaker 142 Throughout history, many have looked for physical evidence of its existence, tempted by stories of a peaceful but powerful powerful subterranean civilization with advanced technology and ancient knowledge long forgotten by modern man.
Speaker 148 This is the story of the underground kingdom of Agartha, and the explorers who've said that not only is it a real place, but they know where it is.
Speaker 19 Stories of a hollow earth have existed in cultures for thousands of years.
Speaker 151 Nearly every ancient society has stories about an underground realm, often inhabited by superior beings.
Speaker 146 Buddhists firmly believe in the subterranean kingdom of Agartha, ruled by the mysterious king of the world.
Speaker 48 Ooh, Leonardo DiCabrio?
Speaker 152 No.
Speaker 59 Agartha is said to be home to millions and connected to the surface by a vast tunnel network within the planet's crust.
Speaker 139 Indian religions speak of a place called Patala, which translates to that which is below the feet.
Speaker 150 Patala is described as a beautiful land full of rolling green hills and crystal clear lakes.
Speaker 154 Agartha is described the same way.
Speaker 19 Some believe this is the real Garden of Eden, that when God cast Adam and Eve out of the garden, he actually sent them to the surface.
Speaker 14 In an ancient Mayan text called the Popol Vu, there is the story of Shibaba, an underworld civilization.
Speaker 8 And from Shibalba, twin brothers emerge and like Adam and Eve, they became the first people above ground.
Speaker 3 Chicomazok is the place where the Aztecs emerged to live on the surface of the earth.
Speaker 159 It translates to seven caves, and researchers are actually looking for it, and some think they found it.
Speaker 157 African and other Native American legends also mention subterranean realms and cavern spirits.
Speaker 41 The most consistent story is that of an advanced inner-earth civilization isolated from surface humanity.
Speaker 162 The Sumerians knew it as Ker, a void space or home of the dead.
Speaker 15 The Babylonians called it Urkala, another world ruled by gods.
Speaker 76 The Chinese call this underworld Diyu, and the Japanese call it Yomi.
Speaker 165 Ancient Egypt, Islam, Greek, Rome, even Celtic Irish, they all have myths of an underground world.
Speaker 158 More modern myths may call this place hell, but it could be argued that hell is a relatively new concept, that it's a construct designed to create fear and inspire good behavior.
Speaker 141 But before the concept of hell, the underworld was inhabited by advanced, god-like people who came to the surface of the earth.
Speaker 53 Once on the surface, they either created humanity or taught civilization to primitive humans.
Speaker 3 It's easy enough to interpret those as the same thing.
Speaker 22 And like the flood myth, which is present in every ancient culture, the Inner Earth story also appears over and over again.
Speaker 151 Recent discoveries are starting to point to the fact that a great flood did really happen.
Speaker 15 So when cultures from all over the world share this same myth, we have to start looking at all those myths as maybe more than just a story.
Speaker 58 Those myths may be referring to actual history.
Speaker 169 But to prove the existence of Agartha, an underground civilization, and the hollow earth, we'll need more than stories.
Speaker 140 We need scientific evidence and eyewitness testimony.
Speaker 17 Fortunately, we have both.
Speaker 93 The hollow Earth theory proposes that our planet is not a solid sphere, but a hollow one, with vast unexplored spaces within.
Speaker 165 In 1692, astronomer Edmund Halley proposed a hollow Earth consisting of a shell about 500 miles thick.
Speaker 136 Within that shell are two concentric spheres and a central core about the diameter of Venus.
Speaker 93 Haley said the spaces in between the shells could support life with light provided by a luminous atmosphere.
Speaker 161 In the late 18th century, mathematician Leonard Euler used physics calculations to hypothesize a hollow Earth with a central sun.
Speaker 15 Euler's calculations suggested that gravity would propel matter equally in all directions, forming spheres with hollow interiors.
Speaker 38 Planes always fly in a straight line. If the earth Earth was round, they would have to adjust for that.
Speaker 17 Yeah, that's not how that works.
Speaker 38 Yeah, speaking of planes, if the Earth was a spinning ball, you'd be able to fly a helicopter straight up in the air, wait for the ball to spin, and then land on the other side of the planet.
Speaker 176 Yeah, the atmosphere spins too.
Speaker 76 The air.
Speaker 51 Yeah.
Speaker 38 Right. How fast does the Earth spin?
Speaker 66 Well, that depends on the latitude.
Speaker 177 Fast.
Speaker 5 Between 300 and 1,000 miles an hour.
Speaker 38 Okay, so empty air sticks to the ground, moving at a thousand miles an hour.
Speaker 10 Yep.
Speaker 38 In perfect sync, everywhere on a big round pole.
Speaker 17 Yes.
Speaker 38 Agree to disagree.
Speaker 13 But what does modern science have to say about the hollow Earth?
Speaker 158 On the surface, the hollow Earth theory seems to defy basic geological understanding.
Speaker 180 Seismic data and the study of Earth's gravitational field suggests that our planet is composed of several layers, the crust, the mantle, and the core.
Speaker 161 However, proponents of the hollow Earth theory argue that the data are open to interpretation.
Speaker 29 They point to anomalies in seismic readings, which they claim could be indicative of large empty spaces within the earth.
Speaker 66 They also cite the existence of vast underground caves as evidence of the earth's hollowness. And if the earth is hollow, it could support the large population of Agartha.
Speaker 161 Even if the earth isn't completely hollow, if there are vast hollow areas within the earth, why couldn't they house a hidden civilization?
Speaker 24 Some trace the story of Agartha back to ancient Buddhist texts, where it's described as a paradise, a place of pure harmony and advanced knowledge.
Speaker 37 In the Western world, what we know about Agartha mostly comes from Alexander Santive Delvedre.
Speaker 19 He was a French intellectual and occultist. He spoke of Agartha as a secret civilization, its people possessing wisdom and technology far beyond our understanding.
Speaker 89 Santive learned of Agartha through his Sanskrit teacher, who insisted it was a real geographic place.
Speaker 12 Santiv's descriptions of Agartha were vivid and detailed.
Speaker 94 He spoke of grand palaces illuminated by magical light and of advanced technologies that harnessed the Earth's magnetic field.
Speaker 89 In the 19th century, Agarthans already had citywide lighting, railways, and even air travel.
Speaker 15 Santives believed that the Agarthans were the guardians of sacred knowledge, a knowledge that can bring about a golden age of peace and enlightenment on the surface world.
Speaker 19 Others would continue the search for Agartha.
Speaker 148 Occultist Elena Blavatsky searched for evidence of a hollow earth and the secret tunnels that Agarthans used to travel all over the planet.
Speaker 13 But as far as we know, Santiv and Madame Blavatsky didn't find Agartha.
Speaker 181 But not because it doesn't exist, because they didn't know where to look.
Speaker 188 But we do.
Speaker 37 The reason Edmund Haley started exploring the idea that the Earth was hollow was because of strange compass readings in the Atlantic.
Speaker 17 He believed that the Aurora Borealis resulted from gases escaping from the inner spheres inside the Earth.
Speaker 162 This suggested there were entrances entrances at the north and south pole, and once inside, you can navigate the inner shells through vast cave and tunnel systems.
Speaker 34 The hollow earth theory fell out of favor for a while, but gained new life in 1818.
Speaker 142 American John Sims launched the notorious Sims hole theory.
Speaker 150 He declared that the Earth was hollow and habitable.
Speaker 68 He said the inner Earth is comprised of four nested shells with openings at the poles.
Speaker 37 And Sims dedicated much of his life to promoting this theory by trying to put together a polar expedition, though that never happened.
Speaker 192 In 1829, Norwegian fisherman Olaf Janssen claimed that he and his father sailed through a polar opening and into the planet's interior.
Speaker 193 There they spent two years among a race of giants before exiting through the South Pole.
Speaker 138 His story is documented in the book The Smoky God by Willis George Emerson, which is a fun read.
Speaker 17 But probably the most famous and detailed account of the world inside the Earth comes from Admiral Richard E.
Speaker 4 Byrd.
Speaker 19 Admiral Byrd was an aviation pioneer, polar explorer, and one of the most decorated and celebrated officers in the history of the American military, so a serious guy.
Speaker 82 Byrd took his plane out on a quick survey mission of the North Pole.
Speaker 157 As he was flying over ice and snow, he noticed the sunlight changed.
Speaker 17 Then it got warmer.
Speaker 130 A few minutes later, he was flying over fields of green grass and forests and rivers.
Speaker 134 He even saw a woolly mammoth grazing in one of those fields.
Speaker 11 Then he no longer had control of his plane, and suddenly two craft came up beside him.
Speaker 195 Off our port and starboard wings are a strange type of aircraft. They are closing rapidly alongside.
Speaker 127 They are disc-shaped and have a radiant quality to them.
Speaker 195
They are close enough now to see the markings on them. It is a type of swastika.
This is fantastic.
Speaker 127 Where are we? What has happened?
Speaker 195
I tug at the controls again. They will not respond.
We are caught in an invisible vice grip of some type.
Speaker 157 Admiral Bird lands and is escorted by tall blonde men to an underground city.
Speaker 30 There, the admiral meets someone called the master.
Speaker 89 Now, I linked to an episode where I go into a lot of detail about what Admiral Byrd found, so check that out if you want to learn more.
Speaker 183 I'll try not to spoil too much here.
Speaker 95 So Admiral Byrd found a way to the hollow earth in the North Pole.
Speaker 137 Others have found their way in through the South Pole.
Speaker 66 The South Pole is often connected to Nazi Germany.
Speaker 130 Hitler was an occultist and was famously fascinated by the possibility that the hollow earth could be accessed through Antarctica.
Speaker 17 Germany did make an expedition to Antarctica in 1938.
Speaker 193 I theorized in the Operation High Jump episode that this was the reason the United States sent such a large, well-armed task force down there in 1946.
Speaker 13 The Germans had maps of the area, including a cave system underneath the surface.
Speaker 28 They even had step-by-step directions on how to get into the hollow Earth.
Speaker 155 The directions are very specific.
Speaker 19 Distances right down to the meter.
Speaker 39 After you follow the first eight steps, the ninth step is interesting.
Speaker 198
Proceed to Agartha, full speed. Process straight ahead until the new light can be seen.
Change of magnetic poles, the changes of the compass needle and instruments are to be disregarded.
Speaker 19 German U-Boat 209 commanded by Einrich Vrode said he reached the interior of the Earth and found a vast network of tunnels.
Speaker 13 There are rumors that, after Germany surrendered, some Nazis fled to Antarctica and hid in these tunnels.
Speaker 175 And other rumors say they're still there.
Speaker 139 But the poles aren't the only way to get into the cave system that leads to Agartha.
Speaker 17 There are entrances all over the world.
Speaker 26 And chances are, there's one near you.
Speaker 19 The planetary grid system is a network of energy lines crisscrossing the planet.
Speaker 22 These lines are said to influence everything from ancient monument placement to the patterns of animal migration.
Speaker 84 The idea of a planetary grid goes back to the ancient Greeks, who believed in a concept called amphalos, the Earth's central point.
Speaker 57 And you can see this concept expressed in places like the Oracle at Delphi, said to be the center of the ancient world.
Speaker 135 A few centuries later in the 1920s, Alfred Watkins noticed that ancient sites seemed to line up along straight paths.
Speaker 12 He termed these ley lines.
Speaker 146 And while some considered his theory a coincidence, others saw a pattern connected to the Earth's geography.
Speaker 171 More recently, the unified vector geometry theory was proposed by Buckminster Fuller and later developed by scientists like William Becker and Beth Haggins.
Speaker 5 According to this theory, the Earth is covered by an invisible grid formed by 120 identical triangles. This grid supposedly aligns with significant geographical and historical points across the globe.
Speaker 137 Take the Great Pyramid of Giza.
Speaker 135 According to the unified vector geometry theory, it isn't randomly placed, but occupies a crucial point on this global energy grid.
Speaker 203 The same applies to other ancient landmarks like Stonehenge and Machu Picchu, the Nazca Lines, and even the Bermuda Triangle.
Speaker 30 In addition to the North and South Poles, entrances to the kingdom of Gartha are also found on some of these planetary grid points.
Speaker 190 Let's take a quick trip around the world and look for a way in.
Speaker 3 The first way into the hollow Earth is in the caves of Deiros in Greece.
Speaker 42 This entrance is closely connected to Plato and the story of Atlantis.
Speaker 200 From Greece across the Mediterranean to Mount Epimao in Italy,
Speaker 17 for centuries, this has been called a portal to the inner earth.
Speaker 193 Now going south across the Mediterranean is the pyramid of Giza.
Speaker 13 Giza doesn't seem like it would have access to the hollow earth, but we now know that underneath the pyramids is a vast cave system, underground rivers, reservoirs, and tunnels.
Speaker 190 With modern technology like ground-penetrating radar, new caverns and chambers are discovered all the time.
Speaker 155 Another entrance to the earth is said to be within King Solomon's mines.
Speaker 135 Solomon, a king of Israel and son of King David, was known for his wisdom, power, and his personal fortune, described as one of the largest on Earth.
Speaker 167 King Solomon's Mines became known to the world because of the famous novel featuring the character Alan Quartermain, an adventurer you might remember from the movie, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.
Speaker 168 Quartermain was played by Sean Connery.
Speaker 38 Underrated movie.
Speaker 85 Yeah, I think so too.
Speaker 154 Wealth is usually associated with gold, but King Solomon's wealth is thought to have come from the mining of copper.
Speaker 12 And these mines would have been operating around the 13th century BC.
Speaker 161 But even though the legend of King Solomon's mines comes from a fictional novel, treasure hunters believe this is a real place and have been searching for it for a long time.
Speaker 160 In 2008, there might have been a breakthrough.
Speaker 19 An ancient mining city was discovered in Kerbat el-Nahas in Jordan.
Speaker 179 There, archaeologists discovered a copper mine and a copper smelting camp, which seemed to be operational in the 13th century BC.
Speaker 5 The team also found a lot of personal items, including clothing, ceramics, fabric, even tools, all indicating a highly developed, long-term settlement at the site.
Speaker 154 And these objects have been dated to the same period as King Solomon's mines.
Speaker 208 The next entrance is said to be in Rama, India,
Speaker 70 where an ancient subterranean city was recently discovered.
Speaker 19 Tibet is home to many stories about hollow earth, so it's not surprising that there are entrances underneath the Himalayas.
Speaker 19 One of these is in the underground city of Shonshe, which, according to legend, has been guarded guarded by monks for thousands of years.
Speaker 69 But there are entrances to the inner earth in the west too.
Speaker 5 Iguazu in Argentina allegedly has an entrance hidden somewhere underneath the famous waterfalls.
Speaker 70 Underneath Mato Grosso in Brazil is said to be the city of Posid, which was built by Atlanteans after the destruction of Atlantis.
Speaker 132 Even the United States has gateways to the hollow earth.
Speaker 68 Mammoth Cave in Kentucky has been known as an entrance since the first native tribes arrived there thousands of years ago.
Speaker 19 The most famous entrance to the hollow earth in the United States is probably Mount Shasta.
Speaker 59 It's here where the city of Telos is said to have been built and is still occupied.
Speaker 30 And there is a lot of evidence that something is happening there.
Speaker 67 I linked to an episode we did where we called Mount Shasta the most paranormal place on Earth.
Speaker 16 And it absolutely is.
Speaker 133 And these are just a few entrances to the kingdom of Gartha in North America.
Speaker 22 There are others in Arkansas, California, and other states, and several locations in Canada.
Speaker 35 Even the site of the secret underground base in Dulce, New Mexico, was said to be chosen because of its proximity to an entrance to the inner earth.
Speaker 168 And we did an episode on Dulce Base as well.
Speaker 41 And you might have noticed that a lot of alleged entrances to the hollow Earth coincide with locations famous for UFO sightings.
Speaker 19 And this might not be a coincidence.
Speaker 181 Whenever someone mentions a UFO, our instinct is to look up toward the sky, to space.
Speaker 4 Turns out, we might be looking in the wrong direction.
Speaker 57 When we think of UFOs, we think of extraterrestrials from a distant star.
Speaker 4 And that could be true.
Speaker 62 But there's also the theory that UFOs aren't coming from a different planet, but from inside our planet.
Speaker 68 Scientifically speaking, it makes more sense that there's a race of humanoid beings living within the Earth, as opposed to a race of humanoid beings who have somehow figured out how to cross the vast distances of space.
Speaker 165 And isn't it strange that the aliens we talk about are all humanoid?
Speaker 32 Whether they're the small grays, the tall whites, or even the goblin-type aliens, they all kind of look like us.
Speaker 128 Two eyes, nose, mouth, two legs with feet and toes, two arms with hands and fingers.
Speaker 57 Even the size of the beings is close to the size of humans.
Speaker 68 Now, maybe all intelligent life in the universe evolves this way, but I would expect life in different biomes, in different ecosystems, on different planets light years away to look radically different than humans.
Speaker 17 But they don't.
Speaker 19 So it's possible that they're from here, just in places we can't normally see.
Speaker 11 We see a lot of UFOs coming out of the ocean, but we haven't found any type of base, at least not a confirmed sighting.
Speaker 57 So what if the base is inside the hollow earth, under the ocean?
Speaker 186 I can think of no better hiding place.
Speaker 144 Far sight of the moon.
Speaker 10 Yeah, that would be a good hiding place.
Speaker 66 And there are crazy things happening on the far side of the moon, and an episode on that is coming up.
Speaker 78 There have been many UFO sightings around Mount Shasta where the object flies into the mountain and then disappears.
Speaker 176 Now, assuming the witnesses are telling the truth, and I believe they are, the objects are going somewhere.
Speaker 146 In the Arctic near the North Pole, the earliest reported UFO sightings go back to the year 1850.
Speaker 30 Captain DeHaven and his medical officer saw what they thought was a balloon, but then a second object appeared and suddenly both objects vanished.
Speaker 77 Around midnight on January 22nd, 1952, a strange object was tracked on radar at a military outpost in northern Alaska.
Speaker 59 It was moving at 1,500 miles per hour, which no aircraft on Earth could do.
Speaker 39 Three jets were sent to investigate, and as the jets approached, the radar blip slowed down and just hovered.
Speaker 33 A few seconds later, it streaked out of sight, heading to the North Pole, moving even faster than before.
Speaker 186 On October 5th, 1960, the ballistic missile early warning station at Thule, Greenland thought World War III had started.
Speaker 141 Radar was tracking multiple objects moving at speeds too fast to be anything except a Soviet missile attack.
Speaker 192 Within minutes, U.S.
Speaker 41 bases in England and Canada were mobilized, and NORAD and the Strategic Air Command were alerted.
Speaker 68 A few minutes later, the radar signals changed course and disappeared somewhere near the North Pole.
Speaker 166 The military has been dealing with Arctic UFOs since 1945.
Speaker 93 The first UFO in Alaska emerged from the sea in March of that year.
Speaker 14 14 crew members on an Army transport ship witnessed the object.
Speaker 139 It approached the ship, circled it, and then flew away.
Speaker 176 And there were many more sightings in the Arctic during this time.
Speaker 19 Inuits in the Arctic regions have encountered UFOs in the past and included them in their myths.
Speaker 179 Once, a man from the Buckland River tribe discovered what appeared to be a UFO landing site.
Speaker 93 Two strips of land approximately two feet wide had been burned all the way down to the ground.
Speaker 16 On Sledge Island, Inuits have a legend of a massive ball of fire resembling the moon that descended from the sky.
Speaker 37 Shortly after the object was spotted, a creature described as a human skeleton appeared in the village.
Speaker 29 According to the legend, this visitor was not friendly and killed most of the people it encountered.
Speaker 7 These are just a small fraction of the stories about UFOs and visitors coming from the ocean, from the poles, or the middle of the earth.
Speaker 146 So we've covered the eyewitness accounts.
Speaker 37 The next piece of the Hollow Earth puzzle is scientific evidence.
Speaker 212 We have that too.
Speaker 31 The Cola Superdeep Borehole was just nine inches in diameter, and at 40,230 feet, it's the deepest hole on Earth.
Speaker 15 It took almost 20 years to reach its depth of seven and a half miles.
Speaker 38 That Mel's hole is deep in a net.
Speaker 13 Well, that's true, but that's another episode.
Speaker 38 They pulled some crazy stuff out of Mel's hole.
Speaker 140 Cola Superdeep was abandoned in 1992 when the drillers encountered higher than expected temperatures, over 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
Speaker 76 The drill just couldn't handle the heat.
Speaker 183 Seven and a half miles is a deep hole, but it's 4,000 miles to the Earth's core, so the Cola Superdeep is nothing.
Speaker 39 And since grade school, we've been taught that the Earth is made up of the crust, the mantle, and the core.
Speaker 206 And the core is two layers.
Speaker 48 The outer core is almost 1400 miles thick and mostly made of liquid iron and nickel.
Speaker 158 The inner core is a solid sphere with a radius of about 750 miles.
Speaker 95 And the inner core is thought to be comprised mostly of iron and some nickel.
Speaker 13 But if we've only dug seven and a half miles down, how do we know for sure what's down there?
Speaker 11 Well, we don't.
Speaker 192 But by using different methods, scientists can take a guess.
Speaker 37 The primary way we've learned about the Earth's core is through the study of seismic waves.
Speaker 154 These are waves of energy that travel through the Earth's layers.
Speaker 134 They move at different speeds depending on the density and the composition of the layer they're passing through.
Speaker 167 Further evidence comes from the Earth's magnetic field, which is best explained by a dynamo effect.
Speaker 173 This is the spinning motion of the liquid iron and nickel which generates the field.
Speaker 53 But something strange happened at the beginning of this year.
Speaker 48 The Earth's inner core stopped spinning.
Speaker 19 Now it's believed that the core started spinning again, but in a different direction.
Speaker 62 And nobody really knows what caused this.
Speaker 5 We can only guess.
Speaker 17 A few months later, it was determined that the Earth has an inner, inner core of solid iron about 400 miles wide.
Speaker 19 So new discoveries are always being made, and everything we know about the inner Earth is just educated guesses.
Speaker 149 Why couldn't the Earth be hollow?
Speaker 75 Or at least have enormous hollowed-out spaces that could support life?
Speaker 158 Now, skeptics have argued that you can't have life inside the Earth.
Speaker 48 The main reason, there's no water.
Speaker 164 Well, when the Cola Superdeep borehole was being drilled, fossilized plankton were found miles below the surface.
Speaker 77 Still, those are fossils, maybe millions of years old.
Speaker 15 What about now?
Speaker 78 Well, in 2014, scientists discovered water hundreds of miles below the Earth's surface.
Speaker 95 Not just a little water, they found so much water you can fill all the Earth's oceans with it.
Speaker 213 Three times. Whoa!
Speaker 48 Most of the Earth's water is not on the surface, it's inside.
Speaker 14 This water exists between 250 and 410 miles under the surface in an area called a transition zone, a buffer layer that separates the upper from the lower mantle.
Speaker 201 Now, if there's water down there, I wonder what else could be down there.
Speaker 19 Well, in 2019, geologists from Princeton University published a study that surprised everyone.
Speaker 151 They used supercomputers to analyze seismic data from some of the largest earthquakes ever recorded, including the 8.2 magnitude quake that hit Bolivia in 1994.
Speaker 179 Earthquakes that big reverberate through the entire planet.
Speaker 141 We may not feel them, but seismographs can detect them.
Speaker 74 Analysis showed that beneath the surface of the Earth are vast plains and mountains taller than the Himalayas, all deep within the Earth.
Speaker 15 How deep?
Speaker 9 410 miles, the same depth as where the water is found, the transition zone.
Speaker 158 So what about the entrances at the poles?
Speaker 89 Well, pictures are hard to find, and they're allegedly all altered by NASA, which we know they do.
Speaker 37 But there are a few photos and videos out there of the poles that show something strange.
Speaker 191 These photos were taken by the SS-7 satellite in 1968.
Speaker 37 In one photograph, the North Pole was covered by clouds.
Speaker 160 In another photograph, the same area had no clouds, revealing a massive hole where the pole would be.
Speaker 9 This was taken from the ISS in March of 2015.
Speaker 196 NASA says that's a typhoon.
Speaker 49 Fair enough.
Speaker 30 But in 1987, the Russian space station Mir recorded something at the North Pole that is definitely not a typhoon.
Speaker 139 What is this?
Speaker 193 The hollow Earth theory has been around for centuries. At one point in history, it was the mainstream scientific view.
Speaker 146 But is there really evidence to support the hollow earth theory?
Speaker 150 Well, yes and no.
Speaker 189 Modern hollow earth theory always starts with Edmund Halley.
Speaker 68 He's a famous astronomer, which gives the theory some legitimacy.
Speaker 158 Haley put forth the idea because he couldn't explain why magnetic poles were moving.
Speaker 68 He figured there were shells inside the Earth that moved independently of each other.
Speaker 39 And he was almost right.
Speaker 77 During Haley's time, it wasn't yet known that the Earth's core spins, which creates the magnetic field.
Speaker 37 but he was correct that sections of the inner earth can move independently of each other including the core as we only recently discovered mathematician leonard euler gets credit for pushing the hollow earth theory in the 18th century now i'm not sure how he became attached to the theory there's no evidence he ever said anything about it and the concept of agartha as a legendary subterranean world was first mentioned in the late 19th century French occultist and esoteric writer Alexander Santive introduced the idea in a book he published in 1885.
Speaker 13 And according to his writing, Agartha was a place of ancient wisdom and spiritual enlightenment, but he never found actual hard evidence that it was a real place.
Speaker 53 He actually never looked.
Speaker 205 The idea caught on with other occultists and theosophists like Madame Blavatsky, but the only evidence they provide of the hollow earth comes from visions and telepathic communication.
Speaker 134 And I'll leave it to you to determine if that's proof enough.
Speaker 61 Most modern hollow earth myths come from the Jules Verne novel Journey to the Center of the Earth.
Speaker 215 When this story was published in 1864, it was a phenomenon and made Jules Verne one of the most famous authors in the world.
Speaker 148 Before there were blockbuster films, there was Jules Verne.
Speaker 134 Now, Admiral Byrd's diary describes how he flew into the hollow earth and had a meeting with an advanced race of beings who warned him about war and nuclear weapons.
Speaker 191 And this is a common theme in science fiction in the 1950s and 1960s.
Speaker 166 Admiral Byrd's story is basically the same plot as the day the earth stood still.
Speaker 42 It just takes place in Agartha.
Speaker 19 I covered Admiral Byrd's diary in the other episode.
Speaker 205 I also explained whether the diary is real or not.
Speaker 64 Spoiler alert, it's not.
Speaker 95 Now, the water found inside the Earth is real.
Speaker 192 And when the discovery was made, we were clickbaited into thinking there are these vast oceans inside the Earth.
Speaker 162 And there may be, but that's not what this discovery showed.
Speaker 58 There is a massive amount of water in the Earth's mantle, but it's trapped inside rocks and minerals.
Speaker 17 Yep, lots of it.
Speaker 140 It's a process called mineral hydration.
Speaker 66 It's a good way to lock water in in a dry environment.
Speaker 162 For example, the surface of the moon is covered in water.
Speaker 3 The water is just embedded in the lunar soil.
Speaker 141 So the water inside the earth is real, just not in a way that's obvious.
Speaker 48 And the mountains inside the earth are also real, but also not how we might think.
Speaker 24 Again, we were clickbaited into thinking there are huge open spaces underground with mountain ranges.
Speaker 75 And you can't help but picture scenes from Godzilla vs.
Speaker 158 Kong.
Speaker 207 But that's not what they found.
Speaker 75 There are mountains of material that are denser than the material around them.
Speaker 19 It's still solid-ish material, just of different densities.
Speaker 28 The NASA video is a typhoon, and the video taken from Mir was a hoax, but you probably knew that.
Speaker 15 Now, it's true, there aren't a lot of satellite pictures of the poles, and there is a lot of speculation about this.
Speaker 48 The truth is, there aren't a lot of satellites there.
Speaker 22 It's not worth taking a lot of photographs of the poles because not much changes.
Speaker 48 And photos that are almost pure white are hard to analyze.
Speaker 15 Now, there are a couple of satellites in polar orbit that measure how much the ice caps are melting.
Speaker 38 They're not.
Speaker 86 Well,
Speaker 77 a few years ago, you can maybe make that argument, but NASA reports that Antarctica is losing around 150 billion tons of ice per year.
Speaker 38 Yeah, but when does NASA ever tell the truth, huh?
Speaker 50 Now, that's a fair point.
Speaker 66 But just last week, it was reported that Antarctica is experiencing a a six sigma event, which happens every seven and a half million years.
Speaker 38 Oh, this sounds bad.
Speaker 15 Well, it ain't good, but assuming we're not all underwater, I'll get into that in a future episode.
Speaker 75 As for things I can explain, there are witness reports of UFOs flying into Mount Shasta.
Speaker 19 No video that I can find, but multiple witnesses have seen this, and I think they're probably telling the truth.
Speaker 181 UFOs are coming out of the ocean.
Speaker 17 We've all seen video of that.
Speaker 30 And if the aliens landed tomorrow and held a press conference where they said we're not from another planet, but we're from inside this planet, well, that would make sense to me.
Speaker 15 Scientifically speaking, that's more plausible than creating wormholes and bending space-time to travel through space.
Speaker 90 But until the aliens announce themselves, or until our government starts telling the truth, we're just not going to know for sure.
Speaker 219 And there are many, many interesting stories about the hollow Earth, and there's no way to cover them in one episode, so keep an eye out for more on this topic.
Speaker 4 Now, it's true we can't prove the Earth is hollow.
Speaker 166 It's also true we can't prove it's not.
Speaker 91 If you follow this channel, you know I try to find as much truth in these mysteries as I can.
Speaker 158 But the real truth is, some mysteries just can't be solved.
Speaker 4 And those are my favorite.
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Speaker 17 All right.
Speaker 6 I actually wasn't going to include this next video, but someone insisted on it. It's too perfect.
Speaker 165 We gotta put this one in.
Speaker 131 He's probably right.
Speaker 19 It's an entire episode about the war between Atlantis and Lemuria.
Speaker 3 Now, I wrote this episode because while researching Agartha, I came across this story of this ancient war and I was fascinated by it.
Speaker 67 I'm also proud of the edit.
Speaker 21 See you in a minute.
Speaker 3 For thousands of years, the world has been captivated by the mystery of Atlantis.
Speaker 74 The concept of an ancient city hidden beneath the ocean is intriguing. But what if there was not just a city, but an entire continent buried beneath the waves?
Speaker 19 The continent of Lemuria is a huge landmass believed to have sunk in the Indian Ocean after some ancient catastrophic event.
Speaker 167 Atlantis and Lemuria are similar in that they've sparked numerous theories, legends, and interpretations.
Speaker 28 But Atlantis and Lemuria are very different in one way.
Speaker 16 There's no proof of Atlantis.
Speaker 33 In 1858, zoologist Philip Sclater made a name for himself in the scientific community.
Speaker 154 He divided the world into six geographic regions based on the distribution of animal species.
Speaker 130 They were Palearctic, Ethiopian, Indian, Australasian, Nearctic, and Neotropical.
Speaker 158 Sclater's system is still used today.
Speaker 77 While Slater created his classification system, a mystery emerged.
Speaker 39 The fossils of lemurs.
Speaker 13 Lemur fossils were found in parts of South America, India, Africa, and Madagascar.
Speaker 48 These areas are not connected by land, but lemurs don't swim.
Speaker 130 The question haunted Sclater, how did lemurs spread across the world?
Speaker 154 Identical species don't develop in different places at once.
Speaker 213 He had a radical answer, that there was a landmass once connecting these areas.
Speaker 19 It would need to be massive, bigger than Australia.
Speaker 132 His theory was a stretch, but it would solve the mysteries he'd stumbled upon.
Speaker 73 Along with the unexplainable locations of lemurs, Sclater also uncovered extreme similarities between monkeys found in South America and Africa.
Speaker 89 In 1864, Sclater published an essay about his theory in a scientific journal.
Speaker 75 In the essay, he refers to his proposed continent as Lemuria.
Speaker 92 Anterior to the existence of Africa in its present shape, a large continent occupied parts of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, stretching out towards what is now America to the west and to India on the east.
Speaker 92 In Madagascar and the Mascarene Islands, we have existing relics of this great continent, for which as the original focus of the Sturps Lemurum, I should propose the name Lemuria.
Speaker 77 This land bridge concept was popular in the scientific community at the time.
Speaker 68 Sir Charles Lyle, a well-known geologist and teacher, believed continents were rising above and sinking below the ocean routinely, just very gradually.
Speaker 41 So it's no surprise that following the publication of Philips Glater's essay, the Lemuria theory really caught on.
Speaker 10 It turned out, Lemuria may have been the answer to many scientific mysteries.
Speaker 70 In fact, Lemuria may have been the birthplace of humanity itself.
Speaker 35 In 1864, Philip Sclater introduced the concept of Lemuria to the world.
Speaker 183 24 years later, Helena Blavatsky, a Russian theosophist and co-founder of the Theosophical Society, published a book titled The Secret Doctrine.
Speaker 90 Theosophists, like Blavatsky, are truth seekers who study a combination of religion, science, and philosophy.
Speaker 130 They believe in an ancient wisdom that unites all major religions.
Speaker 19 The Secret Doctrine discusses the origins of humanity.
Speaker 76 It outlines a sequence of seven root races representing different stages of human development.
Speaker 134 Currently, we are in the fifth stage, with the sixth and seventh yet to come.
Speaker 3 According to the Secret Doctrine and other writings by Blavatsky's followers, the first root race was ethereal and didn't possess physical bodies.
Speaker 134 They may have appeared as giant phantoms.
Speaker 182 The second root race was shapeless and asexual.
Speaker 38 Asexual.
Speaker 66 Well, they didn't engage in sexual activity.
Speaker 38 Sounds like they were married.
Speaker 94 They reproduced through a process called budding, which is essentially natural cloning.
Speaker 53 The third root race thrived in Lemuria and coexisted with dinosaurs.
Speaker 133 According to Theosophist W.
Speaker 66 Scott Elliott, these Lemurians were giants.
Speaker 220 His stature was gigantic, somewhere between 12 and 15 feet. His skin was of a yellowish-brown color.
Speaker 220 He had a strangely flattened face, eyes small but piercing, and set curiously far apart so that he could see sideways as well as in front.
Speaker 220 The head sloped backwards and upwards in a rather curious way. The arms and legs, especially the former, were longer in proportion than ours.
Speaker 221 Early in the Lemurian period, these supposed human ancestors laid eggs, but over millions of years, their reproductive process developed into,
Speaker 203 well, the one that we know today.
Speaker 38 Yeah, that process has gotten me in a lot of trouble over the years.
Speaker 3 Well, maybe you shouldn't have engaged in the process as much as you did.
Speaker 38 Yeah, what can I tell you? The ladies love me.
Speaker 53 But Blavatsky and her followers weren't the only people who wrote about the Lemurians.
Speaker 19 A few years later, British writer James Churchward started writing about the sunken continent of Mew.
Speaker 30 At first, Mew was thought to be the inspiration for Plato's story of Atlantis, but Churchward connected it to Lemuria, and now many consider these lost continents one and the same.
Speaker 68 James Churchward's work is based on the translations of ancient Indian tablets.
Speaker 66 These texts are included included in a series of books called The Children of Mew.
Speaker 18 The tablets describe an ancient civilization of 60 million people that was eventually destroyed.
Speaker 29 According to Churchward and others, like archaeologist Augustus Le Planjan, the sunken continent of Mew once stretched from Hawaii in the north to Easter Island in the east and almost reached Japan in the west.
Speaker 12 The Yanaguni Monument, off the coast of Japan, is believed to be the underwater ruins of this lost civilization.
Speaker 68 Nan Madal in Micronesia is is considered the southern part of Mew. The site contained structures made of large volcanic rock logs.
Speaker 158 It's unknown who built them or how, but the society was advanced.
Speaker 142 Recent LIDAR imaging revealed an artificial irrigation system that provided fresh water to residents throughout the area.
Speaker 136 They even had a sewer system years before the ancient Greeks or other advanced civilizations.
Speaker 77 Easter Island marks the eastern point of Mew.
Speaker 89 Take a look at Easter Island.
Speaker 11 It's a small island in the middle of nowhere, yet it was once home to 12,000 people.
Speaker 32 How did they get there?
Speaker 160 Mainstream science says they traveled thousands of miles across the Pacific Ocean in canoes.
Speaker 18 But if the continent of Mu existed, they could have just walked there.
Speaker 22 This could also explain the similarities between Polynesian languages and Greek, as well as the worship of a sun god named Ra'a on Easter Island, which is similar to the Egyptian sun god Ra.
Speaker 19 These similarities of language and religion suggest that these cultures either intermingled or originated from a common source.
Speaker 41 James Churchward, Les Planjan, Helena Blavatsky, they all describe Lemuria Emu differently.
Speaker 160 But there's one thing they all agree on.
Speaker 69 It was destroyed in a terrible cataclysm.
Speaker 68 Chan Thomas in his book The Adam and Eve Story presents compelling evidence that global disasters occur in a cycle.
Speaker 164 Lemuria might have been destroyed during one of these events.
Speaker 41 According to James Bramwell and William Scott Elliott, supporters of this theory, Lemuria was destroyed 11,500 years ago in a global disaster.
Speaker 30 And evidence of a global cataclysm can be found all over the earth, from the pyramids of Giza, across Africa, and even on Easter Island.
Speaker 12 Now, of course, I'm referring to the Great Flood mentioned in the myths of every culture on Earth.
Speaker 73 The flood that occurred during a period of history called the Yaradryas.
Speaker 84 As the last ice age drew to a close, the massive ice sheets that had covered much of the northern hemisphere began to rapidly melt away.
Speaker 12 Great torrents of fresh water poured into the oceans, causing sea levels to rise dramatically across the globe.
Speaker 124 What?
Speaker 41 Coastal areas were transformed by the flood as shorelines expanded inland by hundreds of miles.
Speaker 3 Entire landmasses were submerged beneath the rising seas.
Speaker 57 The lives of every human on earth were disrupted by the great flood.
Speaker 68 Entire cultures that had been tied to the old shorelines were shattered and scattered.
Speaker 143 But a few resourceful people survived and rebuilt their civilization.
Speaker 41 But this time they did it in secret and hidden far away from any future global catastrophe.
Speaker 71 But what caused the ice sheets to melt in the first place?
Speaker 3 There's disagreement about this.
Speaker 74 Some think it was the impact of a massive comet or asteroid.
Speaker 79 Others think it was a solar event so destructive that plasma from the Sun stripped away the Earth's magnetic field, exposing the planet to extreme heat and radiation.
Speaker 204 Or a pole shift, which would also create a worldwide disaster.
Speaker 41 But there is one legend of Lemuria that contains a different explanation, that the Great Flood wasn't caused by an asteroid or the Sun.
Speaker 204 It's said that the Great Flood was caused by people.
Speaker 182 According to Blavatsky, Lemuria was destroyed by fire.
Speaker 75 Volcanic eruptions shattered the continent into islands.
Speaker 137 Slowly, the islands sank into the sea, along with Lemurian history.
Speaker 68 James Churchward's version of the sinking of Mew is more dramatic and immediate.
Speaker 93 The civilization was obliterated in a single night of terror.
Speaker 142 Intense earthquakes shook the land.
Speaker 22 Volcanic eruptions spewed fire and ash.
Speaker 79 Relentless tsunamis engulfed the entire continent.
Speaker 182 It was a catastrophic event.
Speaker 171 In one night, everything was gone.
Speaker 10 There are even speculations that the Lemurians were eradicated by a pole shift, a sudden and civilization-ending event.
Speaker 66 Churchward's depiction resembles this cataclysmic shift.
Speaker 141 Volcanoes erupting around the world simultaneously, massive waves flooding everything, an entire civilization wiped away in an afternoon.
Speaker 191 Others propose something even more chilling.
Speaker 68 The destruction of Lemuria was not natural at all.
Speaker 91 They believe it was intentional.
Speaker 59 There is a 10,000-year-old story, which appears in books like the Chronicles Vakacor, which says the lost continents of Lemuria and Atlantis sank due due to a nuclear war caused by the Anunnaki.
Speaker 3 The Anunnaki are deities of the ancient Sumerians, Akkadians, Assyrians, and Babylonians.
Speaker 203 And some consider the Anunnaki an alien race who created humans through DNA manipulation, then used humans as slaves.
Speaker 3 A full Anunnaki episode is coming up.
Speaker 79 The Chronicles of Akakor tells the story of two hostile divine races that eventually went to war.
Speaker 188 The four corners of the earth were red. The two races of gods started to dispute.
Speaker 130 In J.J.
Speaker 203 Benitez's book, The Visitors, he recounts the alien abduction of a scientist, Daniel W.
Speaker 76 Frye, on July 4th, 1959.
Speaker 37 While Fry was on the alien vessel, they told him that they were the descendants of a race who lived on the land of Mew.
Speaker 138 They said there was another advanced civilization on Earth that we call the Atlanteans.
Speaker 16 Edgar Casey also received telepathic messages about Atlantis.
Speaker 41 He described their culture and their technology.
Speaker 223 In our great city, we harnessed the Firestone's energy through advanced mechanics. Our domed power station concentrated the stone's rays via prisms.
Speaker 223 This energy propelled our crafts through induction, similar to your remote radio control. Though invisible, the rays powered vehicles through the air on land and sea.
Speaker 223 Carefully aligned, the stone's forces regenerated human bodies and fueled industries.
Speaker 39 Casey also predicted that Atlantis would eventually be discovered.
Speaker 223 The position as the continent Atlantis occupied is that as between the Gulf of Mexico on the one hand and the Mediterranean upon the other.
Speaker 223 Evidences of this lost civilization are to be found in the Pyrenees and Morocco on the one hand, British Honduras, Yucatan and America upon the other.
Speaker 223 the British West Indies or the Bahamas, and a portion of same that may be seen in the present, if the geological survey would be made in some of these, especially or notably in Bimini and in the Gulf Stream through this vicinity, these may be even yet determined.
Speaker 68 Now keep in mind that it was 1939 when Edgar Casey predicted that Atlanta would be discovered in Bimini in the Bahamas. The Bimini Road wasn't discovered until 1968.
Speaker 89 According to Casey and others, Atlanteans lived peacefully on Earth for over 200,000 years, but then the Anunnaki started to influence and corrupt the leaders of Atlantis.
Speaker 11 The corrupted Atlanteans, known as the Sons of Belial, initiated a conflict with Lemuria.
Speaker 161 About 25,000 years ago, Atlantis and Lemuria disagreed on how to rule the Earth.
Speaker 141 Atlantis wanted to dominate all tribes and civilizations worldwide.
Speaker 15 But the Lemurians wanted the Earth's civilizations to develop on their own.
Speaker 3 So they ordered Atlantis to leave them alone.
Speaker 154 Atlantis refused.
Speaker 28 Lemuria insisted.
Speaker 41 Atlantis chose war.
Speaker 193 The beginning of the war was the year 10,468 BC.
Speaker 134 In his writing, Plato mentions 9500 BC as the year that Atlantis was destroyed.
Speaker 23 An ancient historian named Hemis reports a terrible catastrophe that occurred in 11,000 BC.
Speaker 182 But how were these civilizations destroyed?
Speaker 191 Well, the Atlanteans had extremely advanced technology and weapons.
Speaker 223 Their technologies and weapons were beyond what we know today. Flying crafts powered by fire crystals traversed the skies.
Speaker 223 Great energy beams harvested from the Earth itself fueled weapons that could level mountains.
Speaker 12 Lemuria was not as well armed and could not avoid war.
Speaker 92
They burned the world with solar heat and tried to draw energy from each other. Rivers have been changed.
And the height of the mountains and the strength of the sun have changed.
Speaker 92 There have been continents that have been flooded.
Speaker 162 In the end, more than 60 million Lemurians died.
Speaker 182 The survivors took refuge in Agartha and later attacked Atlantis.
Speaker 47 The Earth became unstable as a result of nuclear explosions, and because of that, the Earth's axis changed and the pole shifted.
Speaker 22 All that remained of Atlantis are ancient structures like Stonehenge and the Great Pyramids.
Speaker 53 The civilization of Atlantis did not survive the conflict, but about 10,000 Lemurians did survive and they rebuilt their civilization, but this time they did it in secret.
Speaker 4 And that civilization exists today, thriving under a mountain in California.
Speaker 22 Mount Shasta in Northern California has become synonymous with the unknown.
Speaker 135 Many who venture close to the mountain report strange events, glowing orbs, unexplained voices, and a tangible sense of another presence.
Speaker 57 Mount Shasta is also considered a vortex, a place where the boundary between dimensions is thin.
Speaker 25 Native American tribes speak of its sacred power, a spot where the spirit world is accessible.
Speaker 76 Then there are the geological mysteries.
Speaker 159 Why does Shasta have such a complex structure and so many different kinds of rock?
Speaker 164 Why do some plants grow there that are found nowhere else?
Speaker 4 Where do those plants come from?
Speaker 73 Well, legend has it that some Womurians survived the cataclysm.
Speaker 46 The survivors traveled to North America and brought with them plants and animals and technology.
Speaker 141 They then built a city underneath Mount Shasta.
Speaker 12 They called this city Telos, the city of light, and eyewitnesses have described the city in detail.
Speaker 225 As you approach the hidden entrance to Telos, an energy pulsates through the ground. There is a deep humming sound and a vibration that you can feel all over your body.
Speaker 223 Once inside, you are enveloped by a soft light that emanates from the walls of the city. Telos is carved into five expansive levels, each one a labyrinth of corridors, chambers, and gardens.
Speaker 226 The inhabitants of Telos are seven feet tall and draped in flowing white robes. Despite their large size, they move slowly and gracefully.
Speaker 226 They are the Lemurians, the guardians of their ancient lost civilization. Their technology is integrated with their natural surroundings, just as it did in Lemuria before the fall.
Speaker 31 In Telos, they use crystal technology.
Speaker 189 Large crystalline structures serve various functions.
Speaker 62 They have healing chambers that resonate with frequencies that restore the body and the soul.
Speaker 30 They have crystal communication devices that allow mental connection across the entire planet.
Speaker 225 Transportation within the city is achieved through levitating platforms that glide along magnetic lines, guided by thought alone.
Speaker 226 At the center of Telos is the Temple of the Heart. Here, a large crystal pulses with a heartbeat, a rhythm synchronized with the natural resonance of the earth.
Speaker 13 Residents of Mount Shasta claim to have seen tall beings wearing white robes walking at the foot of the mountain.
Speaker 5 Hikers have even followed the beings into caves.
Speaker 141 But when the hikers finally get inside the cave, it's empty, though some say you can still hear and feel the humming vibration.
Speaker 7 One eyewitness actually made the news in the early 20th century.
Speaker 77 In 1904, J.C.
Speaker 22 Brown, a British prospector, was hired by a mining company to search for gold deposits in Northern California.
Speaker 52 While investigating around Mount Shasta, he noticed an odd-looking piece of rock that didn't match the surrounding area.
Speaker 73 As he began clearing the debris and vegetation surrounding the rock, he found an entrance to a cavern system that led deep into Mount Shasta.
Speaker 68 Brown walked about three miles into the interior of the mountain through an array of criss-crossing tunnel systems when he began stumbling across pieces of gold.
Speaker 141 After the 11th mile, he reached a location that resembled a village.
Speaker 13 Inside the village, he came across chambers filled with gold and copper tablets.
Speaker 57 He found statues and spears and weapons.
Speaker 67 and he found skeletons.
Speaker 57 The average heights of these skeletons were around six foot six inches tall, and the tallest being 10 feet in height.
Speaker 3 Over the next few days, he took pages and pages of notes.
Speaker 22 He memorized everything that he could, and when he left, he covered the entrance so that no one else would find it.
Speaker 77 And Brown spent the next 30 years researching and tried to build a group of experts to embark on an expedition.
Speaker 66 He finally gained a following of about 80 people willing to join the expedition, including a museum curator and several scientists.
Speaker 133 He spent six weeks planning out the entire trip, and several individuals sold off their properties, believing that they would soon soon become rich.
Speaker 42 Brown was worried someone would sneak into the city in advance, so he withheld a lot of the specifics regarding the location of the cavern system.
Speaker 30 He met with the team one last time to make final preparations and establish a time and place of departure, June 19th at 1 p.m.
Speaker 227 The day finally arrived and JC Brown didn't show and he was never heard from again.
Speaker 133 But the story of Lemuria is not only told in the West.
Speaker 24 The Tamil people, indigenous to South India, have a story of a lost continent that dates back to ancient times.
Speaker 5 The name Kumari Kandam was applied to this sunken land.
Speaker 19 The legend tells of an early Tamil dynasty known as the Pandeyan kings.
Speaker 139 They ruled over the now submerged Kumari Kandam continent before it was swallowed by the rising seas at the end of the last ice age.
Speaker 4 Dryas.
Speaker 203 According to the stories, Kumari Kandam was once located in the Indian Ocean between India and Madagascar.
Speaker 3 This large continent was the cradle of civilization, home to the first people.
Speaker 14 The Pandeyan kings ruled the entire continent from their capital city before successive floods submerged Kumari Kandem around 10,000 years ago.
Speaker 133 Is this just a Tamiya legend or is this actual history?
Speaker 39 Well, floods at the end of the last ice age, we have proof of that.
Speaker 157 But a lost continent in the Indian Ocean between Madagascar and India?
Speaker 153 That's so specific.
Speaker 133 There's no way there's proof of that, is there?
Speaker 55 Is there?
Speaker 38 Is there?
Speaker 17 There is.
Speaker 30 Imagine an ancient tropical land.
Speaker 70 Lush jungles stretch as far as the eye can see.
Speaker 74 Dinosaurs graze on treetops high above the forest floor while early mammals stalk the dark ground below.
Speaker 3 This was Mauritia, a lost world forgotten beneath the waves.
Speaker 41 In 2013, scientists announced that they may have found traces of this vanished continent deep under the Indian Ocean.
Speaker 13 It had sunk sunk below the sea millions of years ago when the continents were still joined as one supercontinent.
Speaker 77 Back then, South America and Africa hadn't split apart.
Speaker 182 India was attached to Madagascar and Mauritia was squeezed in between.
Speaker 50 Mauritia was discovered by accident.
Speaker 68 Geologists studying rocks on the island of Mauritius, east of Madagascar, were confused.
Speaker 30 They found minerals too ancient to belong to such a young volcanic island.
Speaker 164 As they followed the clues, they found traces of a much older landmass.
Speaker 173 A huge mass of buried continental crust stretched across the Indian Ocean, a lost continent matching ancient minerals.
Speaker 183 The researchers named it Mauritia after the island that led to its discovery.
Speaker 66 But the location of Mauritia is exactly where some legends say Lemuria was.
Speaker 164 The details of the continent are still a mystery with more questions than answers. Was it really an intact continent or just a jumbled mass of islands?
Speaker 41 And what creatures might have lived on this island?
Speaker 19 And could some of those creatures have been the very early ancestors of the lemurians there is no hard evidence to support the existence of lemuria or atlantis everything we know about these civilizations comes from stories and many of those stories come from unreliable sources like madam blavatsky james churchboard and edgar casey daniel fry who claimed to have been abducted by aliens probably wasn't he failed to polygraph he kept changing his story and he lied about his scientific credentials he also got caught hoaxing ufo photographs so without evidence places like lemuria the land of Mew, and Atlantis remain nothing but myths.
Speaker 91 But the accidental discovery of Mauritia shows that some ancient legends may be based in truth.
Speaker 28 The discovery of the continent of Mauritia happened completely by accident.
Speaker 68 Bimini Road was discovered by accident.
Speaker 90 So was the Yanaguni Monument.
Speaker 138 The city of Dwarka is described in ancient Indian texts as a magnificent city that was a symbol of prosperity.
Speaker 41 It was described as an advanced, well-planned city with beautiful gardens and temples and palaces.
Speaker 20 But according to Hindu legend, thousands of years ago, the seas began to rise, and eventually Dwarka disappeared into the ocean and was lost forever.
Speaker 16 And for a thousand years, the story of the city of Dwarka was thought to be symbolic.
Speaker 30 But in the 1980s, the ancient city was found and is estimated to be around 10,000 years old, maybe older.
Speaker 131 In 2001, an underwater discovery was made off the coast of Cuba.
Speaker 85 Structures were found that at first were thought to be natural formations, but a submersible robot was sent to the site and found what's been described as an entire city.
Speaker 22 And what makes this find so extraordinary is that it's about 2,000 feet down.
Speaker 210 Scientists have said it could take 50,000 years for a city to sink that far.
Speaker 154 Now, even if it's not that old, there are blocks down there that are thought to be at least 6,000 years old, but nobody can say for sure.
Speaker 68 All of these discoveries were made by accident.
Speaker 184 And as long as people keep exploring the sea, there's a chance that Atlantis and Lemuria might eventually be found.
Speaker 169 And if we actually excavate the sites off India and Japan in the east and Cuba and the Bahamas in the west, we may realize that Atlantis and Lemuria have already been found.
Speaker 96 During your busy lunch hour with errands and quick appointments to fit in, it could feel like you've driven halfway across California.
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Speaker 105 Visit fuelrewards.com/slash join25 and sign up today. At participating merchants and shell locations, limit 20 gallons, restrictions apply.
Speaker 98 Visit fuelrewards.com for more information.
Speaker 107 What does Zinn offer you?
Speaker 110 Not just hands-free nicotine satisfaction, but the opportunity to be yourself.
Speaker 111 The chance to find connection.
Speaker 113 The freedom to do things your way.
Speaker 114 When is the right time for Zin?
Speaker 117 Anytime you need more time, more time for the moment, more time to find what moves you.
Speaker 108 Smoke-free, device-free time for you.
Speaker 118 Why bring Zin into your life?
Speaker 121 Because America's number one nicotine pouch opens up the endless possibilities of right now.
Speaker 121 From the night out you're waiting to have, to the friends you need to catch up with, to the project you're thinking about starting, and the satisfaction that will come once you do.
Speaker 107 With Zinn, you don't just find freedom, you keep finding it again and again.
Speaker 117 Find your Zen.
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Speaker 123 Warning, this product contains nicotine.
Speaker 122 Nicotine is an addictive chemical.
Speaker 124 Top reasons your career wants you to move to Ohio.
Speaker 125 So many amazing growth opportunities, high-paying jobs in technology, technology, advanced manufacturing, engineering, life sciences, and more.
Speaker 125 You'll soar to new heights, just like the Wright brothers, John Glenn, even Neil Armstrong. Their careers all took off in Ohio, and yours can too.
Speaker 125 A job that can take you further and a place you can't wait to come home to. Have it all in the heart of it all.
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Speaker 126 This fall, let your home smell as good as it looks. Pura's app-controlled diffusers bring you premium scents from brands like Nest New York, Capri Blue, and Anthropology.
Speaker 126 From Spice Pumpkin to Whitewoods, your fall favorites are just a tap away. It's home fragrance that feels as elevated as it smells, and right now, it's the perfect time to stock up.
Speaker 126 Visit Pura.com and bring home the best scents of the season.
Speaker 158 Next up is a video about Ooh parts or out-of-place artifacts.
Speaker 22 But a better description is out-of-time artifacts.
Speaker 7 These are ancient objects discovered that are way too advanced for their time. Now, there are lots of these objects, and I only cover the major ones in this episode.
Speaker 39 But even if you've heard of these objects, if this episode is new for you, I promise you're going to learn something new.
Speaker 37 The story of the human race is a story of technology.
Speaker 81 One of our ancestors created fire and passed that knowledge along to the next generation.
Speaker 8 Then the invention of the wheel, then agriculture, a writing system, mathematics, space travel.
Speaker 69 Within our story, empires rise and fall and technology progresses.
Speaker 35 Civilizations are born and die, and the human race continues to innovate.
Speaker 3 All of our innovations are built on previous ones.
Speaker 5 There could be no aqueduct without the arch.
Speaker 157 There could be no metal plow until someone learned how to mine iron.
Speaker 209 There could be no light bulb, no smartphone, and no computer without first understanding electricity.
Speaker 3 Our progress is linear, it's orderly.
Speaker 156 But sometimes an object is discovered that's completely out of place and out of time.
Speaker 75 A computer found on a sunken Roman ship, a power plant found in a 100,000-year-old cave, and evidence of a nuclear reactor from over a billion years ago.
Speaker 41 These objects shouldn't exist, but they do.
Speaker 77 Their existence violates the natural order of human progress.
Speaker 57 So if humans didn't create these items, who did?
Speaker 3 In 1962, an article was published about an archaeological expedition that explored the Bayanhar Mountains of Tibet in 1937.
Speaker 37 The team, led by archaeologist Chifu Tai, discovered 716 granite discs engraved with characters that looked like hieroglyphics.
Speaker 41 Each disc was 9 inches in diameter and 1 inch inch thick, with a perfect one inch hole in the center.
Speaker 7 The stones were dated to more than 12,000 years ago, but they weren't the strangest thing found at the site.
Speaker 16 Not even close.
Speaker 145 The team discovered advanced star maps and the remains of unusual humanoids.
Speaker 36 The beings were small with thin bodies and large heads.
Speaker 36 Aliens!
Speaker 174 Well, it took more than 20 years of trying, but the markings on the discs were finally translated.
Speaker 9 The discs told the story of a vessel that traveled to Earth from outer space.
Speaker 85 The inscriptions described a crash in the mountains of Tibet and what happened to the survivors of the crash.
Speaker 53 The writing also gave the beings a name.
Speaker 15 They were called the Dropa.
Speaker 231 The Dropa came down from the clouds in their aircraft. Our men, women, and children hid in the caves 10 times before sunrise.
Speaker 231 When at last we understood the sign language of the Dropa, we realized that the newcomers had peaceful intentions.
Speaker 77 These findings were published in 1962 by Professor Sum-Um Nui, but as could be expected, his peers didn't take it seriously.
Speaker 41 The story and the stones resurfaced six years later, but this time in Russia.
Speaker 13 Scientists discovered the granite used to make the stones contained extremely high amounts of cobalt and other heavy metals.
Speaker 160 These properties would have made the stones very hard to carve with primitive tools 12,000 years ago.
Speaker 35 The stones were tested with an oscillograph, a device used to read current and voltage.
Speaker 84 The results indicated the stones had once been electrically charged or might have been electrical conductors.
Speaker 22 After these new discoveries, the stones disappeared again until they turned up in the Bampo Museum in China.
Speaker 15 In 1974, Austrian engineer Ernst Wegner went to the museum to see the stones.
Speaker 156 Although the museum wouldn't give him any information about them, he was allowed to take photographs of the stones.
Speaker 140 That same year, a book was published called Sun Gods in Exile by David Agamon, and that book would prove everything.
Speaker 39 Sun Gods in Exile tells the story of Oxford professor Carl Robin Evans and his 1947 expedition into the Bayanhar Mountains.
Speaker 174 There, he encountered living Dropa, where he learned their language and learned their history from their religious leader, Lurgen La.
Speaker 206 Lurgen La told him the Dropa came from a planet in the Sirius system, and they had come to Earth on an exploratory mission 12,000 years ago.
Speaker 187 Their ship crash-landed in the Himalayas and stranded the Dropa on Earth forever.
Speaker 50 The book was based on the journal of Dr.
Speaker 172 Carl Robin Evans, and that journal had pictures.
Speaker 48 This is Hui Pa La and Bez La, the rulers of the Dropa in 1947.
Speaker 183 The journal describes the Dropa as a small race, averaging 4'2 in height and only 60 pounds.
Speaker 25 They have large heads with large blue eyes.
Speaker 45 In 1994, German scientist Hartwig Hausdorff went to the Bampo Museum in China and asked to see the stones for himself.
Speaker 84 Well, he was told the stones were destroyed on official orders.
Speaker 5 When Hausdorff tried to look further into the Dropa tribe and their stones, the Chinese government said they had no record of any stones or a tribe known as the Dropa.
Speaker 66 As far as the Chinese government was concerned, the Dropa never existed.
Speaker 178 In the year 1900, off the coast of a small Greek island, a group of men were diving for sponges.
Speaker 66 During one dive, at a depth of around 150 feet, they found something very unexpected, an ancient Roman shipwreck.
Speaker 178 The ship was full of ancient Greek artifacts dating back over 2,000 years.
Speaker 131 Coins, pottery, statues, and many other items were brought back to the surface.
Speaker 77 Among the wreckage was a heavily weathered block made of wood and calcified bronze.
Speaker 161 The block was taken to the museum with the rest of the artifacts, but it didn't really look like anything, so it was mostly ignored.
Speaker 132 But two years later, archaeologist Valerio Stace took a closer look at the unassuming block.
Speaker 53 It didn't take long for him to discover there was a lot more to the block than people realized.
Speaker 66 He could make out the shape of a large gear embedded in the calcified stone.
Speaker 45 He believed it was some sort of ancient astronomical clock.
Speaker 19 Mainstream archaeologists dismissed the idea as prochronistic, meaning too advanced for the time period or the wreckage.
Speaker 66 The ship was underwater for 2,000 years.
Speaker 19 The type of technology needed to build an astronomical clock just didn't exist yet.
Speaker 146 In fact, gears of this quality wouldn't be invented until the 14th century, about 1700 years later.
Speaker 7 Mainstream scientists said the object must have found its way onto the ship at a much later time and therefore wasn't all that special or important.
Speaker 22 So the object was placed on a shelf in a dark back room of a museum and that's where it stayed, completely ignored for 50 years.
Speaker 59 But in 1951, Yale professor Derek J.
Speaker 176 DeSola Price was researching ancient clocks.
Speaker 75 He heard about a mysterious object discovered off the coast of a small Greek island called Antikythera.
Speaker 41 Price looked into the artifact, but his findings didn't impress his colleagues.
Speaker 174 But he would continue researching the device for the next 23 years.
Speaker 68 Then in 1974, with the help of a nuclear physicist, Price used X-ray and gamma-ray imaging to examine 82 pieces of the rock.
Speaker 131 This imaging revealed an assortment of bronze gears of various sizes, all connected to a central crank.
Speaker 40 As the gears spun, they would move hands on the object's face, like the hands of a clock.
Speaker 181 But this device wasn't designed to tell you what time it was.
Speaker 133 It was designed to do much, much more.
Speaker 220 Nothing like this instrument is preserved elsewhere. Nothing comparable to it is known from any ancient scientific text or literary allusion.
Speaker 220 It is a bit frightening to know that just before the fall of their great civilization, the ancient Greeks had come so close to our age, not only in their thought, but also in their scientific technology.
Speaker 90 By 2009, scientists had gathered enough scans and images to reconstruct what the Antikythera mechanism had looked like.
Speaker 68 It had 30 gears intricately designed and expertly crafted.
Speaker 81 The gears drove dials and hands on the front and back of the device.
Speaker 19 Despite all this information, they still didn't know precisely what it did.
Speaker 159 While the world waited for more information on this mysterious device, that opened the door to a lot of theories.
Speaker 4 I love theories.
Speaker 233 I know you do.
Speaker 28 One theory said the device was a piece of technology taken from Atlantis.
Speaker 41 No culture on Earth at the time had this level of technology.
Speaker 22 If the mechanism was something powerful or important, it would make sense that Atlantean survivors would want to keep it safe.
Speaker 17 Right.
Speaker 37 Some people believe the mechanism was so advanced it was proof of a creator, like scaffolding left around a building after construction was completed.
Speaker 140 Another theory was that it was left behind by aliens, either accidentally or as a gift.
Speaker 27 Alien technology would explain how it ended up in the first century BC, but the most alarming opinion was that the Antikythera mechanism was a doomsday device, a weapon to depopulate the Earth, created by an ancient race of reptilians.
Speaker 4 Lizard people!
Speaker 222 Yeah, maybe it was a clock used to calculate a time when the weapon would be deployed.
Speaker 151 Well, lizard people are very punctual.
Speaker 132 Despite all this evidence, one of the most prevalent theories was that the whole thing was a hoax.
Speaker 27 Some people said it was nothing more than a single brass gear, and the scientists were making up the rest.
Speaker 19 What we do know for sure is the Antikythera mechanism isn't going anywhere.
Speaker 66 Even though it's been 123 years since it was pulled out of the ocean, we're still uncovering more of its secrets all the time.
Speaker 136 Eventually, we will know everything there is to know about this fascinating device and maybe even design our own.
Speaker 186 But even if we can build one, the question is,
Speaker 195 should we?
Speaker 140 In the Qinghai province of China, on the southern shore of Tuoso Lake, is a pyramid-shaped mountain called Mount Baigong.
Speaker 39 In 1996, archaeologist Bai Wu was exploring a cave inside Mount Baigong when he made an unexplainable and controversial discovery.
Speaker 13 Inside the cave, you found iron scraps all over the dirt floor.
Speaker 200 Who found iron scraps?
Speaker 76 You found.
Speaker 202 I found.
Speaker 207 You found. Me?
Speaker 188 You.
Speaker 77 So confused.
Speaker 15 Along with the iron scraps, there were oddly shaped stones standing on end.
Speaker 28 But most mysterious of all, there were iron pipes running deep into the mountain.
Speaker 129 And here the story takes a turn because the cave wasn't naturally formed.
Speaker 53 It was a triangular-shaped entrance carved by somebody.
Speaker 25 And Mount Baigong wasn't a mountain, it was a pyramid, also constructed by somebody.
Speaker 41 The more scientists looked at Mount Baigong, the more questions they had.
Speaker 144 None of this made sense.
Speaker 129 This is the middle of nowhere.
Speaker 132 Nobody lives there.
Speaker 29 And as far as anyone knew, nobody ever had.
Speaker 185 And those iron pipes?
Speaker 61 According to the Beijing Institute of Geology, the pipes were forged more than 150,000 years ago.
Speaker 19 The pipes vary in size from 18 inches in diameter to as thin as a grain of rice.
Speaker 7 And later expeditions found pipes big enough to walk through.
Speaker 35 And there were humans living all over the world at that time, but metallurgy wasn't discovered until about 10,000 BC.
Speaker 138 So who created the pipes and why?
Speaker 24 While there is no clear purpose for the pipes, more were found at Lake Tuosu 260 feet away, along with more strange stones.
Speaker 15 The pipes at the lake are both above and below the water level.
Speaker 184 Some researchers believe the pipes were used to pump water into the pyramid, possibly for cooling purposes.
Speaker 91 Considering Tuoso is a salt lake, one theory suggests the pipes may have been used for a process called electrolysis.
Speaker 66 When you pass an electric current through water, the water molecules separate into oxygen and hydrogen atoms.
Speaker 33 Salt water is a better conductor than fresh water.
Speaker 88 The salt helps separate the oxygen and hydrogen more efficiently.
Speaker 19 And hydrogen could be used for a lot of things, like refining oil, treating metals, and processing foods.
Speaker 212 But hydrogen could also be used as fuel.
Speaker 91 In addition to dating the pipes, the Beijing Institute of Geology tested the pipes' composition.
Speaker 68 They're made up of 30% rusted iron.
Speaker 157 They also contain large amounts of silicon dioxide, which is commonly found in quartz, as well as calcium oxide, also known as quick lime.
Speaker 174 These are interesting materials.
Speaker 167 Iron conducts heat and electricity.
Speaker 81 And when quartz is subjected to stress, like millions of gallons of water flowing through a pipe, it generates electricity.
Speaker 7 This is called the piezoelectric effect.
Speaker 17 Remember, the Great Pyramid in Egypt is also built near a water source.
Speaker 211 Well, technically, it's on top of one.
Speaker 148 There's a large aquifer under the Giza Plateau.
Speaker 227 Also, there are chambers within the Great Pyramid made of quartz, and metal pipes have been discovered within the pyramid complex.
Speaker 18 Nikolai Tesla built his famous Wardencliffe Tower using these same principles.
Speaker 209 Using this ancient method, Tesla believed he could generate free, unlimited energy that could be beamed wirelessly to any place on Earth.
Speaker 38 The Illuminati would never allow that.
Speaker 17 They didn't.
Speaker 37 When Tesla was close to a discovery, his investors pulled their funding and invested in oil instead.
Speaker 213 Orincliffe Tower was eventually abandoned.
Speaker 4 Now, if you're interested in specifically how this works and what happened to Tesla's tower, I've linked to another episode below.
Speaker 201 Now, calcium oxide or quicklime found in the pipes is also interesting.
Speaker 84 Quicklime is highly volatile and chemically reactive.
Speaker 177 If you expose quicklime to water, it causes an exothermic reaction.
Speaker 190 In other words, it generates heat.
Speaker 47 Lots of heat.
Speaker 40 One liter of water combined with about seven pounds of quicklime generates about three and a half megajoules of energy.
Speaker 12 That's basically a gallon of gas.
Speaker 59 And if you remove the water, quicklime reverts back to its original state.
Speaker 161 And as long as you have a stable water source, like a lake, you could repeat this process over and over again.
Speaker 48 Now, besides these common materials, the pipes also contain 8% of the material that could not be identified.
Speaker 217 But here's a thought.
Speaker 66 We've got iron pipes that can carry water or some other medium, electricity to convert water into oxygen and hydrogen.
Speaker 41 We've got quick lime, which, when exposed to water, creates heat.
Speaker 22 The heat causes the hydrogen to expand.
Speaker 169 The expansion of the quartz within the pipes generates even more electricity.
Speaker 59 And this process can repeat over and over again, all happening inside a pyramid.
Speaker 66 Well, that's the same process used to make the Great Pyramid of Giza, a power plant, all built 150,000 years ago.
Speaker 20 I know what that sounds like to me.
Speaker 187 In the 9th century, on a grassy field somewhere in northern England, a Nordic Viking squares off against a Saxon housekarl.
Speaker 155 Before knights, the housekarl was the highly trained elite warrior of medieval Europe.
Speaker 76 Against the Viking, this warrior should have the advantage.
Speaker 22 The Saxon wears chainmail armor, while the Viking wears only leather.
Speaker 41 The Saxon has a shield, light and strong.
Speaker 182 The Viking has no shield.
Speaker 33 And the Saxon's sword is larger and stronger than the Viking's. The Saxon warrior is confident.
Speaker 228 He charges forward and takes a few heavy swings.
Speaker 19 The Viking defends with his short sword.
Speaker 153 The Saxon steps back, confused.
Speaker 42 He's fought Vikings before.
Speaker 69 Usually their short, blunt weapons shatter when hit with heavy English steel.
Speaker 9 But this Viking has a magic sword.
Speaker 211 At least, it appears to be magic to this 9th century Saxon.
Speaker 41 Being lighter and faster, the Viking sidesteps then lunges forward.
Speaker 36 He thrusts his razor-sharp blade through the Saxon's chainmail.
Speaker 19 His armor should have easily protected him from this attack, but the Viking's sword pierces the chainmail like it's not even there.
Speaker 31 The Saxon falls to his knees as the Viking withdraws his sword.
Speaker 76 The Saxon, more confused than frightened, sees writing on the side of the blade.
Speaker 11 A name.
Speaker 136 It's a name he's heard before.
Speaker 35 And in that moment, everything makes sense.
Speaker 17 Then the world goes black.
Speaker 22 This blade and others like it were virtually indestructible and unbeatable in battle.
Speaker 17 They weren't elaborate swords gilded with gold or jewels, they were pretty ordinary looking, but they were easy to identify as they all shared the same inscription, Ulfbert.
Speaker 66 Created using a process that would remain unknown for centuries, the Ulfbert was a revolutionary high-tech tool.
Speaker 175 There are only 170 of these swords left in existence, all forged sometime between 800 and 1000 AD.
Speaker 40 Though Ulfbert's swords are usually associated with Vikings, it's actually a word of Frankish origin.
Speaker 134 It was most likely the name of the swordsmith who created the blades. Now the process of making a sword in the 11th century wasn't an easy one.
Speaker 78 In order for iron to be used as a weapon, it had to be forged into steel.
Speaker 168 So iron was mined and smelted in a furnace with charcoal, which is mostly carbon.
Speaker 132 Iron itself is too soft to be used as a sword.
Speaker 90 The blade would bend and chip and lose its edge too quickly to be useful.
Speaker 168 The carbon hardens the iron, so it keeps its shape and sharp edge for longer.
Speaker 232 But add too much carbon, the metal becomes brittle.
Speaker 57 It took a skilled and talented smith to get the mixture just right.
Speaker 135 Now once hot enough, the iron forms a gooey, spongy mass called a bloom.
Speaker 46 And after the bloom is removed from the heat, it's hammered over and over again to remove impurities known as slag.
Speaker 164 Slag is typically trace amounts of silicon, manganese, sulfur, and other elements.
Speaker 168 Blacksmiths would heat and hammer the metal over and over again to separate as much slag from the iron as possible.
Speaker 76 And because of the limited technology of the time, the impurity of the steel was still pretty high, and the amount of carbon they were able to get into the metal was pretty low.
Speaker 62 Even the best medieval steel is primitive to even the lowest quality steel that we produce today.
Speaker 93 Except for Ulfbert steel.
Speaker 179 Experts have said that an Ulfbert sword would have been like a lightsaber in medieval Europe.
Speaker 83 And that's not that much of an exaggeration.
Speaker 140 Ulfbert swords were centuries ahead of the competition.
Speaker 150 They were superior to all others in sharpness, in strength, flexibility.
Speaker 151 Ulfbert steel was also very lightweight.
Speaker 73 This was a huge and unfair advantage in combat.
Speaker 27 The sword could withstand an enemy's blow without breaking, a common fear among warriors.
Speaker 61 In a time when fighters wore coats of chainmail, an Ulfbert sword could cut through this defense more effectively than other swords.
Speaker 179 Modern scientists have examined Ulfbert blades to try to find out what made them so special.
Speaker 217 Now, first they found that almost all impurities were removed from the steel.
Speaker 9 Ulfbert blades also had a carbon content three times higher than other swords from the same period.
Speaker 185 Now here's the thing, to achieve this level of purity and the carbon content of the Ulfbert sword, the metal would have need to have been liquefied.
Speaker 203 This causes carbon to dissolve into the iron forming an alloy.
Speaker 174 The high temperature also removes impurities more effectively.
Speaker 35 A temperature of 2400 degrees Fahrenheit is needed for this process. The resulting alloy is called crucible steel because the metal is melted in a large crucible.
Speaker 37 Now, for hundreds of years, Smiths tried to duplicate Ulfbert's steel, but nobody could come close.
Speaker 227 Alfbert was a man a thousand years ahead of his time, and nobody knows who he was.
Speaker 79 But many people still wonder, what else did he know?
Speaker 153 Physicist Francis Perrin sat at a nuclear plant in the south of France, thinking to himself, this cannot be possible.
Speaker 162 He was examining a dark piece of uranium ore, but what he discovered didn't make sense.
Speaker 29 This piece of uranium had somehow undergone nuclear fission, but this uranium was mined.
Speaker 53 Nuclear fission doesn't just happen in nature.
Speaker 15 And even more confusing, this uranium ore was almost 2 billion years old.
Speaker 140 Atoms are the building blocks of all matter in the universe.
Speaker 94 The sun, the earth, the air we breathe, our bodies themselves.
Speaker 7 everything is made up of atoms.
Speaker 85 But atoms can be split.
Speaker 74 And when that happens, energy is released.
Speaker 94 And this energy can be harnessed and used to charge your phone or power an entire city or
Speaker 153 Splitting an atom is called nuclear fission, and it's a very delicate process.
Speaker 69 To start, start, you'll need a high-quality fuel source like uranium or plutonium, and this is thankfully hard to find.
Speaker 45 And even if you do find it, it has to be refined before it can be used.
Speaker 233 Next, you need pure water, like really pure.
Speaker 38 So, no chance of a nuclear reactor in here, eh?
Speaker 51 None.
Speaker 38 Unless it works with vodka.
Speaker 204 It doesn't.
Speaker 17 The water used for the fission process in a nuclear power plant has to have all minerals removed.
Speaker 163 Then it's filtered and finally distilled.
Speaker 162 If there's even just a few contaminated parts per million in the water, fission won't happen.
Speaker 200 Naturally, uranium contains a very consistent and specific amount of the isotope uranium-235.
Speaker 130 And when U-235 is split, for a brief moment it absorbs a neutron and is turned into U-236.
Speaker 30 Then U-236 is split into other elements like barium, krypton, or strontium.
Speaker 53 Since all natural uranium decays at the same rate, any uranium pulled out of the Earth should have the same exact amount of U-235.
Speaker 61 The The only way, literally the only way, for uranium ore to have a lower percentage of U-235 is through nuclear fission.
Speaker 76 So, Francis Perrin was faced with concrete evidence that nuclear fission had not only occurred before it was discovered, but it happened 1.8 billion years before.
Speaker 53 After further study, Perrin and his peers concluded the uranium ore had to be natural, and fission somehow occurred naturally.
Speaker 53 But American chemist Glenn Seaborg didn't agree.
Speaker 77 He said in order order for U-235 to burn through fission, the conditions would have needed to be exactly right.
Speaker 10 They'd have to be perfect, too perfect for nature.
Speaker 68 Man-made nuclear reactors are built with extreme precision, and no natural water source would even be close to pure enough to keep the reaction going.
Speaker 28 For this to happen on Earth 2 billion years ago was impossible.
Speaker 10 Further investigation revealed high concentrations of fission byproducts within the mine, indicating nuclear chain reactions had definitely taken place.
Speaker 57 Also, the geology of the region contained radioactive waste that proved the controlled use of a nuclear reactor that ran for 500,000 years.
Speaker 12 At the time the reactor was operating, the only life on Earth was single-celled organisms.
Speaker 17 Or
Speaker 218 out-of-place artifacts are sometimes called oo parts, and there are a lot of them out there.
Speaker 132 These were just a few of my favorites.
Speaker 232 But how many of these objects are really out of place?
Speaker 158 Now I love the legend of the Dropa Stones, but it's ultimately disappointing.
Speaker 172 The original story from 1962 is credited to writer Reinhard Wegman, but no record of a writer by that name can be found.
Speaker 132 Same with the archaeologist who discovered the stones, Chu Pu Tei, and Sum Um Nui, the professor who studied them.
Speaker 158 They don't exist either.
Speaker 232 No academic works can be found for either of them, and their names aren't even Chinese.
Speaker 132 Wegener's photos of the Dropa discs are pretty low resolution.
Speaker 7 You can't see any details like the hieroglyphics the stones supposedly had.
Speaker 3 It's more likely what he was taking a picture of was a jade B-disc.
Speaker 166 B-discs are elaborately decorated discs cut from jade.
Speaker 15 And B-discs are old.
Speaker 208 They've been dated as early as 3000 BC and maybe even older.
Speaker 9 But they were fairly common.
Speaker 45 The only mystery is we really don't know what the discs were for.
Speaker 57 They probably have something to do with funerals because they've been found in graves of important people.
Speaker 35 And there's David Agamon's book, Exile of the Sun Gods, which details an expedition into Tibet.
Speaker 27 On that expedition, a race of people is encountered who call themselves the Dropa.
Speaker 19 The Dropa claim they were descendants of extraterrestrials.
Speaker 184 The book tells the story of their UFO crash, their history, and the artifacts they left behind, which included discs with mysterious hieroglyphics.
Speaker 38 Such a great story.
Speaker 64 It is, but it never happened.
Speaker 128 Oh, no. In 1995, Agamon, whose real name is David Gaiman, sat for an interview with the magazine The Fortean Times.
Speaker 3 He admitted admitted that the story was all made up.
Speaker 235 The narrative was edited by David Agamon and included a photograph of a curious disc-shaped plate embossed with pictograms that seemed to be part of a record of the journey of the star beings from their homeworld.
Speaker 235 The author David Gaiman admitted to FT recently it had been written as satire on the alien intervention in human evolution genre.
Speaker 235 Still, it is regarded in some quarters as an authentic ancient astronaut event.
Speaker 132 He claimed it was his greatest hoax and said his only regret was that the book didn't sell better.
Speaker 19 There isn't a single person living or dead that's been confirmed to have seen a dropistone, so I think this one is a hoax.
Speaker 133 Now the Antikyther mechanism is not a hoax.
Speaker 203 That is a real object, and it was found on an ancient Roman shipwreck.
Speaker 31 It really was on that ship 2,000 years ago.
Speaker 140 All of that is true.
Speaker 132 But despite all the wild theories surrounding the device, the truth is actually anticlimactic and comes down to a simple misunderstanding.
Speaker 211 Many people assume, and many journalists state, the Antikythera mechanism is the only device of its kind and that it was created with technology far beyond what existed at the time.
Speaker 85 Well, that's not true.
Speaker 57 Devices like this one are well documented in ancient writings and were known about long before it was found in 1900.
Speaker 204 What made the Antikythera mechanism special was that it survived.
Speaker 57 It's the only known artifact of one of these devices in existence.
Speaker 69 Another misconception is that we don't know what it does, but we actually do.
Speaker 38 Well, how do we know?
Speaker 204 It has labels on it. Oh.
Speaker 62 Small colored stones show the position and motions of the planets.
Speaker 7 The sun and moon were shown relative to the constellations of the zodiac.
Speaker 139 It predicted solar and lunar eclipses and what color the eclipses would be.
Speaker 202 It had a 365-day solar calendar and a lunar calendar 19 years long.
Speaker 41 A small colored stone rotated to show the phases of the moon.
Speaker 53 There was even a dial showing a countdown to the next Olympic Games, so it probably wasn't created by aliens.
Speaker 38 Oh, well, maybe aliens are big sports fans.
Speaker 76 Maybe, but aliens probably follow sports using equipment more advanced than something made from gears.
Speaker 209 Plus, the device has been recreated using X-ray and gamma-ray imaging.
Speaker 19 Turns out, the thing wasn't all that accurate.
Speaker 28 So the Antikythera device is real and a fascinating piece of engineering, but it isn't an out-of-place artifact.
Speaker 202 Next, the Mount Baigon Pyramid probably isn't a pyramid.
Speaker 236 In fact, the word Baigong just means hill in the local dialect.
Speaker 38 This is getting depressing.
Speaker 13 While the caves may appear man-made, they probably aren't.
Speaker 27 The triangular shape of the entrance only looks that way from a certain angle, and there's no indication of two collapsed entrances or anything artificially created.
Speaker 68 The pipes, though, they can't really be explained.
Speaker 146 They really do appear to be forged metal pipes.
Speaker 68 They're really made of rusted iron, quartz, and quicklime.
Speaker 59 That's all true.
Speaker 79 And the archaeologist who discovered them by you is a real person.
Speaker 16 Who's real?
Speaker 132 You is.
Speaker 76 I is? No, you is. Me is?
Speaker 38 You. That's what I said.
Speaker 129 Look, I don't want to do this again.
Speaker 215 Who doesn't?
Speaker 51 Me.
Speaker 161 You? Stop it.
Speaker 186 The mainstream theory is that the bygone pipes are just tree roots.
Speaker 151 Tree roots?
Speaker 17 Yep.
Speaker 130 Tree roots can turn to stone through a process known as per-mineralization, which is a type of fossilization.
Speaker 22 This happens over over a long period, often taking thousands to millions of years.
Speaker 192 Now, this theory sounds plausible, but the only source for the claim is an article by Jinmin Weekly from 2003.
Speaker 173 The article was originally in Chinese, but the English translation says they found fossilized plant matter inside the tubes.
Speaker 28 This could be proof that the pipes are in fact tree roots, or indicate at some point in the last 150,000 years, algae or moss grew inside the pipes.
Speaker 70 It's still a mystery.
Speaker 25 Now on the surface, the Ulfbert swords defy science.
Speaker 149 Metal of such high quality didn't exist at the time.
Speaker 15 Except it did.
Speaker 3 It was rare, but it did exist.
Speaker 41 You've probably heard of Damascus steel.
Speaker 80 Damascus steel is one of the most legendary steels ever made.
Speaker 130 It's extremely durable and contains almost no impurities.
Speaker 182 The traditional method of producing Damascus steel has actually been lost to history, but experts believe the process involves layering iron and steel or multiple types of steel.
Speaker 68 The metals are then forged together by repeated folding and welding. This process may be repeated many times to create hundreds or even thousands of layers.
Speaker 167 This is what creates the unique patterns that Damascus steel is known for.
Speaker 93 Damascus steel was of quality equal to and probably even better than the Ulfbert swords.
Speaker 164 And Damascus blades were around a thousand years earlier.
Speaker 90 They just didn't become widely known until many years later.
Speaker 3 But nobody in Europe was producing steel like this until Ulfbert.
Speaker 28 Ulfbert's swords were extremely rare and extremely expensive.
Speaker 19 An average soldier wouldn't have used one of these and probably never even saw one.
Speaker 41 They were so expensive not just because of their quality, they were forged with raw materials not found in Europe.
Speaker 80 Most likely steel ingots from Asia were brought by merchants to the Rhineland, which is now Germany.
Speaker 137 After being forged in the Rhineland, they were most likely shipped north to Scandinavia.
Speaker 145 Many still believe such advanced blades would have been impossible to create with medieval technology, but modern blacksmiths have been able to replicate the process.
Speaker 215 It's not easy to do, but it is possible.
Speaker 57 Ulfbert was, during his time, one of the most talented weapons makers in the world.
Speaker 31 Though nobody knows who he is, a thousand years later, people still know his name.
Speaker 19 The Oclo reactor legend is partly true and partly false. First, chemist Glenn Seaborg never said it had to be man-made.
Speaker 167 He did say for it to be naturally occurring, the conditions would have to be perfect.
Speaker 27 People then took that as a claim and ran with it.
Speaker 68 In order for a chain reaction to occur, the amount of U-235 would need to be at critical mass, around 3-5%.
Speaker 58 Now, the current amount found in natural uranium is 0.7%.
Speaker 7 This isn't enough for fission to occur.
Speaker 167 But 1.8 billion years ago, the percentage of U-235 would have been much higher, enough to start a nuclear chain reaction.
Speaker 66 The likelihood of water being pure enough is slim, but not impossible. There's chemical evidence that a nuclear reaction did occur.
Speaker 41 Most articles and videos about the Oclo reactor describe it as a nuclear explosion like an atomic bomb, but that's not what happened.
Speaker 132 The uranium did undergo natural fission, but it was a slow burn that happened over 500,000 years.
Speaker 59 That's not as dramatic as a mushroom cloud, but it's pretty close to how modern nuclear reactors work.
Speaker 27 And that brings up an interesting point.
Speaker 3 In the distant future, all evidence of the human race will be completely gone.
Speaker 77 If a cataclysm wiped out the human race tomorrow, it would take just a few years for nature to reclaim urban areas.
Speaker 212 In a few thousand years, all cities are buried.
Speaker 50 In 100,000 years, all human remains are fossilized.
Speaker 163 In a million years, all evidence of the human race will have mineralized.
Speaker 19 Even styrofoam and plastic turns to stone and crumbles.
Speaker 196 In 10 million years, all that stone, the fossils, and every bit of evidence of the entire human race is recycled back into the Earth's mantle.
Speaker 18 An archaeologist far in the future would never know we even existed unless he finds and tests uranium.
Speaker 12 Evidence of our nuclear technology would still be detectable in uranium.
Speaker 143 That future archaeologist will be confused because, even though there's no evidence of civilization or technology, the uranium he finds will show evidence of fission.
Speaker 159 Other scientists will come up with theories about nuclear reactors that spontaneously appear in nature under perfect conditions.
Speaker 132 But the archaeologist feels there's more to the story.
Speaker 80 He has a nagging sense that millions of years ago, someone was here.
Speaker 19 And who's to say that this hasn't already happened?
Speaker 184 And that future archaeologist is us
Speaker 3 now obviously there are many more of these artifacts so we can probably do a part two but just to name a few the dendera lights in egypt look like people standing around a large light bulb with a filament
Speaker 153 but
Speaker 21 wait should i debunk these now no no no no no no save it for the next episode you're right okay there's also a 2,000-year-old earthquake detector that was found in China.
Speaker 38 Ancient Chinese secret, huh?
Speaker 22 Well, it's not a secret.
Speaker 38 Well, I was doing a bit.
Speaker 55 A bit about what?
Speaker 38 Hello, Calgon.
Speaker 55 Caligon, I don't follow.
Speaker 202 No, for crying out loud.
Speaker 38 Hey, uh, uh, roll the clip.
Speaker 119 We need more, Calgon.
Speaker 119 Ancient Chinese secret, huh?
Speaker 55
Oh, right. I remember that one.
Told ya.
Speaker 26 Uh, who were you talking to when you asked them to roll the clip?
Speaker 38 Ancient goldfish Secret.
Speaker 38 You should have seen that coming.
Speaker 237 I should have.
Speaker 38 You're getting slow in your old age.
Speaker 47 Speaking of old age, up next is a video about Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 4 Segway, nice.
Speaker 3 I think our video on Gobekli is about one of the best out there.
Speaker 140 But after you watch this, check out Jimmy Corsetti's video about how the WEF and Davos are a little too involved in this archaeological site.
Speaker 38 Yeah, they're a little too involved with everything.
Speaker 15 I agree.
Speaker 6 And we have an episode coming up about the Illuminati, so we'll get into some of how they're involved.
Speaker 64 Yeah, but not too involved.
Speaker 53 Nope.
Speaker 184 When talking about certain powerful elites, you have to be very careful.
Speaker 176 And I'm serious.
Speaker 21 Not only could the channel get demonetized, but our channel could be deleted.
Speaker 38 Yeah, especially if we joke about the Clintons.
Speaker 21 We do not joke about the Clintons.
Speaker 38 I know, but you gotta admit that it's strange.
Speaker 38
Okay, okay, okay. No Clinton jokes.
I get it.
Speaker 161 So, go back with Tepe.
Speaker 211 In Jimmy's video, he asked a question that we've all been asking for years.
Speaker 161 Why aren't we still digging?
Speaker 27 We know for a fact there's way more to the site.
Speaker 163 So, what else is down there?
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Speaker 35 We are the descendants of an ancient civilization.
Speaker 222 One which mastered technology, mapped the cosmos, and understood our relationship with the natural world.
Speaker 148 Our ancestors traveled the world and built enormous structures.
Speaker 143 They scaled their creations into cities.
Speaker 209 They shared a common governance and similar religious beliefs.
Speaker 132 Our ancestors lived, as we do today, as a global society.
Speaker 93 Then around 14,500 years ago, this global superpower started to collapse.
Speaker 234 First came uncontrollable change, and then a cataclysm.
Speaker 157 In less than a week, everything and almost everyone was gone.
Speaker 215 Those left behind built monuments.
Speaker 22 Monuments not as tributes to gods or homage to kings.
Speaker 88 the monuments are a warning to future generations, to us.
Speaker 3 That warning is simple: danger is coming.
Speaker 85 Our civilization has ended before, and it will end again.
Speaker 14 This is one story that big archaeology and world governments don't want you to know.
Speaker 208 Because once you hear it, you'll never trust them again.
Speaker 19 Because the danger that's coming, there's not a thing they can do to stop it.
Speaker 19 In 1994, German archaeologist Klaus Schmidt was touring Turkish Neolithic sites when he spotted a limestone block poking out from a hillside.
Speaker 221 The locals call the area Pot Belly Hill, or in their language, Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 19 Schmidt and his team began excavating the hillside around the limestone.
Speaker 68 And though they didn't know it at the time, what they discovered would change everything we know about human history.
Speaker 132 We've all been taught the official story, the big archaeology story of the origin of human civilization.
Speaker 90 Stone Age hunter-gatherers emerged from the last ice age and eventually discovered farming.
Speaker 208 These people organized into settlements in Mesopotamia, the Fertile Crescent.
Speaker 80 Then, about 6,000 years ago, the first civilization was born, ancient Sumer.
Speaker 48 Stone Age humans before Sumer were primitive.
Speaker 69 Their most advanced technology was stone tools.
Speaker 5 At Kobekli Tepe, archaeologists uncovered four man-made stone enclosures covering 100,000 square feet of land.
Speaker 25 That's interesting, but there was a problem.
Speaker 234 The earliest parts of Gobekli Tepe were built 11,600 years ago.
Speaker 59 That's 6,000 years before the ancient Sumerians were doing anything.
Speaker 144 Now, this didn't make sense at all.
Speaker 93 11,600 years ago was the end of the last ice age.
Speaker 22 Big archaeology said this far back in time, humans were following the migration of animals.
Speaker 13 They built temporary camps, or at most, mud huts.
Speaker 137 Humans were not building enormous, permanent stone structures.
Speaker 170 They didn't have the knowledge.
Speaker 151 They didn't have the tools.
Speaker 94 They didn't have the talent.
Speaker 172 Yet, here it was.
Speaker 193 So the more they dug, the more things stopped making sense.
Speaker 189 Soon, archaeologists learned that the enclosures weren't built at the same time.
Speaker 5 This indicates long-term occupation of the site.
Speaker 74 Well, how long?
Speaker 7 Well, the newest structure was built about 10,500 years ago.
Speaker 31 That means Gobekli Tepe was occupied for over a thousand years.
Speaker 11 Now, a thousand years doesn't sound that long, but in human history, a thousand years is a very long time.
Speaker 30 That's enough time for the Roman Empire to rise and fall, and rise and fall again.
Speaker 151 The excavation of Gobekli Tepe continued, and from the perspective of the scientific establishment, things just kept getting worse.
Speaker 78 Gobekli Tepe wasn't haphazardly thrown together by Stone Age primitives.
Speaker 64 It was built strategically for a purpose.
Speaker 3 The four enclosures are circular, between 20 and 200 feet across, and all are angled toward the star Sirius. Sirius is the brightest star in the sky.
Speaker 93 Many cultures throughout history built temples angled at Sirius, but not 12,000 years ago.
Speaker 70 Yet here it was.
Speaker 89 Over the course of 1100 years, Sirius's alignment moved across the night sky, so the builders of Agli Tepe created newer enclosures to follow each realignment.
Speaker 30 To build these monuments required an understanding of astronomy, mathematics, and engineering.
Speaker 203 A project of this size would also require skills like community planning, administration, and division of labor.
Speaker 22 Big archaeology said people during this time had not yet acquired these skills.
Speaker 4 Yet here it was.
Speaker 5 Within each enclosure are T-shaped pillars, some of them 16 feet tall, each weighing up to 10 tons.
Speaker 19 43 pillars have been excavated so far, but the Gobekli Tepe story is just getting started.
Speaker 151 Only 5% of the site has been uncovered.
Speaker 229 Recent LIDAR imaging revealed at least 15 to 20 additional structures and enclosures buried beneath the main site, and there are more than 200 additional stone pillars.
Speaker 50 Now, about those stone pillars, there's something very strange going on.
Speaker 18 Engraved on the pillars are depictions of humans, animals, and human-animal hybrids.
Speaker 169 There are foxes, lions, scorpions, snakes, boar, wild donkey, gazelles, there's all kinds of things.
Speaker 156 And the work is very advanced.
Speaker 185 But the most advanced carvings are on the oldest pillars.
Speaker 154 As the site gets newer, the designs get less intricate.
Speaker 175 It's like technology and craftsmanship suddenly appeared out of nowhere.
Speaker 68 Somehow, 7,000 years before Stonehenge and the Great Pyramids of Giza were built, and 6,000 years before the invention of writing, humans were capable of building this.
Speaker 57 Where did the builders get this sudden knowledge?
Speaker 5 Well, the answer to that question is controversial.
Speaker 129 Maybe the human story doesn't start at at the end of the last ice age, like big archaeology wants us to think.
Speaker 30 Maybe before the last ice age, the Earth was home to an older and much more advanced civilization.
Speaker 140 That civilization then taught the primitive local hunter-gatherers about mathematics and engineering.
Speaker 57 They also taught these primitive humans astronomy and told them to pay very close attention to the sky.
Speaker 70 These ancients then told the local people their story of the time before the ice age when their civilization flourished.
Speaker 136 Pillar 43 in Enclosure D has become known as the Vulture Stone.
Speaker 3 On the Vulture Stone, there's a detailed carving that tells the story of these ancient people.
Speaker 132 Unfortunately, it's also the story of the end of the world.
Speaker 57 Pillar 43 in Enclosure D, also known as the Vulture Stone, depicts the worst day in human history.
Speaker 139 Engraved on the pillar are asterisms, which are bright star clusters like constellations.
Speaker 189 Pillar 43 points to Scorpius.
Speaker 214 Now, to be fair to skeptics, every culture is going to have different representations for their constellations.
Speaker 205 But look at the drawing on the Vulture Stone.
Speaker 132 Without a doubt, that is a Scorpion.
Speaker 68 When the constellation Scorpius is lined up with the night sky, all the other drawings fall into place, each of them representing constellations.
Speaker 19 A sun sits atop the vulture's wing in the design, showing its placement in the sky in relation to the stars.
Speaker 163 If we use the central sun as a guide to line up the constellations, it reveals a star map.
Speaker 68 And every star map is a date stamp.
Speaker 189 Take the Hoover Dam, for example.
Speaker 3 Engraved on the floor of the dam is the exact configuration of the stars as seen from that location on the day the dam opened.
Speaker 38 Why did they carve that in the damn floor?
Speaker 91 So if the structure is found thousands or millions of years from now, archaeologists will know the exact date.
Speaker 38 The date the damn people made it.
Speaker 51 Right.
Speaker 38 Damn good idea.
Speaker 57 The vulture stone shows the only time in history that this specific configuration of stars could be seen from Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 3 It was a 100-year window between 10,900 to 10,800 BC, about 13,000 years ago.
Speaker 31 But wait, this is more than a thousand years before Gobekli Tepe was built.
Speaker 157 So this tablet is telling a story of something that happened in the past.
Speaker 208 It's the story of a time period commonly referred to as the Younger Dryas and the terror from the sky that changed the face of the Earth.
Speaker 62 The ice age lasted about 2.6 million years.
Speaker 232 Most of the northern hemisphere was covered by miles-thick sheets of ice.
Speaker 212 30% of the Earth's surface was covered by glaciers.
Speaker 79 This sounds bad, but for the human race, it was good.
Speaker 15 Sure, the climate was cold, but it wasn't cold everywhere.
Speaker 170 Most of Africa and the Middle East were warm with plenty of plant and animal life.
Speaker 11 And the climate was consistent for 2.6 million years.
Speaker 215 Hominids had a nice, stable climate in which to evolve during this time.
Speaker 181 Homo sapiens, modern humans, emerged during this time.
Speaker 155 We were born in the ice age. We thrived in it.
Speaker 68 Then the climate started changing.
Speaker 66 Temperatures became warmer year after year.
Speaker 11 The ice sheets slowly melted.
Speaker 84 Sea levels gradually rose.
Speaker 62 This would have been a concern for the human civilization. But they were helpless to do anything about it.
Speaker 38 Oh, so you admit that even if the climate is getting warmer, there's nothing we can do about it?
Speaker 11 Well, that's an open debate.
Speaker 38 How dare you?
Speaker 7 Then suddenly, around 12,900 years ago, the Earth got cold again.
Speaker 40 Not as cold as before, but cold enough that humans understood how to survive and thrive in these conditions.
Speaker 158 This mini-ice age was essentially a return to normal.
Speaker 187 But a thousand years later, this age of normalcy ended violently and suddenly.
Speaker 211 The ice sheets melted as they had before, but not over 2.6 million years.
Speaker 215 This time the ice melted in weeks.
Speaker 57 There was no time for civilization to adjust.
Speaker 132 This was the cataclysm.
Speaker 57 And there's evidence of this cataclysm in ice core samples taken from Greenland and Antarctica.
Speaker 90 There's evidence in sediment cores from the bottom of lakes and oceans.
Speaker 182 There's evidence in organic material that's been carbon dated.
Speaker 31 But there's also evidence of this disaster on pillar 43, the vulture stone.
Speaker 162 Along with giving us a date, the tablet also depicts the comet impact of the younger Dryas.
Speaker 39 At the bottom of the pillar is a headless man, linking the date to death.
Speaker 67 There's also a snake coming from the south.
Speaker 140 This has been said to represent three giant waves washing over the earth.
Speaker 208 Those could have been the tsunamis that we know for sure happened.
Speaker 193 But Pillar 43 is only a piece of the story.
Speaker 196 Pillar 56 depicts more of the Younger Dryas' impact.
Speaker 173 Waves crashing, animals fleeing.
Speaker 5 Now, those are scary, but to me, Pillar 18 is the most ominous depiction at Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 80 First of all, it contains the only word on the whole site.
Speaker 132 The word is God.
Speaker 38 Maybe it was saying, oh God, we're gonna die.
Speaker 38 Oh God, please save us.
Speaker 19 I think it was saying exactly that.
Speaker 38 Wait, I was just joking.
Speaker 69 Well, I think something very bad happened and this pillar is a plea for help.
Speaker 38 Oh, my joke isn't very funny anymore.
Speaker 130 Pillar 18 in Enclosure D focuses on the constellation we know as Aquarius.
Speaker 214 But when it was built, the pillar was probably centered on Taurus.
Speaker 145 Now, if that's true, we now have a very big piece of this puzzle.
Speaker 181 The comet Enki was discovered in 1786 and takes about three years to orbit the Sun.
Speaker 57 Enki is about three miles wide.
Speaker 39 Not a huge comet, but not small either.
Speaker 3 The thing is, it used to be bigger.
Speaker 20 Much bigger.
Speaker 57 It was part of what scientists call a mega-comet.
Speaker 208 100 miles wide and not just made of ice, but also glass, metal, and rock.
Speaker 31 About 20,000 years ago, the mega-comet broke up.
Speaker 38 This This is good, right?
Speaker 11 Oh no, this is bad.
Speaker 221 Really bad.
Speaker 194 When the 100-mile megacomet broke up, it created an enormous debris field.
Speaker 173 Now instead of one mega comet, you've got millions of smaller comets, ranging in size from grains of sand to over a mile across.
Speaker 197 When the Earth passed through that cloud of debris, the people at Kobeklitepe would have seen a firestorm of comets raining down on the Earth, all coming from the Aquarius constellation, just as is depicted on Pillar 43.
Speaker 217 But here's the scary part.
Speaker 167 We fly through that same debris field every year.
Speaker 78 It's called the Torrid Meteor Shower, and it's caused a lot of damage through the years.
Speaker 17 And if you're watching this in September, October, or November, we're flying through it right now.
Speaker 57 When Gobekli Tepe was discovered, big archaeology had no choice but to admit they had underestimated the technological abilities of early man by, oh, about 5,000 years.
Speaker 62 It must be a mistake, they said.
Speaker 185 After all, their grant money depends on them being right.
Speaker 208 No need to fund a search for, let's say, a mummy in a pyramid that's not going to be there.
Speaker 200 But in 2019, more bad news for the mainstream.
Speaker 3 That year, excavations started at Karahan Tepe, about 40 miles from Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 159 Initial estimates say it might have been settled before Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 18 Gobekli Tepe seems to have been built for a single purpose, maybe a place of worship or an observatory.
Speaker 214 Carahantepe is very different.
Speaker 129 It shows obvious signs of a structured society.
Speaker 34 Now, there are many different types of buildings at Carahantepe.
Speaker 14 Some could be shops or residences or food storage.
Speaker 15 Vessels, grindstones, flint, plates, and all kinds of other objects have been found at Carahantepe.
Speaker 19 These types of artifacts haven't been found at Gobekle Tepe, suggesting the two sites served very different social functions.
Speaker 158 But these places existed at the same time.
Speaker 182 So it's possible Gobekle Tepe was a religious center, where Karahantepe was a residential neighborhood, or maybe a shopping district.
Speaker 39 And if that's true, there must be more settlements in the area yet to be found.
Speaker 38 There's more?
Speaker 17 Lots more.
Speaker 133 In 2021, the Turkish government announced the discovery of at least 11 additional hillsides, which contain structures very much like Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 173 The hillsides make up a hundred-mile ring with Gobekli Tepe in the center.
Speaker 182 These sites are known collectively as Tastepler.
Speaker 233 Now, instead of an area inhabited by nomadic primitives, Tastepler is a metropolis.
Speaker 57 Cyberch was uncovered by archaeologists in 2021, around 10 miles from Gobekli Tepe. Siberch Cyberch is one of the most complex settlements in the area.
Speaker 90 Archaeologists found communal buildings big enough to seat 50 people.
Speaker 18 There are communal halls covered with countless engravings of humans and animals.
Speaker 157 To the south of the communal buildings are ancient residential homes.
Speaker 132 The layout of each of the Tas Tepler archaeological sites suggests hundreds of thousands of people lived there, permanently, right after the Younger Dryas changed the face of the world.
Speaker 25 But there's a site discovered in 2008 about 180 miles away, which really broke history and suggests Tas Tepler may have been a capital in what was a very busy region.
Speaker 132 While digging a dam in the area, engineers rediscovered the settlement of Bankuklu Tarla.
Speaker 5 Damn, engineers.
Speaker 22 Look, you don't have to keep tagging that joke. Oh, you don't like my damn jokes, huh?
Speaker 31 The Bankuklu-Tarla settlement is between 12,000 and 13,000 years old.
Speaker 208 That means it was built within the Younger Dryest Cold period, before the flood.
Speaker 231 The structure found has similar features with Gobekli Tepe and the structures belonging to this period in the region.
Speaker 231 The building has a unique architectural style, shape, and interior arrangement, unique with these features. We can say that it is a temple that dates back to 12,000 years.
Speaker 143 This is where the existence of an ancient advanced civilization starts to become almost irrefutable.
Speaker 17 Bankuklu Bankuklu Tarla has all the things we find on Tas Tepler.
Speaker 18 Private buildings, public spaces.
Speaker 24 It's got storage rooms, tools, ornamental objects.
Speaker 216 It's got mega and microliths.
Speaker 164 The people of Bankuklu Tarla were so advanced, they even built a sewer system.
Speaker 19 More than 130 skeletons have been found there, each buried with hundreds of thousands of beads.
Speaker 132 The manufacturing of beads proves that there was a division of labor, an artisan class.
Speaker 90 It proves that the people had time for more than just hunting and gathering.
Speaker 19 They had time to make art.
Speaker 38 Making beads is more of a craft than art, but I get your meaning.
Speaker 3 So, big archaeology was wrong again.
Speaker 17 Very, very wrong.
Speaker 14 This area of Turkey shows that thousands of people lived there in organized communities.
Speaker 27 They built neighborhoods and temples.
Speaker 89 They had shops and large halls for gathering.
Speaker 3 They had division of labor.
Speaker 19 They were experts at stonework. They understood mathematics and astronomy.
Speaker 136 They were talented engineers.
Speaker 7 And this was 12,000 years ago.
Speaker 90 But where's the evidence of people learning these skills?
Speaker 80 If the people at Gobekli Tepe were putting up 10-ton stone pillars 10 to 12,000 years ago, shouldn't we see communities learning these skills 15,000 years ago, 20,000 years ago?
Speaker 167 We should see an evolution of technology that takes thousands of years.
Speaker 4 But we don't.
Speaker 197 This advanced technology just appeared.
Speaker 197 But that's not exactly true.
Speaker 214 The people in the area around Gobekli Tepe, Bankuku Tarla, and Syberch were taught this technology after the Great Flood.
Speaker 62 It was a gift to them.
Speaker 228 A gift from the people of the sea.
Speaker 53 Mainstream or big archaeology gets things wrong.
Speaker 147 A lot of things.
Speaker 161 Gobekli Tepe shouldn't be there.
Speaker 218 Neither should Karahan Tepe, Bankuku Tarla, or any of the other settlements in the area.
Speaker 129 We're told the Great Pyramids of Giza are tombs built for pharaohs, but no mummy has ever been found in a tomb.
Speaker 53 Not one, not ever.
Speaker 19 But in the Great Pyramid, we did find evidence that it might have been used as an ancient power plant.
Speaker 132 Big archaeology hates that idea.
Speaker 181 Now when I was growing up, we were taught that Native Americans first arrived in North America by crossing the Bering Land Bridge in Alaska between 10 to 12,000 years ago.
Speaker 3 This was called the Clovis first model because some stone tools were found in Clovis, New Mexico.
Speaker 208 Big archaeology wasn't even close on how people got to the Americas or when.
Speaker 39 The Monte Verde site in Chile blew up the Clovis model when it was dated to 14,800 years ago.
Speaker 132 Buttermilk Creek Complex in Texas was dated to about 15,500 years ago.
Speaker 181 The Bluefish Caves in Yukon, Canada have evidence suggesting human activity as far back as 24,000 years ago.
Speaker 132 Plus, there's hard evidence that people from Polynesia in the South Pacific traded with and mated with tribes in Guatemala many years before Columbus.
Speaker 19 And they didn't cross the Bering Land Bridge in Alaska.
Speaker 78 They sailed thousands of miles across the Pacific Ocean.
Speaker 27 This means they had advanced shipmaking skills and seamanship.
Speaker 173 They had knowledge of astronomy and the weather.
Speaker 149 You had to make that trip.
Speaker 38 They also had to have balls of steel.
Speaker 132 I would have preferred that you said nerves of steel, but yeah, they were brave.
Speaker 66 Big archaeology knows the Mayan culture had a large population, but they were not considered to be very technologically advanced.
Speaker 173 But in 2023, researchers deep in the Guatemalan jungle discovered a sprawling Mayan civilization.
Speaker 3 It covers more than 650 square miles.
Speaker 131 And here's the crazy thing.
Speaker 176 The cities were interconnected by a series of superhighways.
Speaker 151 And these weren't just paths or dirt roads.
Speaker 182 The roads were elevated to allow for drainage and even paved with white plaster.
Speaker 75 The Romans get a lot of credit for creating the first roads, but the Mayans beat the Romans to it by about 2,000 years.
Speaker 224 They're the world's first superhighway system that we have.
Speaker 224 What's amazing about them is that they unite all these cities together like a spider web, which forms one of the earliest and first state societies in the Western Hemisphere.
Speaker 208 So big archaeology was wrong about Mayan technology, but they still had to get in the last word.
Speaker 19 Mainstream said, sure, they had hundreds of miles of roads, but they didn't have vehicles.
Speaker 221 They just walked.
Speaker 5 No animals or people pulling carts.
Speaker 18 They just walked hundreds of miles.
Speaker 62 Big archaeology said this is because the Mayans didn't discover the wheel.
Speaker 130 But Mayan toys have been discovered that have wheels.
Speaker 57 Big archaeology says the Mayans never thought to scale them up to put them on carts.
Speaker 186 How do we know this?
Speaker 57 Big archaeology says we know this because we haven't discovered the carts.
Speaker 52 Oh.
Speaker 132 But a year ago, big archaeology would have said there's no way the Mayans could have built a highway system.
Speaker 11 Why not?
Speaker 173 Well, because we haven't found one.
Speaker 9 Yet there it is.
Speaker 57 Big archaeology is quick to take a lack of evidence at face value, regardless of common sense.
Speaker 57 Like there was no such thing as the city of Dwarka, the advanced and prosperous city in India that was consumed by a great flood.
Speaker 15 That was all a myth.
Speaker 12 Then Dwarka was found and dated to the younger Dryas.
Speaker 78 There's no such thing as Atlantis, but it's hard to explain the Bimini Road in the Bahamas, or the ancient city off the coast of Cuba that could be anywhere from 6,000 to 50,000 years old.
Speaker 18 There's no such thing as Mew, the continent that once connected Greece to Easter Island.
Speaker 14 Yet the languages from those two cultures share about a thousand words.
Speaker 161 And the Yanaguni Monument off the coast of Japan is right where Mew would have been.
Speaker 134 There was no such thing as Derinkuyu, the secret underground city that hid 20,000 people from danger for thousands of years.
Speaker 70 That was just a local myth.
Speaker 173 Then a man tried expanding his basement and realized it's already been expanded, and the lost city of Derinkuyu was discovered.
Speaker 143 And that's why big archaeology says there was no advanced culture before the flood, because there's no evidence of it.
Speaker 39 Except, there is.
Speaker 41 Every culture has a flood myth.
Speaker 134 Long before Noah built the Ark, a great flood turned up in Mesopotamia in the epic of Gilgamesh.
Speaker 143 The ancient Sumerians, Egyptians, Greeks, Hindus, they all have a legend of a deluge that wiped the earth clean.
Speaker 62 The flood myth really is worldwide.
Speaker 186 The Norse have their own version of the Noah's Ark story.
Speaker 169 The Inca, the Aztec, tribes across America, Japanese, Chinese, Hawaiian, Australian, Aboriginal.
Speaker 18 This is just to name a few, the list is much longer.
Speaker 139 Now, the legends vary, but they're all basically the same plot.
Speaker 39 People are misbehaving, so a flood is sent to wipe them out and start over with a few survivors.
Speaker 179 Now, I don't know about the misbehaving part, but we're pretty sure the flood really happened.
Speaker 167 But some of the flood legends have a twist.
Speaker 150 Those legends say that before the flood, there were advanced civilizations who flourished on their own continents, while primitive humans were still figuring out stone tools.
Speaker 180 Atlantis was a powerful and advanced island nation.
Speaker 197 It was larger than Asia and ruled by the descendants of gods.
Speaker 132 Atlantis was prosperous and technologically advanced, but the people became corrupt, prompting the gods to sink the island into the ocean in a single day and night of catastrophic earthquakes and floods.
Speaker 132 Lemuria was a huge continent in the Pacific Ocean.
Speaker 143 Lemuria was home to a spiritually advanced civilization that was sometimes ally and sometimes enemy of Atlantis.
Speaker 187 And then there was Mu.
Speaker 19 Mu is a continent either in the Pacific Ocean or Indian Ocean.
Speaker 41 It was once inhabited by an advanced civilization.
Speaker 143 The survivors of Mu brought their wisdom and began the civilizations of ancient Egypt and the Maya.
Speaker 149 Atlantis, Lemuria, and Mu are all similar stories in that they were highly advanced civilizations.
Speaker 16 All existed around 9600 BC, all destroyed by a great flood.
Speaker 206 But in all three stories, there are a few survivors.
Speaker 90 After the floodwaters recede and their homelands are destroyed, these survivors seek refuge on the mainland.
Speaker 187 The people they find are kind but primitive, so the survivors grant them the gift of civilization.
Speaker 38 And when you show up somewhere, it's always polite to bring something. Flour, bottle of wine, civilization.
Speaker 208 I agree, that's just good matters.
Speaker 13 But it's at this time that agriculture explodes across the Middle East.
Speaker 5 Megalithic structures now appear.
Speaker 171 Complex cities emerge, all seemingly overnight.
Speaker 143 In Hindu, Matsya takes the form of a fish and guides King Manu to re-establish civilization.
Speaker 129 In Mesopotamia, Awanis emerged from the sea as half man, half fish.
Speaker 26 A man in?
Speaker 17 Yep.
Speaker 38 Hey, yeah, ask him if he has a sister, will ya?
Speaker 152 Awanis teaches the Sumerians agriculture, writing, law, and all knowledge crucial for civilization.
Speaker 132 Cuetza Coatl, also associated with water, brought civilization to the Aztecs.
Speaker 208 In Egyptian, Polynesian, Japanese, Chinese, Norse, Hawaiian, Native American, there's a godlike teacher who comes from the sea to help restart civilization.
Speaker 149 And these saviors or teachers or whatever you want to call them, they all appear after the Great Flood at the end of the Younger Dryas.
Speaker 134 And they all transfer wisdom and knowledge to the primitive people that they meet and restart civilization.
Speaker 171 And there's more evidence.
Speaker 17 The cultures around the world seem to have been given the same knowledge.
Speaker 132 For example, Sirius is the brightest star in the sky.
Speaker 187 Every culture knows about it, but every culture, new and old, refers to Sirius as a dog or a wolf.
Speaker 32 In ancient Iraq, Sirius was called the dog star that leads.
Speaker 90 In China, it was known as the heavenly wolf.
Speaker 129 Assyrians and Akkadians knew Sirius as as the dog of the sun.
Speaker 78 And in North America, native tribes used largely canine terminology, like dog that follows mountain sheep or wolf star when referring to Sirius.
Speaker 62 Most cultures holding a reverence for the brightest star in the sky is understandable, but all of them referring to the same star as a dog or a wolf?
Speaker 16 That seems like a big coincidence.
Speaker 38 We don't believe in those.
Speaker 238 We don't.
Speaker 7 And then, seemingly out of nowhere, Bankuklutarla, a bustling city, appears in Turkey.
Speaker 208 Karahan Tepe, with its homes and halls and magnificent art, appears.
Speaker 62 And Gobekli Tepe is built, an entire complex dedicated to the star Sirius.
Speaker 218 And within the complex, 10-ton stone pillars that tell the story of man, the fire from the sky, the flood that swallows the earth, and of civilization given a second chance.
Speaker 88 The pillars also offer a warning for future generations.
Speaker 17 For us, all that has happened before will happen again.
Speaker 142 The builders gave us symbols on stones and told us to watch the sky.
Speaker 57 They showed us the constellations to study.
Speaker 93 They gave us the exact date of the last disaster so we could prepare for the next one, because there's always a next one.
Speaker 129 The images carved in the stone pillars could be a guide to ensure humanity's survival.
Speaker 39 But if all that's true, why was it all intentionally buried?
Speaker 80 Around 10,000 years ago, the people of Gobekli Tepe took up a massive project.
Speaker 13 They filled in the entire compound with stone and debris.
Speaker 57 Then they covered it with earth and mud to make it seem like it was never there.
Speaker 212 There are two theories for why they did this.
Speaker 178 One, to preserve it.
Speaker 51 Or two, to hide it.
Speaker 208 An advanced society destroyed by an ancient cataclysm.
Speaker 90 The survivors venture out into the world, spreading wisdom and knowledge and sowing the seeds of civilization.
Speaker 50 Then, in an instant, agriculture explodes, cities are born, and a new era of man begins.
Speaker 229 Just not the first era of man.
Speaker 139 Not only is this a great story, it's one of my favorite stories.
Speaker 19 I read Graham Hancock's book, Fingerprints of the Gods, in the 1990s, and I was hooked.
Speaker 132 I've been an ancient civilization junkie ever since.
Speaker 132 But is it true?
Speaker 62 Well, big archaeology says it's absolutely not true.
Speaker 196 But we've shown that lack of evidence is proof enough for the mainstream to say that something never existed.
Speaker 167 Only when dragged, kicking, and screaming to evidence of the Great Flood do they finally acknowledge it.
Speaker 132 And only when Gobekli Tepe is discovered does the date of the first civilization get pushed back.
Speaker 79 Then Mankuklutarla is found and the date changes again.
Speaker 201 And it may change again and again.
Speaker 154 So big archaeology was wrong about how advanced the people of the Stone Age were.
Speaker 218 They were clearly advanced enough to build monolithic monuments and huge complex cities. It appears as if this skill and technology comes out of nowhere.
Speaker 135 We don't see older, smaller structures that show an evolution of technology that leads to something as magnificent as Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 134 The technology just appeared, and it appeared at the end of the Younger Dryas, after the Great Flood.
Speaker 3 So it must be a transfer of technology from survivors of an ancient society whose civilization was lost beneath the waves.
Speaker 78 But let's be fair.
Speaker 157 There was an evolution of technology leading to Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 78 Natufian culture existed in the same area about 15,000 years ago.
Speaker 134 They were unusual in that they settled the area permanently.
Speaker 14 There's evidence of cemeteries, architecture, food production, animal domestication, and burials with elaborate mortuary treatments, the Natufians built organized stone structures decorated with art.
Speaker 31 This is 2,000 years before Gobeklitepe.
Speaker 218 Ayamalaha was a Natufian settlement built around 12,000 years ago.
Speaker 182 They too used circular structures like those found at Gobeklitepe.
Speaker 57 Pre-Natufian culture goes back to 23,000 years ago.
Speaker 15 Now it's rare to find evidence of this culture, but it's not impossible.
Speaker 11 There are engravings, ornaments, and beads that are older than Gobekli Tepe, thousands of years older.
Speaker 181 The monoliths at Gobekli Tepe are impressive, but the Natuthians also created huge slabs of decorated limestone.
Speaker 167 Not as elaborate, but they were made with skill and craftsmanship.
Speaker 41 Kortik Tepe is another mound discovered in the Anatolia area of Turkey.
Speaker 213 Found there are pieces of very elaborate pottery, carvings, jewelry, tools, and fishing hooks.
Speaker 70 Kortik Tepe has been dated from 12,400 years ago to 11,700 years ago.
Speaker 215 So not only older than Gobeklitepe, this settlement existed during the cold snap of the younger Dryas.
Speaker 9 Now it is worth noting that Cortik Tepe disappears around the time of the flood.
Speaker 93 But before the flood, people lived there for a thousand years.
Speaker 11 So there is evidence of an evolution of technology, not just with jewelry and engraving, but even building large monoliths, all thousands of years before Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 132 One of the great mysteries is why Gobekli Tepe was deliberately filled in.
Speaker 151 Now, the working theory is the earlier structures were pretty big and dug into a mound.
Speaker 181 An earthquake hit, knocked everything into the mound and made a mess of things.
Speaker 229 Then everyone in the area filled in the rest of the hole and built newer, smaller structures around the older, larger ones.
Speaker 227 Structures that were designed to withstand earthquakes.
Speaker 181 Now, no one really knows for sure, but it's a theory that makes sense to me.
Speaker 39 And there are some issues with the dates as well.
Speaker 159 The date on Pillar 43, the Vulture Stone, that's 13,000 years ago.
Speaker 208 That doesn't line up with the end of the Younger Dryas, so it's not describing the Great Flood. But that date does line up with the beginning of the Younger Dryas.
Speaker 170 Was there an impact at that time too?
Speaker 4 Well, there probably was.
Speaker 80 It's believed that the abrupt cooling 13,000 years ago was caused by a series of events that happened at the same time.
Speaker 210 There are ice core samples that show an impact 12,887 years ago, and that date is accurate within five years.
Speaker 145 And this happened at the same time as a large volcanic eruption in Germany.
Speaker 3 This caused the Earth to be covered in soot, which caused years of darkness.
Speaker 158 Meanwhile, the impacts disrupted the ocean currents, so everything got cold again.
Speaker 214 Not as cold as before, but still cold.
Speaker 229 Then about a thousand years later, another event, maybe another impact, maybe a massive solar event, we don't really know for sure, but something did happen to warm the Earth and melt the ice caps really fast.
Speaker 63 We do have evidence of cultures that existed before, during, and after the Younger Dryas.
Speaker 221 Now, did we debunk the idea of an advanced culture before that?
Speaker 15 Absolutely not.
Speaker 173 I'm just trying to give you the full picture.
Speaker 45 There absolutely could have been someone else here long ago.
Speaker 78 And we've talked before about how it would take only about 10,000 years before all evidence of the human race is gone.
Speaker 193 But here's the thing about that number: civilization disappearing in 10,000 years assumes the Earth is peaceful.
Speaker 196 If one of these years, the torrid meteor shower threw a rock at us like it did during the Younger Dryas, well, it wouldn't take 10,000 years to erase our civilization.
Speaker 11 We'd be gone in a day.
Speaker 24 Here's how it happens.
Speaker 37 It's a brisk November evening.
Speaker 129 Maybe this year, maybe 20 years from now, it doesn't matter.
Speaker 136 Every November, the Earth passes through the torrid meteor cloud and the Earth sky lights up.
Speaker 17 People gather all over the world to see the event.
Speaker 129 Meteor watching parties are common.
Speaker 62 You and a few friends decide to get together and see the show.
Speaker 208 The sky does not disappoint.
Speaker 3 Shooting stars zip across the night sky like fireflies.
Speaker 93 There are even larger comets that streak by for a full second or two before burning out.
Speaker 15 And once in a while, a big one.
Speaker 158 It's a fireball that lights up the sky, and for a moment, night turns to day. Now, everyone's heart races, but fireballs like these are known to happen during the Torrid shower.
Speaker 34 People remember the Torrids of 2015.
Speaker 158 That year, fireballs hit the Earth in swarms.
Speaker 89 In 2020, a Torrid fireball exploded over Japan that sounded like a bomb going off.
Speaker 202 That one set off car alarms for miles.
Speaker 139 You continue to watch the sky and notice the shooting stars getting denser, thicker.
Speaker 141 Then a fireball, then another.
Speaker 149 You feel a little anxiety, but the TORD meteors have been happening your whole life and they've been nothing more than a light show.
Speaker 40 Then another fireball.
Speaker 180 This one looks like it's close.
Speaker 93 It vaporizes in a flash of light so bright that you have to shield your eyes.
Speaker 191 You and your group of skywatchers giggle nervously.
Speaker 173 Then three seconds later, a crack, then a boom.
Speaker 57 So loud you feel it in your stomach.
Speaker 17 Everyone agrees.
Speaker 180 This was fun, but let's go home.
Speaker 7 But now there's another fireball.
Speaker 66 Everyone turns to see.
Speaker 68 This one is different.
Speaker 192 It's not really streaking across the sky.
Speaker 22 It's expanding somehow. No, it's not expanding.
Speaker 90 It's coming closer.
Speaker 221 It comes closer and closer, and there's no way to tell how big it is.
Speaker 170 From where you're standing, it's like a mountain made of fire.
Speaker 197 Just as panic sets in, it disappears somewhere over the horizon.
Speaker 132 You let out a deep sigh.
Speaker 41 You didn't realize it, but for the past 30 seconds, you've been holding your breath.
Speaker 173 You and your group are now frantically gathering your belongings.
Speaker 62 That was more than enough excitement for one evening.
Speaker 3 You even ask yourself if you even want to do this again next year.
Speaker 73 But that question has already been answered for you.
Speaker 183 You just didn't know it yet.
Speaker 227 Over the horizon where the fireball disappeared, a ball of light emerges.
Speaker 181 Everything is lit up like the day.
Speaker 176 No, brighter than that.
Speaker 227 It's so bright, everything is just white.
Speaker 162 The ball of white light grows larger and larger, and you feel something deep in your brain.
Speaker 230 That part of your brain that evolved two million years ago, that blizzard brain.
Speaker 129 It sends you a single message.
Speaker 17 Run.
Speaker 17 You run.
Speaker 62 About 3,000 miles away, there has been an event.
Speaker 57 The meteor hits and vaporizes everything around the impact point for miles.
Speaker 17 Water, rock, cities, all vanish.
Speaker 189 Then the shock waves start.
Speaker 140 Earthquakes radiate out from the impact point over and over again as the Earth reverberates like a bell.
Speaker 57 These earthquakes move faster than the speed speed of sound.
Speaker 145 They're so powerful, they disrupt the tectonic plates of the earth.
Speaker 82 That sets off a chain reaction of earthquakes and volcanoes across every major fault line.
Speaker 57 Forget LA and San Francisco.
Speaker 162 The San Andreas will either eat or burn the entire California coast.
Speaker 62 Then you've got the Cascadia subduction zone in the Pacific Northwest.
Speaker 234 The Hayward Fault, the Calaveras Fault, the Garlock, the Wasatch.
Speaker 15 They all erupt.
Speaker 197 From western Canada to Baja Mexico is leveled.
Speaker 157 Everything within 20 miles of the coast crumbles into the sea.
Speaker 197 Then the shock waves roll back around the planet again and again and again.
Speaker 19 The biggest fault system in the United States is the New Madrid Seismic Zone.
Speaker 48 The most powerful earthquakes in U.S.
Speaker 157 history have come from here.
Speaker 182 When that fault goes, say goodbye to Chicago, Indianapolis, St.
Speaker 197 Louis, and down to New Orleans.
Speaker 17 All gone, crumbled, on fire, or underwater.
Speaker 197 The New Madrid fault connects to the Ramapo Fault in the east and sets it off like a fuse.
Speaker 208 Ramapo extends through Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey.
Speaker 197 Then the Charleston Fault in South Carolina goes next.
Speaker 209 From Boston to Seattle, from Maine to Miami and everything in between, earthquakes rock the country over and over again.
Speaker 93 And this is happening everywhere in the world.
Speaker 232 Then comes the wind.
Speaker 133 A Category 5 hurricane has wind speeds of 150 to 160 miles per hour.
Speaker 208 A Cat 5 hurricane is going to seem like a gentle afternoon.
Speaker 130 Rushing around the planet is a storm with winds over 1,000 miles per hour.
Speaker 138 This is called the air blast.
Speaker 39 Anything wooden is gone.
Speaker 15 Cars, boats, people, all gone.
Speaker 146 Only the sturdiest stone structures could survive the wind.
Speaker 5 But most stone structures have already been turned to rubble by the earthquakes.
Speaker 229 In some places, the wind lasts for 16 hours.
Speaker 129 And within the wind is everything.
Speaker 10 Buildings, Buildings, cars, trees, everything.
Speaker 72 It's a food processor that pulverizes everything for hours.
Speaker 57 What happens next goes one of two ways.
Speaker 25 Option one, the rock hits solid earth.
Speaker 78 Now, if that happens, heat and ejecta cause wildfires for thousands of miles around the impact point.
Speaker 11 Radiating out from the center is a fireball moving at twice the speed of sound.
Speaker 68 This fireball is hotter than the surface of the sun.
Speaker 62 A land impact impact also launches millions and millions of tons of ejecta into the atmosphere.
Speaker 144 In fact, millions of tons of molten rock will leave the atmosphere and go into space.
Speaker 162 The rock cools and forms a shell of debris in orbit around the Earth.
Speaker 19 No more space station, no more satellites.
Speaker 192 The ejecta that remains in the atmosphere blocks out the sun for months.
Speaker 132 But it only takes a few days for plant life to start dying.
Speaker 193 The entire food chain is disrupted within a week and completely collapses in a month.
Speaker 17 All food is gone.
Speaker 201 And that's a land impact.
Speaker 90 Option two is an ocean impact.
Speaker 50 This is probably worse.
Speaker 12 The rock hits, vaporizes the ocean water, and collides with the bedrock.
Speaker 134 The earthquakes begin like before, but what's really dramatic is the tsunami.
Speaker 209 But it's much more than a tsunami, more than a mega tsunami.
Speaker 157 What this is, there's really no name for it.
Speaker 17 A wall of water rises about a mile and a half in the air.
Speaker 78 The water would be higher than the clouds if there were clouds.
Speaker 39 The shock waves and air blast dissipated all the clouds, leaving only dark streaks of smoke that turned the sky blood red.
Speaker 15 The wall of water extends in all directions.
Speaker 219 It moves at 500 miles per hour.
Speaker 197 By the time it makes landfall, it's even higher.
Speaker 83 As the water tears across the land, it collects debris.
Speaker 139 Every object the water touches is captured and becomes part of the wave.
Speaker 57 Within minutes, the front face of the wall is a solid mass of debris moving hundreds of miles per hour.
Speaker 18 The devastation is extreme.
Speaker 44 As the Earth reverberates, the secondary waves begin.
Speaker 19 These are smaller waves compared to the first, but they're still hundreds of feet high, and they pummel the coasts over and over and over again.
Speaker 140 About 24 hours later, the Earth settles.
Speaker 78 Volcanoes continue to erupt, and there are thousands of earthquake aftershocks, but most of the violence is over.
Speaker 24 This is the worst day in human history.
Speaker 70 But here's what's really scary.
Speaker 153 The scenario I just described has happened many times.
Speaker 57 So a question for the skeptics, how much evidence of human civilization would be left after this type of event?
Speaker 158 Skeptics say there would be evidence of trash, plastic, and steel.
Speaker 15 But would there?
Speaker 203 After the comet strike, the fireball, the shock waves, the 1,000 mile an hour wind, the string of mega tsunamis, I'm not sure how much of anything would be left after that.
Speaker 181 Now you would think that this event would leave a mess of debris across the landscape, but it would be nothing like that.
Speaker 162 The land would be pristine. Well, pristine in a way.
Speaker 152 From horizon to horizon is mud.
Speaker 128 Nothing but mud.
Speaker 215 Everything has been pulverized into dust.
Speaker 227 Any object larger than a basketball is buried under mud a thousand feet deep.
Speaker 132 Big archaeology says there was no early civilization because they haven't found one.
Speaker 208 Or maybe they just haven't dug deep enough.
Speaker 18 There is evidence of an ancient advanced civilization in myths and legends from cultures around the world.
Speaker 132 Not just evidence that a civilization was here, but also how it was destroyed.
Speaker 41 The book of Revelation describes events that could be interpreted as impacts.
Speaker 92 it is rolled together, and every mountain and island were moved out of their places. Revelation 6
Speaker 187 That sounds exactly like the impact I described earlier.
Speaker 183 The stars fall to the earth, the darkness, the mighty wind, an earthquake strong enough to move mountains.
Speaker 57 In Indian texts, the Vedas and the Mahabharata, they contain descriptions of celestial events and weapons that have been interpreted as a comet or meteor impacts.
Speaker 231 Gigantic elephants burnt by that weapon fell all around, uttering fierce cries loud as those of the clouds.
Speaker 231 Other huge elephants, scorched by that fire, ran hither and thither and roared aloud in fear, as if in the midst of a forest conflagration. Mahabharata, Book 7.
Speaker 137 That sounds like molten ejecta hitting the earth and setting everything on fire, just like we'd expect.
Speaker 181 The Lasco caves in France are some of the most famous cave art ever found.
Speaker 17 One drawing called the Shaft Scene features a dying man and several animals.
Speaker 197 Researchers now say this describes a comet strike around 15,200 BC.
Speaker 17 Petroglyphs all over the world depict celestial objects with multiple tails.
Speaker 136 These have been suggested to represent the Torrid Meteor Swarm.
Speaker 3 This petroglyph from Forsyth County, Georgia is star map.
Speaker 13 It suggests a comet impact event in 536 AD.
Speaker 170 Ice core samples from Greenland confirm an impact sometime between 533 and 540.
Speaker 36 That impact had global ramifications and cooled the Earth over five degrees.
Speaker 170 There are more examples of impacts, and these are just the most obvious ones.
Speaker 139 And notice that they're not all from thousands of years ago.
Speaker 39 Some are from just hundreds of years ago.
Speaker 162 The Tunguska event in 1908 is thought to be a torrid meteor that strayed from the debris field.
Speaker 58 These impacts happen periodically, and they usually happen in the autumn when we cross the torrid debris field.
Speaker 74 And maybe that's the story being told on the Vulture Stone at Gobekli Tepe.
Speaker 180 Not the story of what happened in the past, but the potential danger we face right now.
Speaker 136 The torrid comets come every year, September to November.
Speaker 3 This year, the Tourid comets peak on November 6th.
Speaker 68 You can see them for yourself.
Speaker 15 Now, sure, most of them look like shooting stars, but some of them are fireballs that light up the entire sky.
Speaker 167 Now, why does big archaeology and every world government discount this story?
Speaker 228 Because there's not a thing they can do about it.
Speaker 17 Every time we pass through the Torrid Comet Cloud, we're playing Russian roulette.
Speaker 129 Every year, a new spin of the chamber, a new pull of the trigger.
Speaker 149 Now, chances are, when we pull the trigger, all we hear is a click.
Speaker 17 But there are objects in the Torrid Cloud that are a mile wide.
Speaker 57 So even though the chance is small, there is a chance, a real chance, that one of those objects will find its way to us.
Speaker 19 And when that happens, our civilization ends once again.
Speaker 57 And there will be only a handful of survivors, the few people lucky enough to hide in mountain caves.
Speaker 90 And maybe those survivors will create cave paintings or rock carvings describing this world-ending event.
Speaker 161 However they do it, they'll want to tell our story, and it's an important one.
Speaker 3 Every year we take our chance with the Torrids.
Speaker 171 One year we're going to lose.
Speaker 11 Then the only thing left left of us, our entire civilization, will be one more very short story.
Speaker 236 Thank you so much for hanging out today. My name is AJ.
Speaker 140 That's Cyclefish.
Speaker 38 We do not joke about the Clintons.
Speaker 205 That's true, we don't.
Speaker 23 This has been a Wi-Files compilation episode, and I hope you were able to learn some new stuff.
Speaker 140 But if you didn't, I still appreciate you checking in.
Speaker 19 Now, we're back next week with a new episode.
Speaker 21 We'll be talking about the dark side of DARPA.
Speaker 217 And yes, it's a scary episode.
Speaker 140 Anyway, a few plugs. Don't forget that the Y Files is also available as a podcast.
Speaker 19 Twice a week, I dive deeper into the stories we explore in the channel and share episodes that wouldn't make it to YouTube.
Speaker 47 Look for the Y Files Operation Podcast on your favorite podcast platform.
Speaker 184 Now if you want to connect with like-minded folks who share our love for the weird, join the Y Files Discord.
Speaker 9 It's a fun, active community with thousands of members and it's completely free to join.
Speaker 21 And stay up to date with all things wifiles by checking out our production calendar at thewifiles.com slash cow there you'll find upcoming episodes podcast releases live streams and everything else happening with the channel and finally a heartfelt thank you to our amazing patrons who make this channel possible each and every episode of the wifiles is dedicated to our patreon members without your help this channel simply wouldn't exist.
Speaker 66 I'm grateful for you each and every day.
Speaker 236 Now, if you'd like to support the channel, consider becoming a member on Patreon.
Speaker 59 For as little as three bucks a month you get access to perks like the videos early without commercials, access to merch only available to members, plus two private live streams every week just for you.
Speaker 189 I think it's the best perk that Patreon members get.
Speaker 21 You even have the chance to turn on your camera, pop on stage and chat with the entire Wi-Fi's team.
Speaker 239 It's nice.
Speaker 3 You get to know us as people because we're actually people.
Speaker 231 Well, most of us are.
Speaker 237 Another great way to support the channel is grab something from the Wi-Fi store.
Speaker 38 Go get a heck of his t-shirt or one of them mugs that you put your fist in, just like it's my face, or a hoodie or sick with my face on it, or one of these jet deck a cards with my face on it, or one of these squeezy animal stop talking doll fishy.
Speaker 47 Alright, those are the plugs and we'll be back next week with the dark side of DARPA.
Speaker 186 Until then, be safe, be kind, and know that you are appreciated.
Speaker 239 I play Polymer Senaria 51. A secret code inside the Bible said I would.
Speaker 239 I love my UFOs and paranormal fun, as well as music, song singing the like I should.
Speaker 86 But then another conspiracy theory becomes the truth, my friends.
Speaker 239 And it never ends.
Speaker 56 No, it never ends.
Speaker 56 I feel the crap guy down, got stuck inside Mel's home.
Speaker 239 With them chaotrup, I'm being only too aware.
Speaker 86 Dude, Stanley Kufrick fake the moon landing alone
Speaker 239 on a film set. Or would the shadow be over there.
Speaker 239 The Roswell aliens just fought the smiling man, I'm told.
Speaker 239 And his name was Cole.
Speaker 239 And I can't believe I'm dancing with the bitches.
Speaker 239 And no fish on Thursday nights with AJ.
Speaker 239 Where the rap balls have been all through the night.
Speaker 239 All I ever wanted was to just hear the truth. So the rat balls love never beat up through the light.
Speaker 239 The Mothman sidings and the solar storm still come. She will got the secret city underground.
Speaker 239 Mysterious number stations, planet surfbo,
Speaker 239 project stargate, and what the dark watchers found.
Speaker 239 In a simulation, don't you worry though.
Speaker 239 The black knight satellite told me so
Speaker 239 I can't believe
Speaker 239
I'm dancing with the field shit. And we'll fish on Thursday, nights, Wednesday, Jason.
And we're swamping me up to the night.
Speaker 239 All I ever wanted was to just hear the truth. So we'll repeat all through the night.
Speaker 239 Handsome fish on Thursday, night, swimming, change you and weapons and me all through the night.
Speaker 239 All I ever wanted was to just hear the truth. So the water floor beat all through the
Speaker 239 light.
Speaker 239 Gurdy loves to dance.
Speaker 239 Gurdy loves to dance.
Speaker 239 Girlie loves to dance.
Speaker 239 Girlie loves to dance.
Speaker 239 Gurdy loves to dance.
Speaker 239 Yeah, Gurdy loves to dance on the dance floor
Speaker 239 because she is a camera. And cameras love to dance when the feeling is wide aware.
Speaker 239 Gurdy loves to dance.
Speaker 239 Gurdy loves
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Speaker 199 And baking the surprise birthday cake for Lou.
Speaker 199 And Sue forgetting that her oven doesn't really work.
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