We start seeing sea levels going down hundreds of feet. Once we get 11, 12, 13 thousand years ago, the changes become profoundly dramatic. If we started recreating maps, going backwards, like taking snapshots of the planet, every millennium, going back, what we would see is that going back to seven or eight thousand years ago, the basic configuration of our planet would not change much. When we go beyond that a few thousand years, we're in a completely different world.Īnd, I mean, so completely different that it's almost unrecognizable from our modern world. You know, when we look at the emergence of modern civilization, we would basically trace it back to nine or ten thousand years ago with the emergence of, you know, agriculture, the dispersion of languages, the first cities, and so forth. Where is the infrastructure that would have existed?Īnd, you know, I don't know if he really had an answer for that, other than the fact that, you know, there had been cataclysmic events that had intervened between then and now.īut he wasn't really specific about what the nature of those catastrophes actually were.Īnd a lot of additional research has come out since 1995 that basically opens the window onto those events that basically separates our modern history, which, you know, the recorded history goes back five or six thousand years. I could call him the Landscapes of Catastrophe because he's doing his sequel to Fingerprints of the Gods.Īnd you know, when he came out with that book in 1995, he was theorizing that there had been this lost civilization in prehistoric times.Īnd, you know, the critics, the gist of most of what the critics were attacking him on, and there were considerable attacks on him as a result of some of the things he put forward in that book, was that, well, if there was this, you know, great civilization that had existed in, you know, back in prehistory, where's the evidence of it? Well, we were I was taking Graham on a tour, showing him some landscapes. You just returned from a long excursion with Graham Hancock. If you want to bend that thing like that towards your face, it'll probably work a little. So tell me you just returned from a long excursion with Graham Hancock. Maybe we'll have time to get into that a little bit today. Well, you know, ironically, there's an upside to the whole thing. I knew once you sat down for three hours on a podcast and opened up about that stuff, it was really going to uncork a lot of people's domes. I knew after the first time I met you, we had that long conversation in Atlanta. I knew that was going to be the case, though. I apologize to all the listeners out there that might have had nightmares. You freaked out the entire podcast population the last time you were here with your stories of cataclysmic disasters and the ramifications of asteroid impacts and just the evidence that you presented was a real mind fuck, as it were. Makes it look like we're on a radio show.
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