Hello you savages. Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at drinkag1.com/modernwisdom Get expert bloodwork analysis and bypass Function’s 300,000-person waitlist at functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with any purchase at drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at nomatic.com/modernwisdom Here’s the timestamps: 00:00 The True History of America 13:27 Why the Amazon is So Extraordinary 22:00 Graham’s Experiences With Ayahuasca 35:10 Is the Amazon Man-Made? 46:56 What Graham Learned About the Mayans 1:01:43 The Psychology of Ancient Humans 1:11:45 How Dreadful Was the Younger Dryas? 1:26:59 The Mystery of Easter Island 1:38:44 Why Graham Couldn’t Film More in North America 1:46:10 Reflecting on the Debate With Flint Dibble 2:00:19 What Will Graham Focus on Next? 2:03:10 Where to Find Graham
Hey Chris love your content brother i can't find the video where you where talking about changing the kind of magnesium you was taken and I didn't watch the hole video what kind it it thanks man keep up the good work
@@SittingInTheCenter Just because those words are used by conservative academia doesn't mean they are correct. Have you actually followed his argument? In particular, the astronomical aspects of ancient culture is undeniable.
@@allrequiredfields Thinking for oneself should preclude one from believing anything that Hancock says. So I would say your comment is inherently contradictory.
Whether he's right or not i how he takes on a protégé that will equally enthusiastically carry on asking questions in an interesting and knowledgeable way. (edit because auto-correction)
@@eskylent7962😂😂😂 ohh pls a lot of the things he has say has been proven true!!! The more they study things the older they get making Hancock questions true
First Lex, then Rogan again, then PBD, and now this? Damn this is a crazy podcast tour, but it definitely did a good job promoting season 2 of his show lol
He got a check from Netflix and good for him. He stayed on-course and slugged it out for a long time and put himself out there for a lot of bullets. What i love about Graham is that he doesn’t stray into the bs like aliens and such. He follows clues.
Brilliant. Love this guy. Whether he’s right or wrong, all he’s saying is ASK QUESTIONS. Don’t just believe the narrative you’re told. Decide for yourself.
@@BartvanderHorst You're exactly the kind of person that Graham talks against. Very dogmatic, someone says ask questions and you say they know nothing?
Hey Everyone 🤠 Find the parts that interest you: 0:00 - Columbus's discovery anniversary discussion 1:13 - Evidence of early human behavior 10:51 - Direct crossing of the Pacific Ocean 14:19 - Discovery of ancient earthworks in the Amazon 20:30 - Exploring the Amazon's hidden secrets 24:30 - Connection between psychedelics and cave art 31:16 - DMT and monoamine oxidase inhibitors 34:51 - Lessons learned from ayahuasca journeys 41:33 - Humans' callousness towards the environment 43:20 - Seeking spirituality beyond mainstream religions 1:00:02 - Importance of astronomy in ancient cultures 1:02:25 - Hermetic tradition and As Above So Below 1:06:27 - Great Pyramid's dimensions and Earth's measurements 1:13:15 - Discussion on bringing back woolly mammoths 1:15:00 - The significance of the dodo bird's revival 1:19:00 - Younger Dryas impact hypothesis explained 1:23:35 - Importance of organized travel gear 1:25:17 - Climate change due to icy meltwater 1:27:02 - Exploring the mysteries of Easter Island 1:34:13 - Seven sages of civilization in myths 1:39:03 - Chaco Canyon's astronomical alignments 1:44:31 - Tension in storytelling 1:46:10 - Debate reflections with Flint Dibble 1:52:10 - Criticism from mainstream archaeology 1:54:39 - Discussing defensive writing in archaeology 2:01:01 - Future focus on Ancient Egypt and collaboration Recap by Bumpups ✏️
The problem with modern academia is that they are so set in their ways that they can't admit they might be wrong. They have forgotten that new findings are happening all the time. And Academia is fluid. And always will be.
What I think a lot of people miss about Graham Hancock is that he was asking these questions and investigating interesting connections 30 years ago at a time before the internet was omnipresent and back when the sciences tended to be rather siloed - archeologists weren't comparing notes with geologists, oceanographers, indigenous historians, etc. as a regular practice.
So pleased to hear Graham and Zahi are on speaking terms again, it will give Graham more access to sites that will undoubtedly benefit his audience and fans.
This guy’s a friggin’ hero in my book. We tend to think of religion as punishing those who step out of line from the received and official version of events, but there’s clearly just as inflexible a hegemony of doctrine and practices within academic history, just as many vested interests, pious authoritarianism and fear of free thought and just as much hypocrisy, savage, vindictive and punitive revenge upon those whose spirit of genuine curiosity for reality and enthusiasm for academic rigour leads them to pursue truth at all costs.
I have been an native American artifact hunter for over 40 years. From some things that I have found I whole heartedly believe humans were around long before what has been presented. I found things much older than 13,000 BC.
Hopefully you aren't disrupting the sites and causing them to not be datable. If artifacts are removed from their place in the strata and not properly recorded then they lose all informational meaning.
The most important and ignored Dino prints in Nevada I think… big Dino prints of a herbivorous duckbills and right beside them are human foot prints in the same limestone sentiment. There no doubt, the prints though eroded as exposure, are human. Yet science tells us this is impossible!
I think some people are missing the point a bit on Columbus. I don’t think the purpose of the statement was to minimize the importance of Europes discovery of the Americas in Western history, but more to highlight the significance of the the Native history, which is often at most an after thought. It is obvious to state that Columbus didn’t “discover” America, but I do think it’s a shame that Native culture and history is a really small part of American curriculum, especially because new discoveries are suggesting that the Native people were here for so long that it’s actually shifting modern thoughts on human migration and the bigger, more global human story
Stop putting air quotes, it was discovered by Europeans. That does not mean it was Columbus who discovered the Americas/New World for the first time ever by human beings. What were they doing with the land prior to the arrival of civilization? Were there wars fought as there have been since the dawn of humanity? Did a stronger nation conquer a weaker one? Is that an anomaly in history? Why is it always Western society that gets the scrutiny. I do not see anybody upset about the Japanese did in WWII or what happened to the Armenians in WWI. Nobody cries about Genghis Khan and what he did to the Khwarazmian Empire. Nobody cares about the Barbary sl*ve trade or how they treated their African sl*ves. It is one of those things that you cannot help but notice.
We've been on Turtle Island for a long time Zaddy, since it was a tiny speck of mud in otter's paw. Nobody discovered this place, we were born from the rivers and mountains on this land. We've been here since the beginning, the Europeans will always be our guests.
@@obtuseangler768 What about all of the modern people that originally come from South America that now live here? Guests? Just curious why you state that Europeans are forever your guests when every single non-Native American would also fit the same thing.
@melanieforyou they are home in South America, they are guests on Turtle Island as well. It's not hard to tell they are indigenous to somewhere else. I'm not implying we can't get all get along. I am from the Great Lakes region yet I live in BC, I will always be a guest of the Nations here no matter what I think I own. I'm well acquainted with the British North America Act which supercedes the Indian Act of 1867-1873, what would you like to know? If you aren't First Nations from North America then of course you would be defined as a guest, you certainly can't be the host by definition.
to hear Graham speak of his issue with anger was very eye-opening for me. I love Graham and his work and he comes across as such a kind and gentle soul, as well as highly intelligent and interesting. I feel a deeper connection to him now as I would describe myself as having all of these qualities as well - with the greatest humility when it comes to my definition of highly intelligent. ;-)
He is angry cause his b.s. grift got called out, anybody who knows anything says those guys is a fraud, incompetent liar who is also incredibly boring. This guy is a non factor in anything scientific, they don’t respect him, he isn’t a geologist. He isn’t a historian, he isn’t even that intelligent or he would be aware he is spreading misinformation.
So just watching this. What I like about GH is his curiosity and willingness to question. It is unacceptable for his requests for filming to be denied. It's fear. Maintaining the status quo.
It was denied cause nobody respects this guy, he’s a hack journalist. Real academia doesn’t have anything to gain by entertaining this mook, what credibility does he have? You are more qualified as a scientist and geologist as this tabloid reporter who doesn’t even understand proper scientific research.
What wisdom? He is old and senile journalist who writes pseudo science as a grift. He isn’t a scientist, doctorate or genius. He is a complete conman and worse off all an incredibly boorish.
Yeah it’s getting quite boring. Nothing against Graham and I love modern wisdom, but hearing him tell basically the exact same things as on Rogan and on Lex in such a short span of time is pretty tiresome
Excellent show! I'm a huge fan of Graham's work. Regardless of the exact conclusions he comes to, it's ESSENTIAL to never stop questioning dogmatic narratives, otherwise we'll never know the truth
Exactly this! I keep seeing comments that claim that because the ‘sciences’/ scientific institutions don’t currently back his theories that means they have a monopoly on the scientific method. The scientific method means testing a hypothesis of something that currently is not believed to be true - and only by doing this can we learn as you say! We can’t test everything and so have to prioritise - all Graeme is doing is waving a flag in an area he has found some inconsistencies to learn more, and selling a few books of his speculations.
@@wbunnage Because a theory is not viable in science unless you have material evidence to back it up. Graham's theories, unfortunately to his fans I guess, have no material evidence to back any of it up so that's why science metaphorically and literally laughs at Graham and doesn't take him seriously. His theories are backed up by wild fantasies and made-up interpretations that any first year science major can debunk with little to no effort. Yes, it's important to question science so as to constantly evolve and learn new things but what Graham theorizes is complete and utter fantasy and only detracts for science advancement because now so many people have been completely duped by Graham and now don't trust real science and think real scientific fact are lies when in fact Graham is the liar. There's a big difference between something that can be proven true and something that cannot be true because proof doesn't exist for it and what Graham is selling is something that cannot be true because there's zero evidence for any of it. Graham isn't teaching anybody anything, he's detracting from real science and real scientific method so he can dupe the people that are easily duped and make a career out of it and that he has done very well. The advanced civilization that spanned the globe and may have even been more advanced than modern civilization but yet didn't leave behind a single pot or tool or anything that can prove Graham's thesis correct. What's Graham's convenient excuse for this? Scientists just haven't found it yet or it was all destroyed by the biblical Great Flood of the Younger Dryas that flooded the whole planet and destroyed every speck of possible evidence of this advanced civilization. The same flood that Graham himself proved only affected a rather small portion of the planet in North America. The same advanced civilization that Graham thinks moved and shaped rocks by magic apparently but yet they couldn't figure out how to build a boat and survive a flood that only affected a rather small portion of the world? So advanced but they couldn't figure out to move further south away from the floodwaters? C'mon, do I need to go on? Graham is the flat-earther of archeology and it's no wonder his following is so cult-like, just like the flat-earth cult.
I've read most of this Graham's books and watched many of his podcasts. He's brilliant-full of knowledge and integrity. His perspective isn't about dismissing archaeology, but offering a fresh viewpoint. I remember learning about the pyramids when I was 8 and being fascinated, only to feel underwhelmed when told they were just tombs-it felt like such an anticlimax. Fast forward 30 years, and I discovered Graham's work, which reignited that childhood curiosity. When you look at the evidence he presents, it’s clear that these structures are much older than mainstream accounts suggest. The pyramids likely served as spiritual technology, something we've long forgotten
Unfortunately, the pyramids on the Giza plateau have organic mortar inside them which we can radiocarbon date to be between 1,000 - 3,000 BC. To the very best of our knowledge the main pyramid builders in ancient Egypt were the 3rd and 4th dynasty pharaohs. There is a clear lineage and evolution of pyramid building from Djoser's 'stepped' pyramid at Saqqara to Khufu's Great pyramid at Giza. I think it's amazing that they were built and built so well. They must have been a staggering sight back in ancient times. And whilst it might seem boring that they were tombs, to the Egyptians, the afterlife was certainly no boring matter. It was incredibly important to them. To have a fine tomb really elevated that pharaoh in the eyes of the gods and in the eyes of their people so that they might be remembered for all eternity.
@@robreeves9825 First of all, no mummy was ever found inside a pyramid. Second, kinda strange that, if you're such an egomaniac that you want to build the biggest structure of the world, you agree to have an anonymous tomb. I'd put my name on it with the hugest, totally indestructible letters they could build!🤣
@@natasjadirken5633pharaohs considered themselves gods, so they were definitely very modest. As for why no mummies in the pyramids - because everybody knew it was a tomb with huge treasures buried inside they were looted quite early. Grave robbery was the reason why they stopped building pyramids and went for underground tombs. Also embalming was most likely less advanced when they built pyramids.
@@robreeves9825Your perspective is intriguing and offers a thought-provoking critique of modern materialistic science. Ancient Egyptians, in my opinion, weren’t simply tethered to the afterlife as a belief system-they lived in a worldview deeply intertwined with the spiritual realm. Their monumental pyramids seem to resonate with something beyond our current scientific understanding, perhaps pointing to a metaphysical truth that remains undiscovered. It’s ironic how dismissing such ideas as conspiracy theories comes so easily in an era where even Congress holds public hearings on recovered alien bodies and crash retrievals. This opens the door to revisiting what we consider possible. When we delve into UFO phenomena, the prevalence of pyramid-shaped sightings raises intriguing questions. Coincidence? Perhaps. But perhaps also a signal that ancient wisdom and modern mystery share more than we currently comprehend. As the Egyptians might suggest, true understanding may only come when we "west"-when we transcend this life and discover what lies beyond.
So interesting he talks about doing DMT and dealing with his anger. I remember the first time I heard him on JRE I was so put off by his anger and demeanor, I avoided listening to him for a while. But these past few weeks listening to him I’ve thought wow this dude has really mellowed out; and I love listening to him chat. I guess those DMT trips really helped.
Graham Hancock is an intelligent man who needs more recognition for his work…. He’s a journalist who gets ridiculed for using his brain…. I Love the fact that he does what takes! My Hero! I wish I were able to get an hour with him…
A journalist finds credible sources and researches information. A writer scratches the surface of topics and then creates stories. Hancock is a scratcher.
Chris, you are the best "question asker". You really listen to your guests and ask honest, sincere, and salient questions. This interview is proof of that.
I've been following Graham Hancock and others for many years. I think mainstream archeologists attack them because they have the courage to examine alternative history.
I've watched all of Graham Hancock's interviews promoting his brilliant Ancient Apocalypse season 2 and this one is one of the best. He goes into much more detail about all the discoveries and experiences and Chris Williamson asks all the right questions! Great podcast all round. 👌🏼
An Indonesian teenager survived 49 days and thousands of kilometers at sea on his rompong. A rompong is a fishing hut built to trap fish in net-like cages underneath. The design of a rompong is thousands of years old and fed him, and housed him, and floated without sail in every imaginable sea condition. The boy had no navigation skills, or means of directing the craft but it is easy to imagine he could reach other islands and eventually South America if he had. There is no reason to believe early man could not travel by sea for long distances catching his food, remaining seaworthy and healthy thousands of years ago.
To sail across Pacific before modern time,?Polynesian sailors have, & still do, use traditional methods to sail from 1 Polynesian to another, all the way to N & S America!!
I so respect Graham for challenging the ‘false narrative’ of our history. His contention that we have a c50,000+ history of human civilisation is so resonant. Look how far we’ve come in 2,000 years. How much could our ancestors have evolved over 50,000 years, until the great floods c12,000? Amazing buildings etc all evidence of this…
And according to Theosophical teachings Hancock's dating is way too short. The whole planet has been inhabited for many millions of years. The America's were part of old Atlantis although alot of it is under the Atlantic ocean and Lemuria is much much older than Atlantis. Humanity is so narrow minded.
Graham, thanks for carrying the torch of Heyerdahl for us all and for your bravery and steadfastness. If u ever do any work in New England u and sintha can stay at my place in Rockport.. it's on a granite promontory overlooking Massachusetts Bay.... no doubt many ancient peoples of many backgrounds stood on my rock watching the sun rise on the horizon... on a clear day u can see to Boston, Provincetown, and Maine... there's also weird striations on my rock that may or may not be ancient. Keep it up. Heyerdahl KNEW!!!!
Listening again to Graham Hancock: Thank you for using your years on this earth to learn about thoughts/ideas/actions that we ALL have access to, if we choose.🎶🌸
I very much respect Graham Hancock’s research results. He has so much logical and undeniable proof (to my way of thinking) of the many newer ideas just beginning t😅o come to light. I should have been a geological anthropologist. Sherry, the farm that we had here when Tommy and I were married, has an Indian settlement. I had located pot shards with Creek Indian decorations carved onto them. I had hundreds of perfect arrowheads and spear heads. Along with the tools they had used to make them. I want to buy that farm back so much so that my entire soul feels driven back there. I had asked t😅o keep an area so that that I could work it. Tommy had no conception of how much those artifacts meant to me. I actually wanted to invite some college classes to see how much interest there might be. But, he was caught up in clearing spaces for our pastures. This is one of the areas of certain disagreement. I left all the arrow heads, etc. there on the farm where I believed they properly belonged. I just wish I had brought some of them with me. I really don’t know why I did. We had about a lie and 1/2 of river frontage. Great riding trails. Horses!!! I had wanted them all my life. This one of the most heartbreaking regrets of my life. That I didn’t ask to keep some of them. I don’t know why just went off on this rant. Don’t feel bad that I just didn’t feel that even a few would have been ok. One of my greatest desires is to have that land in my possession. Know of anybody with enough money and interest?? If you can think of any suggestions I would be so grateful. 😢😊😂❤
Don't be fooled. Hancock has never done one days work or study in archaeology. He just writes unoriginal, third rate pseudoscience for money, and you mugs lap it up.
@@williambrock3534 The only reason he knows anything at all about archaeology is he reads the work of real archaeologists. You know, the professionals who he constantly whines about.
Way to work on yourself Graham. Inspiring words. I’m 70 also. Ive had the gift of gab all my life. Misused quite often, but getting better at thinking how my words will impact before I speak. Wish I knew that sooner.
Massive respect to Mr. Graham Hancock for putting so much knowledge out there, & encouraging us to ask questions about the mysteries of our ancient past. It's fascinating
Dudes like him get in the way of actual discovery, muddying the channels of research. The child like intrigue is getting old but it’s sensational so it sells.
@@finnmacdiarmid3250 😂 oh yeah, because archaeologists are so busy making plethoras of new discoveries, not putting cease & desists on research at Gobekli Tepe or anything like that. That's not the entire point to Graham's work or anything lol. Which as you say, is so "muddying" & in the way. Lol yeah man, more inquiry into the subject definitely gets in the way. More inquiry & curiosity totally impedes progress. How much more counter intelligent can you be
@@finnmacdiarmid3250Like it or not, GH is igniting a renewed intetest in archeology among the world's youth. More students entering the field can only be good.
Love your work. What an inspiration & your life's work has already changed history! SAA🤦🏿♂️ combined will never even come close to your legacy, travels & your empirical drive where evidence always leads your arguments. I am a black 🇿🇦can, and I have read all of your books, & will reactivate my Netflix account just to catch season 2 of your magnum opus👏🏿
He is a world traveller and he has become wealthy by encouraging people to buy his books. His books inspire people to believe in mysteries instead of encouraging people to actually study existing published data.
It is important to remember that ancient humans didn't have TV to watch for entertainment. Their TV was the sky, especially at night. Laying out in a field at night staring up at the stars is something they must have done regularly. Given time you notice things, such as the position of the stars and how they align differently throughout the year, etc. Eventually, you can't help but learn some things. The people that learned the most became the experts of their time, and most likely a teacher on the movements of the heavens.
It’s crazy people traveled, possibly by foot, from Russia over to the U.S. and then down to New Mexico. I’m guessing they moved south for warmer weather. I currently live in west Texas right next to Clovis, NM so I hear about the history all the time and it always amazes me.
Naprosto miluji Grahama Hancocka, excelentní práce skvělá intuice. Jaká škoda pro nás, lidi, že jsou mu některá místa zapovězena, a víme proč a kdo oni jsou. Ať ho Bohové chrání a jdou mu po boku.
There is something very strange about the Americas. The DNA data are consistent with the Americas being settled from Beringia with the first arrivals now found further south. However, religion, culture, rubber harvesting and mound and pyramid building appears to have migrated from South America to the north. The only explanation for this that I can think of is that the population and archeology of North America was scrubbed out by some event after the initial settlement of the Americas leaving a void to be resettled from the south.
He’s spot on. Dmt is the portal to a deeper understanding of what we really are. Are being is not our person, are understanding of this experience is constrained by our brain. Down the rabbit hole we go!
In New Zealand there is a man made stone structure called the Kaimanawa Wall, for over 30 years the government refuses to acknowledge that this is made by ancient people, which predate even our native people.
What native people? Maori came to New Zealand in their whaka - their own history tells us that. The natives of New Zealand, which were not the Moriori are long gone. Not only the Kaimanawa wall, but as a youngster in the 60's we were shown some amazing stuff up in the Northland - not allowed in that area now, which I believe is down to Maori not wanting it known there were people in the country earlier. Back in the country in the 80s on some dive trips and was shown runes, identical to those I have seen elsewhere in the world. Pretty sure, based on maps from long before the time of Cook & Magellan showing Antarctica that more of the world was known to preceeding civilisations. Possibly from the Orient or Asia Minor, but until more turns up, who knows? I read somewhere about an expedition going to McMurdo in the 25/26 or 26/27 season that is going to do some drone surveys with ground penetrating radar.
Knights Templar say they were here in the 1200, and Maya claim. Egyptian visiting before that. Graham is right ,just give academic folks time to catch up. Great story.
@ 1:02:06 ... It's amazing amount of Scientific knowledge these communities, cultures had.... knowledge that would directly inducate to them about Agriculture, Weather.., Governance, . Architecture etc
One of the most controversial topics is not ancient peoples crossing the Pacific, but an expanding earth being much younger connecting Asia to Australia. Due to dating in an assumed uniformitarianistic world, geology has been dating everything wrong. We live in a cyclic catastrophic world that where everything is about 600 times younger than geology assumes.
That is a fun theory. It fits with the lighter gravity that must have existed in earth at the time of the dinosaurs, as the current gravity would not have supported their weight, plus massive trees much larger than trees today, huge insects etc.
If a large group of "experts" and "scientists" come out against his work we now know that means he is probably correct about everything and we will find that out eventually😑
You'd easily find a large group of experts and scientists coming out against the flat earth theory therefore, by your reasoning, the flat earthers are right on the point because the mainstream comes out against them
Creators:Thank you both….so brave to choose to be on the world stage. Some beings want to blame, some want to deny, many are too afraid to accept responsibility for their own creations. Learning to be wise is eternally fantastic…ALL the knowers know. JOY🎶🌸
Great Talk- Lovely perspectives and food for thought. GHs work and time taken to response to other powerstructures; are the heart of the matter, in my view. Its building up diversity; and plural ways of thinking, debating and then Living.. Big Big Thanks for that 🙏🏼🙏🏼
A direct hit by an air bursting comet fragment on a prehistoric village settlement in Syria complete with geological evidence such as shocked quartz or glass but no crater is incredible, shows comets are a real continuous threat, should be known globally ✌️❤️🇬🇧
Now the theory is trending to a "micronova" from the sun. China found glass on the lunar surface on their recent moon mission. They were seeking this for confirmation of a solar micronova. This might be cyclical, recurring every 12,000 years. Interestingly, the sun, from earth, would appear at first white, as our ozone layer collapses, then red, then black just before the micronova blows away all the accumulated galactic dust. These reflect perfectly the colors of the four horsemen of the apocalypse. Anyway, just a theory that is being tossed around grad schools.
Nice interview ! Thank you Chris for giving time and space to Graham Hancock. His way of sharing his thoughts, expertise, creative and associative thinking sounds as good as the music of Herbie Hancock ;+>
Milo the greatest liar on the Internet. I took geology in college to. My professor had 30 years with the United States geological survey team. That's the number one geological research group in the world. And he was a hard core fundamentalist Christian. I'm talking the world is only 6,000 years old believer. When asked why he believed that said "because according to geological science as I understand and know it, and I have a PhD in it, either the entire field of geology is a lie. Witch I don't believe, or archeology and the history of humanity is a complete lie. So I chose to believe in God and the Bible as at this time in my life it makes more logical sense than the lies people believe." Dude traveled the world doing geological surveys for the government and oil companies his entire life. And after 30 years he was like yup human history is one big clear as day lie when you know basic geology. 😂 Milo don't know shit bit the official story he was taught. Like a good brainwashed cog he spouts his ignorance with confidence.
@@veraciousreasoning863 - Do you bother fact-checking Debunking as constantly lies and misrepresents those he disagrees with. World of Antiquity calmly responds to the Debunking videos made about him and exposes Debunking lies and misrepresentations with evidence. Debunking attacked World of Antiquity and called him names in his video but got a calm professional response. DeBunking made videos claiming Flit Dibble worked with Native American bones knowing it was completely false. He also posted the lie on Twitter alongside a picture of Dibble holding a cow bone. Why would you trust someone willing to post such lies just to discredit someone?
I hope Graham lives to see some of his predictions proven. But even if he is wrong on nearly everything, the fact he is proving mainstream archaeology is dead wrong on the human story will be his biggest win.
The Dinosaur extinction event 66 million years ago was made worse by the fact the area in the Yucatan where the asteroid hit was rich in Gypsum. Huge amounts of it were blasted into the atmosphere, where it stayed for longer than most other soil or materials would due to the chemical make up of Gypsum.
I think his theory needs to somewhat be looked at I've watched both seasons on Netflix. For me it seems that it's likely that there is a technology that we've lost and most people can't understand that technology isn't just the AI or Internet or computers or even cars. But there's something to what he's saying does feel like there's something there
Why are you calling Dibble angry? He was polite and calm on Joe Rogan. Since then he has suffered nothing but abuse and lies from Hancock fans. He has every right to offer a response to Hancock who constantly attacks mainstream archaeology. In the first few seconds of this interview, he talks about how archaeologists were dragged kicking and screaming being forced to believe that first was false and humans arrived in the Americas much earlier. He doesn't mention that it was other archaeologists who found the evidence to disprove Clovid first. So it was a disagreement between archaeologists in one small field of archaeology. Hancock constantly brings this up to try and discredit archaeologists in general which he needs to do to explain why archaeologists the world over don't believe there is any evidence to support an ancient advanced culture.
0:10 of course he never discovered anywhere! He was just a person who was named to find lands that could be dominated which had not yet been by other Europeans.
Why? Already he lost the first round to Flint Dibble? He isn’t going win the second. He doesn’t have anything new or interesting to add. Same boring old story.
Before the Amazon forest was there - there were miles between the villages with open land. It was after many years of humans no longer living there that the trees were able to grow up and take over. I think Pangea was totally inhabited before it broke up into continents- leaving people on each continent-like it is happening in E Africa. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Dibble has recently done a podcast with Milo Rosi where they try to debunk all alternate theories and get a stronger online presence. I wanted to watch it to get both sides of the argument, but my god they are so patronising with very thinly drawn arguments. I lasted about 5 minutes before i had to turn it off.
Watched a short video of Milo Rossi where he debunks Graham Hancock and tells people not to bother watching Ancient Apocalypse. First time I had ever heard of Milo Rossi and I wasn't impressed. I left a comment about how much I liked the Ancient Apocalypse series and I got attacked by one of his followers. A far more experienced Archaeologist critiqued a video of Milo's and pointed out that the info he was saying about the site he was visiting was wrong . Also, one of the first things Archaeologists learn is how to protect the integrity of a site and in the video Milo can be seen not following those instructions he should've learned.
Graham Hancock has very interesting takes on lots of gray areas of history and archeology. But sometimes he provides evidence that debunks (I hate this term) some of his proposals: if the Sphinx is perfectly aligned to the sunrise at the equinox it cannot be older than the pyramids as proposed by Dr Robert Schoch. I think that the work that mr Hancock does is fundamentally necessary to the advancement of history and archeology. Good to hear he buried the hatchet with Zahi Hawass. Maybe this will be the start of a new era of collaboration.
To be more detailed of the alignment of the sphinx, it aligns with the equinox, and being a lion when Leo was the alignment n the sky at the equinox was over 30000 years ago. This was also proven to be when the belt of Orion perfectly matched the alignment of the pyramids.
Also there are many depictions of the sphinx of when it was a lion and didnt have a pharaohs head put in place. The water erosion around the base of the sphinx also indicates an older age of its being there.
Perhaps Hancok has taken a leaf from Goggin's book: let the opposition fuel his work, create his energy? I'm a deep sceptic of most narratives, be they religion or theoretical physics (another type of religion)..But "as above, so below" sent a shiver down my back. The numerology of the pyramids is astounding and cannot be coincidence. Graham Hancock deserves to be heard; the archaeologists damn themselves by failing to treat him with the respect his years of research deserve. By the way, I enjoyed this chat more than the actual series. Thanks Chris, very well done.
Hello you savages. Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at drinkag1.com/modernwisdom
Get expert bloodwork analysis and bypass Function’s 300,000-person waitlist at functionhealth.com/modernwisdom
Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with any purchase at drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom
Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at nomatic.com/modernwisdom
Here’s the timestamps:
00:00 The True History of America
13:27 Why the Amazon is So Extraordinary
22:00 Graham’s Experiences With Ayahuasca
35:10 Is the Amazon Man-Made?
46:56 What Graham Learned About the Mayans
1:01:43 The Psychology of Ancient Humans
1:11:45 How Dreadful Was the Younger Dryas?
1:26:59 The Mystery of Easter Island
1:38:44 Why Graham Couldn’t Film More in North America
1:46:10 Reflecting on the Debate With Flint Dibble
2:00:19 What Will Graham Focus on Next?
2:03:10 Where to Find Graham
Soooo, hancock comes to this podcast with evidence for his civilization?
SOL=I
This month, FMH, I tried to do all the things. No success
Hey Chris love your content brother i can't find the video where you where talking about changing the kind of magnesium you was taken and I didn't watch the hole video what kind it it thanks man keep up the good work
❤ & ❤ the glasses
Thanks 4 The Show. On GRAEME HANCOCK !!!🧠🗡💬💭🌎💨💻
Graham Hancock is a pleasure to listen to - beautiful English, spoken eloquently, knowledge, data and detail pours forth from him.
Yeah, he's got a good storytelling voice. It's all pseudoscientific claptrap of course. But whatevs.
@@SittingInTheCenter Just because those words are used by conservative academia doesn't mean they are correct. Have you actually followed his argument? In particular, the astronomical aspects of ancient culture is undeniable.
Mild mannered also (admittedly brought out by his ayawaska experiences)
@@SittingInTheCenter Try thinking for yourself. Stop mindlessly parroting the memes you've read about him.
@@allrequiredfields Thinking for oneself should preclude one from believing anything that Hancock says. So I would say your comment is inherently contradictory.
I hope Graham is around for many more years to come.
why?
the guy is a quack..
hes a great story teller. So i am sure he will be.
ditto
@@jadezee6316ok lol so what else do you believe that you were told to.
Whether he's right or not i how he takes on a protégé that will equally enthusiastically carry on asking questions in an interesting and knowledgeable way. (edit because auto-correction)
I could listen to Hancock speak for hours
He just seems smart, thst doesn't make him smart. All a ton is BS.
That’s really sad. Actual science is much better. Watch debunk videos of this charlatan they’re much better
And I have :)
@@eskylent7962😂😂😂 ohh pls a lot of the things he has say has been proven true!!! The more they study things the older they get making Hancock questions true
@ are you 14 by any chance?
First Lex, then Rogan again, then PBD, and now this? Damn this is a crazy podcast tour, but it definitely did a good job promoting season 2 of his show lol
He’s been working hard in the background this last 1-2 years 😂
you forgot Matt Beall Limitless! :)
Imagine that, someone doing a publicity tour after spending years creating a television show.
He got a check from Netflix and good for him. He stayed on-course and slugged it out for a long time and put himself out there for a lot of bullets. What i love about Graham is that he doesn’t stray into the bs like aliens and such. He follows clues.
UA-cam suggestions have served me well these past few days, love this!
Brilliant. Love this guy. Whether he’s right or wrong, all he’s saying is ASK QUESTIONS. Don’t just believe the narrative you’re told. Decide for yourself.
You are not well informed about archeology, you use just one source. And that is the problem.
@@jamessaltlife what if he's wrong AND he's lying about archeologies treatment of him?
Both possible. But I don’t dislike him or archaeologists. Just ask questions fellas
@@BartvanderHorst you literally know nothing about him
@@BartvanderHorst You're exactly the kind of person that Graham talks against. Very dogmatic, someone says ask questions and you say they know nothing?
Hey Everyone 🤠
Find the parts that interest you:
0:00 - Columbus's discovery anniversary discussion
1:13 - Evidence of early human behavior
10:51 - Direct crossing of the Pacific Ocean
14:19 - Discovery of ancient earthworks in the Amazon
20:30 - Exploring the Amazon's hidden secrets
24:30 - Connection between psychedelics and cave art
31:16 - DMT and monoamine oxidase inhibitors
34:51 - Lessons learned from ayahuasca journeys
41:33 - Humans' callousness towards the environment
43:20 - Seeking spirituality beyond mainstream religions
1:00:02 - Importance of astronomy in ancient cultures
1:02:25 - Hermetic tradition and As Above So Below
1:06:27 - Great Pyramid's dimensions and Earth's measurements
1:13:15 - Discussion on bringing back woolly mammoths
1:15:00 - The significance of the dodo bird's revival
1:19:00 - Younger Dryas impact hypothesis explained
1:23:35 - Importance of organized travel gear
1:25:17 - Climate change due to icy meltwater
1:27:02 - Exploring the mysteries of Easter Island
1:34:13 - Seven sages of civilization in myths
1:39:03 - Chaco Canyon's astronomical alignments
1:44:31 - Tension in storytelling
1:46:10 - Debate reflections with Flint Dibble
1:52:10 - Criticism from mainstream archaeology
1:54:39 - Discussing defensive writing in archaeology
2:01:01 - Future focus on Ancient Egypt and collaboration
Recap by Bumpups ✏️
And he is unqualified to discuss any of it. He is a grifter.
Awesome thank you:)
The problem with modern academia is that they are so set in their ways that they can't admit they might be wrong. They have forgotten that new findings are happening all the time. And Academia is fluid. And always will be.
They follow the science
We want Dibble vs hancock live from Gobekle Tepe
😭😭😭
MMA, grappling or boxing?😂😂😂
The ppv would break tvs across the world
@@brunofraysse421picturing Dibble getting scrappy is cracking me up🤣
@@ItsJick 🤣🤣🤣
What I think a lot of people miss about Graham Hancock is that he was asking these questions and investigating interesting connections 30 years ago at a time before the internet was omnipresent and back when the sciences tended to be rather siloed - archeologists weren't comparing notes with geologists, oceanographers, indigenous historians, etc. as a regular practice.
So pleased to hear Graham and Zahi are on speaking terms again, it will give Graham more access to sites that will undoubtedly benefit his audience and fans.
Perhaps Zahi has since found things that make him question his own ingrained beliefs...
Mad props to Williamson for having my favourite person on 🙌🏼💜
Isn't it interesting how many university departments gate keep research rather than upholding the scientific method?
This guy’s a friggin’ hero in my book. We tend to think of religion as punishing those who step out of line from the received and official version of events, but there’s clearly just as inflexible a hegemony of doctrine and practices within academic history, just as many vested interests, pious authoritarianism and fear of free thought and just as much hypocrisy, savage, vindictive and punitive revenge upon those whose spirit of genuine curiosity for reality and enthusiasm for academic rigour leads them to pursue truth at all costs.
He reminds me of Richard Carrier in terms of his academic independence and willingness to challenge the received teachings of academic hegemony.
Graham Hancock is spot on. Incredibly awesome man, thanks!
I have been an native American artifact hunter for over 40 years. From some things that I have found I whole heartedly believe humans were around long before what has been presented.
I found things much older than 13,000 BC.
yes hunter gatherer sites. This has been confirmed a long time ago.
Hopefully you aren't disrupting the sites and causing them to not be datable. If artifacts are removed from their place in the strata and not properly recorded then they lose all informational meaning.
The most important and ignored Dino prints in Nevada I think… big Dino prints of a herbivorous duckbills and right beside them are human foot prints in the same limestone sentiment.
There no doubt, the prints though eroded as exposure, are human.
Yet science tells us this is impossible!
Re..eeeeeeeee.....heeeeeeellllllly!!!
Perhaps also non Homo sapiens but still humans were the ancient
advanced civilization?
I think some people are missing the point a bit on Columbus. I don’t think the purpose of the statement was to minimize the importance of Europes discovery of the Americas in Western history, but more to highlight the significance of the the Native history, which is often at most an after thought. It is obvious to state that Columbus didn’t “discover” America, but I do think it’s a shame that Native culture and history is a really small part of American curriculum, especially because new discoveries are suggesting that the Native people were here for so long that it’s actually shifting modern thoughts on human migration and the bigger, more global human story
It is more impressive that Columbus found and reported on America (obviously he was not first) than the fact that humans were already in America.
Stop putting air quotes, it was discovered by Europeans. That does not mean it was Columbus who discovered the Americas/New World for the first time ever by human beings.
What were they doing with the land prior to the arrival of civilization? Were there wars fought as there have been since the dawn of humanity?
Did a stronger nation conquer a weaker one? Is that an anomaly in history?
Why is it always Western society that gets the scrutiny. I do not see anybody upset about the Japanese did in WWII or what happened to the Armenians in WWI. Nobody cries about Genghis Khan and what he did to the Khwarazmian Empire. Nobody cares about the Barbary sl*ve trade or how they treated their African sl*ves.
It is one of those things that you cannot help but notice.
We've been on Turtle Island for a long time Zaddy, since it was a tiny speck of mud in otter's paw.
Nobody discovered this place, we were born from the rivers and mountains on this land.
We've been here since the beginning, the Europeans will always be our guests.
@@obtuseangler768 What about all of the modern people that originally come from South America that now live here? Guests? Just curious why you state that Europeans are forever your guests when every single non-Native American would also fit the same thing.
@melanieforyou they are home in South America, they are guests on Turtle Island as well. It's not hard to tell they are indigenous to somewhere else.
I'm not implying we can't get all get along. I am from the Great Lakes region yet I live in BC, I will always be a guest of the Nations here no matter what I think I own.
I'm well acquainted with the British North America Act which supercedes the Indian Act of 1867-1873, what would you like to know?
If you aren't First Nations from North America then of course you would be defined as a guest, you certainly can't be the host by definition.
to hear Graham speak of his issue with anger was very eye-opening for me. I love Graham and his work and he comes across as such a kind and gentle soul, as well as highly intelligent and interesting. I feel a deeper connection to him now as I would describe myself as having all of these qualities as well - with the greatest humility when it comes to my definition of highly intelligent. ;-)
He is angry cause his b.s. grift got called out, anybody who knows anything says those guys is a fraud, incompetent liar who is also incredibly boring. This guy is a non factor in anything scientific, they don’t respect him, he isn’t a geologist. He isn’t a historian, he isn’t even that intelligent or he would be aware he is spreading misinformation.
True journalist ! Deadly curious and sharp as a knife
So just watching this. What I like about GH is his curiosity and willingness to question. It is unacceptable for his requests for filming to be denied. It's fear. Maintaining the status quo.
It was denied cause nobody respects this guy, he’s a hack journalist. Real academia doesn’t have anything to gain by entertaining this mook, what credibility does he have? You are more qualified as a scientist and geologist as this tabloid reporter who doesn’t even understand proper scientific research.
Every podcast of his are so different. So thankful for all his wisdom, especially now at 74 yrs old. God bless you brother
He looks and sounds great, and passionate!
What wisdom? He is old and senile journalist who writes pseudo science as a grift. He isn’t a scientist, doctorate or genius. He is a complete conman and worse off all an incredibly boorish.
Based on the ancient Greek historian Plutarch and his description of voyages, the ancient Greeks did in fact travel to North America before Columbus.
Dang Hancock has been doing the podcasting rounds lately.
its season 2 promo
Yeah it’s getting quite boring. Nothing against Graham and I love modern wisdom, but hearing him tell basically the exact same things as on Rogan and on Lex in such a short span of time is pretty tiresome
@@paintbuschso don’t listen?
He has to promote the new season of his show and he lives in England so if you come to America why wouldn't make all the rounds you could
But. .. must.. consume 😂@@giespouwen8091
Excellent show! I'm a huge fan of Graham's work. Regardless of the exact conclusions he comes to, it's ESSENTIAL to never stop questioning dogmatic narratives, otherwise we'll never know the truth
Exactly this! I keep seeing comments that claim that because the ‘sciences’/ scientific institutions don’t currently back his theories that means they have a monopoly on the scientific method. The scientific method means testing a hypothesis of something that currently is not believed to be true - and only by doing this can we learn as you say!
We can’t test everything and so have to prioritise - all Graeme is doing is waving a flag in an area he has found some inconsistencies to learn more, and selling a few books of his speculations.
@@wbunnage Because a theory is not viable in science unless you have material evidence to back it up. Graham's theories, unfortunately to his fans I guess, have no material evidence to back any of it up so that's why science metaphorically and literally laughs at Graham and doesn't take him seriously. His theories are backed up by wild fantasies and made-up interpretations that any first year science major can debunk with little to no effort.
Yes, it's important to question science so as to constantly evolve and learn new things but what Graham theorizes is complete and utter fantasy and only detracts for science advancement because now so many people have been completely duped by Graham and now don't trust real science and think real scientific fact are lies when in fact Graham is the liar. There's a big difference between something that can be proven true and something that cannot be true because proof doesn't exist for it and what Graham is selling is something that cannot be true because there's zero evidence for any of it. Graham isn't teaching anybody anything, he's detracting from real science and real scientific method so he can dupe the people that are easily duped and make a career out of it and that he has done very well.
The advanced civilization that spanned the globe and may have even been more advanced than modern civilization but yet didn't leave behind a single pot or tool or anything that can prove Graham's thesis correct. What's Graham's convenient excuse for this? Scientists just haven't found it yet or it was all destroyed by the biblical Great Flood of the Younger Dryas that flooded the whole planet and destroyed every speck of possible evidence of this advanced civilization. The same flood that Graham himself proved only affected a rather small portion of the planet in North America. The same advanced civilization that Graham thinks moved and shaped rocks by magic apparently but yet they couldn't figure out how to build a boat and survive a flood that only affected a rather small portion of the world? So advanced but they couldn't figure out to move further south away from the floodwaters? C'mon, do I need to go on?
Graham is the flat-earther of archeology and it's no wonder his following is so cult-like, just like the flat-earth cult.
@@godsmacking99What is the difference between facts and fiction? Fiction has to make sense.
Absolutely right. Those who issue utterances like “the science is settled” have an agenda that has little to do with truth.
@@godsmacking99 Do you often see people building boats when the tsunami warning sounds? No.
I've read most of this Graham's books and watched many of his podcasts. He's brilliant-full of knowledge and integrity. His perspective isn't about dismissing archaeology, but offering a fresh viewpoint. I remember learning about the pyramids when I was 8 and being fascinated, only to feel underwhelmed when told they were just tombs-it felt like such an anticlimax. Fast forward 30 years, and I discovered Graham's work, which reignited that childhood curiosity. When you look at the evidence he presents, it’s clear that these structures are much older than mainstream accounts suggest. The pyramids likely served as spiritual technology, something we've long forgotten
Unfortunately, the pyramids on the Giza plateau have organic mortar inside them which we can radiocarbon date to be between 1,000 - 3,000 BC. To the very best of our knowledge the main pyramid builders in ancient Egypt were the 3rd and 4th dynasty pharaohs. There is a clear lineage and evolution of pyramid building from Djoser's 'stepped' pyramid at Saqqara to Khufu's Great pyramid at Giza.
I think it's amazing that they were built and built so well. They must have been a staggering sight back in ancient times. And whilst it might seem boring that they were tombs, to the Egyptians, the afterlife was certainly no boring matter. It was incredibly important to them. To have a fine tomb really elevated that pharaoh in the eyes of the gods and in the eyes of their people so that they might be remembered for all eternity.
@@robreeves9825 First of all, no mummy was ever found inside a pyramid. Second, kinda strange that, if you're such an egomaniac that you want to build the biggest structure of the world, you agree to have an anonymous tomb. I'd put my name on it with the hugest, totally indestructible letters they could build!🤣
@@natasjadirken5633pharaohs considered themselves gods, so they were definitely very modest. As for why no mummies in the pyramids - because everybody knew it was a tomb with huge treasures buried inside they were looted quite early. Grave robbery was the reason why they stopped building pyramids and went for underground tombs. Also embalming was most likely less advanced when they built pyramids.
@@robreeves9825Your perspective is intriguing and offers a thought-provoking critique of modern materialistic science. Ancient Egyptians, in my opinion, weren’t simply tethered to the afterlife as a belief system-they lived in a worldview deeply intertwined with the spiritual realm. Their monumental pyramids seem to resonate with something beyond our current scientific understanding, perhaps pointing to a metaphysical truth that remains undiscovered.
It’s ironic how dismissing such ideas as conspiracy theories comes so easily in an era where even Congress holds public hearings on recovered alien bodies and crash retrievals. This opens the door to revisiting what we consider possible. When we delve into UFO phenomena, the prevalence of pyramid-shaped sightings raises intriguing questions. Coincidence? Perhaps. But perhaps also a signal that ancient wisdom and modern mystery share more than we currently comprehend.
As the Egyptians might suggest, true understanding may only come when we "west"-when we transcend this life and discover what lies beyond.
So interesting he talks about doing DMT and dealing with his anger. I remember the first time I heard him on JRE I was so put off by his anger and demeanor, I avoided listening to him for a while. But these past few weeks listening to him I’ve thought wow this dude has really mellowed out; and I love listening to him chat. I guess those DMT trips really helped.
Graham Hancock is an intelligent man who needs more recognition for his work…. He’s a journalist who gets ridiculed for using his brain…. I Love the fact that he does what takes! My Hero! I wish I were able to get an hour with him…
A journalist finds credible sources and researches information. A writer scratches the surface of topics and then creates stories. Hancock is a scratcher.
Chris, you are the best "question asker". You really listen to your guests and ask honest, sincere, and salient questions. This interview is proof of that.
Interviewer*
I've been following Graham Hancock and others for many years. I think mainstream archeologists attack them because they have the courage to examine alternative history.
The third Podcast with the great Graham Hancock this week. What a pleasure.
Graham is awesome.:I 100% would have a beer and chat and his voice is amazing to fall asleep to..and I mean that in a complimentary way 👍
Agree!
I've watched all of Graham Hancock's interviews promoting his brilliant Ancient Apocalypse season 2 and this one is one of the best. He goes into much more detail about all the discoveries and experiences and Chris Williamson asks all the right questions! Great podcast all round. 👌🏼
How did you make the link in your comment
I adore Graham Hancock been following him for over a decade now. I especially love how much love and respect he has for his bride and partner.
Graham you have so much information to share I never want to stop listening to you
It's 50% information and 50% conjecture
Have you found wrong time/ out of time handcraft or manufactured tools, containers,‘weapon es, jewelry, toys, music instruments?, etc.)
I don’t understand the fascination with this geriatric conman. He is dull and lame, he just rips off Terrance Mckinna and CasteNADA (sic)
@@samaval9920he hasn’t found anything, just lost his rabbit ass mind from smoking mushrooms.
Has anyone else noticed the power of plants in South America? The potency of plant recipes seems greater there than anywhere else ✌️❤️🇬🇧
An Indonesian teenager survived 49 days and thousands of kilometers at sea on his rompong. A rompong is a fishing hut built to trap fish in net-like cages underneath.
The design of a rompong is thousands of years old and fed him, and housed him, and floated without sail in every imaginable sea condition.
The boy had no navigation skills, or means of directing the craft but it is easy to imagine he could reach other islands and eventually South America if he had.
There is no reason to believe early man could not travel by sea for long distances catching his food, remaining seaworthy and healthy thousands of years ago.
To sail across Pacific before modern time,?Polynesian sailors have, & still do, use traditional methods to sail from 1 Polynesian to another, all the way to N & S America!!
I so respect Graham for challenging the ‘false narrative’ of our history. His contention that we have a c50,000+ history of human civilisation is so resonant. Look how far we’ve come in 2,000 years. How much could our ancestors have evolved over 50,000 years, until the great floods c12,000? Amazing buildings etc all evidence of this…
And according to Theosophical teachings Hancock's dating is way too short. The whole planet has been inhabited for many millions of years. The America's were part of old Atlantis although alot of it is under the Atlantic ocean and Lemuria is much much older than Atlantis. Humanity is so narrow minded.
I found it amusing that Archaeologists had refused to acknowledge Ron Wyatt’s work in 1987? and now recently tried to take credit for his findings.
Graham, thanks for carrying the torch of Heyerdahl for us all and for your bravery and steadfastness.
If u ever do any work in New England u and sintha can stay at my place in Rockport.. it's on a granite promontory overlooking Massachusetts Bay.... no doubt many ancient peoples of many backgrounds stood on my rock watching the sun rise on the horizon... on a clear day u can see to Boston, Provincetown, and Maine... there's also weird striations on my rock that may or may not be ancient.
Keep it up.
Heyerdahl KNEW!!!!
We may need to know when the next apocalypse happens. Cheers to you and Hancock for the episode. A pleasure to be a listener
Listening again to Graham Hancock: Thank you for using your years on this earth to learn about thoughts/ideas/actions that we ALL have access to, if we choose.🎶🌸
I very much respect Graham Hancock’s research results. He has so much logical and undeniable proof (to my way of thinking) of the many newer ideas just beginning t😅o come to light. I should have been a geological anthropologist. Sherry, the farm that we had here when Tommy and I were married, has an Indian settlement. I had located pot shards with Creek Indian decorations carved onto them. I had hundreds of perfect arrowheads and spear heads. Along with the tools they had used to make them. I want to buy that farm back so much so that my entire soul feels driven back there. I had asked t😅o keep an area so that that I could work it. Tommy had no conception of how much those artifacts meant to me. I actually wanted to invite some college classes to see how much interest there might be. But, he was caught up in clearing spaces for our pastures. This is one of the areas of certain disagreement. I left all the arrow heads, etc. there on the farm where I believed they properly belonged. I just wish I had brought some of them with me. I really don’t know why I did. We had about a lie and 1/2 of river frontage. Great riding trails. Horses!!! I had wanted them all my life. This one of the most heartbreaking regrets of my life. That I didn’t ask to keep some of them.
I don’t know why just went off on this rant. Don’t feel bad that I just didn’t feel that even a few would have been ok.
One of my greatest desires is to have that land in my possession. Know of anybody with enough money and interest?? If you can think of any suggestions I would be so grateful. 😢😊😂❤
It's good to get it off your chest, even if only for your own benefit 🙌
Thank you Graham Hancock, for being the real archeologist the world needs. People want and need to know where we came from. You do amazing work.
Don't be fooled. Hancock has never done one days work or study in archaeology. He just writes unoriginal, third rate pseudoscience for money, and you mugs lap it up.
He is an amazing researcher and explorer, but I believe he is not an archeologist. He does the research, not field work, I think.
@@melanieforyou Name one thing he has ever been proven correct about.
@@DickiesDisintegratingWan-dt3ekcorrect but id aslso point out he is better read than most archaeologists
@@williambrock3534 The only reason he knows anything at all about archaeology is he reads the work of real archaeologists. You know, the professionals who he constantly whines about.
Omg Hancock week continues Ty sir
Way to work on yourself Graham. Inspiring words. I’m 70 also. Ive had the gift of gab all my life. Misused quite often, but getting better at thinking how my words will impact before I speak. Wish I knew that sooner.
Massive respect to Mr. Graham Hancock for putting so much knowledge out there, & encouraging us to ask questions about the mysteries of our ancient past. It's fascinating
Dudes like him get in the way of actual discovery, muddying the channels of research. The child like intrigue is getting old but it’s sensational so it sells.
@@finnmacdiarmid3250 😂 oh yeah, because archaeologists are so busy making plethoras of new discoveries, not putting cease & desists on research at Gobekli Tepe or anything like that. That's not the entire point to Graham's work or anything lol. Which as you say, is so "muddying" & in the way. Lol yeah man, more inquiry into the subject definitely gets in the way. More inquiry & curiosity totally impedes progress. How much more counter intelligent can you be
@@finnmacdiarmid3250Like it or not, GH is igniting a renewed intetest in archeology among the world's youth. More students entering the field can only be good.
thanks chris and graham -I'm 75 and your conversation -discussion is very much appreciated thank you
Graham is the most underrated researcher
His research makes sense
And can be proofed any time
That he is right
He has no research. That is the point. He makes claims and invents mysteries.
Love your work. What an inspiration & your life's work has already changed history! SAA🤦🏿♂️ combined will never even come close to your legacy, travels & your empirical drive where evidence always leads your arguments. I am a black 🇿🇦can, and I have read all of your books, & will reactivate my Netflix account just to catch season 2 of your magnum opus👏🏿
He is a world traveller and he has become wealthy by encouraging people to buy his books. His books inspire people to believe in mysteries instead of encouraging people to actually study existing published data.
I'm loving Season 2 of Ancient Apocalypse.
It is important to remember that ancient humans didn't have TV to watch for entertainment. Their TV was the sky, especially at night. Laying out in a field at night staring up at the stars is something they must have done regularly. Given time you notice things, such as the position of the stars and how they align differently throughout the year, etc. Eventually, you can't help but learn some things. The people that learned the most became the experts of their time, and most likely a teacher on the movements of the heavens.
It’s crazy people traveled, possibly by foot, from Russia over to the U.S. and then down to New Mexico. I’m guessing they moved south for warmer weather. I currently live in west Texas right next to Clovis, NM so I hear about the history all the time and it always amazes me.
Naprosto miluji Grahama Hancocka, excelentní práce skvělá intuice. Jaká škoda pro nás, lidi, že jsou mu některá místa zapovězena, a víme proč a kdo oni jsou. Ať ho Bohové chrání a jdou mu po boku.
Shoemaker/Levy 9 was one of the premier events of our lifetime. I'm very grateful for having the opportunity to watch it unfold in real time.
There is something very strange about the Americas. The DNA data are consistent with the Americas being settled from Beringia with the first arrivals now found further south. However, religion, culture, rubber harvesting and mound and pyramid building appears to have migrated from South America to the north. The only explanation for this that I can think of is that the population and archeology of North America was scrubbed out by some event after the initial settlement of the Americas leaving a void to be resettled from the south.
He’s spot on. Dmt is the portal to a deeper understanding of what we really are. Are being is not our person, are understanding of this experience is constrained by our brain. Down the rabbit hole we go!
In New Zealand there is a man made stone structure called the Kaimanawa Wall, for over 30 years the government refuses to acknowledge that this is made by ancient people, which predate even our native people.
The Kaimanawa Wall is a natural formation.
@@AnyoneCanSee Nope.
What native people? Maori came to New Zealand in their whaka - their own history tells us that. The natives of New Zealand, which were not the Moriori are long gone.
Not only the Kaimanawa wall, but as a youngster in the 60's we were shown some amazing stuff up in the Northland - not allowed in that area now, which I believe is down to Maori not wanting it known there were people in the country earlier. Back in the country in the 80s on some dive trips and was shown runes, identical to those I have seen elsewhere in the world. Pretty sure, based on maps from long before the time of Cook & Magellan showing Antarctica that more of the world was known to preceeding civilisations. Possibly from the Orient or Asia Minor, but until more turns up, who knows?
I read somewhere about an expedition going to McMurdo in the 25/26 or 26/27 season that is going to do some drone surveys with ground penetrating radar.
@@AnyoneCanSeeIt's not even a wall, it's a small outcrop. 😂
Usually i agree its a government coverup but i have my doubts on this one. Its an interesting stone formation though.
Graham raises more questions than answers. I love it
SAVAGE SHADES, for the discerning savage.....😁😁✝️great show fellas! Love you Graham, YOUR TIME HAS ARRIVED BROTHER.....😁😁😁
Cool 😎
At any age your clock is ticking Graham. Much respect from Minnesota 🍀
Knights Templar say they were here in the 1200, and Maya claim. Egyptian visiting before that. Graham is right ,just give academic folks time to catch up. Great story.
Absolute rubbish
@@driveboy317 what is absolute rubbish?
PODCAST ON THE GIZA PLATOU!?!?! Let’s goooooo!!!!!
I see content: sleep
I see Graham Hancock: WAKE TF UP
It will be one of the great losses of this century when this man passes. Absolutely brilliant
Name one thing he has ever discovered, or one thing he has ever been proven correct about.
@ 1:02:06 ...
It's amazing amount of Scientific knowledge these communities, cultures had.... knowledge that would directly inducate to them about Agriculture, Weather.., Governance, . Architecture etc
Graham is the only Historian i trust.
Never Trust the MSM !
On any topic .
He isn’t a historian. He is a hack, grifter and that’s why nobody takes him seriously.
I love listening to Graham
Have to wonder how different humans were 50k years ago - those were some tough people living a tough life
Their lives may have been more advanced than ours.
One of the most controversial topics is not ancient peoples crossing the Pacific, but an expanding earth being much younger connecting Asia to Australia. Due to dating in an assumed uniformitarianistic world, geology has been dating everything wrong. We live in a cyclic catastrophic world that where everything is about 600 times younger than geology assumes.
That is a fun theory. It fits with the lighter gravity that must have existed in earth at the time of the dinosaurs, as the current gravity would not have supported their weight, plus massive trees much larger than trees today, huge insects etc.
I just listened to Graham and Lex, so this is very timely. Great stuff ❤
He just had a wonderful interview on the jesse Michel American Alchemy channel.
If a large group of "experts" and "scientists" come out against his work we now know that means he is probably correct about everything and we will find that out eventually😑
You'd easily find a large group of experts and scientists coming out against the flat earth theory therefore, by your reasoning, the flat earthers are right on the point because the mainstream comes out against them
Im glad Grandpa is getting around, vlogging... preaching the Gospel. love it! Preach!
Creators:Thank you both….so brave to choose to be on the world stage. Some beings want to blame, some want to deny, many are too afraid to accept responsibility for their own creations. Learning to be wise is eternally fantastic…ALL the knowers know. JOY🎶🌸
I love Graham Hancock. And straight away he corrects Chris's silly statement: "Columbus did NOT discover America"!
They forced that big cover up in us!!
Absolutely loving these history guests! there’s so much we can learn from the past that can be extrapolated to improve our lives.
Not if it's just fantasy from a drug-addled mind. This is nonsense.
Great Talk- Lovely perspectives and food for thought.
GHs work and time taken to response to other powerstructures; are the heart of the matter, in my view.
Its building up diversity; and plural ways of thinking, debating and then Living.. Big Big Thanks for that 🙏🏼🙏🏼
Hancock may not be right, and there may not have been an Atlantis. But he makes Redditors seethe so for that I love him.
A direct hit by an air bursting comet fragment on a prehistoric village settlement in Syria complete with geological evidence such as shocked quartz or glass but no crater is incredible, shows comets are a real continuous threat, should be known globally ✌️❤️🇬🇧
Now the theory is trending to a "micronova" from the sun. China found glass on the lunar surface on their recent moon mission. They were seeking this for confirmation of a solar micronova. This might be cyclical, recurring every 12,000 years. Interestingly, the sun, from earth, would appear at first white, as our ozone layer collapses, then red, then black just before the micronova blows away all the accumulated galactic dust. These reflect perfectly the colors of the four horsemen of the apocalypse.
Anyway, just a theory that is being tossed around grad schools.
Get David Reich on the podcast to provide the leading ancient civilization's geneticist opinion of the genetic origins of South America.
Please share the genetic origins knowledge will ya?
Nice interview ! Thank you Chris for giving time and space to Graham Hancock. His way of sharing his thoughts, expertise, creative and associative thinking sounds as good as the music of Herbie Hancock ;+>
Now you need to invite Milo Rossi on the show next.
Dedeunking did a great job debunking everything Milo said and how much he typically lies
@@veraciousreasoning863 Did Dedeunking do an episode on Graham Hancock?
Milo the greatest liar on the Internet. I took geology in college to. My professor had 30 years with the United States geological survey team. That's the number one geological research group in the world. And he was a hard core fundamentalist Christian. I'm talking the world is only 6,000 years old believer. When asked why he believed that said "because according to geological science as I understand and know it, and I have a PhD in it, either the entire field of geology is a lie. Witch I don't believe, or archeology and the history of humanity is a complete lie. So I chose to believe in God and the Bible as at this time in my life it makes more logical sense than the lies people believe." Dude traveled the world doing geological surveys for the government and oil companies his entire life. And after 30 years he was like yup human history is one big clear as day lie when you know basic geology. 😂 Milo don't know shit bit the official story he was taught. Like a good brainwashed cog he spouts his ignorance with confidence.
@@veraciousreasoning863 - Do you bother fact-checking Debunking as constantly lies and misrepresents those he disagrees with. World of Antiquity calmly responds to the Debunking videos made about him and exposes Debunking lies and misrepresentations with evidence. Debunking attacked World of Antiquity and called him names in his video but got a calm professional response. DeBunking made videos claiming Flit Dibble worked with Native American bones knowing it was completely false. He also posted the lie on Twitter alongside a picture of Dibble holding a cow bone. Why would you trust someone willing to post such lies just to discredit someone?
@@thomabow8949 - No, he worships Hancock and attacks anyone who disagrees with Hancock.
You can tell he loves the Amazon. Nice to hear him tal about it.
I hope Graham lives to see some of his predictions proven. But even if he is wrong on nearly everything, the fact he is proving mainstream archaeology is dead wrong on the human story will be his biggest win.
The Dinosaur extinction event 66 million years ago was made worse by the fact the area in the Yucatan where the asteroid hit was rich in Gypsum. Huge amounts of it were blasted into the atmosphere, where it stayed for longer than most other soil or materials would due to the chemical make up of Gypsum.
I think his theory needs to somewhat be looked at I've watched both seasons on Netflix. For me it seems that it's likely that there is a technology that we've lost and most people can't understand that technology isn't just the AI or Internet or computers or even cars. But there's something to what he's saying does feel like there's something there
Knowledge supports growth.
Angry Dibble intensifies
Why are you calling Dibble angry? He was polite and calm on Joe Rogan. Since then he has suffered nothing but abuse and lies from Hancock fans. He has every right to offer a response to Hancock who constantly attacks mainstream archaeology. In the first few seconds of this interview, he talks about how archaeologists were dragged kicking and screaming being forced to believe that first was false and humans arrived in the Americas much earlier. He doesn't mention that it was other archaeologists who found the evidence to disprove Clovid first. So it was a disagreement between archaeologists in one small field of archaeology. Hancock constantly brings this up to try and discredit archaeologists in general which he needs to do to explain why archaeologists the world over don't believe there is any evidence to support an ancient advanced culture.
Dibbles anger intensifies!!!😡
what's that mean
Watched new season on Netflix, watched on Rogan, watched on Lex, now watching here
Watched him on literally every pod I’ve been able to catch on this tour lol
Don’t forget PBD 😊
Glad I’m
Not the only one who will watch anything Graham is on 😂
On Lex: any time an archaeologist "responds to Graham," Graham is substantiated.
Dont miss matt beall, probably the largest private collector of stone vases
0:10 of course he never discovered anywhere! He was just a person who was named to find lands that could be dominated which had not yet been by other Europeans.
So happy to See Graham getting out there.. He is a treasure.
We need Hancock vs The Dibbler round 2 ASAP.
Why? Already he lost the first round to Flint Dibble? He isn’t going win the second. He doesn’t have anything new or interesting to add. Same boring old story.
@RhaineM its very simple, I love watching people argue.
Knows his stuff. Love his view point
Wonderful second series thanks!
Before the Amazon forest was there - there were miles between the villages with open land. It was after many years of humans no longer living there that the trees were able to grow up and take over. I think Pangea was totally inhabited before it broke up into continents- leaving people on each continent-like it is happening in E Africa. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
4th Graham Hancock podcast in a week? I’m here for all of it! Way to start my week
Now I have to search the other ones
Some of Greek and Egyptian culture is from previous cultures from many 1000’s of years previously, some of it is pre ice age ✌️❤️🇬🇧
Dibble has recently done a podcast with Milo Rosi where they try to debunk all alternate theories and get a stronger online presence. I wanted to watch it to get both sides of the argument, but my god they are so patronising with very thinly drawn arguments. I lasted about 5 minutes before i had to turn it off.
I can’t listen to Dibble. He’s just annoying to me. I don’t know why. Wish I could. I’m sure he’s got solid info.
Agreed. He has an abrasive personality. There is a lot I disagree with Handcock, but I would love to sit and share a few beers with him.
Dibble is not an archaeologist, he is a troll army commander...
Watched a short video of Milo Rossi where he debunks Graham Hancock and tells people not to bother watching Ancient Apocalypse. First time I had ever heard of Milo Rossi and I wasn't impressed. I left a comment about how much I liked the Ancient Apocalypse series and I got attacked by one of his followers. A far more experienced Archaeologist critiqued a video of Milo's and pointed out that the info he was saying about the site he was visiting was wrong . Also, one of the first things Archaeologists learn is how to protect the integrity of a site and in the video Milo can be seen not following those instructions he should've learned.
Love ya Randall and thanks for all you do. BLESSINGS !!!!
Graham Hancock has very interesting takes on lots of gray areas of history and archeology. But sometimes he provides evidence that debunks (I hate this term) some of his proposals: if the Sphinx is perfectly aligned to the sunrise at the equinox it cannot be older than the pyramids as proposed by Dr Robert Schoch.
I think that the work that mr Hancock does is fundamentally necessary to the advancement of history and archeology. Good to hear he buried the hatchet with Zahi Hawass. Maybe this will be the start of a new era of collaboration.
It is also aligned with the sunrise at the equinox some 30,000 years ago.
aligned with sunrise on the equinox during the Age of Leo, not today.
To be more detailed of the alignment of the sphinx, it aligns with the equinox, and being a lion when Leo was the alignment n the sky at the equinox was over 30000 years ago. This was also proven to be when the belt of Orion perfectly matched the alignment of the pyramids.
Also there are many depictions of the sphinx of when it was a lion and didnt have a pharaohs head put in place. The water erosion around the base of the sphinx also indicates an older age of its being there.
Perhaps Hancok has taken a leaf from Goggin's book: let the opposition fuel his work, create his energy?
I'm a deep sceptic of most narratives, be they religion or theoretical physics (another type of religion)..But "as above, so below" sent a shiver down my back. The numerology of the pyramids is astounding and cannot be coincidence. Graham Hancock deserves to be heard; the archaeologists damn themselves by failing to treat him with the respect his years of research deserve.
By the way, I enjoyed this chat more than the actual series. Thanks Chris, very well done.