Bobby da Costa Well, funny I’ve come by this video. Just did two DNA 🧬 test that traces my roots back to east Papua, Vanuatu and the islands under it as well as Australia. Predominantly Papua though. I always thought the red-blondish strands in my hair came from a European Ancestry but turns out, it was Oceania the whole time!
In college in the nineties. Took physical anthropology as an elective and was so blown away that I took about 10 more courses. All the professors indicated we had multiple "unidentified contributors" in our genome(s), and that only time would reveal who these contributors were. The puzzle is slowly coming together. Amazing, amazing stuff.
That's crazy. I took a college course in the mid-2000s (probably '07) where they had started identifying the contributors. But I barely paid attention, haha. I was much more interested in the part of the course that talked about how DNA copies itself. Still, kinda cool to see the academic progress: they were talking about unidentified contributors in your era, then just starting to identify them in mine.
I am an Australian with Aboriginal/Denisovan ancestry that has been traced to Tasmania. To think they travelled from Siberia to Tasmania ... WOW!! Listening to Graham Hancock speak about the Denisovans was something special ..!
I wonder whether any of these species were able to communicate with spoken language or maybe raised a captured child of another species to be like them. Looking at the timescale involved the modern world seems so radical yet so SMALL compared to our ancestral history.
@@AceofDlamonds We interbred with them so much that it is believed we lived amongst each other. That breeding wasn’t just done through rape of different tribes or the occasional stroll through the woods, but took as man & wife and had colonies together. I mean 5% of DNA still left in most of the population it makes sense right.
@@AceofDlamonds What is the difference between "coincidence" and "pure coincidence"? I'm unsure of what you are trying to say. I'm also curious what about the Noah story you think is incompatible with archeology? I mean I literally pointed out how it is compatible, i.e. 3 sons/3 species.
Prometheus, are you talking about Joe Rogan or Graham Hancock? They are both interesting. Graham Hancock is intelligent and nice. But he promoted many silly theories which have been thoroughly debunked by now. His theories about the arc of the covenant are not supported by facts! I agree with him, though, that archeologists and paleoanthropologists are far too rigid. Especially the latter have the unfortunate tendency to promote certain scenarios although only very few material clues are available. And they are very reluctant to change their ideas.
Graham Hancock is for me the most interesting, and easiest to listen to, contemporary historians available to learn from. What we have derived from, remains a mysterious puzzle that continually captivates my attention.
According to 23andme (so maybe take it with a grain of salt) I'm almost 4% neanderthal. If given the chance, I will participate in a breeding regime to reform the neanderthal species. If you see any big boned, slope-browed ladies, send them my way plz
"Everybody's heard of the Denisovans" "A lot of people havent" _thinks about the actual state of humanity_ "Well, I guess, yes, a lot of people haven't"
@@nathanjohnson7419 When I learned about this stuff in school, it was still thought neanderthals were our ancestors, although they are partially, but not to the extent I was taught. This was like 15 or so years back I think, and it was old books, so they might've been outdated.
@storm breaker I could be wrong but I think he meant they were a breed of human preceding modern humans. Meaning Modern Humans evolved out of Neanderthals. Also some people do not have Neanderthal DNA so saying they are our ancestors isn't necessarily true.
I have always pondered how our ancient ancestors could have survived on such a harsh planet and environment without having some intelligence about them. In those times they were not at the top of the food chain. When they went out for a hunt or to do anything really they were constantly at risk of being attacked. To live that way and survive all while migrating to other parts of the planet is quite amazing and hints at their ingenuity.
it’s different today w technology and how just society functions i think. buildings and shit weren’t a thing so running into a wolf was like commonplace. being a badass was like the standard basically is what i’m saying, if u couldn’t kill a bear w ur hands u were probably a bitch back then lol
There was also way more megafauna and predators. Europe used to have lions. Humans are a part of the reason megafauna don't really exist anymore. We've outcompeted them for resources.
Modern humans have been around for ~200,000 years. Our ancestors weren't any less intelligent than we are. We have just had 8,000 years of stable climate.
they were smarter than us. if they learned how to survive in a harsh environment like that they were definitely smarter than us, at least at surviving. our specialty is technology and non-physical stuff, like language, philosophy, math and shit. theres also the fact that they were just as conscious about us, if not more conscious due to the constant danger they faced.
compare this with the shit we had to deal with in school...so what does that say? modern "education" isnt about education, its mostly just tax payer funded daycare and a means of government control
But we will be participating in Warhammer 40,000 in a few years. In the grimdark of the distant future. There is ONLY war. . . Warhammer 40k beats the holy shit out of anything ever done in the Star Wars legendarium.
Graham Hancock is a legend..just listen to to his beautifully flowing & incredibly articulate usage of the English language..I love listening to him speaking..could listen to him all day long..& he sure knows his sh#t ! 😉👍
I thought the same thing, 4th age of man.... hell, you could even throw in mythical creatures in there and we killed them off. Check out the terra papers, dont take it as gospel. It's supposedly hopi religion but it's about aliens having a death star, the genesis program and ishtar saving humans from the flood.
@Will H I just looked up those cynocephaly and their in the terra papers as well, they were the warrior caste to their, basically, overlords of a reptilian race.
scientists from various fields, from archaeologists and historians to physicists and astronomers, have all debunked most of Graham Hancock’s works as ‘pseudoscience’. I think he is a great story teller but ya in the realm of science fiction. He is the academic example of the "trust me bro" guy hahahahha ...
@@pipilwarrior- Spot on. This interview is a good example of his traditional "modus operandi". Pick someone else work, add no real value to it. And splash if full of he's fantastic fairy tales...Then serve it cold to an awe public! LOL 😂😂 While admittedly he has good oratory and charismatic speech. It's nevertheless a very distant relative of anything that we can call "science".
Always a pleasure to listen to the both of them . I've been a fan of Graham for as long as he's been writing books . So glad that his health is better now.
I like Mr. G. Hancock his passion and vigorous exploring of human past is quite fascinating and never boring…If we could just turn on TV 📺 and rewind the time and see the real truth…
I won an argument at work today about how to make bubbles out of Dawn dish soap. I felt smart, and victorious. Then I watch this, and realize I've failed in life.
“And some things that should not have been forgotten were lost. History became legend. Legend became myth.". Lord of the rings quote but still has relevance in today's world.
It's so touching. The first thing we want to know about our cousins is if we found any of their art. So much time gone, and only a pinky to work with, and we're still anxious to meet them.
Chauvet cave art dates from 30,000 years ago. It's pretty darn good too. Especially considering it predates the invention of writing by about twenty thousand years...
@@mamindhive Anxious as in "wanting very much". I and many people are fascinated with the past and would like to know more about it. I don't know why you're coming heavy in here trying to make that desire seem weird.
That story about the drilled holes was mind blowing, imaging people 40-50,000 years ago had the tools and technology to do that. I'm no archeologist or anthropologist but I have to think this wasn't something that could accomplished through using a drill like an awl, where you're basically turning it like a screwdriver, it had to have used some mechanized technology. It makes me wonder what else they were doing.
With the speed of the turning of the drill bit, as described, it would prob have to involve some sort of gearing. You would need some kind of mechanical advantage to get those speeds. That coupled with the stationary aspect would make one lean towards some kind of place made for doing that was around, ie a shop of some kind. Very fascinating information.
Joe can barely hold focus on the words coming out of his own mouth. But if you like that drill hole, you'll love Brien Foerster's channel. The huge drill holes he's found in Peru and Egypt drill a hole right through our narrative of human technological development. A big, scary, mysterious hole! His channel is full of terrifying enigmas that are often simply lying around on the world. Rogan and Hancock are ok, but Brien literally goes there and shows you this stuff right to your face in HD.
@@borkwoof696Cord drills? 😂 Is this a joke? Cord (corded) are powered, the first drills were Bow Drills, these were invented by the Inuit in 5000BC then stabilized and perfected in Egypt in 3000BC, a massive empire of builders with heavy stable tools. These humans achieved the same, in a cave, 65000 years ago. This is beyond mind-blowing.
The Denisovans were tall, agile and handled the ball well with good outside shooting. They were also a good defensive team. The Denisovan Nuggets were really good contenders in the NBA.
@Blindi just a joke. But in my opinion. I think they reading the DNA wrong. The 7% is what we have in common with the Neanderthals and devion. If we interbreed with them some of the traits and phenotype would still be around to today.
I highly respect Graham Hancock and his work. His theories and research into ancient civilizations challenge the status quo. Loved Fingerprints of the Gods!
That's confusing. I think you assume that in academia there is a ridgid belief about the past and history but that is not the case. In fact students are encouraged to constantly challenge everything. If you try and get an article published that contains nothing new it'll simply be thrown out. Your thesis for your master's and PhD has to contain new knowledge to count.
@@lukedavis6711 if such is the case, then explain to me why academia dismisses the possible existence of an advanced ancient civilization that was capable of building global pyramidal structures, global polygonic masonry structures, and the like.
@@lukedavis6711 ehhhh thats not true at all, hueyatlaco which has carved and butchered bones which date to 250,000 years ago one of them which is a carved mastodon pelvis and also tools in a 250,000 year old stratum layer, got immediately covered up because of all the reliable dates like uranium series that show that it dated to that time
@@MiThreeSunz Dale Carnegie said "You can’t win an argument. You can’t because if you lose it, you lose it; and if you win it, you lose it. Why? Well, suppose you triumph over the other man and shoot his argument full of holes and prove that he is non compos mentis. Then what? You will feel fine. But what about him? You have made him feel inferior. You have hurt his pride." With that in mind let me attempt to bridge that impossible gap. The simple answer is that there isn't sufficient evidence to grant that there ever was an advanced ancient civilization. In the same way that I dont have to defend my non belief in unicorns; it's the responsibility of the unicorn believes to provide evidence of that claim. So for almost everyone in academia they don't see Hancocks ideas a threat that challenges their ideas; they litterally see it as disproving unicorns. Hope that made sense and if you have any questions or wanna push back on anything I've said don't be afraid to talk to me.
@@lukedavis6711 thanks for your engagement. I do appreciate your opinion and position. Per your reference to Dale Carnegie’s quote, my intent is not to win an argument but to find an acceptable middle ground on the subject. Indeed there may not be sufficient empirical evidence currently to prove the existence of an advanced ancient civilization. However those in pursuit of the evidence who posit the possibility are often refuted by academia’s mainstream narrative without open-minded consideration of the possibility. Happy to discuss further. 😊
This is one scientist I could listen to for hours. He's not a know at all, on the contrary I feel like he understands how much he really doesn't know and understand which lends a helpful hand to his curiosity and wonder at new human discoveries. In comparison many other scientists speak with so much arrogance there's no room left for what ifs and asking questions...I'm looking at you Neil...
scientists from various fields, from archaeologists and historians to physicists and astronomers, have all debunked most of Graham Hancock’s works as ‘pseudoscience’. I think he is a great story teller but ya in the realm of science fiction. He is the academic example of the "trust me bro" guy hahahahha ...
The drill hole reminds me of the mysterious drill holes found in Egypt. The Egyptians had some very advanced technology, and supposedly we only just recently (in the last century or two) gained the ability to drill with the same rigor and precision as the ancient Egyptians. It seems to me like there is a technique for drilling that has been lost to time, and it will be interesting to see if we ever figure it out again.
Reminds me the idea that we don't realize how expert our ancestor could be in a specific domain. Thinking that you hadn't a lot of side activities and entertainment to spend time, you would likely spend most of your life time doing the same thing, mastering the same thing, which leads to being incredibly agile and skillfull in a specific area.
They used drivers to screw the holes and certain stone and metals to connect structures, usually wet sand mixed with pebbles to stick into the sandstone and limestone to mix the sand into wet sand sticking it to other types of stone that were shaped or metal that was shaped to reinforce certain structures, usually stone and sand with other types of adhesive and shaped tools that could work the walls and harden the sandstone -JACK
Kudos to you for bringing guys like this on the show. You might do a lot of self deprecating humor but more people need to be brave enough to have the same curiosity that you do.
@Kiera Mubambai That humans evolved from Neanderthals was not only believed by many scientists/experts a few years ago, it was actually taught in schools and suggested in many textbooks. That is why some people still have the misconception that we evolved from Neanderthals. Also, your simpleton status really comes out when you call people retarded for being misinformed or ignorant.
@@riverrock3897 thank you. Was going to write that. I was literally taught that in grade school and had not encountered any information stating otherwise until recently after looking into it all more on my own. Not from any stupidity, just literally misinformation from a "proper" school education.
A have Australian aboriginal ancestry it's always fascinating to hear the pieces of the stories my family has told us about our past fall into place scientifically
I have absolutely no connection to Australia and none of my dna matches do but for some reason I have dna from somewhere near Australia and I find it all pretty interesting
As an archaeologist (used to be) the Clovis first school of thought was/is pretty tight. It was rare to have a professor, for example, acknowledge this finding or entertain a discussion the followed a different line. This is an extremely interesting topic and one that nearly inspires me to get back in the field.
soakedbearrd This is a point of his. Anything against the “establishment” is going to be frowned upon and met with harsh criticism-even made to look silly or outrageous-all to protect a long established narrative. Coming up through undergrad and then graduate school, it becomes clear that some of these folks that made these discoveries (Clovis) and/or established this school of thought were like rockstars. It seems weird, but these archaeologists were/are idolized in certain circles and have massive followings-it’s very difficult to shake that and change that. People are dedicated, loyal, and resistant to change.
@@SpeedCultureStudios You find that a lot with the sciences, a sort of orthodoxy and stubbornness to go along with it. The established authority on the subject is usually to the respected scientist that laid the foundation. And whos idea cannot be challenged lightly or without sufficient reason.
I like Graham Hancock, he always has something interesting to say, he is very eloquent, and very organized in his thought process. It would be something to be able to sit in a lecture hall and here what he has to say. Praraphrase: America is vast, but Siberia is even more vast. That ride must have been endless. Driving through Montana seems endless, multiply that by how much?
Graham looks like he could teach a class of middle schoolers about the complex historical milestones of humans, and they would actually understand it all.
I doubt it since it is natural that a "majority" of a certain number of people worth mentioning tend to be very average intellectually, and very non-challenging to status quo opinions. So rather the big challenge for the human pack animal is to admit that the pack is always wrong
Love listening to Graham......great writer as well! Our planet is one of so many mysteries.....too bad the education system doesn't start teaching this story to our kids. It would get their minds engaged and perhaps we'd have many more searchers of our past to get this story figured out!
Agreed! I cant stand the stuff. And when you really wonder about Milk/cows/ dairy, (personally I just don't like milk and am indifferent to cheese) I don't know if it does affect the human body, but I know I don't want to be built like cow! and we should have enough research to prove these facts. their new ideas? or this we just discovered? bulshit it's just not going to work for me. I mean people spend billions of dollars in the diet industry and it's not doing anything for anyone but making them worse, placebo effect.
More than four decades before this show and even before Algore invented the interwebs, the great prophet Van Halen foretold this very thing in a song..."woah oh oh Jamie is tryin'"
You might,but the little prognosticator will be wealthier......he makes a lot of money preaching to the "ignorant"..... There are moves afoot for academics to write counter theories to Hancocks "religion". But not all of it is speculation....for example the former Russian heavyweight boxer is most certainly part neanderthal.....from his appearance you would assume he is as thick as a plank....infact he is said to be very intelligent.(Valuev is his name)
Joe, you were right about the discovery of the Denisovans. It was in 2008 that the finger bone was found. The exploration in 1970 was the first of its kind, and its aim was to discover remains of canids
It fascinate me he was so enthusiastic for the milk from cow this is sad how disconnected people are from nature now everything is store bought processed food
yeah. we used to do that too, neighbours farm delivered fresh milk. i didnt like it though, very lumpy and we used to drink it warm. but it was considered a treat. this was in sweden in the 1980s.
I live in Europe in a fairly modern country but I still have a close enough neighbor that have cows that are feed naturally and I don't buy milk from shop Im buying it from him ,every night or morning I know when he milks the cows and I go and get fresh and still warm milk,he uses machines for milking for obvious reasons and one of the biggest is the milk absorb odors (he sell the milk to the local milk factory) and the machine don't let outside odors to be absorbed and like he said it's creamy and it's far more delicious.
I love his message on being more tentative in our beliefs. It constantly flabbergasts me when people believe they know something for sure. for example, if you told someone from the 1940s that you could have a television phone that fits in your pocket by the end of the century, they would have called you crazy and delusional. Makes me wonder how crazy and delusional we are today. For me personally, I knew everything there was to know when I was 18. Since then I have learned how much of it I must have forgotten because I don't know diddly squat. 😅
Modern history is so self effacing and self complementary. We think "they' the old ones were primitive...it's just a false belief that modern school teach stubbornly.
psst.....its because "they" "the old ones" were black people. the only reason any of this information is "lost" is because the offspring of the interbreeding feels threatened by what this man calls "anatomically modern human". think about it. what race of people are the only ones who dont know their history? I can see why they went through all the trouble to hide it. next time you see a fb post about black crime in chicago. just know those peoples ancestors are who he is referring to as the modern human.
@@jondavid1256 Yeah you right, white people came from black people somehow. White people are just albino black dudes. But yes i would agree our history isnt "lost", its intentionally kept away from us for whatever reasons.
Hancock is awesome, I've listened to both fingerprints and magicians of the gods - really opened my mind. and i totally believe him when he says our conscientiousness is being transmitted from somewhere else.
Claudio Gomboli my thoughts exactly. Every time I walk into a modern art gallery I’m like “why the hell is there a paint spattered toilet in a plastic box?”
@@turtleinashirt There´s was one "piece of art" in Serralves a local park with "good" and famous art that was somewhat of a big bird cage but half buried everyone thought it was about prison jail that shit but no it was about global warming and reprensented tornadoes, how couldnt have I guessed that xD?
Best podcast around.. Nothing else keeps my attention and literally entertains and informs me at the same time. Only podcast that im zeroed in no matter the guest.
Ancient Humans Had Sex With Mystery Species, New DNA Study Shows “The ancient genomes, one from a Neanderthal and one from a different archaic human group, the Denisovans, were presented on 18 November at a meeting at the Royal Society in London. They suggest that interbreeding went on between the members of several ancient human-like groups living in Europe and Asia more than 30,000 years ago, including an as-yet unknown human ancestor from Asia.” “What it begins to suggest is that we’re looking at a ‘Lord of the Rings’-type world - that there were many hominid populations,” says Mark Thomas, an evolutionary geneticist at University College London who was at the meeting but was not involved in the work.” “The first Neanderthal and the Denisovan genome sequences revolutionized the study of ancient human history, not least because they showed that these groups interbred with anatomically modern humans, contributing to the genetic diversity of many people alive today. All humans whose ancestry originates outside of Africa owe about 2% of their genome to Neanderthals; and certain populations living in Oceania, such as Papua New Guineans and Australian Aboriginals, got about 4% of their DNA from interbreeding between their ancestors and Denisovans, who are named after the cave in Siberia’s Altai Mountains where they were discovered. The cave contains remains deposited there between 30,000 and 50,000 years ago.”
“Approximately 2-4% of genetic material in human populations outside Africa is derived from Neanderthals who interbred with anatomically modern humans. Recent studies have shown that this Neanderthal DNA is depleted around functional genomic regions; this has been suggested to be a consequence of harmful epistatic interactions between human and Neanderthal alleles. However, using published estimates of Neanderthal inbreeding and the distribution of mutational fitness effects, we infer that Neanderthals had at least 40% lower fitness than humans on average; this increased load predicts the reduction in Neanderthal introgression around genes without the need to invoke epistasis. We also predict a residual Neanderthal mutational load in non-Africans, leading to a fitness reduction of at least 0.5%. This effect of Neanderthal admixture has been left out of previous debate on mutation load differences between Africans and non-Africans. We also show that if many deleterious mutations are recessive, the Neanderthal admixture fraction could increase over time due to the protective effect of Neanderthal haplotypes against deleterious alleles that arose recently in the human population. This might partially explain why so many organisms retain gene flow from other species and appear to derive adaptive benefits from introgression”. www.genetics.org/content/203/2/881
There was a really good TV show on BBC in the UK about 5 years ago that redesigned like 4 species of human in cluding them, it done it in like a 3D sort of way where they reconstructed the bodies with fake bones and how they'd walk and what they looked like and then showd like animated clips on them hunting and stuff. I cant remember if it was one episode or 1 episode per night for a few nights i also think it was done live on TV.
Why do they lie to us about our History? Never will make sence to me how much resources have been used to suppress facts and divert attention from the Truth.
From an engineering perspective; specifically regarding the so-called green stone and the stable drill, they obviously had something that was along the lines of a vice too. Probably with a v notch in it as well, in order to attain the required level of grip of the said object. It furthermore begs the question: did the vice move towards a stationary positioned, albeit spinning drill of sorts, or vice versa? There just weren't dremmels back them and would have thought long and hard about the task in hand. Kudos to them...and some!
How is the year of the execution of the presumed bracelet done? By what evidence what it know there was another piece to the bracelet what was dangling from the hole. The evidence does not show the other supposed piece to it. Currently the bracelet looks broken and appears cannot be worn as it is, so it seems speculative it was even a C shaped type of bracelet.
I love seeing some of these alternative ideas get coverage, Grahams really helped expose the dogma of archaeology hopefully people will keep pushing for better research and when the facts are presented not shame someone cause it dont fit their own agenda like has been done for decades
This. Absolutely agree. In this particular case though, the Denisovans are the first hominins identified as a new species on a genetic basis and their DNA has been mapped and added to our markers. We now know how much Denisovan DNA we still retain. It's fully acknowledged and accepted by science.
This information give me goosebumps and butterflies. It is incredibly fascinating to know that we weren't the only ones around and that we have a rich historic past contrary to what we are led to believe by established academics.
@@henrikson2902 well... if driving without stops u can get there in just one day. But there is a slight problem: it's not like we have highways here, one lane each way so u can get stuck behind some crappy truck. But no, no way it takes 3 days of driving.
I think we are constantly underestimating the cunning and intelligence our of past ancestors.
And their technology!
Bobby da Costa Well, funny I’ve come by this video. Just did two DNA 🧬 test that traces my roots back to east Papua, Vanuatu and the islands under it as well as Australia. Predominantly Papua though. I always thought the red-blondish strands in my hair came from a European Ancestry but turns out, it was Oceania the whole time!
I don't think people realize how much the majority of this planet have "dumbed down" over centuries so now they can't imagine the possibilities.
@Bobby da Costa he said ancestors, so humans too.
What if Neanderthal are the aliens?
Can we appreciate how happy this guy is talking about this
Seriously though
The "can we just appreciate this random stupid thing about the video" comment
He is awesome
And how happy Joe is listening
Find something that will make you this happy about and do that for the rest of your life
In college in the nineties. Took physical anthropology as an elective and was so blown away that I took about 10 more courses. All the professors indicated we had multiple "unidentified contributors" in our genome(s), and that only time would reveal who these contributors were. The puzzle is slowly coming together. Amazing, amazing stuff.
That's crazy. I took a college course in the mid-2000s (probably '07) where they had started identifying the contributors. But I barely paid attention, haha. I was much more interested in the part of the course that talked about how DNA copies itself. Still, kinda cool to see the academic progress: they were talking about unidentified contributors in your era, then just starting to identify them in mine.
Wow
I am an Australian with Aboriginal/Denisovan ancestry that has been traced to Tasmania. To think they travelled from Siberia to Tasmania ... WOW!! Listening to Graham Hancock speak about the Denisovans was something special ..!
Very interesting.
It's just as likely they travelled from Australia not to Australia.
Are there any physical traits that you have that come from that ancestry? Sorry if that’s a stupid question, just very cool and interesting 😅
I find the fact that there were once several species of humans roaming the earth endlessly fascinating.
I wonder whether any of these species were able to communicate with spoken language or maybe raised a captured child of another species to be like them. Looking at the timescale involved the modern world seems so radical yet so SMALL compared to our ancestral history.
@@AceofDlamonds We interbred with them so much that it is believed we lived amongst each other. That breeding wasn’t just done through rape of different tribes or the occasional stroll through the woods, but took as man & wife and had colonies together. I mean 5% of DNA still left in most of the population it makes sense right.
Also interesting that there are 3 species and 3 sons in the Noah flood story, yes, story, but very interesting "coincidence".
@@leelariviere555
That's pure coincidence and the Noah story is incompatible with general history, archeology.
@@AceofDlamonds What is the difference between "coincidence" and "pure coincidence"? I'm unsure of what you are trying to say. I'm also curious what about the Noah story you think is incompatible with archeology? I mean I literally pointed out how it is compatible, i.e. 3 sons/3 species.
I love how you guys break the podcasts into relevant searchable focused clips, keep it up!
They can generate more money this way!
Liam Wood Rightfully so, less people want to listen to entire podcasts and would rather listen to interesting bits.
Isn't Jamie awesome
Wont be the same now hes on spotify :( hopefully theres still short clips
jay cee PSVR the gamecat there will be, just not the whole episode
This guy is one of the most interesting men Ive ever seen.
he's cap sadly
@@seanchurch694 Why would you say that??
ice jj fish one of them?
Prometheus, are you talking about Joe Rogan or Graham Hancock? They are both interesting. Graham Hancock is intelligent and nice. But he promoted many silly theories which have been thoroughly debunked by now. His theories about the arc of the covenant are not supported by facts! I agree with him, though, that archeologists and paleoanthropologists are far too rigid. Especially the latter have the unfortunate tendency to promote certain scenarios although only very few material clues are available. And they are very reluctant to change their ideas.
He's an idiot unfortunately. Just an articulate one.
Graham Hancock is for me the most interesting, and easiest to listen to, contemporary historians available to learn from.
What we have derived from, remains a mysterious puzzle that continually captivates my attention.
Agreed 100%
Absolutely.
He’s a crazy conspiracy theorist, right up until it turns out he’s right.
He’s not an historian lol. He’s a journalist that loves to promote pseudo science and make it sound good lol
According to 23andme (so maybe take it with a grain of salt) I'm almost 4% neanderthal. If given the chance, I will participate in a breeding regime to reform the neanderthal species. If you see any big boned, slope-browed ladies, send them my way plz
If you're 4% there is 50% your mom is too, take the chances mate.
@@ennisdelmar807 she's off the market but good thinking
Done and done
@Chaos Undivided That's fucking great!
tiananman Serena Williams is a good candidate
"Everybody's heard of the Denisovans"
"A lot of people havent"
_thinks about the actual state of humanity_
"Well, I guess, yes, a lot of people haven't"
Haha were you one of them i was. Go to school to be taught bullshit
They don't teach u about denisovens in school, just neanderthals and san bushman
@@nathanjohnson7419 When I learned about this stuff in school, it was still thought neanderthals were our ancestors, although they are partially, but not to the extent I was taught. This was like 15 or so years back I think, and it was old books, so they might've been outdated.
@storm breaker
I could be wrong but I think he meant they were a breed of human preceding modern humans. Meaning Modern Humans evolved out of Neanderthals.
Also some people do not have Neanderthal DNA so saying they are our ancestors isn't necessarily true.
They are a different branch of none human but we did breed and they are now extinct with only a little DNA left in some modern humans.
Plot twist: The Denisovans invented the cordless drill. Black and Decker have been lying to us from the start. We need answers.
I always suspected........
No it was corded. Something like a fire drill worked with a bow and cord in some sort of stabilizing frame.....
😂😂😂
It probably lasted a lot longer than a Black and decker too lol
Maybe they created some crazy drills and used some sort of high pressure tension to drill it. Still quite an invention for living in the Jungle.
I have always pondered how our ancient ancestors could have survived on such a harsh planet and environment without having some intelligence about them. In those times they were not at the top of the food chain. When they went out for a hunt or to do anything really they were constantly at risk of being attacked. To live that way and survive all while migrating to other parts of the planet is quite amazing and hints at their ingenuity.
it’s different today w technology and how just society functions i think. buildings and shit weren’t a thing so running into a wolf was like commonplace. being a badass was like the standard basically is what i’m saying, if u couldn’t kill a bear w ur hands u were probably a bitch back then lol
There was also way more megafauna and predators. Europe used to have lions. Humans are a part of the reason megafauna don't really exist anymore. We've outcompeted them for resources.
Modern humans have been around for ~200,000 years.
Our ancestors weren't any less intelligent than we are.
We have just had 8,000 years of stable climate.
they survived because they were the most intelligent animals on the planet.
they were smarter than us. if they learned how to survive in a harsh environment like that they were definitely smarter than us, at least at surviving. our specialty is technology and non-physical stuff, like language, philosophy, math and shit.
theres also the fact that they were just as conscious about us, if not more conscious due to the constant danger they faced.
I've never watched so many Rogan clips. I watched more from Graham than all other clips put together.
Eric Zetterlund than you should watch the Forrest Falange one
Just listen to the pod dude
@@samueld2630 I'm debating if I should just listen to entire thing with this guy
Yep, it's pretty interesting
casual
*I can listen to this type of stuff all day incredibly interesting!*
compare this with the shit we had to deal with in school...so what does that say? modern "education" isnt about education, its mostly just tax payer funded daycare and a means of government control
high five, buddy... have you seen this? ua-cam.com/video/zLgXYU1XtBU/v-deo.html
@highmiles 68 goddamn right.
@highmiles 68 yup!!!
it can be dangerous
Star wars is happening somewhere, we just aren't in it.
Its in a galaxy, far far away
@@KingL1nk101 DAAAAAAA
A long long time ago as well
Statistically probably
But we will be participating in Warhammer 40,000 in a few years.
In the grimdark of the distant future. There is ONLY war.
.
.
Warhammer 40k beats the holy shit out of anything ever done in the Star Wars legendarium.
Graham Hancock is a legend..just listen to to his beautifully flowing & incredibly articulate usage of the English language..I love listening to him speaking..could listen to him all day long..& he sure knows his sh#t ! 😉👍
He's not the nerd we deserve, but the nerve we need
You'll find your shambling sub-humans here in the comments section
You shouldn't denegrate yourself like that, Lilly
I stumbled across to this comment. We're evolving.
lol @@Bix12
Ha! Good one, I’ll add to the sub human population I guess
@Andy Bailey She didn't say everybody was. Reading is hard.
1) Were a species with amnesia.
2) Pre-History was actually like Lord of the Rings.
I thought the same thing, 4th age of man.... hell, you could even throw in mythical creatures in there and we killed them off.
Check out the terra papers, dont take it as gospel. It's supposedly hopi religion but it's about aliens having a death star, the genesis program and ishtar saving humans from the flood.
@Will H I just looked up those cynocephaly and their in the terra papers as well, they were the warrior caste to their, basically, overlords of a reptilian race.
@Will H great Wum
Or fucking moron. Let's hope it's the former for your sake
@Nathanfx2006. Yeah, we are always forgetting the difference between 'were' and 'we're'.
@@deeznuts8910 Youre just won the game of life my friend, well played.
I'm today years old when I first heard of Denisovans
And their leader, Dennis.
Four month older than I
Something to brag abt heheh
It’s ok. The guy pretending to be an archaeologist only learned about them a decade ago.
kaerbear 🤦♂️ 👏🏼
I hope Graham takes some comfort in these recent discoveries. He had been proven right about so much. Human History is absolutely fascinating!
scientists from various fields, from archaeologists and historians to physicists and astronomers, have all debunked most of Graham Hancock’s works as ‘pseudoscience’. I think he is a great story teller but ya in the realm of science fiction. He is the academic example of the "trust me bro" guy hahahahha ...
@@pipilwarrior- Spot on. This interview is a good example of his traditional "modus operandi". Pick someone else work, add no real value to it. And splash if full of he's fantastic fairy tales...Then serve it cold to an awe public! LOL 😂😂
While admittedly he has good oratory and charismatic speech.
It's nevertheless a very distant relative of anything that we can call "science".
Graham needs to be on again even though he was just on. Can’t get enough and I enjoy watching every episode over and over.
He needs to be on every qeek
As a Papua New Guinean, I feel very Denisovan right now.
As a Ni-Van i feel the same💀
Show us the drill!!!
@@dexxterseth6043 Aboriginal here and I feel the same
Cave crib tour
Damn...I'm Irish and Scottish and feel totally lost.
Always a pleasure to listen to the both of them . I've been a fan of Graham for as long as he's been writing books . So glad that his health is better now.
I like Mr. G. Hancock his passion and vigorous exploring of human past is quite fascinating and never boring…If we could just turn on TV 📺 and rewind the time and see the real truth…
He's a fantasist complete snakeoil salesman
I remember when you had dozens of choices for informative channels to choose from on cable.
I won an argument at work today about how to make bubbles out of Dawn dish soap. I felt smart, and victorious. Then I watch this, and realize I've failed in life.
craig ledbetter yes you have
We each have our Everest
craig ledbetter
Don’t be so hard on yourself, brother. How many geniuses have you met?
You made a dope song tho
F
“And some things that should not have been forgotten were lost. History became legend. Legend became myth.". Lord of the rings quote but still has relevance in today's world.
tolkien was aware as fuck
Sounds like orc mischief to me
dont forget the lord of the rings was basically about ww2
tolkien was speaking about experinces from his life
Aaron Brandon WWI.
@@aduarte8057 well yeah it was about his experince from ww1 but also what he saw leading up to ww2 as the novel came out in 1937
It's so touching. The first thing we want to know about our cousins is if we found any of their art. So much time gone, and only a pinky to work with, and we're still anxious to meet them.
... and kill them.
Chauvet cave art dates from 30,000 years ago. It's pretty darn good too. Especially considering it predates the invention of writing by about twenty thousand years...
Why are you anxious to meet them? Is your life that weird? No community to mingle with?
@@mamindhive Anxious as in "wanting very much". I and many people are fascinated with the past and would like to know more about it.
I don't know why you're coming heavy in here trying to make that desire seem weird.
@@mamindhive Regular arab commenting nonsense in yt:
That story about the drilled holes was mind blowing, imaging people 40-50,000 years ago had the tools and technology to do that. I'm no archeologist or anthropologist but I have to think this wasn't something that could accomplished through using a drill like an awl, where you're basically turning it like a screwdriver, it had to have used some mechanized technology. It makes me wonder what else they were doing.
Bow drill.
They definitely invented the first drildo
With the speed of the turning of the drill bit, as described, it would prob have to involve some sort of gearing. You would need some kind of mechanical advantage to get those speeds. That coupled with the stationary aspect would make one lean towards some kind of place made for doing that was around, ie a shop of some kind.
Very fascinating information.
@@stope420 maybe they did it just like you make a fire with a sticks and strings. Not that hard i guess no electric drill needed
Building Teotihuacan, Puma Punku, TzinTzunTzan, Egypt, Baal Bek
“How did you travel across Siberia?”
“We took a car”
“WHOA!”
Lmao
🤣
How were they to travel to Siberia, in a space craft, horse and buggy?
@@genoveseLLB Train perhaps?
Siberia has shit roads, and it can be incredibly dangerous - that’s why he said “woah”
@@DD-ws6cu the entirety of Russia has shit roads, not just Siberia.
What an intelligent man. I love listening to him talk
Graham is my favourite guest. I've watched his shows hundreds of times. Fascinating guy.
We are so very lucky to be alive at the same time as Graham Hancock, thank you again & again
Joe: How did you cross Syberia?
Scientist: We took a car.
Joe: Woah!
😂
😂
Joe: Owen Wilson WOW!
"Scientist" is not how you spell "Author".
@@ericmueller6836 Eric "this is not how you spell Author" Mueller.
@@fatgeekproduction7528 hahaha, it is true that this guy isn't a scientist though. He would even say that himself
Can't believe Joe didn't focus on the fixed drill part of the information. That is mind blowing.
Joe can barely hold focus on the words coming out of his own mouth. But if you like that drill hole, you'll love Brien Foerster's channel. The huge drill holes he's found in Peru and Egypt drill a hole right through our narrative of human technological development. A big, scary, mysterious hole! His channel is full of terrifying enigmas that are often simply lying around on the world. Rogan and Hancock are ok, but Brien literally goes there and shows you this stuff right to your face in HD.
Is it, though? Even with a cord drill you can make pretty straight holes.
@@borkwoof696Cord drills? 😂
Is this a joke?
Cord (corded) are powered, the first drills were Bow Drills, these were invented by the Inuit in 5000BC then stabilized and perfected in Egypt in 3000BC, a massive empire of builders with heavy stable tools.
These humans achieved the same, in a cave, 65000 years ago.
This is beyond mind-blowing.
Graham “thick, thick cream” Hancock
Hardy har har!!!! Hehehe so funny!
Eh
Lmao
I was looking for this, thank you!
Your comment is disgusting BUT I liked it because you are creative and we need your funk.
Carry on👮.
I’ve been getting a lot of Graham in my recommendations lately. Hopefully this is a sign that he’ll be back on JRE 🤞🏻
He better..
This guy is so entertaining and informative, what a great guest!
He should have his own UA-cam Channel tbh!
MrMattumbo Is the TBH really necessary? lol.
@@stanknugget To be honest, yes lol
Agreed
@mommatoldme are you going to explain how?... or are you going to keep polishing your history teacher's hammer....
Why u make people do that crap
1st full Rogan podcast in months I’ve wanted to download and listen to.
You're a dull human being if you don't wanna listen to Russel Brand, Kevin Hart or Tom Papa.
Joe is best when he is being curious and worst when he is trying to address politics.
tyler trujillo Russel Brand is too in-space if you ask me. Hart and Papa were entertaining.
This guy was on London Real too check it
Yeah I agree with that☝️person up there,Jones was def the best but all mentioned here were worth watching for sure. JRE is on a roll.✌️
The Denisovans were tall, agile and handled the ball well with good outside shooting. They were also a good defensive team. The Denisovan Nuggets were really good contenders in the NBA.
Well this aged goodhaha
The Neanderthal Basketball Association?
Damn that's racist lol
@@Capodecamper Only you mentioned any race..
all you racist folks will be shocked when you go to Ancestry and find out that you are not 100% anything, but actually EURO ASIAN AFRO AND UNKNOWN DNA
I'm so glad I found Joe, I could drink this up all day long if I only had all the time in the world to burn. Sipping sizes are awesome!
The Denisovans went to Australia
Joe: How?
They took a car
Joe: Wow!
That didnt happen they were talking about the trip in Siberia
Sergiio Van Haren they went to Australia and bred with the aboriginals in Australia and now aboriginals are about 7-8 percent denisovan
@@judealsnih4249 no the aboriginals are the denisova and mated with modern humans
Hahahahaaa!
@Blindi just a joke. But in my opinion. I think they reading the DNA wrong. The 7% is what we have in common with the Neanderthals and devion. If we interbreed with them some of the traits and phenotype would still be around to today.
I highly respect Graham Hancock and his work. His theories and research into ancient civilizations challenge the status quo. Loved Fingerprints of the Gods!
That's confusing. I think you assume that in academia there is a ridgid belief about the past and history but that is not the case. In fact students are encouraged to constantly challenge everything. If you try and get an article published that contains nothing new it'll simply be thrown out. Your thesis for your master's and PhD has to contain new knowledge to count.
@@lukedavis6711 if such is the case, then explain to me why academia dismisses the possible existence of an advanced ancient civilization that was capable of building global pyramidal structures, global polygonic masonry structures, and the like.
@@lukedavis6711 ehhhh thats not true at all, hueyatlaco which has carved and butchered bones which date to 250,000 years ago one of them which is a carved mastodon pelvis and also tools in a 250,000 year old stratum layer, got immediately covered up because of all the reliable dates like uranium series that show that it dated to that time
@@MiThreeSunz Dale Carnegie said "You can’t win an argument. You can’t because if you lose it, you lose it; and if you win it, you lose it. Why? Well, suppose you triumph over the other man and shoot his argument full of holes and prove that he is non compos mentis. Then what? You will feel fine. But what about him? You have made him feel inferior. You have hurt his pride."
With that in mind let me attempt to bridge that impossible gap. The simple answer is that there isn't sufficient evidence to grant that there ever was an advanced ancient civilization. In the same way that I dont have to defend my non belief in unicorns; it's the responsibility of the unicorn believes to provide evidence of that claim. So for almost everyone in academia they don't see Hancocks ideas a threat that challenges their ideas; they litterally see it as disproving unicorns.
Hope that made sense and if you have any questions or wanna push back on anything I've said don't be afraid to talk to me.
@@lukedavis6711 thanks for your engagement. I do appreciate your opinion and position. Per your reference to Dale Carnegie’s quote, my intent is not to win an argument but to find an acceptable middle ground on the subject. Indeed there may not be sufficient empirical evidence currently to prove the existence of an advanced ancient civilization. However those in pursuit of the evidence who posit the possibility are often refuted by academia’s mainstream narrative without open-minded consideration of the possibility. Happy to discuss further. 😊
Thank god for google or Jamie would be unemployed.
😂
he's talented! did you see how fast he pulled up the pic of the green stone bracelet?
I want Jamie's job. I guarantee that I am faster at web searches than he is.
Ray Davison Pull that up Ray - doesn't really sound right 😂
😂🤣😂🤣
This is one scientist I could listen to for hours. He's not a know at all, on the contrary I feel like he understands how much he really doesn't know and understand which lends a helpful hand to his curiosity and wonder at new human discoveries.
In comparison many other scientists speak with so much arrogance there's no room left for what ifs and asking questions...I'm looking at you Neil...
LOL hey mister Potato head he is not a scientist, he is a journalist who writes bullshit that folks with little education find appealing
@@islandbuoy4 so you must really enjoy his work too!
scientists from various fields, from archaeologists and historians to physicists and astronomers, have all debunked most of Graham Hancock’s works as ‘pseudoscience’. I think he is a great story teller but ya in the realm of science fiction. He is the academic example of the "trust me bro" guy hahahahha ...
Hancock is not a scientist. He’s a journalist and writer who is looking for answers about our distant past.
@@Tygram17 he is journalist, the archeologist being stubborn when their field touch by outer party
I would absolutely love to meet Graham Hancock in person. He sounds so knowledgeable in ancient history and so well spoken.
He's a Freemason shill peddling bullshit for the New World Order
The drill hole reminds me of the mysterious drill holes found in Egypt. The Egyptians had some very advanced technology, and supposedly we only just recently (in the last century or two) gained the ability to drill with the same rigor and precision as the ancient Egyptians. It seems to me like there is a technique for drilling that has been lost to time, and it will be interesting to see if we ever figure it out again.
Reminds me the idea that we don't realize how expert our ancestor could be in a specific domain. Thinking that you hadn't a lot of side activities and entertainment to spend time, you would likely spend most of your life time doing the same thing, mastering the same thing, which leads to being incredibly agile and skillfull in a specific area.
Bowdrill with stabiliser
@@Livvvid Simple drilling has never been forgotten, Hancock is an author
They used drivers to screw the holes and certain stone and metals to connect structures, usually wet sand mixed with pebbles to stick into the sandstone and limestone to mix the sand into wet sand sticking it to other types of stone that were shaped or metal that was shaped to reinforce certain structures, usually stone and sand with other types of adhesive and shaped tools that could work the walls and harden the sandstone -JACK
@@ZACHANDJACKSZACHSMAFIA the bronze age didn't start until like 6000 years avo
Graham Hancock is Definitely top 3 best guest/ best recurring guest on the JRE... 🙏🏽
GH is a fascinating researcher and puts so much of our ancient history in a way it's easier to understand.
Kudos to you for bringing guys like this on the show. You might do a lot of self deprecating humor but more people need to be brave enough to have the same curiosity that you do.
One of my top two favorite of Joes guests. I love when this pod gets THIS nerdy.
Glad Joe has such an interest in these subjects, you can tell he's completely fascinated. Great stuff!
I could listen to Mr. Hancock speak for hours
Joe "I wonder if the denisovans tried DMT" Rogan
Joe "Google that Tim" Rogan
Lmao
That's entirely possible.
Everytime I watch a Joe Rogan video I scroll down to look for these comments LOL
Lol! You know that’s what he’s thinking.
I bet that fixed drill contraption was 10x. More precise than a harbor freight drill press
Harbor freight.. anyone would bet that
@@Naughtycow-v8 lol, a very "serene" comment😂
Aliens!
yet it too came with a free torch
HeyDude can’t relate, I’m a snapon guy. Hard flex
Graham: "I think everybody's heard of the denisovans"
Joe: "Alot of people haven't"
Graham: "I guess alot of people haven't"
Jason Glenn yeah but have you heard of DMT?
I had never heard of Denisovans either
@Jordan So much for their "purity"
@Kiera Mubambai That humans evolved from Neanderthals was not only believed by many scientists/experts a few years ago, it was actually taught in schools and suggested in many textbooks. That is why some people still have the misconception that we evolved from Neanderthals. Also, your simpleton status really comes out when you call people retarded for being misinformed or ignorant.
@@riverrock3897 thank you. Was going to write that. I was literally taught that in grade school and had not encountered any information stating otherwise until recently after looking into it all more on my own. Not from any stupidity, just literally misinformation from a "proper" school education.
A have Australian aboriginal ancestry it's always fascinating to hear the pieces of the stories my family has told us about our past fall into place scientifically
I have absolutely no connection to Australia and none of my dna matches do but for some reason I have dna from somewhere near Australia and I find it all pretty interesting
As an archaeologist (used to be) the Clovis first school of thought was/is pretty tight. It was rare to have a professor, for example, acknowledge this finding or entertain a discussion the followed a different line. This is an extremely interesting topic and one that nearly inspires me to get back in the field.
Hancock is well versed in archaeology but his research is considered semi-taboo from the establishment's point of view.
soakedbearrd This is a point of his. Anything against the “establishment” is going to be frowned upon and met with harsh criticism-even made to look silly or outrageous-all to protect a long established narrative.
Coming up through undergrad and then graduate school, it becomes clear that some of these folks that made these discoveries (Clovis) and/or established this school of thought were like rockstars. It seems weird, but these archaeologists were/are idolized in certain circles and have massive followings-it’s very difficult to shake that and change that. People are dedicated, loyal, and resistant to change.
@@SpeedCultureStudios You find that a lot with the sciences, a sort of orthodoxy and stubbornness to go along with it. The established authority on the subject is usually to the respected scientist that laid the foundation. And whos idea cannot be challenged lightly or without sufficient reason.
One Fine Trek whats your personal take / opinion on This guy Graham?
He is still wrong denosivian was confirmed way before 2008.
I like Graham Hancock, he always has something interesting to say, he is very eloquent, and very organized in his thought process. It would be something to be able to sit in a lecture hall and here what he has to say. Praraphrase: America is vast, but Siberia is even more vast. That ride must have been endless. Driving through Montana seems endless, multiply that by how much?
I could listen to this bloke all day
@@I_am_BiG_Al 🖕
@@I_am_BiG_Al who u support dimlow
Human history seriously needs to be rewritten
I did it billymeier.files.wordpress.com/2017/12/we-came-from-the-stars-and-then-from-mars-21-0.pdf
This video didn’t age well
It did, read more 😅
@@onewhostudies6856dude wtf 309 pages. You a writer or did you just find this some where.
Nothing to do with history. This is prehistory. It isn't written and we are unraveling it as we go. We have always known there is more to the story
Joe "I'm 5% neanderthal & 90% DMT" Rogan.
H O N K H O N K Not 10% its 5%, you learn how to do math idiot
Bared thank you haha
Whatever the percentages ,,, spaced out or doped up applies.
H O N K H O N K you said 10 percent😂
I think H O N K H O N K was just joking around lol
Graham has always been Joe’s best, most interesting guest.
Was gonna ask if anyone else wanted to hear this guy keep going. Seems everyone was as captivated as I was. Thanks for introducing this guy Rogen
He's been on the JRE podcast quite a few times over the years.
Graham looks like he could teach a class of middle schoolers about the complex historical milestones of humans, and they would actually understand it all.
I doubt it since it is natural that a "majority" of a certain number of people worth mentioning tend to be very average intellectually, and very non-challenging to status quo opinions. So rather the big challenge for the human pack animal is to admit that the pack is always wrong
he is right now
Love listening to Graham......great writer as well! Our planet is one of so many mysteries.....too bad the education system doesn't start teaching this story to our kids. It would get their minds engaged and perhaps we'd have many more searchers of our past to get this story figured out!
Most of graham stuff is pseudo science nonsense that would easily fit in the fiction section next to Harry Potter
-Whoever Discovered Milk Was Doing Some Weird Shit With Cows😭
Underrated comment. I just picture Joe saying that than saying "Jamie pull that up."
Thicc thicc CREAM
EAST-END JUSTICE HAHAHAHAH Best thing I have ever heard
Agreed! I cant stand the stuff. And when you really wonder about Milk/cows/ dairy, (personally I just don't like milk and am indifferent to cheese) I don't know if it does affect the human body, but I know I don't want to be built like cow! and we should have enough research to prove these facts. their new ideas? or this we just discovered? bulshit it's just not going to work for me. I mean people spend billions of dollars in the diet industry and it's not doing anything for anyone but making them worse, placebo effect.
Not really, probably just watched a calf go to the mothers udder and drink from it...
"....we took a car! "Joe Rogan's eyes light up in amazement, just like the Denisovans when they first seen fire with their own eyes!!
Honestly think joe rogan is 60% denisovan and 40% DMT
I love ❤ that you have such a diversity of
subjects explained and talked about on your podcast. Keep up the great work. Everyone.
"Pull that up Jamie"
Robert A “Pull up your A in Physics Jamie”
Robert A lol I read this right as he asked Jamie to pull up when they discovered the denisovans
More than four decades before this show and even before Algore invented the interwebs, the great prophet Van Halen foretold this very thing in a song..."woah oh oh Jamie is tryin'"
Can we all just take a min to appreciate the work joe has done with his podcasts😂 enough to last till lockdowns over
Can we all take a minute to agree to stop making these “can we all” comments
When you watch guys like Graham, you get the feeling we might actually find out our true historical beginnings.
You might,but the little prognosticator will be wealthier......he makes a lot of money preaching to the "ignorant".....
There are moves afoot for academics to write counter theories to Hancocks "religion".
But not all of it is speculation....for example the former Russian heavyweight boxer is most certainly part neanderthal.....from his appearance you would assume he is as thick as a plank....infact he is said to be very intelligent.(Valuev is his name)
"You can't interbreed with another spiecies"
Liger: hold my beer.
This guys is an absolute legend!!
Brilliant Darts player in his time Denis Ovens.
In all seriousness, I’m completely hooked on Graham’s stuff
To not speak of the former footballer (soccer player) Justin Payne :) :)
We are now entering the Homovapians era.
Homovapians? Is that like homosexuals who vape?
#VapeNation
What do u mean
Why does everyone watch Joe Rogan high?
Its already happened. Ppl are now too vapid to get this joke
I'm from Papua New Guinea and to hear about this in 2022 is certainly mind blowing 🤯
I grew up on a dairy farm and have to agree raw milk is delicious. City folk don't know what they are missing.
It’s the best . It’s illegal too. Best drink of a time is a cold glass of raw milk by superb cows . I’d order that for my last death row meal.
KPW nope
A.C. B. ART ?
Joe, you were right about the discovery of the Denisovans. It was in 2008 that the finger bone was found. The exploration in 1970 was the first of its kind, and its aim was to discover remains of canids
Check Ron Perlman's DNA, I think he's the only actor in Quest for Fire who didn't need makeup.
The Channel true dat 😂
Same for The Island of Dr. Moreau.
@Mike Hanniganyes
YO LIL DONNIE
Stolen Patrice O’Neal joke. But I still gave the thumbs up out of respect for Patrice.
It fascinate me he was so enthusiastic for the milk from cow this is sad how disconnected people are from nature now everything is store bought processed food
yeah. we used to do that too, neighbours farm delivered fresh milk. i didnt like it though, very lumpy and we used to drink it warm. but it was considered a treat. this was in sweden in the 1980s.
I live in Europe in a fairly modern country but I still have a close enough neighbor that have cows that are feed naturally and I don't buy milk from shop Im buying it from him ,every night or morning I know when he milks the cows and I go and get fresh and still warm milk,he uses machines for milking for obvious reasons and one of the biggest is the milk absorb odors (he sell the milk to the local milk factory) and the machine don't let outside odors to be absorbed and like he said it's creamy and it's far more delicious.
I love his message on being more tentative in our beliefs. It constantly flabbergasts me when people believe they know something for sure. for example, if you told someone from the 1940s that you could have a television phone that fits in your pocket by the end of the century, they would have called you crazy and delusional. Makes me wonder how crazy and delusional we are today. For me personally, I knew everything there was to know when I was 18. Since then I have learned how much of it I must have forgotten because I don't know diddly squat. 😅
sat on a beach at 18 realised that all i know is one grain of sand and how arrogant and small i am in the big picture
this guy doesn’t seem to be too bald until you actually look at his head
I am actually completely bald, but I still have a lot of hair - it's irritating
I had to laugh once I look past the perceived hair line on his forehead
Hahaha
He got no hair
Toupée
Modern history is so self effacing and self complementary. We think "they' the old ones were primitive...it's just a false belief that modern school teach stubbornly.
psst.....its because "they" "the old ones" were black people. the only reason any of this information is "lost" is because the offspring of the interbreeding feels threatened by what this man calls "anatomically modern human". think about it. what race of people are the only ones who dont know their history? I can see why they went through all the trouble to hide it. next time you see a fb post about black crime in chicago. just know those peoples ancestors are who he is referring to as the modern human.
@jon david Is this satire, or are you that ignorant?
@@jondavid1256 Yeah you right, white people came from black people somehow. White people are just albino black dudes. But yes i would agree our history isnt "lost", its intentionally kept away from us for whatever reasons.
Self effacing means humble. Self-complimentary is the word you were looking for.
Pb&j-complementary things
You have a nice smile- complimentary.
They didn't have computers or fighter jets. They still used bone tools and animal hide to make things.
Please bring Graham back!!!! He is brilliant 💫
Graham is one smart dude. Always enjoyed his lectures
Thanx Joe!!!
Hancock is awesome, I've listened to both fingerprints and magicians of the gods - really opened my mind. and i totally believe him when he says our conscientiousness is being transmitted from somewhere else.
“Did they leave behind art?”
“Better than that, they left behind objects that are hard to explain.”
I love that 😂😂
Ryan Russell sounds like a possible definition for “art”
Claudio Gomboli my thoughts exactly. Every time I walk into a modern art gallery I’m like “why the hell is there a paint spattered toilet in a plastic box?”
@@turtleinashirt There´s was one "piece of art" in Serralves a local park with "good" and famous art that was somewhat of a big bird cage but half buried everyone thought it was about prison jail that shit but no it was about global warming and reprensented tornadoes, how couldnt have I guessed that xD?
Hard to explain like how most modern art is art.
@@sirclintonify modern art is indeed art, but they are shit art.
Best podcast around.. Nothing else keeps my attention and literally entertains and informs me at the same time. Only podcast that im zeroed in no matter the guest.
How did you cross it? Asks joe with intense curiosity.
Answer, : in a car.
In the back of a Denisovan 😂😂😂
@@hbvtux Niiice!
August Frost yeah but did you use DMT?
maybe he wanted to hear about the Orient Express or something
He expected the answer to be bare chested riding a horse.
My favorite guest on this podcast. Jake the snake was s good one too.
It was like a “Lord of the Rings” type of world back in the days.
Ancient Humans Had Sex With Mystery Species, New DNA Study Shows
“The ancient genomes, one from a Neanderthal and one from a different archaic human group, the Denisovans, were presented on 18 November at a meeting at the Royal Society in London. They suggest that interbreeding went on between the members of several ancient human-like groups living in Europe and Asia more than 30,000 years ago, including an as-yet unknown human ancestor from Asia.”
“What it begins to suggest is that we’re looking at a ‘Lord of the Rings’-type world - that there were many hominid populations,” says Mark Thomas, an evolutionary geneticist at University College London who was at the meeting but was not involved in the work.”
“The first Neanderthal and the Denisovan genome sequences revolutionized the study of ancient human history, not least because they showed that these groups interbred with anatomically modern humans, contributing to the genetic diversity of many people alive today.
All humans whose ancestry originates outside of Africa owe about 2% of their genome to Neanderthals; and certain populations living in Oceania, such as Papua New Guineans and Australian Aboriginals, got about 4% of their DNA from interbreeding between their ancestors and Denisovans, who are named after the cave in Siberia’s Altai Mountains where they were discovered. The cave contains remains deposited there between 30,000 and 50,000 years ago.”
m.huffpost.com/us/entry/4302031
“Approximately 2-4% of genetic material in human populations outside Africa is derived from Neanderthals who interbred with anatomically modern humans. Recent studies have shown that this Neanderthal DNA is depleted around functional genomic regions; this has been suggested to be a consequence of harmful epistatic interactions between human and Neanderthal alleles. However, using published estimates of Neanderthal inbreeding and the distribution of mutational fitness effects, we infer that Neanderthals had at least 40% lower fitness than humans on average; this increased load predicts the reduction in Neanderthal introgression around genes without the need to invoke epistasis. We also predict a residual Neanderthal mutational load in non-Africans, leading to a fitness reduction of at least 0.5%. This effect of Neanderthal admixture has been left out of previous debate on mutation load differences between Africans and non-Africans. We also show that if many deleterious mutations are recessive, the Neanderthal admixture fraction could increase over time due to the protective effect of Neanderthal haplotypes against deleterious alleles that arose recently in the human population. This might partially explain why so many organisms retain gene flow from other species and appear to derive adaptive benefits from introgression”.
www.genetics.org/content/203/2/881
Let's keep hollywoodian and similar postmodern culture pollutions our of it though...
Could be the inspiration for elves,orcs dwarfs,goblins etc....just saying
please bring back this guy i like it
*Googles Denisovans immediately after watching this*
And now you are MORE confused than before. uh ?
Sad
Mitch Williams Google homo capensis, that thing had a much larger brain than ours.
There was a really good TV show on BBC in the UK about 5 years ago that redesigned like 4 species of human in cluding them, it done it in like a 3D sort of way where they reconstructed the bodies with fake bones and how they'd walk and what they looked like and then showd like animated clips on them hunting and stuff. I cant remember if it was one episode or 1 episode per night for a few nights i also think it was done live on TV.
Why do they lie to us about our History? Never will make sence to me how much resources have been used to suppress facts and divert attention from the Truth.
Why does he look and sound like an older version of Tom Hiddleston.
my guy i can’t unsee that now
Tom Hiddlefather
From an engineering perspective; specifically regarding the so-called green stone and the stable drill, they obviously had something that was along the lines of a vice too. Probably with a v notch in it as well, in order to attain the required level of grip of the said object.
It furthermore begs the question: did the vice move towards a stationary positioned, albeit spinning drill of sorts, or vice versa?
There just weren't dremmels back them and would have thought long and hard about the task in hand. Kudos to them...and some!
How is the year of the execution of the presumed bracelet done?
By what evidence what it know there was another piece to the bracelet what was dangling from the hole. The evidence does not show the other supposed piece to it. Currently the bracelet looks broken and appears cannot be worn as it is, so it seems speculative it was even a C shaped type of bracelet.
America Before is a Great Read..Graham describes amazing History and very personal accounts of his journey on amazing discoveries of our ancient past.
I love seeing some of these alternative ideas get coverage, Grahams really helped expose the dogma of archaeology hopefully people will keep pushing for better research and when the facts are presented not shame someone cause it dont fit their own agenda like has been done for decades
This.
Absolutely agree.
In this particular case though, the Denisovans are the first hominins identified as a new species on a genetic basis and their DNA has been mapped and added to our markers. We now know how much Denisovan DNA we still retain.
It's fully acknowledged and accepted by science.
This information give me goosebumps and butterflies. It is incredibly fascinating to know that we weren't the only ones around and that we have a rich historic past contrary to what we are led to believe by established academics.
I live near those caves in about 250 km. I traveled there.
Nice
Круто, как там?
Is he right that it takes three days of driving from Novosibirsk to the cave? Google says approx. 500 kilometeres
@@henrikson2902 well... if driving without stops u can get there in just one day. But there is a slight problem: it's not like we have highways here, one lane each way so u can get stuck behind some crappy truck. But no, no way it takes 3 days of driving.
Ivan Andreev Do you partake in the consumption of the thick, thick cream?
The bracelet is beautiful. An ancient drill: The mind reels. 🤔😶