Dr. Ed Barnhart
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But if you looked at a map of Mexico and Central America, where Costa Rica and Panama and Nicaragua are now, that would look nothing like what it looks like right now. If there was way less water in the oceans and it was all frozen up.
Oh, really?
Oh, really?
Oh, really?
Okay. So they kept going all the way down, because the first... The first evidence of people are, like, in South South America. Am I right there? Like, around Peru? I mean, that's what the archaeology is telling us right now.
Okay. So they kept going all the way down, because the first... The first evidence of people are, like, in South South America. Am I right there? Like, around Peru? I mean, that's what the archaeology is telling us right now.
Okay. So they kept going all the way down, because the first... The first evidence of people are, like, in South South America. Am I right there? Like, around Peru? I mean, that's what the archaeology is telling us right now.
Um, going back to the, the younger, driest hypothesis, the, when I, one of the most compelling things about that idea to me is the, when you compare it to, when you look at like things in Egypt, like the great pyramid, and you look at how crazy that thing is and how hard it would have been the, the.
Um, going back to the, the younger, driest hypothesis, the, when I, one of the most compelling things about that idea to me is the, when you compare it to, when you look at like things in Egypt, like the great pyramid, and you look at how crazy that thing is and how hard it would have been the, the.
Um, going back to the, the younger, driest hypothesis, the, when I, one of the most compelling things about that idea to me is the, when you compare it to, when you look at like things in Egypt, like the great pyramid, and you look at how crazy that thing is and how hard it would have been the, the.
the idea that makes it so compelling is that maybe it's possible that human beings were more technologically advanced. And then there was some sort of like cataclysm that like wiped them out. And then we had to like hit a reset on humanity where we kind of like knocked us back to the stone age and we had to restart.
the idea that makes it so compelling is that maybe it's possible that human beings were more technologically advanced. And then there was some sort of like cataclysm that like wiped them out. And then we had to like hit a reset on humanity where we kind of like knocked us back to the stone age and we had to restart.
the idea that makes it so compelling is that maybe it's possible that human beings were more technologically advanced. And then there was some sort of like cataclysm that like wiped them out. And then we had to like hit a reset on humanity where we kind of like knocked us back to the stone age and we had to restart.
And that explains how like it goes from maybe the pyramids really, really old and then future civilizations came and they weren't as sophisticated. And then they started drawing hieroglyphs on like these polished granite boxes and stuff like that. And like inside the pyramids and said, oh, started putting their dead people in there and saying there were tombs.
And that explains how like it goes from maybe the pyramids really, really old and then future civilizations came and they weren't as sophisticated. And then they started drawing hieroglyphs on like these polished granite boxes and stuff like that. And like inside the pyramids and said, oh, started putting their dead people in there and saying there were tombs.
And that explains how like it goes from maybe the pyramids really, really old and then future civilizations came and they weren't as sophisticated. And then they started drawing hieroglyphs on like these polished granite boxes and stuff like that. And like inside the pyramids and said, oh, started putting their dead people in there and saying there were tombs.
When you look inside of it, it's like, how do you explain all these crazy shafts that doesn't look like human beings are meant to be in here at all? Like, how did you move these giant 2000 ton blocks, 500 miles? To me, I'm really curious. I talked to Flint Dibble on here. He's the only other academic archaeologist I've talked to. I watched that episode. Yeah. I liked him.
When you look inside of it, it's like, how do you explain all these crazy shafts that doesn't look like human beings are meant to be in here at all? Like, how did you move these giant 2000 ton blocks, 500 miles? To me, I'm really curious. I talked to Flint Dibble on here. He's the only other academic archaeologist I've talked to. I watched that episode. Yeah. I liked him.
When you look inside of it, it's like, how do you explain all these crazy shafts that doesn't look like human beings are meant to be in here at all? Like, how did you move these giant 2000 ton blocks, 500 miles? To me, I'm really curious. I talked to Flint Dibble on here. He's the only other academic archaeologist I've talked to. I watched that episode. Yeah. I liked him.
He made some really strong cases for some things. But the Egypt stuff, he just had blinders on about the Egypt thing. I don't think he was open-minded about some of the Egypt evidence, including these vases. Yeah. But but yeah, the Egypt thing is really interesting.