Ancient Apocalypse (2022) s01e06 Episode Script
America's Lost Civilization
1
[Graham] When did humans
first reach the Americas?
If you were at school
any time between roughly 1960 and 2010,
chances are you were taught this story.
That during the last Ice Age,
bands of hunter-gatherers
passed over a land bridge
connecting Asia to North America,
where the Bering Strait is now.
And that somewhere around
13,000 years ago as the ice melted,
they migrated south
into the American Heartland.
Archaeology was convinced
that the Americas
were not inhabited by human beings
until about 13,000 years ago.
This was a dominant paradigm
in the study of ancient America.
But it was wrong.
The old notion
has been completely overturned
by the discovery
of much older archaeological remains.
Fossilized human footprints
have been found in the New Mexican desert
that date to 22,000 years ago,
the height of the last Ice Age.
And though still contested,
evidence for an even earlier
human presence
dating back as much as 130,000 years
has recently begun to emerge.
It's high time
to reconsider the whole timeline
of the human story in the Americas.
[audience applause]
Very little is left
of the ancient North American monuments.
More than 90% of the structures
that were documented in the 19th century
are now completely gone,
and of the less than 10% that remain,
the majority have been
vandalized and destroyed.
[birds chirping]
It's disturbing to imagine
what precious secrets of the ancients
were lost in colonial land grabs,
and in the systematic crushing
of indigenous beliefs,
traditions, and monuments that followed.
The few sites that survive
may be critical in establishing
the possibility of a lost civilization.
Sites like this one,
known as Poverty Point.
It gets its somewhat unusual name
from the plantation
that used to be on this spot,
just 15 miles west
of the Mississippi River
in northeastern Louisiana.
For a long time,
this was thought to be just a scenic hill
rising up out of the farmland.
But this isn't just a hill.
Archaeologists no longer dispute
that it's an immense
man-made earthen structure,
today known simply as Mound A.
And when the surrounding area
was found to be littered
with clay artifacts and human figures
archaeologists realized that Mound A
is part of a much larger ancient complex.
Climbing Mound A
is really worth the effort.
You get a perspective up here
that you don't get down at ground level.
What I notice immediately
is how flat this land is.
If you remove the trees,
and I believe the ancients did that,
you have a perfectly flat horizon
in 360 degrees all around you.
But this is not some kind of
defensive structure. So what is it?
Even from above,
it's hard to get the full picture.
But we have a good idea
of the original layout of the site.
And it's like nothing else
from the ancient world.
Mound A likely
originally stood as high as 100 feet,
anchoring a 43-acre plaza.
With six concentric ridges,
each perhaps as tall as six feet
and leveled off at the top
creating a half circle with a diameter
of three quarters of a mile,
broken up by a series of aisles,
like some kind of amphitheater.
And scattered nearby are no less
than six massive man-made mounds
labeled by archaeologists,
simply "A" through "F".
Poverty Point is one of the largest
and most complex ancient sites
in North America.
Its oldest sections
date back to 3,700 years ago
long before its builders
farmed the land or kept livestock.
And the ancient Americans of Poverty Point
then spent the next 600 years
continuously developing
and improving the site.
Why?
No documents or traditions have survived
to tell us
what Poverty Point's purpose was.
So archaeologists are left guessing.
Site manager
and historian, Mark Brink Jr.,
is the first to admit
that mainstream archaeology
hasn't been able to confirm much
about this mysterious site.
Tell me everything
you know about this site.
So Mound A is massive,
the largest mound constructed
in the Western Hemisphere at the time,
which shows you that Poverty Point
was the center of something truly big.
It suggests, then,
a strong motive behind it.
Do you have any thoughts
on what that motive could be?
We really don't know.
It was a ceremonial center
for some reason, but we don't know yet.
- Can we add the "yet"?
- Yeah.
We do have an idea
as to why it was built here
and not someplace else,
and it has to do with an even more
ancient site about two miles to the south.
As we go south from Poverty Point
we come to a place
called Lower Jackson Mound.
And the three principal mounds
of Poverty Point
are lined up precisely north-south
with Lower Jackson Mound.
And Lower Jackson Mound
is much older than Poverty Point.
It dates to 3500 BC, 5,500 years old.
And yet, the makers of Poverty Point
were not only aware of it,
but they used it
as the anchor of their whole site.
Clearly the ancient builders
understood geography
and how to
orient structures to true north.
But there's something else
going on here at Poverty Point
that archaeologists
don't like to acknowledge
encoded in its unique geometry.
You see, the flat horizon all around
allows you to observe
the rising and the setting of the Sun
and the Moon and the stars.
This is a place for astronomers.
Most of us are not aware of this today.
Why should we be?
We live in light-polluted cities.
We can hardly see the skies at all,
but if you were the ancients
and you studied the skies,
you would notice this phenomenon.
The Sun has
its stopping points on the horizon.
We call them the solstices.
The Sun stops still
on the summer solstice,
stays roughly in the same place
for two or three days,
and then starts to move back
like a pendulum swing along the horizon.
Same on the winter solstice.
Archaeoastronomer William Romain
discovered that these important dates,
the solstices, respectively the longest
and shortest days of the year,
were actually marked at Poverty Point
by a skillfully designed
system of alignments.
If you stand at the eastern edge
of the oval space
at the heart of the plaza,
the summer solstice sunset
falls directly in line with Mound B,
the oldest mound.
And from the same vantage point,
the winter solstice sunset
falls directly behind Mound E.
Move over to the western edge
of that same inner oval,
and you'll find that the summer solstice
Sun rises directly over Mound C,
while the winter solstice Sun
rises directly over Mound D.
And if you gaze directly west
through the center of the plaza
on either the spring or fall equinox,
the Sun appears to roll down
the northern edge of Mound A
before sinking below the horizon.
Poverty Point may have
more intriguing structures
designed to track changes in the sky.
In one corner of the site,
archaeologists found
a large circle of holes
marked today by restored white posts.
We don't know how tall the original posts
in those holes would have been,
but in its overall conception and design,
it reminds me of the prehistoric Woodhenge
excavated near Stonehenge in England.
What's unique about Poverty Point
is how many woodhenges it boasts.
These circles,
how many of them are there here?
Well, there's probably
at least 40 of them.
Scale? Across
So, some of them are pretty small,
maybe 60 feet in diameter,
some are larger,
200 or more feet in diameter,
but the dates on these vary wildly.
[Graham] They were created
over the course of hundreds of years,
spanning generations of ancient Americans,
who kept tweaking
their position and size over time.
I'm reminded of Malta
where the megalith builders
kept changing
the orientation of their temples
to face the star Sirius,
culminating with Ġgantija.
And of Göbekli Tepe in Turkey
where the ancients
built a series of temples
over a period of about a thousand years,
also, I believe,
to track the movement of the stars.
These are all massive projects,
featuring structures repeatedly rebuilt
and shifted in their orientation
over generations.
Could the multiple post circles
of Poverty Point
also have been designed
to track something in the heavens?
Sophisticated knowledge, true science
is evidenced by the geometry
and the astronomy of the site.
Yet mainstream archaeologists
are reluctant
to recognize astronomy of any kind
in Poverty Point's wood circles.
- Here, I don't think they make sense.
- Mmm-hmm.
Why should the people
who lived here and created this place,
why should they
not have been interested in the sky?
- I'm not saying they weren't.
- No.
I bet they were.
Okay. So what do you think
the circles were used for?
We don't know. We don't know yet
if they were used
for astronomy purposes or not.
[Graham] Yeah.
Ancient cultures
were very fixated upon the sky.
That notion isn't in itself disputed,
but archaeology
tends to regard it as irrelevant.
I think that the reason is, in part,
because most archaeologists
just don't understand astronomy at all.
It's not what they've been taught to do,
and secondly,
they regard it as an intrusion
into their domain by outsiders.
I'm not claiming
that Poverty Point was created
by the lost advanced civilization
I'm looking for.
But I'm interested in the origins
of the sophisticated
astronomy and geometry
that were deployed here.
There's evidence
that advanced architectural,
Earth-measuring and astronomical knowledge
was inherited from earlier times,
but inherited from whom
and how much earlier?
I'm not saying
the ancient Americans living here
weren't capable
of discovering and incorporating
these astronomical observations
into their sites by themselves.
On the contrary.
I think we've passed the point
where we should regard
the Native American cultures
as simply hunter-gatherers.
They were much more complicated than that
and much more sophisticated.
And their vision
of Earth's place in the cosmos
expressed by the alignments
at Poverty Point
is essentially the same vision
that we've seen in other ancient sites
around the world,
sharing the same focus
on the sacred connection
between Earth and sky.
Poverty Point is just
one of 800 Mound Builder sites
surviving across the state of Louisiana.
While in North America as a whole,
out of an original estimated total
of one million mounds,
around 100,000 still remain.
Amongst these,
the most spectacular example of a mound
expressing the sacred connection
between Earth and sky,
lies about 600 miles to the northeast
of Poverty Point in Ohio,
a site that may just hold the key
to understanding what happened
to the lost civilization
I've been searching for.
Perched atop a densely forested ridge
lies a stunning example
of an effigy mound.
A gigantic earthwork
shaped into the form of a living creature.
In this case, a 400-meter-long snake.
It's called Serpent Mound.
Starting from its coiled tail,
seven bends in its body
wind their way to the head,
where gaping jaws appear
about to engulf a separate oval earthwork.
Even from the air,
it's hard to make out all the detail.
But by taking into account new discoveries
about its original construction
and stripping away the trees,
we can reveal what the effigy
would have looked like in its prime.
Serpent Mound extends
more than quarter of a mile
from its jaws in the northwest
to its tail on the southwestern corner
of the hilltop.
Originally, there was a circle
of standing stones by the head,
function unknown.
And just behind the head,
two decorative extensions,
function, likewise, unknown.
Serpent Mound
is a remarkable, graceful structure,
one that instills wonder
in those who visit.
It's clearly an ancient
and mysterious place.
But who built the huge effigy, and why?
The sign of the site will tell you
it was built around 1000 AD
by an indigenous people
referred to as the Fort Ancient Culture.
But the sign, like so many
of these historical markers, is wrong.
Truth is that nobody really knows
how old Serpent Mound is.
That date of 1000 AD
was based on just two
of the organic samples
taken from parts of the mound
that may have been later reconstructed,
because another archaeological survey
found samples from the serpent's base
dating back to 321 BC.
The evidence that Serpent Mound was
the subject of a restoration
is very clear.
I suggest that these restorations
go back deep into the past.
There's just one problem
with investigating my theory.
The administrators of Serpent Mound
have decided to ban me.
We've made repeated efforts
to get permission to film here,
but they denied us that permission.
On what I regard as ideological
and indeed rather personal grounds,
let me read from their email.
"Our role is to ensure that
Serpent Mound's integrity
and preservation,
both physically
and in its historical interpretation,
are maintained."
"Because the presenter
of this series, Graham Hancock,
proposes a theory
and story that do not align
with what we know
to be true about Serpent Mound,
your request is declined."
A correct word for this so-called mission
to protect the interpretation of the site
is, of course, censorship.
And what more effective way
for archaeologists to censor
and restrain and crush opposing views
than to deny access
to archaeological sites?
It's by no means
the first time this has happened.
This unfortunately
is systematic and consistent behavior
amongst archaeologists.
They do practice censorship.
They practice censorship by ridiculing
and insulting alternative ideas.
So what exactly is it
in this theory of mine
that's deemed so objectionable?
Quite simply,
it's because I dare to suggest
that the idea
behind the design of Serpent Mound
goes back to a time
much earlier than 300 BC,
more than 10,000 years earlier
to the end of the last Ice Age.
And for me, the proof of this lies in
one of its most stunning attributes,
one that mainstream archaeologists
don't like to acknowledge.
Because again, it involves the sky.
If you overfly Serpent Mound
on the summer solstice around June 21st,
you'll immediately notice
that the jaws of the serpent
are aligned almost directly
to the point where the Sun sets.
So this is what happens at sunset
on the summer solstice.
You see the head of the serpent,
it seems to be seeking out the Sun,
and then as the Sun begins to go down,
you get it more clearly,
this beautiful alignment
between Earth and sky,
then the majesty of the site
just overwhelms you.
It's obvious to anybody today
that that is what the head
of the great serpent is pointing at.
But that idea was ignored and rejected
by archaeology for a very long time.
The organization, which runs the site,
has allowed an enormous number of trees
to grow up around the head of the serpent.
I think they believe
it provides shade to tourists.
But what it does
is it limits that massive impact
of seeing the head of the serpent
pointing directly at the setting Sun.
Jeff Wilson, who owns much of the property
next to the ancient effigy,
is the president of an independent group
called The Friends of Serpent Mound,
dedicated to preserving and promoting this
and other Native American sites.
Clearly Serpent Mound
is very important to you.
Yes, it's very personal to me.
It's one of the most spiritual places
I've ever visited.
It's a sacred place.
When you encounter it,
you walk away feeling changed
by the experience when you come here.
It's the most amazing
archaeoastronomy site in North America,
- bar none.
- Yes.
What makes it so is the recent
confirmation that the Mound Builders
cleverly incorporated a whole series
of sky ground alignments
into Serpent Mound's design.
The center of the second bend
behind the head
points eastward to where the Sun rises
on the summer solstice,
and the center of the following bend
targets the sunrise
on the spring and fall equinoxes
when night and day are of equal length.
While the center of the final bend
is aimed where the Sun rises
on the winter solstice,
the shortest day of the year.
As for that intricately coiled tail,
if you draw a straight line
from its exact center
through the hinge of the serpent's jaws,
you'll find it's precisely oriented
to true astronomical north.
To construct it and to figure out
where all these astronomical alignments
that are incorporated into its design
is just an amazing sheer work of genius
It's a work of genius, yeah.
from the prehistoric Native Americans.
Yeah. And that genius
is easily overlooked, actually.
Is archaeology taking
the astronomy of this site seriously?
Are enough archaeologists
taking it seriously?
I don't think so, no.
Um
There's very few people that even
pay attention to it or consider it.
It's as though mainstream archaeologists
want us to believe
that all these astronomical alignments
happen by accident.
I think it's fair to say that there were
people in ancient Native America
with advanced surveying,
geometrical and astronomical skills,
and they put those skills to work
in the creation of enormous monuments,
most of which have
tragically been swept away.
These precise solar alignments
manifested on such a gigantic scale
represent an extraordinary achievement
for hunter-gatherers
living in the 3rd century BC.
But there's evidence suggesting
that the ridge where Serpent Mound sits
was considered sacred
for thousands of years before that.
Every single culture
that ever existed here,
dating back to the last Ice Age,
left cultural remains at Serpent Mound.
What it says to me,
this continuous human presence here,
it kind of suggests to me that the site's
been sacred for a very long time.
Right.
It seems to me
that should be taken into account
in the archaeological narrative.
It should be part of the story
of Serpent Mound.
Yes.
Archaeologists have been wrong before
and they could be wrong again.
All in all, it's obvious that the origins
of Serpent Mound are complicated.
What if 321 BC doesn't mark the year
of Serpent Mound's construction,
but one of its many reconstructions?
Let's not forget
we're dealing with a serpent here,
and that serpents are creatures renowned
for their ability to change their skin.
It's a possibility actually suggested
by Serpent Mound's unique alignment.
You see, it isn't quite perfect.
Today the summer solstice Sun,
as viewed from Serpent Mound,
actually sets about two degrees
off the exact center of the jaws.
Seems close enough to the naked eye.
But it's hard to believe that the people
who conceived of and created
this sophisticated effigy mound,
tracking all those calendar moments,
would go to all this trouble
and not get it exactly right.
I think they did get it right.
It all has to do with the way the Earth
shifts on its axis over the millennia.
In a phenomenon long known to astronomers
who refer to it as
the obliquity of the ecliptic.
To put it in simple terms,
the Earth, as we know,
is tilted on its axis,
but that tilt is not fixed and constant.
It changes over a 41,000-year cycle.
It changes roughly
two-and-a-half degrees over that cycle.
It nods back and forward,
and that affects the rising position
of the Sun on the summer solstice.
Instead of asking why the serpent's jaws
aren't perfectly aligned
to the summer solstice sunset,
what if we asked a different question?
When, if one takes into account
this obliquity of the ecliptic,
did the gaping jaws
and the setting Sun line up perfectly?
Turns out it wasn't a thousand years ago,
or even 2,300 years ago,
when archaeologists insist
Serpent Mound was first constructed.
The serpent's mouth
was exactly centered on the Sun
around 12,800 years ago
at the end of the last Ice Age,
when the ridge on which
the serpent was built
itself occupied
an extraordinarily significant spot.
At the very peak of the Ice Age,
around 20,000 years ago,
much of North America was covered
by an immense ice cap over a mile deep.
Today, Ohio's Serpent Mound Valley
is a forest-covered wilderness,
but let's not look at it as it is now.
Let's look at it as it was
during the last Ice Age.
This very valley,
where the great serpent was constructed,
actually marks the furthest south
that the North American ice sheet reached.
The giant ice cliffs
rising just by this ridge
would have looked like
something out of a fantasy novel.
To the people
who lived through this period,
it must have seemed that
some benign magical power was at work.
But any celebration of the halt of the ice
would have been short-lived,
because sometime around 12,800 years ago,
when the serpent was perfectly aligned
with the summer solstice,
something huge was happening
all over the planet.
[thunderclap]
Something apocalyptic
called the Younger Dryas.
It was a period of radical climate change
and rising sea levels.
Humanity survived, but barely.
I find it intriguing, by means of its
alignment to the summer solstice sunset,
that Serpent Mound serves
as a signpost, a date stamp,
drawing our attention to the skies
of 12,800 years ago,
a time when we know
there was a global cataclysm
big enough to have destroyed
an advanced civilization.
Again, I'm reminded of Göbekli Tepe,
where figures of creatures carved
into one of the most spectacular pillars
seem to depict the position
of the stars at the summer solstice
during the time of the Younger Dryas.
It's no accident in my view
that the serpent's solstitial alignment
also speaks to that same
cataclysmic epoch.
But why a serpent?
Of the greatest relevance, I think,
are numerous Native American
myths and traditions
in which giant serpents are directly
associated with cataclysmic Earth changes.
There's an ancient legend of the Iroquois
whose domain at the height of their power
extended deep into Ohio.
The villain of the legend
is a giant horned serpent.
Long ago, a village was plagued
by a great serpent
who dwelt in a nearby lake.
So the great spirit in the sky
sent down a hero to defeat him.
In a vicious battle,
bolts of lightning struck the serpent,
the sound shook the Earth,
and the flashes were so bright
that the people shielded their eyes,
covered their ears, and hid in fear.
The very constellations
were dislodged from the night sky
and came crashing to Earth
with a ferocious blast and scorching heat.
One star fell into the lake,
wounding the horned serpent.
As the great serpent
thrashed its tail in pain,
it sent 100-foot waves
crashing through the valleys
in a series of colossal floods.
Most of the tribe didn't survive,
but the serpent was driven away.
We've already seen such serpent imagery
in ancient monuments all over the world.
On the temples in Mexico,
dedicated to Quetzalcoatl,
the feathered serpent,
carved into the temple
of Ġgantija on Malta,
and raining down from the skies
on the pillars of Göbekli Tepe.
It's a powerful symbol
found at sites
that invite us to look to the heavens.
Why?
I think this Iroquois legend
has more than a kernel of truth to it.
Perhaps the stars,
or something resembling stars,
did fall to Earth.
Perhaps there was
great flooding afterwards,
part of those earthshaking cataclysms
of the Younger Dryas.
If the original version of Serpent Mound
was designed sometime around
the end of the last Ice Age, as I believe,
then perhaps it was intended
to carry a message to the future,
a warning even, as to what caused
that apocalyptic series of events
around 12,800 years ago,
a warning to look to the heavens
for stars falling from the sky.
A quarter of the way around the Earth,
there's evidence that
other ancient peoples also lived in terror
of just such a threat from above,
and took steps to protect themselves
deep in the heart of Cappadocia
in modern-day Turkey,
which is where I'm heading next.
[Graham] When did humans
first reach the Americas?
If you were at school
any time between roughly 1960 and 2010,
chances are you were taught this story.
That during the last Ice Age,
bands of hunter-gatherers
passed over a land bridge
connecting Asia to North America,
where the Bering Strait is now.
And that somewhere around
13,000 years ago as the ice melted,
they migrated south
into the American Heartland.
Archaeology was convinced
that the Americas
were not inhabited by human beings
until about 13,000 years ago.
This was a dominant paradigm
in the study of ancient America.
But it was wrong.
The old notion
has been completely overturned
by the discovery
of much older archaeological remains.
Fossilized human footprints
have been found in the New Mexican desert
that date to 22,000 years ago,
the height of the last Ice Age.
And though still contested,
evidence for an even earlier
human presence
dating back as much as 130,000 years
has recently begun to emerge.
It's high time
to reconsider the whole timeline
of the human story in the Americas.
[audience applause]
Very little is left
of the ancient North American monuments.
More than 90% of the structures
that were documented in the 19th century
are now completely gone,
and of the less than 10% that remain,
the majority have been
vandalized and destroyed.
[birds chirping]
It's disturbing to imagine
what precious secrets of the ancients
were lost in colonial land grabs,
and in the systematic crushing
of indigenous beliefs,
traditions, and monuments that followed.
The few sites that survive
may be critical in establishing
the possibility of a lost civilization.
Sites like this one,
known as Poverty Point.
It gets its somewhat unusual name
from the plantation
that used to be on this spot,
just 15 miles west
of the Mississippi River
in northeastern Louisiana.
For a long time,
this was thought to be just a scenic hill
rising up out of the farmland.
But this isn't just a hill.
Archaeologists no longer dispute
that it's an immense
man-made earthen structure,
today known simply as Mound A.
And when the surrounding area
was found to be littered
with clay artifacts and human figures
archaeologists realized that Mound A
is part of a much larger ancient complex.
Climbing Mound A
is really worth the effort.
You get a perspective up here
that you don't get down at ground level.
What I notice immediately
is how flat this land is.
If you remove the trees,
and I believe the ancients did that,
you have a perfectly flat horizon
in 360 degrees all around you.
But this is not some kind of
defensive structure. So what is it?
Even from above,
it's hard to get the full picture.
But we have a good idea
of the original layout of the site.
And it's like nothing else
from the ancient world.
Mound A likely
originally stood as high as 100 feet,
anchoring a 43-acre plaza.
With six concentric ridges,
each perhaps as tall as six feet
and leveled off at the top
creating a half circle with a diameter
of three quarters of a mile,
broken up by a series of aisles,
like some kind of amphitheater.
And scattered nearby are no less
than six massive man-made mounds
labeled by archaeologists,
simply "A" through "F".
Poverty Point is one of the largest
and most complex ancient sites
in North America.
Its oldest sections
date back to 3,700 years ago
long before its builders
farmed the land or kept livestock.
And the ancient Americans of Poverty Point
then spent the next 600 years
continuously developing
and improving the site.
Why?
No documents or traditions have survived
to tell us
what Poverty Point's purpose was.
So archaeologists are left guessing.
Site manager
and historian, Mark Brink Jr.,
is the first to admit
that mainstream archaeology
hasn't been able to confirm much
about this mysterious site.
Tell me everything
you know about this site.
So Mound A is massive,
the largest mound constructed
in the Western Hemisphere at the time,
which shows you that Poverty Point
was the center of something truly big.
It suggests, then,
a strong motive behind it.
Do you have any thoughts
on what that motive could be?
We really don't know.
It was a ceremonial center
for some reason, but we don't know yet.
- Can we add the "yet"?
- Yeah.
We do have an idea
as to why it was built here
and not someplace else,
and it has to do with an even more
ancient site about two miles to the south.
As we go south from Poverty Point
we come to a place
called Lower Jackson Mound.
And the three principal mounds
of Poverty Point
are lined up precisely north-south
with Lower Jackson Mound.
And Lower Jackson Mound
is much older than Poverty Point.
It dates to 3500 BC, 5,500 years old.
And yet, the makers of Poverty Point
were not only aware of it,
but they used it
as the anchor of their whole site.
Clearly the ancient builders
understood geography
and how to
orient structures to true north.
But there's something else
going on here at Poverty Point
that archaeologists
don't like to acknowledge
encoded in its unique geometry.
You see, the flat horizon all around
allows you to observe
the rising and the setting of the Sun
and the Moon and the stars.
This is a place for astronomers.
Most of us are not aware of this today.
Why should we be?
We live in light-polluted cities.
We can hardly see the skies at all,
but if you were the ancients
and you studied the skies,
you would notice this phenomenon.
The Sun has
its stopping points on the horizon.
We call them the solstices.
The Sun stops still
on the summer solstice,
stays roughly in the same place
for two or three days,
and then starts to move back
like a pendulum swing along the horizon.
Same on the winter solstice.
Archaeoastronomer William Romain
discovered that these important dates,
the solstices, respectively the longest
and shortest days of the year,
were actually marked at Poverty Point
by a skillfully designed
system of alignments.
If you stand at the eastern edge
of the oval space
at the heart of the plaza,
the summer solstice sunset
falls directly in line with Mound B,
the oldest mound.
And from the same vantage point,
the winter solstice sunset
falls directly behind Mound E.
Move over to the western edge
of that same inner oval,
and you'll find that the summer solstice
Sun rises directly over Mound C,
while the winter solstice Sun
rises directly over Mound D.
And if you gaze directly west
through the center of the plaza
on either the spring or fall equinox,
the Sun appears to roll down
the northern edge of Mound A
before sinking below the horizon.
Poverty Point may have
more intriguing structures
designed to track changes in the sky.
In one corner of the site,
archaeologists found
a large circle of holes
marked today by restored white posts.
We don't know how tall the original posts
in those holes would have been,
but in its overall conception and design,
it reminds me of the prehistoric Woodhenge
excavated near Stonehenge in England.
What's unique about Poverty Point
is how many woodhenges it boasts.
These circles,
how many of them are there here?
Well, there's probably
at least 40 of them.
Scale? Across
So, some of them are pretty small,
maybe 60 feet in diameter,
some are larger,
200 or more feet in diameter,
but the dates on these vary wildly.
[Graham] They were created
over the course of hundreds of years,
spanning generations of ancient Americans,
who kept tweaking
their position and size over time.
I'm reminded of Malta
where the megalith builders
kept changing
the orientation of their temples
to face the star Sirius,
culminating with Ġgantija.
And of Göbekli Tepe in Turkey
where the ancients
built a series of temples
over a period of about a thousand years,
also, I believe,
to track the movement of the stars.
These are all massive projects,
featuring structures repeatedly rebuilt
and shifted in their orientation
over generations.
Could the multiple post circles
of Poverty Point
also have been designed
to track something in the heavens?
Sophisticated knowledge, true science
is evidenced by the geometry
and the astronomy of the site.
Yet mainstream archaeologists
are reluctant
to recognize astronomy of any kind
in Poverty Point's wood circles.
- Here, I don't think they make sense.
- Mmm-hmm.
Why should the people
who lived here and created this place,
why should they
not have been interested in the sky?
- I'm not saying they weren't.
- No.
I bet they were.
Okay. So what do you think
the circles were used for?
We don't know. We don't know yet
if they were used
for astronomy purposes or not.
[Graham] Yeah.
Ancient cultures
were very fixated upon the sky.
That notion isn't in itself disputed,
but archaeology
tends to regard it as irrelevant.
I think that the reason is, in part,
because most archaeologists
just don't understand astronomy at all.
It's not what they've been taught to do,
and secondly,
they regard it as an intrusion
into their domain by outsiders.
I'm not claiming
that Poverty Point was created
by the lost advanced civilization
I'm looking for.
But I'm interested in the origins
of the sophisticated
astronomy and geometry
that were deployed here.
There's evidence
that advanced architectural,
Earth-measuring and astronomical knowledge
was inherited from earlier times,
but inherited from whom
and how much earlier?
I'm not saying
the ancient Americans living here
weren't capable
of discovering and incorporating
these astronomical observations
into their sites by themselves.
On the contrary.
I think we've passed the point
where we should regard
the Native American cultures
as simply hunter-gatherers.
They were much more complicated than that
and much more sophisticated.
And their vision
of Earth's place in the cosmos
expressed by the alignments
at Poverty Point
is essentially the same vision
that we've seen in other ancient sites
around the world,
sharing the same focus
on the sacred connection
between Earth and sky.
Poverty Point is just
one of 800 Mound Builder sites
surviving across the state of Louisiana.
While in North America as a whole,
out of an original estimated total
of one million mounds,
around 100,000 still remain.
Amongst these,
the most spectacular example of a mound
expressing the sacred connection
between Earth and sky,
lies about 600 miles to the northeast
of Poverty Point in Ohio,
a site that may just hold the key
to understanding what happened
to the lost civilization
I've been searching for.
Perched atop a densely forested ridge
lies a stunning example
of an effigy mound.
A gigantic earthwork
shaped into the form of a living creature.
In this case, a 400-meter-long snake.
It's called Serpent Mound.
Starting from its coiled tail,
seven bends in its body
wind their way to the head,
where gaping jaws appear
about to engulf a separate oval earthwork.
Even from the air,
it's hard to make out all the detail.
But by taking into account new discoveries
about its original construction
and stripping away the trees,
we can reveal what the effigy
would have looked like in its prime.
Serpent Mound extends
more than quarter of a mile
from its jaws in the northwest
to its tail on the southwestern corner
of the hilltop.
Originally, there was a circle
of standing stones by the head,
function unknown.
And just behind the head,
two decorative extensions,
function, likewise, unknown.
Serpent Mound
is a remarkable, graceful structure,
one that instills wonder
in those who visit.
It's clearly an ancient
and mysterious place.
But who built the huge effigy, and why?
The sign of the site will tell you
it was built around 1000 AD
by an indigenous people
referred to as the Fort Ancient Culture.
But the sign, like so many
of these historical markers, is wrong.
Truth is that nobody really knows
how old Serpent Mound is.
That date of 1000 AD
was based on just two
of the organic samples
taken from parts of the mound
that may have been later reconstructed,
because another archaeological survey
found samples from the serpent's base
dating back to 321 BC.
The evidence that Serpent Mound was
the subject of a restoration
is very clear.
I suggest that these restorations
go back deep into the past.
There's just one problem
with investigating my theory.
The administrators of Serpent Mound
have decided to ban me.
We've made repeated efforts
to get permission to film here,
but they denied us that permission.
On what I regard as ideological
and indeed rather personal grounds,
let me read from their email.
"Our role is to ensure that
Serpent Mound's integrity
and preservation,
both physically
and in its historical interpretation,
are maintained."
"Because the presenter
of this series, Graham Hancock,
proposes a theory
and story that do not align
with what we know
to be true about Serpent Mound,
your request is declined."
A correct word for this so-called mission
to protect the interpretation of the site
is, of course, censorship.
And what more effective way
for archaeologists to censor
and restrain and crush opposing views
than to deny access
to archaeological sites?
It's by no means
the first time this has happened.
This unfortunately
is systematic and consistent behavior
amongst archaeologists.
They do practice censorship.
They practice censorship by ridiculing
and insulting alternative ideas.
So what exactly is it
in this theory of mine
that's deemed so objectionable?
Quite simply,
it's because I dare to suggest
that the idea
behind the design of Serpent Mound
goes back to a time
much earlier than 300 BC,
more than 10,000 years earlier
to the end of the last Ice Age.
And for me, the proof of this lies in
one of its most stunning attributes,
one that mainstream archaeologists
don't like to acknowledge.
Because again, it involves the sky.
If you overfly Serpent Mound
on the summer solstice around June 21st,
you'll immediately notice
that the jaws of the serpent
are aligned almost directly
to the point where the Sun sets.
So this is what happens at sunset
on the summer solstice.
You see the head of the serpent,
it seems to be seeking out the Sun,
and then as the Sun begins to go down,
you get it more clearly,
this beautiful alignment
between Earth and sky,
then the majesty of the site
just overwhelms you.
It's obvious to anybody today
that that is what the head
of the great serpent is pointing at.
But that idea was ignored and rejected
by archaeology for a very long time.
The organization, which runs the site,
has allowed an enormous number of trees
to grow up around the head of the serpent.
I think they believe
it provides shade to tourists.
But what it does
is it limits that massive impact
of seeing the head of the serpent
pointing directly at the setting Sun.
Jeff Wilson, who owns much of the property
next to the ancient effigy,
is the president of an independent group
called The Friends of Serpent Mound,
dedicated to preserving and promoting this
and other Native American sites.
Clearly Serpent Mound
is very important to you.
Yes, it's very personal to me.
It's one of the most spiritual places
I've ever visited.
It's a sacred place.
When you encounter it,
you walk away feeling changed
by the experience when you come here.
It's the most amazing
archaeoastronomy site in North America,
- bar none.
- Yes.
What makes it so is the recent
confirmation that the Mound Builders
cleverly incorporated a whole series
of sky ground alignments
into Serpent Mound's design.
The center of the second bend
behind the head
points eastward to where the Sun rises
on the summer solstice,
and the center of the following bend
targets the sunrise
on the spring and fall equinoxes
when night and day are of equal length.
While the center of the final bend
is aimed where the Sun rises
on the winter solstice,
the shortest day of the year.
As for that intricately coiled tail,
if you draw a straight line
from its exact center
through the hinge of the serpent's jaws,
you'll find it's precisely oriented
to true astronomical north.
To construct it and to figure out
where all these astronomical alignments
that are incorporated into its design
is just an amazing sheer work of genius
It's a work of genius, yeah.
from the prehistoric Native Americans.
Yeah. And that genius
is easily overlooked, actually.
Is archaeology taking
the astronomy of this site seriously?
Are enough archaeologists
taking it seriously?
I don't think so, no.
Um
There's very few people that even
pay attention to it or consider it.
It's as though mainstream archaeologists
want us to believe
that all these astronomical alignments
happen by accident.
I think it's fair to say that there were
people in ancient Native America
with advanced surveying,
geometrical and astronomical skills,
and they put those skills to work
in the creation of enormous monuments,
most of which have
tragically been swept away.
These precise solar alignments
manifested on such a gigantic scale
represent an extraordinary achievement
for hunter-gatherers
living in the 3rd century BC.
But there's evidence suggesting
that the ridge where Serpent Mound sits
was considered sacred
for thousands of years before that.
Every single culture
that ever existed here,
dating back to the last Ice Age,
left cultural remains at Serpent Mound.
What it says to me,
this continuous human presence here,
it kind of suggests to me that the site's
been sacred for a very long time.
Right.
It seems to me
that should be taken into account
in the archaeological narrative.
It should be part of the story
of Serpent Mound.
Yes.
Archaeologists have been wrong before
and they could be wrong again.
All in all, it's obvious that the origins
of Serpent Mound are complicated.
What if 321 BC doesn't mark the year
of Serpent Mound's construction,
but one of its many reconstructions?
Let's not forget
we're dealing with a serpent here,
and that serpents are creatures renowned
for their ability to change their skin.
It's a possibility actually suggested
by Serpent Mound's unique alignment.
You see, it isn't quite perfect.
Today the summer solstice Sun,
as viewed from Serpent Mound,
actually sets about two degrees
off the exact center of the jaws.
Seems close enough to the naked eye.
But it's hard to believe that the people
who conceived of and created
this sophisticated effigy mound,
tracking all those calendar moments,
would go to all this trouble
and not get it exactly right.
I think they did get it right.
It all has to do with the way the Earth
shifts on its axis over the millennia.
In a phenomenon long known to astronomers
who refer to it as
the obliquity of the ecliptic.
To put it in simple terms,
the Earth, as we know,
is tilted on its axis,
but that tilt is not fixed and constant.
It changes over a 41,000-year cycle.
It changes roughly
two-and-a-half degrees over that cycle.
It nods back and forward,
and that affects the rising position
of the Sun on the summer solstice.
Instead of asking why the serpent's jaws
aren't perfectly aligned
to the summer solstice sunset,
what if we asked a different question?
When, if one takes into account
this obliquity of the ecliptic,
did the gaping jaws
and the setting Sun line up perfectly?
Turns out it wasn't a thousand years ago,
or even 2,300 years ago,
when archaeologists insist
Serpent Mound was first constructed.
The serpent's mouth
was exactly centered on the Sun
around 12,800 years ago
at the end of the last Ice Age,
when the ridge on which
the serpent was built
itself occupied
an extraordinarily significant spot.
At the very peak of the Ice Age,
around 20,000 years ago,
much of North America was covered
by an immense ice cap over a mile deep.
Today, Ohio's Serpent Mound Valley
is a forest-covered wilderness,
but let's not look at it as it is now.
Let's look at it as it was
during the last Ice Age.
This very valley,
where the great serpent was constructed,
actually marks the furthest south
that the North American ice sheet reached.
The giant ice cliffs
rising just by this ridge
would have looked like
something out of a fantasy novel.
To the people
who lived through this period,
it must have seemed that
some benign magical power was at work.
But any celebration of the halt of the ice
would have been short-lived,
because sometime around 12,800 years ago,
when the serpent was perfectly aligned
with the summer solstice,
something huge was happening
all over the planet.
[thunderclap]
Something apocalyptic
called the Younger Dryas.
It was a period of radical climate change
and rising sea levels.
Humanity survived, but barely.
I find it intriguing, by means of its
alignment to the summer solstice sunset,
that Serpent Mound serves
as a signpost, a date stamp,
drawing our attention to the skies
of 12,800 years ago,
a time when we know
there was a global cataclysm
big enough to have destroyed
an advanced civilization.
Again, I'm reminded of Göbekli Tepe,
where figures of creatures carved
into one of the most spectacular pillars
seem to depict the position
of the stars at the summer solstice
during the time of the Younger Dryas.
It's no accident in my view
that the serpent's solstitial alignment
also speaks to that same
cataclysmic epoch.
But why a serpent?
Of the greatest relevance, I think,
are numerous Native American
myths and traditions
in which giant serpents are directly
associated with cataclysmic Earth changes.
There's an ancient legend of the Iroquois
whose domain at the height of their power
extended deep into Ohio.
The villain of the legend
is a giant horned serpent.
Long ago, a village was plagued
by a great serpent
who dwelt in a nearby lake.
So the great spirit in the sky
sent down a hero to defeat him.
In a vicious battle,
bolts of lightning struck the serpent,
the sound shook the Earth,
and the flashes were so bright
that the people shielded their eyes,
covered their ears, and hid in fear.
The very constellations
were dislodged from the night sky
and came crashing to Earth
with a ferocious blast and scorching heat.
One star fell into the lake,
wounding the horned serpent.
As the great serpent
thrashed its tail in pain,
it sent 100-foot waves
crashing through the valleys
in a series of colossal floods.
Most of the tribe didn't survive,
but the serpent was driven away.
We've already seen such serpent imagery
in ancient monuments all over the world.
On the temples in Mexico,
dedicated to Quetzalcoatl,
the feathered serpent,
carved into the temple
of Ġgantija on Malta,
and raining down from the skies
on the pillars of Göbekli Tepe.
It's a powerful symbol
found at sites
that invite us to look to the heavens.
Why?
I think this Iroquois legend
has more than a kernel of truth to it.
Perhaps the stars,
or something resembling stars,
did fall to Earth.
Perhaps there was
great flooding afterwards,
part of those earthshaking cataclysms
of the Younger Dryas.
If the original version of Serpent Mound
was designed sometime around
the end of the last Ice Age, as I believe,
then perhaps it was intended
to carry a message to the future,
a warning even, as to what caused
that apocalyptic series of events
around 12,800 years ago,
a warning to look to the heavens
for stars falling from the sky.
A quarter of the way around the Earth,
there's evidence that
other ancient peoples also lived in terror
of just such a threat from above,
and took steps to protect themselves
deep in the heart of Cappadocia
in modern-day Turkey,
which is where I'm heading next.