Episode #449 from 1:16:04

Sahara Desert and the Amazon rainforest

Now, of course, the air bars on this are quite large, but if an advanced ice-age civilization existed, where do you think it was? Where do you think we might find it one day if it existed, and how big do you think it might have been? Well, this is where I'm often accused of presenting a God-of-the-gaps argument, that I think there was a lost civilization because there's lots of the earth that archeologists have never looked at. Of course, I'm not thinking that. These are very special gaps that I'm interested in. I'm interested in them because of all the curiosities and the puzzlement that I've expressed to you before. It's not just because they're gaps in the archeological record. It's because those gaps involve places that were very interesting places to live during the ice age. They specifically include the Sahara Desert, which was not a desert during the ice age and went through this warm wet period when it was very, very fertile. Certainly, some archeology has been done in the Sahara, but it's fractional. It's tiny. I think if we want to get into the true origins of Ancient Egyptian civilization, of the peoples of Ancient Egypt, we need to be looking in the Sahara for that.

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Now, of course, the air bars on this are quite large, but if an advanced ice-age civilization existed, where do you think it was? Where do you think we might find it one day if it existed, and how big do you think it might have been? Well, this is where I'm often accused of presenting a God-of-the-gaps argument, that I think there was a lost civilization because there's lots of the earth that archeologists have never looked at. Of course, I'm not thinking that. These are very special gaps that I'm interested in. I'm interested in them because of all the curiosities and the puzzlement that I've expressed to you before. It's not just because they're gaps in the archeological record. It's because those gaps involve places that were very interesting places to live during the ice age. They specifically include the Sahara Desert, which was not a desert during the ice age and went through this warm wet period when it was very, very fertile. Certainly, some archeology has been done in the Sahara, but it's fractional. It's tiny. I think if we want to get into the true origins of Ancient Egyptian civilization, of the peoples of Ancient Egypt, we need to be looking in the Sahara for that.

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Sahara Desert and the Amazon rainforest chapter timestamp | Graham Hancock: Lost Civilization of the Ice Age & Ancient Human History | EpisodeIndex