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00:00On the shallow seafloor in various parts of the globe are found sophisticated megalithic
00:21structures which obviously were built during the Ice Age because the sea level rose several
00:27hundred feet at the close of the Ice Age and that resulted in the submergence of these
00:32megalithic structures.
00:40Maps by the Ice Age navigators who settled these regions indicate that the mariners of
00:45ancient times measured and mapped the Earth with fantastic precision, even accurately
00:51mapping Antarctica, which is shocking when we consider that Antarctica was supposedly
00:57not discovered until the year 1818 by the Russians.
01:02The mapping technique utilized by those ancient navigators is actually embodied in the astronomically
01:09derived dimensions of the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt, which was on the prime meridian
01:14of ancient times, whereas today Greenwich, England is on the modern prime meridian, and
01:20the meridian, or longitude, from which our modern timekeeping system is based.
01:27We will explore how the ancient mapping and timekeeping system was the forerunner of our
01:32modern one, and so, how ancient civilizations could measure and map the globe with essentially
01:38the same methodology as our current system.
02:06We have long suspected that in ancient times navigators were successfully sailing and settling
02:13disparate parts of the globe in search of mineral riches, as evidenced by the sophisticated
02:18megalithic walls, citadels, and pyramid-like temples which had been discovered in India,
02:24Japan, on the islands of Polynesia and the Pacific, and across to the Andes Mountains
02:30in South America, where the great ancient megalithic structures, such as Machu Picchu
02:35of the pre-Inca civilization, are found.
02:41To the west, from the cradle of civilization in Mesopotamia and Egypt, are found megalithic
02:47constructions near mineral deposits in southern Spain, off Malta, on islands in the Atlantic,
02:54such as the Tenerife Islands, and across the Atlantic to the fantastically sophisticated
02:59structures of the pre-Mayan Olmecs in southern Mexico.
03:15On the Ryukyu Islands of southern Japan are found ancient megalithic walls, terraced plazas,
03:21and citadels of the ancient Jomon civilization, commonly considered to have been built at
03:27around 2000 BC, not much after megalithic buildings is believed to have begun worldwide,
03:34and some of these structures are now on the shallow seafloor nearby, in waters down to
03:39at least 100 foot depths, submerged by the sea level rise from the melting of the Ice
03:44Age ice packs.
03:52In some cases, so-called experts or popular authors have assumed that if you got a structure
04:00under water, you can just look at how deep the water is, somehow correlate depth of water
04:07and with how fast waters have risen, and in some cases I've seen people assume if it's
04:15under so much water, it must date back say 10,000 years or more, and that's not a good
04:23assumption.
04:30Graham Hancock's work, he's done some fabulous research through the years, he's one of the
04:35few that came out with these photographs of these submerged megaliths that are on the
04:39shallow seafloor from various parts of the world. Great shots, his wife's a photographer,
04:44pointed this anomaly out, these megaliths on the seabottom, on the shallow seafloor,
04:50and he says, yes, they were covered up when the Ice Age ended, but he goes with the conventional
04:55date of 10,000 BC for the end of the Ice Age, but I began looking at this, no, it doesn't
05:01make sense.
05:07And I would say the last thing that probably convinced me that it was man-made was that
05:11discovery on the second day of a dive trip when we went down and saw this rounded rock,
05:18huge, it's 15 feet in diameter, 12 feet high, rounded rock, and it's sitting on a square
05:23pedestal that's on a flat rock. Now, this flat rock is as flat as a pool table. The
05:30pedestal is about 8 to 12 inches above this flat rock, and it's also as flat as a pool
05:37table with an 8 inch, if you can think of it, just 8 inch relief pushed up. It's beautiful.
05:43It's perfectly square. And then there's this 12 foot high, 15 foot wide, rounded rock.
05:51And the round ball is obviously not contiguous to the square platform. And that was impressive
05:58to me.
06:15So you could have, for instance, a city or a culture that's now underwater, totally submerged,
06:22but it may date back to 4,000, 5,000 B.C. You don't need to postulate that it goes all
06:28the way back to 10,000 or 15,000 or 20,000 B.C., as some popular writers have suggested.
06:52I did see structures above the water that are on the land, and these structures were
06:59in vicinity of Isekei Point, but closest to where the underwater face is. It's on the
07:06north side of the island, and these rise up about 70 feet above the water's edge, and
07:13they are carved almost identically, but they're not exactly the same size as the Isekei Point
07:20face.
07:21I did see structures above the water that are on the land, and these structures were
07:28in vicinity of Isekei Point, but closest to where the underwater face is. It's on the
07:35land, almost identical to the monuments at Isekei Point. It really makes you feel, if
07:40you've dove Isekei Point, and then you walk to these monuments, you feel like you're underwater
07:45again.
07:57Halfway around the world from Japan, in the waters off the coast of southern Spain, just
08:02west of the rocks at Gibraltar, which were known as the Pillars of Hercules in ancient
08:07times, are submerged ruins apparently built by the Phoenicians, who mined the rich gold,
08:13silver, and copper deposits of southern Spain, beginning at around 2000 B.C.
08:19After speaking to Francisco Salazar Paco, a very important diver in Spain, and spending
08:25time with him, he said to me, Maxine, there are four submerged cities off the coast of
08:30Spain. I've read about Atlantis, Maxine, and I believe one of them is Atlantis, but we
08:35need to do something about it.
08:37And spending time with him, he said to me, Maxine, there are four submerged cities off
08:42the coast of Spain. I've read about Atlantis, Maxine, and I believe one of them is Atlantis,
08:47but we need to do some more exploring. And after many, many years, Paco was able to get
08:53photographs of this civilization, which we are absolutely confident, by water level and
08:59location, is Atlantis.
09:01When did the Ice Age end? Well, almost all the experts say that megalithic building began
09:07on the Earth around 3000 B.C., but they say that the Ice Age ended at 10,000 B.C., so
09:15there's a disconnect there of 7,000 years. Now, which was it? Did the Ice Age end much
09:21later than advertised, or did the megalithic building begin much earlier than advertised?
09:27It's important that the conventional scientists state a date for 10,000 B.C. for the Ice Age,
09:32because the Ice Age people were supposedly cavemen, developing in the Darwinian way slowly
09:38through thousands of years. So you have your cavemen at 10,000 B.C., you have your
09:43megalithic building that they acknowledge at about 3,000 B.C., so you had to have a
09:47continuum of development for, say, 7,000 years.
09:51Aficionados of Plato's Atlantis story know that he said that Atlantis went under
09:569,000 years before his time, which would have put the submergence of Atlantis at about
10:019,500 B.C. However, the Mycenaean kings of Athens, also mentioned in Plato's story,
10:08who were ruling around the time that Atlantis went under, also mentioned in Plato's
10:14are known to have lived circa 1,500 B.C., and not circa 9,500 B.C. So, apparently,
10:21a zero was added to the 900 actual years before Plato's time, and the Athenian kings
10:26in the story and the submergence of Atlantis were therefore at around 1,500 B.C.
10:44Everybody wants to know, what's up with Atlantis? Well, as it turns out, Atlantis
10:48is just the megaliths that are now submerged just west of Gibraltar. Plato himself said
10:55Atlantis is just west of the pillars of Hercules.
11:02When I finally saw the photos, we had a city about 2 1⁄2 miles wide by 2 1⁄2 miles
11:08long. We could see fireplaces. We could see remnants of buildings. We could see pottery,
11:15all sorts of things, 120 feet down on the continental shelf.
11:25Well, we know there were civilizations, certainly, off the coast of Egypt, Alexandria. We know
11:31that there were civilizations, certainly, we've seen underwater cities off Malta, off
11:38Crete, off Ireland. So, everywhere in the world, the whole history of the world lies
11:44underwater.
11:51These megaliths, you know, are submerged off northwest India, southern India, Malta, Egypt,
11:57Lebanon, and off the coast of southern Spain. They're in about 50 to 100 feet of water.
12:06Submerged megalithic complexes are also found in the Mediterranean, off Slima, Malta, where
12:12were discovered megalithic walls and temples, which appear to be of circa 2000 B.C. vintage,
12:18and off Egypt in the Mediterranean, where are found the submerged ruins of ancient Rahinet,
12:24known to the ancient Mycenaeans of Greece as Heraklion.
12:31And off Lebanon, where are the submerged megalithic ruins of the ancient Phoenician port city
12:36states of Sidon and Yarmouda, which disappeared from the pages of history at around 1500 B.C.
12:44And off the coast of Greece, near Pleitra, Abdera, Platygeali, Astakos, and Elephonesi,
12:50are found submerged megalithic complexes, which were submerged when Greek legend states
12:56that the sea rose and covered a great part of the land.
13:06And off the coast of Greece, near Piraeus, where are the submerged megalithic complexes
13:13And on the shallow seafloor off northwest India are vast complexes of brick-based structures
13:18from the legendary civilization of the Rama Empire, which according to ancient Vedic literature
13:25were submerged by the sea apparently at around 1500 B.C., as that is when the stories of
13:31the early Vedic literature are said to have occurred, and those submerged ruins in the
13:36gulfs of Kambe and Kutch off northwest India are virtually the same as the ancient ruins
13:42of Mohenjodaro and Harappa, which are nearby on shore and which are commonly thought to
13:48have been built circa 2000 B.C.
13:56The ancient Hindu and Tamil traditions of southern India speak of a lost kingdom,
14:02the kingdom of Kumari Kandam, which is off the extreme southern tip of India,
14:07and they mention a king, King Netiyan, who was a Pandian king around 2000 B.C.
14:14who had to flee inland because his kingdom was being eaten up by a sea level rise.
14:20Now conventional scientists would have us say that this story must have been from before
14:2710,000 B.C. when they say that the Ice Age ended.
14:31Therefore, to witness a sea level rise like that tells us the Hindu writers must have
14:36been at that time frame also, at 10,000 B.C., but the Hindu writers, the Hindu scholars
14:41all say, now that material comes from 1500 to 2000 B.C.
14:47Geologists tell us that the seas were about 400 feet lower, and they calculate this based
14:58on the size of the ice caps during the last Ice Age, and so that's where most of the
15:05water was that has caused this differential in sea levels.
15:12Therefore, if we have advanced civilizations near the height of the last Golden Age,
15:18you would expect to find much of that along the coastlines, because even today you'll
15:24find 80-85% of the population gathered towards the coastlines.
15:30That's where people like to live.
15:42And what we know is that, of course, since the end of the last Ice Age, sea levels have
15:48risen, they've risen dramatically over that time period, and quite logically, ancient
15:56peoples, many ancient peoples lived near the coastline, and when you have that much water
16:04rising, in some cases, their cities, their habitations were totally inundated, they're
16:13now found underwater, if they're found at all.
16:22During the Ice Age, North America was connected to Eurasia, across the Bering Straits, that
16:28was dry land, and that got flooded.
16:32England and Ireland were connected to Europe, and as the water rose, that got flooded.
16:44Professor Kimura shares with me his findings that he presented to a Japanese forensic society
16:52that studies these kinds of things, and he shared his report with me while I was doing
16:56research for these articles.
16:58And it seems that they hypothesized that as the water tables began to rise, that they
17:05had to shift from the monuments that I dove on in Esaiki Point, and they had to shift
17:11because the monuments were infiltrated with water, they had to shift to another site on
17:16Yonaguni.
17:17Now those are two sites that I photographed and I understand, and Kimura thinks this shift
17:21came some 4,000 years ago, which makes sense to me.
17:27Many ancient legends speak of a surprisingly rapid sea level rise, as kingdoms were engulfed
17:36within a generation.
17:42There are several Mayan documents or books that survive.
17:46One is called the Dresden Codex.
17:48It's primarily about the Venus Cycle, but there's a very interesting page, the last
17:53page of the Dresden Codex depicts a flood, a flood coming out of the mouth of the cosmic
17:59monster.
18:12But we can also have relatively abrupt climate change, literally on the timescale of decades,
18:17and that's where this interaction of the atmosphere and the ocean, for example, if we have a lot
18:22of melt water, a lot of fresh water at high latitudes, it can shut off what we call the
18:28overturning circulation of the ocean.
18:30That can give rise to relatively abrupt climate change on the timescale of literally decades.
18:36Some scientists say that all of the submerged structures from various parts of the globe
18:41must have been the result of earthquake activity.
18:45It was previously thought that the Ice Age ended at around 10,000 BC, and thinking that
18:51megalithic building began about 8,000 years ago, it's hard to imagine that the ice age
18:57would have lasted that long.
18:59The Ice Age ended at around 10,000 BC, and thinking that megalithic building began about
19:048,000 years after that time, many say that the submergences of all those ruins must have
19:10been due to earthquake activity, and not because of sea level rise, such as Yarmouda, off the
19:16coast of Lebanon.
19:18For earthquakes to have caused that submerging, we see evidence of a 200-foot vertical block
19:24fault somewhere in the hills of Lebanon around there, and there's no evidence of that.
19:30There's no evidence of horse or grobbins reflecting 200-foot blocks of the coastline dropping
19:36into the sea.
19:38And the same can be said for the other submerged megalithic sites in various parts of the world.
19:44No evidence of block faulting by earthquakes.
19:47Therefore, the sea level rise spoken of in the various ancient legends must have been
19:53the cause of the submergences of all the sites.
19:56That huge sea level rise, and the fact that it was caused by earthquakes, is the only
20:02cause of the submergences of all the sites.
20:05That huge sea level rise could have resulted only from the melting of the Ice Age ice packs.
20:19So the great ancient civilizations were flourishing during the Ice Age, when there was intense
20:24snowfall in the extreme latitudes, and much heavier rainfall in the middle latitudes,
20:31in regions such as Mesopotamia, the Indus of northwest India, and in Egypt.
20:42These regions are currently desert wastelands, but during the Ice Age, when these civilizations
20:48were flourishing and building their biggest and best megalithic structures, those lands
20:54were lush green areas of fertility, with pastures and forests providing bounty for the humans
21:00and the many kinds of animals which inhabited those areas when they received about 40 inches
21:05of rain per year.
21:12The ancients would not have selected Egypt to build their extensive and complex megalithic
21:17structures if it had been the parched desert wasteland which it is today.
21:22This is confirmed by the fact that the Nile River of early Egypt lapped at the paws of
21:27the Sphinx when the Nile was 50 feet deeper because of the much greater rainfall.
21:37What I found is the core body of the Sphinx, the Sphinx enclosure in which it sits, has
21:43classic rain erosion, precipitation induced erosion, call it what you like.
21:50We know that the Sahara Desert and the Sphinx sits on the edge of the Sahara Desert,
21:56and the Sahara Desert is a relatively recent desert geologically.
22:05There is some evidence that, for example, the Sahara Desert was more moist, had running
22:11streams and rivers, had lakes that were larger, had wildlife that was consistent with a more
22:17humid environment, and it's pretty reasonable to guess that that was also the case in eastern
22:23Africa where Egypt is.
22:27The Sahara Desert
22:33Northern Africa in general does seem to have been wetter and more humid, probably cooler
22:38than it is in the present day.
22:45The Sahara has not always been a Sahara.
22:47The Sahara was once, in very recent times, geologically speaking, was non-desert.
22:55You had a much more lush, savanna-type region.
23:02You had lakes, ephemeral lakes.
23:04You had rivers.
23:05We know this from a variety of data now, including imaging from satellites where you can pick
23:11up ancient riverbeds, etc.
23:13I believe that it makes sense that when you had lesserity, more water, more vegetation,
23:24well, helped promote ancient cultures.
23:38The population of Egypt was in the hundreds of thousands, perhaps approaching a million,
23:43during the heyday of early Egypt when the magnificent megalithic structures of the Giza
23:49Plateau were being built by those highly ingenious and industrious Egyptians of Ice Age times.
23:55And obviously, such could not have occurred in the present environment there, which is
24:00one of the driest places on Earth.
24:08This was a different place then, with a climate similar to that of southeastern U.S. or the
24:14Pampas of Argentina.
24:17This climate must have been attractive to those sophisticated surveyors and engineers
24:22who masterminded the gargantuan structures of the Giza Plateau, preeminent of which is
24:28the famous Great Pyramid.
24:34In the old kingdom times, when you're building the pyramids, the superstructure of the Great
24:40Pyramid, for instance, best estimates are you need incredible workforce.
24:45You have to house them, you have to feed them.
24:50And there have been found, in recent years, around the edge, the periphery of the Giza
24:58Plateau, evidence of bakeries, evidence of encampments, that type of thing, for a fairly
25:06large settlement, a fairly large number of workers in old kingdom times.
25:16Back in pre-dynastic times, it was lusher and not as barren desert, so you could have
25:22more food and supplies maybe produced, I wouldn't say on site, but in more of the local area.
25:30The Great Pyramid is an amazing artifact of a higher culture.
25:36It's made of two and a half to three million blocks of stone.
25:41The smaller ones are several tons, and the larger ones are dozens of tons.
25:48I think there's one that's about 70 tons in the king's chamber.
25:52And supposedly it was built during Khufu's reign, a period of 20 to 30 years, something
25:59like that.
26:00And it just is inconceivable how you could put that many large stones into place in that
26:08period of time.
26:09Because if you think about it nowadays, trying to move a 50-ton stone, you'll plan that
26:16for several weeks and then get your whole crew together to move one stone.
26:23That knowledge is lost.
26:25That shows a level of sophistication and engineering that's just mind-boggling.
26:33But it's also aligned with incredible accuracy to the true North Pole of the Earth.
26:41Not just a magnetic pole, not just approximately the North Pole, but incredible accuracy to
26:47the true North Pole.
26:48In fact, it's the most accurately aligned building ever constructed before the 19th
26:55century.
26:56They were doing something that no one could replicate for thousands of years.
27:04The Great Pyramid at Egypt is not on a very recognizable meridian because our modern meridian
27:17system is based upon Greenwich.
27:19The zero point is placed at Greenwich for recent historical reasons.
27:24But if we assume that the prime meridian is at the longitude of the Giza Plateau, then
27:31all these other sacred sites around the world, like for example at Angkor and other places,
27:38fit nicely into this harmonic grid.
27:41These sites are separated by 72 degrees and so on, which are proportions of the processional
27:48cycle.
27:49This amazingly accurate ancient world grid of longitudes and latitudes was actually surveyed
27:56with a relatively simple mechanical device, which allowed the ancients to accurately measure
28:01Earth distances by measuring the movement of the constellations of the zodiac along
28:07the horizon due to precession.
28:10Well, precession is the slow wobble of the Earth's axis, like a gyroscope in space.
28:17It's a slow wobble like a gyroscope as it orbits around the Sun.
28:21And the slow wobble like a gyroscope would cycle once in 25,920 years.
28:28The ancients with the Celtic Cross or the Archaeometer, a simple handheld mechanical
28:33device, measured the rate that the constellations of the zodiac appear to move along the horizon
28:40very slowly because of this wobble of the Earth's axis like a gyroscope.
28:44And it would wobble once in 25,920 years.
28:47They measured the rate that this wobble occurs.
28:50It's 72 years per one degree.
28:53The constellations appear to move along the horizon because of precession.
28:57So they knew this rate.
28:58They measured this rate.
29:00And knowing the geometry of a hexagon and a circle, you take a hexagon, a six-sided
29:06figure, all right, put it within the circle of the Earth, so to say.
29:10So you have this hexagon in there.
29:12If you know the length of one side of that Earth hexagon, we'll call it, if you know
29:16the length of that or the amount of time it will take for the constellations to move
29:22along that section of the Earth hexagon, you thereby know the radius of that circle.
29:29So if you know that length along one side of the Earth where you're measuring the
29:33precession to be occurring, if you can measure that, you have the length of the radius of
29:37the Earth, thereby you have the circumference of the Earth.
29:41So they could measure and map the Earth with this simple mechanical device.
29:51The length of the perimeter of the base of the Great Pyramid is half a nautical mile.
29:56And this is no coincidence because the ancient Egyptians subdivided the length of one side
30:02of the Earth hexagon by 7,200 for the length of their Great Pyramid's base perimeter.
30:08And as 440 cubits compose the length of each of the four base edges of the Great Pyramid,
30:14we see that the length of the cubit, which is 20.632 inches, is four times 440 divided
30:22into 1,7200 of the length of the radius of the Earth, which is the same length as the
30:29length of one side of the six-sided Earth hexagon.
30:33The ancient Egyptian cubit used to survey the pyramid was astronomically derived by
30:39measuring the rate of precession and applying such to simple geometry and not by a number
30:45of hand widths or finger lengths as had been generally proposed by archaeologists.
31:03In addition, the height of the Great Pyramid is 280 cubits, so the pi relationship is embodied
31:10in the dimensions of the Great Pyramid because the 880-cubit length of two base sides of
31:16the Great Pyramid, which represents the diameter of the Earth, is 3.14, the value of pi times
31:24the 280-cubit height of the Great Pyramid.
31:28So the dimensions of the Great Pyramid are self-evidently an embodiment of the dimensions
31:33of the Earth, which were accurately measured with a simple mechanical device, the archaeometer,
31:39also known as a Celtic cross, which allowed the ancients to measure and thereby subdivide
31:44the dimensions of the Earth to establish the length of the royal cubit and therewith to
31:50survey and construct the Great Pyramid as a reduced embodiment of the dimensions of the Earth.
31:59Pi is definitely encoded within the Great Pyramid and what we see is that if you take
32:06the height of the Great Pyramid from the center of the base to the apex, consider that r,
32:13radius of a circle, take the perimeter of the base of the Great Pyramid, consider that
32:23c, everyone knows the formula from grade school, 2 pi r equals circumference. The base of the
32:31Great Pyramid is the circumference, the height of the Great Pyramid is r, 2 times the height
32:40times pi equals the perimeter of the base. Clearly, pi is included within the Great Pyramid.
32:53Since the Great Pyramid constructors surveyed the dimensions of that magnificent edifice
32:59to precession by the measurement of the dimensions of the Earth through simple hexagon geometry
33:05and the application of the 72 year per one degree rate of the apparent movement of the
33:11constellations of the zodiac along the horizon, they could have planned the Great Pyramid
33:16to be one thirty-six hundredth of the radius of the Earth, which would have been one nautical mile.
33:29So the Great Pyramid would then be twice as big as it is, but since that would have been
33:34logistically very difficult to achieve, they went with half a nautical mile and that the
33:40base perimeter length of the Great Pyramid is half a nautical mile is no coincidence
33:45because that same Earth measuring and surveying technique was used to map the Earth and that
33:51was the forerunner of our modern mapping and timekeeping system.
33:58Yeah, the significance of ancients having this capability to measure and map the Earth,
34:04well that flies in the face of what the conventionals have been teaching us, obviously.
34:08You know, they taught us that the development of mankind has been kind of an evolutionary
34:13Darwinian type progression from cavemen through quasi-cavemen, Neolithic, up until modern
34:21man at around three thousand B.C. But their own corollary theory to that is that this
34:30megalithic building, sophisticated megalithic building, started suddenly, abruptly, with
34:36no evolutionary precursors in building style leading up to it. The Great Pyramids appeared
34:42out of nowhere.
34:48They were not only astute sky watchers but they were what we might call surveyors of
34:54the Earth. They were mappers and so they would map out the Earth. So what we have is many
35:02sacred sites around the world that are located on specific meridians, specific latitudes
35:09and longitudes, and they seem to be placed in harmonic relationship with each other.
35:14The ancient navigators were able to determine their position anywhere on the Earth to within
35:20three nautical miles by triangulating their position according to how long it would take
35:25for the constellations to move to the same position in the sky as at the base reference
35:30point, which in the ancient world was the Great Pyramid. Many of the ancient maps which
35:36were used as the source maps were the unusually accurate medieval maps showing Antarctica
35:42and other coastlines which supposedly weren't discovered until the 1800s.
35:52It was on the prime meridian of the ancient world and the ancient mapping system related
35:57time to distance just as does our modern system of arc seconds and arc minutes, also known
36:04as nautical miles, and thereby they did indeed map and navigate much of the world in ancient
36:10times.
36:14So here we are in the year 2005-2006 trying to look back and interpret what the ancients
36:25knew, and we tend to filter that information consciously or not through our own biases,
36:33our own context, and the principle context we use is that evolution is fairly linear,
36:41that we went from caveman to modern man and a few bumps along the way, but we're progressing.
36:47However, if you use the ancient context that life is cyclical, just as the day and the
36:55seasons are cyclical, then if you go back far enough, actually prior to about 1500 B.C.,
37:03you would expect to start to see things that reflect a higher consciousness, and so it
37:10presents a whole different way to look at the archaeological record.
37:14In the archaeological record, there's been recent discoveries that indicate that there
37:18were connections between, for example, the Phoenicians and South America. For example,
37:25there were Roman trading vessels found in the mouth of the Amazon. There's actually
37:31a lot of evidence that there were contacts going on around the world.
37:38But scientists have always said, there's no way that navigators could have been navigating
37:43the oceans around 2000 B.C. They were in skin-covered rudimentary canoe-like vessels,
37:50and on top of that, navigating? Ha! Forget about it. But as we've shown through the
37:56astronomically derived dimensions of the Great Pyramid of Giza, the Great Pyramid dimensions
38:01are an embodiment of the dimensions of the Earth. So in fact, these guys around 2000 B.C.,
38:08as the diffusionist theorists thought, imagined that they could somehow navigate, they didn't
38:14know exactly how, but with this finding, this precession mapping finding, we have shown
38:19that they actually could measure the dimensions of the Earth, and thereby chart and map it
38:24accordingly.
38:30And I think the more we look at, we see remarkable similarities among cultures, even if they're
38:37separated by oceans.
38:47Furthermore, you start looking at ancient cultures, and they could navigate large water
38:54bodies. They could navigate the oceans.
38:59We have a hunch that the Atlanteans were able to navigate the seas.
39:10We have great similarities between Mexico and Egypt. You turn an Egyptian sideways,
39:16he looks like a Mayan Indian. You have the same pyramids. You have commonalities in the
39:21languages. There are Mayan characters in the Egyptian language.
39:25There are Mayan characters in the Egyptian language. So how did that happen? Well, they
39:30had to have a way to get across.
39:36The Orontius Phineus map shows Antarctica when the Ice Age had just begun, because a
39:42small polar ice pack is shown on the Orontius Phineus map. And the mountains and river valleys
39:49of the continent of Antarctica, the land mass below all the current snow and ice, he
39:55showed those mountains and river valleys accurately, very accurately, longitude and latitude,
40:01incredibly. And this is borne out with our remote sensing in modern times. We can sense
40:06down through that two miles of snow and ice and see what the underlying terrain is like,
40:11and it jibes perfectly with that Orontius Phineus map, or virtually, you know, beyond
40:16coincidence, beyond our wildest hopes that it could be a coincidence. Just right there,
40:21there it is. Greenland, same thing. The Ibn Zarah map shows details of Greenland, the
40:27details of the mountain ranges and the river valleys incredibly precisely, but it's now
40:33under a mile of snow and ice. They couldn't have known that. They were mapping that thing.
40:37They were mapping those continents early in the Ice Age before the Ice Age had totally
40:41built up upon them. Now going back to Antarctica, Orontius Phineus map early in the Ice Age,
40:46a little bit of snowpack on Antarctica. And the Piraeus map apparently shows a couple
40:51hundred years later, the ice pack had grown. A few of the mountain ranges near the shoreline
40:56were still showing, but the ice pack had grown. Again, with the exact precision of where the
41:01mountain ranges and river valleys are, that are now two miles under snow and ice.
41:12So the ancients were measuring and mapping the globe during the Ice Age, and even in
41:17the early stages of the Ice Age.
41:22So what caused the Ice Age, which the evidence indicates, ended at around 1500 BC?
41:29The fact is, we don't know what the beginning of an Ice Age is. We really don't know how
41:42the ice caps, say, over North America begin to grow. And maybe an Ice Age begins with
41:50heavier snowfalls associated with open water. We absolutely have no idea what really happens
41:57at the beginning of a glacial expansion.
42:03When you have a cold area, even if it's relatively dry, just a little bit amount of snow accumulating
42:10over years and years and years still amounts to a lot of snow, just like we have in Antarctica.
42:15So it never really melts. So that's the main thing, is it can be cold, relatively dry,
42:20but just a little amount of snow accumulated over a long period of time still represents
42:25a lot of snow. We clearly have evidence that the planet was not a snowball earth, was not
42:30covered in snow, that the tropics still existed.
42:40Warmer oceans must have caused the Ice Age, because with colder ocean waters, from a colder
42:47environment, you get colder oceans, so you have less evaporation off the oceans, so you
42:52have less cloud cover than today, if the Ice Age atmosphere was colder than today,
42:57and or the Ice Age oceans were colder than today. Therefore, the Ice Age oceans must
43:03have been warmer than today, paradoxically, because only with warmer ocean water do you
43:08get the higher evaporation rate to create the dense cloud cover for the Ice Age.
43:13However, conventional scientists insist that all the seasons of the year were colder during
43:19the Ice Age. But with the dense, global, encompassing cloud cover of the Ice Age, cooler summers
43:26and warmer winters ensued, resulting in little snow melt in the summer and greater snowfall
43:32in the winter. As snowfall amounts are maximized near 32 degrees Celsius, the temperature of
43:39snowfall amounts are maximized near 32 degrees Fahrenheit, and super cold environments are
43:46technically deserts.
43:51I would expect that the ice caps during the Ice Age came about not because there was a
43:57lot more snow, at least not over a very long period, but because it was enough colder in
44:03the summer that the snow that did fall didn't melt. Generally speaking, very cold areas
44:09of the world tend to be very dry. This is true nowadays. Antarctica is a very, very
44:15dry continent, but because it never gets warm enough for the ice and snow to melt, it's
44:21covered with snow, covered with glaciers. Siberia in the wintertime is very, very dry,
44:29but because it's extremely cold, what snow does fall stays, and so you get a good snow
44:34cover.
44:40The conventionals, once again, say that the Ice Age was caused by cooler temperatures
44:45because during the Milankovitch Cycle, which is where the ellipse of the orbit of the Earth
44:51changes over time every 100,000 years, once through a period during 100,000 years, the
44:57Earth is farther away from the Sun, therefore the atmosphere is a bit cooler, therefore
45:01you have the Ice Age. That's the big explanation in conventional circles for the cause of the
45:07Ice Age, but we've shown it could not be colder temperatures. What mainstream scientists
45:12say is the cause is hydrologically impossible. Therefore, we have to look at another mechanism
45:18for warmer ocean waters, and conventional scientists don't say it was warmer ocean waters,
45:23but we've shown, once again, according to Hydrology 101, it had to have been warmer
45:28ocean waters.
45:36It is now clear that the ancients measured and mapped the globe during the Ice Age, when
45:41there was intense snowfall in the extreme latitudes, and much more rainfall in the middle
45:47latitudes, where the great ancient civilizations began.
45:54So what caused this heating of the oceans for the high evaporation rates to form the
46:00dense cloud cover of the Ice Age?
46:08It could not have been global warming, because if such warming had increased the surface
46:13temperature of the oceans for higher evaporation rates, causing the cloud cover, it would have
46:19shielded the earth from the sun and cooled the atmosphere back down, a buffer system.
46:29So the heating of the oceans must have been geothermally induced, from heat sourced from
46:35within the earth, not from the atmosphere.
46:42It has been established that the oceans during the Ice Age were paradoxically warmer, but
46:48how much warmer, and what geothermal event or events caused that warmer ocean water for
46:53the dense cloud cover for the Ice Age, this will now be a subject of great debate.
47:18Transcribed by ESO, translated by —
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