Ancient Apocalypse (2022) s01e08 Episode Script

Cataclysm and Rebirth

1
At sites all around the globe,
we've seen what I believe
are the fingerprints
of a lost civilization
dating back to the last Ice Age.
The last great mystery is
what happened
to this advanced civilization?
There may be clues
in the origin myths of ancient cultures,
because many of them
tell the same basic story.
According to these legends,
once upon a time,
humanity shared the Earth
with a more advanced society,
whether Atlanteans,
or giants, or gods on Earth.
Until a horrific
global cataclysm occurred,
a great flood,
only a chosen few were spared
to repopulate the Earth.
Who were later visited by other survivors,
mysterious great teachers,
usually arriving by sea,
to help them lay the foundations
for the rebirth of humanity
and civilization as we know it today.
Science now confirms
that just such a series
of apocalyptic events
did occur at the end of the last Ice Age,
around 12,800 years ago
an epoch known to geologists
as the Younger Dryas.
Only in its aftermath,
did our ancestors suddenly
begin farming and raising livestock,
creating societies
and building
massive megalithic structures,
often aligned to the stars.
Why then?
It's a mystery mainstream archeologists
have no real explanation for,
other than "that's just what happened."
But I have a radically different proposal.
We need to ask ourselves
was that really the dawn of history?
Or was it long before that?
It's possible
that all traces of the lost
advanced civilization I'm looking for
were swept away in the cataclysms
of the Younger Dryas.
But surely the geological evidence
of that apocalyptic moment
should still exist.
And I believe it does.
Here, in the northwest corner of America,
in a part of eastern Washington state
known as the Channeled Scablands.
It's a unique apocalyptic landscape,
a spectacular area
covering 2,000 square miles.
These landscapes speak to an enormous,
almost unspeakable, cataclysm.
It's an area that's
long fascinated geologists,
with giant scars in the rock,
massive potholes, and epic waterfalls.
All of it conspires to look,
well, unearthly.
Not of this world.
This immense fossilized waterfall,
appropriately named Dry Falls,
ranks high amongst the natural wonders
of the Channeled Scablands,
and indeed of the world.
It's so enormous that it's almost
impossible to comprehend its scale.
The Falls are just one section
of a monstrous ravine
gouged out of the earth,
hundreds of feet deep,
50 miles long,
and almost three miles wide,
called Grand Coulee.
Geologists believe that
all these dramatic formations
were created by flooding
that took place sometime
during the last Ice Age.
Precisely when and how this deluge
occurred, however, remains a mystery,
one that has sparked controversy
amongst geologists for decades.
What really happened here?
And could it be related to what happened
to that lost advanced civilization
of the Ice Age?
To help wrap my head around it all,
amateur geologist and author
Randall Carlson,
who's been exploring
the Scablands for decades,
joins me in an area of the Grand Coulee
known as Lenore Lake.
Whatever the cause,
there's no question in anyone's mind
that this is the result
of catastrophic flooding
on a scale that's almost inconceivable.
My first impression,
looking even at the map,
is that this is an area that's been
ripped and torn and scarred.
What's the story
of this incredible landscape?
Right now,
most of the conventional models go
- the source of this water here
- Yeah.
that created the Scablands,
was Lake Missoula.
During the last Ice Age,
massive ice sheets covered
the northern half of North America,
from coast to coast.
Millions of square miles of ice,
locking in enough water to fill an ocean.
And at the southern edge
of the ice sheets,
huge fresh water lakes formed.
One glacial lake, Missoula,
contained as much water
as modern lakes Erie and Ontario combined,
covering much of what is today
northwestern Montana.
The current theory
is that Lake Missoula was blocked up
by some sort of
natural ice dam that burst.
You remove the ice dam,
all the water's going to be flowing
out here to the west like this.
And to account for
all this damage to the landscape,
geologists theorized that the ice dam
re-formed and burst again and again,
causing dozens of floods
over a period of several thousand years,
gradually shaping the Scablands
into what we see today.
So it all came out of Lake Missoula,
and because one emptying
of Lake Missoula wouldn't be enough,
they postulate
up to 80 or 90 emptyings of it.
That certainly helps.
It's a curiously
contrived explanation
for such a wild landscape.
There's a strong what is called
"uniformitarian trend" in geology.
Modern geologists
don't like cataclysms very much.
They prefer long, slow,
gradual explanations of things,
and they prefer the view that,
as things are today,
so they have always been in the past,
even though it seems to me that
that view is completely absurd.
Randall believes
the geological evidence here
speaks not to centuries of gradual floods,
but to a single massively violent deluge
that lasted just a few weeks.
- It's not just water, is it?
- Oh, no.
- Yeah.
- Pretty much as far as the eye could see,
it's going to be
a roiling, boiling, turbulent scene.
Moving water choked
with thousands of icebergs.
All the stuff in between these cliffs
was ripped out.
Yeah.
A tremendously
unimaginably violent event.
To give you an idea,
if you took every single river
on Earth from every continent,
add that together,
you'd still have
to times that by at least ten
to get the volume of water
flowing through here.
Wow! That really puts it in perspective.
It's a truly awe-inspiring
forbidding landscape,
that speaks to me
of an ancient apocalypse.
An apocalypse on a scale
that's almost impossible to imagine today.
During the Ice Age, this would have been
an area of softly rolling grassland,
speckled with roaming herds
of antelope and mastodons,
until the violence arrived.
The floodwaters gouged out
an immense waterfall
that would've been the size
of ten Niagara Falls,
two-and-a-half times taller,
seven times wider,
and 3,000 times more powerful.
How quickly do you think that occurred?
I think it happened very, very quickly.
- Could it have been created in weeks?
- Yes.
The clearest evidence
is right here,
at a place called Wallula Gap,
where the floodwaters carved out
a massive canyon 1,200 feet deep,
leaving behind these
immense basalt outcroppings
known as the Twin Sisters.
Proof of the speed and ferocity
of what was likely the biggest
flash flood in human history.
Randall's research
shows that the formation
simply couldn't be the work of millennia
of gradual erosion, as geologists claim.
And when this great deluge was over,
the receding waters
didn't just leave behind
isolated towers of harder rock.
Nearby, in a spot
known as the Camas Prairie,
are giant ripples in the landscape.
They're so uniform
and so perfectly formed,
anybody who goes to the beach
and sees the tide going out
will see that that receding tide
leaves a series of ripples in the sand,
and those ripples may be half an inch high
and a few feet long.
What we have on the Camas Prairie
is current ripples
that are 30 to 50 feet high
and 300 feet long.
They're the same phenomenon
caused by the recession of waters.
But the ripples on the landscape
speak of a huge event,
an enormous amount of water that ran over
that landscape and then withdrew.
Truly apocalyptic.
Apocalyptic, yes.
If somebody did survive here or there
by luck of the draw,
they could emerge in the aftermath
thinking that the entire world
had been destroyed.
The Scablands show all the signs
of a massive, devastating flood
of very short duration,
much like the ones
described in myths around the world.
And it's unlikely all that water came
from Lake Missoula, as geologists claim.
You remove the ice dam,
all the water is going to be flowing
out here to the west like this,
yet we find along the south wall,
right in here,
we find massive gravel deposits.
This water's flowing south.
And that's exactly where you diverge
from the mainstream.
You see the source of the flooding
on the ice cap, not this lake.
Right.
It's now being admitted and recognized
that, oh, well, maybe there were
other lakes up here.
And what we are going to
really have to do is look to the north.
- To look to the ice cap itself.
- Yes.
To come back
to the mainstream theory,
they put those floods
in a specific time frame,
in the 18,000 to 15,500-year-old window.
Yes. I think we need to
take a hard look at some of those dates.
'Cause I can't think
of anything in that period
which would have provided
the massive energy
needed to release this amount of water.
What needs to happen now
is putting the puzzle pieces together
- Yes.
- to get the grand view,
the coherent big picture.
That bigger picture that Randall
is looking for could be emerging.
Instead of the Scablands
continuing to be framed
as a puzzlingly isolated
regional phenomenon
with no obvious external cause,
Randall's argument
sets this devastated landscape
in context of the much wider,
indeed global, devastation
that occurred
near the end of the last Ice Age.
Not 18,000, or 15,500 years ago
but around 12,800 years ago
at the onset of the Younger Dryas.
Could the destruction
so evident in the Scablands
have been part
of that larger ancient apocalypse
that I suspect erased
an entire advanced civilization?
Another scarred landscape
of ancient America
might hold the final clue.
Twelve hundred miles south,
in the scrub-covered desert
along the US-Mexico border,
at a site called Murray Springs.
Allen West is a member of an
interdisciplinary research group
that stunned
the scientific community in 2007,
publishing a paper
about an extraordinary discovery here,
in an area of exposed earth that contains
what's known as a "black mat."
This black mat layer
that you see through here
- Yeah.
- represents the extinction layer.
Below that, there are mammoth bones,
there are American horse bones,
American camel, the dire wolves,
and saber-toothed cats.
And so far, not a single one of those
has been found in place above that layer.
In addition to
the extinctions of the megafauna,
there was also
an extinction of human beings.
We think that
probably 50 to 60% of the people
across the northern hemisphere
died at this time.
Right. That's a very dramatic figure.
So we knew something had happened,
we didn't know what.
So in a sense,
you were confronted by a mystery
- Yes, yeah, yep.
- that you wanted to explore.
When the black mat was first discovered
and analyzed in the 1960s,
scientists carbon-dated it
to around 12,800 years ago,
the exact moment of the onset
of the Younger Dryas.
Which is why I'm here.
The black mat might help solve
not only the mystery of what kicked off
that cataclysmic epoch in the first place,
but also specifically what might
have released the immense flood
that created the Scablands.
As part of their research,
Allen's group conducted a thorough
chemical analysis of the black mat.
So you came here and you
began to investigate the mat.
What we found is melted glass spherules.
So this is our first clue that some
high-temperature event had happened.
But we didn't know what it was.
So a temperature sufficient
to melt earth basically,
is that what you're saying?
Hot enough to melt a car
into a molten puddle of metal
in the parking lot.
Wow. Right.
What else do you find here?
Well, there was a peak
in platinum and in iridium.
Were you expecting to find
platinum and iridium here?
No, no, we were not.
That's something you just
don't see on this planet very often.
Then we knew that there's
only one thing on Earth that can do that,
and that's some kind of cosmic impact.
Something, an asteroid
or fragments of a comet
coming in through the atmosphere
and either bursting in the air
or smacking directly into the ground?
That's right, yep.
A comet, a species killer.
Would that explain
the apocalyptic cataclysms
that took place
at the end of the Younger Dryas?
It's happened before to the dinosaurs.
Nobody disputes that it was
a cosmic impact, an asteroid or a comet,
that caused the demise of the dinosaurs
66 million years ago.
That event left
a distinct layer in the earth,
which is still visible
in certain places today,
and a very similar layer
is found at Murray Springs.
Once Allen's research group
realized the implications
of the black mat layer at Murray Springs,
they launched a painstaking,
long-term investigation
to see if it showed up anywhere else.
And it did, all over the world.
To date, black mat sites have been found
across North America,
from California to Michigan to New Jersey,
and from Belgium in northern Europe
to Syria in the Middle East.
That's a lot of potential impact sites,
all dated to around the same time,
roughly 12,800 years ago.
We began to realize this had to have been
some kind of huge event.
The total picture got clearer to us
that something catastrophic had happened.
But if there was a comet strike,
where's the impact crater?
I think we saw the answer to that
up in the Scablands.
If the primary impacts
at the beginning of the Younger Dryas
were on ice caps,
when the ice melts away,
there's no crater left to see.
It would support Randall's theory
that the sudden catastrophic flooding
responsible for the Scablands
came not from that lake,
but from the ice cap itself.
It's going to absolutely demand
a rewrite of history as we know it.
Yeah.
Still, one impact alone
couldn't have created
all the black mat sites mapped out
by Allen's research team.
Their discoveries led to a startling idea.
Perhaps it wasn't one cosmic impact that
left all these traces around the world,
but many.
A brief intense storm of cosmic debris
that the Earth ran into.
They called it
the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis.
Don't think Earth was actually hit
by the comet itself,
but rather hit by
tens of thousands of fragments.
Think that 12,800 years ago,
Earth wandered into
the debris trail of a giant comet.
It would have been like thousands
of atomic bombs going off.
In just a few hours,
a truly Earth-shaking event,
releasing water vapor and clouds of dust
that would have shrouded the skies,
causing temperatures to plunge.
Imagine living in Miami
and you're enjoying the beach,
and suddenly the climate
changes to Anchorage, Alaska.
- Just, overnight, really. Yeah.
- Yeah, in a matter of probably months.
When Allen and his colleagues
from what was now called
the Comet Research Group,
first published their findings,
predictably they were met
with scorn and derision.
Scientists unfortunately
are taught to be cynical about things.
Skepticism is healthy, cynicism is not.
What's even more unsettling
about their discovery
is the likely origin
of that cometary debris.
The Taurid meteor stream,
a patch of sky which the Earth
passes through twice a year
in late June and late October.
It's estimated
there are probably 200 objects
with diameters of at least a kilometer,
whirling around
in the Taurid meteor stream.
The evidence brought forward
by the scientists
of the Comet Research Group
amounts to nothing less than an immense
global cataclysm around 12,800 years ago,
an apocalypse big enough
to have obliterated almost all traces
of an advanced civilization
of the Ice Age,
and to explain at a stroke
all the mysteries I've spent
the last 30 years investigating.
It might be why the ancient civilizations
that emerged afterward
were so scientifically focused
on the skies.
This is an area
we really need to pay attention to
because there's
something dangerous up there
and it can end civilization.
At Göbekli Tepe in Turkey,
we've already seen
how the ancients may have memorialized
this apocalypse in stone.
By recording the constellations in the sky
at the time on Pillar 43.
But the pillars may contain
another coded message
that Dr. Martin Sweatman
was keen to show me,
something that he believes is a record
of precisely when and from where
the meteor shower came.
What you've got here,
you've got snakes emanating
from the body and the legs of the fox.
And if we go on
to the other side of the pillar,
and again we have the snakes
kind of emanating from these birds.
Ancient cultures
did see comets as sky serpents.
There's really
no serious dispute about that.
We can interpret this as meteors
radiating from specific constellations
Yeah.
tall bending birds
probably representing Pisces.
Right.
And here we have
the constellation Aquarius,
we think that's what the fox represents.
At the time Göbekli Tepe was built,
these were the constellations from which
the Taurid meteor stream radiated.
They're essentially saying
that the Taurid meteor stream
radiates from Aquarius
and then from Pisces,
and it makes that change
over the course of a few weeks.
A record of a storm
of comet fragments that lasted weeks.
That's a timeframe that fits
all the evidence of the global cataclysm
that hit Earth 12,800 years ago,
including the violent flooding
that tore up the Washington Scablands.
And there might be more
to that specific configuration
of Sun and constellations
featured on Pillar 43.
It occurs at a solstice,
only twice in a cycle
of just under 26,000 years,
each return lasting barely a century.
I therefore find it eerie
as archaeoastronomer
Paul Burley first noted,
that the exact same configuration
seen at the summer solstice
around 12,800 years ago
has returned to our skies today,
at the winter solstice.
Could the imagery of Pillar 43
be a message
contrived by the master astronomers
of a lost civilization?
A warning to the future, to us,
that what goes around comes around?
That when the Sun and stars next take up
this configuration at the solstice,
an apocalypse
of sky serpents could return?
So take heed.
The notion should give us
pause for thought.
I don't want to be
a prophet of gloom and doom,
but are we in danger
from the Taurid meteor stream today?
It was danger to our ancestors.
It caused a cataclysm
on Earth 12,800 years ago.
Can that happen again?
We absolutely are in danger.
In fact, the calculations
of the astronomers
are that we're in
a danger window right now
where the thicker part of the Taurids
could be impacting Earth.
More and more scientists
are now embracing
the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis
and this accelerating interest
is no longer confined to scientists.
If something did hit Earth
somewhere around 12,000 years ago,
and reset civilization,
it's an interesting theory.
But I think it's a theory
that's worth discussing.
I just feel like there's so much emotion
tied up into your theories,
and so much emotion in the resistance.
How does mainstream archaeology
dismiss these things?
Like, what's the common arguments?
The common argument is,
"We are archeologists and we know best."
It's an argument from authority,
"You must accept our dating system."
"We've done all the work
and this is how it is."
It's so strange that people will only
accept and talk about one narrative.
The narrative that
they established a long time ago
Yeah.
and they won't let it be debated.
Maybe part of the reason
is it threatens the notion
that we are the apex and pinnacle
of the whole human story.
Maybe the notion
of a lost civilization in the past
raises the uncomfortable question
that we might be
a lost civilization of the future.
If we were to confront
a massive global cataclysm
of the kind that took place,
that we now know took place
at the end of the last Ice Age,
I think our civilization would
actually be very unlikely to survive it.
So it's not hard to imagine
that an earlier advanced civilization
might have been wiped out,
erased from memory
during this ancient apocalypse
12,800 years ago.
After those cosmic impacts
on the ice caps,
sea levels rose, swallowing up
all the low-lying coastal lands
that would have likely been
settled by an advanced culture.
Places like Sundaland
the Maltese peninsula,
or the Grand Bahama Banks.
Perhaps in Indonesia
the survivors retreated to the hills,
leaving behind tantalizing clues
to their sophisticated architecture.
Some survivors in Turkey
may have decided
to carve out refuges underground
in case more meteors struck.
In the Mediterranean, on Malta,
the survivors might have built temples
aligned to the brightest new star
in their night sky,
perhaps fearing that it might herald
the next comet to strike.
They traversed the seas,
passing down
their geographic knowledge to others.
Their appearances
recorded in ancient traditions,
even etched in stone.
They directed less advanced cultures
to memorialize what happened
with huge monuments
incorporating specific,
dateable alignments,
and megalithic memorials recording
those dates, buried as time capsules.
And these ancients helped reboot humanity
in a scarred and devastated landscape.
In my travels and adventures
over the decades,
I've learned to respect the wisdom
and, yes, the science of the ancients.
They understood the threat from the skies,
and kept their attention focused
very closely on the cosmos,
and on its sometimes deadly
interactions with the Earth below.
Their myths
and their monumental structures,
so carefully aligned
to the stars and to the Sun,
bear witness to this obsession,
and memorialize the terrible events
at the end of the Ice Age
that changed the human story forever,
and gave birth to the modern world.
Perhaps our own advanced civilization
should heed their warnings,
lest our own story end the same way.
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