Hancock highlights the Piri Reis map, Bimini Road, and unusual DNA links between the Amazon and Australasia to suggest advanced seafaring and possible forgotten global knowledge.

 

That's not how Piri Reis draws mountains" Graham Hancock, Ancient  Apocalypse : r/GrahamHancock

 

In a shocking revelation that could rewrite our understanding of history, renowned author and researcher Graham Hancock recently shared compelling evidence suggesting that humanity’s greatest age of exploration may have occurred not 3,000 years ago, as traditionally believed, but 12,000 years ago.

During a captivating discussion with popular podcaster Joe Rogan, Hancock unveiled a series of ancient maps, genetic links, and archaeological anomalies that hint at a lost civilization, possibly far more advanced than we ever imagined.

“What if the world we know is built on fragments of a civilization long forgotten?” Hancock posited, his voice steady yet filled with passion.

“Ancient maps like the Piri Reis chart depict Antarctica as ice-free, a staggering 12,000 years ago, long before modern explorers even knew the continent existed.”

He paused, allowing the weight of his words to settle in. “And it doesn’t stop there. Genetic traces link the Amazon to Australasia in ways that current migration theories can’t explain.”

Listeners were left in awe as Hancock detailed the megalithic ruins like the Bimini Road, which align perfectly with coastlines that vanished beneath the ocean at the end of the last Ice Age.

“These maps and ruins could be echoes of a human civilization erased by time,” he continued. “Or they might suggest something even more extraordinary—external intelligence mapping our world long before recorded history began.”

 

Piri Reis' Map: A Map to Intrigue East and West Alike - 1001 Inventions

 

The conversation turned to the Polynesian expansion, often cited as the first great seafaring adventure of humankind.

“Archaeologists teach us that the Polynesians were remarkable navigators,” Hancock noted. “They sailed thousands of miles across the Pacific, using only the stars and ocean swells to find land.

But what if that was not the first time humans ventured across oceans?” His eyes sparkled with intrigue. “What if there were other explorers, far earlier, who left behind clues scattered across the globe?”

As he spoke, Hancock painted a vivid picture of ancient Egypt, where seagoing vessels were documented over 4,500 years ago. “If they had boats capable of long-distance travel, why assume they never ventured beyond the Nile?” he challenged.

“Mainstream thinking stops at the water’s edge, as if there’s an unspoken rule against looking further back in time.”

Hancock argued that rising sea levels since the last glaciation, which have submerged coastlines by as much as 400 feet, may have hidden evidence of advanced ports and cities.

“The silence of the archaeological record is not proof of absence; it’s a consequence of rising seas,” he asserted.

“Deep in the Amazon rainforest, geneticists have discovered a strange DNA signature in indigenous groups that mirrors those found in Australia. There’s no known migration route to explain this. It’s puzzling, yet mainstream narratives dismiss it as impossible.”

 

Genetic studies link indigenous peoples in the Amazon and Australasia |  Ancient Origins

 

He then turned his attention to the Piri Reis map, compiled in 1513, which shows a southern continent resembling Antarctica, ice-free. “How could mapmakers in the 1500s know this unless they were referencing far older sources?” Hancock questioned.

“The only way to measure longitude accurately was not achieved until the late 1700s, yet these ancient maps seem to possess perfect longitude. It raises the question: did they have access to lost knowledge or technology?”

Listeners were captivated as Hancock elaborated on the Pinkerton World Map of 1818, which left the South Pole blank, highlighting the fact that Antarctica was not officially discovered until 1819.

“Older maps, however, show Antarctica in detail, larger and ice-free, suggesting someone mapped it when sea levels and ice sheets were different,” he said, his tone growing more fervent. “It’s a series of coincidences that begins to look like a pattern.”

The Bimini Road, located off the coast of the Bahamas, became another focal point of Hancock’s argument.

“This formation of massive limestone blocks, often dismissed as natural, may actually be evidence of deliberate construction,” he explained. “The last time that area was above sea level was thousands of years ago.

The Piri Reis map even shows a large island in that exact spot, indicating human presence long before the Polynesians.”

 

When was the last time Antarctica was ice-free? | Live Science

 

Hancock’s theories challenge conventional narratives, suggesting that the maps we see today could be remnants of a more advanced civilization that thrived during the Ice Age.

“Perhaps these ancient people had precision astronomy and advanced timekeeping, allowing them to navigate the oceans with remarkable skill,” he proposed.

“But when the seas rose, they retreated inland, losing their technology and leaving behind only fragments of their knowledge.”

He also entertained a more radical idea: that the maps and anomalies could indicate the influence of an external intelligence. “What if beings from another planet or dimension were surveying Earth during the Ice Age?” Hancock mused.

“Instead of ships, they might have used orbital craft or satellites, capturing images and data, leaving behind genetic traces like those found in the Amazon.”

As the conversation drew to a close, Hancock urged listeners to reconsider their understanding of history. “Every culture has stories of floods—Atlantis, Mesopotamia, Mesoamerica,” he noted.

“What if these aren’t just myths but memories of a time when the ocean claimed great civilizations? Are we staring at the last messages of a lost world, or the first proof that we were never alone?”

With those provocative questions lingering in the air, Hancock left his audience eager for more, challenging them to explore the mysteries of our past and consider the possibilities that lie beneath the surface of history.