10/12/2024

Ancient Apocalypse season 2 | What Graham Hancock Won’t Tell You About Ancient America



Netflix’s Ancient Apocalypse season 2, featuring Graham Hancock, continues exploring ancient mysteries in the Americas and the possibility of lost advanced civilizations. Hancock, known for challenging mainstream archaeology, proposes that advanced civilizations may have existed long before recorded history. His theories, presented in Ancient Apocalypse on Netflix, have gained a massive audience, and this series delves into ancient sites like Machu Picchu, Tiwanaku, Pumapunku, Sacsayhuamán, Teotihuacan, the Pyramid of the Sun, and the Pyramid of the Moon. The Nazca Lines and Paracas Candelabra also raise questions about forgotten civilizations and their links to ancient mysteries across the Americas. In this video, we explore whether these megalithic sites could be connected to the Anunnaki, gods mentioned in ancient Sumerian texts. According to Mesopotamian mythology, the Anunnaki descended to Earth, bringing advanced knowledge and technology. Hancock theorizes that this lost civilization may have influenced both Mesopotamia and the Americas, impacting the construction of sites like Tiwanaku and Machu Picchu. By examining the myths of Quetzalcoatl, worshipped by the Maya and Aztec, and Viracocha, the creator god of the Inca, we find parallels that connect these deities to the Anunnaki. This raises the possibility that these ancient gods, revered across different civilizations, could represent the same lost civilization or a shared influence, possibly tied to the lost city of Atlantis, Lemuria, or Hyperborea. Hancock suggests that this forgotten pre-flood civilization was destroyed by cataclysmic events over 12,000 years ago, including the melting of glaciers and rising sea levels. This theory connects to various lost civilization theories, including Atlantis, and alternative archaeology. Sites like Pumapunku and Chaco Canyon, which are aligned with celestial events like solstices and equinoxes, show an advanced understanding of astronomy and ancient architecture. The Caral-Supe civilization in Peru, the oldest known civilization in the Americas, also raises questions about whether it inherited knowledge from an earlier global culture. Spiritual practices in these ancient American civilizations play a key role in Hancock’s investigation. Ancient shamanic rituals and ceremonies often aligned with celestial events to maintain cosmic harmony. In this video, we examine how shamanism in the Andes and Mesoamerica may have connected people with deities, similar to how the Sumerians described interactions with the Anunnaki. The Paracas Candelabra geoglyph, which resembles lightning bolts associated with storm gods like Adad, suggests possible links between spiritual practices in ancient American and Mesopotamian cultures. We also consider whether the Anunnaki might have traveled the globe after cataclysmic events, influencing civilizations from the Sumerians to the Maya, Inca, and Aztec. Hancock’s exploration into the myths of these cultures, including the Maya’s advanced astronomical knowledge and their understanding of eclipses as cosmic events, raises the possibility that these civilizations shared knowledge similar to that of the Sumerians. The Maya’s detailed astronomical records, like the Dresden Codex, suggest that eclipses and other cosmic phenomena were seen as significant transformations, possibly tied to the influence of ancient gods like the Anunnaki. The search for lost civilizations extends to legends like El Dorado, the fabled city of gold, and to the geoglyphs of Acre, Brazil, which suggest advanced societies in the Amazon long before European colonization. Whether through monumental architecture, spiritual practices, or astronomical knowledge, these civilizations provide clues supporting Hancock’s idea of a global pre-flood civilization. This video explores ancient civilizations in the Americas, examining mysterious ancient sites, forgotten history, and the role advanced cultures—perhaps connected to the Anunnaki—played in shaping human history before recorded time. Script and editing: Lucas Martins Kern



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