The Record in Stone
Seven regions. Dozens of civilisations. One question history refuses to answer: what did they know that we have forgotten?
From the symbolic art of Blombos Cave to the binary logic of Yoruba Ifá — Africa is humanity's intellectual origin.
The Olmec, Maya, Aztec, and Teotihuacan — civilisations that built cities larger than Rome and calendars more accurate than the Gregorian.
Inca, Nazca, Moche, Paracas — stone precision that defies explanation and desert lines visible only from the sky.
Adena, Hopewell, Mississippian — mound builders whose earthworks rival the pyramids in scale, hidden in plain sight.
From Minoan Crete to the megalith builders — Europe's pre-Roman past is older and stranger than the classical world admits.
Sumer, Babylon, the Anatolians — the cradle of recorded civilisation, and perhaps not the first.
China, the Indus Valley, Japan's Jōmon — traditions of staggering antiquity whose records stretch further back than the West's archaeology.
The civilisations that orthodox history says cannot have existed — and the evidence that says otherwise.