Dan Richards of DeDunking challenges the archaeological premises of Flint Dibble and other conventional archaeologists. Dibble prides himself on debunking what he calls amateur archaeology. Richards says Dibble makes stuff up and when he can’t reconcile the evidence, he flat-out lies to cover up his baloney.
Do we believe everything Richards or Graham Hancock says? No.
But the conventional archaeologists are bigger liars and fools who have misled their students for eons now. DeDunking remains a valuable exercise.
In 2001, a research vessel scanning the ocean floor off the coast of Cuba made a discovery that shouldn’t exist. They weren’t looking for ruins, just doing routine sonar mapping. But what appeared on their screens made absolutely no sense. Symmetrical shapes. Perpendicular angles. Repeating geometric patterns stretching across miles of the seabed, buried under 600 meters of water.
Not mountains. Not coral formations. These were structures that looked like they had been built. As the researchers stared at the images, they were forced to ask the one question nobody in their field is supposed to ask: What if something was there before the water?
Millions of square kilometers of land once home to prehistoric humans were swallowed by the sea at the end of the last Ice Age. Today, anomalies like giant geometric shapes on the seabed off Cuba, the sunken plains of Doggerland, and the mysterious underwater structures of Yonaguni challenge everything mainstream archaeology claims to know.
In this episode of Secret Origins, we investigate the ultimate underwater mystery. Was there an advanced, forgotten civilization active 50,000 years ago? And if there was, how did it disappear?
In November 2021, an Iraqi-Italian restoration team working in the basement storage of the Iraq Museum in Baghdad opened a wooden crate marked Tell al-Hiba, 1968 season, unclassified material. Tell al-Hiba is the modern name for the ancient Sumerian city of Lagash, one of the largest urban centers of the third millennium BCE.
The 1968 excavations were interrupted by political crisis, the materials shipped to Baghdad, the crates sealed and placed in a basement where they survived three wars, the 2003 looting, and the flooding of the lower levels in 2015.
Inside the crate were eleven clay tablets in standard condition — fragmented, salt-crusted, partial cuneiform preservation. Ten turned out to be administrative records. Grain accounting, labor allocation, temple supplies. The eleventh tablet was different. Larger, thicker, dense text in three columns on both sides.
When conservator Marco De Gregorio carefully removed the salt layer from the obverse, the first column was not an economic text. It was a narrative. De Gregorio photographed the tablet and sent the images to Iraqi State Board of Antiquities epigraphist Ali al-Hashimi, who began preliminary transliteration that same evening. Here’s more from Null Source.
There were several mummies from ancient Egypt found to have had cocaine, hashish and tobacco in them. All of these mummies predate accepted mainstream contact between the old and new world, so this is interesting… and opposed heavily, as you may well have guessed…Here’s more from Dan Richards on Dedunking.
Why does Zahi Hawaas, Egypt’s former Minister of Tourism and Antiquities, act the way he does? Is there a reason? I think I have found one that is tangible…
Here’s more from Dan Richards on Dedunking, waxing on while recalling the days of his youth, watching heels and heroes on big-time wrestling.
Artificially modified craniums are pretty common in the ancient record. Anton Petrov — a YouTube content creator who focuses on math and science — gets this right.
But the lack of information available now compared to 100 years ago made it harder for him to find all the important data.
So I don’t hold it against him. Instead, I’ll use it as a chance to keep this memory alive. Here’s more from Dedunking.
Let’s bury rare collectibles! Gobekli Tepe, the site that rewrote our past, is being treated like some janky mundane site.
Amazing atria get reburied for ‘safekeeping’ lol. We have lost so much of our past to chance and theft, allowing more to be exposed to the exact same issues that rob us of our heritage is… Irresponsible.
Lee Clare and the Turkish Archaeological Dickweeds need to do their jobs. Here;s more from DeDunking.
An Italian team of archaeologists using satellite radar have discovered what appears to be a second Sphinx buried under 180 feet of hardened sand at the Giza Plateau.
The Scientists used LIDAR radar to map the perimeter of the Giza Plateau. They are not 100 percent confident about what they see beneath the sand’s surface, but expressed an 80 percent likelihood that it is a second Sphinx sculpture.
Beyond the second Sphinx, the team believes they’re measuring something even larger: An underground megastructure beneath the entire plateau.
Here’s more from Project Unity, reporting on the findings by the team under the direction of Filippo Biondi.
Samuel Urban, the Illegitimate Scholar, joins Dedunking in a YouTube broadcast taking a skeptical look at mainstream archaeological theories and presumptions. Says Urban, “I don’t trust woke universities and authoritarian governments to give us the solution.”
Here, the discussion turns to shipwrecks and the underwater debate between Flint Dibble and Graham Hancock, as well as Michael Button’s theories extending the timelines of ancient history.
Dark Journalist Daniel Liszt returns to the HotZone, the region in the Caribbean that the psychic Edgar Cayce said contained the underwater ruins of the lost continent of Atlantis. The HotZone occupies the area between Cuba and the Bahamas, stretching along the westernmost Bimini district of the Bahamas where Ernest Hemingway hung his hat.
In this video, Liszt draws upon emails from the Jeffrey Epstein files that pertains to the HotZone. Epstein’s assistant Ghislaine Maxwell piloted submarines and explored the depths of this region.
Liszt uncovers new bombshell revelations from the files that pertain to Atlantis and Maxwell’s deep-sea dives, providing validation for his body of research. He also focuses on the many so-called “transhumanist” scientists Epstein recruited to visit Little St. James Island, his resort in the U.S. Virgin Islands.