How History As We Know It May Be Complete Bogus

Robin
5 min readDec 5, 2022

History is highly interesting, we still know very little about it and there seems an endless sea of information to be emerging out of the unknown.

So who do we believe and how much of it is true?

Before we dive too deep into it, I demand one thing and one thing only:

Read this with an open mind and do your own research afterward if it piques your interest.

The Lost Civilisation

It is now pretty much proven by geologists and archeologists that there was a huge meteor impact in Greenland 13.000 years ago.

That was the most catastrophic impact since the Chicxulub event killed off Earth’s large dinosaurs about 66 million years ago.

Photo by NASA on Unsplash

While the first Homo sapiens emerged between 200,000 and 300,000 years ago, much farther in the past than this impact, the researchers found that this comet crash actually coincided with significant changes in how human societies self-organized.

A series of cometary fragments exploding over North America might explain a layer of soil immediately prior to the cooling containing unusually high levels of iridium — an element more common in cosmic wanderers like meteoroids than in Earth’s crust.

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Robin

Just sharing ideas and knowledge to manifest in a rapidly-changing world.