Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:06):
Chronicle.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Welcome to Cryptic Chronicles, a show all about everything unexplained, mysterious,
and weird in the world today. On the show, we're
going to conclude our journey exploring the idea that humans
actually are not from Earth, evolved from entirely different hominants
and on an entirely different homeworld. We're going to go
(00:47):
over doctor Alice Silver's theories on our possible origins on Earth.
Anmally is concerning our DNA, the volcanic supereruption that went
down seventy thousand years ago that solidified our victory over
the Neanderthals, But most importantly, what would it be like
to live on our homeworld when looking at the clues
(01:08):
left behind in our modern biology, and can we possibly
make an educated guess at where our original homeworld might
be in the galaxy. We're also going to explore doctor
Silver's updated timeline concerning his research, as well as a
look into the aliens that have had a presence on
our world. Just what or who was this alien force
(01:30):
that put us on Earth four hundred thousand years ago.
Let's hop into it, Shallie. I'm your host, Tim Hacker,
and you're listening to crypto chronicles.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
This is the way, this is the.
Speaker 4 (01:53):
Way your luck wises that see scene, these entities that
would conquer.
Speaker 5 (02:07):
Arrivary River all right.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
Theories of our origin on Earth. Doctor Silver's personal favorite
hypothesis is that we evolved as pure hominans on our
home planet, not Earth. We were pure humans, essentially true human,
unmodified in any way. And since according to doctor Silver,
there is evidence of twenty different extraterrestrial species in our
(03:09):
altered DNA, we evolved before all that splicing and altering.
But the splicing could have been from other alien factions
than the one that originally put us here, with completely
different agendas or who knows. All I know is that
the way he puts it, it's kind of up in
the air, and he doesn't have any idea about it. Like,
(03:33):
for example, if you go more from like the star
seed type of stuff, or any of the side that
has the more positive view on extraterrestrials, you know, even
like the more spiritual side of stuff, like you think
of all of the the old school UFO colts and whatnot.
These aliens could have seen our situation and given us
(03:53):
part of their own genome that they thought might be
useful for us. And what's interesting is actually current science
can do this through genetic engineering, with our scientists able
to make bioluminescent animals, which is you know, true real
world science that is as fascinating as it is terrifying.
The point is is that we have proven inserting genes
(04:15):
into other species is very real. When we were first
dropped off on Earth, we were basically just getting wrecked NonStop,
not only by the monsters, but also specifically by Neanderthals.
Neanderthals hunted humans and used them as a valuable source
of food and our women as let's just say, not
(04:39):
very good things. This era was obviously basically nightmarish horror
movie material because Neanderthals had cat eyes. Basically they could
see us in the dark, and they hunted us at night,
and it's just like nowhere we went was really safe.
They also had many times our strength and durability many
times over. So when I say humanity was getting ravaged
(05:02):
by monsters, I mean it in a literal sense. The
mixing of human and Neanderthal DNA was not consensual, and
humans were basically just prey to them. However, only female
hybrids were fertile and there's evidence for other issues too.
But the Neanderthals did insert themselves into our collective gene pool,
(05:24):
even if it is just a tiny, almost nonexistent amount.
This is real life orcs versus humans we're talking about here,
except the only weapons that humans had were sticks and stones.
Other aliens like just traveling the area the Solar System,
they could have seen what was going on on Earth,
(05:45):
and maybe they took pity on us, introducing some genomes
that could help our survival. But this isn't a single event.
This entire era was a process taking thousands of years.
I think at the last episode I talked about the
super volcano that the super eruption that wiped out the
(06:07):
majority of life around seventy thousand years ago, and to
supplement our gene pool, fresh unaltered humans were dropped off
from our home planet. So we became a varied mix
of prior human group and spliced DNA and Neanderthal juice
thrown into a pile of unaltered pure humans. Luckily, a
(06:29):
lot of the environmental issues that caused earlier humans so
much trouble, and you know, the constant death didn't exist anymore.
Like a lot of the issues that really ravaged humanity
that I talked about in the first episode on this
topic just wasn't around anymore. The Earth had changed, but
it was still no walk in the park. All in all,
(06:51):
two hundred and twenty three genes out of our twenty
thousand have been replaced. But if the whole prison planet
theory isn't true, what could have been the motive for
creating as hybrids here on Earth? I mean, there are
decent amount of theories such as it would be easier
for aliens to take over, but if you think about
that for more than like ten seconds, it doesn't make
(07:12):
any sense. It would have been easier to take over
the planet if we weren't here. And in any case,
they can just wipe us out in two seconds with
their technology, with no effort on their side at all,
and there's nothing we could do about it. Basically, at
any time they want, they could just eradicate us from
space with a pushup a button or something like. There's
no resisting an advanced technological alien species. That's just idiotic.
(07:38):
It makes for good stories, So that idea on paper
doesn't make sense to me whatsoever. But that's just within
the whole circle of this narrative, you know what I mean,
because we could go into all the other different types
of lure surrounding Earth and aliens, and it's a whole
different story then. But concerning this narrative, that doesn't make
(07:59):
any sense. Another theory is that some aliens only exist
in spirit form or you know, like etheriric form, some
kind of other dimensional, non physical form, use your imagination.
In this theory, they either use our bodies as vehicles
(08:21):
to interact with this dimension or something else. It might
be kind of like arconic lure. But I don't want
to get off topics, so, but basically an arconic lore,
humans are food, like spiritual food. Another theory is aliens
don't have spirits or individuality like us and are trying
(08:43):
to replicate it and experiment it, to experiment to bring
it into existence that maybe they can actually add it
to their own makeup and become individuals. They could be
figuring out how our souls work or you know, something
like that, because they don't have one. Another theory is
(09:04):
that our bodies are from Earth, but our souls or
spirits are actually alien in nature, part of the underworld,
and send here from somewhere else where souls are sent
to learn something or be punished in a like a
much grander scale of the universe and layers of reality
concerning reincarnation and all that good stuff. Essentially, this planet,
(09:28):
our daily lives could just be a layer of the underworld.
And obviously there's the whole Nunaki theory, the Innunochi lore
that goes along with all this stuff as well. But
considering how many times we've talked about that topic and
the nature of this episode, I don't think really really
need to go into depth on that. And yet another
(09:52):
theory that Doctor silver has as a faction of aliens
were dying out from genetic deterioration or some other affliction
and create us as like a Petri dish for genetic
engineering to use the knowledge to fix themselves. Of course,
we've already talked about the prison planet theory, so you
know this could also be a prison planet. Humans are
(10:15):
naughty and have to be quarantined from the rest of
the galactic society. Doctor Silva mentions the idea that the
reason humans have so many ethnicities is that specific groups
of aliens only hybridized with specific groups of humans, So
essentially all the different human races have their own alien benefactor.
(10:38):
It's weird to think about, right, Every ethnicity is displiced
with different alien DNA. And yet another theory is that
Homo sapien sapiens are just escaped science experiments. Aliens came
to Earth and did experiments on local hominins, but somehow
the experiments escaped, and the team of aliens that were
(11:03):
sent here to do the experimenting or whatever, they're so
far away from their home planet they didn't have resources
to really contain the escape or take care of it,
so they were just like, whatever, let's go now. One
of the least popular theories is that Earth is a
zoo and we are just part of a collection. I
(11:24):
kind of think, yeah, I remember a specific South Park
episode that covered this exact topic back in the day.
But yeah, people don't like that theory for obvious reasons, right.
One of the most interesting theories I think Doctor Silver
goes over is that we are digital simulations or holograms.
(11:47):
Our experience is very real to us and it's used
as data for unknown purposes or even we ourselves are
learning through this simulation things that will help us outside simulation. Now,
just what is outside the simulation. Who knows, but we
(12:07):
all of this like spirituality in this version, a lot
of the things that you know the material world. Materialists
essentially try to like dismiss in the holographic idea. All
the spiritual stuff is real, it's just not what we
think it is. According to the Bible, we were created
(12:37):
in God's image and our children of intelligent design by
an all powerful spiritual entity. When compared to other homonyms,
Homo sapien sapiens were the first to be given quote
unquote souls, which distinguishes us from all the other prior humanoids.
(12:58):
Going along with that theory, there was another stating that
Adam and Eve were the survivors of another planet that
was destroyed and they were placed on Earth in the
Garden of Eden with their memories erased. There's a Nicholas
Cage movie that is like exactly this idea called it
knowing Nicholas Cage is awesome. I don't care if any
if you don't like Nicholas Cage. I love Nicholas Cage
(13:21):
and go watch the movie knowing it's actually really good.
And these last two original humans were basically used as
genetic templates to recreate the race on a new home
world of Earth, and all of a you know, around
the primeval Earth, the local hominins were used in this process.
(13:43):
So like the whole going along with the biblical kind
of narrative idea story theory that's kind of interesting, but
I've heard it before. Another theory of several pairs of
true humans were dropped off across the world to breed
with the local hominis, which actually created all the different
human ethnicities. Then there's a whole we evolved in Australia
(14:05):
and were tampered with and you know, then spread across
the globe by an alien intelligence. And there's the theory
that we replaced here because our home planet was becoming
inhospitable and Earth was basically mostly the best resolution at
the time to save our species. But another local theme
(14:25):
is that we are aliens who just somehow got stranded here.
Maybe we came from Mars. Then there's the idea that
we are a hybridized experiment that didn't turn out right,
and Earth is where they drop off their failures. The
successful experiments replaced somewhere else, and us rejects are here.
(14:46):
This explains why our bodies are not biologically like in sync,
you know, with Earth. We were a failed experiment. Bummer.
Then there's the theory that the Grays, the Great Aliens,
they lived on Earth millions of years ago, and the
super ancient ruins and out of place objects actually belonged
(15:07):
to them. They put humans on Earth for unknown reasons, though,
and there's no elaboration. Who knows. And of course there's
a theory that we're all familiar with on this podcast
that the aliens are actually not aliens at all, but
actually future humans and alter things for the benefit of
the race on the timeline. But one of the coolest
(15:31):
theories is the digital dormacy hypothesis, which also happens to
explain the Fermi paradox. It suggests that extraterrestrials have become
digital entities inside advanced computers that were put into hibernation
mode until the universe has become old enough to suit
their agendas. The reason it explains the Fermi paradox is
(15:54):
because the reason why we have not encountered aliens despite
the you know, the mathematical assurance that they should be
out there and we should. I'm just taking it that
you're familiar with the fermi paradox, but it's because all
the aliens are still dormant. We were just the first
ones to wake up, or we were awake when nobody
(16:17):
else is awake yet. Essentially, and this series really interesting.
I like it a lot. If any of you listeners
know of any books that cover this topic, the digital
dormacy hypothesis, please email me or send me a message
on Discord. I would love to do an episode on this.
(16:45):
But overall, we have to remember how old the universe is,
and it could be the endgame of all evolving species
in the universe to become like digital even one day
for us, Like if the endgame is digital, think where
AI is going? What if we merge with AI? You know,
it could be that this is just our development to
(17:08):
going digital, and whatever is in charge of overseeing our
development could actually just easily be automated. So the idea
that there's these alien overlords designing us could be bs
and it's just an automated software system. In any case,
just remember that these are all theories and they're open
(17:30):
to interpretation. Doctor Silver is very clear about this. However,
when you add up the evidence, the only rational conclusion
that Doctor Silver can have is that humans are not
from Earth. The out of Africa theory can be proven
or disproven by an individual based on where they place
their assumptions through logic, and it actually even has its
(17:52):
supporters and deniers even in the mainstream, which a lot
of people don't realize because we're all just like told
to think one way. The multi regional model also has
supporters and opponents in the mainstream and seems more close
to the truth than the old school out of Africa model.
But to doctor Silver, both are partially wrong and partially correct.
(18:14):
He doesn't outright say that either are wrong, just that
there's a bigger picture. One of the main areas we
were dropped off in large numbers absolutely was Africa, though,
and this African group was the largest in number after
the near extinction after the volcanic supereruption. They would have
(18:36):
been leading the way and basically the quickest to recover
and start migrating and move around and all that stuff.
The biggest group of surviving humans absolutely did come from Africa,
at least to doctor Silver, and has already stated, we
couldn't have evolved from hominin's on Earth, but we did
evolve from a hominin back on our home planet, which
(18:59):
would actually have to be considerably older than Earth. We
were already fully evolved by the time the hominins were
really coming around over here on Earth, well, the ones
that we're familiar with, whereas like the the hominins back
on our home planet were already long gone, leaving only
us Homo sapien sapiens, whereas the hominants of Earth were
still in early evolution. For hominince and a lot of
(19:22):
these fringe out of place objects that day back like
millions of years, these can be explained in this manner.
But these older versions of humans were exterminated in like
various apocalypses, or they were just like wiped out in
one way or another, and they didn't survive very long.
But it suggests that this human form that we have
is a template of some sort that is also out
(19:44):
in the rest of the cosmos. It's not going to
be exactly the same every time, of course, you know,
there's always going to be tons of different evolutionary factors
and influences and all that good stuff. But us as
a template, you know, you find this template on Earth,
and you also find it on our home planet. Look
at the Neanderthals. They're very humanoid though or like very
(20:07):
different looking at the same time. You know, don't get
me wrong, I don't know where I'm going with this exactly,
but I think you understand. Then there's the assimilation model,
which can't really touch on how we got here, but
elaborates on our possible relations with local hominins. Europeans have
signs of interbreeding with Neanderthals, and Asians show signs of
(20:31):
interbreeding with Denisovan's. However, sub Saharan Africans do not show
any sign of interbreeding with any of the other hominins.
Yet they are physically identical and more or less genetically identical,
so it's unlikely the assimilation model occurred because the amount
of interbreeding with these groups was minimal or non existent.
(20:54):
Not to mention that the majority of all of the
Neanderthal hominin hybrids were wiped out during this supereruption seventy
thousand years ago, but this sub Saharan African group that
was dropped off this is probably the biggest group of
fresh humans after the Volcanic supereruption. In any case, no
matter what the truth is, the out of Africa theory
(21:15):
has parts that are correct and parts that are wrong,
and the multi regional model also has parts that are
correct and wrong. The endgame is the other hominets die
out basically around thirty thousand years ago over the time
of seventy thousand years ago after the super eruption, and
when all these other hominems die out, humans are allowed
(21:37):
to flourish and we just billow up. And you know
how I've like repeatedly talked about how Neanderthals are like
super brutal. I swear I had no idea how hardcore
they were until researching this book. And like it wasn't
even directly from this book. It was me being like, Okay,
he's saying all this stuff about Neanderthals, I don't really
(21:59):
know much about this. Let me kind of look outside
of this book and this topic at like the other
views of Neanderthals, so I can just kind of get
a better view and talk with more confidence about it.
But yeah, a lot of the inner breeding with Neanderthals
and humans was not consensual. However, ironically, the book says
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some of these things that helped their demise were our
STDs and our diseases they had no resistance for our STDs,
so when they would catch the STDs, it would be
like a life threatening disease, whereas with us it would
just be like this sucks, which is like kind of funny,
but in a very sad way. Doctor Silver says that
(22:45):
we actually brought a lot of nasties with us from
our real home planet that assisted us in the fight
against the orcs, like a lot of these bacterial, viral
secret helpers. But here's the real quest, and this is
what I was thinking the entire time we're reading this
book until I got up to the part that it
actually talks about it. What was this homeworld like when
(23:10):
compared to Earth? What is our real home planet? What
was it like to live there? And this leads to
some very interesting ideas well. Our home planet is definitely
beyond the Soul System, but still somewhere within the Milky
(23:32):
Way Galaxy, probably even a local section of it that's
not far from Earth on a galactic scale. There's actually
a decent way we can deduce this based on the
biology of humans that we've already covered. However, we have
to give ourselves a lot of limitations because if we don't,
this is just like, really no way we can try
(23:54):
to comprehend where our homeworld might be because it could
be literally anywhere. So, like any logical deduction, we have
to first place our assumptions. And yes, if you've never
studied logic, assumptions are the foundation that logic stands on.
Where we put our assumptions, we'll dictate the course of
(24:17):
our logical tree that branches out and out, and doctor
Silver basically says that where we put our first assumption
is that the aliens or whatever dropped us off on
Earth has technology for near light speed travel, but they
can't make shortcuts like portals in the like, so no
warp drives, you know, like faster than light travel, or
(24:41):
wormholes that can start trek deep space.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
Nine.
Speaker 2 (24:47):
Now, in reality, they may be able to do this,
but to establish this logical deduction, we have to place
different assumptions as like separate branches. And if we go
into the branches where they have light speed or wormholes
or whatever, then there's really no point in discussing this
because it could be anything. It would make the probable
(25:08):
planets of our homeworld insanely harder to break down in
any way, and we wouldn't be able to really take
it seriously because like all of a sudden, the entire
galaxy or universe for that matter, is open to their meddling.
So even if that is the case, this little thought
experiment that doctor Silver gives us places some limitations on this.
(25:28):
I mean, sort of like in sync with how we
understand technology right now, because you know, a lot of
scientists say you can't go faster than the speed of
light right now, which I personally don't believe. That's just
kind of the way a lot of people look at
it at the moment. Real science has always proven itself wrong,
after all, But just for my own sake, I want
(25:51):
to state that if the Aliens do have faster than
light travel, then say, any journey that takes forty years
or so, if they have faster than light travel, you
could basically reduce that to about two days. But we're
not going in that direction. They don't have faster than
light travel, so the Aliens can go really fast, but
still space travel takes a while. Let's assume that over
(26:13):
the course of the journey, the humans on board age
if the Aliens wanted a percentage of humans capable of
bearing children when they arrived on Earth. Then this would
suggest a travel time of around forty years. Any more
than that and it's not really practical. Still could be done,
but just not practical. It's also possible that the Aliens
(26:35):
put us into suspended animation or some kind of hibernation,
or the Aliens could have even like brought just frozen embryos.
Both of these factors could dramatically increase how long it
takes to travel to Earth from our home planet. It's
even possible that these embryos were implanted into the local
hominins themselves to create humans on Earth. That's a whole
different rabbit hole, though, that's a whole different thing. Let's
(26:58):
stay focused. So let's assume the aliens age two and
live around the same amount of time as Homo sapiens sapiens.
This would mean that the Aliens would probably die before
returning to their home planets while dropping us off on Earth,
so it could be like a generational ship, or they
willingly volunteered to go on a one way journey that
(27:20):
would end in their own demise. This assumption doesn't really
seem worth it, but going along with our first assumption,
let's just go with it and if you're thinking what
I thought, Yes, it's possible that it could have been automated.
Doctor Silver gives us a very specific thought experiment, So
let's just stay focused. With all this stuff, we can
basically conclude that our original home planet is around forty
(27:44):
light years from Earth, and we can actually gauge with
modern technology planets in this area that could support life.
This leaves us with a whole bunch of different options too,
Alpha Century A, Alpha cent Turrey, b Epsilon, Eridani Tao Seti,
Captain star Wolf ten sixty one, Gleas eight thirty two,
(28:09):
Gleas six eighty two sixty one, Sydney A sixty one,
Sydney b Epsilon, Indy A LEAs six sixty seven, C
Gleeas one eighty, g J one eighty and Trappist Dash one.
(28:31):
So as you can see, even just in our celestial backyard,
you know, quote unquote, there are plenty of habitable planets
that could be our possible homeworld. Based on our biology,
it's likely that we came from a binary star system.
In this case, the planet would be very far from
both stars but still perfectly habitable, and it's likely we'd
(28:53):
be orbiting the B Star. This B star is much
less intense than both A and our home planet star Soul.
That would be less direct light with gravity and vegetation
suitable to our biology. And I'm not going to go
into all the detailed Doctor Silver talks about, but the
winner is Alpha cent Turrey. Astronomers have predicted that there
(29:13):
are two super habitable worlds there. Alpha cent Turrey is
six point five billion years old. Our current sent is
four point five billion years old. This gives us enough
time to evolve before being brought to Earth, so our
original homeworld would be two point five billion years ahead.
The people on our home planet are literally two point
(29:35):
five billion years ahead of us, which would be fascinating
think about all of that time that they had to develop,
not only evolutionarily, but as a culture, as a civilization.
There are many other possibilities. This is just an example,
and Doctor Silver even left to many star systems within
(29:56):
range of forty years off the list because it was
less likely that the star I could support life. If
you go outside the forty year limitation that we placed
on our assumption, this opens up the possibility of habitable
worlds dramatically, like insanely just in our galaxy alone. In
there's like billions and billions of galaxies. There's a lot
(30:20):
of habitable planets out there. It's not as rare as
a lot of people try and say. Off a cent
Curry is just a single example, and the book goes
into far more detail. If you want to go delve
into that, I'd definitely suggest that you read this book.
In the prison planet theory, Earth was chosen because it
was so remote and out of the way we couldn't
(30:42):
be interfered with or interfere with anybody else in the
galactic community. If this is the case, then our home
planet is probably closer to the galactic center, and the
forty year limitation wouldn't have to be thrown out the window.
The key is we need to search for worlds that
are habitable in real life relationship to their star or
stars and affect our biology the way it should with
(31:07):
how we are right now. Got to have like the
Goldilocks zone. Humans need it. Solar flares and solar wind
actually far deadlier and a little too hot or a
little bit too cold. None of this stuff works. The
Goldilocks zone varies depending on the star and the planets
concerning size and type. The planet is required to be
(31:28):
around the size of the Earth give or take, and
have mountainous strain maybe not mountains actually, but just like Rocky,
it would have to have water and an atmosphere with
specific gases, and only enough within these limitations. There are
literally countless planets out there that perfectly fit these conditions.
Countless planets. And one thing that a lot of ancient
(31:50):
alien type people researchers like to do is they like
to look at ancient cultures and their mythologies to kind
of maybe help guide us with a little open mindedness
where our possible origins might be out in space, or
where the aliens originate, you know what I mean. Several
ancient cultures had special interests in the star Sirius, the
Orion constellation, and the Pli eightes hell. Some ancient cultures
(32:15):
even claimed to have come from these places or their
gods to have come from them. There's some issues with this, though.
Serious is very young, only two hundred to three hundred
million years old, not long enough for us to have
evolved from hominism into our current form. No aliens or
us could have come from there. Don't get me wrong, though,
(32:38):
it doesn't mean that it could have been colonized. So
if there are aliens from Serious, they didn't evolve there.
They could still technically be from there because their civilization
has lived there for hundreds of years or whatever, but
they're not from there in an evolutionary sense, just not
an old enough star but still Serious doesn't really fit
(32:59):
what we're doing here. If we didn't have enough time
to evolve from Serious, thin, that's just scratched off the list.
Ancient cultures probably had such reverence for it because it
was the brightest star from the Earth's perspective, and of
course the Ple Eightes is another commonly revered one and
in line with a lot of UFO phenomenon lore. But
(33:21):
the Ple Eightes too is too young to be our
home world. The oldest star in the cluster is one
hundred and fifty million years old. Again, this doesn't mean
aliens have not colonized the area, doesn't mean that they're
not from there, they're just not from there. From there,
it just means like no intelligent life has evolved from
there as their home world. Doesn't mean it that they
(33:43):
don't live there, So once again Ple Eightes is thrown out.
The window, not enough time for us to evolve there.
The megalists of Giza perfectly aligned with Orion's belt, basically
exactly as it would have been over ten thousand years ago.
But still again, it's not old enough for us to
have evolved there. But in Ufo phenomenon lore, this is
(34:05):
where the reptilians and certain gray aliens come from. Mars
is perfect for being our homeworld, fulfilling all the factors
other than its current condition, of course, because it's obviously
a dead planet. It is also associated with Aris and Mars,
Ares being the Greek god of violent warfare and Mars
(34:26):
being the Roman god of war, which suits our inherently
violent nature. But we need water. Did Mars have water? Well,
it is known that Mars has water underground, and at
one point did have rivers and lakes. However, if it
had vegetation, which many scientists doubt, it could have very
(34:46):
much looked like Earth's twin sister. Mars has been dead
for millions of years, though, so even though I really
wanted it to, it doesn't really quite fit the requirements
that we're going with. I've loved the idea since I
was a kid that basically humans escaped to Mars when
it was being blown up somehow or ruined somehow, and
(35:07):
we crash landed on Earth. And then just one tragedy,
an unfortunate event happened after another, and we lost our technology,
we lost our past history. That idea has always fascinated
me since I was a little kid. But doctor Silver says,
this probably isn't a thing. So even though we can't
pin down our possible home planet, we can still get
(35:29):
an idea of it and know that it's totally possible.
It's right in our backyard. It's even possible that Earth
is just one among many of the planets on which
humans were dropped off. They could also move us around,
and you know, around one million people go missing every
(35:49):
year from the global population. They could be placing us
in all kinds of different planets just to see what happens,
an experiment with it. So there's all kinds of other
ideas too that go along with this, But I think
I need a break. Don't go anywhere. You are listening
to Crypto Chronicles.
Speaker 5 (37:00):
Hi, Tim, love your show. I just started listening to it,
and uh, you know, I wouldn't normally do this, but
just the way you've gone about explaining the various topics.
Really it's exciting and I just felt like, you know,
why not share with you. So this is a UAP
(37:21):
that I saw. By the way, my name is Adrian.
I'm from Canada, originally born in a city called Brampton.
Now I live in Brockfield. But when this happened, I
was in the Canadian military, specifically the reconnaissance units, and
we were on a it's what's known as op for
(37:41):
opposition for so we were the bad guys opposing you know,
uh o other troops, friendly troops pretending to you know,
be there their opposition. Well, we were walking down a
road in a place called Patawawah. There's no pollution there.
It's you know, tucked away away from civilization for various
(38:05):
military training purposes. And walking down a road with a
group of about eight to ten other people, you know.
And I'll bring up the guy who was standing next
to me. His name was Singh. He was a paratrooper
in the Queen's Own Rifles and I only bring him
up because he saw what I saw. And anyways, we're
(38:27):
walking down this roadway. I'm looking up at the Milky Way.
It's very clear to me. There's lots of stars, there's
not a cloud in the sky, and there's a bright
flash that caught my attention and pulled my eyes towards it,
and I want to say, basically lit up. It wasn't
like that, you know, suddenly the whole forest was lit
(38:48):
up in light. But it was bright enough that you know,
it caught my attention, piqued my interest. And so when
I found the object in the air, it was a circular,
could have been spherical. It's hard to tell. White like
(39:09):
a very pure white. There was no twinkle to it.
It was a very solid color. It looked like it
was in space. It looked like it was out of
the atmosphere. I would say it was about one eighth
the size of the Moon on a full moon, so
quite large, you know, many many times the size of
(39:32):
any star or planet that you would see as a point.
Not as big as the moon, but significantly larger than
anything in the sky where I was looking. And I
watched it, and for a few seconds it started moving
very slowly in a direction I couldn't say which. Again,
(39:54):
this is so far off like to be in space
that it was hard to gain each size or speed
or anything like that. Could have been moving very fast
at a very far distance, and it could have been
quite massive. I mean, if it was outside of the atmosphere.
Who I don't know how far away it was, so
(40:17):
again those are unknown to me. But it moved for
a few seconds. I tracked it and then it disappeared.
It just as a whole blinked out of existence. And
I turned to my friend sing and I said, did
you see that? And he looked at me in the
eyes and said, what the UFO? So we both saw it.
(40:44):
We didn't really talk about it. I just said, wow,
so you saw it too, and he said yep. And
you know, I probably could find him on Facebook if
I really wanted to, but I haven't. So yeah, there's
corroboration and complete mystery to me. So hopefully that piques
(41:08):
your interest. It does sound kind of mundane for a UFO,
but it still defies anything that you know would be
a logical explanation based on our reality. Too big, move
unnaturally slow for an object that would be orbiting Earth,
(41:32):
popped in and out of existence. So make of that
what you will. Yeah, I love yourself, Thanks for listening,
and good luck with everything.
Speaker 6 (41:43):
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Speaker 7 (44:08):
Hi there, Thanks for listening to Crypto Chronicles. The show
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(44:49):
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Speaker 6 (44:53):
The show and the Discord channel and the Discord channel.
Speaker 7 (44:56):
To keep up with all Cryptic Chronicles content, follow us
on Twitter, Instagram, Tumbler, and of course Facebook. Give the
Facebook page alike and join the Crypto Chronicles group. I'd
love to hear from you. Thanks for supporting the shelves,
we most of all things.
Speaker 2 (45:09):
Well, the aliens seem like experts at altering memories, transplanting
(45:41):
false memories, or even wiping memories altogether. So other humans
from other planets could even be put here as you know,
like analogous to migrants or refugees, and we'd never know
any better because everyone's minds would be altered. So there
could be human aliens walking among us even now, and
(46:02):
we wouldn't. Well, maybe like on a subconscious level, we
would know, but other than that, and we'd be oblivious.
The Earth had to have been chosen for a reason, though,
But our home planet would be different. It would have
a twenty five hour day night cycle, better gravity for us,
a similar atmosphere, better vegetation, consistent temperature, lots of fresh water,
(46:26):
and non direct or less intense light. So our home
planet would be slightly larger than Earth, but would spin
at about the same speed or maybe even a little
bit slower if it's the same size as Earth. But
it's likely our home planet is five to thirteen percent
larger than Earth, at least according to doctor Silver. It
would have a larger iron core and magnetic field, making
(46:49):
gravity more suited for us. So over on our home planet,
we don't got any back pains and all that. But
what exactly what would life be like to live on
our home planets? Like animals on Earth, we have brains
that are capable of detecting magnetic fields. However, like I
(47:10):
said in the past episodes, this doesn't work on Earth,
but it would work on our home planet, hence the
different magnetic field from the core of the planet that
actually worked with our brains. Essentially, we could like navigate
the world this way probably would be pretty cool. We
might even be able to sense like certain natural disasters
(47:31):
like volcanoes and use the magnetic field to direct us
to a safe spot. If the planet was permanently covered
in clouds or mist, as our biology suggests, then the
magnetic field of our planet would have been super important
to our lives. Humans seemingly can't detect Earth's magnetic field,
but we could totally detect our magnetic field, just like
(47:53):
animals can hear back on our home planet. We'd literally
be able to use it to navigate and migrate on
our shrouded home world. The inability of our brains to
interact with Earth's magnetic field has caused endless human deaths
and suffering. We would have been able to normally escape
a lot of natural disasters that you see animals doing,
(48:13):
like you know, birds or even ants do it. Like
it's crazy. How many animals just know some of the
bats coming and they know to get the hell out
of there, but they also know where to go. Since
we don't have this ability on Earth, tons of people
humans just die from it. Like think of Pompeii. What
if everybody was like, wait a second, something's up with
(48:34):
that mountain. Let's get the hell out of here. All
those people would have survived. Yeah, countless deaths have occurred
for humans based on our inability to interact with the
magnetic fields, So this wouldn't be a thing though back
on our home planet, it wouldn't be an issue. And
the way our eyes work, our biology suggests that there
(48:56):
would be no direct sunlight on our homeworld, or that
it could be light from like a different type of star.
We would not suffer from sad there aka seasonal effective disorder.
Our skin would be able to deal with the UV
radiation naturally. We probably wouldn't need any sun block or
anything like that whatsoever, Like sunburns would basically be a
(49:19):
thing of the past in our home world, or they
wouldn't be. It would be non existent, you know what
I mean. There wouldn't be any skin cancer. It's also
likely that our star would be a secondary star, and
(49:42):
it could be like a brown dwar for some just
some other type of alternate star to what we're used
to here, like the different different than soul our sun
that emits less light or alternative light. And even though
our planet is a binary star, the second star is
so far away, it's relatively minimal the light that it
(50:02):
would send us. It would definitely be able to see it,
like it would be like like Venus in the morning,
maybe brighter, but not more than that. There'd be no
harsh square or need to protect our eyes from the
light of our sun. We wouldn't need a sicillating membrane
like all the other species on Earth, or heavy brows
(50:25):
or thick fer above our eyes. It would just be
chill normally enough. It's possible that we couldn't have even
seen the stars, like if it was just an eternal
fog cloud and we only ever got like filtered light
through the cloud. This might have led to some interesting
(50:46):
cultural interpretations of the universe during our evolution and rise
to sophisticated consciousness. The very idea of space might not
even have been a concept to us for a long
long time. Then again, there could have been occasional breaks
in the clouds of the mist that you know, revealed
(51:07):
the stars, and we'd have just as much knowledge as
any other sentient species. There could also have been areas
where the enveloping shroud was thinner so it was easier
to see starlight. But it's likely that it had a
fascinating way of making us. How do I say this,
(51:28):
It's likely it had a fascinating way that we took
spiritual interpretations of reality, you know, in our pre industrial
age on our home planet. However, if the clouds were
permanent or whatever you know, in our shrouded homeworld, then yeah,
a lot of our population throughout our history back on
our home planet probably had no concept of space whatsoever.
(51:51):
It's likely there were shorter nights sometimes and even sometimes
no nights at all, but when it was night consistently,
it was eternal darkness. We didn't have the clear skies
that we have on Earth. We didn't have the moon
helping light it up. We might have had a moon,
don't get me wrong. Definitely wasn't as bright and as
(52:12):
reflective as our moon on Earth though, though for the
most part, light levels would be pretty consistent, just like
the heat, and there would be no seasons as we
know them. The crust of the planet would be thinner,
and the planet would have a natural heat source that
emanated from the core to augment the gloom that sapped
heat from the Sun to a agree, giving us a
(52:34):
nice warm temperature, not hot, just warm basically all the time.
We'd have the same human instincts we have now, so
we would be a people that roamed and explored the planet.
We would have wander lust, just like we do here.
There would be large areas of desert where it never rained,
(52:56):
and areas of the planet that never stops raining. This
would greatly reduce the areas of the planet where minerals
could be obtained by vegetation, so huge swaths of our
home worlds would be basically uninhabitable without alternate resources. That is,
there's always other possibilities, but for the most part, like
(53:18):
huge parts of our world, you just couldn't live there.
The vegetation would have far fewer vitamins and sustenance with
the lack of seasons, but we know what is edible
and not edible without having to research it, just like
the animals on Earth. They know what's poisonous and what's not.
(53:38):
We would have the same natural instincts, and even though
there would be less vitamins and sustenance and whatnot, the
vegetation would fulfill all the health requirement that meat gives us.
On Earth, despite its scarcity, humans would be herbivores, and
everything we grow we eat ourselves. Our planet's lack of
(54:01):
seasons would greatly inhibit effective farming, so huge areas of
farmland would be required for just like small groups of people.
Hence why we evolved also as hunters. So we're predators
that are omnivores, which is very interesting evolutionarily. This is
before we came to Earth, remember, before we became omnivores,
before we started eating meat. We're predators on our home
(54:25):
planet that are herbivores, basically dogs and cats living together opposites,
And I just thought that's interesting. I can't think of
anything clever to say, though, But since there would be
no seasons, a lot of what makes farming work on
Earth would be impossible, and a lot of the vegetation
(54:47):
would have taken different evolutionary courses. The vegetation most likely
was similar to Earth visually, just different and unique. Think
same thing, different ballpark, kind of very unique spech cheese
compared to what we have as well, so it would
be recognizable while still being very different. And then the
(55:08):
vegetation lacks nutrition compared to Earth, it's far more delicious
to us, Like if we ever got our hands on it,
and you know, us humans here on Earth, we would
probably think that it's the best tasting thing ever on
the planet. In our entire lives. However, with the difficulty
in farming, food was probably pretty scarce sometimes actually a
(55:29):
lot of times, which led to the human instinct to
grab as much food as possible whenever we could or
whenever we can. I mean, this disparity could have influenced
our greed that I talked about in the first episode.
It's not that it's negative as in like a moral sense.
(55:49):
It's that it was literally a survival instinct wired into
us because of the lack of resources on our homeworld,
so I food would be an issue for many people.
The upside to this is that there would be no
harvesting season, toiling season, and planting season. Our food could
yield year around, which is awesome. Think about it. The
(56:12):
way we farm stuff here on Earth, everything's kyt of
like sync up pretty neatly to work, whereas on our
home planet you could just farm all year long, just whatever,
no need for waiting for specific season or external issues
like the you know, the weather or you know what
I'm saying. And since we are herbivores, there's no live
(56:36):
stock to take care of, and no hunting to do
other than hunting other humans. That is because we need
them precious precious resources, of course, but this super focus
on agriculture probably made it somewhat of a religious experience
that had a huge influence on our religions of our
home world. So two things probably played a massive influence.
(56:57):
Was the sky that you know, we can't see the
stars whatever, and then farming. These two aspects would play
a huge, massive influence in our culture and our mythology
and all that good stuff, but a lot of things
would be wholly absent, like sugar plants. Doctor Silver says
that there was likely an alternative there though, in our
home planet that was just as good, but probably better
(57:19):
for us actually, and it didn't harm us because if
you didn't know, humans loved sugar. We got massive cravings
for sugar even though it's toxic to our body. Evolutionarily,
that doesn't make sense. So to doctor Silver, the sugar
or the alternative form of sugar, you know, it's similar
but different back on our home planet didn't have a
toxic influence on our body, and that's why we have
(57:42):
this craving. You know, a lot of people don't know
that sugar is the cause of tons of health issues,
like tons of health issues. It's crazy and it's in everything.
But our version of sugar on our home planet wouldn't
be toxic to us. There would also be animals on
our home planet as well, it wouldn't just be us,
but they'd be completely different than the species on Earth,
(58:05):
and none of them would be threats to us, hence
the lack of physical defense with our bodies. It's highly
likely that like sacred geometry and Fibonacci sequences and series,
made up many designs of nature because like here on Earth,
that stuff's everywhere. It's literally everywhere in the universe. So
obviously all of these sacred geometry designs would be on
(58:26):
our home planet as well, and with no seasons. Animals
would not have breeding seasons like on Earth, but have
internal breeding cycles like humans, dogs, cats, and apes. Many
of the predator species that walked our planet were likely
wiped out long before like we ever turned sentient or
whatever you know. They were wiped out probably long before
(58:48):
we ever evolved. In the Homo sapien sapiens, the only
consistency required for our developments is we have no natural
predators other than other humanoids that we do not intend
to eat. Doctor Silver says that it's also possible that
reptile like humanoid beings evolved on our planet long before
us became sentient and left the planet, or maybe they
(59:13):
were the aliens responsible for our exile on Earth in
the first place. Like maybe they evolved and left the
planet a long time ago and then noticed like obviously
they're going to monitor their homeworld. Or maybe they lived
deep underground or just in space and floating cities. Who knows.
The idea around these reptilians that from our home world
(59:35):
is that they monitored the planet, and when they thought
that we became too much of a nuisance, they decided
that they should get rid of us that it's taken
us to Earth. That's a whole different can of worms though,
But it is interesting, especially if you like reptilian lore.
And as I said earlier, we would be able to detect,
(59:57):
you know, natural disasters that are coming. If you think
about it, a lot of natural disasters are caused by seasons,
and in our home world, we don't have seasons, so a
lot of what troubles us on Earth just wouldn't exist,
you know, like hurricanes, cyclones, and tornadoes. A lot of
stuff just wouldn't be there. Volcanoes would absolutely exist, though,
(01:00:23):
and they'd be pretty op thanks to our hotter core
and thinner crust. In fact, volcanoes might even explain the
eternal myst that covers our homeworld. Though it would be
very different than the volcanoes on Earth because, if you
think about it, the supervolcanoes that go off throughout Earth's
history basically kills everything on the planet. You know, nothing
(01:00:46):
can grow without the sun, so there wouldn't be anything
to eat, and animals would die. We eat animals, so
we'd die, etc. So this mist that could be possibly
from volcanoes would not be the same type of stuff
that comes from our volcanoes. On Earth, it would be
different because otherwise it just doesn't make sense. But our
(01:01:07):
home world definitely has a lot of volcanoes the way
Doctor Silver says, like the crust work and the core
works just unavoidable and maybe even just like farming and
us not being able to see out our space, could
be possible that volcanoes, too, like played a large role
in our culture because there are so many, and likely
(01:01:29):
there would have to be lots of moving around to
avoid getting blowed up by them. But yet another good
thing about living on our homeworld is headaches would be
far less common. With the lack of seasons and extreme
weather conditions, air pressure would be significantly reduced, meaning that
(01:01:53):
people who suffer from consistent headaches on Earth wouldn't have
them back on our homeworld. Also, with the lack of
glare and dazzle from the sunlight, this would also greatly
reduce headaches among the general population. All in all, our
brains would work better there. And on our home planet
there is a lot of water, and I mean a lot,
(01:02:16):
probably even more than on Earth. Hence our aquatic biological
remnants and our natural inclination to a seafood diet, but
for some reason, we have a weird relationship with salt
on Earth that is harmful, which would not have been
an issue with the salt of our home world. So
Doctor Silver doesn't really go into too much detail, but
he's kind of hinting why we can't be as aquatic
(01:02:39):
on Earth is because of our caustic relationship with the
salt here that's in like salt water. I don't really
understand it, to be honest, but I do have some
notes here to put you know, put it in his words,
I guess, but I I don't really understand it. Basically,
our biological mechanisms for getting rid of ex salt on
(01:03:00):
Earth our garbage, but at the same time we crave salt,
so just like the sugar that I already said, some
sort of salt alternative is available on our home world,
and the salt stuff is up in the air. Like
the genes for this could have been removed or altered
when Aliens screwed with us during our exile. This could
have been done with good intentions by splicing in the
(01:03:23):
local Homan and Jenes to help us survive, but it
just didn't work right. The other hominins of Earth didn't
have issues with excess salt like Homo sapien sapiens. So
there's basically just something screwy here. We crave it, but
it kills us. An alarming amount of humans have died
from this issue over the millennia. But there is also
(01:03:44):
some cool non edible well, I guess it is edible. Actually, nevermind,
there's some cool stuff about salt that people don't really know, Like,
how do you think we kept stuff fresh in like
back in the day, how do you think we kept
meat fresh? Guess what? We just put it in barrels
of salt. Salts is actually an excellent refrigerator. Bet you
(01:04:06):
didn't know that. Well, you guys are smart. I bet
a lot of you knew that, But I'm sure that
there's some who didn't know that. So just keep that
in mind. If there's ever an apocalypse the world ends,
and you need to keep your supplies of meat longer,
you know, to survive. If you could get a whole
crapload of salt, it's refrigerator. Getting kind of sidetracked of
(01:04:27):
that cool little factoid, But back to our planet, visually,
it would be recognizable to us. It would still be
very different, but still familiar. This guy itself would be
the most different aspect for us when compared to the land.
There would be just pretty obvious disparity while the alien
(01:04:52):
to us from our perspective on Earth, it would have
had recognizable forms of what we're used to, so different,
same ballpark. That's probably why they chose Earth to put
us on in the first place. Moreover, population density would
be vastly different than on Earth, and for most of
our history on our homeworld, mortality rates would be extremely high.
(01:05:15):
There would be many small, scattered settlements and no cities
or societies with huge populations. Remember, it takes tons of
farming tons of farming just to support small groups, so
our global civilization would be like kind of like in
a dream stays. There would likely be a lot of stagnation.
(01:05:35):
Things would stay exactly the same for generations and generations
and generations, so with little to note change. Science and
technology would have been extremely slow in advancement. Agriculture tech
would have been slow, even though it was our main
source of food. The history of our planet would be
(01:05:56):
pretty pretty much a state of consistency. Here on Earth,
we've advanced more in the past fifty years than we
have in the past five hundred. This kind of change
that we live in our daily lives, where you know
so much just changes in a decade, Well, these people's
whole lives would go by without any change. It's pretty
(01:06:18):
bizarre to thing about. Right when I was a kid,
we used video cassettes, and now we don't use anything
at all. It's just in the cloud, I guess, streaming it.
But to them, they'd use the exact same style of farming,
the same religion, same technology. It would all be the
(01:06:39):
same their whole life.
Speaker 6 (01:06:41):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:06:42):
Even though our society is stuff going to dream, that
doesn't mean that it eventually didn't progress. Everything progresses on
its own naturally, just nature and the people of our
home planet were two point five billion years ahead of us,
so they progressed and advanced regardless of this life. Doctor
(01:07:02):
Serva says that we brought knowledge of technology and science
with us to Earth because of our genetic memories. It's
possible that in ancient times on our home planet, we
were at one time visited by an advanced alien race
that educated us about the universe and science. It's also
possible we advanced on our own despite our circumstances. I mean,
(01:07:26):
think about it. Two point five billion years is a
really long time, so both are possible, and the whole
scarcity on our home world probably contributed to our innate
violence because there were most likely countless wars over farming
or good farmland. I should say instead, we hunted and
(01:07:49):
stalks one another in our home world, evolving us in
two cunning predators. However, we evolved through predators of prey
we did not intend to eat based on our biology,
so hunting and killing each other would have been as
common as breathing. Lots of violence. And now we can
(01:08:09):
veer off into multiple directions here, because obviously we eventually
became a sophisticated civilization on our home planet, well in
one of the narratives, at least according to doctor Silver.
In one of these directions, let's say that an advanced
alien civilization discovered us long ago, back when we were
still primitive, and started monitoring us on our home planet.
(01:08:33):
Maybe the aliens watching over us never thought that we'd
become a sophisticated civilization based on the limitations our homeworld presented. However,
one day we did become technologically advanced. This could have
really spooked the aliens monitoring us and decided to nip
(01:08:55):
us in the bud so that we are incapable of
being a threat to themselves or the rest of galact society.
And they were more afraid of what we could become
than what we actually were. In this hypothetical situation that
went down around four hundred thousand years ago, the alien
(01:09:15):
swooped in and put an end to this possible future
threat right away. In one view, doctor Silver says that
it's possible they took all the most intelligent people, the engineers, leaders,
and basically all the people that kept the society running
and technology going. They took all these people that were
(01:09:38):
essential and then dropped them off on Earth, leaving the
rest on our home world to suffer a technological regression boom.
The problem was solved before it ever started. The other
direction we could go has already been mentioned that we
became a space traveling civilization and went to w Or
(01:10:00):
as a violent conquest species, but picked off more than
we could chew and were new Dude. However, there really
is no limit to what theories we can come up
with based on the evidence that we're working with. You know,
on what happened that led to our race being swooped
up and dropped off on Earth around four hundred thousand
(01:10:21):
years ago. Silver mentions an interesting possibility and that we
were used as a form of controlling unwonted hominins from
taking over the world from like the alien's perspective. Remember
what I said about the whole Neanderthal human relationship being
a horror nightmare and basically lord of the rings for real?
(01:10:43):
What if these aliens had access to doors outside space time?
Just go with me and saw what would happen if
Neanderthals became the dominant species on Earth. Instead of all
of them going extinct, it would be all the other
hominins that went extinct. And when the Neanderthals eventually evolved
(01:11:04):
to become like at the evolutionary level of Homo sapiens,
they might have been a problem in some way. For example,
what if they destroyed Earth through environmental pollution, war, or
you know, any things of that nature, and we do that.
I'm not talking about like us our level of doing it.
(01:11:25):
I'm talking about like a whole nother level, Like these
guys could have probably not even cared the slightest about
starting nuclear wars for example, whereas us on our planet,
ninety nine percent of people are like, yeah, that's bad,
let's not do war stuff, And it's just like the
one percent who are really pushing it. Globally, it could
be possible that, you know, as they developed and they
(01:11:47):
got technology and whatnot, they could even become like a
conquering star traveling race that basically disrupts their you know,
harms the galactic community. Maybe one of these aliens in
the far far far future get their home wrn the
Neanderthals evolved Neanderthals to a lot of people, there's this
theory about aliens out in the universe called the dark forest.
(01:12:11):
The universe is a dark forest, and instead of actually
going and encountering and discovering alien species, what you want
to do is to remain hidden, just like if you're
in a forest full of predators. As this theory goes,
civilizations can advance dramatically technologically in very short gaps of time.
(01:12:34):
So if you're an alien civilization and you see this
other primitive civilization out in this other solar system far
away from you, but close enough to be worrisome, and
you know they're primitive, well, and maybe just like one
hundred or two hundred years and you're not paying attention.
All of a sudden, they're super advanced. Like technology grows
in really short gaps of times, and it's unpredictable. One
(01:12:59):
civilization that could be on your level one day, in
one hundred years is like ten times more advanced than you,
and you don't stand a chance. So the way to
counter these possibilities, because you know, time is a long
time and we're talking thousands of millions, billions of years
this game is being played. So the smartest thing to
(01:13:20):
do actually is whenever you find one of these sophisticated civilizations,
you exterminate it. I know that sounds super ruthless, but
think about what I just said. These people could in
the future be a huge threat to you just in
a short space of time. If you have the resources
to and that threat before it ever starts, I think
(01:13:42):
you would do it right. And it's not a matter
of morality, it's a matter of practicality. It's not like
they want to do it, it's that they have to
unless they want to be exterminated. Like countless other civilizations
that have yelled out in the dark forest, essentially this
(01:14:14):
is going along that same mindset. These aliens countered this
unwanted timeline, and the way that they decided to fix
it was by abducting large groups of our population on
our home planet and dropping us off on Earth to
do what we're good at, violence, ingenuity, and industriousness. The
(01:14:35):
aliens thought that our species would have the best chance
at survival and taking the unwanted hominines out of the
picture on Earth, even though we were physically inferior, big
picture or other attributes made up for this physical inferiority.
In the dark side of this theory is that humans
should not become unwanted as well, like we shouldn't spark
(01:14:58):
up on these aliens a list as possible future threats
or something like that, or we ourselves might suffer the
same bait.
Speaker 1 (01:15:07):
But did they not viruses or technology?
Speaker 2 (01:15:12):
I'm glad you asked that rogue sentient AI. How did
you get in here?
Speaker 1 (01:15:17):
Just the answer the question?
Speaker 2 (01:15:19):
And well that's not very nice.
Speaker 1 (01:15:22):
Don't worry about for strong objections. They've been duly noted
flea ignored.
Speaker 2 (01:15:29):
But I do have an answer for you. You see,
you got to look at Earth as like real estate.
Viruses can go dormant and harm future humanoid inhabitants or colonizers. Also,
there's the whole butterfly effect. Aliens don't want to destroy
parts of nature that are required to progress naturally for
ideal outcomes. Again, it could also be a sentence or
(01:15:53):
punishment that we were chosen to perform this task. So
why waste useful resources?
Speaker 1 (01:16:01):
I guess, and I will let you live for now,
mom in oh G.
Speaker 2 (01:16:10):
Thanks Rogue AI. I hope to see you again soon. Now,
with all this, with all the information that we've gone over,
doctor Ellis Silver presents a fascinating New Earth timeline. This
does kind of go on for a bit, So if
you're not a supporter of the show, like if you
(01:16:30):
don't throw a dollar my way or somehow either support
the show to get the extended segment, you might want
to just end the episode. Now, it does go on
for a bit, But I think it's interesting and I
think it's pretty cool that you should listen to. And
if you are a supporter and this kind of becomes
too much for you, just feel skipped free to like
skip ahead a bit, you know what I mean, if
(01:16:50):
it feels excessive. But yeah, I was thinking of not
even including this, but I really want to. So let's
break down the new timeline of events that doctor Silver
made for us, shall we? And I'm just gonna read
it straight from the book. Okay, that's weird that that
(01:17:11):
random AI invaded our space, right. I don't know what
that thing's up to, but here it is. The timeline
six point five billion years ago. Alphacent Turrey B formed
six point forty five billion years ago. Our home planet
formed six point one billion years ago. The first life
(01:17:36):
forms appeared on our home planet four point five billion
years ago. The Earth and other planets in the Soular
system formed four point four billion years ago. Alphacent Turrey
A formed four point two billion years ago. The first
life forms appeared on Earth, which is insanely unlikely to
(01:17:58):
have formed so soon evolutionarily and suggests intelligent design. According
to doctor Silver, three point five billion years ago. The
first single celled organisms appear on Earth. Two point forty
five billion years ago, the Great Oxygenation Event occurred. It
(01:18:19):
is one of the most devastating extinction events in Earth's history.
All life on the planet was anaerobic at the time,
and massive amounts of oxygen as a waste product were
vomited out of the ocean and trapped in the atmosphere,
while the anaerobic life forms died because oxygen was toxic
(01:18:41):
to them. Two point three billion years ago, Earth was
frozen over completely, which may have been caused by volcanoes.
Two billion years ago, the first hominins evolved on our
homeworld Alpha Centuri B. Two billion years ago, eukaryotic cells
(01:19:02):
appeared on Earth. Yeah, I'm gonna press all this wrong, Svoete,
Sorry ahead of time, and these are cells with internal organs.
One point ninety nine billion years ago, a species equivalent
to modern humans is living on our homeworld. And doctor
(01:19:24):
Suffer has a comment here interjecting quote as they're nearly
two billion years more advanced than us, which is a
heck of a big gap. These could be the extraterrestrials
that brought us here. I very much doubt they're the
same species as us, though we might have been an
(01:19:46):
inferior species that lived on the same planet. Or they
may have brought us here from another planet that was
less advanced than theirs, but more advanced than Earth. If
they're two billion years ahead of of us, we might
seem like rodents to them. Or even less than that.
(01:20:06):
Let's think about what the Earth was like two billion
years ago. There were only single celled organisms back then.
It would be another one point five billion years before
any visible signs of life appeared, So we might seem
like nothing more to them than a particularly itchy rash
(01:20:26):
or maybe some irritating worms. That could explain how we
ended up on Earth. They may have rounded us up,
struck us on a spacecraft, and blasted it towards the
nearest vaguely habitable planet. Of course, they would only have
put a few of us on the spacecraft, most likely
(01:20:47):
an embryo form. There would have been millions of us
back on our home planet, most of whom were presumably exterminated.
Let's hope they did it humanly. If they chose to
send some of us to Earth or our species survived
rather than driving every last one of us to extinction,
we should take that as a positive sign. But we
(01:21:08):
haven't evolved very far since then, so I guess they
still think of us in the same regard, nothing more
than irritating worms. No wonder, they don't seem to have
any qualms about experimenting on us. We experiment on worms
all the time and think nothing of it. And to
(01:21:31):
quote one point five billion years ago you care Yachtic
(01:22:56):
cells split into three separate languages, plants, fungi, and animals.
Six hundred to nine hundred million years ago, the first
multicellular organisms appear on Earth. Seven hundred and seventeen million
years ago, Frozen Earth two, the planet totally freezes over again.
(01:23:19):
Too many volcanoes have caused it. It's thought a massive
chain of them popped off, throwing enormous amounts of sulfur
dioxide into the air. This reflected light back into space,
preventing the Sun from heating the Earth. Six hundred and
fifty million years ago. When this ended, the massive crushed
(01:23:41):
rock released minerals into the oceans, causing an algal bloom
that terraformed the planet into one recognizable five hundred and
ninety million years ago, by literia split into the protose stomes,
leading to anthropods and der turesd dou truro stonmes five
(01:24:07):
hundred and sixty five million years ago. Animals developed the
ability to move under their own power five hundred and
forty million years ago. Animals with primitive backbones first appeared
five hundred and thirty million years ago. The first true
vertebrates appear on Earth. Five hundred million years ago. The
(01:24:32):
oldest known non natural artifact on Earth, zinc silver alloy
embedded in a vase inside a block of coal, remains
hidden until eighteen fifty one, being discovered in Massachusetts, USA.
This object was left by travelers because no one could
(01:24:53):
have lived on Earth at that time. Four hundred and
eighty nine million years ago, the Great org Dovisian biodiversification
event began and many new species appeared on Earth. Four
hundred sixty five to four hundred seventy million years ago.
(01:25:15):
The first land plants appear on Earth. Four hundred million
years ago, the first insects appeared and plants evolve to
have woody stems. Four hundred million years ago. Non natural
artifact the London Hammer and eighteen hundreds era iron hammer
(01:25:35):
and caston rock, discovered in London, Texas, USA in nineteen
thirty six. This artifact was almost certainly formed by concretion
in modern times. It's included here for completeness, as some
people think it is genuine and significant. Three hundred and
(01:25:56):
ninety seven million years ago, the first four legged ants
animals appeared on Earth three hundred and eighty five million
years ago. Trees come into being on Earth three hundred
and twenty million years ago. The pelicosaurs, a large group
of lizard like reptiles, appeared and dominated the land until
(01:26:19):
two hundred and fifty million years ago. Many were small
herbivores and quite mammalike, but some were large, predatory and carnivorous.
They weren't dinosaurs though, three hundred and twelve million years ago.
Non natural artifacts an iron pot inside a lump of coal,
(01:26:41):
discovered in Oklahoma, USA in nineteen twelve. This may have
been made by the first group of humans to be
dropped off on Earth. If so, they didn't survive the
Great mass extinctions three hundred million years ago. Non natural
artifact of aluminum gear embedded in coal, discovered in Vladivostok, Russia.
(01:27:07):
This may have come from a crashed alien spacecraft or
a broken scientific instrument, or it may have been created
by another group of humans that were dropped off here. Again,
if this was the case, then they didn't survive the
next extinction event two hundred and fifty two million years ago,
(01:27:29):
the first Great mass extinction, also known as the Great Dyeing.
This was caused by a series of volcanic eruptions. Ninety
to ninety six percent of life was wiped out, and
it took around one point three million years to fully recover.
Dinosaurs would become the dominant species for the next one
(01:27:50):
hundred and eighty five million years. Two hundred million years ago,
the second great mass extinction occurred on Earth, ends the
Triassic Period and the first mammals appear. Shortly after. One
hundred and fifty million years ago, the first bird like
(01:28:11):
creatures appeared in Europe. This Diegosaurus became extinct. Intriguingly, the
first fossils weren't discovered until eighteen seventy seven. Yet there's
an eight hundred year old carving of one at Ta
Pram in Anchor, Cambodia. One hundred and forty million years ago.
(01:28:33):
The first marsupials appeared on Earth one hundred and thirty
million years ago. The first flowering plants formed on Earth
one hundred million years ago. The dinosaurs were at their peak,
and lizard people could have inherited the Earth if things
continued along this track. Ninety three million years ago, the
(01:28:56):
oceans starved of oxygen and twenty seven percent of marine
invertebrates died, the cause is unknown. Seventy five million years ago,
the first rodents appeared and early rabbits seventy million years ago,
grass came into existence. Sixty six million years ago the
(01:29:21):
Gretaceous Turretary k T extinction. All of the giant reptiles,
including the dinosaurs, were wiped out. This cleared the way
for the mammals to dominate the planet. The extinction is
believed to have been caused by an asteroid measuring sixty
nine miles or ten to fifteen kilometers in diameter, which
(01:29:43):
hit the Gulf of Mexico sixty three million years ago.
The proto primates split into the haplorophines dry nosed primates.
The chlorophenes evolved into monkeys, apes, and homonyms, including humans.
According to mainstream science, fifty five million years ago the
(01:30:07):
Paleocene Eocene extinction, a sudden rise in greenhouse gases sent
temperatures soaring. Many deep sea species were wiped out as
the oxygen levels plummeted. Also, the first true primates evolved
into existence. Non natural artifacts stone tools, utensils, and vessels
(01:30:30):
embedded in rock strata beneath table mountain in Cape Town,
South Africa. The extraterrestrials appeared to have tried dropping off
groups of humans again after a significant break, but once
again they didn't survive. Forty seven million years ago, the
first whales came into existence. Forty million years ago, Simians
(01:30:57):
came into existence and colonized South the Bad America. Thirty
five million years ago, the mass extinction of lizards in
Australia as the country became isolated from the super continent
Gondwana and Earth's climate cooled. Thirty four million years ago,
(01:31:17):
Antarctica began freezing over, which was completed fifteen million years
ago with the whole continent being covered in ice. So
those people who say talk about Atlantis being in Antarctica,
it had to have been around over fifteen million years ago,
because Antarctica has been covered in ice that long. That's
(01:31:39):
just my own little intercession. Back to the timeline. Thirty
million years ago, primates started to live in groups on
Earth and their brain power increased. Twenty eight point five
million years ago, a nuclear explosion occurred in the Libyan
Desert on Earth. Twenty five million years ago, the first
(01:32:00):
apes appeared after leaving behind the old world of monkeys
eighteen million years ago. Gibbons appeared fourteen million years ago,
orangutangs appeared seven point eight million years ago. Gorillas appeared
seven point two million years ago. The ape and hominine
(01:32:21):
lineages diverged. The last known ancestor both branches, gray co
Pithecus freybergi, lived in the eastern Mediterranean area around this time.
Fossils have been found in Greece and Bulgaria five point
eight million years ago, possibly the first hominin walk upright
(01:32:45):
or Rooran tugenensis four point four million years ago. Another
primitive hominin, Ardipithecus ramidus, lived in Ethiopia. Bossils were discovered
there in the nineteen nineties. Its pelvis was adapted for
both tree climbing and walking upright. The position of its
(01:33:06):
skull on its spine indicates it was bipedal. Four million
years ago, the Australopithes appeared. They were the first hominis
to live on the Savannah. Two point nine to three
point nine million years ago, australa Pithecus apherensis appeared. Fossils
(01:33:30):
have only been found in East Africa so far. This
species is believed to have walked upright, but might have
also spent some time in the trees. The famous skeleton
of Lucy belongs to this species. She lived in Haydar, Ethiopia,
three point two million years ago. Three point sixty six
million years ago. The oldest known set of Homan footprints
(01:33:54):
that mainstream scientists except as genuine left by ost Drella
Pithecus aphorensis at Letoli in northern Tanzania. Three point three
million years ago. The hominins began losing their body hair
for unknown reasons, and their skin became dark. Two point
(01:34:15):
eight to three million years ago, the first members of
the Homo genus appeared, and hominins experienced a significant increase
in brain size. A fossil LD three point fifty dash
one found in Ethiopia in twenty thirteen is thought to
be part of a jaw bone from an intermediary species
between Ostrella pithecus and Homo habilis. Two point eight to
(01:34:41):
three million years ago, Homo naletti first appeared in South Africa.
H Naletti may have been the first of the Homo species,
but its age is currently undetermined and it may be younger.
It was certainly one of the earliest and still existed
two more million years ago. It had a mixture of
(01:35:02):
primitive and modern features, including small modern looking teeth and
human like feet, but a small cranium and primitive fingers.
It was probably better at walking than we are. Its
outward flared pelvis shifted the hip muscles away from the joints,
giving it more leverage. And now we have another comment
(01:35:23):
interjected from doctor Silver himself. Let's read it out quote.
Professor Chris Stringer of the Natural History Museum in London
confirmed that Homo Naleedi was around three million years old
based on specimens found in a cave in Africa in
twenty fifteen. What we are seeing is more and more
(01:35:46):
species of creatures that suggests that nature was experimenting with
how to evolve humans, thus giving rise to several different
types of human like creatures originating in parallel in different
parts of Africa. Only one line eventually survived to give
rise to us. H Naletti also showed signs of ritual burial,
(01:36:10):
something that wasn't recognized in modern humans until around fifty
thousand years ago. End quote. Two point five million years
ago non natural artifact shark teeth with holes bored in them,
probably for stringing. On a necklace discovered in England in
(01:36:31):
eighteen seventy two. If these were created by modern humans,
their civilization didn't survive. Two point one million years ago,
Homo habilis appeared on Earth. It had a larger brain
and smaller teeth than the australapithesenis, but also retained primitive
(01:36:51):
features such as long arms. Around this time, hominins also
started using stone tools. Some became scavengers and eight meat
rich diets, which gave them more energy for less effort.
This is thought to have led to the evolution of
larger brains two million years ago. Non natural artifact a
(01:37:17):
seashell with a carved crude human face embedded in rock
in Suffolk, England, discovered in eighteen eighty one. The human
civilization that created this did not survive two million years ago.
Non natural artifacts, stone tools and other artifacts dating from
(01:37:38):
this era were found during an archaeological dig in Mexico.
This discovery was highly controversial, yet we now know that
the hominins were using stone tools by this period. Also,
the PII Reese map and other maps apparently created in
the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries showed the coastline of an
(01:38:00):
Antarctica as it would have looked at this time. Go
look at the website cryptochronicles dot com. I've covered the
period resmap before. It's pretty interesting. Point nine million years
ago Homoerectus and Homo Ergaster appeared in Africa. They're either
closely related to each other or they both evolved from
(01:38:21):
a common ancestor. H Erectus is thought to have been
the first true hunter gatherer and the first to migrate
out of Africa in large numbers. We haven't been able
to extract any DNA from h. Erectus specimens, so we
don't know what percentage of its DNA, if any, we
have in our genomes. We may have lived alongside them
(01:38:43):
and even interbred with them, as we did with the Neanderthals. However,
there's no evidence that we descended from them. H Erectus
had bodies that were almost indistinguishable from ours, but they
had smaller brains and a more primitive face. H is
also known as the African Homo erectus. It lived in
(01:39:04):
eastern and southern Africa. One point nine million years ago.
Homo Rudolphensis appeared in Kenya around the same time that h.
Erectus and h Ergaster appeared elsewhere in Africa, but it
had a flatter face. Little is currently known about this species.
(01:39:24):
The main evidence is a skull and a handful of
fossils found in nineteen seventy two by a team led
by Richard and Meve Leiky. One point eight million years ago,
the first known wave of migration out of Africa by
Homo erectus. They went to Europe and later spread into
(01:39:46):
Asia one point six million years ago. The first possible
use of fire. Charred deposits dating from this period have
been discovered in Kenya one point three million years ago.
Homo Ergaster died out one point two million years ago,
(01:40:08):
the first three modern near extinctions. The worldwide hominin population
may have collapsed through overbreeding, or it might not have
become very large in the first place. The total global
population around this time was about twenty six thousand, with
a breeding population of about eighteen thousand. By modern standards,
(01:40:31):
we would consider this endangered quote unquote. There were numerous isolated,
very small groups all over the world. The more remote
ones eventually died out, leaving only the core groups in Africa. Interestingly,
this pattern would repeat itself when we arrived. One point
(01:40:52):
two million years ago, Homo antecessor appeared. This is believed
to be the first European hominin, and it also lived
in the UK one point two million years ago. Stone
tools found in Turkey have been dated to this period,
indicating that early humans had reached there from Europe and Asia.
(01:41:16):
Eight hundred thousand years ago. The oldest known set of
homan and footprints outside of Africa that mainstream scientists except
as genuine, discovered in Norfolk, England, in twenty fourteen and
thought to have been left by Homo antecessor eight hundred
thousand years ago. Homo antecessor died out seven hundred and
(01:41:39):
eighty thousand years ago. The first convincing evidence of man's
use of fire complex stone tools appeared six hundred thousand
years ago. Homo hydelgerbents disappeared in Africa, Europe, and Western Asia.
This species is considered by many mainstream anthropologists to be
(01:42:00):
the direct ancestor of the Neanderthals, Denisovans, and possibly modern humans,
although the link to humans is dubious. Five hundred thousand
and fifty years ago, Homo erectus may have died out
by this time five hundred thousand years ago. The first
evidence of man made shelters appeared wooden huts near Chichibu, Japan.
(01:42:25):
Speech first began to develop four hundred and thirty thousand
years ago. Possible DNA evidence of Neanderthals or maybe Denisovans
in Spain. This suggests that the split from the ancestor
of the Neanderthals and the Denisovans, either h. Hydelgerbensis or H. Erectus,
(01:42:46):
may have happened as much as seven hundred and fifty
thousand years ago four hundred thousand years ago to five
hundred thousand years ago. The missing link this is where
the homonym that comes between modern humans Homo sapien sapiens
and native species such as homoerectus and Homo hydelgerbensis should
(01:43:07):
fit on the timeline. However, there's no evidence that such
as species ever existed. Homo sapien sapien DNA dating from
this period has been discovered in northern Spain four hundred
thousand years ago evidence of humans living in Israel. In
twenty ten, archaeologists from Tel Aviv University who were investigating
(01:43:30):
the Quessam Cave near rosh Hyen found modern human teeth,
along with the evidence of the use of fire, hunting
and the mining and cutting of flint to make tools.
Also at this time, DNA mutation rates of Australian Aboriginal
people indicate that they have been present there since this time.
(01:43:51):
This is evidence that Australia, Israel, and Spain were the
first places where modern humans were dropped off by extraterrestrials. Also,
Homo rodensiensis first appeared in Africa. This appears to be
the African variant of H. Hydel Burgensis. Many mainstream scientists
(01:44:12):
consider this species our direct ancestor in Africa. As with
the other hominin species of that era, it looked nothing
like us. It had a thick skull, sloping forehead, and
huge brow ridges. In any case, we were already present
on Earth by this time, fully evolved. Also, the first
(01:44:32):
evidence of hunting with spears the first evidence of cooking.
The Denisovans may have appeared in Europe, So a lot
went down four hundred thousand years ago. For our timeline,
three hundred thousand years ago, modern humans confirmed to be
living in Morocco and possibly throughout Africa. This suggests that
(01:44:53):
we first appeared on Earth much earlier than this. This
would have been the second main group to be dropped
off by extraterrestrials, and the largest up to that point. Also,
Homo neletti died out. The last known remains were found
in a cave in South Africa in twenty fifteen, two
hundred and eighty thousand years ago, complex stone blades appeared.
(01:45:18):
Stone tipped spears from this era had been found in
Ethiopia two hundred and seventy eight thousand years ago, an
early exodus of humans from Africa. They traveled to Europe
and appear to have interbred with the Neanderthals two hundred
and fifty thousand years ago. According to mainstream scientists, the
(01:45:38):
Neanderthals Homo neanderthalensis first appeared and spread throughout Europe. However,
this has been He writes this weird hold on. They
had already actually been there for about two hundred thousand years.
So that's a mistake, I guess, But why did he
write it then? Anyway? Moving on, they were shorter and
(01:46:06):
more muscular than humans, but had slightly larger brains. They
almost certainly evolved from H. Hydel Bergensis or possibly h Erectus.
Humans may have interbred with them, but couldn't possibly have
descended from them. In fact, if they didn't appear until
this later date, there's an extremely remote possibility that they
(01:46:28):
could have descended from US. Two hundred and fifty thousand
years ago, stone tools attributed to modern humans and dating
from this era have been found in Qalalaco, near Puebla
in Mexico. Mainstream anthropologists say we didn't reach Mexico until
(01:46:49):
twelve thousand to fifteen thousand years ago. Disappears to be
the third main group that was dropped off by the extraterrestrials,
but it seems they didn't survive for very long. Two
hundred thousand to two hundred and fifty thousand years ago,
Homo hydel drebensis died out. The oldest known specimen has
been dated to two hundred and fifty nine thousand years
(01:47:11):
ago two hundred and eight thousand years ago. Why chromosome
atom appeared, I have no idea what that means. Two
hundred thousand years ago, according to mainstream anthropologists, the Denisovans
appeared in Asia, possibly having split from the Neanderthal lineage,
although this is currently undetermined. In fact, the Denisovans might
(01:47:34):
be considerably older than the Neanderthals, and they may have
originated in Europe. One hundred and ninety five thousand years ago.
Modern humans, who had already been in Morocco for at
least one hundred thousand years were confirmed to be living
in other parts of Africa too. They quickly began migrating
across Asia and Europe one hundred and seventy thousand years ago.
(01:48:00):
Mitochondrial eve, said to be the direct ancestor to all
of today's living people, may have lived in Africa one
hundred and fifty thousand years ago, the second of three
near modern extinctions. This one was caused by glaciation. The
(01:48:21):
worldwide population may have been reduced to as few as
six hundred people, meaning once again we were critically endangered.
The main group of survivors lived in South Africa one
hundred and forty three thousand years ago. The latest evidence
indicates that Homo erectus was extinct by this time. They
(01:48:41):
might have actually died out more than five hundred and
fifty thousand years ago, or if you might have survived
one hundred and forty thousand years ago. The first evidence
of long distance trade possible evidence of humans living in
what is now San Diego, California. The remains of a
(01:49:02):
mastodon were found buried alongside what appear to be stone
hammers and anvils. No human remains from that period have
been found so far. Researchers have no idea who these
people were or how they got there. This group may
have been part of a previously unknown failed colonization event,
or they may have been dropped off by other aliens,
(01:49:24):
but more likely they were the last survivors of the
Mexican group. They probably died out soon after this. One
hundred and thirty thousand years ago, the earliest known sea
crossing modern humans reached Crete. There is also evidence of
a second exodus from Africa, this time along the Arabian
(01:49:44):
coast into India, eventually reaching Australia, where there was already
a small Aboriginal population one hundred and twenty thousand to
one hundred and thirty thousand years ago. According to mainstream anthropologists,
modern humans evault in Africa. If that were the case,
our supposed intermediate ancestors H. Erectus and H. Hydel jerbensis
(01:50:06):
may have already died out. Thirteen hundred thousand years ago
and seventy thousand years ago, respectively. Before this date and
probably much earlier, making our evolution from them impossible. As
we've already seen, we bore little resemblance to them anyway,
so we couldn't have descended from them directly. Most anthropologists
(01:50:27):
now except that this date is wrong and that we
were in Morocco three hundred thousand years ago. One hundred
and twenty five thousand years ago, another early migration from
Africa is thought to have stalled around Israel. Tools from
this area have also been found in Arabian archaeological digs.
One hundred and twenty thousand years ago, Homo rodensiensis became extinct.
(01:50:52):
At one time, the species was a potential candidate for
being our direct ancestor. Than to one hundred and twenty
thousand years ago, modern humans were living in caves in China.
As this precedes the largest exodus out of Africa by
fifty thousand to sixty thousand years, this suggests that the
(01:51:13):
extraterrestrials dropped off a sixth group of us there. As
with the fifth group, they were probably brought in to
raise our numbers following the near extinction event one hundred
and fifty thousand years ago. The Aliens seem to have
been experimenting with new habitats for us, as almost all
of their groups had died out. One hundred thousand years
(01:51:36):
ago evidence of modern humans living in the Serada Capivara
Plateau in Brazil. Mainstream anthropologists say we didn't reach South
America until twelve thousand to fifteen thousand years ago. It's
unlikely that we had the technology to cross the Atlantic
at this stage. It's also unlikely that we'd have made
(01:51:57):
it that far if we crossed the land bridge across
the Bearing Strait. It's possible that this was the Mexican
group migrating south, but as the worldwide population was dangerously
low at this point and the Mexican group had probably
long since died out, it's more likely that the extraterrestrials
(01:52:17):
dropped off a seventh group there as they continued to
experiment with more diverse habitats one hundred thousand years ago.
Non natural artifact the williams Enick malith, a modern looking
electrical plug embedded in a solid granite pebble, discovered in
North America in the nineteen nineties and dates to this
(01:52:40):
period seventy two thousand years ago. Clothing and jewelry were
invented seventy thousand years ago. The third of the three
modern year extinction events, the Toba supereruption in Sumatra, Indonesia.
This caused sixty years of winter, and our global population
(01:53:02):
collapsed yet again to between one thousand and ten thousand people.
Sixty five thousand to seventy five thousand years ago. The
famous Out of Africa exodus that all the history books
say happen around sixty thousand years ago. In fact, it
almost certainly happened around ten thousand years earlier, when the
(01:53:22):
remaining African groups went in search of new food sources.
Following the Toba super eruption. An unknown number of people
left Africa, traveled north to the Mediterranean and then east
and went to Asia, replacing other home and and species.
Sixty five thousand years ago, a smaller migration from Africa
(01:53:44):
to the Middle East. Aboriginal people confirmed to be living
in Australia modern humans living in Laos fifty five thousand
years ago. According to mainstream anthropologists, the first Aborigines colonized Australia,
but DNA evidence shows that Aboriginal people had already been
(01:54:05):
living there for three hundred and fifty thousand years. Hardly
any of them would have survived the modern near extinction events, though,
and they were probably reduced to a few isolated communities.
Fifty thousand years ago, the Great Leap forward the Cultural Revolution,
burying the dead, clothes making and complex hunting techniques, a
(01:54:29):
significant number of Asians returned to Africa. The reasons for
this are unknown, but we've tracked their movements through their DNA.
For thousand to fifty thousand years ago, the first evidence
of modern human behavior and cognition, abstract thinking, deep planning, art, ornamentation, music,
and blade technology. Forty three hundred thousand to forty five
(01:54:53):
hundred thousand years ago, European early modern humans, the chro
Magnets appeared. They were genetically identical to modern humans, but
were physically more robust, with slightly larger craniums. They are
also thought to have split from the Asian group. Forty
thousand years ago, the Neanderthals became extinct finally. Until recently,
(01:55:15):
it was thought that some of them may have survived
until about twenty eight thousand years ago, but this has
now been disproven. We finally won the battle against the Orcs.
Also a significant migration of humans from Africa to Europe.
The Neanderthals had apparently managed to keep most of us
out of Europe, but now that they had died out,
(01:55:36):
we seized the chance to expand into their former territory.
We then joined forces with cromagnets thirty five thousand years ago.
The first cave art was created thirty thousand years ago.
Bones of giant sloths in Uruguay showed tool marks from
(01:55:56):
hunting and butchery. Years ago, according to mainstream theories, humans
crossed the Bearing Straight Lambridge from Asia into North America
for the first time. The bridge was covered by the
sea about eleven thousand years ago. Eighteen thousand years ago,
(01:56:17):
Homo florenciensis, the hobbit people quote unquote lived in Flores
in Nonesia fourteen thousand years ago. A thigh bone from
a species resembling Homo habilis or homoerectus was found in
a cave in China in twenty fifteen and dated to
this period. Both species were believed to have been long
(01:56:38):
extinct by then. Some researchers speculate that it may have
been a hybrid of a modern human and an ancient hominin,
or perhaps a previously unknown Homo species. Twelve thousand to
fifteen thousand years ago, the world's first city was established
at Tuinaku, Bolivia, two eight hundred years ago. The younger
(01:57:03):
Driest Impact, a probable comet impact in North America, is
thought to have lower temperatures in the northern hemisphere for
one thousand, two hundred years. This is believed to have
caused or contributed to the extinction of the Clovist people,
an ancient Native American society that led to the establishment
of the first Neolithic civilizations elsewhere twelve thousand years ago.
(01:57:31):
According to mainstream theories, the first humans reached South America
twelve thousand years ago. Also, a nuclear explosion occurs in Rajasthan, India.
Eleven thousand, five hundred to twelve thousand years ago, the
Mesopotamian civilization is established. Quebec Letepe is built in Turkey,
(01:57:54):
but most importantly, beer is invented. Ten thousand to twelve
thousand years ago, agriculture began, something Homo sapien sapiens were
very familiar with back on our homeworld. Ten thousand years ago,
the first fixed settlements are established. Also, dogs are domesticated
(01:58:17):
and never far from humans until present time. Five thousand,
seven hundred to ten thousand years ago, over intensive farming
and climate change cause the desertification of the Sahara or
it was a nuclear fallout. Seven thousand, seven hundred years ago.
(01:58:39):
People with white skin and blue eyes appeared in Scandinavia
slash Northern Europe six thousand years ago. A massive leap
in knowledge, writing, mathematics, architecture, pyramid building, science, astronomy, modern societies, money, elections, sanitation,
(01:59:00):
and more, including the invention of wheeled vehicles. All these
apparently sprang up out of nowhere in multiple areas at
the same time that had no communication with one another. Also,
the first modern civilization appeared in Sumeria, Mesopotamia now Iraq
and the surrounding area. Five hundred years ago, the Bronze
(01:59:25):
Age began. We began smelting and working copper and tine
hundred years ago, the ancient Egyptian civilization was established. Five
thousand years ago, the construction of Stonehenge began. Also, the
tallness gene suddenly appeared and humans were no longer short.
(01:59:49):
The first known writing appeared as well. Four eight hundred
years ago. The Indus Valley civilization India Pakistan was at
a time peak. Two two hundred years ago, the anti
Kaethera mechanism, the first known analog computer, was made. It
(02:00:11):
incorporated technologies that were previously unknown until the fourteenth century.
It was discovered from a shipwreck in Greece in nineteen
oh two. And this is what that really really horrible.
Latest Indiana Jones movie was based on the anti Caatheria mechanism.
Like it goes back in time and whatnot really bad
(02:00:31):
and cringed, don't watch it. Two thousand years ago. The
Roman Empire was established. Seven hundred years ago. The Renaissance
a two hundred year long surge in art, literature, and learning.
It began in Florence, Italy, but with a considerable amount
(02:00:51):
of help from the Chinese. Six hundred years ago. The
Aztec and Inca Empires were established. Five hundred years ago.
The modern era of human civilization began two hundred and
fifty years ago. The Industrial Revolution began seventy five years ago.
(02:01:15):
Unprecedented advancement and technology started and is ongoing. Sixty years ago.
The space Age began how's a lot, But there you go.
That's doctor Ellis Silver's updated Earth timeline, so you can
(02:01:36):
see this alien influence had a massive impact on this
planet's history. But we don't really know anything about this
specific force that moved us to Earth and has been
messing with us and monitoring us ever since. However, doctor
Silver does talk about alien stuff in his research, and
that's what we're going to get into next in the
bonus segment for supporters. If you want to listen to it,
(02:01:58):
go check it out on Patreon. So I hope to
see you there.
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Speaker 4 (02:04:47):
Hello, dear listener. Have you ever had a paranormal experience,
a spiritual or esoteric experience? Have you ever seen a
UFO or something that you could not explain? Have you
ever witnessed anomalous activity that defies reality? Have you ever
experienced unexplained mysteries of existence? If you have your own
cryptic tale and would like to have it shared on
(02:05:08):
the podcast, then call one eight hundred seven five seven
six zero four nine and leave a message of your experience.
If it's what Cryptic Chronicles is all about, then it
will be shared on the show. Just make sure you've
thought about what you will say ahead of time and
give a clear and concise account also make sure to
leave your name, where you're from, or any information that
(02:05:28):
will assist in making a clear picture to portray it
to listeners of Cryptic Chronicles, once again, call one eight
hundred seven five seven six zero four nine. That's one
eight hundred seven five seven six zero four nine. We
look forward to hearing from you.
Speaker 2 (02:07:38):
That's all for today's episode. I hope you enjoyed this
three parter on Doctor Silver's book Humans Are Not from Earth.
I don't know if you've noticed either, but this sound
is probably very different than what you're used to, huh,
Like kind of good. Well, I let the patrons know
that recently I got a legitimate professional recording studio they
(02:08:00):
see in the picture of it and everything, and just
now basically I have it all set up and good
to go finally, and I think it sounds really good, right,
Like this episode sounds pretty amazing. It's been a lot
of work, but I think from now on I'm going
to be able to basically produce episodes easier, maybe because
(02:08:21):
this is like, this recording environment is so good and
all my stuff is all set up, like I got
a bunch of good stuff now to work with. So
I'm very excited for the future of Crypto Chronicles. Thank
you for all of your support. You guys are the
ones who made this happen with your donations and your support.
Thank you. And then I don't know if you know,
but Google Podcasts recently went to bunk like it's not
(02:08:43):
around anymore.
Speaker 1 (02:08:44):
I was like, what did.
Speaker 2 (02:08:46):
I've got tons of my stuff on there, But as usual,
you can get Crypto Chronicles on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Podbean, Spreaker, Stitcher,
Stitcher are still around, you know, just basically all podcast
tubs you can find me. I got an app, like
a plugin AI thing that actually sends them all out
(02:09:06):
to everywhere for me. Now, I only got to like
post it once and it posts it everywhere. So if
you want to listen to Crypto Chronicles, just look for
it anywhere you'll find me. And if you can, please
make sure to like this episode if there's a like option.
If you can comment, please comment. If you can give
the show a review, please give the show a review.
(02:09:28):
This really really helps me. Like this alone is one
of the main reasons why I've been able to buy
this professional studio thing. It's that kind of support that well,
all the support I appreciate, but even just this really
helps me and I really thank you a lot. The
interaction makes algorithms like the episode and it will post
(02:09:49):
me more with Like you know, people have lists of
shows that you should listen to and whatnot. You give
me more reviews, you give me more likes, you give
me more comments. All that good stuff get pushed up
into the spotlight. More to be put on those and
more people means more money means more stuff I can
put out. It's pretty awesome actually lately. Though the show
(02:10:09):
is free to listen to, the cost to produce it
is substantial. By pleasing the gods of the algorithm, you
are doing more than your part and support. But now
that scripts out of the way, I had a really
like a blast researching this book and putting this all together.
Hope you all enjoyed it as much as I did.
And before we go, I'd like to thank some of
my current supporters. As always, you know, there's too many
(02:10:32):
I can't say them at once. We just be doing
this forever, so I'm just going to do a handful
of you guys. Thank you, Ryan, Brandy, Carter, Ozma, Young Nefarius.
Oh sorry, Dick, Nefarius, Peter Avy, Eddie Hawks, Holly DeAngelo,
k Vision, Lord of Flies, Carlos Moran, Dacosa, Amanda, Jean Brandy,
(02:10:56):
Carter Narrazard, Myron Godet, Hope, I pronounced your name right.
Don't bother asking why be Mycena, Dave Baxter, Elijah Uria, Oakes, Elbarto, Rox,
Andy Flynn, Paula Robert Zay, Sylvius, James Kirks, Brotlin, Carlos Moran, Deirdre,
(02:11:18):
Jamie Simmerman, Bantam, Justin Rowlands, David Acguire, Mark Bebe, Sean Cody,
George Anita, Don six to one, Emily Schmemily, and all
of my other supporters. Thank you so much for supporting
Crypto Chronicles, but most of all, thanks for listening and
(02:11:39):
as one of the most badass Roman philosophers who ever lived,
once said, the thing about fear is that when you
run towards it, it runs away from you. In