Say did you see that thing about how the Sphinx dates to about 10,000 B.C. because it was weathered by water and not wind? That blew my mind. I started wondering if originally there was such a monument to each of the signs of the zodiak scattered over the earth and that that was the only one whose remains are still recognizable.
What were people doing for 100,000 to 200,000 years from the emergence of homo sapiens until the rise of Egypt (in full cultural flower) in 3,000 B.C.? Bumping around in the jungle? Scratching out a survival? Living in cities and civilizations? I don't think it took them that long to decide that one color's going to be red and another blue or that 2+2=4. If they were like we are today, their minds were working. But if they had advanced civilizations, where are the records and the remains? Can geological forces erase them that thoroughly? What do you think?
"But if they had advanced civilizations, where are the records and the remains? Can geological forces erase them that thoroughly? What do you think?
I think they are all underwater from the ice melt from the last Ice Age. Hopefully the 9,500 year old underwater city off India and the one (hopefully) off the coast of Cuba will change history as we know it. There are undoubtdly underwater cities all over the world. The legend of Atlantis is just 'the tip of the iceberg', so to speak.