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54 results for "Göbekli Tepe burial" — page 1 of 3

D_1_01 Sites & Artifacts

D_1_01 — Göbekli Tepe

Göbekli Tepe (~9600–8000 BCE) in southeastern Turkey is the world's oldest known monumental architecture, predating agriculture, pottery, and settled civilization by millennia. Its T-shaped pillars (up to 5.5m tall, 16 t

Göbekli Tepe Klaus Schmidt PPNA PPNB T-pillars Enclosure D
M_4_11 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_4_11 — Göbekli Tepe Climate Reconstruction: What Supported Its Builders?

Göbekli Tepe (~9600-8000 BCE), the monumental stone pillar sanctuary in southeastern Turkey, presents a fundamental puzzle: how did pre-agricultural hunter-gatherers — people who had not yet domesticated crops or animals

Göbekli Tepe climate Younger Dryas early Holocene archaeobotany archaeozoology
M_1_16 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_1_16 — Göbekli Tepe Pillar & Enclosure Analysis

Göbekli Tepe — the monumental Neolithic ritual complex located on a limestone ridge ~15 km northeast of Şanlıurfa in southeastern Turkey (coordinates: 37°13′23″N, 38°55′21″E) — contains the oldest known monumental stone

Göbekli Tepe T-shaped pillars enclosures Pre-Pottery Neolithic PPN-A PPN-B
M_5_25 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_5_25 — Anatolian Archaeological Frontiers: Göbekli Tepe to Troy

Anatolia (modern Turkey) is among the most archaeologically significant regions on Earth, containing sites that fundamentally challenge conventional timelines of human civilization. Göbekli Tepe (c. 9600–8000 BCE), excav

anatolia göbekli tepe çatalhöyük troy hittites neolithic revolution
M_4_06 Forbidden Archaeology

M_4_06 — Göbekli Tepe Pillar 43 — Comet Impact Encoding and the Vulture Stone

Pillar 43, also known as the "Vulture Stone," is one of the most elaborately carved pillars at Göbekli Tepe, located in Enclosure D of this 11,000+ year-old monumental site in southeastern Turkey. The pillar is carved wi

Göbekli Tepe Pillar 43 Vulture Stone Enclosure D Younger Dryas impact Sweatman
D_1_16 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_1_16 — Göbekli Tepe Pillar Reliefs: Iconographic Analysis

The monumental T-shaped limestone pillars of Göbekli Tepe (southeastern Turkey, c. 9600–8000 BCE) bear the world's oldest known examples of monumental relief sculpture — an extraordinary corpus of carved imagery that pro

Göbekli Tepe pillar reliefs T-pillars iconography Pre-Pottery Neolithic animal carvings
M_4_01 Forbidden Archaeology

M_4_01 — Suppressed Archaeological Discoveries

The concept of "suppressed archaeology" requires careful separation of (1) genuine academic conservatism that slows acceptance of new paradigms (real and documented), (2) documented cases of destruction/loss of archaeolo

Smithsonian giant skeleton Göbekli Tepe deliberate burial Pillar 43 Younger Dryas
F_4_04 Lost Connections

F_4_04 — Post-Catastrophe Knowledge Preservation

If advanced civilization existed before the Younger Dryas impact (~12,800 years ago), how could its knowledge survive total civilizational collapse? This is not an idle question — it is the central engineering problem of

knowledge preservation Enoch pillars two pillars Apkallu degradation antediluvian knowledge Göbekli Tepe burial
D_1_14 Sites & Artifacts

D_1_14 — Karahan Tepe — Pre-Pottery Neolithic Ritual Complex

Karahan Tepe is a Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) site in southeastern Turkey (Şanlıurfa Province), approximately 46 km southeast of Göbekli Tepe, dating to c. 9400–8200 BCE. Discovered during surface surveys in 1997 and sys

Karahan Tepe Taş Tepeler Pre-Pottery Neolithic T-shaped pillars Structure AB phallus room
D_1_18 Verified Sites & Artifacts

D_1_18 — Taş Tepeler: Pre-Pottery Neolithic Ritual Network of Southeastern Turkey

Taş Tepeler ("Stone Hills") is a Turkish government-sponsored archaeological research program and site network encompassing at least 12 Pre-Pottery Neolithic (PPN) sites in the Şanlıurfa Province of southeastern Turkey,

Taş Tepeler Stone Hills Göbekli Tepe Karahan Tepe Sayburç Harbetsuvan Tepesi
M_4_09 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_4_09 — Younger Dryas Impact and Lost Civilization Hypothesis

The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH) proposes that a cosmic impact or airburst event approximately 12,800 years ago (12.8 ka BP) triggered the Younger Dryas cold reversal — a ~1,300-year return to near-glacial cond

Younger Dryas impact hypothesis Younger Dryas Boundary nanodiamonds platinum anomaly Clovis
M_4_02 Forbidden Archaeology

M_4_02 — Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes

This document examines Proto-Agriculture and Managed Landscapes, a topic within the Forbidden Archaeology research area. Key areas of investigation include The "Neolithic Revolution" Concept, Independent Invention: A Glo

proto-agriculture managed landscapes Neolithic Revolution V. Gordon Childe James C. Scott Against the Grain
W_1_23 Verified World Civilizations

W_1_23 — Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB)

The Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB, c. 8800–6500 BCE) represents one of the most transformative periods in human history — the era when small communities of early farmers in the Levant and Upper Mesopotamia scaled up into

PPNB Pre-Pottery Neolithic Göbekli Tepe Jericho Çatalhöyük skull plastering
W_1_08 World Civilizations

W_1_08 — Anatolian Mother Goddess — Çatalhöyük, Cybele, and Pre-Classical Worship

- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)

Çatalhöyük Cybele Magna Mater Anatolian mother goddess Neolithic
E_3_03 Cataclysms & Chronology

E_3_03 — Ice Age Civilizations — Evidence for Complexity During the Last Glacial Maximum

The Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, ~26,500-19,000 BP) — when ice sheets covered ~32% of the global land surface and sea levels dropped ~120 meters below present — was not a period of human stagnation but of remarkable cultur

Ice Age Last Glacial Maximum LGM Paleolithic Upper Paleolithic Younger Dryas
E_1_01 Cataclysms & Chronology

E_1_01 — The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH)

This document examines The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH), a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Notable findings include: Greenland ice-core data confirm rapid cooling at onset and abrupt w

Younger Dryas YDIH impact nanodiamonds microspherules Black Mat
J_3_06 Verified Ancient Technology

J_3_06 — Megalithic Construction Techniques

The quarrying, transport, and erection of megaliths — large stone blocks ranging from several tons to over 1,000 tons — is one of the most impressive and debated aspects of ancient engineering. Major megalithic achieveme

megalith monolith quarrying transporting stones Stonehenge Easter Island
J_1_06 Ancient Technology

J_1_06 — 110 Hz Resonance and Acoustic Altered States

This document examines 110 Hz Resonance and Acoustic Altered States, a topic within the Ancient Technology research area. Key areas of investigation include The Hal Saflieni Hypogeum, The Oracle Chamber, Acoustic Measure

110 Hz Hal Saflieni Hypogeum Malta Oracle Chamber Ian Cook UCLA
Credible

INTERDOC_19 — Cosmic Impact, Mythology, and Cultural Memory

[KEY FINDING] The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH) — first proposed by Richard Firestone, Allen West, and Simon Warwick-Smith (2006–2007) — argues that a cosmic impact or airburst event ~12,800 BP triggered the You

cosmic impact Younger Dryas Chicxulub comet mythology Taurid meteor stream Clube and Napier
Verified

INTERDOC_15 — Astronomical Alignment as Global Pattern

Human civilizations on every inhabited continent independently developed monumental architecture precisely aligned to astronomical events — solstices, equinoxes, cardinal directions, and specific stellar risings. Newgran

astronomical alignment archaeoastronomy solstice equinox precession Stonehenge