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The Current Story Of How Civilization Began Is Wrong

New discoveries are rewriting history (aliens not included).

Peter Burns
6 min readSep 12, 2021

TThe traditional accounts of the beginnings of civilization start off with ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt. These two lands, situated around life-giving rivers are seen as the places where culture first sprang up. In history books, the ziggurats of Ur or the pyramids of Giza demonstrate the first instances of a mix of human organization, innovation, and imagination that epitomize complex societies.

However, all might not be as it seems. New discoveries in archeology are beginning to challenge this story. The advent of civilization might have been sparked millennia before the pharaohs first united the Nile valley. Places which previously were seen as backwaters of early human progress are being pushed into the spotlight.

Gobekli Tepe

Excavations at Gobekli Tepe (Source: Wikimedia Commons)

We are living in exciting times, as scientists uncover and piece together diverse pieces of humanity’s past into a new narrative. In 1994, German archaeologist Klaus Schmitt began poking around the hills of southeastern Turkey, close to the borders with Syria. Guided by local…

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Peter Burns
Peter Burns

Written by Peter Burns

A curious polymath who wants to know how everything works. Blog: Renaissance Man Journal (http://gainweightjournal.com/).

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