Were Ancient Catastrophes Alien Made? | Ancient Aliens
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The Indus Valley, Southern Pakistan.
In 1922, an officer with an Indian archeological survey
group discovered the ruins of an ancient city known
as Mohenjo-daro.
According to mainstream archeologists,
the city, whose name means mound of the dead,
had flourished between 2600 and 1900 BC.
However, scientists in Pakistan have suggested
Mohenjo-daro is much older.
Mainstream archeologists believe the city was abandoned
as a result of climatic changes, or possibly
a decrease in trade.
But when the ruins of Mohenjo-daro
were discovered in the 1920s, 44 skeletons
were found lying face down in the street, many holding hands.
Their faces and body positioning suggested they suffered
a sudden, violent death.
PHILIP COPPENS: You have a culture of people who literally
were lying dead in the street archeologists have found
human remains and something big has happened to these people.
NARRATOR: What in fact did happen
to the people of Mohenjo-daro?
Why is there evidence that wild animals avoided scavenging
the remains?
And why even after thousands of years
had their bones not decayed?
GIORGIO A. TSOUKALOS: In certain areas of that site,
you find increased levels of radiation.
And radiation exists all over the place.
When all of a sudden you have higher levels of radiation
in certain areas of the world, the question arises--
why?
[ominous music]
NARRATOR: Is it possible that Mohenjo-daro
was one of the cities mentioned in the Bhagavad-Gita, a city
that suffered the equivalent of a sudden atomic attack?
In his 1979 book, Atomic Destruction in 2000
BC, British researcher David Davenport claimed to have found
a 50-yard wide epicenter at Mohenjo-daro,
where everything appeared to have been fused
through a transformative process known as vitrification.
GIORGIO A. TSOUKALOS: Vitrification is a process
in which regular type stone gets molten into a magma state,
and then it hardens again.
But once the stone is hardened again, it feels like glass.
At Mohenjo-daro, we find evidence of vitrification,
which could have only been achieved if the material was
exposed to extreme heat by some type of a blast.
DAVID CHILDRESS: When British and Indian and Pakistani
archeologists began doing excavations in the Sindh Desert
on the borders of India and Pakistan
in the late 1940s and early 1950s,
what they found in these cities, Mohenjo-daro, Harappa, Kot
Diji, was archeological evidence to show there were apparently
atomic weapons, only it happened in ancient times.
There's other evidence in parts of Africa
and the Middle East where it would seem
to be like some sort of atomic explosion had taken
place, there and had turned the desert sand into glass.
And that's exactly what happened at Alamogordo in New Mexico
when they detonated the first atom bomb in the desert.
NARRATOR: Could the strange ruins found in the Indus Valley
really contain evidence of an ancient atomic explosion?
If so, where did these powerful weapons come from?
Who was using them, and why?
GIORGIO A. TSOUKALOS: In the ancient Indian texts themselves
it says, and I quote, at one point,
three giant cities were orbiting the Earth.
And those giant cities were often
described as being made of gleaming metal and iron.
And at one point, those three cities
went to war with each other.
And it described how the gods threw weapons at each other,
destroying those cities, they all went up in flames,
and fire came raining down onto Earth.
So when you read those passages, the question
I ask is, what is it that our ancestors try to describe here?
And I think that it was some type of a technology that
was witnessed, yet our ancestors while being highly intelligent,
didn't understand the nuts and bolts
aspects behind that technology.
And so they created something divine out of it,
something supernatural, yet it never was divine,
it never was supernatural.
♪
NARRATOR: Mahabalipuram, India.
While at a local library
with fellow ancient astronaut theorist Praveen Mohan,
Giorgio Tsoukalos gets a firsthand look at early copies
of some of India's most important ancient texts.
And now let me show you the other book.
This is the Bhagavad Gita.
NARRATOR: Among the most influential
is the Bhagavad Gita,
part of the 13,000-page epic
called the Mahabharata,
which contains 19 individual books.
Historians think this text was written around 500 BC,
so this book is 2,500 years old.
-Okay. -But according to "mythology,"
this was supposed to be written at least 10,000 years ago.
(chuckling): Okay.
It's a very popular book, and some people even say
atomic science is hidden in this book.
Not just regular people, but modern physicists.
So the argument can be made that the knowledge of,
-for example, the atom is contained in a book -Mm-hmm.
-Yes. -...that is at least 2,500 years old?
And some stories say
-that it was given by an otherworldly being. -Yes.
-Okay. -Even Robert Oppenheimer,
who is the father of atomic bomb,
-uh, was fascinated by this book. -Mm-hmm.
-Really? Wow. -Yes.
TSOUKALOS: Okay, that's interesting.
NARRATOR: Jornada del Muerto Desert, New Mexico.
July 16, 1945.
In the middle of the barren Alamogordo Bombing
and Gunnery Range,
scientists detonate the first man-made nuclear weapon.
The destruction was comparable to no other weapon known to man.
The father of the atomic bomb was J. Robert Oppenheimer,
the leader of the Manhattan Project,
a secret government program created
to develop such a weapon.
Oppenheimer, when he saw the successful nuclear test
and realized what a terrible weapon he was unleashing,
he quoted the Bhagavad Gita's
"I am become death, the destroyer of worlds."
NARRATOR: Oppenheimer's interest in ancient Sanskrit literature
began while he was a professor
at the University of California, Berkeley
and was introduced to the texts
by renowned scholar Arthur W. Ryder.
Under Ryder's tutelage,
Oppenheimer extensively studied the Vedic scriptures
and became proficient in Sanskrit.
According to his biographers,
he kept a hardcover of the Bhagavad Gita on his bookshelf
and was known to give copies away to his friends as gifts.
BRANDENBURG: One of the ideas that's deep
within the Vedic scriptures, the Bhagavad Gita,
is the idea of duty.
He felt it was his duty to do this,
even though it would be a terrible thing, he realized,
to develop this new nuclear weapon.
So he believed he was part of a cosmic cycle
and we had to do this to advance.
Perhaps he knew that by developing the atomic bomb,
we were actually reconnecting with technologies
that we had been exposed to many thousands of years before.
NARRATOR: One of the key ideas found within the Indian texts
is the concept of the cyclical nature of existence,
that once we complete a cosmic cycle,
it just begins once more.
Oppenheimer himself came to see
that he was, in a sense, fulfilling some ancient destiny
and that this weapon could ultimately be used
to stop a major war, which is exactly what happened.
It totally broke the momentum of World War II.
In that sense, he was seeing that he was, in some way,
fulfilling a destiny that came to him
from a seemingly supernatural source,
i.e. extraterrestrial gods who influenced ancient India.
NARRATOR: If Oppenheimer's work on the atomic bomb
was inspired by the ancient Indian texts,
could this mean that similar weapons actually existed
on Earth thousands of years ago?
Thar Desert.
Rajasthan, India.
1992.
Engineers conducting soil sampling at a site
where a housing development was to be built
discover a heavy layer of radioactive ash under the soil.
Further examination reveals the contamination stretches
across a three-square-mile area of the desert.
MOHAN: After cordoning off the area,
scientists unearthed a city
with completely demolished buildings.
HENRY: Scientists have discovered a radioactive ash
that they believe dates to 8,000 to 12,000 years ago
that shows evidence of a nuclear blast in ancient times.
This is very interesting because the Sanskrit texts
describe exactly this type of occurrence in this era
in ancient times.
NARRATOR: In the Ramayana,
one of the major ancient Sanskrit epics,
a mighty weapon of the god Brahma called the Brahmastra
is described as a weapon of immense power
intended to rain down destruction from above.
Brahma provided this weapon to the hero Rama
as a last resort after all conventional means of warfare
failed in his battle against the demon king.
SHIMKHADA: The Brahmastra is the deadliest weapon there is
in the history of humankind.
It is like a nuclear device, uh, that can be detonated,
and then it will have a very devastating effect.
Once it was fired, its effect fell on a lot of animals,
and then they dropped dead.
And also, people started losing their nails,
their hair, and they could not breathe.
LAYNE LITTLE: Rama fires the Brahmastra weapon
upon Dhrumatulya.
It is commonly accepted that this is in Rajasthan,
in Pakistan.
It's the 19th-largest desert
in the world.
[ominous music]
Alamogordo, New Mexico, white sands proving ground, July 16,
1945.
Early in the morning, a number of US military officers
and scientists gathered to watch a powerful new weapon being
tested.
Some believe the device will be a complete failure,
others think it might destroy the entire state of New Mexico.
As a precaution, viewing stations
are placed from 10 to 20 miles away from the test site.
At precisely five 5:29:45 seconds,
the first atomic bomb is detonated.
3, 2, 1, fire.
[explosion]
The blast emits a fireball over 600 feet wide,
and produces an explosion equal to 20,000 tons of TNT.
The mushroom cloud reaches over 7 miles in height
and the reverberations can be felt nearly 100 miles away.
The world had a new weapon, one so
terrifying it left even its creator, Dr. Robert
Oppenheimer, shocked and shaken.
J. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER: Few people
laughed, few people cried, most people were silent.
NARRATOR: For the first time in its history,
the Earth had been assaulted by a man-made weapon
of incredible power.
But what if it had all happened before?
What if an explosion of even greater force
and destructiveness had long ago shaped the Earth's history?
Some people have suggested on the basis of a number of lines
of evidence that there may have been atomic warfare,
atomic bombs, atomic explosions in the very distant past.
[explosion]
NARRATOR: Atomic warfare among ancient civilizations
may sound like something out of a science fiction novel.
But descriptions of similar deadly occurrences
can be found in the very same text Dr. Oppenheimer quoted
after the New Mexico atomic test.
J. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER: I remember the line
from the Hindu scripture the Bhagavad-Gita, now I am become
death, the destroyer of worlds.
[ominous music]
NARRATOR: Part of an ancient Hindu scripture
known as the Mahabharata, the Bhagavad-Gita
was written sometime between the 5th and 2nd century BC.
This massive 100,000-verse text contains stories about
the ancient empire of Rama, which it is said existed over
12,000 years ago, a roughly 5,000 years before the earliest
recorded civilization in Mesopotamia.
GIORGIO A. TSOUKALOS: If you read the ancient Indian epics,
they read like modern day science fiction.
Yet, they're thousands of years old with references not only
of flying chariots and of these gods that
had these incredible technological capabilities,
but incredible weapons that they used in those epic battles.
NANCY RED STAR: They had what was called a Brahma weapon.
There were many people that were singed and burned and melted
by the Brahma weapon.
NARRATOR: Ancient astronaut theorists
believe the Brahma weapon was an early nuclear device
because the descriptions of its deadly after-effects
are eerily similar to the effects of exposure
to intense radiation.
It is a theory largely discounted
by conventional science.
There is no evidence that a nuclear bomb was described
in the Mahabharata, the Bhagavad-Gita.
It describes a battle.
In battles, there are explosions, big explosions.
[explosion]
It's one thing about suggesting
that, you know, battles have explosions
but that's not really what we're looking at.
You got to look at the whole picture.
One reference that we have for example
speaks of these explosions that were brighter than a thousand
suns.
And when these blasts occurred, the suns were twirling
in the air, trees went up in flames,
and there was just this mass destruction.
[explosion]
After those blasts, people who survive
started to lose their hair, and nails started to fall out.
I mean, right there, we have a concise reference
to radiation poisoning, nuclear fallout.
And those texts are thousands of years old.
[music playing]
NARRATOR: Southern Pakistan-- in the middle of the Indus River
Valley lie the ruins of Mohenjo-daro.
This ancient city, whose name means Mound of the Dead,
was one of the largest urban settlements
in the world in 2,600 BC.
The ancient city of Mohenjo-daro had what appeared
to be streets that were laid out parallel and perpendicular
to each other like a modern city.
The homes actually had their own toilets.
And they had a very sophisticated sewer system.
So it looks like a very advanced city.
NARRATOR: Ancient astronaut theorists have long
thought this site was also the epicenter
of a nuclear explosion that occurred more than 4,000 years
ago.
Skeletons were found in dead positions
as though there was an instantaneous death.
And some of those skeletons, as measured by Soviet scientists,
had 50 times the normal radioactivity.
[dramatic music]
They found pottery that had been fused.
Then walls were heated to such an extent they became
vitrified or glass-like, suggesting
some sort of ancient nuclear weapon involved.
[music playing]
NARRATOR: According to the Mahabharata,
the ancient holy text of the Hindus,
white hot smoke rose in infinite brilliance
and reduced the city to ashes.
Horses were burned by the thousands,
and corpses were vaporized by intense heat.
And afterwards, a big silence came over the entire land,
and people start to have boils on their skin.
Their hair start to fall out and their nails.
There's only one thing that causes this,
and that is radiation poisoning.
It's radiation fallout.
[suspenseful music]
So the question then becomes, when events happen in a place
where there is extreme radiation, what impact does
that have on human life or on other life present there?
Could it explain, for example, why creatures were born
with more than one arm or more than one leg, which then
somehow became deified?
Because even to this day we know that in civilizations where
anomalous human beings are born, somehow the touch of God
is seen to be part of this creation.
NARRATOR: According to the ancient Hindu texts,
after the carnage at Mohenjo-daro,
a fearsome flying monster appeared in the sky.
It was called Garuda.
[dramatic music]
In the Mahabharata, the Garuda is a massive bird-like
creature, has a red face, red wings, talon.
It's so huge, it would block out the sun.
There are stories that it would let a certain god Vishnu
ride on him on occasion.
Each and every time he would show up
descending from the sky, he would create hurricane winds.
And upon his descent, the earth would shake,
dust would fly up in the air, and everyone in the vicinity
would be absolutely terrified.
Now, here we have a carving of Garuda.
And if we look at the top, yes, they look like feathers,
but at the same time they could be interpreted
as big, gigantic flames.
According to Hindu mythology, Garuda
is born out of this cosmic event, this war and destruction
that happens at the end of every age.
Could this have been somehow connected to exposure
to radiation, being born within a zone of high radiation?
We cannot know the answer, but we do know that within India,
within Pakistan, there are known zones of high radiation than
there are normal.
The logic dictates that somehow genetic abominations will have
been born within those places.
[music playing]
NARRATOR: If Mohenjo-daro was, in fact,
the site of an ancient nuclear attack,
could it be possible that Garuda was a mutant beast created
as a byproduct of intense radioactivity?
We tend to have a science fiction view of what mutation
is.
We think of mutation as being caused by radiation,
and they cause outlandish features,
and gigantic-sized insects, and so forth.
But in fact, mutations happen all the time.
[music playing]
There's no recorded evidence of any radiation causing
a mutation, which changes some species
into a different species.
Most of the radiation mutations are lethal.
NARRATOR: But if, as modern scientists believe,
Garuda was not likely the result of genetic mutation,
then what could explain its existence?
The Mahabharata states that Garuda was
born from this raging inferno.
And what's really intriguing is the fact
that in some text passages, we can
read that the exterior of Garuda did not consist of feathers,
but of metal.
Now what kind of a bird is that?
No bird is made of metal, unless it's a type of machine.
Garuda was a flying vehicle.
And Garuda was able to travel to the Moon
and around the Earth with very, very high speed.
Garuda even was able to shock mankind with lightning, which
fell from heaven.
[dramatic music]
Garuda was considered to be a snake killer.
In fact, Garuda needed to eat snakes in order to survive.
Now, compare an airplane at the airport today hooked up
to a fuel line.
Isn't that airplane eating a snake?
[music playing]
If you see modern fighter jets take off
in the middle of the night, there is smoke and fire
coming out of the exhaust.
It looks like a dragon.
It looks like some type of a mythical creature,
especially if you don't know what you're witnessing is nuts
and bolts technology.
So of course you're going to liken it to a living creature.
Those ancient aliens knew that our ancestors would worship
them as gods because they knew that our ancestors,
they didn't know it was technology.
They thought it was magic, spirituality, divine
intervention, which it never was.
Ask follow-up questions or revisit key timestamps.
The video explores the theory that ancient Indian cities like Mohenjo-daro were destroyed by advanced nuclear weapons thousands of years ago. Proponents point to evidence such as fused vitrified stone, radioactive anomalies, and descriptions of catastrophic events in ancient texts like the Mahabharata and the Bhagavad Gita, suggesting these accounts describe technological events misinterpreted by ancestors as divine or supernatural acts.
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