
The Map That Shouldn’t Exist
It starts the way most modern rabbit holes do — not with a university paper, not with a museum announcement, but with a clipped, casual question that sounds almost too simple to matter:
And then Graham Hancock, sitting there like he’s been waiting his whole life for someone to ask, answers:
“Yes… there are.”
That’s the moment the room tilts.
Because if he’s right — even partly right — then the world you think you live on… might be an edited version. A simplified, sanitized, “approved” Earth.
Hancock’s claim is as explosive as it is irresistible:
That there were ancient seafarers — not just Polynesians 3,000 years ago, not Egyptians 4,500 years ago — but a global mapping culture in the Ice Age, capable of charting coastlines, latitudes, longitudes… and landmasses that “official” history says no human could even know existed.
And the evidence, he says, isn’t buried in sand.
It’s buried in maps.
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