1 00:00:00,120 --> 00:00:05,360 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:04,640 --> 00:00:08,280 Speaker 2: And welcome back George Norry along with doctor Aaron Judkins. Aaron, 3 00:00:08,360 --> 00:00:11,360 Speaker 2: let's wrap up Noah's Ark. But a couple main questions. 4 00:00:11,760 --> 00:00:17,600 Speaker 2: One it happened about forty three hundred years ago, they say, 5 00:00:18,480 --> 00:00:21,959 Speaker 2: And two did he really put every animal on the 6 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:23,120 Speaker 2: planet on that arc? 7 00:00:25,320 --> 00:00:29,400 Speaker 3: Well, certainly it was going back several thousand years ago 8 00:00:29,520 --> 00:00:34,879 Speaker 3: for sure. You know, regarding the claims of you know, 9 00:00:34,960 --> 00:00:40,360 Speaker 3: did every animal go on the art? The biblical record 10 00:00:40,440 --> 00:00:43,760 Speaker 3: says that two of every kind went on the art, 11 00:00:43,840 --> 00:00:47,720 Speaker 3: but seven of the clean animals went on the arc, 12 00:00:48,320 --> 00:00:51,239 Speaker 3: which is very interesting because most people don't realize that 13 00:00:51,320 --> 00:00:54,320 Speaker 3: seven of the clean animals went on. But these are kinds, 14 00:00:54,360 --> 00:01:00,360 Speaker 3: not species. So there's been a great study on this. 15 00:01:01,760 --> 00:01:04,880 Speaker 3: There's a book called Noah's Ark of Feasibility Study that 16 00:01:04,959 --> 00:01:09,759 Speaker 3: looked at these numbers, and so they break it all down. 17 00:01:10,200 --> 00:01:16,360 Speaker 3: But the two of the unclean animals went on. And 18 00:01:16,520 --> 00:01:22,880 Speaker 3: what's interesting is George's and genetics that they traced all 19 00:01:22,959 --> 00:01:30,240 Speaker 3: original sheep and goats to five original So when Noah 20 00:01:30,280 --> 00:01:33,920 Speaker 3: came off the arc, at some point he built an 21 00:01:33,959 --> 00:01:39,360 Speaker 3: altar and he sacrificed two of those animals, two of 22 00:01:39,360 --> 00:01:43,839 Speaker 3: the clean animals. Genetics confirmed that all sheep and goats 23 00:01:43,840 --> 00:01:47,400 Speaker 3: come from five originals, so you subtract two out of 24 00:01:47,400 --> 00:01:50,320 Speaker 3: the seven, that gives you five. This is a very 25 00:01:50,320 --> 00:01:54,760 Speaker 3: interesting genetic study that was done that's actually confirming the 26 00:01:54,800 --> 00:02:00,240 Speaker 3: biblical record. So even though probably not all speed she 27 00:02:00,360 --> 00:02:03,000 Speaker 3: went on the arc, they weren't needed, just the two 28 00:02:03,040 --> 00:02:04,160 Speaker 3: of the kinds. 29 00:02:05,080 --> 00:02:07,760 Speaker 2: Might he have taken some kind of DNA on the arc. 30 00:02:07,880 --> 00:02:10,200 Speaker 2: Maybe they were high sci fi and scientific. 31 00:02:12,240 --> 00:02:13,639 Speaker 4: That'd be pretty neat if they did. 32 00:02:13,760 --> 00:02:17,160 Speaker 3: I don't think it's probably realistic that they did that, 33 00:02:17,720 --> 00:02:18,720 Speaker 3: But you don't. 34 00:02:19,440 --> 00:02:20,480 Speaker 4: You don't really. 35 00:02:20,240 --> 00:02:24,400 Speaker 3: Need adult size animals to go on the arc. You 36 00:02:24,520 --> 00:02:27,799 Speaker 3: just need a pink one in a balloon, and they 37 00:02:27,800 --> 00:02:31,520 Speaker 3: need to be juveniles. Matter of fact, that study that 38 00:02:31,560 --> 00:02:35,680 Speaker 3: I referenced earlier suggested that the average size of the 39 00:02:35,720 --> 00:02:38,760 Speaker 3: animal was just about the average size of a sheep, 40 00:02:39,040 --> 00:02:42,560 Speaker 3: So you don't really need the big creatures on there. 41 00:02:42,600 --> 00:02:46,440 Speaker 3: You just need the juveniles to go on. They probably 42 00:02:46,480 --> 00:02:49,880 Speaker 3: went into hibernation at some point. We don't know that 43 00:02:50,000 --> 00:02:55,639 Speaker 3: for sure. That's all speculation, but certainly certainly those animals 44 00:02:55,680 --> 00:03:00,320 Speaker 3: went on because we see in the genetic code that 45 00:03:00,360 --> 00:03:03,280 Speaker 3: I just talked about that confirms that not only in 46 00:03:03,440 --> 00:03:06,680 Speaker 3: the animals storage, but also in humans. There was a 47 00:03:06,720 --> 00:03:10,880 Speaker 3: study that came out called the Mitochondrial Eve and it 48 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:15,520 Speaker 3: traces the mitochondrial DNA of the female lines going back 49 00:03:15,520 --> 00:03:19,800 Speaker 3: to the original. And they titled this mitochondrial Eve because 50 00:03:19,840 --> 00:03:22,760 Speaker 3: it goes back to the original. When they adjusted the 51 00:03:22,919 --> 00:03:26,880 Speaker 3: rate for the clock of the in the DNA sequence, 52 00:03:27,720 --> 00:03:30,920 Speaker 3: they realized that this clock really going back to the 53 00:03:30,960 --> 00:03:35,200 Speaker 3: first genetic eve, measured about six thousand years. Now that's 54 00:03:35,280 --> 00:03:38,280 Speaker 3: not me saying that, that's what the study came out 55 00:03:38,360 --> 00:03:42,640 Speaker 3: and said. So there's something happening here because also in 56 00:03:42,680 --> 00:03:46,600 Speaker 3: that study it showed a genetic bottleneck going back to 57 00:03:46,680 --> 00:03:51,440 Speaker 3: about that time period where human kind came. 58 00:03:51,280 --> 00:03:53,880 Speaker 4: Down to almost a near extinction event. 59 00:03:55,600 --> 00:03:59,200 Speaker 3: So it shows this bottleneck and then a short period 60 00:03:59,320 --> 00:04:02,280 Speaker 3: and then re explosion of the of the human race. 61 00:04:02,520 --> 00:04:05,520 Speaker 3: This is all done through genetic studies. But certainly these 62 00:04:05,560 --> 00:04:11,600 Speaker 3: two sources indicate that the Biblical record isn't be true. 63 00:04:12,120 --> 00:04:14,880 Speaker 2: Was the flood geographical or worldwide? 64 00:04:16,480 --> 00:04:20,960 Speaker 4: Well, that would it would be both geographical and worldwide? 65 00:04:21,920 --> 00:04:25,680 Speaker 3: Why because there is confirming evidence If you just look 66 00:04:25,720 --> 00:04:29,880 Speaker 3: at geology alone. You see folded and bent strata. You 67 00:04:29,920 --> 00:04:33,680 Speaker 3: see multiple layers. In the Grand Canyon, you have missing 68 00:04:33,760 --> 00:04:36,880 Speaker 3: layers that in textbooks are supposed to be there, but 69 00:04:37,000 --> 00:04:40,080 Speaker 3: actually nine of those layers are missing in the Grand Canyon. 70 00:04:40,240 --> 00:04:42,480 Speaker 3: They should be there, but they're not. Then you have 71 00:04:42,600 --> 00:04:46,560 Speaker 3: just layers on top of layers with no evidence of erosion, 72 00:04:47,080 --> 00:04:51,240 Speaker 3: no evidence of build up. So then you have other 73 00:04:51,320 --> 00:04:55,279 Speaker 3: layers intruding into other layers. In some cases, like Heart 74 00:04:55,400 --> 00:04:59,200 Speaker 3: Mountain in Wyoming, you have the geology turned upside down, 75 00:04:59,240 --> 00:05:03,320 Speaker 3: which is very intriguing. You have an older layer of 76 00:05:03,880 --> 00:05:06,240 Speaker 3: rock on top of a younger layer of rock at 77 00:05:06,279 --> 00:05:09,799 Speaker 3: Heart Mountain that's not supposed to happen. Uh. 78 00:05:09,880 --> 00:05:12,400 Speaker 4: So there's there's a lot of confirming evidence. 79 00:05:12,440 --> 00:05:16,359 Speaker 3: We can talk about the fossil record rapid deposition burial, 80 00:05:16,440 --> 00:05:20,960 Speaker 3: which creates fossilization that needs a couple of conditions to happen. 81 00:05:22,160 --> 00:05:24,840 Speaker 3: So here in Texas, you don't have your cow and 82 00:05:24,839 --> 00:05:26,960 Speaker 3: the pasture die and fall over and become a fossil. 83 00:05:27,400 --> 00:05:29,640 Speaker 3: It has to be rapidly buried, and then it has 84 00:05:29,680 --> 00:05:31,640 Speaker 3: to have a lot of pressure over it, and then 85 00:05:31,680 --> 00:05:35,040 Speaker 3: you have to have heat and time for that fossilization occurs, 86 00:05:35,200 --> 00:05:37,440 Speaker 3: so the minerals in the dirt can fossilize into the 87 00:05:37,440 --> 00:05:39,960 Speaker 3: bone and turn it into stone. So there's a lot 88 00:05:40,000 --> 00:05:42,039 Speaker 3: of things like this in the in the in the 89 00:05:42,120 --> 00:05:48,719 Speaker 3: geological record and the fossil record that indicates worldwide conditions. 90 00:05:48,480 --> 00:05:50,640 Speaker 4: Were were there. We are global delutes. 91 00:05:50,720 --> 00:05:53,320 Speaker 3: One more I'll give you is the Gobi Desert in China. 92 00:05:54,240 --> 00:05:57,400 Speaker 3: Although it's sand and desert now, at one time that 93 00:05:57,520 --> 00:06:01,560 Speaker 3: was all under water, and they're finding some fascinating things 94 00:06:01,720 --> 00:06:07,760 Speaker 3: like fossilized dinosaur eggs, completely intact dinosaurs locked into position 95 00:06:07,920 --> 00:06:12,560 Speaker 3: fighting each other, completely intact soft tissue, and dinosaur bones 96 00:06:12,920 --> 00:06:17,119 Speaker 3: that's supposedly sixty sixty five million years yet their soft 97 00:06:17,160 --> 00:06:21,720 Speaker 3: tissue still inside these dinosaur bones. Not only soft tissue, George, 98 00:06:21,720 --> 00:06:27,159 Speaker 3: but collagen, red blood cells that are pliable, elastic still 99 00:06:27,920 --> 00:06:32,080 Speaker 3: nerve endings, collagen. These things are all being vented by 100 00:06:32,160 --> 00:06:38,200 Speaker 3: science now and it really questions this timeline of events 101 00:06:38,240 --> 00:06:40,520 Speaker 3: that we've all been told for so long. 102 00:06:41,279 --> 00:06:45,640 Speaker 2: And what do you think the flood was arin, where 103 00:06:45,640 --> 00:06:49,160 Speaker 2: do I think it was? What do you think it was? 104 00:06:49,680 --> 00:06:53,440 Speaker 2: I think asteroid strike, heavy rains, What do you think happened? 105 00:06:54,800 --> 00:06:55,200 Speaker 4: Well? 106 00:06:55,240 --> 00:06:59,520 Speaker 3: You know there was whatever happened, was a global clad 107 00:07:00,040 --> 00:07:03,920 Speaker 3: had a cosmic event. I think probably all the above happened. 108 00:07:03,920 --> 00:07:07,440 Speaker 3: You had probably a lot of vulcanism that created the 109 00:07:07,440 --> 00:07:12,600 Speaker 3: mid Atlantic Rift. This is under the ocean. This is 110 00:07:12,680 --> 00:07:16,840 Speaker 3: the trench that's it's part of the deepest. 111 00:07:17,400 --> 00:07:20,160 Speaker 4: Canyon in the world. It's under the ocean. 112 00:07:20,640 --> 00:07:23,800 Speaker 3: It's the highest mountain ranges that we have on Earth. 113 00:07:24,040 --> 00:07:27,920 Speaker 3: It's under the ocean. It's taller than Mount Everest. This 114 00:07:28,080 --> 00:07:32,440 Speaker 3: mint Atlantic Rift, geologists say, ripped around the Earth in 115 00:07:32,480 --> 00:07:35,520 Speaker 3: about two minutes, and it kind of created like a 116 00:07:35,920 --> 00:07:39,120 Speaker 3: like a baseball scar, like a seam on a baseball. 117 00:07:39,160 --> 00:07:42,000 Speaker 3: It kind of created a scar, but it ripped around 118 00:07:42,040 --> 00:07:43,840 Speaker 3: the Earth in about two minutes. Now, if you have 119 00:07:43,960 --> 00:07:46,600 Speaker 3: that happen and you have meteor strikes, this is going 120 00:07:46,640 --> 00:07:51,560 Speaker 3: to set out vulcanism. It's going to cause sulfured dioxide 121 00:07:51,600 --> 00:07:54,400 Speaker 3: and carbon dioxide and a bunch of other aerosols to 122 00:07:54,960 --> 00:07:57,320 Speaker 3: spew out into the atmosphere. 123 00:07:57,840 --> 00:07:59,280 Speaker 4: It's going to block out the sun. 124 00:08:00,040 --> 00:08:03,240 Speaker 3: You're going to have some kind of a colder environment, 125 00:08:04,320 --> 00:08:07,200 Speaker 3: it's going to be drier. This is all pointing back 126 00:08:07,240 --> 00:08:11,120 Speaker 3: to the Younger, Dryest event, which is an event that 127 00:08:11,920 --> 00:08:16,680 Speaker 3: most scientists agree that there was a cataclysm that happened worldwide. 128 00:08:16,760 --> 00:08:19,400 Speaker 3: As matter of fact, it wiped out most of the 129 00:08:19,440 --> 00:08:22,200 Speaker 3: Pleistis sne animals so much. 130 00:08:22,040 --> 00:08:27,440 Speaker 4: That when you're looking at these animals they. 131 00:08:28,120 --> 00:08:34,120 Speaker 3: Had extinction events, say in Australia of ninety percent extinction 132 00:08:34,679 --> 00:08:37,959 Speaker 3: event in Australia. With these animals here in North America, 133 00:08:38,000 --> 00:08:42,040 Speaker 3: you'd have seventy to seventy five percent of these Plesis 134 00:08:42,080 --> 00:08:46,199 Speaker 3: sing animals that are completely wiped out. So this is 135 00:08:46,679 --> 00:08:49,440 Speaker 3: something that's happened worldwide. We see it all around the earth, 136 00:08:50,800 --> 00:08:55,400 Speaker 3: and including places like Clovis, New Mexico, where there's a 137 00:08:55,440 --> 00:08:58,480 Speaker 3: record of habitation and then there's just nothing. 138 00:08:59,040 --> 00:08:59,960 Speaker 4: There's just nothing. 139 00:09:01,200 --> 00:09:04,960 Speaker 3: This coincides with other places around the world, including go 140 00:09:05,040 --> 00:09:06,000 Speaker 3: Beckley Tepping. 141 00:09:07,160 --> 00:09:09,880 Speaker 2: Which, since you brought it up, is in Turkey again. 142 00:09:10,120 --> 00:09:12,439 Speaker 2: I mean Turkey's got all these great artifacts. 143 00:09:12,640 --> 00:09:14,920 Speaker 4: Is that they really do? You know? 144 00:09:15,040 --> 00:09:20,200 Speaker 3: Turkey is a wonderful place if you love history and archaeology. 145 00:09:20,240 --> 00:09:23,080 Speaker 3: A lot of people don't know that, but this is 146 00:09:23,480 --> 00:09:29,560 Speaker 3: biblical Asia Minor also referred to as Anatolia, and there 147 00:09:29,600 --> 00:09:32,560 Speaker 3: is so much history there it goes back thousands of years. 148 00:09:33,600 --> 00:09:36,560 Speaker 4: Really a lot of this is just coming to light, 149 00:09:36,679 --> 00:09:39,040 Speaker 4: such as in southeastern Turkey. 150 00:09:40,000 --> 00:09:42,800 Speaker 2: Why is there such a hoopla about go Beckley Teppe. 151 00:09:45,360 --> 00:09:48,800 Speaker 3: Well, here's the big deal about Go Beckley Tepe. Back 152 00:09:48,800 --> 00:09:52,200 Speaker 3: in nineteen ninety five or so, doctor Klaus Schmidt was 153 00:09:53,400 --> 00:09:55,600 Speaker 3: the primary excavator of the site. 154 00:09:56,559 --> 00:09:59,160 Speaker 4: It got mislabeled as a Byzantine cemetery. 155 00:09:59,240 --> 00:10:02,760 Speaker 3: Back in the nineteen sixties, Klaus Smid had wrapped up 156 00:10:03,160 --> 00:10:05,120 Speaker 3: a particular project and he was asked to come over 157 00:10:05,160 --> 00:10:08,280 Speaker 3: and look at it. He immediately recognized that it was Neolithic. 158 00:10:09,040 --> 00:10:13,280 Speaker 3: When they begin to excavate Go Beckley Tape, which took 159 00:10:13,280 --> 00:10:17,480 Speaker 3: them ten years alone just to excavate Enclosure D. That's 160 00:10:17,520 --> 00:10:21,800 Speaker 3: one enclosure. When they started excavating, they begin to hit 161 00:10:21,840 --> 00:10:30,400 Speaker 3: these monumental monolithic stones. And in the case of Enclosure D, 162 00:10:30,760 --> 00:10:35,120 Speaker 3: you have monolithic architecture in the Stone Age with these 163 00:10:35,160 --> 00:10:42,360 Speaker 3: two central anthropomorphic t pillar stones in the center, and 164 00:10:42,400 --> 00:10:43,839 Speaker 3: that's not supposed to be there. 165 00:10:44,720 --> 00:10:49,520 Speaker 4: So according to the conventional knowledge. 166 00:10:48,920 --> 00:10:51,800 Speaker 3: That we have about the Stone Age, this is before 167 00:10:51,840 --> 00:10:54,960 Speaker 3: the invention of pottery. This was a simple one hundred 168 00:10:55,040 --> 00:10:59,120 Speaker 3: gatherer society. Go Beckley Tape turns all that upside down. 169 00:10:59,520 --> 00:11:03,080 Speaker 3: Because now you have people in the Stone Age with 170 00:11:03,200 --> 00:11:10,120 Speaker 3: a division of labor organization building monolithic architecture and that's 171 00:11:10,200 --> 00:11:13,439 Speaker 3: not supposed to be there. It really baffled the archaeologist 172 00:11:14,040 --> 00:11:16,800 Speaker 3: and it really changes everything we know about the Neolithic. 173 00:11:17,600 --> 00:11:20,240 Speaker 2: What surprised you the most about your research into Go 174 00:11:20,320 --> 00:11:21,319 Speaker 2: Beckley Teppe. 175 00:11:22,320 --> 00:11:24,960 Speaker 3: Well, it broke a lot of It broke a lot 176 00:11:25,000 --> 00:11:28,840 Speaker 3: of paradigms that I had. You know, I had some assumptions, 177 00:11:28,880 --> 00:11:30,680 Speaker 3: just like we all do. We start with an assumption 178 00:11:31,520 --> 00:11:33,880 Speaker 3: about what I thought it was. And when I was 179 00:11:33,960 --> 00:11:37,360 Speaker 3: asked to research this, I initially said no several times 180 00:11:37,400 --> 00:11:41,360 Speaker 3: because just my schedule, I had heard about Go Beckley Tepe. 181 00:11:41,760 --> 00:11:43,520 Speaker 4: I knew just a few things about it. 182 00:11:43,640 --> 00:11:46,679 Speaker 3: I just had made some assumptions that, well, you know, 183 00:11:46,720 --> 00:11:50,079 Speaker 3: it's close proximity, within hundreds of miles to Mount air 184 00:11:50,200 --> 00:11:52,160 Speaker 3: rat This is probably have something to do with that. 185 00:11:53,080 --> 00:11:56,640 Speaker 3: But when I really decided to sit down and research 186 00:11:56,679 --> 00:12:01,800 Speaker 3: for the book, that those theories that I had really 187 00:12:02,400 --> 00:12:04,959 Speaker 3: really got blown out of the water. I had to 188 00:12:05,080 --> 00:12:09,760 Speaker 3: change my perspective on Go Beckley Tepe. Here's the reason why. 189 00:12:09,920 --> 00:12:13,800 Speaker 3: One is because that megalithic architecture. Two, you have these 190 00:12:14,240 --> 00:12:19,720 Speaker 3: two eighteen and a half tall anthropomorphic images that centrally 191 00:12:19,760 --> 00:12:24,199 Speaker 3: are located in enclosure D. Three you have zoomorphic imagery 192 00:12:24,760 --> 00:12:30,360 Speaker 3: on the stones, and four you could there's possibly language 193 00:12:30,760 --> 00:12:34,640 Speaker 3: on the stones at go Beckley Tepe. These are all 194 00:12:34,800 --> 00:12:39,080 Speaker 3: very intriguing and it completely was not what I thought 195 00:12:39,120 --> 00:12:41,959 Speaker 3: it was. There was something else that was happening at 196 00:12:41,960 --> 00:12:45,880 Speaker 3: this site that it just caused me to dig deeper 197 00:12:45,920 --> 00:12:49,160 Speaker 3: and deeper and deeper. And as you know, information coming 198 00:12:49,200 --> 00:12:49,440 Speaker 3: out of. 199 00:12:49,440 --> 00:12:51,400 Speaker 4: Go Beckley is rather slow. 200 00:12:52,240 --> 00:12:56,480 Speaker 3: You have excavations that are ensuing, but then that has 201 00:12:56,480 --> 00:13:00,520 Speaker 3: to be processed, then later on it has to be published, 202 00:13:00,559 --> 00:13:04,360 Speaker 3: and so sometimes information is so slow we don't really have, 203 00:13:05,920 --> 00:13:09,200 Speaker 3: you know, real time information until maybe a year later. 204 00:13:10,000 --> 00:13:13,680 Speaker 3: But what we do know right now with go Beckley 205 00:13:13,720 --> 00:13:17,920 Speaker 3: Teppe being only probably ten percent excavated, is that it 206 00:13:18,080 --> 00:13:20,559 Speaker 3: is changing the way we think about the Neolithic. 207 00:13:21,160 --> 00:13:22,240 Speaker 2: What do you think it was? 208 00:13:25,320 --> 00:13:27,760 Speaker 3: Well, in my book, we were proposing a couple of 209 00:13:27,760 --> 00:13:31,120 Speaker 3: different new theories in decoding Go Beckley Tepe. 210 00:13:32,000 --> 00:13:32,560 Speaker 4: One is. 211 00:13:34,800 --> 00:13:41,360 Speaker 3: This language theory called Louvian logograms or Anatolian hieroglyphics. Now, 212 00:13:41,400 --> 00:13:46,800 Speaker 3: in the eighteen hundreds, the scholars had misidentified this language 213 00:13:47,120 --> 00:13:50,719 Speaker 3: and they called it hieroglyphic Hittite. But then it was 214 00:13:50,800 --> 00:13:54,880 Speaker 3: later on they discovered that was not right and it 215 00:13:54,960 --> 00:14:00,120 Speaker 3: was actually Anatolian hieroglyphics. It's pictographical, but specifically this this 216 00:14:00,200 --> 00:14:03,199 Speaker 3: is Louvian logo rams. Now, the Luvians were a culture 217 00:14:03,240 --> 00:14:07,760 Speaker 3: that lived contemporaneous next door to the Hittites, if you will, 218 00:14:08,120 --> 00:14:14,160 Speaker 3: in this region of Turkey. The Luvians had a common 219 00:14:14,200 --> 00:14:20,320 Speaker 3: everyday language, probably Samerian, but they had a formal another language, 220 00:14:20,360 --> 00:14:25,440 Speaker 3: which was a formal writing that they used on monumental stone, 221 00:14:25,760 --> 00:14:30,280 Speaker 3: and that were these logograms. A logogram is one character 222 00:14:30,920 --> 00:14:36,160 Speaker 3: that represents an entire word. So if you're writing on stone, 223 00:14:36,400 --> 00:14:38,760 Speaker 3: you have limited space, you have to make it count. 224 00:14:39,240 --> 00:14:42,480 Speaker 4: A logogram is perfect for that. It was. 225 00:14:43,960 --> 00:14:48,080 Speaker 3: Really something that the Hittites picked up and adopted into their. 226 00:14:47,920 --> 00:14:51,040 Speaker 4: Culture because of just the. 227 00:14:52,720 --> 00:14:56,600 Speaker 3: I guess, the efficiency of the language for writing on stone. 228 00:14:56,640 --> 00:14:59,240 Speaker 3: So if you had a formal occasion you needed to 229 00:14:59,240 --> 00:15:02,360 Speaker 3: write it on stone, you would use Louvian logograms. This 230 00:15:02,440 --> 00:15:04,680 Speaker 3: is one of the theories I'm proposing in the book, 231 00:15:05,120 --> 00:15:07,520 Speaker 3: is that there's language on the stones at go Beckley, 232 00:15:07,560 --> 00:15:14,360 Speaker 3: Tepe not simply art motifs. Two, we're proposing a new 233 00:15:14,400 --> 00:15:18,320 Speaker 3: theory called the regeneration theory at the site, specifically related 234 00:15:18,360 --> 00:15:23,080 Speaker 3: to Enclosure D that talks about the life after death 235 00:15:23,160 --> 00:15:26,200 Speaker 3: concept and what the stones and what. 236 00:15:26,080 --> 00:15:28,600 Speaker 4: The side at Go Beckley Tepe may. 237 00:15:28,440 --> 00:15:33,200 Speaker 3: Be telling us that there was a regeneration in their 238 00:15:33,240 --> 00:15:37,600 Speaker 3: cosmology belief to regenerate their loved ones in the act 239 00:15:37,600 --> 00:15:39,280 Speaker 3: of life, to go back to the heavens as. 240 00:15:39,120 --> 00:15:40,160 Speaker 4: A star god. 241 00:15:40,560 --> 00:15:44,960 Speaker 3: So Three, there's a theory that we're proposing about these 242 00:15:45,000 --> 00:15:50,560 Speaker 3: two anthropomorphic images and Enclosure D, specifically western pillar thirty 243 00:15:50,600 --> 00:15:54,520 Speaker 3: one in Eastern pillar eighteen. I've identified those two and 244 00:15:54,600 --> 00:15:58,040 Speaker 3: I take the Sumerian language and I kind of break 245 00:15:58,120 --> 00:16:03,480 Speaker 3: down for the reader of what it means. It's Sumerian 246 00:16:04,520 --> 00:16:07,360 Speaker 3: related to Go Beckley Teppe, and it really gives us 247 00:16:08,240 --> 00:16:12,120 Speaker 3: a clear understanding about what's happening at the site. 248 00:16:12,400 --> 00:16:15,640 Speaker 1: Listen to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at 249 00:16:15,680 --> 00:16:18,520 Speaker 1: one a m Eastern and go to Coast to coastam 250 00:16:18,680 --> 00:16:19,720 Speaker 1: dot com for more