1 00:00:06,760 --> 00:00:09,920 [pensive music playing] 2 00:00:12,080 --> 00:00:14,360 [Graham] These enormous structures in the Amazon 3 00:00:16,080 --> 00:00:18,320 speak to a monumental human endeavor. 4 00:00:18,400 --> 00:00:20,040 [dramatic sting] 5 00:00:21,560 --> 00:00:24,160 But how many of them are there? 6 00:00:24,240 --> 00:00:26,240 [pensive music continues] 7 00:00:27,400 --> 00:00:28,480 Tell us what you found. 8 00:00:29,440 --> 00:00:31,480 - [Fabio] You see the trees? - [Graham] Yeah. 9 00:00:31,560 --> 00:00:34,600 - [Fabio] And now the terrain. - [Pärssinen] Now we take it down. 10 00:00:34,680 --> 00:00:35,800 Wow. 11 00:00:35,880 --> 00:00:38,000 - Wow. - Incredible. 12 00:00:38,080 --> 00:00:40,080 [pensive music continues] 13 00:00:42,320 --> 00:00:46,360 [Graham] Professor Pärssinen and the team have found nine new geoglyphs 14 00:00:46,440 --> 00:00:48,720 that were hidden beneath the jungle canopy. 15 00:00:48,800 --> 00:00:50,800 [electronic warble] 16 00:00:54,160 --> 00:00:57,600 Here we have round octagonal. 17 00:00:58,240 --> 00:01:01,840 This octagon, it's about 100 meters. 18 00:01:01,920 --> 00:01:03,120 - Yeah. - 100 meters in diameter. 19 00:01:03,200 --> 00:01:04,080 Diameter. 20 00:01:04,160 --> 00:01:08,280 Incredible. And nobody knew it was there until you got up there with your LiDAR. 21 00:01:08,360 --> 00:01:09,720 Nobody knew about this. 22 00:01:09,800 --> 00:01:12,840 Yeah. It's incredible what this technology can reveal. 23 00:01:12,920 --> 00:01:15,200 Let's move up and look at this interesting feature. 24 00:01:16,600 --> 00:01:18,440 [electronic warble] 25 00:01:18,520 --> 00:01:20,760 [Graham] These two nearly overlap 26 00:01:20,840 --> 00:01:25,640 and appear to be connected, perhaps to other sites. 27 00:01:27,480 --> 00:01:31,080 This is road with embankments on both sides. 28 00:01:31,160 --> 00:01:32,920 - An ancient road? - Ancient road, yes. 29 00:01:33,000 --> 00:01:35,360 Leading to the large embankment square. 30 00:01:35,440 --> 00:01:37,120 - Yes. - Stunning. 31 00:01:38,480 --> 00:01:42,480 [Graham] If these geoglyphs were built at the same time as others nearby, 32 00:01:42,560 --> 00:01:46,040 the roads suggest an organized civilization thrived here 33 00:01:47,680 --> 00:01:50,400 at least 2,500 years ago. 34 00:01:52,440 --> 00:01:54,480 And there's evidence they might've been around 35 00:01:54,560 --> 00:01:56,200 for very much longer. 36 00:01:58,160 --> 00:02:03,200 We found that many of these sites have been established 37 00:02:03,280 --> 00:02:04,840 already 10,000 years ago. 38 00:02:08,320 --> 00:02:10,680 [Graham] We can't be sure whether we're looking at 39 00:02:10,760 --> 00:02:13,120 reconstructions of much older geoglyphs. 40 00:02:14,000 --> 00:02:17,720 But what we do know is that human beings were present in that area. 41 00:02:17,800 --> 00:02:21,760 And that evidence goes back more than 10,000 years, uh, into the past 42 00:02:21,840 --> 00:02:24,360 and brings us very close to the end of the last Ice Age. 43 00:02:25,840 --> 00:02:27,520 However old they may be, 44 00:02:27,600 --> 00:02:30,840 the scale of the enterprise is truly astonishing. 45 00:02:32,400 --> 00:02:34,000 So this raises the question, 46 00:02:34,080 --> 00:02:36,800 how many people would it take to do something like this? 47 00:02:36,880 --> 00:02:39,560 We speak, uh, about hundreds of thousands. 48 00:02:39,640 --> 00:02:42,160 Yes. Literally hundreds of thousands of inhabitants. 49 00:02:42,760 --> 00:02:43,720 Amazing. 50 00:02:45,240 --> 00:02:47,480 [Graham] Professor Pärsinnen isn't suggesting 51 00:02:47,560 --> 00:02:50,200 all of those people physically built the geoglyphs. 52 00:02:51,280 --> 00:02:55,760 But a population that size must have existed here long-term 53 00:02:55,840 --> 00:02:59,520 to both provide for and support the necessary workforce. 54 00:02:59,600 --> 00:03:01,960 [birds chirping] 55 00:03:03,680 --> 00:03:05,960 Within a few hundred meters of known geoglyphs, 56 00:03:06,040 --> 00:03:09,760 our LiDAR team were finding more geoglyphs that nobody even knew about. 57 00:03:09,840 --> 00:03:13,120 So what on earth can we expect to discover 58 00:03:13,200 --> 00:03:16,440 if we go hundreds of miles into that dense rainforest? 59 00:03:16,520 --> 00:03:18,640 [triumphant music playing] 60 00:03:18,720 --> 00:03:23,320 This has changed totally our understanding of Amazonia. 61 00:03:23,400 --> 00:03:25,280 We're dealing with a huge phenomenon here, 62 00:03:25,360 --> 00:03:28,040 which has to change the history of the Americas 63 00:03:28,120 --> 00:03:30,000 and changing the history of the world. 64 00:03:30,080 --> 00:03:30,920 [Pärssinen chuckles] 65 00:03:33,200 --> 00:03:34,440 [triumphant music ends] 66 00:03:34,520 --> 00:03:37,880 [theme song playing] 67 00:03:44,400 --> 00:03:45,440 [theme song ends] 68 00:03:45,520 --> 00:03:47,520 {\an8}- [thunder rumbling] - [electronic warble] 69 00:03:48,680 --> 00:03:50,560 {\an8}[suspenseful music playing] 70 00:03:58,680 --> 00:04:03,480 We can't possibly begin to tell the story of the Americas 71 00:04:03,560 --> 00:04:08,840 until we have much more complete knowledge of what was going on in the Amazon… 72 00:04:11,080 --> 00:04:16,080 not 1,000 years ago, but 10,000 years ago, 20,000 years ago, 30,000 years ago. 73 00:04:18,840 --> 00:04:20,120 We need to keep going back. 74 00:04:20,200 --> 00:04:23,800 We need not to close our minds to these possibilities. 75 00:04:25,800 --> 00:04:27,720 [tense music continues] 76 00:04:27,800 --> 00:04:31,120 And there's tantalizing evidence of that deeper history 77 00:04:31,200 --> 00:04:33,480 1,000 miles northeast of Acre. 78 00:04:36,040 --> 00:04:38,320 I've come to the Monte Alegre National Park 79 00:04:38,400 --> 00:04:40,120 on the north bank of the Amazon. 80 00:04:45,280 --> 00:04:49,040 Although much of the Amazon basin is flat and cloaked in trees, 81 00:04:50,960 --> 00:04:55,680 here, distinctive rocky outcrops tower over the canopy. 82 00:04:57,480 --> 00:05:00,960 Archaeologist and anthropologist Dr. Christopher Davis 83 00:05:01,040 --> 00:05:05,480 has spent years investigating a potentially history-changing discovery 84 00:05:05,560 --> 00:05:07,560 high on one of these ridges. 85 00:05:07,640 --> 00:05:09,640 [menacing music playing] 86 00:05:13,800 --> 00:05:15,680 This is Serra do Paituna… 87 00:05:18,080 --> 00:05:19,800 hill of the Blackwater Lake… 88 00:05:23,520 --> 00:05:25,960 a towering rocky crag adorned with 89 00:05:26,040 --> 00:05:28,800 an array of seemingly ancient painted images. 90 00:05:29,320 --> 00:05:31,760 [menacing music continues] 91 00:05:39,200 --> 00:05:40,880 Thank you for leading the way. 92 00:05:44,520 --> 00:05:45,440 [music ends] 93 00:05:45,520 --> 00:05:50,440 [Graham] We're obviously surrounded by just this amazing art here. 94 00:05:50,520 --> 00:05:53,880 What led you to this investigation and this exploration? 95 00:05:53,960 --> 00:05:57,560 {\an8}I started doing archeology, um, as a graduate student. 96 00:05:57,640 --> 00:06:01,680 And I had no idea that there was rock art in the Americas. 97 00:06:01,760 --> 00:06:03,800 And so I was blown away by that. 98 00:06:03,880 --> 00:06:05,880 [mysterious music playing] 99 00:06:06,720 --> 00:06:08,960 [Graham] The images are known as pictographs. 100 00:06:13,640 --> 00:06:15,440 Some are very simple. 101 00:06:15,520 --> 00:06:18,040 Maybe a serpent slithering across the rock. 102 00:06:19,920 --> 00:06:23,240 Others depict more complex geometric patterns. 103 00:06:26,680 --> 00:06:30,160 The big question is when were these images painted? 104 00:06:30,240 --> 00:06:33,720 [music intensifies] 105 00:06:33,800 --> 00:06:35,680 The art itself can't be dated. 106 00:06:36,360 --> 00:06:39,280 So Dr. Davis and his team looked for other evidence. 107 00:06:40,960 --> 00:06:43,920 What's your dating of this site based on at the moment? 108 00:06:44,000 --> 00:06:46,320 It's from the excavation that we did back behind here. 109 00:06:47,600 --> 00:06:53,800 There were fragments of carbonated wood, mostly palm wood, some carbonated seeds. 110 00:06:53,880 --> 00:06:56,440 We found evidence of a fire back there as well. 111 00:06:58,000 --> 00:07:00,320 [Graham] The results were truly unexpected. 112 00:07:03,040 --> 00:07:05,080 [Dr. Davis] From the radiocarbon dating, 113 00:07:05,160 --> 00:07:09,840 the oldest dates that we got were about 13,200 before present. 114 00:07:09,920 --> 00:07:11,280 Fascinating. 115 00:07:13,840 --> 00:07:16,440 Dating back more than 13,000 years, 116 00:07:18,240 --> 00:07:20,320 we're looking at some of the oldest artwork 117 00:07:20,400 --> 00:07:22,400 found anywhere in the Americas. 118 00:07:28,640 --> 00:07:31,600 Artwork created during the last Ice Age. 119 00:07:32,880 --> 00:07:36,680 By people, we're told, who just suddenly appeared here 120 00:07:37,360 --> 00:07:39,160 deep in the Amazon wilderness. 121 00:07:39,240 --> 00:07:41,240 [triumphant music playing] 122 00:07:42,480 --> 00:07:44,800 You can imagine, you know, thousands of years ago, 123 00:07:44,880 --> 00:07:47,400 this would've been much brighter, much more vibrant. 124 00:07:49,120 --> 00:07:50,160 [camera shutter clicks] 125 00:07:50,240 --> 00:07:52,240 [tense music playing] 126 00:07:54,640 --> 00:07:57,640 [Graham] The images were painted using red and yellow ocher 127 00:07:58,600 --> 00:08:01,720 and seemingly treated to make them last. 128 00:08:03,800 --> 00:08:05,720 [tense music ends] 129 00:08:05,800 --> 00:08:08,320 I've done experiments here where you just take the ocher 130 00:08:08,400 --> 00:08:11,040 and draw it on the rock, and it washes away. 131 00:08:11,120 --> 00:08:12,560 Right. So there has to be a binder. 132 00:08:12,640 --> 00:08:15,000 There has to be a binder and a very good one. 133 00:08:15,080 --> 00:08:17,880 - We suspect they mixed it with tree resin… - Uh-huh. 134 00:08:17,960 --> 00:08:22,040 …and the resin forms into almost like amber but it's kind of clear. 135 00:08:22,120 --> 00:08:25,320 [Graham] So that suggests those who created these paintings had, 136 00:08:25,400 --> 00:08:29,160 first of all, experience in how to do paintings like this, 137 00:08:29,240 --> 00:08:32,240 and they developed some knowledge of how to make the paint last. 138 00:08:32,320 --> 00:08:37,400 Absolutely. Um, and in addition to that, it shows preparation and time. 139 00:08:37,480 --> 00:08:40,440 [tense music playing] 140 00:08:40,520 --> 00:08:43,800 [Graham] Most compelling to me are the many handprints… 141 00:08:48,240 --> 00:08:53,120 that intimate human contact expressed by the handprints in the rock art. 142 00:08:55,000 --> 00:08:59,960 It's almost as though they were touching the wall, 143 00:09:00,040 --> 00:09:03,000 and through the wall, touching us, 144 00:09:03,080 --> 00:09:04,960 sending a message to the future. 145 00:09:05,040 --> 00:09:07,840 {\an8}[tense music crescendos, stops] 146 00:09:09,960 --> 00:09:13,000 {\an8}[tense music playing] 147 00:09:13,080 --> 00:09:16,560 {\an8}[Graham] More Paleolithic art has been found in the Western Amazon. 148 00:09:17,600 --> 00:09:20,360 Like this intricate mural in the jungles of Colombia, 149 00:09:20,440 --> 00:09:25,120 where 12,600-year-old images depict humans 150 00:09:25,200 --> 00:09:28,200 alongside what appear to be creatures of the Ice Age. 151 00:09:28,720 --> 00:09:30,960 [tense music intensifies] 152 00:09:31,040 --> 00:09:35,000 {\an8}We are seeing an eyewitness account of the coexistence of human beings 153 00:09:35,080 --> 00:09:38,040 with now long-extinct Ice Age megafauna. 154 00:09:40,360 --> 00:09:44,720 {\an8}And to the east of the Amazon, these paintings push the date back further 155 00:09:45,600 --> 00:09:48,040 to more than 25,000 years ago. 156 00:09:49,040 --> 00:09:51,120 [tense music continues] 157 00:09:51,200 --> 00:09:55,480 Which means 2,000 years before those hunter-gatherers were walking 158 00:09:55,560 --> 00:09:57,560 the White Sands of New Mexico, 159 00:09:58,440 --> 00:10:02,320 there were other people already living in the forests of South America 160 00:10:02,400 --> 00:10:04,400 creating art like this. 161 00:10:04,920 --> 00:10:06,720 And in great numbers. 162 00:10:07,240 --> 00:10:10,760 [tense music crescendos, subsides] 163 00:10:10,840 --> 00:10:13,280 This should open up exploration 164 00:10:13,360 --> 00:10:17,120 of what those human beings might have been doing in the Americas 165 00:10:17,200 --> 00:10:19,280 over these tens of thousands of years 166 00:10:19,360 --> 00:10:21,080 that archaeologists previously didn't think 167 00:10:21,160 --> 00:10:22,920 there were any human beings there at all. 168 00:10:23,000 --> 00:10:25,000 [intriguing music playing] 169 00:10:26,400 --> 00:10:30,400 [Graham] At Serra do Paituna, Dr. Davis is sure of one thing. 170 00:10:32,160 --> 00:10:35,040 Whoever they were and whatever they were doing, 171 00:10:35,560 --> 00:10:38,920 the rock painters here suddenly stopped. 172 00:10:40,000 --> 00:10:43,120 [Dr. Davis] So the first people who were at this region, they were here, 173 00:10:43,200 --> 00:10:46,840 they were doing the art, and then about 12,700 years ago, 174 00:10:46,920 --> 00:10:47,840 they were gone. 175 00:10:47,920 --> 00:10:50,560 So was the area abandoned at that time? 176 00:10:50,640 --> 00:10:51,920 [Dr. Davis] It appears to be so. 177 00:10:52,000 --> 00:10:54,080 For quite some time. For thousands of years. 178 00:10:54,160 --> 00:10:59,000 [Graham] To me, 12,700 years ago is a highly significant date. 179 00:11:00,320 --> 00:11:02,760 There's always margins of error in dates. 180 00:11:03,400 --> 00:11:08,360 But that's very close to the beginning of the Younger Dryas climate anomaly. 181 00:11:08,440 --> 00:11:10,680 So I can't help wondering if there's a connection. 182 00:11:10,760 --> 00:11:13,080 [music intensifies] 183 00:11:13,160 --> 00:11:16,120 [Graham] Back then, temperatures suddenly plunged, 184 00:11:17,280 --> 00:11:20,800 while unexpectedly, fires raged across the planet. 185 00:11:21,320 --> 00:11:23,320 [fire crackling] 186 00:11:23,400 --> 00:11:24,560 And sea levels rose. 187 00:11:29,160 --> 00:11:30,600 [music ends] 188 00:11:30,680 --> 00:11:32,640 [birds chirping] 189 00:11:32,720 --> 00:11:35,800 We can hear echoes of this catastrophic epoch… 190 00:11:35,880 --> 00:11:37,880 [pensive music playing] 191 00:11:38,720 --> 00:11:40,800 …in the oral traditions of Amazonia. 192 00:11:40,880 --> 00:11:42,120 [birds chirping] 193 00:11:43,840 --> 00:11:47,280 There are countless myths and legends about an ancient cataclysm 194 00:11:47,360 --> 00:11:49,360 that are still told all across the Amazon. 195 00:11:49,920 --> 00:11:53,120 And there's one that I find particularly intriguing. 196 00:11:54,800 --> 00:11:57,600 [dramatic music playing] 197 00:11:57,680 --> 00:12:00,400 [Graham] According to the Indigenous Tiriyó people, 198 00:12:00,480 --> 00:12:03,800 long ago, the sky spirits told a shaman 199 00:12:03,880 --> 00:12:06,480 that a terrible flood would soon be unleashed, 200 00:12:06,560 --> 00:12:08,920 a punishment for the people's wickedness. 201 00:12:10,440 --> 00:12:14,760 Some heeded his warning and fled to safety atop Mount Kantani. 202 00:12:14,840 --> 00:12:16,840 [people screaming] 203 00:12:18,400 --> 00:12:20,400 But most perished in the deluge. 204 00:12:22,040 --> 00:12:27,400 Eventually, the flood receded, leaving the survivors to start over. 205 00:12:30,680 --> 00:12:33,320 [music ends] 206 00:12:33,920 --> 00:12:36,960 It is a worldwide tradition. There was a golden age. 207 00:12:37,040 --> 00:12:41,040 There was a time when humans lived in harmony with one another. 208 00:12:41,120 --> 00:12:43,960 But that it somehow fell from its high standards, 209 00:12:44,040 --> 00:12:47,800 and it was punished with a great flood, with a global destruction, 210 00:12:47,880 --> 00:12:49,920 which wiped it from the face of the Earth. 211 00:12:50,000 --> 00:12:51,440 [tense music playing] 212 00:12:51,520 --> 00:12:56,080 [Graham] The global distribution of this shared myth can't be a coincidence. 213 00:12:57,160 --> 00:13:01,880 I believe these ancient stories may be our last surviving memories 214 00:13:01,960 --> 00:13:05,000 of very real events that occurred all over the world 215 00:13:05,080 --> 00:13:06,920 around the end of the Ice Age, 216 00:13:07,000 --> 00:13:09,040 during a period of cataclysms 217 00:13:09,120 --> 00:13:11,560 that we've been calling the Ancient Apocalypse. 218 00:13:11,640 --> 00:13:12,680 [thunder rumbling] 219 00:13:19,840 --> 00:13:21,280 [tense music ends] 220 00:13:21,360 --> 00:13:23,200 [thunder rumbling] 221 00:13:23,280 --> 00:13:25,280 [menacing music playing] 222 00:13:27,720 --> 00:13:29,840 The evidence is mounting more and more 223 00:13:29,920 --> 00:13:33,800 that the Earth crossed the path of cometary debris. 224 00:13:33,880 --> 00:13:37,600 And the argument is that it was multiple impacts of fragments 225 00:13:37,680 --> 00:13:43,560 of this cometary debris that set off the Younger Dryas climate emergency 226 00:13:43,640 --> 00:13:45,280 12,800 years ago. 227 00:13:45,360 --> 00:13:47,840 [menacing music continues] 228 00:13:53,520 --> 00:13:56,040 [Graham] It's an idea we keep encountering 229 00:13:56,120 --> 00:13:59,160 called the Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis. 230 00:14:01,240 --> 00:14:04,280 In both the Southern and Northern Hemispheres, 231 00:14:04,360 --> 00:14:07,440 {\an8}scientists have found black matte layers like this one, 232 00:14:07,520 --> 00:14:10,680 {\an8}showing traces of nanodiamonds, platinum, and iridium, 233 00:14:10,760 --> 00:14:13,720 suggesting a nearby cosmic impact or airburst. 234 00:14:15,360 --> 00:14:18,160 But here, in the Amazon, other evidence might be present, 235 00:14:18,240 --> 00:14:19,800 etched into these walls. 236 00:14:23,360 --> 00:14:25,440 [menacing music ends] 237 00:14:25,520 --> 00:14:28,080 We have several images of comets, 238 00:14:28,160 --> 00:14:30,160 but one panel particularly, 239 00:14:30,240 --> 00:14:36,080 there's a comet that is positioned facing upward. 240 00:14:36,160 --> 00:14:38,240 The tail is going down. The head is going up. 241 00:14:38,320 --> 00:14:39,240 [Graham] Yeah. 242 00:14:39,320 --> 00:14:42,440 Above the comet image is a painting of the sun. 243 00:14:44,000 --> 00:14:48,000 And this was baffling when I first saw it because normally you wouldn't see a comet 244 00:14:48,080 --> 00:14:49,520 until after the sun sets. 245 00:14:50,680 --> 00:14:54,240 [Graham] Most comets are easily distinguishable by their tails, 246 00:14:54,880 --> 00:14:59,320 usually only visible above the setting sun streaming away from it. 247 00:15:00,400 --> 00:15:05,200 Surely it would be impossible to see a comet below the sun in broad daylight. 248 00:15:07,880 --> 00:15:11,840 So that gave me the idea, "When would you possibly see a comet head up 249 00:15:11,920 --> 00:15:13,160 before the sun sets?" 250 00:15:13,960 --> 00:15:16,000 - Maybe during an eclipse. - Mm-hmm. 251 00:15:16,080 --> 00:15:19,760 And so I started looking in astronomy software, 252 00:15:19,840 --> 00:15:25,520 and there was an eclipse that occurred facing that image about 13,027 years ago. 253 00:15:25,600 --> 00:15:26,520 [Graham] Right. 254 00:15:26,600 --> 00:15:30,840 [Dr. Davis] And a comet that was near the sun. 255 00:15:32,800 --> 00:15:35,360 If there was an eclipse that darkened the sun, 256 00:15:35,440 --> 00:15:38,720 you could possibly see suddenly this comet, 257 00:15:38,800 --> 00:15:41,680 and it would be head up facing the sun. 258 00:15:41,760 --> 00:15:43,800 - So-- - That's what we see in the art? 259 00:15:43,880 --> 00:15:45,720 The art does seem to show that. 260 00:15:46,320 --> 00:15:48,520 [Graham] Could this painting be a record of the comet 261 00:15:48,600 --> 00:15:50,200 that many believe broke apart, 262 00:15:50,920 --> 00:15:54,840 pummeling the Earth with debris and triggering the Younger Dryas? 263 00:15:57,840 --> 00:16:01,960 I think the ancients were already getting warnings from the sky. 264 00:16:02,040 --> 00:16:05,960 They were becoming aware that something had changed in the heavens, 265 00:16:06,040 --> 00:16:10,040 and perhaps they were painting the first signs of the apocalypse 266 00:16:10,120 --> 00:16:11,120 that was to come. 267 00:16:12,520 --> 00:16:14,240 [tense music crescendos] 268 00:16:19,000 --> 00:16:20,000 [tense music ends] 269 00:16:24,760 --> 00:16:29,080 [Graham] The timing certainly fits with when humans abandoned this rocky outcrop. 270 00:16:30,560 --> 00:16:32,280 I know archaeologists don't like to speculate 271 00:16:32,360 --> 00:16:33,920 and I'm gonna ask you to speculate, 272 00:16:34,000 --> 00:16:36,200 but do you think the Younger Dryas had anything to do with 273 00:16:36,280 --> 00:16:37,920 that sudden cessation of activity? 274 00:16:38,000 --> 00:16:39,760 You can't ignore it, certainly, 275 00:16:39,840 --> 00:16:42,440 because it does come right at that period of time. 276 00:16:42,520 --> 00:16:43,800 [thunder rumbling] 277 00:16:44,880 --> 00:16:46,320 [tense music playing] 278 00:16:46,400 --> 00:16:47,960 [thunder rumbling] 279 00:16:48,040 --> 00:16:49,360 [tense music ends] 280 00:16:49,440 --> 00:16:51,440 [somber music playing] 281 00:16:53,960 --> 00:16:56,840 [Graham] At a personal level, what's your estimation 282 00:16:56,920 --> 00:16:59,400 of the people who created this art? 283 00:16:59,480 --> 00:17:01,520 How do you envisage them in your mind? 284 00:17:01,600 --> 00:17:05,360 It's kind of hard to imagine how brave you would have to be 285 00:17:05,440 --> 00:17:07,280 coming to a new environment. 286 00:17:07,880 --> 00:17:09,880 I mean, they were pioneers. 287 00:17:10,600 --> 00:17:12,040 [crickets chirping] 288 00:17:12,120 --> 00:17:15,440 [Graham] But how did these pioneers get here in the first place? 289 00:17:16,080 --> 00:17:18,040 [intriguing music playing] 290 00:17:18,120 --> 00:17:24,040 In 2015, scientists investigating just that question dropped a bombshell. 291 00:17:25,640 --> 00:17:29,440 They found that members of certain Indigenous Amazonian tribes 292 00:17:29,520 --> 00:17:32,480 share a specific DNA marker 293 00:17:33,800 --> 00:17:36,880 with people from the other side of the Pacific Ocean. 294 00:17:36,960 --> 00:17:39,760 [music intensifies] 295 00:17:39,840 --> 00:17:43,560 The fact that we find it amongst remote tribes in the Amazon rainforest 296 00:17:43,640 --> 00:17:47,680 and in Papua New Guinea, Taiwan, and Australia 297 00:17:47,760 --> 00:17:52,680 suggests very strongly that there was a direct crossing 298 00:17:52,760 --> 00:17:54,760 across the Pacific Ocean. 299 00:17:56,000 --> 00:18:00,040 Even more surprising is where this DNA signal isn't. 300 00:18:02,000 --> 00:18:07,880 This DNA signal is not found anywhere in North America. 301 00:18:08,480 --> 00:18:11,840 If the Americas were peopled entirely by land, 302 00:18:11,920 --> 00:18:15,800 we should find this DNA signal present in North America 303 00:18:15,880 --> 00:18:17,520 as well as in South America. 304 00:18:18,760 --> 00:18:25,760 What's more, the DNA signal is very old, dating back at least 10,000 years. 305 00:18:26,600 --> 00:18:30,040 Nobody is supposed to have been able to cross the Pacific Ocean 306 00:18:30,120 --> 00:18:34,520 from one side to the other 10 or 11,000 years ago. 307 00:18:34,600 --> 00:18:38,320 For that to have happened just turns the whole story on its head. 308 00:18:38,920 --> 00:18:41,400 If there's one place on Earth that might hold clues 309 00:18:41,480 --> 00:18:43,600 as to who crossed the Pacific back then… 310 00:18:43,680 --> 00:18:45,440 [music crescendos] 311 00:18:47,560 --> 00:18:48,520 …it's here. 312 00:18:48,600 --> 00:18:50,440 [tense music playing] 313 00:18:52,360 --> 00:18:55,800 I've come to one of the world's most remote inhabited islands 314 00:18:58,120 --> 00:19:01,360 2,300 miles west of South America 315 00:19:01,960 --> 00:19:05,520 and 2,600 miles east of Tahiti. 316 00:19:07,680 --> 00:19:13,880 On Easter Sunday, 1722, Dutch explorers stumbled across this small speck of land, 317 00:19:15,840 --> 00:19:18,400 lost in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. 318 00:19:20,240 --> 00:19:22,920 So they named it Easter Island. 319 00:19:24,080 --> 00:19:26,920 But they were stunned to discover that it was inhabited 320 00:19:27,920 --> 00:19:32,320 by a people who today call their home Rapa Nui. 321 00:19:32,400 --> 00:19:33,880 [tense music ends] 322 00:19:33,960 --> 00:19:36,360 [waves crashing] 323 00:19:38,400 --> 00:19:40,120 [Graham] I mean, look at the basic geography. 324 00:19:43,160 --> 00:19:47,040 It's just sitting there in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, 325 00:19:47,120 --> 00:19:51,080 this tiny little dot of land. 326 00:19:53,040 --> 00:19:57,240 And so the first extraordinary thing about it is, 327 00:19:57,320 --> 00:19:59,120 how did people find it at all? 328 00:19:59,200 --> 00:20:03,480 How did anybody ever end up settling on Easter Island 329 00:20:04,200 --> 00:20:08,000 in this huge wilderness of the Pacific Ocean? 330 00:20:08,080 --> 00:20:09,880 [suspenseful music playing] 331 00:20:09,960 --> 00:20:13,640 That Pan-Pacific DNA signal convinces me 332 00:20:13,720 --> 00:20:18,320 that this island could play a key role in my efforts to reconstruct the story 333 00:20:18,400 --> 00:20:20,720 of a lost civilization of the Ice Age. 334 00:20:22,400 --> 00:20:23,240 Why? 335 00:20:25,920 --> 00:20:27,160 Because of these. 336 00:20:27,240 --> 00:20:29,680 [dramatic music playing] 337 00:20:29,760 --> 00:20:33,200 Vast megalithic statues that tower over the landscape… 338 00:20:37,280 --> 00:20:39,400 for which Rapa Nui is famous today. 339 00:20:44,680 --> 00:20:46,040 [music ends] 340 00:20:47,520 --> 00:20:48,720 [Graham] Across the Pacific, 341 00:20:48,800 --> 00:20:52,600 several islands are home to collections of remarkable megalithic structures. 342 00:20:53,320 --> 00:20:57,680 However, the greatest concentration of such monuments is found here. 343 00:20:57,760 --> 00:20:59,760 The islanders call them Moai. 344 00:20:59,840 --> 00:21:01,840 [intriguing music playing] 345 00:21:05,600 --> 00:21:08,000 [Graham] There are more than 1,000 of them… 346 00:21:10,760 --> 00:21:14,320 on a remote rock that's smaller than Washington, DC. 347 00:21:19,120 --> 00:21:23,880 Many stand together along the coastline, facing inland… 348 00:21:28,200 --> 00:21:30,720 while others are found seemingly at random, 349 00:21:31,800 --> 00:21:35,760 as if a massive project had been abandoned midway through. 350 00:21:35,840 --> 00:21:39,920 [music crescendos, stops] 351 00:21:41,480 --> 00:21:46,480 For me, Easter Island is just one of the most enchanted places on Earth. 352 00:21:47,080 --> 00:21:49,720 The great Moai statues, 353 00:21:49,800 --> 00:21:53,360 these human figures carved out of the soft volcanic rock. 354 00:21:55,160 --> 00:21:58,040 It's confronting us with a mystery right there, 355 00:21:58,120 --> 00:21:59,840 which needs to be explained. 356 00:21:59,920 --> 00:22:01,920 [intriguing music continues] 357 00:22:04,280 --> 00:22:07,320 Who were the sculptors of these giant statues? 358 00:22:07,400 --> 00:22:09,120 What were they trying to achieve, 359 00:22:09,200 --> 00:22:12,760 and why did they expend such mighty efforts to achieve it? 360 00:22:14,520 --> 00:22:16,960 These are puzzles to which no definite solution, 361 00:22:17,040 --> 00:22:20,280 only speculation, has ever been offered. 362 00:22:20,360 --> 00:22:21,720 [music continues] 363 00:22:25,240 --> 00:22:26,560 [birds chirping] 364 00:22:26,640 --> 00:22:28,640 [mysterious music playing] 365 00:22:32,280 --> 00:22:35,600 [Graham] This gap in our knowledge is mostly due to the devastation 366 00:22:35,680 --> 00:22:37,680 wrought here by outsiders. 367 00:22:39,880 --> 00:22:41,640 During the 19th century, 368 00:22:41,720 --> 00:22:44,880 the Rapa Nui people were reduced to a tiny remnant 369 00:22:44,960 --> 00:22:47,840 by slave raids and disease. 370 00:22:48,960 --> 00:22:50,440 The few who clung on, did so, 371 00:22:50,520 --> 00:22:53,680 by taking refuge in underground lava tubes like this. 372 00:22:53,760 --> 00:22:55,760 [water dripping] 373 00:22:56,760 --> 00:22:59,440 [Graham] I often say that we're a species with amnesia, 374 00:22:59,960 --> 00:23:02,880 and that is particularly true of Easter Island 375 00:23:02,960 --> 00:23:04,760 because of its tragic history. 376 00:23:05,640 --> 00:23:07,040 Because from the moment 377 00:23:07,120 --> 00:23:11,120 that Easter Island encountered Western culture, 378 00:23:11,800 --> 00:23:13,480 uh, disaster set in. 379 00:23:14,080 --> 00:23:15,040 [water dripping] 380 00:23:15,120 --> 00:23:20,000 The elders who had preserved the memories were all taken away. 381 00:23:20,800 --> 00:23:23,000 Some slaves were later repatriated, 382 00:23:23,880 --> 00:23:26,280 but brought with them deadly diseases, 383 00:23:26,880 --> 00:23:28,840 with the result that the remaining islanders 384 00:23:28,920 --> 00:23:30,480 were all but wiped out. 385 00:23:30,560 --> 00:23:32,560 [dramatic music playing] 386 00:23:35,320 --> 00:23:38,440 Leo Pakarati is an Indigenous documentarian 387 00:23:38,520 --> 00:23:42,080 {\an8}whose family has carefully preserved the oral traditions of Rapa Nui 388 00:23:42,160 --> 00:23:43,440 {\an8}for generations. 389 00:23:44,960 --> 00:23:47,760 He's painfully aware of what was lost 390 00:23:47,840 --> 00:23:50,560 during those dark times of the slave raids. 391 00:23:52,080 --> 00:23:55,320 The only memory that is preserved of the origins of Easter Island 392 00:23:55,400 --> 00:23:58,480 is the memory that survived the 19th century. 393 00:23:59,080 --> 00:24:04,040 In a historical moment, we are only 111 persons on the island. 394 00:24:04,120 --> 00:24:05,600 - It's a big disaster. - For the culture. 395 00:24:05,680 --> 00:24:07,320 It's a cultural disaster too 396 00:24:07,400 --> 00:24:10,320 because you need many people to keep the knowledge. 397 00:24:10,400 --> 00:24:11,920 Few people, few knowledge. 398 00:24:12,000 --> 00:24:15,960 - Yeah. - And we lose a big part of our history. 399 00:24:16,040 --> 00:24:17,440 [somber music playing] 400 00:24:17,520 --> 00:24:20,840 [Graham] And yet, despite these overwhelming odds, 401 00:24:20,920 --> 00:24:23,280 the Rapa Nui have retained memories 402 00:24:23,360 --> 00:24:26,720 concerning this tiny island's most intriguing mystery. 403 00:24:28,120 --> 00:24:30,800 Tell me what the old tradition says about the Moai. 404 00:24:30,880 --> 00:24:34,920 The real name for the Moai is "te aringa ora o te Tupuna." 405 00:24:35,000 --> 00:24:37,400 - Mm-hmm. - "The living face of our ancestors." 406 00:24:37,480 --> 00:24:38,560 That is the name. 407 00:24:38,640 --> 00:24:42,640 The idea is the Moai represent a real person. 408 00:24:42,720 --> 00:24:43,680 Yeah. 409 00:24:43,760 --> 00:24:46,560 And in life, this person is special, important. 410 00:24:48,080 --> 00:24:49,880 [Graham] According to Rapa Nui lore, 411 00:24:49,960 --> 00:24:53,520 these important ancestors were memorialized in the Moai 412 00:24:54,280 --> 00:24:57,160 with distinctive features related to their rank. 413 00:24:57,960 --> 00:24:59,840 - Some of the Moai have short ears. - Yeah. 414 00:24:59,920 --> 00:25:01,800 Some have long ears. What's that about? 415 00:25:01,880 --> 00:25:04,640 [Leo] This is because of our different social classes on the island. 416 00:25:04,720 --> 00:25:08,160 - [Graham] Yeah. - Some people have time for long earrings. 417 00:25:08,240 --> 00:25:10,280 They have long nails too. 418 00:25:10,360 --> 00:25:12,280 - It's a social class act. - [Graham] Yes. 419 00:25:12,360 --> 00:25:15,200 So those long fingers on the Moai, those are actually nails? 420 00:25:15,280 --> 00:25:17,080 [splutters] They have long fingers, 421 00:25:17,160 --> 00:25:20,360 and some Moai have very long nails and curves too. 422 00:25:20,440 --> 00:25:22,440 [tense music playing] 423 00:25:23,720 --> 00:25:25,920 [Graham] I find it impossible to avoid seeing 424 00:25:26,000 --> 00:25:30,080 parallels with similar statues of great antiquity found elsewhere. 425 00:25:31,880 --> 00:25:37,600 {\an8}On the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, we find 4,000-year-old megalithic figures 426 00:25:37,680 --> 00:25:39,720 in a remarkably similar posture 427 00:25:40,520 --> 00:25:42,520 {\an8}and with similar hand positions. 428 00:25:46,160 --> 00:25:49,040 {\an8}Even on the other side of the world, in Turkey, 429 00:25:49,120 --> 00:25:52,960 {\an8}a statue known as Urfa Man that dates back to the Ice Age 430 00:25:53,040 --> 00:25:57,120 strikes a similar pose, his hands clasped across his belly. 431 00:25:57,200 --> 00:25:59,200 [tense music continues] 432 00:26:00,240 --> 00:26:03,960 {\an8}An equally intriguing parallel is found also in Turkey, 433 00:26:04,040 --> 00:26:07,200 {\an8}in the ten-ton megalithic pillars of Göbekli Tepe. 434 00:26:08,160 --> 00:26:12,160 These pillars are 11,600 years old. 435 00:26:14,760 --> 00:26:19,520 Could the similarities of these designs across time and space 436 00:26:19,600 --> 00:26:22,400 be evidence of a single common ancestor culture, 437 00:26:23,480 --> 00:26:27,160 leaving a legacy of ideas for later peoples to express? 438 00:26:30,280 --> 00:26:32,960 [tense music crescendos, stops] 439 00:26:33,040 --> 00:26:34,040 [pensive music playing] 440 00:26:34,120 --> 00:26:37,760 No records exist that could explain the origins of such imagery. 441 00:26:37,840 --> 00:26:39,680 [music continues] 442 00:26:39,760 --> 00:26:42,560 But according to Rapa Nui oral tradition, 443 00:26:42,640 --> 00:26:46,360 the Moai, in addition to being megalithic memorials, 444 00:26:47,080 --> 00:26:50,480 channel a sacred spiritual power from their ancestors, 445 00:26:52,640 --> 00:26:54,720 an energy known as mana. 446 00:26:57,280 --> 00:26:58,840 Tell me more about mana. 447 00:26:58,920 --> 00:27:00,320 Mana is very important. 448 00:27:00,400 --> 00:27:01,920 Mana is the energy. 449 00:27:02,000 --> 00:27:03,280 All the people have mana. 450 00:27:03,360 --> 00:27:06,640 Any rock, any elements in the universe have mana. 451 00:27:06,720 --> 00:27:10,080 So the Moai are invested with mana? 452 00:27:10,160 --> 00:27:11,720 [Leo] Yeah. People, when they die, 453 00:27:11,800 --> 00:27:16,160 the family send to make a Moai with the intention, 454 00:27:16,240 --> 00:27:20,920 the soul, the mana, the spirit of this person entering the Moai. 455 00:27:22,440 --> 00:27:26,240 [Graham] But interestingly, that mana only starts to flow 456 00:27:26,320 --> 00:27:30,400 after the Moai are set in place and properly finished. 457 00:27:31,280 --> 00:27:34,680 In the moment, the Moai is safe on the platform, 458 00:27:34,760 --> 00:27:38,680 the tupuna, the ancestors, carve in the holes for the eyes first, 459 00:27:38,760 --> 00:27:42,360 and later they put in coral for the white part 460 00:27:42,440 --> 00:27:45,480 and sometimes obsidian or other rocks for the eyes. 461 00:27:45,560 --> 00:27:48,080 - [Graham] Right. Yeah. - In this moment, it's no more Moai. 462 00:27:48,160 --> 00:27:51,360 Now it's Aringa ora o te Tupuna. The living face of our ancestors. 463 00:27:51,440 --> 00:27:53,320 - Once it has the eyes? - Once it has the eyes. 464 00:27:53,400 --> 00:27:55,840 - Right. - And from the platform, from the Ahu, 465 00:27:55,920 --> 00:27:59,080 the Moai look in direction to the town and protect the family. 466 00:27:59,160 --> 00:28:00,680 That is the function of the Moai. 467 00:28:02,240 --> 00:28:04,120 [music fades] 468 00:28:07,960 --> 00:28:11,240 [Graham] Clearly, the Moai are deeply sacred to the Rapa Nui. 469 00:28:12,760 --> 00:28:15,600 But does that mean they originally carved them? 470 00:28:18,360 --> 00:28:21,360 Or could the Moai have already been here? 471 00:28:21,920 --> 00:28:24,680 If so, we'd need to rethink the entire timeline 472 00:28:26,560 --> 00:28:28,280 of the peopling of Rapa Nui. 473 00:28:29,440 --> 00:28:32,080 Let's consider an alternative scenario 474 00:28:32,160 --> 00:28:34,640 in which it was first explored by a small group 475 00:28:34,720 --> 00:28:36,720 of highly sophisticated navigators, 476 00:28:37,320 --> 00:28:40,240 much further back in prehistory than is presently accepted. 477 00:28:44,320 --> 00:28:46,320 [tense music playing] 478 00:28:49,360 --> 00:28:50,840 [man chanting] 479 00:28:51,440 --> 00:28:53,360 [all chanting] 480 00:28:53,440 --> 00:28:55,120 [Graham] Based on genetic testing, 481 00:28:55,200 --> 00:28:56,880 we know that the Rapa Nui people… 482 00:28:57,600 --> 00:28:59,120 [chanting] 483 00:28:59,200 --> 00:29:02,240 …are descended from those great ancient navigators, 484 00:29:02,320 --> 00:29:03,760 the Polynesians. 485 00:29:05,600 --> 00:29:10,400 The Polynesians were fantastically advanced navigators and seafarers 486 00:29:10,480 --> 00:29:12,840 and settled many parts of the Pacific Ocean 487 00:29:12,920 --> 00:29:16,440 during the Polynesian expansion about 3,000 years ago. 488 00:29:18,240 --> 00:29:20,960 Carbon dating of the oldest human settlements here 489 00:29:21,040 --> 00:29:26,040 strongly suggests that Rapa Nui was one of the last islands they reached 490 00:29:26,120 --> 00:29:28,280 around 1,100 years ago. 491 00:29:29,200 --> 00:29:31,320 [tense music crescendos, stops] 492 00:29:31,400 --> 00:29:32,720 A new study proposes 493 00:29:32,800 --> 00:29:35,520 that the first people arrived even more recently, 494 00:29:35,600 --> 00:29:37,880 just 800 years ago or less. 495 00:29:40,880 --> 00:29:43,840 [singing in local language] 496 00:29:48,000 --> 00:29:52,480 [Graham] And yet, fragments of a different earlier origin story 497 00:29:52,560 --> 00:29:55,160 that seem to contradict the archaeological timeline 498 00:29:55,240 --> 00:29:57,240 have been kept alive here. 499 00:29:57,920 --> 00:30:00,680 I'm privileged to witness a celebration of it. 500 00:30:00,760 --> 00:30:02,760 [singing in local language] 501 00:30:07,480 --> 00:30:10,040 [singing continues] 502 00:30:10,120 --> 00:30:14,320 The oral traditions speak of a primeval homeland called Hiva, 503 00:30:14,400 --> 00:30:19,400 a large island destroyed by a global flood that forced their ancestors to flee. 504 00:30:20,440 --> 00:30:22,120 [tense music playing] 505 00:30:22,200 --> 00:30:25,960 In this account, the great king of Hiva, Hutu Matu'a, 506 00:30:26,560 --> 00:30:30,760 was warned that his island nation would suffer a terrible deluge 507 00:30:30,840 --> 00:30:32,440 and be submerged forever. 508 00:30:33,280 --> 00:30:35,280 [tense music continues] 509 00:30:37,240 --> 00:30:38,560 Guided by a vision, 510 00:30:38,640 --> 00:30:42,200 he sent seven chosen men out in seafaring canoes, 511 00:30:44,360 --> 00:30:47,680 heading towards the rising sun in search of a new home. 512 00:30:47,760 --> 00:30:49,680 [people screaming] 513 00:30:49,760 --> 00:30:51,560 [Graham] After weeks at sea, 514 00:30:51,640 --> 00:30:54,240 they landed safely on the island of Rapa Nui, 515 00:30:54,320 --> 00:30:58,680 where they were later joined by Hutu Matu'a and hundreds of his people 516 00:30:58,760 --> 00:31:00,960 to reestablish their civilization. 517 00:31:02,640 --> 00:31:05,120 [wind howling] 518 00:31:05,200 --> 00:31:07,040 [waves crashing] 519 00:31:08,280 --> 00:31:11,560 So we have a tradition of a great flood and an exploration, 520 00:31:11,640 --> 00:31:14,480 and we have to ask ourselves, "Did such an event happen?" 521 00:31:15,680 --> 00:31:18,240 You really have to go back to the end of the last Ice Age 522 00:31:19,000 --> 00:31:23,080 to get the kind of flood that would submerge an entire land. 523 00:31:23,160 --> 00:31:24,720 [tense music playing] 524 00:31:24,800 --> 00:31:27,680 The name of that sunken island, Hiva, 525 00:31:27,760 --> 00:31:31,280 in Rapa Nui language means far-off land, 526 00:31:31,360 --> 00:31:35,040 suggesting it wasn't a land the Polynesians were familiar with. 527 00:31:35,680 --> 00:31:42,000 But the arrival of a band of seven by sea after a time of great cataclysm 528 00:31:42,080 --> 00:31:45,320 {\an8}is a tradition encountered all over the ancient world 529 00:31:45,800 --> 00:31:47,840 {\an8}from the Apkallu of Mesopotamia 530 00:31:49,680 --> 00:31:51,600 {\an8}to Egypt's seven sages 531 00:31:52,680 --> 00:31:54,240 {\an8}and India's seven rishis. 532 00:31:54,320 --> 00:31:55,960 {\an8}[tense music continues] 533 00:31:56,040 --> 00:32:00,080 {\an8}Such traditions often speak of a small band of flood survivors 534 00:32:00,160 --> 00:32:03,760 arriving in a distant land in a time of chaos 535 00:32:03,840 --> 00:32:06,240 with a mission to restart civilization. 536 00:32:06,320 --> 00:32:08,960 [Indigenous people singing] 537 00:32:09,040 --> 00:32:13,560 Coincidence? Could these origin stories be memories of real events 538 00:32:13,640 --> 00:32:17,080 experienced by many ancient cultures around the world? 539 00:32:17,880 --> 00:32:20,240 [singing in local language] 540 00:32:23,200 --> 00:32:26,640 [Graham] Crucially, the legend of Hotu Matu'a and Hiva 541 00:32:26,720 --> 00:32:28,160 doesn't include a date. 542 00:32:28,680 --> 00:32:31,440 [singing continues] 543 00:32:33,760 --> 00:32:36,480 [Graham] This causes me to raise questions in my mind 544 00:32:36,560 --> 00:32:38,920 about when Easter Island was first settled. 545 00:32:39,000 --> 00:32:40,360 [singing continues] 546 00:32:40,440 --> 00:32:43,240 [Graham] I'm not disputing the Polynesian expansion. 547 00:32:43,320 --> 00:32:47,320 I'm not disputing that the population of Easter Island today 548 00:32:47,400 --> 00:32:49,640 is a Polynesian population. 549 00:32:50,480 --> 00:32:53,040 But the question is, could it have been settled earlier than that? 550 00:32:55,000 --> 00:32:58,720 [cheering] 551 00:32:58,800 --> 00:33:01,120 [suspenseful music playing] 552 00:33:05,200 --> 00:33:09,120 [Graham] Alas, the Moai themselves can't help us answer this question. 553 00:33:10,880 --> 00:33:12,920 The characteristic Moai are cut from 554 00:33:13,000 --> 00:33:15,560 a relatively soft type of rock called tuff, 555 00:33:16,400 --> 00:33:19,040 a form of volcanic ash turned to stone. 556 00:33:19,120 --> 00:33:21,400 They can't be dated in and of themselves. 557 00:33:22,920 --> 00:33:24,880 In the absence of direct evidence 558 00:33:24,960 --> 00:33:27,680 for when these megalithic statues were carved, 559 00:33:28,680 --> 00:33:31,800 archaeologists relied on dating the organic matter 560 00:33:31,880 --> 00:33:36,080 embedded in the Ahu platforms, on which many of the Moai stand. 561 00:33:37,640 --> 00:33:38,720 For example, 562 00:33:38,800 --> 00:33:45,080 Ahu Nau Nau has been dated to between 400 and 900 years old. 563 00:33:45,160 --> 00:33:47,160 [music ends] 564 00:33:47,240 --> 00:33:49,240 [dramatic music playing] 565 00:33:50,600 --> 00:33:55,080 So that's when historians believe the islanders began to carve the Moai. 566 00:33:57,720 --> 00:33:59,440 But if that were true, 567 00:33:59,520 --> 00:34:02,000 it means that after a few centuries, 568 00:34:02,080 --> 00:34:06,040 living simply with no traces of building the necessary skills, 569 00:34:07,000 --> 00:34:10,880 the Rapa Nui people suddenly embarked on this mammoth project, 570 00:34:12,360 --> 00:34:16,520 which continued until just a few decades before the Europeans arrived. 571 00:34:18,640 --> 00:34:20,600 Many of the platforms are really quite rough 572 00:34:20,680 --> 00:34:23,040 and ready by comparison with the statues. 573 00:34:23,120 --> 00:34:25,280 And we have to ask ourselves the question, 574 00:34:25,360 --> 00:34:29,240 "Are the platforms actually the same age as the statues that stand on top of them?" 575 00:34:29,840 --> 00:34:33,360 Or is it possible that the statues were re-erected 576 00:34:33,440 --> 00:34:35,360 by latecomers to Easter Island, 577 00:34:35,440 --> 00:34:38,600 giving us a totally false idea of how old the statues are 578 00:34:38,680 --> 00:34:40,400 based on the platforms alone? 579 00:34:40,480 --> 00:34:42,480 [suspenseful music playing] 580 00:34:43,360 --> 00:34:45,400 [Graham] After all, throughout history, 581 00:34:45,480 --> 00:34:50,160 many objects of great cultural value have later been moved and displayed 582 00:34:50,240 --> 00:34:51,520 in a newer setting. 583 00:34:51,600 --> 00:34:53,720 {\an8}- [music intensifies] - [bells tolling] 584 00:34:53,800 --> 00:34:57,120 {\an8}In Venice, the four tetrarchs of St. Mark's Basilica 585 00:34:57,200 --> 00:35:02,960 {\an8}were actually carved in Constantinople 900 years before they were installed here. 586 00:35:05,520 --> 00:35:10,120 {\an8}And the Renaissance fountain in front of Rome's Pantheon isn't nearly as old 587 00:35:10,200 --> 00:35:12,760 {\an8}as the ancient Egyptian obelisk it supports. 588 00:35:15,480 --> 00:35:18,760 Many of these huge statues were moved around, relocated, 589 00:35:18,840 --> 00:35:20,440 placed in different positions. 590 00:35:20,520 --> 00:35:23,160 And I think we have to remain open to the possibility 591 00:35:23,240 --> 00:35:25,480 that the statues may already have been there 592 00:35:25,560 --> 00:35:28,360 when the first Polynesians arrived. 593 00:35:29,680 --> 00:35:33,120 And that they were kind of adopted by those new settlers 594 00:35:33,200 --> 00:35:35,360 and taken in to their culture. 595 00:35:37,440 --> 00:35:40,040 Supporting this idea is Ahu Nau Nau, 596 00:35:40,560 --> 00:35:44,120 which uses another Moai head, deeply weathered, 597 00:35:44,640 --> 00:35:48,200 as one of its foundation stones, recycled for this purpose. 598 00:35:51,800 --> 00:35:55,120 [music crescendos, subsides] 599 00:35:55,200 --> 00:35:59,240 Another hint that the Moai could be much older than previously thought 600 00:35:59,960 --> 00:36:02,080 can be found at the extinct volcano, 601 00:36:02,760 --> 00:36:05,880 where nearly all of the megaliths were first quarried and shaped. 602 00:36:05,960 --> 00:36:07,960 [suspenseful music playing] 603 00:36:10,800 --> 00:36:14,400 Here, in the southeastern corner of the island, is an extinct volcano 604 00:36:14,480 --> 00:36:16,120 called Rano Raraku. 605 00:36:17,480 --> 00:36:19,760 It's a dramatic feature on the landscape. 606 00:36:20,280 --> 00:36:22,520 [suspenseful music ends] 607 00:36:22,600 --> 00:36:27,840 And on its slopes are the remains of hundreds of partially completed Moai. 608 00:36:29,280 --> 00:36:32,720 It truly is one of the world's most mysterious places. 609 00:36:33,680 --> 00:36:35,680 [triumphant music playing] 610 00:36:39,600 --> 00:36:43,000 [Graham] Nearly 400 Moai are scattered about the volcano… 611 00:36:48,080 --> 00:36:50,080 in various stages of completion. 612 00:36:56,840 --> 00:36:59,320 [triumphant music crescendos, subsides] 613 00:36:59,400 --> 00:37:01,400 [pensive music playing] 614 00:37:02,560 --> 00:37:05,360 Many only peek above ground level, 615 00:37:05,440 --> 00:37:08,560 their squat torsos embedded in deep sediment. 616 00:37:10,840 --> 00:37:14,160 This sedimentation could result from landslides, 617 00:37:14,240 --> 00:37:17,160 mudflows, or even tsunamis. 618 00:37:20,600 --> 00:37:25,480 But although they might lean, most of the statues remain upright, 619 00:37:25,560 --> 00:37:27,120 not randomly tumbled over, 620 00:37:27,200 --> 00:37:30,240 as you would expect if such an event were the cause. 621 00:37:32,640 --> 00:37:34,560 So what really happened here? 622 00:37:36,200 --> 00:37:39,440 For centuries, the sediment concealed the evidence. 623 00:37:41,040 --> 00:37:45,760 Until 1914, when archaeologists began excavations. 624 00:37:47,240 --> 00:37:49,000 As this photograph shows, 625 00:37:49,080 --> 00:37:53,000 some Moai are much more than just head and shoulders 626 00:37:53,080 --> 00:37:56,760 and include the whole torso lodged deep in the hillside… 627 00:38:00,120 --> 00:38:04,120 a finding that was only fully revealed to the world in the 1950s 628 00:38:04,200 --> 00:38:07,080 by the famous ethnographer Thor Heyerdahl. 629 00:38:08,880 --> 00:38:11,120 [tense music crescendos, stops] 630 00:38:11,200 --> 00:38:13,720 Thor Heyerdahl was a remarkable human being. 631 00:38:13,800 --> 00:38:16,680 I was lucky to meet him more than once. 632 00:38:17,640 --> 00:38:19,840 He was willing to challenge convention. 633 00:38:19,920 --> 00:38:22,800 He was convinced that there were some missing pieces 634 00:38:22,880 --> 00:38:24,760 in the story of our past. 635 00:38:24,840 --> 00:38:28,960 And he tried to show us that deep in prehistory, 636 00:38:29,040 --> 00:38:32,120 uh, ancient humans were capable of achievements 637 00:38:32,200 --> 00:38:35,760 that we have tended to allocate to much later periods. 638 00:38:35,840 --> 00:38:37,480 [triumphant music playing] 639 00:38:37,560 --> 00:38:40,560 [Graham] Like this mysterious Moai building project. 640 00:38:42,120 --> 00:38:43,240 Archaeologists tell us 641 00:38:43,320 --> 00:38:47,040 that the last of the Moai were sculpted around 400 years ago. 642 00:38:47,640 --> 00:38:51,320 But it seems implausible, on such a small island, 643 00:38:51,880 --> 00:38:55,440 that such a massive amount of sedimentation could have accumulated 644 00:38:55,520 --> 00:38:57,960 around them in such a short time. 645 00:38:59,880 --> 00:39:03,160 None of these Moai show evidence of intentional burial. 646 00:39:04,200 --> 00:39:06,280 So is there another explanation? 647 00:39:06,360 --> 00:39:09,080 [triumphant music intensifies] 648 00:39:09,160 --> 00:39:11,760 Could it be that what we're looking at is the end result 649 00:39:11,840 --> 00:39:13,560 of a process of sedimentation 650 00:39:13,640 --> 00:39:17,120 that would have taken not hundreds of years, but thousands? 651 00:39:19,640 --> 00:39:21,560 The problem with that theory? 652 00:39:21,640 --> 00:39:25,320 There's no evidence of human habitation dating so far back. 653 00:39:25,400 --> 00:39:26,720 [dramatic music playing] 654 00:39:26,800 --> 00:39:27,840 Or is there? 655 00:39:34,960 --> 00:39:38,080 [music ends] 656 00:39:38,720 --> 00:39:40,720 [closing theme playing] 657 00:40:05,080 --> 00:40:07,960 {\an8}[closing theme ends]