1 00:00:05,960 --> 00:00:08,280 [insects chirping] 2 00:00:09,960 --> 00:00:12,160 [suspenseful music playing] 3 00:00:15,200 --> 00:00:18,440 Ayahuasca is one of the scientific inventions of the Amazon. 4 00:00:20,040 --> 00:00:21,960 It's a powerful visionary brew, 5 00:00:23,440 --> 00:00:27,760 one that's central to Indigenous spirituality and legal here in Peru. 6 00:00:29,160 --> 00:00:34,040 I myself have had many experiences with ayahuasca guided by a shaman. 7 00:00:35,880 --> 00:00:39,400 And I believe its use dates back further than anyone thinks, 8 00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,720 especially in the light of the artwork it inspires. 9 00:00:45,720 --> 00:00:47,640 There are incredible visions. 10 00:00:47,720 --> 00:00:49,280 Nine times out of ten, 11 00:00:49,360 --> 00:00:51,880 those are introduced with geometric patterns. 12 00:00:53,360 --> 00:00:55,400 And after these first visions, 13 00:00:55,480 --> 00:00:58,680 many people report encounters with fantastical beings. 14 00:01:00,360 --> 00:01:05,680 Sometimes those entities may be a mixture of an animal and a human being, 15 00:01:05,760 --> 00:01:08,320 so-called therianthrope from the Greek 16 00:01:08,400 --> 00:01:11,160 therion meaning "wild beast" and anthropos meaning "man." 17 00:01:11,240 --> 00:01:13,440 These are very common entities that are encountered. 18 00:01:14,880 --> 00:01:18,240 What intrigues me is that evidence of the use of ayahuasca 19 00:01:18,320 --> 00:01:20,600 and the visions it inspires 20 00:01:20,680 --> 00:01:22,680 can be found not just in the Amazon, 21 00:01:22,760 --> 00:01:26,680 but at many other ancient sites I've explored in South America. 22 00:01:29,280 --> 00:01:33,400 {\an8}In Cusco, the Inca used the brew during human sacrifices 23 00:01:34,080 --> 00:01:36,960 to aid the victim's passage to the afterlife. 24 00:01:38,360 --> 00:01:41,080 And their patterned, figure-filled artwork 25 00:01:41,160 --> 00:01:44,960 greatly resembles contemporary ayahuasca-inspired art. 26 00:01:45,040 --> 00:01:46,840 {\an8}[intriguing music playing] 27 00:01:46,920 --> 00:01:49,360 {\an8}At the pre-Inca site of Tiwanaku in Bolivia, 28 00:01:49,960 --> 00:01:53,800 researchers have identified the objects held by this 1,500-year-old statue 29 00:01:54,720 --> 00:01:57,680 as snuff trays for hallucinogenic powders, 30 00:01:59,120 --> 00:02:02,600 while much Tiwanaku pottery features geometric designs 31 00:02:02,680 --> 00:02:06,640 and fantastical entities, likely inspired by psychedelic visions. 32 00:02:08,600 --> 00:02:13,000 You can see those same visions reflected in traditional Amazonian art too. 33 00:02:15,880 --> 00:02:18,400 What comes to mind is the case of the Tucano, 34 00:02:18,920 --> 00:02:21,880 who, by and large, paint on non-permanent media. 35 00:02:23,080 --> 00:02:26,880 [Dr. Luna] The painting, the malocas, you know, the communal houses. 36 00:02:26,960 --> 00:02:28,840 {\an8}You see that there is a continuity here. 37 00:02:28,920 --> 00:02:30,920 [intriguing music subsides] 38 00:02:31,000 --> 00:02:35,360 Remember the origin myth of the Tucano that speaks of their great teachers, 39 00:02:35,440 --> 00:02:37,800 the daughter of the sun and her companions? 40 00:02:39,520 --> 00:02:42,200 Interestingly, the story doesn't end 41 00:02:42,280 --> 00:02:45,760 with the departure of those mystical, civilizing heroes. 42 00:02:45,840 --> 00:02:47,720 [intriguing music continues] 43 00:02:47,800 --> 00:02:49,080 According to lore, 44 00:02:49,160 --> 00:02:52,240 after ensuring the land could support the newcomers, 45 00:02:52,320 --> 00:02:55,760 the divine beings left open a channel of communication 46 00:02:55,840 --> 00:02:58,360 for humans to use whenever there was need. 47 00:02:58,920 --> 00:03:02,880 That channel is the brew we know today as ayahuasca. 48 00:03:03,600 --> 00:03:05,480 [birds chirping] 49 00:03:05,560 --> 00:03:09,840 The word ayahuasca means "vine of souls" in Quechua, the Inca language. 50 00:03:11,160 --> 00:03:14,000 But I believe its use vastly predates the Inca. 51 00:03:14,760 --> 00:03:16,120 This is where the issue 52 00:03:16,200 --> 00:03:19,600 of this very ancient rock art becomes interesting. 53 00:03:21,920 --> 00:03:23,520 {\an8}[Graham] These rock paintings 54 00:03:23,600 --> 00:03:26,280 {\an8}from the part of the Amazon where the Tucano live today 55 00:03:26,760 --> 00:03:31,200 explore the same themes we see in all ayahuasca-inspired art. 56 00:03:32,360 --> 00:03:38,240 I can't help observing that there are similar and connected patterns. 57 00:03:38,320 --> 00:03:40,400 We see therianthropic beings, 58 00:03:40,480 --> 00:03:42,920 beings that are part animal, part human in form. 59 00:03:43,000 --> 00:03:43,880 [Dr. Luna] Like here? 60 00:03:45,080 --> 00:03:47,200 [Graham] We see geometric patterns. 61 00:03:47,720 --> 00:03:49,040 We see serpents. 62 00:03:49,120 --> 00:03:50,880 To me this is an extraordinary mystery 63 00:03:50,960 --> 00:03:54,520 that… that the same themes keep coming up again and again and again. 64 00:03:56,600 --> 00:04:01,480 And yet these images, indisputably, were created during the last Ice Age. 65 00:04:03,800 --> 00:04:05,520 [intriguing music fades] 66 00:04:05,600 --> 00:04:10,520 It suggests that ayahuasca was being used almost 13,000 years ago. 67 00:04:10,600 --> 00:04:12,920 It's a logical deduction from looking at the art. 68 00:04:13,000 --> 00:04:14,200 Exactly. 69 00:04:14,280 --> 00:04:17,000 [dramatic music playing] 70 00:04:17,080 --> 00:04:20,400 If true, the implications are staggering. 71 00:04:23,560 --> 00:04:26,840 It means those ancient Amazonians may have already mastered 72 00:04:26,920 --> 00:04:29,080 the complex chemistry of ayahuasca 73 00:04:30,960 --> 00:04:32,560 as far back as the Ice Age. 74 00:04:33,280 --> 00:04:36,960 [tense music builds, fades] 75 00:04:37,040 --> 00:04:39,040 [theme song playing] 76 00:04:45,800 --> 00:04:46,960 [theme song ends] 77 00:04:47,040 --> 00:04:49,880 {\an8}- [thunder rumbling] - [electronic warble] 78 00:04:51,000 --> 00:04:52,800 {\an8}[intriguing music playing] 79 00:04:55,000 --> 00:04:58,080 [Graham] The geometry, the spiraling patterns, 80 00:04:58,920 --> 00:05:02,400 this is one of the most extraordinary aspects of the psychedelic experience. 81 00:05:04,280 --> 00:05:08,080 Those geometric visions may explain another mystery that we encountered 82 00:05:08,160 --> 00:05:11,240 at the very start of our exploration of the Americas. 83 00:05:12,320 --> 00:05:13,800 {\an8}[intriguing music intensifies] 84 00:05:13,880 --> 00:05:16,640 {\an8}The immense geoglyphs emerging from the jungle 85 00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:19,160 {\an8}along the southwestern rim of the Amazon. 86 00:05:20,880 --> 00:05:24,600 I'm struck by the repetition of the geometrical idea, 87 00:05:24,680 --> 00:05:27,680 that we find this again and again, whether the art is modern, 88 00:05:27,760 --> 00:05:30,480 whether it's 13,000 years old, we find it here. 89 00:05:30,560 --> 00:05:34,080 And I can't help wondering whether these geometric earthworks 90 00:05:34,160 --> 00:05:36,240 may also have been influenced by ayahuasca. 91 00:05:36,320 --> 00:05:39,680 [Dr. Luna] Can be. By ayahuasca or other visionary plants. 92 00:05:39,760 --> 00:05:42,280 - [Graham] Other plants. - Because there are many plants. 93 00:05:42,360 --> 00:05:48,120 Behind every, uh, culture you find some visionary plant of some sort. 94 00:05:48,200 --> 00:05:50,480 [intriguing music continues] 95 00:05:50,560 --> 00:05:55,400 [Graham] Those geoglyphs seem to be a manifestation 96 00:05:55,480 --> 00:05:59,320 in three-dimensional form, on an enormous scale, 97 00:05:59,400 --> 00:06:03,880 of precisely the kind of visions that are induced by the consumption 98 00:06:03,960 --> 00:06:06,280 of a substance like ayahuasca, 99 00:06:06,360 --> 00:06:10,040 where the very first things that are seen are geometrical patterns. 100 00:06:11,120 --> 00:06:12,560 [tense music playing] 101 00:06:12,640 --> 00:06:17,200 I think we are seeing a manifestation of the same impulse in different media. 102 00:06:19,960 --> 00:06:23,920 And if the Amazonian geoglyphs were inspired by visionary experiences, 103 00:06:24,680 --> 00:06:28,800 then we have to ask where else that inspiration might have been felt 104 00:06:29,560 --> 00:06:31,560 for one compelling reason. 105 00:06:32,360 --> 00:06:37,200 How similar these earthworks are to geometrical earthworks 106 00:06:37,280 --> 00:06:40,840 {\an8}in North America, in the state of Ohio. 107 00:06:40,920 --> 00:06:43,080 {\an8}[dramatic music playing] 108 00:06:43,160 --> 00:06:46,160 They're called the Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks, 109 00:06:46,240 --> 00:06:50,240 attributed to a civilization known today as the Hopewell culture 110 00:06:51,040 --> 00:06:55,000 that thrived in the Great Lakes region around 2,000 years ago. 111 00:06:55,080 --> 00:06:59,440 Massive ditches and embankments in precise geometrical array. 112 00:07:00,560 --> 00:07:04,000 You could really transpose the earthworks of the Amazon 113 00:07:04,080 --> 00:07:07,360 to the earthworks of Ohio or vice versa. 114 00:07:09,200 --> 00:07:13,640 And yet they appear to have been created by completely unconnected cultures. 115 00:07:14,520 --> 00:07:20,000 This is where I simply cannot accept coincidence as an explanation. 116 00:07:20,080 --> 00:07:24,000 I think that when we see an idea cropping up again and again 117 00:07:24,080 --> 00:07:26,720 in widely-separated geographical locations, 118 00:07:28,640 --> 00:07:31,520 {\an8}what we're looking at is an inheritance of ideas 119 00:07:31,600 --> 00:07:35,880 {\an8}that was passed down and that manifests in different periods of time. 120 00:07:35,960 --> 00:07:39,160 {\an8}But the idea is what is truly ancient, 121 00:07:39,240 --> 00:07:42,360 not necessarily the structure that we're looking at. 122 00:07:42,440 --> 00:07:44,680 [dramatic music subsides] 123 00:07:44,760 --> 00:07:49,160 Unlike their Amazonian counterparts, where research is only just beginning… 124 00:07:49,720 --> 00:07:51,200 [dramatic music intensifies] 125 00:07:51,280 --> 00:07:55,080 …the earthworks in Ohio have been studied for more than a century. 126 00:07:56,000 --> 00:08:00,200 And we know they're more than just intriguing geometrical shapes. 127 00:08:02,840 --> 00:08:06,640 Many of Ohio's earthworks, including the effigy of Serpent Mound, 128 00:08:07,240 --> 00:08:11,880 feature precise alignments to specific solstices and equinoxes. 129 00:08:11,960 --> 00:08:13,840 [birds chirping] 130 00:08:13,920 --> 00:08:16,160 But remarkably, in some cases, 131 00:08:16,240 --> 00:08:18,000 they were built to align directly 132 00:08:18,080 --> 00:08:21,000 with even more complex lunar cycles as well. 133 00:08:21,080 --> 00:08:22,520 [intriguing music playing] 134 00:08:22,600 --> 00:08:26,280 It's one of the curiosities of the ancient world 135 00:08:26,360 --> 00:08:33,200 that there was a very intense interest in what was going on in the heavens. 136 00:08:33,280 --> 00:08:35,280 [intriguing music intensifies] 137 00:08:35,360 --> 00:08:38,320 These astounding feats of astronomical observation 138 00:08:38,400 --> 00:08:41,680 were made by ancient Americans some 2,000 years ago, 139 00:08:43,080 --> 00:08:44,400 perhaps far earlier, 140 00:08:45,960 --> 00:08:49,240 and can also be found in other North American mound structures. 141 00:08:51,120 --> 00:08:53,800 {\an8}At sites like the 1,000-year-old Cahokia 142 00:08:55,400 --> 00:08:57,840 {\an8}and 3,000-year-old Poverty Point, 143 00:08:59,160 --> 00:09:02,800 itself purposefully positioned due north of another site, 144 00:09:03,920 --> 00:09:07,800 {\an8}Lower Jackson Mound, which dates back 5,000 years. 145 00:09:10,040 --> 00:09:12,800 Who knows what astronomy might lie encoded 146 00:09:12,880 --> 00:09:14,520 waiting to be discovered 147 00:09:14,600 --> 00:09:17,640 in those recently-revealed Amazonian geoglyphs? 148 00:09:18,720 --> 00:09:22,000 We know that human beings were in America for tens of thousands of years. 149 00:09:22,080 --> 00:09:25,680 Surely there should be openness to the possibility that there was time 150 00:09:25,760 --> 00:09:29,280 to develop a culture, to develop sophisticated knowledge of the heavens, 151 00:09:29,360 --> 00:09:31,480 and to express that in monuments. 152 00:09:31,560 --> 00:09:33,200 [suspenseful music playing] 153 00:09:33,280 --> 00:09:35,760 [Graham] Could this detailed astronomical knowledge 154 00:09:35,840 --> 00:09:39,640 be evidence that the lost civilization of the Ice Age I'm seeking 155 00:09:39,720 --> 00:09:44,040 left a legacy of ideas in other parts of North America as well? 156 00:09:47,480 --> 00:09:50,480 [suspenseful music builds] 157 00:09:51,760 --> 00:09:53,880 [suspenseful music intensifies] 158 00:09:53,960 --> 00:09:56,120 1,300 miles from Ohio… 159 00:09:58,600 --> 00:10:01,040 [suspenseful music continues] 160 00:10:02,240 --> 00:10:04,520 …in the northwest corner of New Mexico, 161 00:10:05,320 --> 00:10:08,000 I've arrived at a high-altitude cold desert 162 00:10:08,960 --> 00:10:11,760 carved up by towering mesas and buttes. 163 00:10:11,840 --> 00:10:13,760 [suspenseful music subsides] 164 00:10:13,840 --> 00:10:16,680 The Badlands of the southwestern United States 165 00:10:16,760 --> 00:10:20,240 are a realm of harsh extremes and breathtaking vistas, 166 00:10:20,840 --> 00:10:22,960 intersected by ancient canyons 167 00:10:23,040 --> 00:10:26,160 with near-vertical sandstone cliffs on both sides. 168 00:10:27,040 --> 00:10:29,520 [intriguing music playing] 169 00:10:30,520 --> 00:10:34,280 You might think that the desolate setting of these Badlands 170 00:10:34,360 --> 00:10:38,240 would be ill-suited to any large-scale construction project, 171 00:10:38,320 --> 00:10:40,480 either now or in ancient times. 172 00:10:41,360 --> 00:10:42,720 But you'd be wrong. 173 00:10:44,280 --> 00:10:48,320 This canyon is home to some of the most important archaeological sites 174 00:10:48,400 --> 00:10:49,280 in North America. 175 00:10:49,360 --> 00:10:51,360 [intriguing music intensifies] 176 00:10:52,320 --> 00:10:54,560 Dozens of ancient man-made structures 177 00:10:54,640 --> 00:10:57,400 are scattered for miles across the valley floor, 178 00:10:59,080 --> 00:11:01,080 from small freestanding chambers 179 00:11:02,960 --> 00:11:05,440 to massive so-called great houses. 180 00:11:07,440 --> 00:11:09,960 This is Chaco Canyon. 181 00:11:10,040 --> 00:11:13,360 [intriguing music builds, fades] 182 00:11:17,280 --> 00:11:19,760 [Graham] Despite more than a century of research, 183 00:11:21,080 --> 00:11:25,880 the ancient structures that we see here in Chaco Canyon remain enigmatic. 184 00:11:26,920 --> 00:11:30,760 Their origins and even their function are still hotly debated. 185 00:11:31,280 --> 00:11:33,000 [tense music playing] 186 00:11:36,680 --> 00:11:40,520 At the heart of the mystery in the center of the canyon… 187 00:11:44,200 --> 00:11:47,480 is the most imposing great house of them all. 188 00:11:48,240 --> 00:11:50,240 [tense music intensifies] 189 00:11:52,360 --> 00:11:56,200 The name of this place is Pueblo Bonito, meaning "beautiful town." 190 00:11:59,760 --> 00:12:02,040 Rising to a height of several stories, 191 00:12:03,080 --> 00:12:07,160 it's a labyrinth of rooms, corridors, 192 00:12:09,000 --> 00:12:12,720 and vast, circular, semi-subterranean enclosures. 193 00:12:14,760 --> 00:12:18,120 Even today, centuries after all work here ceased, 194 00:12:18,200 --> 00:12:20,000 it strikes the eye forcefully. 195 00:12:20,080 --> 00:12:21,480 [tense music continues] 196 00:12:22,080 --> 00:12:25,600 Pueblo Bonito is a huge construction project. 197 00:12:27,520 --> 00:12:29,840 Hundreds of rooms have been mapped, 198 00:12:32,160 --> 00:12:37,000 many mysteriously built with no obvious way in or out. 199 00:12:39,880 --> 00:12:42,400 Archaeologists have worked here for decades 200 00:12:42,480 --> 00:12:44,560 and made many significant discoveries. 201 00:12:45,720 --> 00:12:48,160 Yet it still confounds interpretation. 202 00:12:50,080 --> 00:12:52,080 [tense music fades] 203 00:12:52,160 --> 00:12:54,680 But one thing we can be fairly certain of 204 00:12:54,760 --> 00:12:57,880 is how Pueblo Bonito would have looked in its prime. 205 00:12:57,960 --> 00:12:59,760 [intriguing music playing] 206 00:13:01,040 --> 00:13:03,680 The compound was a huge semicircle 207 00:13:04,320 --> 00:13:07,520 with straight walls facing the canyon floor. 208 00:13:08,640 --> 00:13:13,200 Rectangular buildings were stacked around the curve, four stories tall, 209 00:13:15,760 --> 00:13:18,160 creating as many as 800 rooms, 210 00:13:18,680 --> 00:13:22,400 all surrounding a plaza divided by a central wall 211 00:13:23,000 --> 00:13:27,320 with multiple circular, semi-subterranean structures on each side. 212 00:13:29,600 --> 00:13:30,800 [music fades] 213 00:13:30,880 --> 00:13:33,000 So who were its builders? 214 00:13:33,080 --> 00:13:36,360 And why did they go to such immense lengths 215 00:13:36,440 --> 00:13:39,200 to create this extraordinary edifice? 216 00:13:39,280 --> 00:13:41,640 - [suspenseful music playing] - [eagle screeching] 217 00:13:43,440 --> 00:13:44,840 [Graham] Nathan Hatfield, 218 00:13:44,920 --> 00:13:48,920 {\an8}officially designated as Chaco Canyon's Chief of Interpretation, 219 00:13:49,480 --> 00:13:52,160 has spent nearly a decade studying the structures here. 220 00:13:56,240 --> 00:13:58,440 Tell us about the place that we're standing in. 221 00:13:59,120 --> 00:14:03,200 This structure was the largest building in North America 222 00:14:03,280 --> 00:14:06,360 up until the mid-19th century. 223 00:14:09,440 --> 00:14:12,640 [Graham] Archaeologists couldn't carbon date the stone itself. 224 00:14:13,920 --> 00:14:16,960 But using the highly accurate tree-ring method of dating 225 00:14:17,040 --> 00:14:18,560 on its wooden beams, 226 00:14:18,640 --> 00:14:22,080 they were able to determine various phases of construction. 227 00:14:22,160 --> 00:14:24,000 [suspenseful music continues] 228 00:14:24,080 --> 00:14:26,520 This was not built in a single moment. 229 00:14:26,600 --> 00:14:29,800 This was built over a period of a couple of centuries. 230 00:14:29,880 --> 00:14:32,680 So if we look at that oldest part of Pueblo Bonito, 231 00:14:32,760 --> 00:14:34,880 what sort of numbers are we talking about? 232 00:14:34,960 --> 00:14:37,240 It was built starting around 850. 233 00:14:37,840 --> 00:14:39,720 - That's 850 AD? - [Nathan] 850 AD. 234 00:14:39,800 --> 00:14:40,640 [Graham] Yeah. 235 00:14:41,160 --> 00:14:44,680 [Nathan] And construction was ongoing for 236 00:14:44,760 --> 00:14:47,360 at least 200 years, maybe a little bit longer. 237 00:14:48,000 --> 00:14:50,040 [Graham] This was before the area was settled 238 00:14:50,120 --> 00:14:51,800 by the modern-day Pueblo peoples… 239 00:14:53,960 --> 00:14:56,680 like the Hopi, the Zuni, and the Acoma. 240 00:14:56,760 --> 00:14:58,760 [intriguing music playing] 241 00:14:59,880 --> 00:15:02,720 [Nathan] Pueblo Bonito was built by 242 00:15:02,800 --> 00:15:05,040 what we call the ancestral Pueblo people. 243 00:15:05,120 --> 00:15:06,880 - For reasons unknown to us… - [Graham] Yeah. 244 00:15:06,960 --> 00:15:12,040 [Nathan] …they selected Chaco Canyon to be the center of their culture. 245 00:15:12,840 --> 00:15:17,520 And Pueblo Bonito would become the largest building 246 00:15:17,600 --> 00:15:19,520 in this cultural center. 247 00:15:19,600 --> 00:15:20,720 [dramatic music plays] 248 00:15:21,280 --> 00:15:24,600 [Graham] A cultural center that, as well as Pueblo Bonito, 249 00:15:24,680 --> 00:15:27,360 featured more than a dozen other great houses. 250 00:15:29,400 --> 00:15:34,080 Why did they build all these structures here in Chaco Canyon? 251 00:15:35,760 --> 00:15:39,640 [Graham] Was there a permanent established residential population here? 252 00:15:40,280 --> 00:15:43,560 [Nathan] No. Archaeologists did not see 253 00:15:43,640 --> 00:15:46,920 the evidence to support a huge population. 254 00:15:47,440 --> 00:15:49,000 [intriguing music continues] 255 00:15:49,080 --> 00:15:54,080 [Graham] So if these great houses weren't actually built to house people, 256 00:15:54,720 --> 00:15:56,080 what was their purpose? 257 00:15:57,280 --> 00:15:59,520 [intriguing music builds] 258 00:15:59,600 --> 00:16:04,440 Within the ruins, archaeologists found more than a hundred ritual burials… 259 00:16:08,440 --> 00:16:12,680 along with pottery featuring spectacular geometric patterns 260 00:16:13,880 --> 00:16:19,000 {\an8}and artifacts known to come from hundreds, if not thousands, of miles away. 261 00:16:20,360 --> 00:16:23,960 {\an8}We find that enormous efforts were gone to… 262 00:16:24,840 --> 00:16:27,880 to create it as a kind of center of the world. 263 00:16:27,960 --> 00:16:29,960 [intriguing music continues] 264 00:16:31,120 --> 00:16:33,760 As the evidence has come in, it's become clear that 265 00:16:33,840 --> 00:16:36,680 it seems to have been a center of pilgrimage, 266 00:16:36,760 --> 00:16:39,720 where people would come from all directions, 267 00:16:39,800 --> 00:16:41,800 drawn to the magic of the place. 268 00:16:42,960 --> 00:16:45,720 It clearly is a sacred place of some sort. 269 00:16:45,800 --> 00:16:48,080 [somber music playing] 270 00:16:48,880 --> 00:16:51,760 In that light, the circular structures we find 271 00:16:51,840 --> 00:16:55,640 within nearly all of Chaco's buildings make more sense. 272 00:16:56,800 --> 00:17:00,160 The Hopi, descendants of the ancestral Puebloans, 273 00:17:00,240 --> 00:17:02,720 call such structures kivas. 274 00:17:03,880 --> 00:17:05,240 [Graham] Tell me about the kivas. 275 00:17:05,320 --> 00:17:08,320 What is your understanding of what they were and are? 276 00:17:08,920 --> 00:17:12,800 It's generally agreed upon that a kiva was a ceremonial space. 277 00:17:12,880 --> 00:17:15,200 There are features that are pretty common. 278 00:17:15,720 --> 00:17:17,200 There's the bench. 279 00:17:17,280 --> 00:17:20,760 Within the larger great kivas, you see floor vaults. 280 00:17:20,840 --> 00:17:24,880 Most of them have some kind of wood-burning fireplace. 281 00:17:26,360 --> 00:17:28,880 [Graham] For the Hopi and Pueblo peoples today, 282 00:17:28,960 --> 00:17:32,760 the kiva is a spiritual and political space 283 00:17:32,840 --> 00:17:35,800 in which they gather to perform sacred rituals. 284 00:17:35,880 --> 00:17:37,800 [Graham] So it's an ongoing cultural tradition? 285 00:17:37,880 --> 00:17:40,200 - And they're used for ceremony? - Yes. Yes. 286 00:17:41,080 --> 00:17:43,720 [Graham] Ceremonies that, then and now, 287 00:17:43,800 --> 00:17:46,920 feature the consumption of a special form of tobacco. 288 00:17:49,000 --> 00:17:50,960 {\an8}North of Chaco in Utah, 289 00:17:51,600 --> 00:17:54,960 archaeologists studying an ancient man-made hearth 290 00:17:55,040 --> 00:17:57,560 found seeds from the hallucinogenic species 291 00:17:58,280 --> 00:17:59,520 coyote tobacco. 292 00:18:00,520 --> 00:18:04,320 The seeds were carbon-dated to 12,300 years ago, 293 00:18:05,000 --> 00:18:07,120 suggesting humans were using tobacco here 294 00:18:07,200 --> 00:18:09,080 as far back as the Ice Age. 295 00:18:09,800 --> 00:18:12,680 It's likely that such hallucinogenic plants 296 00:18:12,760 --> 00:18:17,040 were still in use thousands of years later in ceremonies here at Chaco… 297 00:18:19,520 --> 00:18:22,320 just as shamans of the Amazon use ayahuasca. 298 00:18:22,400 --> 00:18:24,400 [fire crackling] 299 00:18:24,480 --> 00:18:25,920 [tense music playing] 300 00:18:26,000 --> 00:18:29,000 Is it possible that these shamanistic traditions, 301 00:18:29,080 --> 00:18:31,080 thousands of miles apart, 302 00:18:31,600 --> 00:18:34,920 are the legacy of a single, more ancient belief system 303 00:18:35,000 --> 00:18:37,760 that left traces of itself across the Americas? 304 00:18:39,440 --> 00:18:42,640 To explore the mysteries of these kivas further, 305 00:18:42,720 --> 00:18:47,800 I'm headed to the canyon rim, about half a mile south of Pueblo Bonito, 306 00:18:49,080 --> 00:18:50,920 to the grandest kiva of them all… 307 00:18:51,000 --> 00:18:52,760 [tense music builds] 308 00:18:52,840 --> 00:18:54,080 …Casa Rinconada. 309 00:18:55,000 --> 00:18:57,000 [uptempo tense music playing] 310 00:18:57,840 --> 00:19:00,480 Unlike the vast majority of Chaco's kivas, 311 00:19:00,560 --> 00:19:03,880 Casa Rinconada stands apart from any other extensive building. 312 00:19:06,080 --> 00:19:08,040 Inside the sunken enclosure, 313 00:19:08,120 --> 00:19:11,160 T-shaped doorways are positioned in the walls, 314 00:19:11,880 --> 00:19:15,280 openings that face almost perfectly north and south. 315 00:19:17,640 --> 00:19:21,760 As time-lapse photos show, directly above the doorway, 316 00:19:21,840 --> 00:19:25,600 the night sky revolves around the north star Polaris. 317 00:19:26,120 --> 00:19:27,840 [uptempo tense music builds] 318 00:19:27,920 --> 00:19:31,400 There's something strangely familiar about Casa Rinconada. 319 00:19:33,560 --> 00:19:37,120 {\an8}It reminds me of the Ice Age megalithic site of Göbekli Tepe 320 00:19:37,200 --> 00:19:38,440 {\an8}in far-off Turkey. 321 00:19:40,720 --> 00:19:44,360 There, similarly sunken, circular, kiva-like chambers 322 00:19:45,160 --> 00:19:46,720 feature T-shaped pillars, 323 00:19:47,360 --> 00:19:50,600 which too are aligned to specific points in the heavens. 324 00:19:53,200 --> 00:19:55,320 But how could these ancient structures, 325 00:19:55,400 --> 00:19:58,880 so widely separated by geography and time, 326 00:19:59,400 --> 00:20:00,680 have any connection? 327 00:20:01,520 --> 00:20:03,360 It's tempting to speculate. 328 00:20:04,440 --> 00:20:07,960 And the origin myth of the Hopi offers a possible clue. 329 00:20:09,200 --> 00:20:12,320 The Hopi believe that we're living in the fourth world, 330 00:20:12,400 --> 00:20:15,560 that there have been three previous emergences 331 00:20:15,640 --> 00:20:18,080 from some sort of underground realm. 332 00:20:18,160 --> 00:20:20,160 [suspenseful music playing] 333 00:20:22,920 --> 00:20:26,880 According to Hopi legend, after creating the first living creatures, 334 00:20:27,440 --> 00:20:30,840 the sun spirit ordered his messenger, Spider Grandmother, 335 00:20:31,440 --> 00:20:35,760 to guide these ever-evolving life forms through the first two worlds. 336 00:20:35,840 --> 00:20:38,160 [creatures howling] 337 00:20:38,720 --> 00:20:39,920 In the third world, 338 00:20:40,000 --> 00:20:43,080 she showed early humans how to weave and make pottery 339 00:20:43,800 --> 00:20:45,800 and taught them good from evil. 340 00:20:45,880 --> 00:20:47,880 [indistinct chatter] 341 00:20:49,440 --> 00:20:52,000 [Graham] Still, some turned to wicked ways. 342 00:20:52,080 --> 00:20:54,760 [arguing indistinctly] 343 00:20:54,840 --> 00:20:57,000 [Graham] Displeased, the sun spirit ordered 344 00:20:57,080 --> 00:20:59,120 those of good heart to move on. 345 00:21:00,960 --> 00:21:04,280 They ascended a great reed to an opening in the sky. 346 00:21:05,560 --> 00:21:09,040 There, Spider Grandmother helped them emerge into their new home, 347 00:21:09,640 --> 00:21:13,320 the fourth world, where their descendants still live today. 348 00:21:16,840 --> 00:21:20,280 The Hopi hold sacred an unusual geological feature 349 00:21:20,360 --> 00:21:21,640 in the Grand Canyon, 350 00:21:22,160 --> 00:21:25,360 believing it to be the literal emergence point of myth. 351 00:21:26,680 --> 00:21:28,320 They call it Sipapu. 352 00:21:30,040 --> 00:21:31,400 No one is allowed near it, 353 00:21:31,480 --> 00:21:34,920 but symbolically, it's replicated throughout the Hopi world. 354 00:21:36,080 --> 00:21:38,000 [suspenseful music fades] 355 00:21:38,080 --> 00:21:43,880 In Puebloan culture, a hole in the floor of the kiva is also known as a sipapu, 356 00:21:43,960 --> 00:21:49,000 and this is seen as the place from which the ancients emerged from a previous world 357 00:21:49,080 --> 00:21:53,120 that had been destroyed into the world that we live in today. 358 00:21:54,280 --> 00:21:57,040 And this is where I want to make a comparison 359 00:21:57,120 --> 00:21:59,440 that might seem very extreme. 360 00:21:59,520 --> 00:22:04,080 I'm just wondering whether it all goes back to a time 361 00:22:04,160 --> 00:22:08,000 when it was necessary for people to take shelter underground. 362 00:22:08,640 --> 00:22:13,360 And we know that there was such a time around 12,800 years ago 363 00:22:13,440 --> 00:22:15,400 at the beginning of the Younger Dryas. 364 00:22:17,520 --> 00:22:19,320 Although still debated, 365 00:22:19,400 --> 00:22:22,560 many scientists believe that the Earth-shaking cataclysms 366 00:22:22,640 --> 00:22:28,400 and floods of that time were caused by cosmic impacts and airbursts 367 00:22:28,480 --> 00:22:30,600 as the Earth passed through the debris trail 368 00:22:30,680 --> 00:22:32,680 of a disintegrating comet. 369 00:22:32,760 --> 00:22:35,600 [intriguing music playing] 370 00:22:35,680 --> 00:22:38,440 If the enemy was danger from the sky, 371 00:22:38,520 --> 00:22:42,040 if we're looking at impacts from a fragmenting giant comet, 372 00:22:42,120 --> 00:22:45,000 uh, then underground structures make a great deal of sense. 373 00:22:45,920 --> 00:22:48,840 That deep ancient connection is not a direct connection. 374 00:22:48,920 --> 00:22:51,640 It's a stored memory in oral tradition 375 00:22:52,200 --> 00:22:55,760 that there was a time when our ancestors had to emerge 376 00:22:55,840 --> 00:22:58,760 from beneath the ground to come out into a new world 377 00:22:58,840 --> 00:23:03,160 that had been swept clean in a cataclysm and to repopulate that new world. 378 00:23:03,240 --> 00:23:05,040 [intriguing music fades] 379 00:23:06,080 --> 00:23:07,360 Let me be clear. 380 00:23:07,440 --> 00:23:12,000 I don't doubt that this spectacular kiva dates from around 1,000 years ago, 381 00:23:12,080 --> 00:23:14,960 but I suspect that its builders incorporated within it 382 00:23:15,040 --> 00:23:19,200 a legacy of knowledge and ideas that are far, far older. 383 00:23:20,480 --> 00:23:24,200 Much like another idea we see demonstrated again and again 384 00:23:24,280 --> 00:23:26,520 at all these ancient American sites, 385 00:23:27,320 --> 00:23:30,920 the importance of astronomical and geometrical knowledge. 386 00:23:31,000 --> 00:23:33,000 [suspenseful music playing] 387 00:23:34,320 --> 00:23:38,680 At Pueblo Bonito, the whole structure is perfectly aligned 388 00:23:38,760 --> 00:23:42,840 to the cardinal directions, north, south, east, and west, 389 00:23:43,600 --> 00:23:47,200 showing its builders understood their place on the planet. 390 00:23:48,200 --> 00:23:52,640 What's more, on the equinox, something magical happens. 391 00:23:53,320 --> 00:23:58,240 The sun rises and sets perfectly in line with the west side of the southern wall. 392 00:24:00,480 --> 00:24:02,800 [Nathan] It wasn't just some random accident. 393 00:24:03,480 --> 00:24:05,080 It was so well-thought-out. 394 00:24:05,680 --> 00:24:08,920 And what's, I think, appealing to people about that 395 00:24:09,000 --> 00:24:11,680 is that it's the same sky that we can see today. 396 00:24:11,760 --> 00:24:13,680 - Yes. - We can still see the alignments. 397 00:24:13,760 --> 00:24:16,080 [suspenseful music continues] 398 00:24:16,160 --> 00:24:20,320 I've heard that there were functionaries called sun priests here in the past. 399 00:24:20,400 --> 00:24:21,400 Is that right? 400 00:24:21,480 --> 00:24:24,880 They were the sun watchers, the sun priests. 401 00:24:24,960 --> 00:24:27,640 They were people dedicated to the architecture. 402 00:24:27,720 --> 00:24:30,760 There were people dedicated to watching the sky. 403 00:24:30,840 --> 00:24:31,680 Yeah. 404 00:24:33,360 --> 00:24:37,040 What were the main celestial events that they were tracking? 405 00:24:37,120 --> 00:24:41,400 Summer solstice, winter solstice, equinoxes, when the sun rises due east? 406 00:24:41,480 --> 00:24:43,920 That ties back to the agriculture. 407 00:24:44,000 --> 00:24:45,000 [Graham] Right. 408 00:24:45,080 --> 00:24:50,720 Having that calendar on the landscape is critical for survival. 409 00:24:50,800 --> 00:24:53,640 And the fact that they were able to do that 410 00:24:53,720 --> 00:24:56,360 with these monumental structures, 411 00:24:56,960 --> 00:25:01,800 I think it all goes back to their ability to find success with farming. 412 00:25:03,720 --> 00:25:05,920 [Graham] It's an argument I've heard before, 413 00:25:06,000 --> 00:25:07,600 but there's a problem with assuming 414 00:25:07,680 --> 00:25:10,560 all this effort had to do only with farming. 415 00:25:11,720 --> 00:25:13,560 [suspenseful music continues] 416 00:25:13,640 --> 00:25:18,600 Around 90 miles north of Chaco Canyon stands a distinctive sandstone ridge 417 00:25:19,240 --> 00:25:24,240 topped by two pinnacles known as Chimney Rock and Companion Rock. 418 00:25:25,960 --> 00:25:30,640 Near them, we find a Chacoan great house complete with two kivas. 419 00:25:31,760 --> 00:25:37,120 It turns out that that whole structure was placed there 420 00:25:37,200 --> 00:25:39,280 in a very precise alignment 421 00:25:39,360 --> 00:25:45,880 to allow observation of a lunar event that only occurs once every 18.6 years, 422 00:25:45,960 --> 00:25:48,920 and that is the extreme northern standstill of the moon. 423 00:25:50,320 --> 00:25:52,480 It's when the rising and setting moon 424 00:25:52,560 --> 00:25:55,480 reaches its most northerly point in the night sky 425 00:25:56,080 --> 00:25:58,960 before appearing to rise and set further south 426 00:25:59,040 --> 00:26:00,760 as part of a recurring cycle. 427 00:26:02,520 --> 00:26:07,000 The moon rises between Chimney Rock and Companion Rock 428 00:26:07,080 --> 00:26:09,720 only at that time and at no other time. 429 00:26:11,480 --> 00:26:14,520 This is the kind of knowledge that has to be handed down 430 00:26:14,600 --> 00:26:16,120 generation to generation. 431 00:26:16,960 --> 00:26:18,760 You don't just notice it once 432 00:26:18,840 --> 00:26:21,200 and then build a structure to memorialize it. 433 00:26:21,280 --> 00:26:23,280 [suspenseful music fades] 434 00:26:23,880 --> 00:26:27,080 It speaks to an ancient intellectual endeavor 435 00:26:27,160 --> 00:26:30,280 to understand the cosmos that surrounds us, 436 00:26:30,360 --> 00:26:34,960 and that cosmos is full of motion and changes, 437 00:26:35,640 --> 00:26:38,720 and the long-term observation of those motions and changes 438 00:26:38,800 --> 00:26:41,360 requires a really dedicated effort, 439 00:26:41,440 --> 00:26:43,520 in many cases over thousands of years. 440 00:26:43,600 --> 00:26:45,160 [wind howling] 441 00:26:46,400 --> 00:26:49,200 Once researchers started looking for lunar alignments 442 00:26:49,280 --> 00:26:51,440 in the buildings in Chaco Canyon, 443 00:26:51,520 --> 00:26:54,080 all sorts of remarkable examples were found. 444 00:26:54,160 --> 00:26:56,560 [intriguing music playing] 445 00:26:56,640 --> 00:27:00,960 When the moon reaches its extreme southern standstill in winter, 446 00:27:01,040 --> 00:27:03,800 again once every 18.6 years, 447 00:27:04,640 --> 00:27:08,640 {\an8}it rises in a line through three great houses six miles apart 448 00:27:09,160 --> 00:27:11,160 {\an8}with Pueblo Bonito at its middle. 449 00:27:12,160 --> 00:27:15,960 {\an8}And 9.3 years later, at the halfway point in this cycle, 450 00:27:16,640 --> 00:27:20,000 the summer moon rises in a line across a large structure 451 00:27:20,080 --> 00:27:25,080 {\an8}just east of Pueblo Bonito to another one 11 miles to the southwest… 452 00:27:27,640 --> 00:27:31,760 while that same setting moon shines across one great house, 453 00:27:31,840 --> 00:27:33,880 again through Pueblo Bonito, 454 00:27:33,960 --> 00:27:38,560 more than 17 miles beyond the canyon to yet another great house. 455 00:27:40,200 --> 00:27:41,800 And one thing is certain. 456 00:27:42,320 --> 00:27:47,000 The 18.6-year lunar cycle has no influence whatsoever 457 00:27:47,560 --> 00:27:49,240 on the growing of crops. 458 00:27:49,320 --> 00:27:51,840 Why, therefore, did the ancient Puebloans 459 00:27:51,920 --> 00:27:55,120 go to such lengths to mark it in their architecture? 460 00:27:55,200 --> 00:27:56,880 [intriguing music fades] 461 00:27:56,960 --> 00:28:01,000 That speaks eloquently to the fact that no economic purpose was involved, 462 00:28:01,080 --> 00:28:03,160 that this was about the celebration 463 00:28:03,240 --> 00:28:05,200 of the connection between heaven and earth. 464 00:28:05,280 --> 00:28:07,320 [wind howling] 465 00:28:07,400 --> 00:28:11,520 What's now clear is that all these Chacoan structures combine 466 00:28:11,600 --> 00:28:14,880 to form a ritual calendar laid out upon the Earth… 467 00:28:14,960 --> 00:28:16,640 [intriguing music playing] 468 00:28:18,480 --> 00:28:21,920 …in a canyon that may have been chosen for this very purpose 469 00:28:22,440 --> 00:28:25,120 as a terrestrial counterpart to the Milky Way. 470 00:28:25,200 --> 00:28:27,680 [intriguing music subsides] 471 00:28:27,760 --> 00:28:32,480 But the connections with the cosmos, sky and ground, as above, so below, 472 00:28:33,240 --> 00:28:35,320 that were so important to Chaco culture 473 00:28:35,400 --> 00:28:38,520 aren't limited to its vast building complexes. 474 00:28:42,000 --> 00:28:44,880 About five miles southeast of central Chaco… 475 00:28:47,280 --> 00:28:49,320 I'm heading up from the canyon floor 476 00:28:51,080 --> 00:28:55,800 in search of something intriguing that adorns these rugged canyon walls. 477 00:28:59,360 --> 00:29:04,240 Ancient works of art carved into the living rock. 478 00:29:04,880 --> 00:29:07,600 [intriguing music continues] 479 00:29:09,800 --> 00:29:13,000 These are precious records, stories in stone 480 00:29:13,080 --> 00:29:16,480 that have been continually revised, altered, and added to 481 00:29:16,560 --> 00:29:19,440 over who knows how many thousands of years. 482 00:29:21,720 --> 00:29:24,480 There are human figures that appear to be dancing 483 00:29:24,560 --> 00:29:26,560 and playing musical instruments. 484 00:29:27,160 --> 00:29:29,000 [intriguing music intensifies] 485 00:29:29,080 --> 00:29:32,800 Spirals and serpents coil along the canyon walls, 486 00:29:33,440 --> 00:29:37,640 which also feature strange creatures and geometric forms, 487 00:29:37,720 --> 00:29:40,400 much like those that appear in artwork of the Amazon, 488 00:29:40,920 --> 00:29:42,920 possibly inspired by psychedelics. 489 00:29:44,880 --> 00:29:48,320 Whichever part of the world you're in and whichever period of history it is, 490 00:29:48,400 --> 00:29:51,920 once you come to the cave art and the petroglyphs and the rock art, 491 00:29:52,000 --> 00:29:55,200 you find again and again exactly the same visuals 492 00:29:55,280 --> 00:29:57,600 that you find with the ayahuasca experience 493 00:29:57,680 --> 00:29:59,440 and other psychedelics being repeated. 494 00:29:59,520 --> 00:30:01,520 [uptempo tense music playing] 495 00:30:02,840 --> 00:30:05,200 As well as these visionary elements, 496 00:30:05,280 --> 00:30:10,360 Chacoan rock art reflects the same focus on astronomy found in its architecture. 497 00:30:13,320 --> 00:30:16,480 This image has been interpreted as an eclipse, 498 00:30:17,240 --> 00:30:21,320 the sun darkened by the moon, while its corona flares outwards. 499 00:30:23,600 --> 00:30:25,840 And this, a supernova, 500 00:30:25,920 --> 00:30:28,880 now known to have been visible in the daytime sky 501 00:30:29,480 --> 00:30:33,680 during the ancestral Puebloan period in AD 1054. 502 00:30:34,680 --> 00:30:38,600 Why create such imagery in such a hard-to-reach location 503 00:30:39,120 --> 00:30:41,680 unless there was a compelling reason to do so? 504 00:30:41,760 --> 00:30:43,200 [dramatic music playing] 505 00:30:43,280 --> 00:30:48,640 In the absence of any apparent economic, strategic, or political motive, 506 00:30:48,720 --> 00:30:52,280 it follows that some higher purpose must have been involved. 507 00:30:53,560 --> 00:30:56,000 It seems to me more and more obvious 508 00:30:56,080 --> 00:30:59,440 that Chaco Canyon is a ritualized landscape 509 00:30:59,520 --> 00:31:03,880 and that its origins can't be limited to a mere thousand or so years ago, 510 00:31:03,960 --> 00:31:05,880 but must go back much further, 511 00:31:05,960 --> 00:31:08,360 perhaps even as far back as the last Ice Age. 512 00:31:09,920 --> 00:31:13,920 [music intensifies, fades] 513 00:31:14,000 --> 00:31:18,600 To your knowledge, how far back in the past can we trace 514 00:31:18,680 --> 00:31:21,280 any kind of human presence here in Chaco Canyon? 515 00:31:21,360 --> 00:31:25,880 You've probably heard very recently in White Sands National Monument-- 516 00:31:25,960 --> 00:31:28,280 23,000-year-old footprints in White Sands. 517 00:31:28,360 --> 00:31:30,840 - [Nathan] And that's not that far away. - [Graham] No. 518 00:31:30,920 --> 00:31:35,120 So it's quite likely that people would have been in Chaco Canyon 519 00:31:35,800 --> 00:31:37,160 maybe even… 520 00:31:37,240 --> 00:31:40,680 maybe even 10,000 years before any building was constructed. 521 00:31:40,760 --> 00:31:43,040 [intriguing music playing] 522 00:31:43,120 --> 00:31:45,080 I think they were 523 00:31:45,160 --> 00:31:50,280 observing the landscape and the sky for generations 524 00:31:50,360 --> 00:31:52,880 - before they decided to build. - [Graham] Yeah. 525 00:31:57,440 --> 00:31:59,480 Chaco Canyon bears the fingerprints 526 00:31:59,560 --> 00:32:02,840 of a culture of highly-sophisticated astronomers. 527 00:32:03,720 --> 00:32:09,000 Their intense focus on the regular cycles of sun, moon, and stars 528 00:32:09,960 --> 00:32:12,360 and on the wider majesty of the cosmos 529 00:32:12,440 --> 00:32:15,320 wasn't just an idiosyncratic quirk of their own. 530 00:32:15,400 --> 00:32:17,480 It was shared in the same way, 531 00:32:17,560 --> 00:32:22,440 using eerily similar symbolism, art, and architectural alignments 532 00:32:22,520 --> 00:32:25,560 by many other ancient cultures all around the world. 533 00:32:26,080 --> 00:32:27,600 {\an8}[intriguing music continues] 534 00:32:27,680 --> 00:32:31,840 {\an8}The way Malta's megalithic Temple of Mnajdra is precisely aligned 535 00:32:31,920 --> 00:32:34,360 {\an8}to capture the equinoxes and the solstices. 536 00:32:36,480 --> 00:32:39,560 {\an8}Or how the axis of the great Temple of Karnak in Egypt 537 00:32:39,640 --> 00:32:41,880 {\an8}targets the winter solstice sunrise. 538 00:32:44,400 --> 00:32:47,480 {\an8}Or the precision with which the central tower 539 00:32:47,560 --> 00:32:49,560 {\an8}of Angkor Wat in Cambodia 540 00:32:49,640 --> 00:32:52,160 aligns to the rising sun on the equinoxes. 541 00:32:53,480 --> 00:32:57,000 There seems to have been a worldwide architectural project 542 00:32:57,080 --> 00:33:01,400 to reproduce the harmony and directions of the heavens 543 00:33:01,480 --> 00:33:05,280 in monuments on the ground to bring heaven down to earth. 544 00:33:05,360 --> 00:33:07,360 [intriguing music subsides] 545 00:33:08,240 --> 00:33:12,680 But how far back does this seemingly global human project go? 546 00:33:14,560 --> 00:33:16,560 [intriguing music intensifies] 547 00:33:19,400 --> 00:33:20,360 There are clues 548 00:33:20,440 --> 00:33:23,880 in one of ancient America's most accomplished civilizations 549 00:33:26,280 --> 00:33:30,040 that once dominated what is now southern Mexico and Central America. 550 00:33:31,560 --> 00:33:32,520 The Maya. 551 00:33:35,000 --> 00:33:39,080 The Maya to me are one of the most fascinating cultures 552 00:33:39,160 --> 00:33:40,480 of the ancient world 553 00:33:41,240 --> 00:33:45,360 and a culture filled with mystery and contradiction. 554 00:33:48,000 --> 00:33:50,640 Many descendants of the Maya still live here today 555 00:33:52,440 --> 00:33:56,280 in the spectacular landscapes of Chiapas and the Yucatán Peninsula. 556 00:33:56,360 --> 00:33:58,480 [intriguing music continues] 557 00:34:00,120 --> 00:34:03,600 Here, long before the Incas and the Pueblo culture of Chaco, 558 00:34:05,160 --> 00:34:07,400 the Maya civilization thrived. 559 00:34:09,240 --> 00:34:12,760 It was a culture that expressed its genius in many ways, 560 00:34:14,520 --> 00:34:17,960 notably through magnificent feats of architecture. 561 00:34:18,040 --> 00:34:20,560 [intriguing music intensifies] 562 00:34:20,640 --> 00:34:23,520 Surrounded by dense lowland rainforest, 563 00:34:23,600 --> 00:34:27,400 this is the Mayan sacred realm of Palenque. 564 00:34:28,360 --> 00:34:31,560 [intriguing music builds, fades] 565 00:34:32,560 --> 00:34:34,560 [suspenseful music playing] 566 00:34:40,040 --> 00:34:43,400 [Graham] Palenque is an absolutely breathtaking place. 567 00:34:44,240 --> 00:34:46,560 With its awe-inspiring architecture and engineering, 568 00:34:46,640 --> 00:34:49,360 it has all the hallmarks of a classic Mayan site. 569 00:34:52,560 --> 00:34:53,560 Soaring pyramids, 570 00:34:55,600 --> 00:34:57,040 a ceremonial ball court, 571 00:34:58,240 --> 00:34:59,440 a looming palace, 572 00:35:00,840 --> 00:35:04,240 and temples filled with intriguing imagery. 573 00:35:06,760 --> 00:35:10,000 The Maya are probably best known for their incredible architecture, 574 00:35:10,080 --> 00:35:14,040 for the amazing complexes of pyramids that they created, 575 00:35:14,120 --> 00:35:18,920 typically step pyramids, and the beautiful elegance of the design 576 00:35:19,000 --> 00:35:21,480 and the high precision of the workmanship. 577 00:35:21,560 --> 00:35:24,880 That immediately tells us that we're dealing with an advanced culture. 578 00:35:24,960 --> 00:35:26,960 [dramatic music playing] 579 00:35:29,720 --> 00:35:32,800 {\an8}[Graham] Maya expert and guide Mildred Lucas Garcia 580 00:35:32,880 --> 00:35:35,000 {\an8}has devoted more than a decade 581 00:35:35,080 --> 00:35:37,040 to understanding Palenque better. 582 00:35:38,800 --> 00:35:41,080 When did work begin here? 583 00:35:41,600 --> 00:35:43,520 How long was this site occupied? 584 00:35:44,160 --> 00:35:47,600 The city's foundation started in the year 200 BC, 585 00:35:47,680 --> 00:35:50,640 and it was abandoned over the 900s AD. 586 00:35:50,720 --> 00:35:51,560 Right. 587 00:35:51,640 --> 00:35:55,080 When I look at this incredible site, these huge pyramids, 588 00:35:55,160 --> 00:35:58,040 beautifully constructed, beautifully designed, 589 00:35:58,120 --> 00:36:01,360 it's clear that this was the work of very skillful people, 590 00:36:01,440 --> 00:36:04,600 and that they must have had some kind of plan from the beginning. 591 00:36:04,680 --> 00:36:06,400 But tell me, how did they do it? 592 00:36:06,480 --> 00:36:09,480 [Mildred] We know that there were quarries nearby. 593 00:36:09,560 --> 00:36:12,760 That's why they decided to build the city here 594 00:36:12,840 --> 00:36:15,240 because they had all the natural resources, 595 00:36:15,320 --> 00:36:17,360 they had all the limestone in this area, 596 00:36:17,440 --> 00:36:19,440 they had the water, 597 00:36:19,520 --> 00:36:23,000 and this was a very strategic area to build the city. 598 00:36:23,080 --> 00:36:26,720 But how… how they built that, that's unknown. 599 00:36:26,800 --> 00:36:28,720 - We don't know. - It's still a mystery. 600 00:36:28,800 --> 00:36:30,640 - It's still a mystery. Mm-hmm. - Yeah. Yeah. 601 00:36:31,320 --> 00:36:33,800 Why did the Maya build pyramids? 602 00:36:33,880 --> 00:36:36,560 Here in Palenque, we see a lot of… a lot of pyramids. 603 00:36:37,600 --> 00:36:40,720 [Mildred] The pyramids, not only for the Mayas, 604 00:36:40,800 --> 00:36:42,600 but for the ancient cultures, 605 00:36:42,680 --> 00:36:44,680 represented the holy mountains. 606 00:36:45,400 --> 00:36:48,440 Here in Palenque, they built such big structures 607 00:36:48,520 --> 00:36:50,320 to represent these holy mountains. 608 00:36:50,400 --> 00:36:52,400 [suspenseful music playing] 609 00:36:53,600 --> 00:36:55,600 [Graham] Mountains played an important role 610 00:36:55,680 --> 00:36:59,960 in the belief system of the Maya as symbols of the source of creation. 611 00:37:02,800 --> 00:37:07,160 But it appears that there may have been more to the Maya's epic building project, 612 00:37:07,240 --> 00:37:09,240 especially here at Palenque. 613 00:37:11,480 --> 00:37:14,760 [Mildred] In Palenque, some of the buildings were designed 614 00:37:14,840 --> 00:37:17,640 following the astronomical observations. 615 00:37:17,720 --> 00:37:18,600 Wow. 616 00:37:19,720 --> 00:37:22,760 [Mildred] There's three buildings known as the Group of the Crosses 617 00:37:22,840 --> 00:37:26,600 that were used as an astronomical observation area. 618 00:37:26,680 --> 00:37:27,560 [Graham] Right. 619 00:37:28,560 --> 00:37:31,360 [Mildred] These buildings were perfectly aligned 620 00:37:31,440 --> 00:37:32,920 with the summer solstice… 621 00:37:33,000 --> 00:37:35,360 - Yeah. - …and with the spring equinox. 622 00:37:35,440 --> 00:37:37,680 [suspenseful music continues] 623 00:37:37,760 --> 00:37:41,320 Clearly, highly-skilled astronomers were involved in the creation 624 00:37:41,400 --> 00:37:42,440 of the whole complex. 625 00:37:42,520 --> 00:37:43,440 Yes, it's true. 626 00:37:43,520 --> 00:37:45,520 [intriguing music playing] 627 00:37:47,240 --> 00:37:49,480 [Graham] But why would they go to so much trouble 628 00:37:49,560 --> 00:37:51,440 to align these massive structures 629 00:37:51,520 --> 00:37:53,040 to solstices and equinoxes? 630 00:37:57,360 --> 00:38:01,360 Given these incredible alignments, one thing is clear. 631 00:38:03,360 --> 00:38:06,600 If you want to know what Palenque is really all about, 632 00:38:06,680 --> 00:38:09,040 you have to look not only at its architecture, 633 00:38:09,120 --> 00:38:11,080 but also at the sky. 634 00:38:11,600 --> 00:38:13,600 [intriguing music intensifies] 635 00:38:18,760 --> 00:38:20,640 [intriguing music builds] 636 00:38:20,720 --> 00:38:26,400 I've come to the Temple of the Sun at a special moment on a special day, 637 00:38:28,240 --> 00:38:29,840 dawn on the spring equinox, 638 00:38:31,120 --> 00:38:36,520 when the sun rises precisely due east and sets precisely due west 639 00:38:37,120 --> 00:38:39,680 in a manifestation of cosmic harmony. 640 00:38:41,160 --> 00:38:46,200 Here at the Temple of the Sun, that sunrise creates a unique spectacle, 641 00:38:46,760 --> 00:38:49,920 one still celebrated today by the local community. 642 00:38:50,880 --> 00:38:54,080 {\an8}[Nicolás in Spanish] The spring equinox, it is important 643 00:38:54,160 --> 00:38:56,120 {\an8}for the spirituality of the Maya. 644 00:38:56,720 --> 00:39:00,560 Right here where we are is the most important place. 645 00:39:00,640 --> 00:39:02,160 [blowing conch] 646 00:39:02,760 --> 00:39:05,240 [Graham in English] And I have a front row seat for it. 647 00:39:05,320 --> 00:39:07,360 [intriguing music ends] 648 00:39:07,440 --> 00:39:09,440 [closing theme playing] 649 00:39:36,640 --> 00:39:38,880 [closing theme ends]