Secrets in the Sand - Season 2 Episode 03- Hidden Temple of Athribis
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00:00Archaeologists uncover mysterious remains within a crypt in Israel.
00:07Four of the rings were around the individual's neck, and there were others around the arms and the legs.
00:13Who was this person, and why were they buried wrapped in metal rings?
00:16An astonishing discovery is unearthed in the sands of the Egyptian desert.
00:21They noticed strangely smooth limestone blocks on the cliff's facade, carved right into the landscape.
00:28But what was it?
00:30In the Jordan desert, researchers unearth a strange structure with remarkable carved features.
00:36But the most striking thing inside the round rock formation was two standing vertical stones called steelies, each with a human face carved into them.
00:46So what were they for? And how long have they been standing here, in the middle of nowhere?
00:52Ancient lost cities, forgotten treasures, mysterious structures.
00:59As new technology uncovers remarkable tales hidden beneath the deserts of the world, the secrets in the sand will finally be revealed.
01:11Just a few miles due north of the Jerusalem city center lies the settlement of Ramat Shlomo, Israel.
01:30During the summer months, this area is blisteringly hot, with temperatures sometimes reaching almost 110 degrees Fahrenheit.
01:37It's also extremely dry, averaging just under two inches of rain per month, most of which falls during the wet season from October to April.
01:46Ramat Shlomo is part of East Jerusalem.
01:49It was once part of Jordan, but came under Israeli control after the Six Day War in 1967.
01:55Jerusalem is one of the world's oldest cities, with a history going back over 5,000 years.
02:02Its origins trace back to roughly 3000 BCE, with the first settlement near the Gihon Spring.
02:11The oldest mention of Jerusalem is from Egyptian texts dating to around 2000 BCE, where it's referred to as Rusalimam.
02:19Given this rich history, it's no surprise that the area is of keen interest to archaeologists.
02:25A team of archaeologists from the Israel Antiquities Authority are excavating an ancient complex known as Kirbat al-Masani in advance of construction work near Ramat Shlomo, when they unearth a surprise.
02:40Two burial crypts were uncovered containing the scattered skeletal remains of several individuals, including children, women and men.
02:49But the real shock came when a third tube was found.
02:53Inside were skeletal remains that appeared to be wrapped in metal rings.
02:58Four of the rings were around the individual's neck, and there were others around the arms and the legs.
03:05But unfortunately, the bones were so severely degraded, they were only able to recover fragments of the cranium, a small finger bone, and parts of a femur.
03:15The poor condition of the remains makes establishing things like the sex of the person or age at death very difficult.
03:22So the question is, who was this person, and why were they buried wrapped in metal rings?
03:28The first thing that springs to mind is that maybe they were a prisoner, a criminal bound with chains and then executed, or possibly an enslaved person.
03:37In 2015, construction workers in the village of Great Casterdon in the East Midlands of England discovered the ancient remains of a man with heavy iron shackles and a padlock around his ankles.
03:51Radiocarbon dating placed the remains to between 226 and 427 CE during the Roman occupation of Britain.
03:59The man was likely between the ages of 26 and 35 when he died, and the body showed evidence of a life of physically demanding labor.
04:07It's historical fact that slavery was an accepted practice throughout the Roman Empire, and they were known to change some of their agricultural slaves.
04:15So the shackled man was probably a farm laborer.
04:18So is it possible that the individual discovered at Kirbat el-Massani was also an enslaved person?
04:24Maybe, but there's one key difference.
04:27The slave's body discovered in England was not properly laid out.
04:31It was found at a strange angle, lying somewhat on its right side with the left arm raised up on a slope.
04:38This indicates that maybe the man was thrown into a ditch rather than given a proper burial.
04:44On the other hand, the body at Kirbat el-Massani was carefully buried in a grave resting on its back.
04:51So if they likely weren't an enslaved person or prisoner, there has to be another explanation for why this individual was buried laden with metal rings.
05:00Maybe it's something a little strange or involving superstition.
05:04In 2022, a team of archaeologists from Nicholas Copernicus University in Turan, Poland, were excavating an ancient castle when they uncovered something truly bizarre.
05:16On a riverbank adjacent to the castle, they noticed human bones sticking out from the ground.
05:22But here's where it gets really weird.
05:24After an excavation, they found that the individual was buried with a semicircular sickle pinned around their neck.
05:32And that's not all. The skeleton's big toe on the left foot had a rusted old triangular padlock attached to it.
05:40Analysis of the remains revealed that they belonged to a female between the ages of 17 and 21.
05:47And she had the Kimmerle anomaly, which is a condition where an extra piece of bone forms on the first cervical vertebra.
05:54This could have led her to fainting regularly or having mental health issues, which could have been seen as evil behavior.
06:01Reports of vampire sightings and attacks became widespread across medieval Europe.
06:07And unusual measures were taken to ensure that suspected vampires could not rise from the dead.
06:13Some individuals were buried with large stones around their necks.
06:18Others were buried face down.
06:20And some, like the woman in Poland, were pinned down with metal objects and secured with locks.
06:26So could this explain the body found at Kirbat el-Masani that was chained with metal rings?
06:33It's possible, but the timeline and location are problematic.
06:37Most vampire burials took place in Europe during the Middle Ages right up until the 18th century.
06:43We know from the grave goods and the geology of the site at Kirbat el-Masani that the bodies there are likely from the 5th century CE.
06:52Almost a thousand years before the vampire scare in Europe.
06:56So there has to be another reason for the rings on the body.
06:59The team at Kirbat el-Masani investigates the grave site further and makes another surprising discovery.
07:06Along with the rings, iron plates were found where the stomach would have been.
07:10This person was effectively covered in metal, which could suggest that it was some kind of crudely made body armor.
07:16So maybe this is a warrior's grave.
07:19That's a possibility, but all that metal would have been really cumbersome.
07:23It would have been heavy.
07:24I can't see somebody being able to move around or fight effectively with metal rings weighing down their arms and legs.
07:30Plus, if this person was going to get a warrior's burial, you'd expect to find things like swords or arrows or spears with them.
07:38At least a helmet. There's nothing like that here.
07:41As the excavation nears completion, the scope of the complex at Kirbat el-Masani comes into view.
07:48This place is huge.
07:50They unearthed three apses assumed to be part of a church or monastery, built with finely cut limestone blocks.
07:57There are also rooms believed to have been an inn, which makes sense given that the site is near the main road that led from Jaffa and Lydda to Jerusalem.
08:06The complex is believed to have been built between 350 and 650 CE, when Christianity was becoming the dominant religion in the region.
08:16And Jerusalem was a spiritual center, attracting pilgrims from far and wide.
08:21This period also saw the spread of monasticism, a devout way of life where people detached from the world to focus on spiritual concerns and lived in monasteries like Kirbat el-Masani.
08:34This period also saw the growth of asceticism. Basically, that's avoiding anything pleasurable.
08:40Asceticism is a word that's sometimes used interchangeably with monasticism, but it's not the same.
08:46Ascetics practice extreme self-denial, whereas monks isolate themselves from the world.
08:53Neither of them sound very fun.
08:55The most stringent ascetics practiced self-inflicted pain and voluntary suffering.
09:00And one of these practices was to limit mobility by wrapping themselves in heavy metal chains.
09:05Like the ones found with the remains at Kirbat el-Masani.
09:08So given this, the grave likely belonged to an ascetic who also happened to be a monk and probably lived in isolation at the monastery.
09:16But who was he?
09:27Searching for answers at Kirbat el-Masani, the team salvages what little remains of the skeleton and turns it into the lab for analysis.
09:36The results are startling.
09:38They recovered a single tooth, and analysis of the enamel showed the presence of amylex, which is a protein encoded on the X chromosome.
09:47Also notable was the absence of amyly, which is present only in males, meaning this was a woman.
09:55While the use of chains by male ascetics from this era is widely known, this is the first archeological evidence that women engaged in self-torture during the Byzantine period.
10:05An amazing discovery.
10:08Females tended to practice less extreme forms of asceticism by fasting, meditating, and praying.
10:15So just who was this woman that took her beliefs to such lengths?
10:19Historical records indicate that women in the Roman Empire began practicing asceticism as early as the 4th century CE, as a spiritual pursuit that likely began with the nobility.
10:31Many churches and monasteries were founded in Jerusalem by wealthy women from the Roman aristocracy looking for a spiritual connection as a way of atoning for their lavish lifestyles.
10:44But some of them took it a step further.
10:45Two well-known ascetics were Melania the Elder, a Christian saint from a noble family, and her granddaughter Melania the Younger, who founded convents in the Kidron Valley and on the Mount of Olives located near Jerusalem's old city.
11:01Melania the Younger was known for her extreme practices, which included confining herself in a wooden box that restricted all movement.
11:09Some female ascetics from the time even went so far as to disguise themselves as men.
11:16Pelagia the Penitent, recognized as a saint by several churches, was a former sex worker who turned to Christianity and led a life of self-denial, fasting, and prayer disguised as a man.
11:26This at least suggests that monastic life was sometimes simply not available for women.
11:33As for who the chained woman founded Kirbat el-Masani was, that is still a mystery.
11:38And there may be more forgotten female ascetics hidden beneath ancient monasteries.
11:46The discovery of the female remains at Kirbat el-Masani challenges traditional historical narratives by showing that women engaged in extreme religious practices in the Byzantine era,
11:57and hints that female asceticism may have been much more widespread than previously believed.
12:12Just over four miles from the modern city of Sohaj, on the western bank of the Nile, the cliffs of Athrabus rise up from the desert floor.
12:20When you think of Egypt, you think of the desert. And that's because 96% of that country is exactly that.
12:26But, if you know where to look, you can also find huge swaths of fertile land there.
12:32And one of those places is an area surrounding Athrabus.
12:36This is because the Nile River carries sediment thousands of miles northwards, through Egypt, towards the Mediterranean.
12:43And when the river floods, these sediments are dispersed across the valley, turning the sand into rich soil.
12:50Today, 95% of Egyptians live within a few miles of the Nile's banks,
12:56a pattern that stretches back thousands of years to ancient Egyptians who built their largest cities along the river.
13:05A group of archaeologists is investigating the cliffs' base as part of an ongoing excavation when they spot something strange.
13:13They noticed strangely smooth limestone blocks on the cliffs' façade.
13:19On closer inspection, they realized they were actually looking at the remains of a structure carved right into the landscape.
13:27As the team brushes away centuries of sand, they reveal figures carved into the limestone.
13:34Two stand out as particularly unusual.
13:37These two figures have human bodies and the heads of animals.
13:41One is an ibis and one is a falcon.
13:43They're surrounded by carvings of Egyptian gods.
13:45And at first, you might think that they're gods too.
13:49But they're actually beings known as deacons.
13:53In ancient Egypt, deacons represented 36 small constellations of stars.
13:59Each deacon corresponded to about 10 degrees of sky.
14:02So with 36 sections of 10 degrees each, you got a full 360-degree panorama.
14:08And by tracking the deacons as they moved through the sky, Egyptians were able to keep track of what the date was.
14:16Each of the 36 deacons was associated with a particular deity.
14:19In the case of the deacons of Athrabas, the falcon-headed god may have been linked to the sky god Horus.
14:25While the ibis head might evoke Thoth, god of writing and wisdom.
14:29Though we can't be sure.
14:31But we're left wondering, why were they carved here?
14:34320 miles from Athrabas, in the northern reaches of the Nile Delta,
14:38a team of archaeologists working in the ruins of the ancient city of Kafr al-Sheikh,
14:45come across the work of some of Egypt's earliest astronomers.
14:49They found a vast complex built from mud bricks spanning more than 10,000 square feet
14:57that contained a huge limestone sundial built out of 15-foot blocks.
15:02This sundial acted like a clock, allowing the ancient Egyptians to track the time throughout the day.
15:11Researchers also found several other tools that indicated that this building was also used at night.
15:17One of them was a merket, which was essentially a weight attached to a wooden handle
15:22that helped ancient astronomers track the alignment of the deacons across the night sky.
15:27Researchers were able to date the site to the sixth century BCE,
15:30making it the oldest known observatory in all of ancient Egypt.
15:35Could this site at Athrabas have been built around the same time
15:38as part of that society's curiosity about the stars?
15:42The deacons aren't the only figures carved into the limestone.
15:46The team also spotted the silhouette of a pharaoh known as Ptolemy VIII,
15:50one of ancient Egypt's most volatile rulers.
15:52Ptolemy VIII's reign was incredibly chaotic and led to the empire's economic collapse.
16:00He was constantly at odds with his siblings, driving his own brother out of the country to keep the throne.
16:06He married his older sister, but they feuded constantly and he went so far as to kill their own son out of spite.
16:18But the real tipping point came when he decided to marry his niece, a move that sparked a full-blown civil war.
16:26Ptolemy hung on to his position by the skin of his teeth, often relying on diplomatic support from Rome to keep him in power.
16:35Experts date the structure at Athrabas to the second century BCE, during the reign of Ptolemy VIII,
16:42hundreds of years after the observatory at Tafr el-Sheikh was built.
16:45So why did the pharaoh leave his mark on this particular structure?
16:50As work continues on the ruins from Athrabas, the archaeologists realize for the first time the true extent of what they have uncovered.
16:59This structure is enormous. It's over 150 feet wide.
17:04And it's made up of these two symmetrical columns.
17:07Unfortunately, both of those columns have been damaged by a nearby limestone quarry.
17:11So today, they're only about 15 feet tall, but it's believed that they once towered up to 60 feet above.
17:20We know that ancient Egyptian pharaohs frequently commissioned grand architectural projects to showcase their power and demonstrate their devotion to the gods.
17:29Massive structures that took decades to complete and were often initiated at the very start of a pharaoh's reign.
17:36Could the site of Athrabas represent a continuation of this tradition?
17:39Is it possible that this was intended to serve as the tomb of Ptolemy VIII himself?
17:52A short distance from Athrabas, a local police station receives a call that leads to a shocking discovery.
17:59Police learn that a small gang is illegally excavating a small mound near a known archaeological site.
18:09When they investigate, they're astonished to find an exceptionally well-preserved tomb.
18:14Inside, they find a central lobby and a small burial room with detailed funerary rites depicted on every single wall.
18:24In the burial room, there are two limestone sarcophagi, each containing a mummy.
18:29These mummies were likely a married couple and probably really important in the area because they were surrounded by dozens of grave offerings, including more than 50 mummified animals.
18:41They also had cats, they had dogs, they even had eagles, and they had hundreds of fragments of pottery. And all of it was just meant to travel with that couple into the afterlife.
18:54Researchers are able to date this extraordinary tomb back more than 2,000 years to the tail end of the Ptolemaic period.
19:03The graves are evidence that high-profile Ptolemaic burials took place extremely close to Athrabas.
19:09Based on this, it's even more likely that the structure buried in the cliff face is another impressive tomb.
19:14But there are problems with this theory. For one, many believe that Ptolemy VIII is likely buried closer to Alexandria, which was the capital at the end of his reign, and the resting place for many of his relatives.
19:30Another theory suggests that Ptolemy was buried in Cyrene, a Libyan colony that he once ruled.
19:35In the ancient city of Ptolemaeus, a grand tomb was discovered that some believe may have been intended as his final resting place.
19:44Ultimately, we still don't know where Ptolemy is buried.
19:48So, if the structure at Athrabas probably isn't Ptolemy's tomb, what else could it be?
19:56As researchers finally unearth the full facade buried in the cliffside, the building's striking silhouette points to fresh possibilities.
20:05The two towers, joined by a shorter building, is an iconic staple of ancient Egyptian architecture known as a pylon.
20:12These pylons were built to symbolize the horizon.
20:15The towers each represented a huge mountain, and the space between the two showed the valley in which the sun set.
20:21They also share a close resemblance to the hieroglyph Akhet, which translates to horizon, and shows a sun setting between two large hills.
20:29The ancient Egyptians were obsessed with the horizon, in part because it represented a constant threat to one of their oldest and most important gods, Ra.
20:42It was believed that at night, Ra would descend below the horizon, where he entered the underworld and was forced to battle a giant serpent known as Apophis.
20:56Only if he won would the sun rise again.
20:59Pylons like the one at Athrabas were a literal representation of a boundary, and were positioned at the entrance to some of Egypt's grandest temples.
21:09Most of these temples were built to house Egyptian gods who were channeled through sacred sculptures and rituals.
21:14Priests would tend to these temples conducting ceremonies throughout the year to appease the gods in an effort to maintain peace.
21:24So, if the temple at Athrabas is one of these houses, the question becomes, which god was it built for?
21:32Having revealed the entirety of the temple facade, researchers are drawn to one last set of figures etched into the stone.
21:40Alongside the pharaoh and the deacons is the figure of a man holding a flail.
21:45This is Min, the god of male fertility, one of the most important deities of ancient Egypt, which relied heavily on agriculture.
21:52Each year before the harvest season, images of Min would be brought out of the temples and into the fields to bless the crops.
21:59The cult of Min grew extremely strong in the area surrounding Athrabas, and enormous festivals would have been held in his honor.
22:10You would think this would make him the star attraction of the hidden temple, but this isn't the case.
22:16There are two other gods etched into the reliefs. One is a woman with the head of a lion, and the other is a young boy.
22:25These are Min's wife and son, Repet and Colanthes.
22:29In fact, it's a Repet that appears to be taking center stage, with the pharaoh making offerings to her and her son rather than to her husband.
22:36It's unclear exactly what kind of role Repet or her son would have played in the local community, but it likely would have been related somehow to fertility.
22:46What is known is that before the Greeks labeled this place Athrabas, Egyptians called it Hut Repet, or Domain of Repet.
22:54So, it may well be that this temple once stood at the center of an entire town dedicated to that lion headed goddess.
23:06Today, the Athrabas site stretches over 75 acres.
23:11Most of the area is still covered by a layer of limestone rubble, but researchers are confident that their ongoing efforts will one day uncover the entirety of this stunning, long forgotten complex.
23:24The unrelenting Syrian desert spans more than 200,000 square miles of West Asia, including parts of Saudi Arabia, Syria, and 85% of Jordan's landmass.
23:46The Syrian desert is one of the most arid and hottest deserts in the world, with summer temperatures frequently reaching over 100 degrees Fahrenheit.
23:57The dry landscape in southeastern Jordan is made up of sandy plateaus, occasionally broken up by mountain ranges and river valleys called wadis.
24:07While there's evidence of human activity in Jordan going back to the Paleolithic period, large sections of the country were first settled by nomadic tribes like the Canaanites and Shasu in the Bronze Age between 3200 and 1200 BC.
24:23These settlements were consolidated into kingdoms for hundreds of years until the classical period, when Jordan came under Greek and Roman influence.
24:31Not surprisingly, there's been a wealth of discoveries found beneath the sand of Jordan's deserts.
24:38The most famous is the Rose City of Petra, made up of rock-cut tombs and advanced water systems.
24:44In the north, the Roman city of Jerash was revealed to contain a hippodrome and the Temple of Artemis.
24:51A team of archaeologists is busy at work in the southwestern Badia region of Jordan, when they come across a surprising discovery.
25:01They were surveying an area between the Al Jaffer Basin and a nearby mountain range in a fairly open and flat section of the desert and discovered a circular enclosure made from rocks and stones with an altar-like formation in its center, as well as a stone hearth with traces of burnt charcoal.
25:26In addition to the altar and hearth, there were several smaller stones in the shape of animal figurines placed around the perimeter.
25:36But the most striking thing inside the round rock formation was two standing vertical stones called steelies, each with a human face carved into them.
25:45The first one stood around two feet, three inches tall and bore a simple set of eyes, nose and mouth.
25:52The taller one at over three and a half feet displayed a larger human face, along with a number of vertical lines carved beside it in a unique design or pattern.
26:02So what were they for? And how long have they been standing here in the middle of nowhere?
26:08Samples from the structure in the southwestern Badia region of Jordan are taken for radiocarbon dating.
26:24Over 15 samples were collected from the charcoal remains found among the hearth's rocks and stones.
26:31The results were uniformly consistent, putting the site at around 7000 BCE, which falls in the early Neolithic period.
26:43The Neolithic era spans more than five millennia, from 10,000 to 4500 BCE.
26:49So it encompasses a lot of change in human activity.
26:53In Jordan, just like in other places, there was a slow transition from tribal hunter-gatherer societies to cultures with domesticated animals and agricultural settlements.
27:04Further examination of the strange formation reveals a possible clue.
27:09The circular arrangement of the structure plus the ultra-like formation in the center suggested it may have been connected to an ancient ritual or ceremony.
27:21And that line of thinking was supported by the anthropomorphic nature of the two stone carvings.
27:28The practice of giving human characteristics to non-human entities has been around for millennia, whether it's animals, deities, or completely inanimate objects such as rocks and stones.
27:41Many ancient cultures imposed human traits as a form of storytelling to pass down myths and folklore, but it also had a deep spiritual and religious significance.
27:53One of the earliest examples of this was found at Gobekli Tepe, a settlement in Mesopotamia in what we now call Turkey.
28:02It was inhabited from roughly 9500 to 8000 BCE, also the Neolithic period.
28:08And it featured a large stone circle with pillars decorated with carvings of human features, like arms, hands, and clothing.
28:17The carvings provided archaeologists with rare insights into a possible prehistoric religion, as well as the iconography of the period.
28:25Since the stone circle at Gobekli Tepe didn't appear to have a function connected to hunting, farming, or dwelling, it was believed to be a communal or spiritual gathering place.
28:36If that were the case, it would make it one of the world's first known temples.
28:40So is it possible that the strange discovery in Jordan served a similar purpose?
28:45A detailed analysis of the two stone carvings leads to a surprising connection.
28:52The human faces depicted were carved in simple, clean lines, consistent with other carvings of that period.
29:01But it was the curious pattern edged beside the face of the larger stone that became the focus.
29:08Two lines in a V-shape coming together to create an enclosed circle, like a keyhole.
29:15What could it mean?
29:18Well, given that the stone structure was carbon dated to 7000 BC, the keyhole shape was ultimately identified as being the same shape as a Neolithic hunting trap called a desert kite.
29:32Desert kites were stone walls, often hundreds of feet long, that converged into a round, contained space.
29:39They were built by nomadic tribes during the hunter-gatherer phase of the early Neolithic period and used to trap animals like deer and gazelles.
29:48Hunting parties would drive herds into the open end of the kites and down into the confined space, where other members of the party corralled the animals for slaughter.
29:58They were named in the 1920s by British Royal Air Force pilots flying across the region.
30:04They were marked on their resemblance to kites, and the name stuck.
30:08To date, there have been over 6000 of these ancient animal traps identified across the Middle East.
30:15But were any of them connected to the Southeastern body a rock circle?
30:19A larger survey is conducted to include the surrounding area, and it doesn't take long to find answers.
30:34Sure enough, the surrounding desert landscape showed evidence of multiple desert kites, shaped much like the one carved next to the face on the stone.
30:43So there's a strong connection between the items found inside the rock circle and the hunting methods of the Neolithic nomads who built it.
30:51The bigger picture that emerged was of a hunting campsite featuring several large desert kites.
30:58The rock circle served as the spiritual center for the hunters, a place to engage in ceremonies or rituals connected to the upcoming hunt.
31:08The presence of the altar, hearth, and smaller carved animal figurines likely all played a role in these rituals.
31:17Whether it was to invoke supernatural forces for a successful hunt, or to bring out an abundance of prey to capture.
31:25This remarkable Neolithic stone altar discovered in the Jordan Desert represents a critical link between mass hunting and ritual performance.
31:35And may be one of the earliest examples of art as an expression of faith.
31:41Set in the heart of South Central New Mexico, White Sands National Park extends over 275 square miles, dazzling hundreds of thousands of visitors every year.
32:02Most of the world's desert sand is made of quartz grain, tiny pieces of rock weathered by years of exposure to the elements.
32:08But here, the sand is almost all composed of pure gypsum, a bright white mineral that can be almost blinding in the sun.
32:18Gypsum is quite a common mineral, but gypsum's sand is extremely rare because it's water-soluble.
32:25Like salt or sugar, it dissolves in water and won't solidify again unless the moisture evaporates.
32:32But White Sands National Park lies at the bottom of a basin, surrounded by the San Andreas and Sacramento mountains.
32:39These mountains are made up of layers of gypsum.
32:42So when it rains, the minerals wash down into the basin, and when the water eventually evaporates, the sand is left behind.
32:49A National Park biologist exploring the sands after a rainstorm notices something strange.
32:56He spotted sets of disappearing footprints.
32:59When the ground was wet, he could clearly make out several tracks, which seemed to belong to a range of different animals.
33:05But then when the earth dried up again, they just vanished.
33:09Today, we know them as ghost tracks, but they baffled experts for almost a century.
33:15In the 1930s, a local trapper described finding huge, comma-shaped prints up to 20 inches long.
33:22At first, many believed these were the first confirmed evidence of Bigfoot.
33:27But now we know that these tracks actually belong to a giant ground sloth that roamed North America tens of thousands of years ago.
33:34Here's where it gets odd. Inside one of the sloth tracks was what appeared to be a human footprint.
33:41Dozens more of these prints were scattered throughout the desert, but there are no other clues to tell us who they might have belonged to.
33:48There are no remnants of ancient human settlements anywhere in white sands.
33:53No arrowheads, stone tools, or traces of buildings.
33:57Who were these mysterious people?
34:00As interest in the footprints grows, some experts wonder whether they could have been left by one of North America's oldest people, known as Clovis Culture.
34:10Clovis Culture was first discovered 300 miles northeast of White Sands National Park on the outskirts of a village called Folsom.
34:19A local rancher was riding along a gully when he spotted the bones of Ice Age bison and mammoths buried in the embankment.
34:27Cut marks on the bones suggested that these animals hadn't died of natural causes.
34:32They'd been butchered.
34:3420 years later, an archaeologist working near the city of Clovis began to uncover exquisitely crafted stone points.
34:42The points had been carved with grooves along their edges to make them as sharp as possible.
34:47And they became known as Clovis points.
34:50Over the last century, more than 10,000 Clovis points have been found scattered across North America, dated between roughly 9,500 and 9,000 BCE.
35:01They're often associated with the bones of large animals, indicating that the Clovis culture thrived on butchering big game.
35:08So, could the mysterious White Sands footprints be from this period?
35:12Was the giant sloth they were following intended as prey?
35:15In order to confirm whether these prints could belong to the Clovis hunters, a team begins an elaborate effort to date the footprints.
35:24They identified 61 human tracks in total, trapped in multiple layers of Earth.
35:30But these prints aren't physical objects, which makes them impossible to date.
35:35So, they searched the sediment layers for organic material and found dozens of preserved rupia serosa seeds, also known as ditch grass.
35:44By dating the seeds directly above and below the footprints, they were able to establish that the prints were far too old to belong to the Clovis culture.
35:53In fact, these were far too old to belong to any known culture.
35:57These tracks were left between 21 and 23,000 years ago.
36:02The staggering results sent shockwaves through the archeological world.
36:07This discovery changes everything.
36:09For decades, the Clovis first theory was widely accepted.
36:13The idea that the Clovis were the very first humans to arrive in North America and that they did that no more than 13,000 years ago.
36:20But here we have evidence of a far older group making that journey much earlier.
36:26The Clovis first theory suggested that humans reached America by crossing the Bering Strait, a land bridge that formed between modern-day Russia and Alaska.
36:36They would then have spread southwards, following an ice-free corridor as massive ice sheets covering much of modern-day Canada gradually receded.
36:45This theory relies on the idea that this wave of migration to the Americas, led by Clovis culture, was the first of its kind.
36:54But these ancient footprints challenged that notion.
36:57So, were there people here already?
36:59Nearly 3,000 miles away, a team of archeologists working along Alaska's Tanana River make their own astonishing discovery, unearthing yet more traces of some of the earliest Native Americans.
37:12They were conducting surveys in a heavily wooded, remote area when they found the remains of an ancient campsite.
37:19It included a residential structure and a central hearth that was likely built to cook food.
37:24Inside the hearth, they uncovered the cremated remains of a young child who had died around 3 years old.
37:31Below the hearth, two more infants were uncovered.
37:34This time, they were buried, but not cremated.
37:37Now, these children were much younger than the first, with the oldest being no more than 7 months old.
37:43They had been buried in graves filled with offerings, including decorated antlers and a set of stone tools.
37:51In order to date these burials, the researchers carefully extract DNA from one of the infants and begin a detailed analysis.
37:59The results proved that these infants were buried at the end of the Paleolithic era, around 11,500 years ago.
38:06This alone marks an incredible discovery because DNA this ancient is really rare.
38:11But these samples also allowed us to look back even further into the past and form a detailed picture of these children's genetic ancestry.
38:19Up until this discovery, two main groups of Native Americans had been identified.
38:24Southern and Northern Native Americans.
38:27But these infants belonged to neither.
38:30Instead, they proved the existence of a third, previously undiscovered group.
38:35Today, this group is known as the Ancient Beringians.
38:38We now believe that the Ancient Beringians began to split from their East Asian ancestors around 25,000 years ago.
38:45Based on this genetic evidence, it's possible that these ancient Native Americans formed one of the earliest known waves of migration to North America.
38:54Thousands of years before Clovis culture appeared.
38:57The discovery of the ancient Beringian population presents fascinating possibilities for the researchers investigating the White Sands footprints.
39:16Finding an entirely new ancient American group means humans didn't reach North America in one large wave of migration like we previously thought.
39:26Instead, they appear to have arrived as a bunch of small, genetically distinct groups, many of which may still be undiscovered.
39:35So now the question becomes, could the people who left their footprints in the desert have been one of these unidentified groups of ancient Native Americans?
39:44And, if so, what's the story of how that population made its way to what is now the Southwestern U.S.?
39:53The truth is, we don't know how these ancient humans reached New Mexico.
39:56It's possible they may have traveled by boat, following the Siberian and Alaskan shoreline south, before traveling inland on foot.
40:03Or they may have found a different passage, one we still don't know about.
40:08To this day, the White Sands footprints remain shrouded in mystery.
40:12But while they may not be able to tell us who these people were, they do paint a vivid picture of the environment in which they lived.
40:21Today, White Sands National Park is a true desert, but it wasn't always.
40:27The ditch weed seeds that were found trapped in layers of sediment are actually aquatic plants.
40:34Tens of thousands of years ago, these plants grew on the banks of an enormous body of water called Lake Otero.
40:41Lake Otero was huge. It covered roughly 1,600 square miles, transforming this desert landscape into a thriving wetland.
40:51Then, around 23,000 years ago, the region became drier and the lake receded, leaving behind a soft surface covered by gypsum sand and silt.
41:01This was the surface that ended up preserving the White Sands footprints.
41:06We don't just see humans stalking giant sloths here.
41:09Other fossilized tracks proved that there was a whole range of animals passing through the shores of Lake Otero.
41:14You've got mammoths, you've got camels.
41:17I mean, they're traveling in herds as families.
41:20In one spot, there was even footprints that show a baby mammoth spinning around and maybe even playing next to its parents.
41:28In almost all cases, the interactions between individuals and different species seem to have been peaceful.
41:35It's even possible that humans would have followed animals here, traveling in one large extended community from one lake to another.
41:44The extraordinary tracks in White Sands National Park serve as a fascinating time capsule, bringing a long gone world to life using little more than footprints in the sand, while possibly rewriting the history of North America's first inhabitants.
42:00And that's certainly something.
42:01OP
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