
Randall Carlson
@randallwcarlson • 169,263 subscribers
Randall Carlson and Graham Hancock reunite! January 14 @ 8PM EST …Click the link below 👇
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Deep sea sediment cores from the North Atlantic reveal something unexpected: alternating layers of coarse and fine material that challenge our assumptions about steady oceanic processes. When researchers pull these cores from the ocean floor and analyze their composition, they find thick deposits of fine sediment, the kind forming today at current rates, interrupted by distinct layers of much coarser material. The texture and grain size of sediment tells a story about the energy and conditions present when it was deposited. Fine material settles slowly under calm conditions, while coarse deposits suggest rapid, high-energy events. The succession of these contrasting layers points to dramatic shifts in oceanic conditions over time, periods of relative stability punctuated by episodes of something far more dynamic.
Randall Carlson84,064 Aufrufe • vor 4 Tagen

When he walks people through the difference between Meteor Crater and Tunguska, he's making a point most people miss: not all cosmic impacts are the same. One was a dense iron asteroid that punched a hole 600 feet deep and a kilometer wide into the Arizona desert. The other was a low-density object, probably cometary, that exploded five miles up and flattened 800 square miles of Siberian forest without ever touching the ground. These aren't just different events, they're opposite ends of a spectrum. On one end, you have iron-rich bodies with densities around five grams per cubic centimeter, dense as cast iron. On the other, you have loosely bound, icy objects closer to one gram per cubic centimeter, basically a cosmic snowball. Everything in between is possible, and that range determines whether you get a crater, an airburst, or something else entirely. Understanding that continuum is critical when assessing the real risks we face from space.
Randall Carlson60,500 Aufrufe • vor 6 Tagen

He examines evidence showing the end of the last ice age wasn't gradual at all. Surface ocean temperatures in the Atlantic jumped several degrees Celsius in what appears to be a geologically instantaneous shift. Deep sea sedimentation rates in the Equatorial Atlantic dropped sharply at the same time. Bottom waters in the Curiaco Trench suddenly stagnated, and the Pluvial Lakes of the Great Basin shrank rapidly from maximum volume to near their current size. What stands out is that these changes happened simultaneously across geographically isolated systems, from ocean basins to landlocked lakes. This kind of synchronous, abrupt warming at the close of the Wisconsin glaciation challenges the conventional view of slow, incremental climate transitions.
Randall Carlson25,681 Aufrufe • vor 2 Tagen

Less than 700 years ago those casing stones were still on the Great Pyramid. Think about what that means. If you were crossing the desert in the 1300s and you looked out toward Giza, what you would have seen was not the stepped, weathered structure that tourists photograph today. You would have seen a smooth, seamless white surface, enormous, rising out of the sand like something that had no business being there. That is gone now, stripped away, and what was exposed underneath is where things get interesting. The conventional dating puts construction somewhere between 4,500 and 4,600 years ago, Old Kingdom Egypt, and that has been the accepted position for a long time. But the erosion patterns on those now-exposed inner stones are raising some uncomfortable questions about whether that date holds up. Erosion takes time, and the character of what you see on those surfaces is difficult to square with a 4,500 year timeline. It is the same question that has been asked about the Sphinx enclosure, and the methodology is identical. You go to the geology, you look at what the rock is actually telling you, and you ask whether the standard historical account is consistent with what you are seeing. In this case, there is a growing body of evidence suggesting the answer to that question is no.
Randall Carlson66,197 Aufrufe • vor 10 Tagen

When Solon visited Egypt, the priests told him something that should stop you in your tracks. You Greeks, they said, are like children. And the reason? You only remember one flood. They named three. Now that was preserved through Plato, and for a long time it was easy to file that away as mythology and move on. But here is where it gets interesting. Go to the geological record and you find meltwater Pulse 1A at around 14,500 years ago. Then meltwater Pulse 1B at approximately 11,600 years ago, which is precisely the date Plato gives for the subsidence of Atlantis. And now evidence is emerging for a third major meltwater event right at the onset of the Younger Dryas itself. So you have an ancient priestly tradition naming three floods, and you have the stratigraphic record pointing to three distinct pulses of catastrophic sea level rise. At what point does that stop being a coincidence worth dismissing and start being a correspondence worth investigating? That is the question. The Egyptian priests were not writing poetry. They appear to have been preserving an actual record of events, transmitted across generations with enough precision that the dates still line up with what ocean cores and coastal geology are now recovering independently.
Randall Carlson64,758 Aufrufe • vor 9 Tagen

The latest skeletal evidence places anatomically modern humans on Earth somewhere between 180,000 and 200,000 years ago. That is approximately 7,000 generations of people biologically identical to us - with the same brains, the same cognitive capacity, and presumably the same drive to organise, build, and innovate. And yet, by the conventional account, civilisation only appeared in the last few hundred generations. The question Randall Carlson raises is not rhetorical. It is one of the most uncomfortable in all of science. How is it that across all those long generations, nothing we would recognise as civilisation took root and flourished? The most parsimonious answer, Randall argues, may not be that civilisation simply hadn't started yet. It may be that it had - and that what we are living in now is not the origin of human civilisation, but its reboot.
Randall Carlson581,869 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten

He walks through a 1976 study on Hudson Bay's isostatic rebound, the land rising after ice removal, and what it reveals about the Laurentide Ice Sheet's collapse. The abstract describes an ice unloading model requiring the central dome to have collapsed between 12,000 and 10,000 years before present in radiocarbon years. But here's the critical adjustment: in 1976, researchers were only beginning to revise and calibrate radiocarbon dates. Add the necessary correction, roughly 2,000 years, and the collapse window shifts to between 14,000 and 12,000 years ago. That timing places the event squarely within the Younger Dryas boundary period, when catastrophic meltwater pulses and rapid climate shifts were already underway. The rebound data from the Ottawa Islands doesn't just track uplift. It tracks the speed and scale of ice loss, and the numbers point to something sudden, not gradual.
Randall Carlson10,306 Aufrufe • vor 2 Tagen

The Berezovka mammoth was found frozen in permafrost in a position that tells an extraordinary story. Sitting on its haunches with both hips broken, it had food in its mouth and undigested material in its stomach that had never had time to putrefy. Scientific analysis concluded that the entire six ton carcass would have had to be frozen within approximately ten hours to prevent biological decomposition of the stomach contents from beginning. The question that conclusion forces is one Randall states directly - how do you freeze a six ton mammoth in ten hours? Under any gradual or incremental climate change scenario the answer is that you simply do not. The Berezovka mammoth is physical evidence of a temperature drop so sudden and so catastrophic that a living animal was flash frozen mid-meal, food still in its mouth, before decomposition could begin. Both hips broken suggests it was thrown or fell violently before the freeze occurred. Something happened - and whatever it was, it happened with a speed that no conventional model of glacial climate change has ever been able to account for. Come step into the field with Randall and see the evidence first hand - click here for the Finger Lakes tour! 👇
Randall Carlson270,708 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

Randall Carlson reaches for Tolkien to make a point about scale. When the characters in The Hobbit finally reach Smaug's hoard, the gold is so vast that fighting over it becomes absurd - no isolated faction could ever spend what is already there. The same logic, he argues, applies to the resource abundance that emerging space research keeps confirming exists beyond Earth's atmosphere. The objections to space development are real - it is challenging, risky, and dangerous. Randall's response is a question rather than a rebuttal. What has humanity ever done that was genuinely worth doing, that genuinely improved the condition of the species, that was not all three of those things simultaneously? The difficulty is not the argument against going. It is the argument for it. The resources are there in quantities that make terrestrial competition look like factions quarrelling over scraps. The only question is whether we are willing to do what the species has always had to do to reach the next level - accept the risk and go anyway.
Randall Carlson81,453 Aufrufe • vor 22 Tagen

Professor Jones, whose work sits at the center of the climate change modeling apparatus, stated plainly that he would not share his data even if the World Meteorological Organization requested it. His reasoning was that 25 years of work had gone into the research, and he saw no obligation to hand it over to people whose aim was to find something wrong with it. That statement is worth reading slowly, because it is a precise inversion of how science is supposed to work. The whole point of publishing a scientific claim is that other researchers can examine the underlying data, attempt to replicate the result, and either confirm or challenge the conclusion. That is not a hostile process. That is the process. Replication is the mechanism by which a scientific claim earns the right to be called scientific. When a researcher withholds the data behind conclusions that are being used to drive policy affecting hundreds of millions of people, the enterprise has left the domain of science and entered the domain of politics. The 25 years invested in the work is not a justification for withholding it. If anything, the scale of that investment makes independent scrutiny more important, not less. You do not get to claim scientific authority while simultaneously blocking the one process that confers it.
Randall Carlson25,142 Aufrufe • vor 7 Tagen

The Beresovka mammoth was found sitting upright—hips broken, flowering plants in its mouth, stomach contents perfectly preserved. To stop decay, the entire 6-ton carcass had to freeze solid in less than 10 hours. So the question is… what kind of force does that?
Randall Carlson1,373,241 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Start with a single cubic mile of ice and convert it instantaneously to water. The flood that produces would be enormous by any human standard. Now multiply that by six million - the estimated volume of glacial ice sitting on the continental landmasses of North America and Eurasia at the peak of the last Ice Age. All of it is gone now. The question Randall Carlson forces is deceptively simple: how fast did it go? If that volume of ice melted gradually over 50,000 or 100,000 years, the resulting sea level rise and meltwater discharge would be spread thinly enough across time to look almost imperceptible in any given century. But if the same six million cubic miles of ice melted over three, four, or five thousand years - as the evidence increasingly suggests - the implications are categorically different. The meltwater pulses, the catastrophic floods, the rapid sea level rises recorded in the geological record all point toward a process that was far faster and far more violent than the gradualist model has ever been comfortable acknowledging. The ice did not gently fade. It collapsed. Join Randall in the field in New York State for his Finger Lakes Tour, Aug 30 - Sep 5, 2026:
Randall Carlson98,798 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat

The Moon’s rotation is perfectly locked to its orbit…a 1:1 spin-orbit coupling. That shouldn’t happen if the Moon were evenly distributed. This anomaly suggests extreme rigidity inside the lunar crust. Something beneath the surface is holding it in place.
Randall Carlson463,071 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten

The method Randall describes is elegant in its simplicity and profound in its implications. Drive a pole with a sharpened point into the ground. Draw a circle of any sacred length around it. As the sun rises in the east, a long shadow is cast to the west - and as it shortens toward noon, the moment the shadow's tip touches the circle, a stake is driven into the ground. That point is due south. As the afternoon progresses and the shadow swings back and lengthens toward the west, a second stake is driven when the tip touches the circle again. String a line between the two stakes and the result is a precise east-west line. The north-south axis follows immediately from there. With those four cardinal directions established, the entire geometric program of a sacred site can be laid out - squares, rectangles, circles, ellipses, all derived from a single pole, a drawn circle, and the movement of the sun across the sky. No instruments beyond what any culture in any era could produce. No calculations beyond what sustained observation of shadow movement provides. Randall's point is that this method was available to every ancient builder who ever oriented a monument to the cardinal directions - and the precision of the sacred sites that resulted was not the product of sophisticated technology but of a simple, reproducible technique that anyone willing to watch the sun carefully enough could master.
Randall Carlson142,043 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten

Some of these crop circle formations are geometrically intricate to a degree that would present a serious challenge to reproduce even on paper, in broad daylight, over several weeks. That is not an exaggeration. The aerial photographs of certain formations show levels of precision and complexity that would take hours just to draft at a drafting table, let alone execute in a field, at night, at scales exceeding a hundred feet. Now, that alone does not prove anything. It is entirely possible that someone has developed a method, refined it over years, and managed to pull it off repeatedly without ever getting caught. But you have to actually account for what that would require. You would need a coordinated team, specialized equipment, and apparently a flawless operational record with zero witnesses. The point being made here is a simple one about the standard of evidence being applied. Writing all of these off as obvious hoaxes is not a more rational position than taking some of them seriously. If the hoax explanation requires as many unstated assumptions as the alternatives, then the reflexive dismissal is not skepticism. It is just a different kind of credulity, and the geometry of some of these formations makes that worth sitting with before moving on.
Randall Carlson16,633 Aufrufe • vor 8 Tagen

A 6-mile-wide asteroid slams into Earth at 20 miles per second. The result? A 150-mile crater—and global extinction. Skeptics scoffed… until drill cores in the Yucatán revealed melted green glass and a buried impact scar: the Chicxulub Crater. The KT extinction wasn’t slow. It was sudden, violent—and cosmic.
Randall Carlson631,957 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr

Whatever struck the Earth at the Younger Dryas boundary is proving extraordinarily difficult to classify - and that difficulty is itself significant. The signature left behind is confusing in a specific and revealing way. The object appears to have been heterogeneous - carrying attributes of both a comet and an asteroid simultaneously. Not one or the other. Both. That combination places it outside the standard categories that impact science was built around and makes the task of reconstructing what actually happened considerably more complex. The geographic reach of the evidence is the detail that keeps expanding with each new study. The proxies - the byproducts and chemical signatures left behind by an impact of this kind - are now being identified across more than half the surface of the Earth. That distribution is not consistent with a localized regional impact. It is consistent with an event of global scale - one that deposited its chemical fingerprint across multiple continents simultaneously. And Randall notes that subsequent research will almost certainly continue to expand that picture. The proxies are turning up wherever researchers look for them - and the full global distribution of the Younger Dryas impact signature is, by all indications, still in the process of being mapped.
Randall Carlson28,590 Aufrufe • vor 17 Tagen

Lancelot: undefeated in battle, greatest knight alive. Guinevere seduces him. They have an affair in the woods. Arthur discovers them, panics, and falls onto his own sword, piercing his side - in the exact same location as Jesus’ wound at the crucifixion. Fast forward to Arthur in his final battle. His old wound - the very same wound as Christ - is killing him. Arthurian legend structured around Christian symbolism. Greatest knight defeated by forbidden love. King wounded by his own weapon in Christ's wound location. Not coincidence. Deliberate symbolic parallel to crucifixion narrative.
Randall Carlson160,331 Aufrufe • vor 4 Monaten

The question Randall keeps returning to is deceptively simple. Why? What is the motive for quarrying and assembling 20 ton stones into monumental structures? In a world where virtually all of humanity was either farming or nomadically hunting and gathering, megalithic construction is not a natural cultural priority. Survival is. Feeding people is. Moving with the seasons is. Dragging enormous blocks of stone across landscapes and assembling them with precision is not something subsistence cultures do as a hobby. The eccentric outlier argument - that some culture simply became obsessed with large rocks and decided to demonstrate it - doesn't hold up under scrutiny. Outliers exist at the margins. What we find instead is megalithic construction appearing across multiple continents, in multiple periods, at a scale and level of precision that demands organisation, intention, and knowledge far beyond what the standard historical narrative assigns to these peoples. The motive question isn't a footnote. It is the whole conversation.
Randall Carlson116,583 Aufrufe • vor 3 Monaten

The ten Sumerian kings who reigned before the Great Flood are recorded as having ruled for a combined total of 432,000 years. Randall is clear that he doesn't take that figure literally - no individual king reigned for 43,200 years. However, the number itself is where the real argument begins. That same numerical sequence is embedded throughout the way modern civilization measures time and space. The moon's diameter is 2,160 miles - precisely half of 4,320, and double 1,080. The recurrence of that figure across Sumerian kingship lists and contemporary astronomical measurement is not coincidental. What Randall draws attention to next is the origin of the mile itself. It is not an arbitrary unit. It derives ultimately from human anatomy and the geometric proportions of the human body - which connects it to the same tradition of sacred geometry and human-cosmic correspondence that Randall traces across multiple ancient cultures. The implication is significant. If the numbers embedded in Sumerian myth are the same numbers encoded in our most basic units of measurement, and if those units trace back to human geometry, then the knowledge system that produced the Sumerian king lists and the one that produced our measurement conventions may share a common and much older source.
Randall Carlson101,602 Aufrufe • vor 2 Monaten