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After the Flood, Cataclysm and the Forgotten Origins of Civilization. ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS AND MYSTERIES, #1
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233586002
- EAN9798233586002
- Date de parution24/12/2025
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
A forgotten chapter of human history may be hiding in plain sight-not in secret vaults, but in the oldest stories ever told. Across continents, civilizations preserved the same haunting pattern: a world that once thrived, a sudden catastrophe of water, fire, and darkness, and scattered survivors forced to rebuild from fragments. This book follows the trail where geology and myth overlap-drowned coastlines, abrupt climate shocks, and the global memory of endings that refuse to die.
Through a gripping, evidence-minded narrative, it explores how cataclysms can erase entire landscapes, scramble the archaeological record, and leave behind only the most durable artifact of all: story. From the "flood that swallowed the first world" to legends of burning skies and long dark ages, these traditions begin to look less like fantasy and more like compressed memory-warnings carried forward across millennia.
Blending deep-time climate history, collapse dynamics, and the logic of lost coastlines, this book asks a provocative question: what if civilization has restarted more than once? Powerful, cinematic, and relentlessly thought-provoking, it reframes prehistory as a cycle of rise, rupture, and return-and leaves you looking at ancient ruins, sacred time, and humanity's future with new eyes.
Through a gripping, evidence-minded narrative, it explores how cataclysms can erase entire landscapes, scramble the archaeological record, and leave behind only the most durable artifact of all: story. From the "flood that swallowed the first world" to legends of burning skies and long dark ages, these traditions begin to look less like fantasy and more like compressed memory-warnings carried forward across millennia.
Blending deep-time climate history, collapse dynamics, and the logic of lost coastlines, this book asks a provocative question: what if civilization has restarted more than once? Powerful, cinematic, and relentlessly thought-provoking, it reframes prehistory as a cycle of rise, rupture, and return-and leaves you looking at ancient ruins, sacred time, and humanity's future with new eyes.













