Graham Hancock


Graham Bruce Hancock is a British author known for promoting pseudoscientific explanations of ancient civilizations and hypothetical lost lands. Hancock argues that an advanced society with spiritual technology thrived during the last Ice Age until comet impacts triggered the Younger Dryas about 12,900 years ago. He maintains that survivors of the disaster shared their knowledge with hunter-gatherer communities in regions such as ancient Egypt, Sumer, and Mesoamerica, sparking the earliest known civilizations.
Born in Edinburgh, Hancock studied sociology at Durham University before joining British newspapers and magazines as a journalist. His first three books examined international development, including Lords of Poverty, a well-received critique of corruption in the aid system. Beginning with The Sign and the Seal in 1992, he shifted to speculative accounts of human prehistory and ancient civilizations, publishing a dozen books that include Fingerprints of the Gods and Magicians of the Gods.
Scholars describe Hancock's investigations of archaeological evidence, myths, and historical documents as mimicking investigative journalism while lacking accuracy, consistency, and impartiality. They label his work pseudoarchaeology and pseudohistory because they see it as biased toward preconceived conclusions that ignore context, misrepresent sources, cherry pick and omit evidence that contradicts his claims. Hancock's idea of an advanced ice age civilization is seen as a variant of the hyperdiffusionism hypothesis that has been advocated by various authors since the 19th century.
Anthropologist Jeb Card characterizes Hancock's writings as paranormal and views his proposed Ice Age civilization as a modern mythic narrative focused on secret and spiritual knowledge, with Hancock contending that members of the ice age civilisation had psychic abilities and communicated with "powerful nonphysical beings" through psychedelic use. Hancock portrays himself as a culture hero challenging the "dogmatism" of academics, presenting his work as more valid than professional archaeology and as "a path to truly understanding reality and the spiritual elements denied by materialist science", even while citing science to support his ideas. He has not submitted his writings for scholarly peer review, and they have not been published in academic journals.
Hancock has written two fantasy novels and in 2013 delivered a controversial TEDx talk promoting the psychoactive drink ayahuasca. His ideas have inspired several films and he presented the Netflix series Ancient Apocalypse based on his theories. He makes regular appearances on the podcast The Joe Rogan Experience to promote his claims.

Early life and journalism

Graham Bruce Hancock was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1950. He moved to India with his parents at the age of three, where his father worked as a surgeon. After returning to the United Kingdom, he graduated from Durham University with a degree in sociology in 1973.
Hancock reported for British newspapers including The Times, The Sunday Times, The Independent, and The Guardian. He co-edited New Internationalist magazine from 1976 to 1979 and served as the East Africa correspondent for The Economist from 1981 to 1983. His first books focused on economic and social development in developing countries. Lords of Poverty: The Power, Prestige, and Corruption of the International Aid Business drew on his reporting about international aid for The Economist and argued that entrenched corruption made the aid system irredeemable, describing it as "inherently bad, bad to the bone, and utterly beyond reform". Reviewers praised the book's forceful critique of global aid, yet many disputed Hancock's conclusion that aid is inherently harmful.
Hancock later acknowledged missteps during this period, including what he described as "friendly personal terms" with Somali dictator Siad Barre and links to Ethiopian dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam. He wrote a favorable profile of Barre for The Independent, noting that the regime facilitated parts of his trip and conceding that he "definitely made a mistake" by establishing those connections. He has said that by 1987 he was "pretty much permanently stoned" because he believed cannabis improved his writing.

Later writing

The publication of The Sign and the Seal: The Quest for the Lost Ark of the Covenant in 1992 marked a career transition from his earlier development reporting to books pursuing speculative through lines among archaeological, historical, and cross-cultural material. Reporting by The Independent in 1995 described how he pivoted in 1989 from work with the Barre regime to researching the Ark of the Covenant, an effort that led to The Sign and the Seal. His subsequent titles include Fingerprints of the Gods, Magicians of the Gods, Keeper of Genesis, The Mars Mystery, Heaven's Mirror, Underworld: The Mysterious Origins of Civilization, and Talisman: Sacred Cities, Secret Faith.
Hancock's first novel, Entangled: The Eater of Souls, launched a planned fantasy series in 2010 that follows "two brave young women" who "do battle with a demon who travels through time." The story emerged from his ayahuasca experiences, which he said gave him "a series of intense visions" revealing the characters and plot. He described writing it as "tremendous fun", free from the academic scrutiny of his non-fiction work, joking "What was there to lose when my critics already described my factual books as fiction?".

''The Sign and the Seal'' (1992)

The Sign and the Seal chronicles Hancock's investigation of how the Ark of the Covenant might have traveled from ancient Israel to Ethiopia. He follows a path through Elephantine and Tana Qirqos and connects the story to medieval Ethiopia and the Knights Templar. Jonathan Kirsch of the Los Angeles Times described the book as "part travelogue, part true-adventure, part mystery-thriller" yet concluded that it was "a whacking big dose of amateur scholarship alloyed with a fervid imagination." Kirkus Reviews noted Hancock's claim "that the Lost Ark of the Covenant really exists" and framed the project as an extension of his Ethiopian reportage and speculation.

''Fingerprints of the Gods'' (1995)

Hancock's Fingerprints of the Gods: The Evidence of Earth's Lost Civilization argues that an advanced society perished at the end of the last Ice Age and that its survivors transmitted astronomical and architectural knowledge to later cultures. The narrative reads monuments in the Americas, Africa, and Asia as fragments of that inheritance. Archaeologist Garrett G. Fagan wrote that the book drags "artefacts, monuments, entire cities, or whole cultures" into a predetermined conclusion while ignoring their historical contexts. Kenneth Feder observed that Hancock's thesis reflected diffusionist arguments that had circulated for decades and concluded that it offered nothing original.

''The Message of the Sphinx'' (1996)

The Message of the Sphinx: A Quest for the Hidden Legacy of Mankind, a.k.a. Keeper of Genesis in the United Kingdom, is a pseudoarchaeology book written by Hancock and Robert Bauval in 1996 which argues that the creation of the Sphinx and Pyramids occurred as far back as 10,500 BC using astronomical data. Working from the premise that the Giza pyramid complex encodes a message, the book begins with the fringe Sphinx water erosion hypothesis, evidence that the authors believe suggests that deep erosion patterns on the flanks of the Sphinx were caused by thousands of years of heavy rain. The authors use computer simulations of the sky to claim that the pyramids, representing the three stars of Orion's Belt, together with associated causeways and alignments, constitute a record in stone of the celestial array at the vernal equinox in 10,500 BC. This moment, they contend, represents Zep Tepi, the "First Time", often referenced in the hieroglyphic record. They state that the initiation rites of the Egyptian pharaohs replicate on Earth the Sun's journey through the stars in this remote era, and they suggest that the "Hall of Records" of a lost civilization may be located by treating the Giza Plateau as a template of these same ancient skies.

''The Mars Mystery'' (1997)

In The Mars Mystery, Hancock and his coauthors Robert Bauval and John Grigsby interpreted low-resolution Viking lander images of the Cydonia region of Mars as evidence that the so-called "Face on Mars" and a "five sided pyramid" were created by an advanced Martian civilization later destroyed by a catastrophe, linking the "Face on Mars" to Egyptian mythology, and comparing the supposed Martian pyramid with Egyptian and Mesoamerican pyramids. They suggested that the "Face on Mars" represented a deliberate message to the people of Earth, in the words of reviewer David V. Barrett: "a warning that a Mars-like doom lies in wait for the Earth unless we take steps to avert it."

''Talisman'' (2004)

Talisman: Sacred Cities, Secret Faith, coauthored with Robert Bauval, according to David V. Barrett, primarily focuses on "the stream of heterodox religious beliefs, from early Christianity to the 18th century.", including the Corpus Hermeticum the Cathars, Rosicrucians, the Freemasons and the Knights Templar. The book makes a number of speculative claims, including that areas of Paris are inspired by Egyptian mythology, that there are links between Solomon's Temple and the Twin Towers as well as between the Star of David and The Pentagon. David V. Barrett dismissed the book as "a mish-mash of badly-connected, half-argued theories" stating that at the end of the their book they begin "promulgating a version of the old Jewish-Masonic plot", and journalist Damian Thompson later described Hancock and Bauval as fantasists.