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Speaker 1: Welcome to thrilling threads. Imagine for a moment that your

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body's most essential survival mechanism, the one that keeps you

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alive when every other human on the planet would gasp

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for air, wasn't wasn't an adaptation that took millennia of slow,

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painful local evolution.

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Speaker 2: It's a powerful thought, it is, right.

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Speaker 1: Yeah, what if that vital biological superpower, I mean, a

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genuine genetic ability built right into your DNA, came from

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a source that predates our recorded.

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Speaker 2: History, from an ancestor we thought was long extinct exactly.

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Speaker 1: And what if that extinct ancestor in turn traced its

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own origins not to Earth, but well directly up to

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a specific cluster of stars.

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Speaker 2: Now you're connecting some very different worlds.

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Speaker 1: We are diving deep today, and not just into metaphor

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or philosophy. We're looking at the collision point of cutting

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edge genomics and ancient cultural memory.

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Speaker 2: We're going to the world's most extreme altitude.

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Speaker 1: The Himalayas. We're there to track a genetic advantage that

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is so profound, so specialized, that the scientific community had

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to look beyond modern Homo sapiens to explain.

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Speaker 2: It and what they found there is just stunning. It

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echoes creation myths from all over the planet.

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Speaker 1: Okay, let's unpack this. We have a compelling stack of

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material today that weaves together three seemingly unrelated threads. Seemingly first,

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you have these sacred Hindu and Buddhist narratives about divine

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knowledge transfer. Then you have the specific, highly efficient oxygen

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gene found in the Sherpet.

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Speaker 2: People, and third the discovery of a mysterious forty thousand

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year old pre human species, the Denisovans.

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Speaker 1: Our mission on this episode of Thrilling Threads is to

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synthesize these threads into a coherent, captivating narrative about human

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origins that suggests our unique abilities might be less about

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random mutation and more about well, something deliberate.

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Speaker 2: Perhaps even cosmic intervention exactly. That is precisely the challenge,

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and it's a wonderful one. We are essentially trying to

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see if ancient folklore can serve as a map for

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modern geneticists. I mean, the scope of this exploration is huge.

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Speaker 1: It forces you to connect dots you didn't even know.

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Speaker 2: We're on the same page, right, We have to link

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sacred geography, the spiritual narratives of multiple Himalayan faiths with

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the microscopic world of population genetics, all while grappling with

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the implications of these newly discovered ancient humanoid lineages.

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Speaker 1: So for you listening right now, the focus is really

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on understanding this staggering convergence.

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Speaker 2: Yes, we're looking for the common thread, the thing that

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links the unparalleled physical resilience of the sharp of people

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the existence of these ancient Dnis evans.

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Speaker 1: Who we only knew about from a single pinky bone initially.

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Speaker 2: Initially, yes, from that single bone, to the persistent global

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cultural stories that tie the origin of these specific populations

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directly to the Pleietes' star cluster. It's a true exercise

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in synthesis.

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Speaker 1: We're trying to find out what happens when deep history

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meets the deepest reaches of the cosmos, and.

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Speaker 2: To start connecting those dots, we have to begin where

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these cultures believe the knowledge and maybe even the DNA originated.

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Speaker 1: The highest most sacred points on the planet, the tops

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of the mountains. Our sources immediately establish the supreme spiritual

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significance of the high peaks in the Himalayan region. I mean,

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these mountains are not just geographical features. They are the

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bedrock of civilization and spirituality for followers of Hindu, Buddhist,

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Jane and Bond faiths, and.

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Speaker 2: They're considered, you know, universally, to be the earthly abode

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of their gods.

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Speaker 1: It phras earthly abode. That's so key, isn't that It

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implies that these locations aren't just places where the gods

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are worshiped.

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Speaker 2: No, it's where they reside, or at least where they

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access our physical plane. They're seen as spiritual magnets, power centers,

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the intersection of heaven and earth.

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Speaker 1: It makes sense if you want to talk to the

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divine or maybe find the source of some ancient power,

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you go to the place where that power literally touches

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the ground.

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Speaker 2: And this belief system dictates a physical journey, a pilgrimage, a.

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Speaker 1: Journey of purification and seeking, and our material highlights a

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really key stopping point along these ancient pilgrimage rips, the

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sap caves.

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Speaker 2: These are generally identified on the southern face of the mountain,

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a location that's pivotal because it's where pilgrims would pause

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to honor the foundational figures of this whole cosmic lineage story.

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Speaker 1: We have to pause on those figures.

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Speaker 2: The sap to issues, yes, which, as you mentioned, means

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the seven Great Sages. In the traditional view across these

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interconnected faiths, especially the Hindu traditions, these seven Sages are

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the foundational pillars. They're considered the divine benefactors of mankind.

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Speaker 1: Not just wise men divine benefactor.

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Speaker 2: The huge difference. They are seen as the original lawgivers,

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the first teachers, the source of profound knowledge and astronomy, medicine, philosophy,

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you name it.

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Speaker 1: That role of benefactors would immediately caught my attention to

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the source material. It goes so far beyond simply being wise.

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The sources are extremely specific about their purpose here on Earth.

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Speaker 2: They weren't just wandering mystics now.

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Speaker 1: They were here to train to impart their knowledge to

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human beings. This is a crucial distinction, isn't it. It

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frames the origins of human culture and are very capacity

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as a result of external non human knowledge transfer.

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Speaker 2: Absolutely, this isn't a story about humanity organically and slowly

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evolving wisdom over eons. It's presented as a deliberate, top

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down act of mentorship and instruction.

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Speaker 1: Coming from outside the existing human domain exactly.

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Speaker 2: The narrative holds that they were systematic about it. They

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fulfilled their duties, they established the necessary framework for human development,

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and then once their task.

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Speaker 1: Was complete, they just left.

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Speaker 2: They simply returned back to the sky or back to heaven.

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It's like an exit strategy for perfected masters. Their job

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here was done.

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Speaker 1: And this return to the sky is where the celestial

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threat becomes physically traceable. The narrative doesn't just stop at

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them going back to heaven.

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Speaker 2: Vaguely, No, it's very specific.

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Speaker 1: This is the synthesis point that establishes the cosmic connection.

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The sources explicitly state that after the Septusies departed, the

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Plaietes start are identified as their wives.

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Speaker 2: Or sometimes their spiritual constellation, their home base in the heavens.

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Speaker 1: That precise identification is the lingepin. It's what connects the

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myth directly to the cosmos. The Sapterishies these divine benefactors

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who are tasked with, let's be honest, upgrading humanity.

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Speaker 2: Yes, that's what it sounds like.

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Speaker 1: They're directly linked to the Pleiades star system. They are

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viewed within this traditional framework as ascended masters. Specifically connected

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to this one star cluster.

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Speaker 2: So if the source of human knowledge and advancement came

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from beings associated with a distant star system, then the

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story of human origins immediately becomes interplanetary.

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Speaker 1: But what I find even more compelling than the starlink

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itself is how these ancient beliefs translate to self identity today.

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This isn't just some beautiful abstract story from a dusty

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old book.

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Speaker 2: No, it's a living tradition.

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Speaker 1: The sources highlight the ancient belief that modern populations across India, Tibet,

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and Nepal still claim to trace their genetic lineage directly

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back to these safterrationis right.

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Speaker 2: They are not just claiming spiritual inspiration, they're claiming biological descent,

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a direct bloodline.

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Speaker 1: It's incredible. They believe they are literally descended from these

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powerful cosmic beings associated with the Pliades.

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Speaker 2: And that establishes the entire mythological blueprint. We're investigating. A

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specific population living in a specific extreme geography, claims their

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very DNA originates from starlinked benefactors who came down to

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Earth to initiate some kind of technological or biological upgrade.

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Speaker 1: It's an extraordinary claim, and for millennia it was relegated

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to the realm of folklore and religion. But now we

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have to ask, could there actually be a biological basis

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for this cosmic claim.

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Speaker 2: Which means we need to transition as smoothly as we

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can from the spiritual height of the mountains to the

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biological miracle that occurs there every single day.

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Speaker 1: Let's do it.

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Speaker 2: So, this transition demands we move from ancient scripture to

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modern physiological observation. We have to focus immediately and precisely

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on the sharp of people.

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Speaker 1: We're shifting from stories of celestial stages to the measurable,

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observable reality of high altitude survival.

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Speaker 2: And the Shurpas are justly famous worldwide for this, for

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their unmatched, almost superhuman ability to live, work, and thrive

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at extreme altitudes. We're talking about environments that are essentially

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hostile to standard human biology.

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Speaker 1: And their survival isn't just a matter of enduring hardship

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of being tough. The sources confirmed this is a profound,

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fundamental biological advantage.

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Speaker 2: We really need to emphasize the medical civility of these altitudes.

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I think people hear high altitude and they think of

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being a little out of breath on a hype.

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Speaker 1: Right, But for the average person listening, if you or

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I were to be transported rapidly up to fourteen thousand

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or sixteen thousand feet, let alone the base camp elevations

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of eighteen thousand feet in higher where sharp is regularly work.

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Speaker 2: The effects would be devastating, absolutely devastating. You're talking about

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acute mountain sickness, which can progress to high altitude pulmonary

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edema or cerebral edema.

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Speaker 1: Your lungs fill with fluid, your brain.

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Speaker 2: Swells, and it can lead very quickly to death, all

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because of hypoxia, the lack of sufficient oxygen in your

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blood and tissues.

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Speaker 1: And the typical human response to this is actually part

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of the problem, isn't it.

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Speaker 2: It is the typical human response to low oxygen is

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for your body to produce more red blood cells to

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try and carry oxygen more efficiently. But it's a clumsy solution.

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Speaker 1: Like turning up the volume on a fuzzy radio station.

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Speaker 2: Exactly. Too many red blood cells thicken the blood. It

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becomes viscous like sludge that makes the heart work much

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harder to pump it around, and it can actually increase

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your risk of stroke or heart failure over time. It's

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a detrimental cycle of adaptation.

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Speaker 1: But the Shirpas don't do this.

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Speaker 2: The sheaps somehow seem to have found a biological cheat

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code that sidesteps this entire dangerous process.

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Speaker 1: So the scientific community, seeing this incredible resilience, naturally went

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looking for the genetic mechanism, and they found it. They

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found what they called the super athlete gene, which is

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specific encoded into SHERPA DNA.

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Speaker 2: And we can get technical here because this is where

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the nugget of true insight lies. This gene is known

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to science as EPAS one EPAS one, Yes, EPAS one,

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it stands for endothelial PAS domain protein one. It's sometimes

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referred to as HIF two. And all you really need

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to know is that it's a key component of the

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hypoxia inducible factor system.

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Speaker 1: So it's like a thermostat for oxygen in the body.

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Speaker 2: A master regulator. It's the switch that detects low oxygen

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and then tells the rest of the body how to

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respond to it.

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Speaker 1: And the key function of EPAS one and the SHERPA

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population is well, it's revolutionary. Unlike lowlander populations who ramp

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up their red blood cell production dangerously.

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Speaker 2: The Schrpa variant of epas one allows their body to

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regulate oxygen much more efficiently at a cellular level. It

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fine tunes the entire system.

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Speaker 1: How does it do that? What's the mechanism.

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Speaker 2: It's a beautiful example of cellular efficiency. Instead of compensating

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for low oxygen by flooding the bloodstream with red blood cells,

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which thickens the blood, the Sherpa variant of epas one

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manages the process internally.

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Speaker 1: So it's a smarter, not harder approach.

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Speaker 2: Precisely, it modulates things like pulmonary circulation and cellular metabolism,

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making better use of the oxygen that is available. In fact,

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they maintain lower average hemoglobin concentrations than acclimatized lowlanders at

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the same elevation, way lower. That seems counterintuitive, it does,

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but it's a massive biological advantage. Their blood stays thinner,

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their heart doesn't have to work as hard, and their

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cells are just better at using every single molecule of

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oxygen that comes their way. It's less about pumping more

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fuel and more about having a perfectly efficient engine.

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Speaker 1: That is a true biological superpower built right into the code,

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and this wasn't a slow gradual discovery. The sources emphasize

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the precision of the finding. In July twenty fourteen, geneticists

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confirmed not just the genes function, but they.

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Speaker 2: Claim to have identified the mysterious source of this unique

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genetic gift.

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Speaker 1: And this is where the story shifts dramatically because the

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scientific conclusion they reached was a major paradigm.

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Speaker 2: Shift, a huge one. They discovered that this specialized, highly

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efficient genetic adaptation, this specific epas one variant, was not

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a recent successful mutation that arose within the Sharpe population

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in the last few thousand years.

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Speaker 1: So they didn't just evolve it on their own up

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in the mountains.

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Speaker 2: No, Instead, it was passed down to them, inherited from

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a mysterious ancient lineage of pre humans.

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Speaker 1: What's fascinating here is that the source of one of

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humanity's most specialized, evolutionarily advantageous genes is traced back not

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to Homo sapiens evolution in its current form.

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Speaker 2: But to an unknown, older, distinct ancestor. It's not a

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self generated upgrade, it's a downloaded patch from.

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Speaker 1: Deep history, a genetic gift.

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Speaker 2: A piece of sophisticated biological technology. You could almost say

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that was transferred to modern humans through intermingling, through interbreeding.

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Speaker 1: And this transfer event it happened long time ago.

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Speaker 2: So long ago that it predates what we commonly consider

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the formation of modern Asian populations. That phrase mysterious ancient

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lineage of pre humans. It demands an identification, and.

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Speaker 1: That identification leads us to the heart of the Altai Mountains.

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Speaker 2: Define the identity of this mysterious benefactor. We have to

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shift our focus both geographically and archaeologically. We're leaving the

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sacred peaks of the Himalayas and traveling thousands of miles

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north to the remote Altai Mountains in Siberia.

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Speaker 1: And this shift is significant. But there is a crucial

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parallel here that we can't ignore. The Altai Mountains, where

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this definitive discovery was made, are also found at extremely high.

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Speaker 2: Elevation oh for fourteen thousand feet in many areas.

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Speaker 1: So it reinforces the idea that this genetic advantage is

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deeply tied to surviving profound altitude. Whether you're in the

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Altai or the Himalayas, the pressure is the.

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Speaker 2: Same, and the evidence they found there. I mean, it

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was incredibly modest. It was almost insultingly small given its

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eventual impact.

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Speaker 1: It was a fragment, a tiny fragment.

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Speaker 2: Specifically a pinky bone, the distal phalanx of an ancient

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humanoid species. It was found in the Denisova Cave and.

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Speaker 1: Based on rigorous dating methods, the bone dates back approximately

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forty thousand years.

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Speaker 2: Forty thousand years, I mean, think about that. That pushes

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us back to a period when modern humans were interacting

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with Neanderthals, spreading out of Africa and encountering other pre

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human species across Eurasia.

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Speaker 1: But the sheer volume of information they were able to

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extract from that tiny bone fragment, that is what really

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defines the technological leap here.

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Speaker 2: That small fragment was priceless. It was taken to the

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epicenter of ancient DNA research, the Max Planck Institute for

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Evolutionary Anthropology in Germany.

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Speaker 1: This is where the really state of the art genomics happens.

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Speaker 2: It is and analyzing forty thousand year old fragmented DNA

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is a remarkable technological feat in itself. You have to

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understand the DNA is typically degraded it's contaminated with bacteria.

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It's just incredibly difficult to work with.

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Speaker 1: And the initial findings were as the source of state

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shocking an understatement.

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Speaker 2: When the researchers compared the DNA they extracted from the

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bone to all known human and pre human DNA records,

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and that includes Neanderthals, they found no comparison with human DNA.

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Speaker 1: No comparison.

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Speaker 2: It immediately established this as a distinct, previously unknown prehumer species.

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They named it Denisovin, after the cave where the bone

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was found.

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Speaker 1: I think we need to linger on that for a second.

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No comparison, it's so easy to just gloss over that phrase.

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Speaker 2: It's huge.

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Speaker 1: It means this creature diverged from the common human Neanderthal

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ancestors so long ago we're talking perhaps seven hundred thousand

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years ago, that its genetic makeup was fundamentally different. It

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followed its own separate evolutionary path for hundreds of thousands

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of years.

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Speaker 2: It wasn't a close cousin. It was an entirely separate

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branch of the homin in family tree.

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Speaker 1: And then the Max Plank team accomplished what seems like

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a technological miracle.

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Speaker 2: They sequenced the entire Denesavin genome from that small fragment, the.

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Speaker 1: Whole thing, from one pinky bone.

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Speaker 2: The entire thing. It gave us a complete biological blueprint

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of an entire ancient species. And this level of detail

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is what allowed them to conduct direct comparisons with modern

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populations worldwide.

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Speaker 1: And that is what led to the incredible realization. The

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moment that connects the ancient species to the modern.

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Speaker 2: Surpis This is the moment where the genetic threads we

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began with snap into perfect alignment, bridging forty thousand years

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of evolutionary history.

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Speaker 1: The revelation was undeniable, wasn't it completely?

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Speaker 2: The Denicivans possessed the same super athlete gene that specific

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epas one variant found in the.

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Speaker 1: Shurpace of Tibet, the exact same one.

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Speaker 2: The same highly efficient blood thinning oxygen regulating system was

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present in this ancient, distinct pre human species found thousands

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of miles away from the Himalayas.

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Speaker 1: The smoking gun was found when additional testing confirmed the

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mechanism of transfer. This is what geneticists call introgression right.

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Speaker 2: It's the transfer of genetic material from one species to

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another through repeated interbreeding. The Dinisivans didn't just happen to

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have a similar gene.

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Speaker 1: No, they actively passed down this specific, highly beneficial epas

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one variant to the modern ancestors of the Sherpas through

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ancient interbreeding events.

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Speaker 2: So think about that for a moment. Just let it

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sink in. The sherp of people who represent the absolute

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peak of human high altitude adaptation, inherited their defining biological

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trait from a creature we only know about from a

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tiny pinky bone.

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Speaker 1: This single finding just fundamentally changes how we view human origins.

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Speaker 2: It completely dismantles the simple linear model of evolution we

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were all taught in school. You know, that's straight line

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from ape to human.

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Speaker 1: As our source of state. Human origins are a lot

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more complex than what we ever imagined. It's not a tree,

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It's more like a tangled bush or a braided river.

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Speaker 2: A great analogy. We are looking at a history where

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different species Denisovans, Neanderthals, and modern Homo Savians were intermingling,

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trading genes back and forth.

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Speaker 1: So our specialized abilities, our upgrades, are actually ancient inheritances

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biological handoffs from species we previously classified as extinct rivals

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or evolutionary dead ends.

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Speaker 2: And this highly specific, crucial advantage came to us horizontally

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from another species, not vertically through our own slow internal evolution.

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Speaker 1: It's like discovering that the best software update for your

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operating system didn't come from the official developer, but was

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downloaded from a sophisticated forgotten server run by an unknown predecessor.

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Speaker 2: And that genetic gift epas one came from the Denisovans,

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which now deepens the mystery where did they get it?

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Speaker 1: Where else did their DNA go exactly?

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Speaker 2: Since that initial discovery and sequencing, the scientific community has

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been tracing the genetic footprint of the Dinisivan species all

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across the world.

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Speaker 1: And what they found reveals that the influence of this

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ancient lineage is far broader than just a single population

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in the Himalayas.

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Speaker 2: Far broader denis even DNA has now been identified in

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modern human population across massive geographic regions. Our sources identify

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these populations in places as far flung as Australia.

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Speaker 1: Particularly with Aboriginal Australians and Melanesians.

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Speaker 2: Yes they have some of the highest percentages, but also

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in the America's various specific islands, India, and of course Tibet.

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Speaker 1: This single ancient species left a truly global genetic legacy.

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It confirms widespread intermingling across multiple continents thousands and thousands

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of years ago.

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Speaker 2: That geographical spread is just astonishing. We're talking about groups

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separated by vast oceans, huge mountain ranges, and deep cultural

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divides from millennia.

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Speaker 1: Yet they all carry this ancient biological signature in their cells.

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But here is the massive non genetic common thread, the

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cultural convergence that begins to pull us right back into

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the mythological realm we started in with the saptacies.

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Speaker 2: This is where it gets really interesting.

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Speaker 1: Remarkably, the sources revealed that the native people that inhabit

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these diverse, geographically spread regions, all of whom carried traces

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of Dinnisovan DNA, they.

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Speaker 2: All share a profound and foundational connection to the Pleades

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Star cluster.

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Speaker 1: It's a global cultural coincidence tied to a specific ancient

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genetic marker.

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Speaker 2: Now, this is where I have to step in and

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try to introduce a little critical balance, because the skeptic

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in me is screaming coincidence right now.

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Speaker 1: It's a fair point.

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Speaker 2: I mean, the Pleiades or the Seven Sisters, they're one

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of the most visible and easily recognizable star clusters in

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the night sky. Couldn't this simply be a shared ancient

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astronomical calendar point or a universal myth observed by all

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early humans, regardless of their DNA.

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Speaker 1: That's a fair and essential question to ask. But the

405
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sources argue for something far more specific than just shared astronomy. Okay.

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Researchers found that these groups, from Australian Aboriginal communities to

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Indigenous Americans and the populations of India and Tibet, they

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shared a specific cultural belief which they viewed the Pleiades

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as the definitive origin point. They deemed a critic for

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the establishment of their specific culture and their history. It

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wasn't just a pretty constellation to them. It was their

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ancestral home.

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Speaker 2: So it's not just oh, look at the seven stars,

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it's that's where we came from.

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Speaker 1: Precisely, the reverence for the Pleiades isn't a minor mythological

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footnote for these cultures. It's a foundational component of their

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history and their identity. Their lineage is somehow attributed to

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these stars.

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Speaker 2: And this specific cultural attribution is happening specifically in the

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global populations that carry the physical biological legacy the DNA

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of the Dinisivans.

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Speaker 1: That convergence is explosive. You have the scientifically verified ancient

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genetic input.

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Speaker 2: The Denisovan DNA, including the epas one upgrade.

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Speaker 1: Directly aligning with an ancient, deeply held cultural belief.

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Speaker 2: The Pleiades as the source of their lineage.

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Speaker 1: This is what leads us directly to the extraterrestrial hypothesis,

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which our sources explore as the ultimate explanation for this

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astounding overlap.

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Speaker 2: And the question posed by the material is direct, isn't

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it very?

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Speaker 1: Is it possible that the Denisovan bone fragment found in Siberia,

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the one that holds the key to the surpass superpower,

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once belonged to an extraterrestrial being or at least a

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hybridized being from the Plaiodes.

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Speaker 2: This is where the mythological Saptaratius, the celestial benefactors, and

437
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the physical dnis fans the genetic benefactors merge into one

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singular narrative, and.

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Speaker 1: This convergence is so widespread in the study of ancient

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contact that the alleged visitors from this star cluster have

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earned a specific common name among researchers, the Pleiadeans, the Plaiodeans.

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It's a narrative deeply ingrained in the dialogue around ancient

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visitors in cosmic contact, suggesting that all these disparate cultures

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we've discussed are all referencing the same foundational event.

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Speaker 2: So if we follow the threads of the extraterrestrial hypothesis

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laid out in the sources, we have to look at

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the description of these alleged Pliodium visitors based.

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Speaker 1: On reports gathered over centuries or at least those compiled

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in the modern era through various.

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Speaker 2: Accounts, and the descriptions collected often focus on their physical attributes.

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They are frequently described as being primarily Nordics.

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Speaker 1: Tall, fair haired, blue eyed.

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Speaker 2: That kind of things exactly, And this resemblance to a

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specific human phenotype immediately raises that compelling question our sources pose,

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do they look like us? Or should we be asking

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if we look like them?

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Speaker 1: That's a huge shift in perspective.

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Speaker 2: It is it suggests not just passing contact, but a

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deep physical template or a genetic blueprint that was intentionally

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established early in human history. The Nordic description is almost

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a common trope in contact reports, reinforcing this idea of

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a specific, non hostile and perhaps supervisory alien race.

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Speaker 1: But the descriptions are complex. Sometimes they seem contradictory, which

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I think.

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Speaker 2: Reflects the difficulty of translating a cosmic reality into human

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language and perception. The sources also mentioned descriptions of Pleiadeans

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as light beings.

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Speaker 1: Meaning non corporeal or energy based entities.

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Speaker 2: Yes, and sometimes blue skinned beings that arrive from the sky.

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And that blueskin is fascinating when you consider how often

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blueskin figures appear in Hindu iconography, like Krishna, like Krishna

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and Shiva, often representing divinity and celestial origin. It links

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us right back to those subterieschi myths we started with.

474
00:24:14,599 --> 00:24:17,599
Speaker 1: The common denominator across all these stories isn't just that

475
00:24:17,640 --> 00:24:21,319
they visited, but that they were active participants in our development.

476
00:24:21,519 --> 00:24:22,720
Speaker 2: That's the core belief.

477
00:24:23,000 --> 00:24:26,119
Speaker 1: The idea relating the sources is that ancient civilizations were

478
00:24:26,160 --> 00:24:29,240
fully aware that the Palladians had been in contact with

479
00:24:29,319 --> 00:24:32,960
Earth since the beginning of time. This is a continuous,

480
00:24:33,079 --> 00:24:36,680
intentional narrative of intervention, not an accidental.

481
00:24:36,200 --> 00:24:40,200
Speaker 2: Flyby, and that continuous presence leads to the most provocative

482
00:24:40,279 --> 00:24:40,839
theory of.

483
00:24:40,839 --> 00:24:43,160
Speaker 1: All genetic engineering seeding.

484
00:24:43,599 --> 00:24:47,640
Speaker 2: Yes, if these highly advanced beings were here since the beginning,

485
00:24:47,680 --> 00:24:50,960
and if they're interested in human evolution, perhaps even responsible

486
00:24:51,000 --> 00:24:53,720
for it, then the theory suggests it's possible that the

487
00:24:53,759 --> 00:24:56,440
Pleiadeans seeded the earth with their own DNA.

488
00:24:56,359 --> 00:24:58,680
Speaker 1: And the motivation for such a profound act of genetic

489
00:24:58,759 --> 00:25:02,359
manipulation is crucial. Here It's explained not in terms of

490
00:25:02,400 --> 00:25:03,759
exploitation or dominance.

491
00:25:03,839 --> 00:25:07,880
Speaker 2: No, it's framed as a deliberate act of enhancement, an upgrade.

492
00:25:08,079 --> 00:25:11,519
Speaker 1: The goal of this seating was specifically to upgrade the

493
00:25:11,519 --> 00:25:14,920
genetic material of humanity to ensure that it will continue

494
00:25:14,960 --> 00:25:15,519
to evolve.

495
00:25:15,559 --> 00:25:18,640
Speaker 2: And think about that EPSS one gene, the dinicivant upgrade

496
00:25:18,640 --> 00:25:21,759
that gave a specific human population the ability to survive

497
00:25:21,799 --> 00:25:25,839
the impossible. If you are an advanced civilization looking to

498
00:25:25,920 --> 00:25:29,960
ensure the survival of a fledgling species in harsh environments, what.

499
00:25:30,000 --> 00:25:32,759
Speaker 1: Better way to upgrade them than by introducing a hyper

500
00:25:32,839 --> 00:25:34,400
efficient oxygen regulator.

501
00:25:34,480 --> 00:25:38,079
Speaker 2: It fits perfectly into the framework of intentional biological assistance

502
00:25:38,599 --> 00:25:41,519
a targeted genetic patch delivered by an external source.

503
00:25:42,200 --> 00:25:45,000
Speaker 1: So this takes us to the ultimate synthesis point. We

504
00:25:45,079 --> 00:25:48,079
have to review the entire extraordinary chain of evidence we've

505
00:25:48,160 --> 00:25:48,519
laid out.

506
00:25:48,640 --> 00:25:49,160
Speaker 2: Let's do it.

507
00:25:49,200 --> 00:25:52,599
Speaker 1: We started in the Himalayas with a divine Starlink lineage,

508
00:25:52,960 --> 00:25:56,559
the septarities who imparted knowledge and were connected to the Pleiades.

509
00:25:56,680 --> 00:26:00,279
Speaker 2: Then we found a modern scientific mystery, a genetic superpower,

510
00:26:00,680 --> 00:26:04,039
the SHRPA high altitude gene that defines survival in that

511
00:26:04,160 --> 00:26:04,960
very same region.

512
00:26:05,039 --> 00:26:08,119
Speaker 1: We trace that gene back forty thousand years to an

513
00:26:08,200 --> 00:26:12,480
ancient non human source, the Nisivan DNA.

514
00:26:11,920 --> 00:26:14,960
Speaker 2: And finally we find that every modern population on Earth

515
00:26:15,000 --> 00:26:19,640
carrying that ancient Dnisovan DNA shares a deep foundational cultural

516
00:26:19,680 --> 00:26:23,160
belief tied to those same stars, the Pleiades, which.

517
00:26:23,079 --> 00:26:26,079
Speaker 1: Leads directly to the theory of cosmic genetic intervention or

518
00:26:26,160 --> 00:26:27,039
pleiady in seeding.

519
00:26:27,279 --> 00:26:29,880
Speaker 2: It is a remarkable narrative structure. I mean, it forces

520
00:26:29,960 --> 00:26:31,599
us to confront the scale of this.

521
00:26:31,559 --> 00:26:35,160
Speaker 1: Claim, the claim being that our most specialized life saving

522
00:26:35,200 --> 00:26:38,880
adaptations might not be the result of a slow, random

523
00:26:39,000 --> 00:26:41,720
terrestrial mutation process that just happened work out.

524
00:26:41,920 --> 00:26:46,039
Speaker 2: Instead, they could be the result of an intentional genetic upgrade,

525
00:26:46,440 --> 00:26:50,400
a biological template inserted by a pre human ancestor who

526
00:26:50,440 --> 00:26:54,759
is culturally and mythologically linked to a specific star cluster.

527
00:26:54,559 --> 00:26:58,200
Speaker 1: A star cluster revered by every modern population carrying that

528
00:26:58,279 --> 00:26:59,240
ancestor's DNA.

529
00:26:59,480 --> 00:27:02,960
Speaker 2: It's suggests purpose where we previously assumed only the randomness

530
00:27:02,960 --> 00:27:03,480
of evolution.

531
00:27:03,759 --> 00:27:06,880
Speaker 1: As we step back from this exploration on thrilling threads,

532
00:27:07,240 --> 00:27:10,240
it's vital to reflect on the nature of information itself.

533
00:27:09,920 --> 00:27:13,559
Speaker 2: I agree, even if we maintain a rigorous scientific distance

534
00:27:13,599 --> 00:27:17,000
from the extraterrestrial hypothesis, which is important to do. Of course,

535
00:27:17,039 --> 00:27:22,200
the sources reveal a profound and frankly statistically stunning convergence.

536
00:27:22,319 --> 00:27:23,599
Speaker 1: It's hard to dismiss the.

537
00:27:23,519 --> 00:27:27,839
Speaker 2: Populations who maintain a foundational cultural claim of lineage from

538
00:27:27,920 --> 00:27:32,079
celestial beings. The sceptring She's associated with the Pleiades are

539
00:27:32,119 --> 00:27:35,359
the very same populations who have now been scientifically proven

540
00:27:35,400 --> 00:27:39,599
to carry the most ancient, most specialized, and most advantageous

541
00:27:39,640 --> 00:27:42,160
genetic material available to modern.

542
00:27:41,920 --> 00:27:45,200
Speaker 1: Humans, the Denisovans superathlete gene.

543
00:27:45,519 --> 00:27:48,359
Speaker 2: The myth and the genetic map overlap in a way

544
00:27:48,400 --> 00:27:52,240
that science struggles to explain purely through terrestrial coincidence. It's

545
00:27:52,240 --> 00:27:54,559
a very difficult circle to square, and.

546
00:27:54,519 --> 00:27:57,720
Speaker 1: This brings us back to the fundamental mechanisms of evolution itself.

547
00:27:58,160 --> 00:28:00,680
When we talk about how genetic material is passed down,

548
00:28:00,880 --> 00:28:03,359
we usually talk about vertical inheritance.

549
00:28:03,000 --> 00:28:06,240
Speaker 2: Right, the slow generational transfer from parent to child within

550
00:28:06,240 --> 00:28:08,000
a species. It's the standard model.

551
00:28:08,240 --> 00:28:11,640
Speaker 1: But what the Diniesivan discovery confirms is the profound power

552
00:28:11,680 --> 00:28:13,400
of horizontal transfer.

553
00:28:13,079 --> 00:28:16,920
Speaker 2: The intermingling and handoff of genetic material between entirely different

554
00:28:16,960 --> 00:28:18,880
species or pre human lineages.

555
00:28:19,200 --> 00:28:22,400
Speaker 1: And the evidence suggests that the most advantageous leap in

556
00:28:22,480 --> 00:28:26,000
human adaptation, the ability to survive at the highest altitudes

557
00:28:26,000 --> 00:28:28,880
on the planet, came from that horizontal transfer.

558
00:28:28,680 --> 00:28:31,880
Speaker 2: A genetic download from an external, older species.

559
00:28:32,119 --> 00:28:35,279
Speaker 1: This raises an important question that geneticists are still grappling with.

560
00:28:35,359 --> 00:28:39,200
Speaker 2: Right absolutely, how many of our other defining human traits

561
00:28:39,240 --> 00:28:43,240
are intelligence, our capacity for language, even our susceptibility to

562
00:28:43,279 --> 00:28:48,279
certain diseases are actually ancient biological handoffs from species. We

563
00:28:48,319 --> 00:28:52,759
only dimly understand how much of us isn't originally us?

564
00:28:53,000 --> 00:28:55,680
Speaker 1: That is the ultimate knowledge nugget here. The sharp of

565
00:28:55,759 --> 00:28:59,720
superathlete gene is a direct measurable genetic legacy from the

566
00:28:59,759 --> 00:29:03,480
din Nivans, an ancient pre human species. This DNA has

567
00:29:03,519 --> 00:29:07,880
been scattered globally, creating a genetic diaspora across Australia, the Pacific,

568
00:29:07,920 --> 00:29:09,000
the Americas, in Tibet.

569
00:29:09,200 --> 00:29:11,759
Speaker 2: And what ties all these genetically linked groups together is

570
00:29:11,799 --> 00:29:15,240
that profound shared cultural belief that the Pleiades is their

571
00:29:15,279 --> 00:29:17,000
origin point, their ancestral home.

572
00:29:17,279 --> 00:29:20,680
Speaker 1: If a small forty thousand year old pinky bone found

573
00:29:20,759 --> 00:29:24,359
high in the Altai Mountains can completely rewrite human evolution,

574
00:29:24,880 --> 00:29:30,119
confirming massive inner species interaction and revealing a biological superpower

575
00:29:30,319 --> 00:29:32,880
that lines up perfectly with ancient star.

576
00:29:32,759 --> 00:29:35,480
Speaker 2: Myths, then we have to ask ourselves.

577
00:29:35,240 --> 00:29:39,519
Speaker 1: What other specialized adaptations lie dormant in our DNA, What

578
00:29:39,599 --> 00:29:43,920
other genetic upgrades, perhaps less obvious than oxygen efficiency or

579
00:29:44,000 --> 00:29:46,920
waiting to be traced back to these complex ancestors who

580
00:29:47,000 --> 00:29:48,480
may or may not have come from the stars.

581
00:29:48,599 --> 00:29:49,759
Speaker 2: It's a staggering thought.

582
00:29:50,160 --> 00:29:51,759
Speaker 1: So we turn it over to you. What does this

583
00:29:51,799 --> 00:29:54,440
all mean to you? Given the scientific evidence of the

584
00:29:54,480 --> 00:29:57,720
Denisovan link and the widespread cultural reverence for the Pliades

585
00:29:58,000 --> 00:30:01,160
in the very populations carrying that gene, do you think

586
00:30:01,160 --> 00:30:04,559
it's possible that ancient human mythology was actually just historical record,

587
00:30:04,920 --> 00:30:05,279
or does.

588
00:30:05,200 --> 00:30:08,039
Speaker 2: The fact that our most useful genetic adaptation comes from

589
00:30:08,039 --> 00:30:11,839
a mysterious pre human source suggests that human evolution is

590
00:30:11,960 --> 00:30:13,960
less about survival of the fittest and.

591
00:30:14,000 --> 00:30:16,680
Speaker 1: Much much more about survival of the upgraded. Let us

592
00:30:16,720 --> 00:30:17,279
know what you think.

