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Anthropic Files for IPO — and the Valuation Wall Street Is Pricing In Should Alarm YouTechnologyCleveland Trades Myles Garrett to the Rams — and Admits It Has No Idea When It's Winning AgainSportsUK Cancels Travel Authorisation for Two US Commentators Who Criticised IsraelPoliticsSerena Williams, 44, Is Back. The Tour Should Be Paying Attention.SportsIran Pulls the Plug on U.S. Back-Channel Talks — and Hormuz Is Now on the TablePoliticsEagles Are Ready to Move A.J. Brown — and the Patriots Are the Only Real BuyerSportsEx-Elite Cop Held Without Bail in Murder of Man Who Testified Against PowerPoliticsUS Strikes Iranian Soil as Gulf States Unite Against Tehran's Regional AssaultPoliticsUS and Iran Trade Strikes Across the Gulf — While Both Claim the Ceasefire Still StandsPoliticsKohli Scores 75* to Hand RCB Back-to-Back IPL Titles — Then Wears the ReceiptsSportsDavide Ancelotti Gets Lille Job — But the Surname Does the Heavy LiftingSportsConor McGregor returning to UFC in July for fight vs. Max HollowaySportsEuphoria Is Done. Levinson Killed the Show the Only Way It Could End.EntertainmentJames Milner Retires at 40 — The Premier League's Most Durable Man Hangs Up His BootsSportsEuphoria Is Over. Season 4 Isn't Coming. Here's What HBO Won't Say Plainly.EntertainmentFrance and UK Board Russian Shadow-Fleet Tanker in Atlantic — Moscow Calls It PiracyPoliticsAsia's Factories Are Stockpiling for a War Nobody Wants to NameBusinessTrump Declares Iran 'Wants a Deal' While Missiles Still Fly Near HormuzPoliticsMahindra Outsells Hyundai Again — India's Auto Pecking Order Is ShiftingBusinessIndia Zeroes Out Cotton Import Duty — Textile Mills Win, But the Fix Has an Expiry DateBusinessArmenia's June 7 Vote Is a Referendum on Leaving Russia's Orbit for GoodPoliticsIndia's Restaurants Are Paying Twice What They Paid in January for Cooking GasBusinessOchoa at 40: Mexico's Six-Cup Keeper Is Both a Record and a ReckoningSportsFive Workers Killed in Explosion at South Korea's Premier Defense ManufacturerBusinessAnthropic Files for IPO — and the Valuation Wall Street Is Pricing In Should Alarm YouTechnologyCleveland Trades Myles Garrett to the Rams — and Admits It Has No Idea When It's Winning AgainSportsUK Cancels Travel Authorisation for Two US Commentators Who Criticised IsraelPoliticsSerena Williams, 44, Is Back. The Tour Should Be Paying Attention.SportsIran Pulls the Plug on U.S. Back-Channel Talks — and Hormuz Is Now on the TablePoliticsEagles Are Ready to Move A.J. Brown — and the Patriots Are the Only Real BuyerSportsEx-Elite Cop Held Without Bail in Murder of Man Who Testified Against PowerPoliticsUS Strikes Iranian Soil as Gulf States Unite Against Tehran's Regional AssaultPoliticsUS and Iran Trade Strikes Across the Gulf — While Both Claim the Ceasefire Still StandsPoliticsKohli Scores 75* to Hand RCB Back-to-Back IPL Titles — Then Wears the ReceiptsSportsDavide Ancelotti Gets Lille Job — But the Surname Does the Heavy LiftingSportsConor McGregor returning to UFC in July for fight vs. Max HollowaySportsEuphoria Is Done. Levinson Killed the Show the Only Way It Could End.EntertainmentJames Milner Retires at 40 — The Premier League's Most Durable Man Hangs Up His BootsSportsEuphoria Is Over. Season 4 Isn't Coming. Here's What HBO Won't Say Plainly.EntertainmentFrance and UK Board Russian Shadow-Fleet Tanker in Atlantic — Moscow Calls It PiracyPoliticsAsia's Factories Are Stockpiling for a War Nobody Wants to NameBusinessTrump Declares Iran 'Wants a Deal' While Missiles Still Fly Near HormuzPoliticsMahindra Outsells Hyundai Again — India's Auto Pecking Order Is ShiftingBusinessIndia Zeroes Out Cotton Import Duty — Textile Mills Win, But the Fix Has an Expiry DateBusinessArmenia's June 7 Vote Is a Referendum on Leaving Russia's Orbit for GoodPoliticsIndia's Restaurants Are Paying Twice What They Paid in January for Cooking GasBusinessOchoa at 40: Mexico's Six-Cup Keeper Is Both a Record and a ReckoningSportsFive Workers Killed in Explosion at South Korea's Premier Defense ManufacturerBusiness

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Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

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Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

Atlantis Was Real, It Was Just Called Doggerland And the Sea Swallowed It While People Watched

A populated, forested country the size of a nation once joined Britain to the European mainland, and it drowned within human memory. The proof isn't in Plato; it's in the seabed.

▶ Video· 4 sourcesDoggerlandMesolithic Europesea level rise
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

The 1513 Map That "Knew" Antarctica — Or A Coastline Bent To Fit The Page

An Ottoman admiral's surviving map fragment shows a southern landmass that some claim is ice-free Antarctica, charted three centuries before the continent was found. The map is real, the admiral is real, and the Antarctica reading is where it falls apart.

Inverted World· 3 sourcesPiri Reis mapAntarcticaCharles Hapgood
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

Europe's 'Largest Pyramid' Is a Hill. 25 Scientists Begged UNESCO to Make Them Stop Digging.

A Bosnian businessman declared the natural hill of Visocica a 12,000-year-old pyramid and started excavating. Geologists identified it as a textbook flatiron — and a coalition of scholars petitioned UNESCO to protect the real archaeology being destroyed.

Inverted World· 3 sourcesBosnian pyramidsSemir Osmanagicflatiron landform
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

The Sahara Has a 25-Mile Bullseye, and It Inconveniently Matches the One Detail Everyone Forgot About Atlantis

The Richat Structure in Mauritania is a vast concentric-ringed formation that superficially echoes Plato's described capital of Atlantis, inverting the legend from sunken ocean city to landlocked desert. The geology says volcanic dome; the coincidence still nags.

Inverted World· 3 sourcesRichat StructureAtlantisPlato Critias
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

The Drowned Staircase: Did an Ice Age Culture Carve Yonaguni Before the Sea Swallowed It?

A terraced stone formation lies 25 meters underwater off Japan's southernmost island. One marine geologist says it was shaped by human hands during the last Ice Age; another says nature did it all. Both have dived it for decades.

▶ Video· 3 sourcesIce Age sea level riseunderwater archaeologyYonaguni
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

The City Built on the Sea: 750,000 Tons of Basalt, Stacked by a Few Thousand Islanders, and No One Wrote Down How

Nan Madol is a city of nearly a hundred artificial islands made of stacked basalt 'logs' in a Pacific lagoon. The scale is staggering, the dating is now precise, and the engineering still has no surviving instruction manual.

▶ Video· 3 sourcesNan MadolSaudeleur dynastycolumnar basalt
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

The 25,000-Year-Old Pyramid That a Journal Published, Then Erased: Inside the Gunung Padang Retraction

A peer-reviewed journal published a claim that an Indonesian hill was a man-made pyramid up to 27,000 years old. Within months it was retracted, because the radiocarbon dates came from soil, with no sign of human hands.

▶ Video· 3 sourcesGunung Padangpseudoarchaeologyretracted paper
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

Hunter-Gatherers Built a Temple 6,000 Years Before Stonehenge. The Textbook Has the Order Backwards.

At Gobekli Tepe in Turkey, foragers who had no pottery, no metal, and no farming quarried and raised multi-ton carved pillars into monumental enclosures around 9500 BC. It flips the textbook rule that settled agriculture had to come first.

Inverted World· 3 sourcesGobekli TepeNeolithicKlaus Schmidt
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

The '500,000-Year-Old' Machine Inside a Geode Was a Model T Spark Plug

In 1961 rockhounds cracked open what looked like a geode and found a machined metal core inside, supposedly half a million years old. X-rays and a spark-plug collectors' club identified it as a 1920s Champion plug.

Inverted World· 2 sourcesCoso artifactout-of-place artifactspark plug
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

The H-Blocks That Shouldn't Exist: Machine-Perfect Andesite in the Bolivian Sky

At 12,800 feet on the Andean altiplano lie interlocking andesite blocks cut with right angles, flat planes, and drilled holes so uniform they look milled. The question isn't whether they're real. It's how hammer-stones did it.

Inverted World· 2 sourcesPuma PunkuTiwanakuprecision stonework
Lost Civilizations & Forbidden Archaeology

Sacsayhuamán: The Inca Fit 100-Ton Boulders So Tight You Still Can't Slip a Blade Between Them

Above Cusco, the Inca interlocked colossal irregular limestone blocks — some weighing well over 100 tons — into mortarless walls whose joints are still too tight for a knife. The official toolkit: hammerstones, ramps, and human muscle. The precision keeps inviting bigger questions.

Inverted World· 2 sourcesSacsayhuamánpolygonal masonryInca engineering