The authors argue that the scientific community employs a "knowledge filter" (a form of confirmation bias) that leads them to ignore, suppress, or explain away archaeological evidence that contradicts the dominant evolutionary paradigm.
Forbidden Archeology: The Hidden History of the Human Race , published in 1993 by Michael A. Cremo and Richard L. Thompson, is a 914-page work that challenges the standard Darwinian narrative of human evolution. Core Arguments Forbidden Archeology The Hidden History of the ...
The text documents hundreds of purported anomalies, such as human bones and stone tools found in extremely old geological strata. Examples include the 2.8-billion-year-old grooved spheres from South Africa and modern human fossils in 30- to 40-million-year-old gravels at Table Mountain, California. Scientific Reception The authors argue that the scientific community employs
The book's central premise is that anatomically modern humans have existed on Earth for millions, or even billions, of years—far longer than the approximately 200,000 to 300,000 years accepted by mainstream science. Thompson, is a 914-page work that challenges the
While the book has become an underground classic among alternative history enthusiasts, the mainstream scientific community largely classifies it as or pseudoarchaeology .