imagine only some shitholes in africa survive. It will be dust in 50 years.
What will be dust, the pyramids? And survive what?
It's crossed my mind a lot that the only way our civilization gets remembered 12,000 years into the future is if someone bothers to preserve it. And quite frankly, if the northern hemisphere got wiped out (in a massive war or something) I have zero reason to think the southern hemisphere would prioritize preservation of technology or history. Because it doesn't now.
Hangar straps even in the picture.
I'm starting to get more interested in Amazonian ruins, and the idea that a civilization might have once spanned the Sahara AND Amazon regions. There are old maps that depict Africa and South America as being much closer together than they are now, and were done by Greek/Roman historians based on what they'd been told about the past. One map even had a clearly-marked civilization spanning the Amazon AND west Africa, with a sea between them. Now who knows how much of this is even remotely accurate, but it's an interesting thought, given we now know the Amazon and Sahara were both really nice livable regions 12,000 years ago.
Starting to think there's some credence to the "polar shift" apocalypse theory, or even that a massive tectonic plate shift might have taken place. If Africa and South America moved apart fairly suddenly, it'd cause global flooding that would certainly wipe out whatever civilization lived in that region. Also South America would have then collided with the Mu plate, causing THAT theoretical continent to get pushed under the ocean in one fell swoop.
Main rationale for the idea of one civilization spanning Amazon/Sahara is the fact that A) Ancient architecture is so similar across both regions, B) The pantheon of deities is so similar across both regions, C) Aztecs are literally named after Atlan, as their ancestors hailed from "Aztlan", D) Advanced language sprouted up in both regions parallel to each other at the supposed "dawn of civilization", as if it was already there and was merely separated by an ocean.
I think the Tower of Babel, great flood, Atlas "dropping the western edge of the world" i.e. Gibraltar, and so forth are all legends based on real events that took place either 12,000ish years ago or in the intervening few thousand years of recovery. 12,000 years, or even 8,000 years, is an unfathomably long time. The only reason we even know anything about 2-3000 years ago is that Greeks and Romans bothered to actually record anything.