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History of the Olmec, Maya, Aztec, Inca & Amazon Civilization - Ed Barnhart

2026-04-06 Film & Animation
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Before Skool
Before Skool
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Description

Ed Barnhart (full name: Edwin Lawrence Barnhart, born October 29, 1968) is a prominent American archaeologist, explorer, and educator specializing in the ancient civilizations of the Americas, particularly the Maya, Olmec and Aztec. The Olmecs were the earliest known major civilization in Mesoamerica (what is now Mexico and Central America). They flourished roughly from 1400 BCE to 400 BCE along the tropical Gulf Coast of southern Veracruz and Tabasco, Mexico. The Maya were one of the most advanced and longest-lasting civilizations in ancient Mesoamerica (present-day southern Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador). They did not suddenly appear or disappear — their culture spanned more than 3,000 years, from roughly 2000 BCE all the way into the Spanish conquest (and their descendants are still thriving today). The Aztecs (also known as the Mexica) were the last great civilization of ancient Mesoamerica. They rose to power in central Mexico and built one of the largest and most powerful empires in the Americas right up until the Spanish arrived in 1519. The Inca (also called the Inka) were the largest and most powerful empire in pre-Columbian South America. They built one of the most impressive civilizations in the ancient world in just about 100 years before the Spanish arrived. Their heartland was the Andes Mountains of Peru, but at its peak the empire (called Tawantinsuyu – “Land of the Four Quarters”) stretched 2,500 miles from modern Colombia in the north all the way to Chile and parts of Argentina in the south. Capital: Cusco (in present-day Peru). Most famous site: Machu Picchu. 0:00 - Intro 2:40 - When did Humans Reach the Americas? 6:00 - Was there an Ice Age Sea Voyage to South America? 7:45 - Open Minded Approach to Archeology 10:30 - Discoveries that change Mainstream Historical Narrative 19:30 - Ed's Discovery of a Massive Mayan City 27:44 - Magnetic Cube Discovery at Olmec Site 37:16 - Solving the greatest Mysteries 43:00 - How did the Mayan tell time? 51:00 - Human Sacrifice in Mesoamerica 1:01:15 - How the Aztec Empire Began 1:07:30 - Europeans bring devastating disease to the Americas 1:12:24 - Uncontacted Tribes in the Amazon 1:15:40 - Women's Status in Pre-Columbian America 1:19:30 - Giant Amazonian Woman Warriors 1:22:10 - Disease wiping out Indigenous 1:25:30 - Psychedelic Use in Mesoamerican Cultures 1:32:30 - How did the Inca move such massive stones? 1:41:00 - The Astonishing short timeline of the Aztec and Inca 1:43:50 - Mississippi Mound Building Civilization 1:49:01 - Vikings in America 1:52:04 - Ancient Chinese Ships Reaching America 1:54:29 - Hostility in the field of Archeology 1:59:10 - Exciting future of Archeology, What will we find next?

Top Comments (10)

@kathleenpowers5160 2026-04-06

If you haven't seen Ed's series on Great Courses, it is the BEST thing I've ever seen on Great Courses! It's like he takes you there, to all the civilizations, the best places to eat, the culture, the history. It was AMAZING!

15
@BeforeSkool 2026-04-06

This podcast is edited in a very different style than the others. There's more visuals and edits throughout. Let me know what you think. Do you like more detailed, polished editing? Or do you prefer raw video with no cuts and no visuals?

12 6 replies
@qui-gonjay2944 2026-04-06

Dr. Barnhart is the best. The best communicator of these topics to the public.

8 1 replies
@patrickermine6325 2026-04-06

Ed is so cool.....❤

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@basalt111 2026-04-07

Ed's the man!

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@Mrfixit434 2026-04-07

I have been personally a member of Dr. Barnharts non-profit Maya Exploration Center, and his ArchaeoEd YouTube podcast on Patreon for years. I’m looking forward to taking the Great Courses here shortly.

3
@TheMongolianMage 2026-04-07

I love Ed. Saw him first on Matt Beal. He's so humble & open-minded. Compare him to the likes of 'professor' dave & Dibble & you see what a real scientist is. Didn't know he had his own channel; I'll be sure to sub, thanks 👍🏽😊

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@andygarcia645 2026-04-09

He’s such a cool dude man.

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@Hexadeci 2026-04-10

I think they were for fire starting. You put an ember and some timber in there and then blow through the hole. Or maybe the material itself works like flint and you could rub the flat surface on something, a spark would generate near a hole and get sucked into the timber in the middle.

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@annchavez9192 2026-04-07

when you're in the Mesa Verde-Chaco area, it would be cool if you could visit an excavation that's going on near Mesa Verde. it's being led by Bruce Bradley, and it's a PI (possibly Basketmaker, as well)-PIII occupation site, a Chaco outlier. my husband's been digging with them for a few years. your tour-folks could see archaeology in action!

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