The 130,000-Year-Old Stone Tools Found on Crete - Who Crossed the Sea BEFORE Modern Humans?

🎧 Listen on Spotify (ad free, no music): https://open.spotify.com/show/4r9aY3o... 📖 Get Our Book: https://sleepytimehistory.com 🎥 AI Video Tool: https://autotube.pro?ref=sleepy-time-... ❤️ Support Us: https://buymeacoffee.com/sleepytimehi... Could someone have crossed open sea to Crete 130,000 years ago… long before modern humans were supposed to sail? In this Sleepy Time History deep dive, we explore the mysterious stone tools found on the island of Crete that appear far older than any accepted evidence of human seafaring. We look at how archaeologists date these tools, what their shapes reveal about the makers, and why Crete’s geography makes this discovery so shocking. Were Neanderthals or even earlier hominins crossing the Mediterranean during the Pleistocene? We examine the climate, coastlines, and possible sea routes, weigh accident versus intentional voyages, and explore what life on ancient Crete might have looked like for its first visitors. If you’re curious about human evolution, ancient exploration, and how one island can rewrite our timeline of innovation, this episode is for you. Settle in, press play, and if you enjoy slow-burn mysteries from the deep past, remember to like the video and subscribe to Sleepy Time History for more relaxing, thought-provoking history and archaeology stories. Recommended:    • The 7 Civilizations Before Us — Why Ancien...      • The LOST 100,000 Years: How Humans Lived B...      • The 12,000-Year Cycle - Why So Many Ancien...      • The RH Negative Enigma: Ancient Bloodlines...      • Boring History for Sleep - Prehistory, Anc...   Chapters: 00:00 Intro / Hook: An Island That Shouldn’t Have Been Reachable 05:42 Crete in Deep Time: Why Geography Makes This So Strange 16:17 The Discoveries: Where the Cretan Tools Were Found 27:54 How Do We Date Tools That Old? The Clockwork Behind the Claim 39:11 What Kind of Tools Are These? Reading Behavior from Stone 49:25 The Mediterranean ~130,000 Years Ago: Climate, Coastlines, and Opportunity 1:02:45 If Not Modern Humans, Then Who? The Candidate Hominins 1:14:31 Can Neanderthals Cross Seas? Evidence from Other Islands and Shores 1:27:09 The Seaworthy Problem: Routes to Crete and the Physics of Getting There 1:39:58 Accident vs. Intention: Could They Have Drifted to Crete? 1:50:11 What Life on Crete Would Look Like for Early Visitors 2:02:19 Skeptics’ Corner: Alternative Explanations and What Would Falsify Them 2:13:43 Why This Matters: Rewriting the Timeline of Exploration and Innovation 2:22:38 What Comes Next: New Digs, New Tech, and the Search Under the Sea 2:34:14 The Mystery of Crete, and the Humans Before ‘Us’ Sources: Strasser, T.F., Panagopoulou, E., Runnels, C., Murray, P.M., Thompson, N., Karkanas, P., McCoy, F.W., & Wegmann, K.W. (2010). “Stone Age seafaring in the Mediterranean: Evidence from the Plakias region, Crete.” Hesperia. Broodbank, C. (2013). The Making of the Middle Sea: A History of the Mediterranean from the Beginning to the Emergence of the Classical World. Thames & Hudson. Phoca-Cosmetatou, N. (Ed.). (2011). The First Mediterranean Islanders: Initial Occupation and Survival Strategies. Oxbow Books. Klein, R.G. (2009). The Human Career: Human Biological and Cultural Origins (3rd ed.). University of Chicago Press. Bailey, G.N., & Flemming, N.C. (2008). “Archaeology of the continental shelf: Marine resources, submerged landscapes and underwater archaeology.” Quaternary Science Reviews. Note on Process & Accuracy: Every story on this channel begins with a deep respect for history. We act as directors and editors, using AI tools to help research and draft the script while we shape the narrative and verify facts. The narration comes from a digital replica of a professional voice actor, and the images are individually crafted artistic impressions using AI. Even with these tools, creating a story of this depth still takes hours of work. Please note that while the narrative is thoroughly based on historical research, its primary purpose is storytelling for entertainment and relaxation. As such, it is not intended to be used as a formal academic or scientific source. Thank you for your trust and support.