 The forager population paradox, along with a number of other paradoxes found in a number of academic fields of research, is now finally rediscovering much regarding our past, vindicating proof of what we have long argued is still hidden. In many areas, buried under meters of Earth or virtually impenetrable forests, chapters of lost human history lay waiting to be found, which due to our research into similarities and differentiating factors within unexplained ruins, at least three advanced civilizations once lost, we claim are now finally being rediscovered. Geological research has proven again and again through the dating of many natural processes, the submergence of land masses, along with studies into erosion rates, along with carbon radiation dating, many ruins once claimed as a mere few thousand years old, have inadvertently regardless of the subsequent conservative attempts at dating these zones, are now shown to have been undeniably far older. Yet the forager population paradox is scientific evidence which demonstrates that human civilizations did indeed once experience a global catastrophe. Found by many names, the Great Flood, the Great Deluge, Rapture, along with many other names in many ancient texts found all around the world, only a paradox due to it not fitting with a paradigm. Population growth is a science which can accurately track the history and indeed ancestral origins and age of a species. Yet there lay a problem with the study of human population in particular, at some point within a now forgotten history, the human race experienced an event which reset our population growth. It would seem that even the great effort of bending carbon datings, which we allege are dishonest ageings of ancient ruins and the civilizations that built them, was still not conservative enough to hide this truth. Once a thriving ancient population seemingly vanished. As supported, or rather corroborated by the many unfinished and destroyed ancient relics, we often discuss on our channel. According to the proceedings of National Academy of Science, USA, in a research project titled Periodic Catastrophes over Human Evolutionary History are necessary to explain the forager population paradox. They state, and I quote, investigating multiple demographic scenarios in a large sample of human and chimpanzee populations. We find that periodic catastrophes, combined with plausible fertility or mortality reductions, can reasonably generate zero population growth. Our findings bolster arguments about the role of intergenerational cooperation in supporting the colonizing potential of human populations once released from catastrophes. End quote. End quote. The only way to explain the population growth, or lack of at certain points of our species history, in comparison to its persistently claimed age, the paradox, or the current population, proves that we did indeed experience catastrophe. An event long denied as ever being experienced by our species, with the last acceptably permitted event, K2, having been experienced only by the dinosaurs. We find the data, the paradox, and the methodological truths it exhibits highly compelling.