 The discovery of the Electric Universe, the realization of the petroglyph record relating to plasmatic events, does not just change the mainstream outlook of the heavens, it also changes what we see and hear in messages from the ancient world. Their squatter-man style symbols stand testament to their effort to document and communicate a great happening, a happening that the modern world tried desperately to misunderstand. Over the past century and a half, archaeologists have unearthed huge libraries of archaic text. Many of them describing great spectacles in the heavens and directly relating a connection all around the world. Modern researchers have set aside these descriptions as untrustworthy because they accepted the assumed uneventful solar system hypothesized by astronomers. They accept without question that the evidence is wrong and this leads to a great curiosity in our efforts to understand the past. As a result, most historians do not doubt that the ancient sky looked almost exactly like our sky today and they give little or no attention to the extravagant or nonsensical claims of early sky worshipers. Were it possible for us to stand alongside our early ancestors to witness the events that provoked the age of mythmaking and the birth of the archaic religions? Early celestial drama would exceed anything conceivable in our own time. The sky was electric, filled with luminous clouds, threads of light, thunderbolts seemingly released by the gods and smoothly rising rivers of fire, now realized to be the effects of an immense aurora event of prehistory. To today's observer, the events could only appear too vast, too improbable, but they did happen and our realization is being documented here on YouTube by The Lost History Channel and based on decades of research by Anthony Peratt and David Talbot. We invite you to catch up with these realizations in our series The Squatter Man Project which we will of course link below. Thanks for watching and remember, the ways by which we arrive at knowledge are hardly less wonderful than the discovery of these things themselves.