In the 1940s, a man named James Dickson claimed to have found a strange, bell-shaped artifact while digging a road near Tillamook, Oregon. Made of an unknown metallic alloy and covered in unidentifiable symbols, it appeared ancient. If authentic, it would suggest pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact in the Pacific Northwest. But the bell vanished, leaving only sketches and testimonies. Was it a hoax, a lost modern object, or genuine evidence that rewrites history? We track the scant paper trail of the bell, interviewing descendants of those who saw it and analyzing the published sketches. We compare the symbols to known scripts from Asia, the Mediterranean, and even ancient Iberia. The episode delves into the contentious world of "out-of-place artifacts" (ooparts), exploring why mainstream archaeology often dismisses such finds and what it takes for a single, anomalous object to challenge established historical narratives. You'll grapple with the fundamental questions of historical evidence: how do we verify the unverifiable? The Tillamook Bell is a ghost in the archive, a story that forces us to confront our own desire for mystery and the rigorous skepticism required to separate history from fantasy. Not all lost artifacts are ancient, but all of them tell a story about the finder. #TillamookBell #Oopart #PreColumbianContact #PacificNorthwest #Archaeology #AlternativeHistory #Oregon #ArtifactMystery Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).
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