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Did the Anunnaki Destroy Sodom? Ancient Tablets Tell a Different Story Than You Were Taught. Beneath museum vaults worldwide lie thousands of clay tablets older than the Bible, pressed with cuneiform signs by Sumerian scribes who recorded councils of divine beings called the Anunnaki deliberating over the fate of cities. These tablets describe a pattern: observation, testing, judgment, destruction. Meanwhile, at a site called Tall el-Hammam in Jordan, archaeologists have uncovered pottery turned to glass, bones calcined by temperatures exceeding any Bronze Age technology, and mudbrick walls simultaneously melted and blown outward. The scientific team published their findings suggesting a cosmic airburst roughly a thousand times more powerful than Hiroshima, dated to the same era and location described in Genesis for the destruction of Sodom. This is the story of what the oldest texts actually say about divine judgment, what the earth has preserved in salt and ash, and why a pattern encoded four thousand years ago still speaks to questions we cannot stop asking. 🔬 THE SCIENCE: A 2021 study published in Nature Scientific Reports analyzed the destruction layer at Tall el-Hammam, finding evidence consistent with a cosmic airburst event around 1650 BCE. The research team identified shocked quartz, melted pottery, spherules of vaporized material, and human bones showing directional thermal exposure. Temperature estimates exceeded 2000 degrees Celsius, far beyond what ancient warfare or accidental fires could produce. The site's location in the Jordan Valley north of the Dead Sea corresponds to biblical descriptions of the Cities of the Plain. Geological surveys of the Dead Sea basin reveal catastrophic changes in lake levels during this period, potentially burying destroyed settlements under expanding salt waters. The destruction pattern mirrors the 1908 Tunguska event in Siberia but at significantly greater magnitude, suggesting an asteroid or comet fragment detonated in the atmosphere directly above a thriving Bronze Age city. 📚 SOURCES AND FURTHER READING: Bunch, T.E., et al. (2021). A Tunguska-sized airburst destroyed Tall el-Hammam, a Middle Bronze Age city in the Jordan Valley near the Dead Sea. Nature Scientific Reports, 11, 18632. Black, J.A., et al. (2004). The Literature of Ancient Sumer. Oxford University Press. Jacobsen, T. (1976). The Treasures of Darkness: A History of Mesopotamian Religion. Yale University Press. Kramer, S.N. (1963). The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character. University of Chicago Press. Collins, S. & Scott, L. (2013). Discovering the City of Sodom. Howard Books. Silvia, P.J., et al. (2021). Analysis of sedimentary quartz grains from Tall el-Hammam destruction layer. Journal of Archaeological Science, 134. Lambert, W.G. (2013). Babylonian Creation Myths. Eisenbrauns. Dalley, S. (2000). Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, The Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. Oxford World's Classics. Finkel, I. (2014). The Ark Before Noah: Decoding the Story of the Flood. Doubleday. Neev, D. & Emery, K.O. (1967). The Dead Sea: Depositional Processes and Environments of Evaporites. Geological Survey of Israel Bulletin 41. 📖 ABOUT THIS CONTENT: This video is designed as educational and informative content with the goal of widening understanding of ancient Near Eastern history, archaeology, and comparative religion. We aim to present complex scholarly material in accessible form while respecting the nuance that serious topics deserve. Our script was written by humans engaging directly with primary sources and peer-reviewed research. Visual concepts and storyboards were developed internally by our team through collaborative discussion. We believe knowledge about ancient civilizations and their texts belongs to everyone, not just specialists with access to academic libraries.