If you have an article that you wish to submit for publication, please email forum@grahamhancock.com.

Images must be legal to use and correctly attributed. Generally this means the image must be either 1) Public Domain, or 2) a Creative Commons license*.

Please format the attribution like so:

Your caption under the image
‘Image name’ by Person (LicenseLinkedToImageSource)

NB Only Creative Commons Attribution licenses legally require the Image Name and Author.

In practice:

Here’s my caption about this image
‘Barbarella the Chinese crested puppy’ by Rhododendrites (CC BY SA 4.0)

Here is the caption I wish to put about this pig
‘Miniature Pig’ by Johan Spaedtke (CC0)

‘Elk Calf’ by Jacob W. Frank (Public Domain)

My caption about this cat
Ty_Swartz (Pixabay License)

Best sources of legal images


* Usually excluding CCBYNC Non-Commercial Creative Commons licenses like so.

4 thoughts on “Article Submission Guidance”

  1. david new says:

    Graham,i have recently reread Holy Blood Holy Grail after many years.It has been about thirty since last time and i have learned many things that i didnt know when i last read it.I have made discoveries about the
    Ark that you may or may not have realised. I will only talk to you. Please get in touch.

  2. Steven Boyles says:

    ATTN DEAR GRAHAM
    I HAVE FOUND AN EARTH NODE CALL BY THE INDIANS AS THE GREAT SPIRIT IT IS MOBILE AND I NEED HELP GETTING ACCESS I AM AT BOYS333@YAHOO.COM PLEASE CONTACT ME FOR MORE DETAIL

    WHOEVER READS THIS PLEASE PASS TO GRAHAM ASAP

  3. Steven Young says:

    Hello Graham I would really like you on my Podcast. We might break the internet. Especially if you were a regular guest. Thank You

  4. Thelma Gruss says:

    Dear Graham, What if the “Lost Civilization” is actually a vast migrating herd of human beings who long, long ago set out on a journey without looking back? Migration would not have been a novel idea. Massive herds of many species were common by land, air and sea. A large herd of perhaps hundreds of thousands of people would have its successes and losses and still be able to carry on. Like other hunting packs, humans may have developed specialized skills: certain groups for hunting and killing, others for navigating the heavens (essential for global travel), some may have experimented with unknown herbal medicines and foods, poisoning only a handful of people out of the many thousands…or immunizing them etc. Neurologists who specialize in evolutionary changes have been trying to understand why our brains have developed as they have, with genetic predispositions that divide us into groups like the Meyers-Briggs personality types. Each type possesses certain specialized skills and talents useful to the group as a whole. The travels would entail entirely new challenges and new learning experiences all along the way. These forever moving humans may have perfected many of their skills. They would leave their messages in stone. I think we may have liked working together, enjoyed the experiences of successful endeavors, and came to love adventures into the unknown. Circumstances may have caused small groups to fall off and continue to use their skills locally while adjusting to the new terrain. Memories would have been immortalized. The constantly moving herd, now more evolved, may have returned after many centuries or out of necessity. A whole army might enter an area, but locals only talk about the leader. I know this is sketchy, but I may run out of space. If you are interested, I can go on..and on. You have done such incredible work. I hope you can point all future studies in the right direction.

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