I was really impressed with a recent piece by Donna D’Errico. She produces YouTube videos as part of the Myth Bound series, and I completely understand her approach. In an era when everyone can have their own media platform, people like Donna are stepping up to explore Earth’s mysteries afresh. She’s doing a kind of modern Josh Gates-style investigation—traveling to sites, talking to experts, and digging into legends with genuine curiosity. Her episode on Serpent Mound struck me as particularly strong.
Before I dive deeper, I have to acknowledge that this discussion probably won’t win me many friends—especially as my book The Politics of Heaven nears publication during a time when Spielberg’s Disclosure Day and waves of official UAP releases are forcing people to reconsider long-dismissed ideas. My reference point here is one of deep respect for the field: I love archaeologists. I admire the dedication it takes to spend years in the dirt, uncovering artifacts so the rest of us can wrestle with their meaning. But like any institutional endeavor, grooves form. Assumptions harden into orthodoxy. Human nature resists relearning, especially when funding, careers, and political narratives are at stake. Once a framework is set, new evidence is often shoehorned to fit rather than allowed to challenge the foundation.
Serpent Mound, in Adams County, Ohio, is far more mysterious than mainstream accounts typically allow. The default narrative attributes it to “Indigenous people,” specifically linking it to the Adena (circa 800 BC–AD 100) or Fort Ancient (AD 1000–1650) cultures, which then folds neatly into broader political claims about “stolen land.” This framing, I believe, serves agendas that seek to undermine America’s founding legitimacy in favor of collectivist remaking—an echo of old European resentments toward the prosperous republic born from the Louisiana Purchase, Florida acquisition, and western expansion.
Donna’s episode respectfully features archaeologists discussing the site’s astronomical alignments, particularly its alignment with the summer solstice sunset, which was important to Fort Ancient peoples. She highlights how the mound feels profoundly three-dimensional on the ground—coiling serpent body undulating with the terrain—unlike the flattened maps most people see. That experiential quality is key. The site was meant to be walked, felt, and understood in context.
Serpent Mound itself is the largest known serpent effigy in the world, stretching approximately 1,348 feet in an uncoiling form with a curled tail. It sits atop a plateau within the Serpent Mound crater (also called the Serpent Mound Disturbance), an eroded meteorite impact structure roughly 8 km (5 miles) in diameter (estimates up to 14 km), formed less than 320 million years ago (likely around 300 million years ago). The builders chose this precise location on the rim of an ancient scar invisible to casual observation. Radiocarbon dating has shifted: earlier assumptions pointed to Adena; a 1991 study suggested Fort Ancient around AD 900–1200; and a 2014 analysis (later corroborated) supports Adena construction around 300 BC, with rebuilding in the Fort Ancient period. Multiple layers of use are evident.
Why build the world’s largest serpent effigy on the edge of a 300-million-year-old impact crater with sophisticated celestial alignments? The mathematics encoded here—solstice and equinox orientations—suggest knowledge far beyond simple hunting calendars. I’ve visited the site for decades, often reflecting on these questions while overlooking the Brush Creek Valley. It is one of three key locations I explore in The Politics of Heaven as evidence of non-human technological and spiritual interaction.
The second is Windover in central Florida, near the modern Kennedy Space Center. This ~8,000-year-old Middle Archaic cemetery (roughly 7,000–8,000 years BP) yielded 168 burials in a peat pond, many with remarkably preserved brain tissue, woven textiles of advanced complexity (multiple weaves, including non-heddle loom examples), and deliberate ritual orientation (often flexed, on left side facing west, anchored with stakes). At the time, sea levels were far lower; the coastline extended miles farther out. Submerged sites likely await discovery. These people practiced sophisticated mortuary rites predating biblical timelines by millennia, challenging simplistic post-Ice Age migration models from Beringia. Their genetics and practices don’t align neatly with those of later tribal groups, opening the door to deeper questions about origins and external influence.
The third is Flag Fen in England, masterfully excavated by Francis Pryor. This Bronze Age site (around 1000 BC, contemporaneous with the First Temple period) features complex timber platforms, votive weapon offerings in wetlands, and evidence of sophisticated beliefs about the afterlife. Pryor’s work—detailed in books like Flag Fen: Life and Death of a Prehistoric Landscape—reveals a ritual landscape of remarkable engineering.
These sites, alongside markers such as the London Stone, Paris’s origin stone, and Washington, D.C.’s Masonic layout, suggest coordinated knowledge across continents and eras. Native American legends—Iroquois, Shawnee, and Aztec migrations from the north (echoed at Three Rivers Petroglyphs in New Mexico)—feature descending “gods,” giants, and supernatural beings that are remarkably consistent with global mythologies. The uniformity points to real encounters rather than independent invention.
Near my home in the Great Miami River valley (Liberty Township / Middletown area, Ohio), the Middletown Mound and Miamisburg Mound stand as testaments. Miamisburg is one of the largest conical mounds in eastern North America—65 feet high, 800 feet in circumference, built by Adena peoples in stages, containing vast amounts of earth and visible for miles. My daughter has taken a great interest in the Middletown site. These should be premier attractions, yet NAGPRA and institutional caution limit new excavations. Cultures routinely built atop older complexes—Cahokia, Baalbek, Jerusalem, Christian churches over pagan temples. Why assume otherwise here?
Archaeologists I respect operate under real constraints. Funding flows through institutions influenced by political and financial interests historically at odds with figures like Andrew Jackson. The “Mound Builder” myth was once weaponized for removal policies (Indian Removal Act, 1830), but today continuity narratives sometimes sideline anomalous evidence. I want these professionals to be better funded for open inquiry.
Post-disclosure, the picture sharpens. UAP whistleblower testimony on non-human biologics and reverse-engineering (with local ties to Wright-Patterson) makes ancient interaction plausible. Disclosure Day shifts the Overton window.
This leads to time—interdimensional or ultra-terrestrial beings likely master relativity. Time dilation is a physics fact. Travelers could experience days while centuries pass on Earth. Sites like Serpent Mound may serve as temporal anchors—celestial markers to recalibrate “when” upon return. Mythic “gods” gifting knowledge then vanishing aligns with this. Cryptids fit as echoes.
I’ve visited these regions and studied the works extensively. These inform The Politics of Heaven, my exploration of spiritual warfare, giants/Nephilim, divine rebellion, and humanity’s interactions. Nineteen of twenty-one chapters tackle controversial ground because they prioritize evidence over control narratives.
Donna D’Errico embodies the right spirit. Archaeologists deserve support for deeper digs. The great serpent on its ancient crater is no random effigy. It testifies to encounters with star-faring knowledge-bearers.
We stand at the threshold of new understanding. The dance continues. The serpent watches. Truth uncoils into the light.
Footnotes
¹ Donna D’Errico, Myth Bound YouTube series (episodes on Serpent Mound and related mysteries).
² Ohio History Connection, Serpent Mound official site details and history.
³ Wikipedia / scientific sources on Serpent Mound crater: ~8 km diameter, <320 million years old (est. ~300 Ma).
⁴ Radiocarbon dating summaries: 2014 Adena ~300 BC with Fort Ancient repairs.
⁵ Astronomical alignments (solstices/equinoxes).
⁶ Windover site reports: ~8,000 BP burials, textiles, rituals (Glen Doran et al.).
⁷ Francis Pryor, Flag Fen: Life and Death of a Prehistoric Landscape (2005).
⁸ Miamisburg Mound: Ohio History Connection / National Register details.
⁹ Broader context: Graham Hancock, Ross Hamilton (Serpent Mound), UAP disclosures, and Pryor’s Time Team work
Rich Hoffman
More about me
Click Here to Protect Yourself with Second Call Defense https://www.secondcalldefense.org/?affiliate=20707

About the Author: Rich Hoffman
Rich Hoffman is an author, political consultant, and strategic advisor based in Cincinnati, Ohio, and the creator of The Politics of Heaven—a unique framework that connects biblical theology, ancient history, and modern power structures to explain how moral alignment and spiritual forces shape global events. Blending real-world political experience with deep research into archaeology, UFO phenomena, and suppressed historical narratives, Hoffman offers compelling commentary on topics ranging from ancient civilizations and the Dead Sea Scrolls to modern populist movements, paranormal continuity, and leadership strategy in chaotic environments. As the author of The Gunfighter’s Guide to Business and the forthcoming Politics of Heaven, he brings a grounded yet provocative voice to media discussions, supported by firsthand experiences and a cross-disciplinary approach that bridges science, history, and theology. For interviews, speaking engagements, or expert analysis, visit richhoffmanbooks.com or contact directly via phone at 513-307-5815 or email at rhoffman@richhoffmanbooks.com. If you’ve seen the movie, Disclosure Day and want to talk about it and the implications of Presidnet Trump’s UAP disclosures, let me know and we can bring some color to your coverage. https://richhoffmanbooks.com/media-inquiries-broadcast-topics-and-contact-info/?frame-nonce=ad51e7ecba I do have a firsthand UFO encounter to discuss.