The answers we seek to discover about our self cannot be found any further than one can blow a feather in the air. Consider the possibilities in these short videos from Before Orion with author and naturalist Bernie Taylor.

Two minute videos exploring mythology, archaeoastronomy, cave art, our archetypal imagination, neurodiversity,…

Was the first art constructed by the hands of people or did we identify art in the world around us? Consider Pablo Picasso’s revelation about humanity from the Paleolithic Cave of Altamira and a more recent intriguing observation. Unveil Picasso’s secret.

Exploring an ancient Saharan Tuareg / Amazigh riddle and the nature of riddles. This riddle may date deep into antiquity and be related to the riddle of the Sphinx. Meet the Tuareg.

Were some biblical stories founded deep in the Paleolithic? Consider this ancient retelling of a Paleolithic myth in the Spanish Cave of El Castillo from more than 34,000 years ago. Explore the Gallery of Discs.

Are our sciences, visual arts, literature and spirituality reborn from earlier traditions?

Did dogs originate from begging wolves or is there an alternative hypothesis? The latest DNA evidence speaks to a now extinct mother canid as the source of dogs and grey wolves. Consider these earliest images of dogs in the El Castillo Cave and the Gorham’s Cave. Find the origin of dogs.

The constellation Ursa Major – the Great Bear – is shared in myths on many continents with a mother bear as the central character. This myth is storied in Gorham’s Cave at Gibraltar from 36,000 years ago. Is this the origin of an intercontinental astronomical myth? Rediscover this archetypal prehistoric myth.

People around the world have some common spiritual beliefs. The psychoanalyst Carl Jung believed in a collective unconscious from which archetypal characters are evoked whereas Joseph Campbell considered an original set of spiritual beliefs that we all inherited and are carried forth through myths. We find archetypal spiritual characters on the Gallery of Discs in the Spanish Cave of El Castillo from more than 34,000 years ago. What do you believe?

Many Native American spiritual traditions connect to a Great Mystery in the sky. This tradition is observed around the world. How did this connection come to be and what does it tell us about ourselves? Reconsider our earliest astronomy and myths.

There are many myths of the monstrous half man/half beast Sphinx with common physical descriptions found around the Mediterranean indicating a common origin. Could the Sphinx be a therianthrope in the Paleolithic tradition?

People have differences in abilities based on their brain-wiring. We often find great artists, scientists, authors and musicians on the extremes of the neurological spectrum. Were the great advances in humanity brought forth by our encouraging the range of neurological differences among people? Are you ready to have a look at neurodiversity?

The color red in warning signage is often a life-saving distraction. Has our unconscious attraction to red also hidden some of mankind’s greatest secrets? That is the elephant in the room.

People interpret the world differently. Is this due to projection?

The spark that ignited our modern development of the Big Bang theory was founded in the Paleolithic cosmic egg myth. Are we trapped in a prehistoric paradigm? Delve deeper into astronomy and myth.

There are many myths and songs that unconsciously bring forth the night’s journey across water. Why does this motif continue to emerge?

Tall mountains around the world are seen as spiritually connecting us to the sky world. Is there a source cosmic mountain or did this archetype surface from our minds?

Joseph Campbell spoke of the hero’s journey monomyth which he believed is at the core of all great myths. Was there an original hero’s journey myth or is the archetypal hero embedded in our collective unconscious as Carl Jung proposed? Consider this timeless hero’s journey.

The original Gallery of Discs image in the El Castillo Cave was taken by the esteemed Spanish photographer Pedro Saura. The Gorham's Etching image from Gorham's Cave was photographed by the paleoarchaeologist Dr. Francesco d'Errico. Rights for use of these original images were paid directly to the photographers. All interpretations of the original Gallery of Discs and Gorham's Etching images are by Bernie Taylor and further discussed in Before Orion: Finding the Face of the Hero. The datings of these Gorham's Cave and El Castillo images are contemporaneous with the oldest known figurative painting from a cave on the island of Sulawesi in Indonesia whose research was led by Adam Brumm and Maxime Aubert, archaeologists at Australia's Griffith University, as reported in National Geographic, The Guardian, NPR, Nature, Science Magazine, Smithsonian, The New York Times, Science Magazine and other media outlets.