The transition from the Late Pleistocene to the Holocene epoch represents one of the most volatile and mysterious periods in human history, marked by a global "reset" event that appears to have fundamentally restructured the physical and metaphysical trajectory of terrestrial life. Central to this transformation is the date of approximately 11,850 BC, an epoch increasingly associated with the Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis, which posits that a cosmic cataclysm triggered a rapid and devastating period of climate change. Beyond the mere ecological impact, this event is theorized to have disrupted a highly sophisticated civilization located in what is now the Sahara Desert—a culture characterized by its integration with "4D living" and a profound understanding of planetary depth resonance. The scattering of survivors from this 11,850 BC event resulted in a global distribution of "knowledge fragments," remnants of which are preserved in the complex cosmological and astronomical traditions of the Dogon tribe in Mali. By synthesizing geological proxies of cosmic impact, the archaeological record of the "Green Sahara," and the anomalous information regarding the Sirius star system found in Dogon mythology, a comprehensive model of ancient 4D existence and its subsequent dissolution can be constructed.