The study of human history frequently encounters anomalies that challenge the linear progression of technological and intellectual development. Among the most significant of these are the Dogon people of Mali, whose oral traditions and cosmological diagrams reflect an advanced understanding of astrophysics and quantum mechanics that seemingly predates modern scientific discovery by millennia. This complex system of knowledge is not an isolated curiosity but appears to be the salvaged intellectual heritage of a sophisticated Sahara civilization that flourished during the African Humid Period. The abrupt termination of this high-vibrational society coincides with a global cataclysmic window centered around 11,850 BC, an epoch increasingly linked to cometary impacts and extreme solar activity that fundamentally altered the Earth’s physical and dimensional characteristics. Central to understanding this transition is the "spacedepth" model, a framework suggesting that ancient civilizations operated within a "4D living" paradigm—a state where consciousness, resonance, and material reality were integrated through high-vibrational frequencies.