On Skeptiko, dpdownsouth posted a link to a talk by Michael Cremo, a researcher inspired by the Hindu Puranas, about evidence of human existence far earlier than conventional archaeologists believe:
Another poster referred to the "excruciating academic precision" of his citations, which sounded good to me, and his Wikipedia page, despite the obligatory condemnation of his work in the opening paragraph ("mainstream scholars ... describe it as pseudoscientific") gives the impression that it's not in fact dismissed out of hand by all archaeologists.
I've started to listen to the talk, and I think he comes across well so far.
Another poster referred to the "excruciating academic precision" of his citations, which sounded good to me, and his Wikipedia page, despite the obligatory condemnation of his work in the opening paragraph ("mainstream scholars ... describe it as pseudoscientific") gives the impression that it's not in fact dismissed out of hand by all archaeologists.
I've started to listen to the talk, and I think he comes across well so far.