They actually made a pod cast of this icky-poo. And a book "Forbidden Archaeology" in 1992 by Michael A. Cremo and Richard L. Thompson. Michael A Cremo is a research associate of the Bhaktivedanta Institute specializing in the history and philosophy of science.
Michael A. Cremo likes to point out what he thinks is contradictory history finds. Too bad he missed the Paluxy River (Glen Rose Texas) controversy in the early 1930s when locals found dinosaur and supposed human footprints in the same rock layer in the Glen Rose Formation, which were widely publicized as evidence against the geological time scale and in favor of young-Earth creationism. However, these anachronistic "human" footprints have been determined to be elongated dinosaur tracks, river scour marks, and hoaxes. Some of these tracks were fake, carved by locals to sell during the Great Depression.
Do not forget the Piltdown Man of 1912.
We might as well be watching "The X Files."
This production came way too late in time to pull the old "We do not know how it was done" thing.
Also, it took quite some time trying to figure out what the narrator was saying as he mispronounces people places and things.
Comparing streets and buildings to integrated circuit boards is absurd.
I could go on; however, you get the point.