120 Year Old Greta Thunberg

2019Conspiracy theory / viral photo comparisondead

Also known as: Time Traveler Greta Thunberg · Greta Thunberg Time Travel Conspiracy

120 Year Old Greta Thunberg is a 2019 viral meme featuring a girl from an 1898 Yukon gold mine photograph who remarkably resembles teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg, sparking humorous time-traveler conspiracy jokes.

120-Year-Old Greta Thunberg is a joke conspiracy theory that went viral in November 2019 after internet users noticed a girl in an 1898 Yukon gold mine photograph who looks strikingly similar to teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg. The resemblance, complete with braided hair and a stern expression, sparked humorous claims that Thunberg is a time traveler sent from the future to save the planet from climate change.

TL;DR

120-Year-Old Greta Thunberg is a joke conspiracy theory that went viral in November 2019 after internet users noticed a girl in an 1898 Yukon gold mine photograph who looks strikingly similar to teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg.

Overview

The meme centers on a black-and-white photograph from roughly 1898, taken by Swedish-American photographer Eric Hegg during the Klondike Gold Rush5. The image, titled "Three children operating rocker at a gold mine on Dominion Creek, Yukon Territory," shows three children extracting gold at a mine in Canada4. In the foreground sits a young girl with braided hair, an angular face, and a stoic expression that looks eerily similar to Greta Thunberg2. The photo is part of the Eric Hegg special collection housed in the University of Washington's archives1.

The joke took the form of a tongue-in-cheek conspiracy theory: Thunberg must be a time traveler who went back 120 years to try to stop climate change at its source, failed, and returned to the present day to try again6. While nobody seriously believed the claim, the uncanny resemblance made the comparison irresistible to share.

The first known link between the photograph and Thunberg appeared on November 9, 2019, when Facebook user Allison White posted the image after spotting it hanging at Pike Place Market in Seattle1. White wrote "#GretaThunberg is a TIME TRAVELER" in a paranormal community group5.

Six days later, on November 15, 2019, the YouTube channel ArtAleinTV uploaded a video titled "Greta Thunberg Found in 120 Year Old Photo?" comparing the appearance of the girl in the Hegg photograph with the 16-year-old Swedish activist4. The video picked up more than 34,000 views within five days4. Many commenters immediately questioned whether the photo had been digitally altered, though the image is verifiably housed in the University of Washington's online archives5.

Origin & Background

Platform
Facebook (first connection), YouTube / Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
Eric Hegg, Allison White, ArtAleinTV, @JackSamStrange
Date
2019
Year
2019

The first known link between the photograph and Thunberg appeared on November 9, 2019, when Facebook user Allison White posted the image after spotting it hanging at Pike Place Market in Seattle. White wrote "#GretaThunberg is a TIME TRAVELER" in a paranormal community group.

Six days later, on November 15, 2019, the YouTube channel ArtAleinTV uploaded a video titled "Greta Thunberg Found in 120 Year Old Photo?" comparing the appearance of the girl in the Hegg photograph with the 16-year-old Swedish activist. The video picked up more than 34,000 views within five days. Many commenters immediately questioned whether the photo had been digitally altered, though the image is verifiably housed in the University of Washington's online archives.

How It Spread

The meme exploded on Twitter starting November 18, 2019. Author Jack Strange (Twitter handle @JackSamStrange) posted a side-by-side comparison and wrote: "So, 'Greta Thunberg' is in a photo from 120 years ago, and it's my new favourite conspiracy. Greta's a time traveller, from the future, and she's here to save us". The tweet racked up over 28,000 likes and 9,600 retweets in less than three days.

Strange followed up with a playful rebuttal to skeptics: "To those saying 'How can she be in the past if she's from the future?!?' Obviously, as a time traveller, she can travel to ANY time period. She obviously tried to go back 120 years, didn't work, and now she's here. Obviously!"

Other Twitter users piled on quickly. Simon Binns wrote, "I'm not one for conspiracy theories but Greta is 100 per cent a time traveller". Another joked, "Maybe she is from the future who was sent back in time to key moments in history to stop climate change". One user responded, "That has to be photoshopped surely, they're identical". The comment "I, for one, welcome our new time travelling overlord" also gained traction.

The story was reportedly picked up by The Sunday Express on November 17, 2019, only for the article to be mysteriously deleted within 24 hours. By November 19, major outlets including the New York Post, People, Daily Mail, The Independent, National Post, and Metro had all published coverage. Some treated it as a fun human interest story, while others used it as a hook to discuss Thunberg's ongoing climate activism and her Atlantic crossing aboard the solar-powered catamaran La Vagabonde.

A notable counter-narrative also emerged, with users pointing out the irony of the situation. As one tweet put it: "People refuse to believe in Climate Change but are willing to believe that Greta Thunberg can time-travel".

The Independent noted a plausible real-world explanation: the girl in the photograph may have been a member of the Swedish community in the Yukon at that time, given Hegg himself was Swedish-American and there were Swedish settlers in the territory. As of 2019, there were still just under 1,000 Swedish-Canadians living in the Yukon.

Thunberg, who was mid-Atlantic on La Vagabonde heading to the UN Climate Change Convention in Madrid at the time, never publicly commented on the photograph.

How to Use This Meme

This meme typically works as a one-off joke rather than a reusable template. People commonly:

1

Share the side-by-side comparison of the 1898 photo and a modern photo of Thunberg

2

Add a caption playing along with the "time traveler" conspiracy, often with mock seriousness

3

Riff on the idea that Thunberg traveled back in time to stop climate change but failed, so she's trying again in the present

Cultural Impact

The 120-Year-Old Greta Thunberg meme landed during peak Thunberg visibility. She had spoken at the UN Climate Action Summit in September 2019, delivering her famous "How dare you" speech that accused world leaders of caring more about money than the planet. Her Fridays for Future movement had inspired climate strikes in roughly 150 countries. The time travel joke added a lighter, more playful dimension to the intense discourse surrounding her activism.

The meme also became a vehicle for meta-commentary about conspiracy culture. Multiple users and journalists noted the absurdity of people entertaining time travel theories while dismissing climate science. The New York Post ran their story under the headline "No, Greta Thunburg is not a time-traveler in this old photo," treating the claim with deadpan debunking.

Coverage across at least six major international outlets within a single day made this one of the faster-spreading viral photo comparisons of 2019.

Fun Facts

The original photograph was taken by Eric Hegg, a Swedish-American photographer who participated in gold-digging expeditions while documenting daily life during the Klondike Gold Rush.

Allison White first spotted the photo not online, but hanging as a print at Pike Place Market in Seattle.

The photo shows children "operating a rocker" at a gold mine, a hand-powered device used to separate gold from river sediment.

Thunberg had sworn off air travel because of its environmental impact and was literally sailing across the Atlantic Ocean when the meme went viral.

The fact that the original photographer Hegg was Swedish-American, and Thunberg is Swedish, adds another layer to the coincidence.

Frequently Asked Questions

120 Year Old Greta Thunberg

2019Conspiracy theory / viral photo comparisondead

Also known as: Time Traveler Greta Thunberg · Greta Thunberg Time Travel Conspiracy

120 Year Old Greta Thunberg is a 2019 viral meme featuring a girl from an 1898 Yukon gold mine photograph who remarkably resembles teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg, sparking humorous time-traveler conspiracy jokes.

120-Year-Old Greta Thunberg is a joke conspiracy theory that went viral in November 2019 after internet users noticed a girl in an 1898 Yukon gold mine photograph who looks strikingly similar to teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg. The resemblance, complete with braided hair and a stern expression, sparked humorous claims that Thunberg is a time traveler sent from the future to save the planet from climate change.

TL;DR

120-Year-Old Greta Thunberg is a joke conspiracy theory that went viral in November 2019 after internet users noticed a girl in an 1898 Yukon gold mine photograph who looks strikingly similar to teenage climate activist Greta Thunberg.

Overview

The meme centers on a black-and-white photograph from roughly 1898, taken by Swedish-American photographer Eric Hegg during the Klondike Gold Rush. The image, titled "Three children operating rocker at a gold mine on Dominion Creek, Yukon Territory," shows three children extracting gold at a mine in Canada. In the foreground sits a young girl with braided hair, an angular face, and a stoic expression that looks eerily similar to Greta Thunberg. The photo is part of the Eric Hegg special collection housed in the University of Washington's archives.

The joke took the form of a tongue-in-cheek conspiracy theory: Thunberg must be a time traveler who went back 120 years to try to stop climate change at its source, failed, and returned to the present day to try again. While nobody seriously believed the claim, the uncanny resemblance made the comparison irresistible to share.

The first known link between the photograph and Thunberg appeared on November 9, 2019, when Facebook user Allison White posted the image after spotting it hanging at Pike Place Market in Seattle. White wrote "#GretaThunberg is a TIME TRAVELER" in a paranormal community group.

Six days later, on November 15, 2019, the YouTube channel ArtAleinTV uploaded a video titled "Greta Thunberg Found in 120 Year Old Photo?" comparing the appearance of the girl in the Hegg photograph with the 16-year-old Swedish activist. The video picked up more than 34,000 views within five days. Many commenters immediately questioned whether the photo had been digitally altered, though the image is verifiably housed in the University of Washington's online archives.

Origin & Background

Platform
Facebook (first connection), YouTube / Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
Eric Hegg, Allison White, ArtAleinTV, @JackSamStrange
Date
2019
Year
2019

The first known link between the photograph and Thunberg appeared on November 9, 2019, when Facebook user Allison White posted the image after spotting it hanging at Pike Place Market in Seattle. White wrote "#GretaThunberg is a TIME TRAVELER" in a paranormal community group.

Six days later, on November 15, 2019, the YouTube channel ArtAleinTV uploaded a video titled "Greta Thunberg Found in 120 Year Old Photo?" comparing the appearance of the girl in the Hegg photograph with the 16-year-old Swedish activist. The video picked up more than 34,000 views within five days. Many commenters immediately questioned whether the photo had been digitally altered, though the image is verifiably housed in the University of Washington's online archives.

How It Spread

The meme exploded on Twitter starting November 18, 2019. Author Jack Strange (Twitter handle @JackSamStrange) posted a side-by-side comparison and wrote: "So, 'Greta Thunberg' is in a photo from 120 years ago, and it's my new favourite conspiracy. Greta's a time traveller, from the future, and she's here to save us". The tweet racked up over 28,000 likes and 9,600 retweets in less than three days.

Strange followed up with a playful rebuttal to skeptics: "To those saying 'How can she be in the past if she's from the future?!?' Obviously, as a time traveller, she can travel to ANY time period. She obviously tried to go back 120 years, didn't work, and now she's here. Obviously!"

Other Twitter users piled on quickly. Simon Binns wrote, "I'm not one for conspiracy theories but Greta is 100 per cent a time traveller". Another joked, "Maybe she is from the future who was sent back in time to key moments in history to stop climate change". One user responded, "That has to be photoshopped surely, they're identical". The comment "I, for one, welcome our new time travelling overlord" also gained traction.

The story was reportedly picked up by The Sunday Express on November 17, 2019, only for the article to be mysteriously deleted within 24 hours. By November 19, major outlets including the New York Post, People, Daily Mail, The Independent, National Post, and Metro had all published coverage. Some treated it as a fun human interest story, while others used it as a hook to discuss Thunberg's ongoing climate activism and her Atlantic crossing aboard the solar-powered catamaran La Vagabonde.

A notable counter-narrative also emerged, with users pointing out the irony of the situation. As one tweet put it: "People refuse to believe in Climate Change but are willing to believe that Greta Thunberg can time-travel".

The Independent noted a plausible real-world explanation: the girl in the photograph may have been a member of the Swedish community in the Yukon at that time, given Hegg himself was Swedish-American and there were Swedish settlers in the territory. As of 2019, there were still just under 1,000 Swedish-Canadians living in the Yukon.

Thunberg, who was mid-Atlantic on La Vagabonde heading to the UN Climate Change Convention in Madrid at the time, never publicly commented on the photograph.

How to Use This Meme

This meme typically works as a one-off joke rather than a reusable template. People commonly:

1

Share the side-by-side comparison of the 1898 photo and a modern photo of Thunberg

2

Add a caption playing along with the "time traveler" conspiracy, often with mock seriousness

3

Riff on the idea that Thunberg traveled back in time to stop climate change but failed, so she's trying again in the present

Cultural Impact

The 120-Year-Old Greta Thunberg meme landed during peak Thunberg visibility. She had spoken at the UN Climate Action Summit in September 2019, delivering her famous "How dare you" speech that accused world leaders of caring more about money than the planet. Her Fridays for Future movement had inspired climate strikes in roughly 150 countries. The time travel joke added a lighter, more playful dimension to the intense discourse surrounding her activism.

The meme also became a vehicle for meta-commentary about conspiracy culture. Multiple users and journalists noted the absurdity of people entertaining time travel theories while dismissing climate science. The New York Post ran their story under the headline "No, Greta Thunburg is not a time-traveler in this old photo," treating the claim with deadpan debunking.

Coverage across at least six major international outlets within a single day made this one of the faster-spreading viral photo comparisons of 2019.

Fun Facts

The original photograph was taken by Eric Hegg, a Swedish-American photographer who participated in gold-digging expeditions while documenting daily life during the Klondike Gold Rush.

Allison White first spotted the photo not online, but hanging as a print at Pike Place Market in Seattle.

The photo shows children "operating a rocker" at a gold mine, a hand-powered device used to separate gold from river sediment.

Thunberg had sworn off air travel because of its environmental impact and was literally sailing across the Atlantic Ocean when the meme went viral.

The fact that the original photographer Hegg was Swedish-American, and Thunberg is Swedish, adds another layer to the coincidence.

Frequently Asked Questions