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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

Stirling.<br />

Historical dogmatists of that period, I remembered, had held<br />

tenaciously to the view that the civilization of the Mayas was the oldest in<br />

Central America. One could be precise about this, they argued, because<br />

the Mayan dot-and-bar calendrical system (which had recently been<br />

decoded) made possible accurate dating of huge numbers of ceremonial<br />

inscriptions. The earliest date ever found on a Mayan site corresponded<br />

to AD 228 of the Christian calendar. 5 It therefore came as quite a jolt to<br />

the academic status quo when Stirling unearthed a stela at Tres Zapotes<br />

which bore an earlier date. Written in the familiar bar-and-dot calendrical<br />

code used by the Maya, it corresponded to 3 September 32 BC. 6<br />

What was shocking about this was that Tres Zapotes was not a Maya<br />

site—not in any way at all. It was entirely, exclusively, unambiguously<br />

Olmec. This suggested that the Olmecs, not the Maya, must have been<br />

the inventors of the calendar, and that the Olmecs, not the Maya, ought<br />

to be recognized as ‘the mother culture’ of Central America. Despite<br />

determined opposition from gangs of furious Mayanists the truth which<br />

Stirling’s spade had unearthed at Tres Zapotes gradually came out. The<br />

Olmecs were much, much older than the Maya. They’d been a smart,<br />

civilized, technologically advanced people and they did, indeed, appear to<br />

have invented the bar-and-dot system of calendrical notation, with the<br />

enigmatic starting date of 13 August 3114 BC, which predicted the end of<br />

the world in AD 2012.<br />

Lying close to the calendar stela at Tres Zapotes, Stirling also unearthed<br />

a giant head. I sat in front of that head now. Dated to around 100 BC, 7 it<br />

was approximately six feet high, 18 feet in circumference and weighed<br />

over 10 tons. Like its counterpart in Santiago Tuxtla, it was unmistakably<br />

the head of an African man wearing a close-fitting helmet with long chinstraps.<br />

The lobes of the ears were pierced by plugs; the pronounced<br />

negroid features were furrowed by deep frown lines on either side of the<br />

nose, and the entire face was concentrated forwards above thick, downcurving<br />

lips. The eyes were open and watchful, almond-shaped and cold.<br />

Beneath the curious helmet, the heavy brows appeared beetling and.<br />

angry.<br />

Stirling was amazed by this discovery and reported,<br />

The head was a head only, carved from a single massive block of basalt, and it<br />

rested on a prepared foundation of unworked slabs of stone ... Cleared of the<br />

surrounding earth it presented an awe-inspiring spectacle. Despite its great size<br />

the workmanship is delicate and sure, the proportions perfect. Unique in character<br />

among aboriginal American sculptures, it is remarkable for its realistic treatment.<br />

The features are bold and amazingly negroid in character ... 8<br />

5<br />

Mexico, p. 637. See also The Ancient Kingdoms of Mexico, p. 24.<br />

6<br />

Ibid.<br />

7<br />

Mexico, p. 638.<br />

8<br />

Matthew W. Stirling, ‘Discovering the New World’s Oldest Dated Work of Man’, National<br />

125

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