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

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

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Chapter 18<br />

Conspicuous Strangers<br />

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

Matthew Stirling, the American archaeologist who excavated La Venta in<br />

the 1940s, made a number of spectacular discoveries there. The most<br />

spectacular of all was the Stele of the Bearded Man.<br />

The plan of the ancient Olmec site, as I have said, lay along an axis<br />

pointing 8° west of north. At the southern end of this axis, 100 feet tall,<br />

loomed the fluted cone of the great pyramid. Next to it, at ground level,<br />

was what looked like a curb about a foot high enclosing a spacious<br />

rectangular area one-quarter the size of an average city block. When the<br />

archaeologists began to uncover this curb they found, to their surprise,<br />

that it consisted of the upper parts of a wall of columns. Further<br />

excavation through the undisturbed layers of stratification that had<br />

accumulated revealed that the columns were ten feet tall. There were<br />

more than 600 of them and they had been set together so closely that<br />

they formed a near-impregnable stockade. Hewn out of solid basalt and<br />

transported to La Venta from quarries more than sixty miles distant, the<br />

columns weighed approximately two tons each.<br />

Why all this trouble? What had the stockade been built to contain?<br />

Even before excavation began, the tip of a massive chunk of rock had<br />

been visible jutting out of the ground in the centre of the enclosed area,<br />

about four feet higher than the illusory ‘curb’ and leaning steeply<br />

forward. It was covered with carvings. These extended down, out of sight,<br />

beneath the layers of soil that filled the ancient stockade to a height of<br />

about nine feet.<br />

Stirling and his team worked for two days to free the great rock. When<br />

exposed it proved to be an imposing stele fourteen feet high, seven feet<br />

wide and almost three feet thick. The carvings showed an encounter<br />

between two tall men, both dressed in elaborate robes and wearing<br />

elegant shoes with turned-up toes. Either erosion or deliberate mutilation<br />

(quite commonly practised on Olmec monuments) had resulted in the<br />

complete defacement of one of the figures. The other was intact. It so<br />

obviously depicted a Caucasian male with a high-bridged nose and a<br />

long, flowing beard that the bemused archaeologists promptly christened<br />

it ‘Uncle Sam’. 1<br />

I walked slowly around the twenty-ton stele, remembering as I did so<br />

that it had lain buried in the earth for more than 3000 years. Only in the<br />

brief half century or so since Stirling’s excavations had it seen the light of<br />

day again. What would its fate be now? Would it stand here for another<br />

1 Fair Gods and Stone Faces, p. 144.<br />

136

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