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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 />

thirty centuries as an object of awe and splendour for future generations<br />

to gawp at and revere? Or, in such a great expanse of time, was it<br />

possible that circumstances might change so much that it would once<br />

again be buried and concealed?<br />

Perhaps neither would happen. I remembered the ancient calendrical<br />

system of Central America, which the Olmecs had initiated. According to<br />

them, and to their more famous successors the Mayas, there just weren’t<br />

any great expanses of time left, let alone three millennia. The Fifth Sun<br />

was all used up and a tremendous earthquake was building to destroy<br />

humanity two days before Christmas in AD 2012.<br />

I turned my attention back to the stele. Two things seemed to be clear:<br />

the encounter scene it portrayed must, for some reason, have been of<br />

immense importance to the Olmecs, hence the grandeur of the stele<br />

itself, and the construction of the remarkable stockade of columns built<br />

to contain it. And, as was the case with the negro heads, it was obvious<br />

that the face of the bearded Caucasian man could only have been<br />

sculpted from a human model. The racial verisimilitude was too good for<br />

an artist to have invented it.<br />

The same went for two other Caucasian figures I was able to identify<br />

among the surviving monuments from La Venta. One was carved in low<br />

relief on a heavy and roughly circular slab of stone about three feet in<br />

diameter. Dressed in what looked like tight-fitting leggings, his features<br />

were those of an Anglo-Saxon. He had a full pointed beard and wore a<br />

curious floppy cap on his head. In his left hand he extended a flag, or<br />

perhaps a weapon of some kind. His right hand, which he held across the<br />

middle of his chest, appeared to be empty. Around his slim waist was tied<br />

a flamboyant sash. The other Caucasian figure, this time carved on the<br />

side of a narrow pillar, was similarly bearded and attired.<br />

Who were these conspicuous strangers? What were they doing in<br />

Central America? When did they come? And what relationship did they<br />

have with those other strangers who had settled in this steamy rubber<br />

jungle—the ones who had provided the models for the great negro<br />

heads?<br />

Some radical researchers, who rejected the dogma concerning the<br />

isolation of the New World prior to 1492, had proposed what looked like<br />

a viable solution to the problem: the bearded, thin-featured individuals<br />

could have been Phoenicians from the Mediterranean who had sailed<br />

through the Pillars of Hercules and across the Atlantic Ocean as early as<br />

the second millennium BC. Advocates of this theory went on to suggest<br />

that the negroes shown at the same sites were the ‘slaves’ of the<br />

Phoenicians, picked up on the coast of West Africa prior to the trans-<br />

Atlantic run. 2<br />

The more consideration I gave to the strange character of the La Venta<br />

sculptures, the more dissatisfied I became with these ideas. Probably the<br />

2 Ibid., p. 141-42.<br />

137

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