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

Central America: the civilization of Ancient Mexico did not emerge<br />

without external influence, and it did not emerge as a result of influence<br />

from the Old World; instead certain cultures in the Old World and in the<br />

New World may both have received a legacy of influence and ideas from a<br />

third party at some exceedingly remote date.<br />

Villahermosa to Oaxaca<br />

Before leaving Villahermosa I visited CICOM, the Centre for Investigation<br />

of the Cultures of the Olmecs and Maya. I wanted to find out from the<br />

scholars there whether there were any other significant Olmec sites in the<br />

region. To my surprise, they suggested that I should look farther afield.<br />

At Monte Alban, in Oaxaca province hundreds of kilometres to the<br />

southwest, archaeologists had apparently unearthed ‘Olmecoid’ artefacts<br />

and a number of reliefs thought to represent the Olmecs themselves.<br />

Santha and I had intended to drive straight on from Villahermosa into<br />

the Yucatan Peninsula, which lay north-east. The journey to Monte Alban<br />

would involve a huge detour, but we decided to make it, in the hope that<br />

it might shed further light on the Olmecs. Besides, it promised to be a<br />

spectacular drive over immense mountains and into the heart of the<br />

hidden valley where the city of Oaxaca lies.<br />

We drove almost due west past the lost site of La Venta, past<br />

Coatzecoalcos once again, and on past Sayula and Loma Bonita to the<br />

road-junction town of Tuxtepec. In so doing, by degrees we left behind<br />

countryside scarred and blackened by the oil industry, crossed long<br />

gentle hillsides carpeted in lush green grass, and ran between fields ripe<br />

with crops.<br />

At Tuxtepec, where the sierras really began, we turned sharply south<br />

following Highway 175 to Oaxaca. On the map it looked barely half the<br />

distance that we had driven from Villahermosa. The road, however,<br />

proved to be a complicated, nerve-racking, muscle-wrenching, apparently<br />

endless zig-zag of hairpin bends—narrow, winding and precipitous—<br />

which went up into the clouds like a stairway to heaven. It took us<br />

through many different layers of alpine vegetation, each occupying a<br />

specialized climatological niche, until it brought us out above the clouds<br />

in a place where familiar plants flourished in giant forms, like John<br />

Wyndham’s triffids, creating a surreal and alien landscape. It took twelve<br />

hours to drive the 700 kilometres from Villahermosa to Oaxaca. By the<br />

time the journey was over, my hands were blistered from gripping the<br />

steering-wheel too tight for too long around too many hairpin bends. My<br />

eyes were blurred and I kept having mental retrospectives of the<br />

vertiginous chasms we had skirted on Highway 175, in the mountains,<br />

where the triffids grew.<br />

The city of Oaxaca is famous for magic mushrooms, marijuana and D.H.<br />

Lawrence (who wrote and set part of his novel The Plumed Serpent here in<br />

141

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