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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 />

days, a minus error of only 0.0002 of a day. 10<br />

Similarly, the Maya knew the time taken by the moon to orbit the earth.<br />

Their estimate of this period was 29.528395 days—extremely close to the<br />

true figure of 29.530588 days computed by the finest modern methods. 11<br />

The Mayan priests also had in their possession very accurate tables for<br />

the prediction of solar and lunar eclipses and were aware that these could<br />

occur only within plus or minus eighteen days of the node (when the<br />

moon’s path crosses the apparent path of the sun). 12 Finally, the Maya<br />

were remarkably accomplished mathematicians. They possessed an<br />

advanced technique of metrical calculation by means of a chequerboard<br />

device we ourselves have only discovered (or rediscovered?) in the last<br />

century. 13 They also understood perfectly and used the abstract concept<br />

of zero 14 and were acquainted with place numerations.<br />

These are esoteric fields. As Thompson observed,<br />

The cipher (nought) and place numerations are so much parts of our cultural<br />

heritage and seem such obvious conveniences that it is difficult to comprehend<br />

how their invention could have been long delayed. Yet neither ancient Greece with<br />

its great mathematicians, nor ancient Rome, had any inkling of either nought or<br />

place numeration. To write 1848 in Roman numerals requires eleven letters:<br />

MDCCCXLVIII. Yet the Maya had a system of place-value notation very much like<br />

our own at a time when the Romans were still using their clumsy method. 15<br />

Isn’t it a bit odd that this otherwise unremarkable Central American tribe<br />

should, at such an early date, have stumbled upon an innovation which<br />

Otto Neugebauer, the historian of science, has described as ‘one of the<br />

most fertile inventions of humanity’. 16<br />

Someone else’s science?<br />

Let us now consider the question of Venus, a planet that was of immense<br />

symbolic importance to all the ancient peoples of Central America, who<br />

identified it strongly with Quetzalcoatl (or Gucumatz or Kukulkan, as the<br />

Plumed Serpent was known in the Maya dialects). 17<br />

Unlike the Ancient Greeks, but like the Ancient Egyptians, the Maya<br />

understood that Venus was both ‘the morning star’ and ‘the evening<br />

10<br />

William Gates’s notes (p. 81) to Diego de Landa’s Yucatan before and after the<br />

Conquest.<br />

11<br />

This is evident from the Dresden Codex. See, for example, An Introduction to the<br />

Study of Maya Hieroglyphs, p. 32.<br />

12<br />

The Maya, p. 176; Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 291; The Rise and Fall of<br />

Maya Civilization, p. 173.<br />

13<br />

Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 287.<br />

14<br />

The Maya, p. 173.<br />

15<br />

The Rise and Fall of Maya Civilization, pp. 178-9.<br />

16<br />

Cited in The Maya, p. 173.<br />

17<br />

World Mythology, p. 241.<br />

161

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