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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 />

Hints of forgotten wisdom<br />

Leaving the Temple of Quetzalcoatl behind me, I recrossed the Citadel in<br />

a westerly direction.<br />

There was no archaeological evidence that this enormous enclosure had<br />

ever served as a citadel—or, for that matter, that it had any kind of<br />

military or defensive function at all. Like so much else about Teotihuacan<br />

it had clearly been planned with painstaking care, and executed with<br />

enormous effort, but its true purpose remained unidentified by modern<br />

scholarship. 28 Even the Aztecs, who had been responsible for naming the<br />

Pyramids of the Sun and the Moon (an attribution which had stuck though<br />

no one had any idea what the original builders had called them) had<br />

failed to invent a name for the Citadel. It had been left to the Spaniards to<br />

label it as they did—an understandable conceit since the 30-acre central<br />

patio of La Ciudadela was surrounded by massively thick embankments<br />

more than 23 feet high and some 1500 feet long on each side. 29<br />

My walk had now brought me to the western extreme of the patio. I<br />

climbed a steep set of stairs that led to the top of the embankment and<br />

turned north on to the Street of the Dead. Once again I had to remind<br />

myself that this was almost certainly not what the Teotihuacanos<br />

(whoever they were) had called the immense and impressive avenue. The<br />

Spanish name Calle de los Muertos was of Aztec origin, apparently based<br />

on speculation that the numerous mounds on either side of the Street<br />

were graves (which, as it happened, they were not). 30<br />

We have already considered the possibility that the Way of the Dead<br />

may have served as a terrestrial counterpart of the Milky Way. Of interest<br />

in this regard is the work of another American, Alfred E. Schlemmer,<br />

who—like Hugh Harleston Jr.—was an engineer. Schlemmer’s field was<br />

technological forecasting, with specific reference to the prediction of<br />

earthquakes, 31 on which he presented a paper at the Eleventh National<br />

Convention of Chemical Engineers (in Mexico City in October 1971).<br />

Schlemmer’s argument was that the Street of the Dead might never<br />

have been a street at all. Instead, it might originally have been laid out as<br />

a row of linked reflecting pools, filled with water which had descended<br />

through a series of locks from the Pyramid of the Moon, at the northern<br />

extreme, to the Citadel in the south.<br />

As I walked steadily northward towards the still-distant Moon Pyramid,<br />

it seemed to me that this theory had several points in its favour. For a<br />

start the ‘Street’ was blocked at regular intervals by high partition walls,<br />

at the foot of which the remains of well-made sluices could clearly be<br />

seen. Moreover, the lie of the land would have facilitated a north-south<br />

28 Ibid., p. 213.<br />

29 Ibid.<br />

30 The Ancient Kingdoms of Mexico, p. 72.<br />

31 Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, pp. 271-2.<br />

171

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