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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 />

Great Pyramid represents the northern hemisphere in a scale of 1:43,200. 18<br />

In Part VII we shall see why this scale was chosen.<br />

Mathematical city<br />

Rising up ahead of me as I walked towards the northern end of the Street<br />

of the Dead, the Pyramid of the Moon, mercifully undamaged by<br />

restorers, had kept its original form as a four-stage ziggurat. The Pyramid<br />

of the Sun, too, had consisted of four stages but Bartres had whimsically<br />

sculpted in a fifth stage between the original third and fourth levels.<br />

There was, however, one original feature of the Pyramid of the Sun that<br />

Bartres had been unable to despoil: a subterranean passageway leading<br />

from a natural cave under the west face. After its accidental discovery in<br />

1971 this passageway was thoroughly explored. Seven feet high, it was<br />

found to run eastwards for more than 300 feet until it reached a point<br />

close to the pyramid’s geometrical centre. 19 Here it debouched into a<br />

second cave, of spacious dimensions, which had been artificially enlarged<br />

into a shape very similar to that of a four-leaf clover. The ‘leaves’ were<br />

chambers, each about sixty feet in circumference, containing a variety of<br />

artefacts such as beautifully engraved slate discs and highly polished<br />

mirrors. There was also a complex drainage system of interlocking<br />

segments of carved rock pipes. 20<br />

This last feature was particularly puzzling because there was no known<br />

source of water within the pyramid. 21 The sluices, however, left little<br />

doubt that water must have been present in antiquity, most probably in<br />

large quantities. This brought to mind the evidence for water having once<br />

run in the Street of the Dead, the sluices and partition walls I had seen<br />

earlier to the north of the Citadel, and Schlemmer’s theory of reflecting<br />

pools and seismic forecasting.<br />

Indeed, the more I thought about it the more it seemed that water had<br />

been the dominant motif at Teotihuacan. Though I had hardly registered<br />

it that morning, the Temple of Quetzalcoatl had been decorated not only<br />

with effigies of the Plumed Serpent but with unmistakable aquatic<br />

symbolism, notably an undulating design suggestive of waves and large<br />

numbers of beautiful carvings of seashells. With these images in my<br />

mind, I reached the wide plaza at the base of the Pyramid of the Moon<br />

and imagined it filled with water, as it might have been, to a depth of<br />

about ten feet. It would have looked magnificent: majestic, powerful and<br />

18 Stecchini, in appendix to Secrets of the Great Pyramid, p. 378. The perimeter of the<br />

Great Pyramid equals exactly one-half minute of arc—see Mysteries of the Mexican<br />

Pyramids, p. 279.<br />

19 The Pyramids of Teotihuacan, p. 20.<br />

20 Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, pp. 335-9.<br />

21 Ibid.<br />

180

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