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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 />

an ascetic. When he ascended to heaven he became a god. 13<br />

Farther south still, the Canarians, an Indian tribe of Ecuador, relate an<br />

ancient story of a flood from which two brothers escaped by going to the<br />

top of a high mountain. As the water rose the mountain grew higher, so<br />

that the two brothers survived the disaster. 14<br />

When they were discovered, the Tupinamba Indians of Brazil venerated<br />

a series of civilizing or creator heroes. The first of these heroes was<br />

Monan (ancient, old) who was said to have been the creator of mankind<br />

but who then destroyed the world with flood and fire ... 15<br />

Peru, as we saw in Part II, is particularly rich in flood legends. A typical<br />

story tells of an Indian who was warned by a llama of a deluge. Together<br />

man and llama fled to a high mountain called Vilca-Coto:<br />

When they reached the top of the mountain they saw that all kinds of birds and<br />

animals had already taken refuge there. The sea began to rise, and covered all the<br />

plains and mountains except the top of Vilca-Coto; and even there the waves<br />

dashed up so high that the animals were forced to crowd into a narrow area ...<br />

Five days later the water ebbed, and the sea returned to its bed. But all human<br />

beings except one were drowned, and from him are descended all the nations on<br />

earth. 16<br />

The Araucnaians of pre-Colombian Chile preserved a tradition that there<br />

was once a flood which very few Indians escaped. The survivors took<br />

refuge on a high mountain called Thegtheg (‘the thundering’ or ‘the<br />

glittering’) which had three peaks and the ability to float on water. 17<br />

In the far south of the continent a Yamana legend from Tierra del Fuego<br />

states: ‘The moon woman caused the flood. This was at the time of the<br />

great upheaval ... Moon was filled with hatred towards human beings ...<br />

At that time everybody drowned with the exception of those few who<br />

were able to escape to the five mountain peaks that the water did not<br />

cover.’ 18<br />

Another Tierra del Fuegan tribe, the Pehuenche, associate the flood<br />

with a prolonged period of darkness: ‘The sun and the moon fell from the<br />

sky and the world stayed that way, without light, until finally two giant<br />

condors carried both the sun and the moon back up to the sky.’ 19<br />

13<br />

New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 440; Atlantis: the Antediluvian World, p.<br />

105.<br />

14<br />

Folklore in the Old Testament, p. 104.<br />

15<br />

New Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology, p. 445.<br />

16<br />

Folklore in the Old Testament, p. 105.<br />

17<br />

Ibid., p. 101.<br />

18<br />

John Bierhorst, The Mythology of South America, William Morrow & Co., New York,<br />

1988, p. 165.<br />

19<br />

Ibid., pp. 165-6.<br />

189

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