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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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Chapter 26<br />

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

A Species Born in the Earth’s Long Winter<br />

In all that we call ‘history’—everything we clearly remember about<br />

ourselves as a species—humanity has not once come close to total<br />

annihilation. In various regions at various times there have been terrible<br />

natural disasters. But there has not been a single occasion in the past<br />

5000 years when mankind as a whole can be said to have faced<br />

extinction.<br />

Has this always been so? Or is it possible, if we go back far enough,<br />

that we might discover an epoch when our ancestors were nearly wiped<br />

out? It is just such an epoch that seems to be the focus of the great<br />

myths of cataclysm. Scholars normally attribute these myths to the<br />

fantasies of ancient poets. But what if the scholars are wrong? What if<br />

some terrible series of natural catastrophes did reduce our prehistoric<br />

ancestors to a handful of individuals scattered here and there across the<br />

face of the earth, far apart, and out of touch with one another?<br />

We are looking for an epoch that will fit the myths as snugly as the<br />

slipper on Cinderella’s foot. In this search, however, there is obviously no<br />

point in investigating any period prior to the emergence on the planet of<br />

recognizably modern human beings. We’re not interested here in Homo<br />

habilis or Homo erectus or even Homo sapiens neanderthalensis. We’re<br />

interested only in Homo sapiens sapiens, our own species, and we haven’t<br />

been around very long.<br />

Students of early Man disagree to some extent over how long we have<br />

been around. Some researchers, as we shall see, claim that partial human<br />

remains in excess of 100,000 years old may be ‘fully modern’. Others<br />

argue for a reduced antiquity in the range of 35-40,000 years, and yet<br />

others propose a compromise of 50,000 years. But no one knows for<br />

sure. ‘The origin of fully modern humans denoted by the subspecies<br />

name Homo sapiens sapiens remains one of the great puzzles of<br />

palaeoanthropology,’ admits one authority. 1<br />

About three and a half million years of more or less relevant evolution<br />

are indicated in the fossil record. For all practical purposes, that record<br />

starts with a small, bipedal hominid (nicknamed Lucy) whose remains<br />

were discovered in 1974 in the Ethiopian section of East Africa’s Great<br />

Rift Valley. With a brain capacity of 400cc (less than a third of the modern<br />

average) Lucy definitely wasn’t human. But she wasn’t an ape either and<br />

she had some remarkably ‘human-like’ features, notably her upright gait,<br />

and the shape of her pelvis and back teeth. For these and other reasons,<br />

1 Roger Lewin, Human Evolution, Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford, 1984, p. 74.<br />

203

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