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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 />

resourceful creatures’ 8 and the fossil record suggests that they were the<br />

dominant species on the planet from about 100,000 years ago until<br />

40,000 years ago. At some point during this lengthy and poorly<br />

understood period, Homo sapiens sapiens established itself, leaving<br />

behind fossil remains from about 40,000 years ago that are undisputably<br />

those of modern humans, and supplanting the Neanderthals completely<br />

by about 35,000 years ago. 9<br />

In summary, human beings like ourselves, whom we could pass in the<br />

street without blinking an eyelid if they were shaved and dressed in<br />

modern clothes, are creatures of the last 115,000 years at the very<br />

most—and more probably of only the last 50,000 years. It follows that if<br />

the myths of cataclysm we have reviewed do reflect an epoch of<br />

geological upheaval experienced by humanity, these upheavals took place<br />

within the last 115,000 years, and more probably within the last 50,000<br />

years.<br />

Cinderella’s slipper<br />

It is a curious coincidence of geology and palaeoanthropology that the<br />

onset and progress of the last Ice Age, and the emergence and<br />

proliferation of modern Man, more or less shadow each other. Curious<br />

too is the fact that so little is known about either.<br />

In North America the last Ice Age is called the Wisconsin Glaciation<br />

(named for rock deposits studied in the state of Wisconsin) and its early<br />

phase has been dated by geologists to 115,000 years ago. 10 There were<br />

various advances and retreats of the ice-cap after that, with the fastest<br />

rate of accumulation taking place between 60,000 years ago and 17,000<br />

years ago—a process culminating in the Tazewell Advance, which saw the<br />

glaciation reach its maximum extent around 15,000 BC. 11 By 13,000 BC,<br />

however, millions of square miles of ice had melted, for reasons that have<br />

never properly been explained, and by 8000 BC the Wisconsin had<br />

withdrawn completely. 12<br />

The Ice Age was a global phenomenon, affecting both the northern and<br />

the southern hemispheres; similar climatic and geological conditions<br />

therefore prevailed in many other parts of the world as well (notably in<br />

eastern Asia, Australia, New Zealand, and South America). There was<br />

massive glaciation in Europe, where the ice reached outward from<br />

Scandinavia and Scotland to cover most of Great Britain, Denmark,<br />

Poland, Russia, large parts of Germany, all of Switzerland, and big chunks<br />

8 Ibid., p. 73.<br />

9 Ibid., p. 73, 77.<br />

10 Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1991, 12:712.<br />

11 Path of the Pole, p. 146.<br />

12 Ibid., p. 152; Encyclopaedia Britannica, 12:712.<br />

205

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