04.04.2013 Views

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

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

of Austria, Italy and France. 13 (<strong>Know</strong>n technically as the Wurm Glaciation,<br />

this European Ice Age started about 70,000 years ago, a little later than<br />

its American counterpart, but attained its maximum extent at the same<br />

time, 17,000 years ago, and then experienced the same rapid withdrawal,<br />

and shared the same terminal date). 14<br />

The crucial stages of Ice Age chronology thus appear to be:<br />

1 around 60,000 years ago, when the Wurm, the Wisconsin and other<br />

glaciations were well under way;<br />

2 around 17,000 years ago, when the ice sheets had reached their<br />

maximum extent in both the Old World and the New;<br />

3 the 7000 years of deglaciation that followed.<br />

The emergence of Homo sapiens sapiens thus coincided with a lengthy<br />

period of geological and climatic turbulence, a period marked, above all<br />

else, by ferocious freezing and flooding. The many millennia during<br />

which the ice was remorselessly expanding must have been terrifying and<br />

awful for our ancestors. But those final 7000 years of deglaciation,<br />

particularly the episodes of very rapid and extensive melting, must have<br />

been worse.<br />

Let us not jump to conclusions about the state of social, or religious, or<br />

scientific, or intellectual development of the human beings who lived<br />

through the sustained collapse of that tumultuous epoch. The popular<br />

stereotype may be wrong in assuming that they were all primitive cave<br />

dwellers. In reality little is known about them and almost the only thing<br />

that can be said is that they were men and women exactly like ourselves<br />

physiologically and psychologically.<br />

It is possible that they came close to total extinction on several<br />

occasions during the upheavals they experienced; it is also possible that<br />

the great myths of cataclysm, to which scholars attribute no historical<br />

value, may contain accurate records and eyewitness accounts of real<br />

events. As we see in the next chapter, if we are looking for an epoch that<br />

fits those myths as snugly as the slipper on Cinderella’s foot, it would<br />

seem that the last Ice Age is it.<br />

13<br />

John Imbrie and Katherine Palmer Imbrie, Ice Ages: Solving the Mystery, Enslow<br />

Publishers, New Jersey, 1979, p. 11.<br />

14<br />

Ibid., p. 120; Encyclopaedia Britannica, 12:783; Human Evolution, p. 73.<br />

206

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!