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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 />

involving the violent obliteration of more than forty million animals, were<br />

not spread out evenly over the whole period; on the contrary, the vast<br />

majority of the extinctions occurred in just two thousand years, between<br />

11,000 BC and 9000 BC. 5 To put this in perspective, during the previous<br />

300,000 years only about twenty genera had disappeared. 6<br />

The same pattern of late and massive extinctions was repeated across<br />

Europe and Asia. Even far-off Australia was not exempt, losing perhaps<br />

nineteen genera of large vertebrates, not all of them mammals, in a<br />

relatively short period of time. 7<br />

Alaska and Siberia: the sudden freeze<br />

The northern regions of Alaska and Siberia appear to have been the worst<br />

hit by the murderous upheavals between 13,000 and 11,000 years ago.<br />

In a great swathe of death around the edge of the Arctic Circle the<br />

remains of uncountable numbers of large animals have been found—<br />

including many carcasses with the flesh still intact, and astonishing<br />

quantities of perfectly preserved mammoth tusks. Indeed, in both<br />

regions, mammoth carcasses have been thawed to feed to sled dogs and<br />

mammoth steaks have featured on restaurant menus in Fairbanks. 8 One<br />

authority has commented, ‘Hundreds of thousands of individuals must<br />

have been frozen immediately after death and remained frozen,<br />

otherwise the meat and ivory would have spoiled ... Some powerful<br />

general force was certainly at work to bring this catastrophe about.’ 9<br />

Dr Dale Guthrie of the Institute of Arctic Biology has made an<br />

interesting point about the sheer variety of animals that flourished in<br />

Alaska before the eleventh millennium BC:<br />

When learning of this exotic mixture of sabre-tooth cats, camels, horses, rhinos,<br />

asses, deer with gigantic antlers, lions, ferrets, and saiga, one cannot help<br />

wondering about the world in which they lived. This great diversity of species, so<br />

different from that encountered today, raises the most obvious question: is it not<br />

likely that the rest of the environment was also different? 10<br />

The Alaskan muck in which the remains are embedded is like a fine, darkgrey<br />

sand. Frozen solid within this mass, in the words of Professor<br />

Hibben of the University of New Mexico:<br />

lie the twisted parts of animals and trees intermingled with lenses of ice and layers<br />

of peat and mosses ... Bison, horses, wolves, bears, lions ... Whole herds of<br />

5<br />

Ibid., pp. 360-1; The Path of the Pole, p. 250.<br />

6<br />

Quaternary Extinctions, p. 360-1.<br />

7<br />

Ibid., p. 358.<br />

8<br />

Donald W. Patten, The Biblical Flood and the Ice Epoch: A Study in Scientific History,<br />

Pacific Meridian Publishing Co., Seattle, 1966, p. 194.<br />

9<br />

The Path of the Pole, p. 258.<br />

10<br />

David M. Hopkins et al., The Palaeoecology of Beringia, Academic Press, New York,<br />

1982, p. 309.<br />

208

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