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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 />

animals were apparently killed together, overcome by some common power ...<br />

Such piles of bodies of animals or men simply do not occur by any ordinary<br />

natural means ...’ 11<br />

At various levels stone artefacts have been found ‘frozen in situ at great<br />

depths, and in association with Ice Age fauna, which confirms that men<br />

were contemporary with extinct animals in Alaska’. 12 Throughout the<br />

Alaskan mucks, also there is:<br />

evidence of atmospheric disturbances of unparalleled violence. Mammoth and<br />

bison alike were torn and twisted as though by a cosmic hand in Godly rage. In<br />

one place we can find the foreleg and shoulder of a mammoth with portions of the<br />

flesh and toenails and hair still clinging to the blackened bones. Close by is the<br />

neck and skull of a bison with the vertebrae clinging together with tendons and<br />

ligaments and the chitinous covering of the horns intact. There is no mark of knife<br />

or cutting instrument [as there would be if human hunters, for example, had been<br />

involved]. The animals were simply torn apart and scattered over the landscape<br />

like things of straw and string, even though some of them weighed several tons.<br />

Mixed with piles of bones are trees, also twisted and torn and piled in tangled<br />

groups; and the whole is covered with a fine sifting muck, then frozen solid. 13<br />

Much the same picture emerges in Siberia where catastrophic climatic<br />

changes and geological upheavals occurred at around the same time.<br />

Here the frozen mammoth graveyards, ‘mined’ for their ivory since the<br />

Roman era, were still yielding an estimated 20,000 pairs of tusks every<br />

decade at the beginning of the twentieth century. 14<br />

Once again, some mysterious factor appears to have been at work in<br />

bringing about these mass extinctions. With their woolly coats and thick<br />

skins, mammoths are generally considered adapted to cold weather, and<br />

we are not surprised to come across their remains in Siberia. Harder to<br />

explain is the fact that human beings perished alongside them, 15 as well<br />

as many other animals that in no sense can be described as cold-adapted<br />

species:<br />

The northern Siberian plains supported vast numbers of rhinoceroses, antelope,<br />

horses, bison, and other herbivorous creatures, while a variety of carnivores,<br />

including the sabertooth cat, preyed upon them ... Like the mammoths, these<br />

other animals ranged to the extreme north of Siberia, to the shores of the Arctic<br />

Ocean, and yet further north to the Lyakhov and New Siberian Islands, only a very<br />

short distance from the North Pole. 16<br />

Researchers have confirmed that of the thirty-four animal species living in<br />

Siberia prior to the catastrophes of the eleventh millennium BC—including<br />

Ossip’s mammoth, giant deer, cave hyena and cave lions—no less than<br />

11<br />

Professor Frank C. Hibben, The Lost Americans, cited in The Path of the Pole, p. 275ff.<br />

12<br />

F. Rainey, ‘Archaeological Investigations in Central Alaska’, American Antiquity,<br />

volume V, 1940, page 307.<br />

13<br />

Path of the Pole, p. 275ff.<br />

14<br />

The Biblical Flood and the Ice Epoch, p. 107-8.<br />

15<br />

A. P. Okladnikov, ‘Excavations in the North’ in Vestiges of Ancient Cultures, Soviet<br />

Union, 1951.<br />

16<br />

The Path of the Pole, p. 255.<br />

209

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