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

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

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

twenty-eight were adapted only to temperate conditions. 17 In this context,<br />

one of the most puzzling aspects of the extinctions, which runs quite<br />

contrary to what today’s geographical and climatic conditions lead us to<br />

expect, is that the farther north one goes, the more the mammoth and<br />

other remains increase in number. 18 Indeed some of the New Siberian<br />

Islands, well within the Arctic Circle, were described by the explorers who<br />

first discovered them as being made up almost entirely of mammoth<br />

bones and tusks. 19 The only logical conclusion, as the nineteenth-century<br />

French zoologist Georges Cuvier put it, is that ‘this eternal frost did not<br />

previously exist in those parts in which the animals were frozen, for they<br />

could not have survived in such a temperature. The same instant that<br />

these creatures were bereft of life, the country which they inhabited<br />

became frozen.’ 20<br />

There is a great deal of other evidence which suggests that a sudden<br />

freeze took place in Siberia during the eleventh millennium BC. In his<br />

survey of the New Siberian Islands, the Arctic explorer Baron Eduard von<br />

Toll found the remains ‘of a sabre-tooth tiger, and a fruit tree that had<br />

been 90 feet tall when it was standing. The tree was well preserved in the<br />

permafrost, with its roots and seeds. Green leaves and ripe fruit still<br />

clung to its branches ... At the present time the only representative of<br />

tree vegetation on the islands is a willow that grows one inch high’. 21<br />

Equally indicative of the cataclysmic change that took place at the onset<br />

of the great cold in Siberia is the food the extinct animals were eating<br />

when they perished: ‘The mammoths died suddenly, in intense cold, and<br />

in great numbers. Death came so quickly that the swallowed vegetation is<br />

yet undigested ... Grasses, bluebells, buttercups, tender sedges, and wild<br />

beans have been found, yet identifiable and undeteriorated, in their<br />

mouths and stomachs.’ 22<br />

Needless to say, such flora does not grow anywhere in Siberia today. Its<br />

presence there in the eleventh millennium BC compels us to accept that<br />

the region had a pleasant and productive climate—one that was<br />

temperate or even warm. 23 Why the end of the last Ice Age in other parts<br />

of the world should have been the beginning of fatal winter in this former<br />

paradise is a question we shall postpone until Part VIII. What is certain,<br />

17<br />

A. P. Okladnikov, Yakutia before its Incorporation into the Russian State, McGill-<br />

Queens University Press, Montreal, 1970.<br />

18<br />

The Path of the Pole, p. 250.<br />

19<br />

The Biblical Flood and the Ice Epoch, p. 107. Wragnell, the explorer, observed on Bear<br />

Island (Medvizhi Ostrova) that the soil consisted of only sand, ice and such a quantity of<br />

mammoth bones that they seemed to be the chief substance of the island. On the<br />

Siberian mainland he observed that the tundra was dotted with mammoth tusks rather<br />

than Arctic shrubbery.<br />

20<br />

Georges Cuvier, Revolutions and Catastrophes in the History of the Earth, 1829.<br />

21<br />

Cited in Path of the Pole, p. 256.<br />

22<br />

Ivan T. Sanderson, ‘Riddle of the Quick-Frozen Giants’, Saturday Evening Post, 16<br />

January 1960, p. 82.<br />

23<br />

Path of the Pole, p. 256.<br />

210

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!