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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 />

only in North America but in Central and South America, in the North<br />

Atlantic, in continental Asia, and in Japan. 31<br />

It is difficult to imagine what this widespread volcanism might have<br />

meant for people living in those strange and terrible times. But those who<br />

recall the cauliflower-shaped clouds of dust, smoke and ash ejected into<br />

the upper atmosphere by the eruption of Mount Saint Helens in 1980 will<br />

appreciate that a large number of such explosions (occurring sequentially<br />

over a sustained period at different points around the globe) would not<br />

only have had devastating local effects but would have caused a severe<br />

deterioration in the world’s climate.<br />

Mount Saint Helens spat out an estimated one cubic kilometre of rock<br />

and was small-scale by comparison with the typical volcanism of the Ice<br />

Age. 32 A more representative impression would be the Indonesian volcano<br />

Krakatoa, which erupted in 1883 with such violence that more than<br />

36,000 people were killed and the explosion was heard 3000 miles away.<br />

From the epicentre in the Sunda Strait, tsunamis 100 feet high roared<br />

across the Java Sea and the Indian Ocean, carrying steamships miles<br />

inland and causing flooding as far away as East Africa and the western<br />

coasts of the Americas. Eighteen cubic kilometres of rock and vast<br />

quantities of ash and dust were pumped into the upper atmosphere;<br />

skies all over the world were noticeably darker for more than two years<br />

and sunsets notably redder. Average global temperatures fell measurably<br />

during this period because volcanic dust-particles reflect the sun’s rays<br />

back into space. 33<br />

During the episodes of intense volcanism which characterized the Ice<br />

Age, we must envisage not one but many Krakatoas. The combined effect<br />

would at first have been a great intensification of glacial conditions, as<br />

the light of the sun was cut by the boiling dust clouds, and as already low<br />

temperatures plummeted even further. Volcanoes also inject enormous<br />

volumes of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, and carbon dioxide is a<br />

‘greenhouse gas’, so it is reasonable to suppose, as the dust began to<br />

settle during periods of relative calm, that a degree of global warming<br />

would have occurred. A number of authorities attribute the repeated<br />

advances and retreats of the great ice sheets to precisely this see-saw<br />

interaction between volcanism and climate. 34<br />

Global flooding<br />

Geologists agree that by 8000 BC the great Wisconsin and Wurm ice-caps<br />

had retreated. The Ice Age was over. However, the seven thousand years<br />

31 Path of the Pole, p. 133, 176.<br />

32 The Evolving Earth, Guild Publishing, London, 1989, p. 30.<br />

33 Ice Ages: Solving the Mystery, p. 64.<br />

34 Path of the Pole, pp. 132-5.<br />

212

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