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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 />

Inevitably the first consequence was a precipitous rise in sea levels,<br />

perhaps as much as 350 feet. 45 Islands and land bridges disappeared and<br />

vast sections of low-lying continental coastline were submerged. From<br />

time to time great tidal waves rose up to engulf higher land as well. They<br />

ebbed away, but in the process left unmistakable traces of their presence.<br />

In the United States, ‘Ice Age marine features are present along the Gulf<br />

coast east of the Mississippi River, in some places at altitudes that may<br />

exceed 200 feet.’ 46 In bogs covering glacial deposits in Michigan,<br />

skeletons of two whales were discovered. In Georgia marine deposits<br />

occur at altitudes of 160 feet, and in northern Florida at altitudes of at<br />

least 240 feet. In Texas, well to the south of the farthest extent of the<br />

Wisconsin Glaciation, the remains of Ice Age land mammals are found in<br />

marine deposits. Another marine deposit, containing walrus, seals and at<br />

least five genera of whales, overlies the seaboard of the north-eastern<br />

states and the Arctic coast of Canada. In many areas along the Pacific<br />

coast of North America Ice Age marine deposits extend ‘more than 200<br />

miles inland.’ 47 The bones of a whale have been found north of Lake<br />

Ontario, about 440 feet above sea level, a skeleton of another whale in<br />

Vermont, more than 500 feet above sea level, and another in the<br />

Montreal-Quebec area about 600 feet above sea level. 48<br />

Flood myths from all over the world characteristically and recurrently<br />

describe scenes when humans and animals flee the rising tides and take<br />

refuge on mountain tops. The fossil record confirms that this did indeed<br />

happen during the melting of the ice sheets and that the mountains were<br />

not always high enough to save the refugees from disaster. For example,<br />

fissures in the rocks on the tops of isolated hills in central France are<br />

filled with what is known as ‘osseous breccia’, consisting of the<br />

splintered bones of mammoths, woolly rhinoceroses and other animals.<br />

The 1430 feet peak of Mount Genay in Burgundy ‘is capped by a breccia<br />

containing remains of mammoth, reindeer, horse and other animals’. 49<br />

Much farther south, so too is the Rock of Gibraltar where ‘a human molar<br />

and some flints worked by Paleolithic man were discovered among the<br />

animal bones.’ 50<br />

Hippo remains, together with mammoth, rhinoceros, horse, bear, bison,<br />

postglacial life fully established by 14,500 years ago. In Lithuania another bog<br />

developed as early as 15,620 years ago. These two dates taken together are rather<br />

suggestive. A bog can develop much faster than a forest. First, however, the ice must<br />

disappear. And let us not forget that there was a great deal of ice.’<br />

45<br />

Ice Ages, p. 11, Biblical Flood and the Ice Epoch, p. 117, Path of the Pole, p. 47.<br />

46<br />

R. F. Flint, Glacial Geology and the Pleistocene Epoch, 1947, pp. 294-5.<br />

47<br />

Ibid., p. 362.<br />

48<br />

Earth in Upheaval, p. 43; in general, pp. 42-4.<br />

49<br />

Ibid., p. 47. Joseph Prestwich, On Certain Phenomena Belonging to the Close of the<br />

Last Geological Period and on their Bearing upon the Tradition of the Flood, Macmillan,<br />

London, 1895, p. 36.<br />

50<br />

On Certain Phenomena, p. 48.<br />

215

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