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.

A token of good faith<br />

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

It was long believed that human beings did not reach the New World until<br />

around 11,000 years ago, but recent finds have steadily pushed that<br />

horizon back. Stone implements dating to 25,000 BC have been identified<br />

by Canadian researchers in the Old Crow Basin in the Yukon Territory of<br />

Alaska. 59 In South America (as far south as Peru and Tierra del Fuego)<br />

human remains and artefacts have been found which have been reliably<br />

dated to 12,000 BC—with another group between 19,000 BC and 23,000<br />

BC. 60 With this and other evidence taken into account, ‘a very reasonable<br />

conclusion on the peopling of the Americas is that it began at least<br />

35,000 years ago, but may well have included waves of immigrants at<br />

later dates too.’ 61<br />

Those newly arriving Ice Age Americans, trekking in from Siberia across<br />

the Bering land bridge, would have faced the most appalling conditions<br />

between 17,000 and 10,000 years ago. It was then that the Wisconsin<br />

glaciers, all at once, went into their ferocious meltdown, forcing a 350foot<br />

rise in global sea levels amid scenes of unprecedented climatic and<br />

geological turmoil. For seven thousand years of human experience,<br />

earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and immense floods, interspersed with<br />

eerie periods of peace, must have dominated the day-to-day lives of the<br />

New World peoples. Perhaps this is why so many of their myths speak<br />

with such conviction of fire and floods and times of darkness and of the<br />

creation and destruction of Suns.<br />

Moreover, as we have seen, the myths of the New World are not in this<br />

respect isolated from those of the Old. All around the globe, a<br />

remarkable uniformity reveals itself over issues such as ‘the great flood’<br />

and ‘the great cold’ and ‘the time of the great upheaval’. It is not just that<br />

the same experiences are being recounted again and again; that, on its<br />

own, would be quite understandable since the Ice Age and its aftereffects<br />

were global phenomena. More curious by far is the way in which<br />

the same symbolic motifs keep recurring: the one good man and his<br />

family, the warning given by a god, the seeds of all living things saved,<br />

the survival ship, the enclosure against the cold, the trunk of a tree in<br />

which the pregenitors of future humanity hide themselves, the birds and<br />

other creatures released after the flood to find land ... and so on.<br />

Isn’t it also odd that so many of the myths turn out to contain<br />

descriptions of figures like Quetzalcoatl and Viracocha, said to have come<br />

in the time of darkness, after the flood, to teach architecture, astronomy,<br />

science and the rule of law to the scattered and devastated tribes of<br />

survivors.<br />

Who were these civilizing heroes? Were they figments of the primitive<br />

59 Human Evolution, p. 92.<br />

60 Ibid.; see also Quaternary Extinctions, p. 375.<br />

61 Human Evolution, p. 92.<br />

217

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!