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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 />

emphasized by the coring tubes used, in 1949, by one of the Byrd<br />

Antarctic Expeditions to take samples of sediment from the bottom of the<br />

Ross Sea. The sediments showed numerous clearly demarcated layers of<br />

stratification reflecting different environmental conditions in different<br />

epochs: ‘coarse glacial marine’, ‘medium glacial marine’, ‘fine glacial<br />

marine’, and so on. The most surprising discovery, however, ‘was that a<br />

number of the layers were formed of fine-grained, well-assorted<br />

sediments, such as are brought down to the sea by rivers flowing from<br />

temperate (that is, ice-free) lands ...’ 7<br />

Using the ionium-dating method developed by Dr W. D. Urry (which<br />

makes use of three different radioactive elements found in sea water 8 ),<br />

researchers at the Carnegie Institute in Washington DC were able to<br />

establish beyond any reasonable doubt that great rivers carrying finegrained<br />

well-assorted sediments had indeed flowed in Antarctica until<br />

about 6000 years ago, as the Oronteus Finaeus Map showed. It was only<br />

after that date, around 4000 BC, ‘that the glacial kind of sediment began<br />

to be deposited on the Ross Sea bottom ... The cores indicate that warm<br />

conditions had prevailed for a long period before that.’ 9<br />

Mercator and Buache<br />

The Piri Reis and Oronteus Finaeus Maps therefore provide us with a<br />

glimpse of Antarctica as no cartographer in historical times could<br />

possibly have seen it. On their own, of course, these two pieces of<br />

evidence should not be sufficient to persuade us that we might be gazing<br />

at the fingerprints of a lost civilization. Can three, or four, or six such<br />

maps, however, be dismissed with equal justification?<br />

7 Ibid., p. 97.<br />

8 For a detailed description of the process see Maps, P. 96.<br />

9 Ibid., page 98.<br />

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