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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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Chapter 32<br />

Speaking to the Unborn<br />

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

It is understandable that a huge range of myths from all over the ancient<br />

world should describe geological catastrophes in graphic detail. Mankind<br />

survived the horror of the last Ice Age, and the most plausible source for<br />

our enduring traditions of flooding and freezing, massive volcanism and<br />

devastating earthquakes is in the tumultuous upheavals unleashed during<br />

the great meltdown of 15,000 to 8000 BC. The final retreat of the ice<br />

sheets, and the consequent 300-400 foot rise in global sea levels, took<br />

place only a few thousand years before the beginning of the historical<br />

period. It is therefore not surprising that all our early civilizations should<br />

have retained vivid memories of the vast cataclysms that had terrified<br />

their forefathers.<br />

Much harder to explain is the peculiar but distinctive way the myths of<br />

cataclysm seem to bear the intelligent imprint of a guiding hand. 1 Indeed<br />

the degree of convergence between such ancient stories is frequently<br />

remarkable enough to raise the suspicion that they must all have been<br />

‘written’ by the same ‘author’.<br />

Could that author have had anything to do with the wondrous deity, or<br />

superhuman, spoken of in so many of the myths we have reviewed, who<br />

appears immediately after the world has been shattered by a horrifying<br />

geological catastrophe and brings comfort and the gifts of civilization to<br />

the shocked and demoralized survivors?<br />

White and bearded, Osiris is the Egyptian manifestation of this universal<br />

figure, and it may not be an accident that one of the first acts he is<br />

remembered for in myth is the abolition of cannibalism among the<br />

primitive inhabitants of the Nile Valley. 2 Viracocha, in South America, was<br />

said to have begun his civilizing mission immediately after a great flood;<br />

Quetzalcoatl, the discoverer of maize, brought the benefits of crops,<br />

mathematics, astronomy and a refined culture to Mexico after the Fourth<br />

Sun had been overwhelmed by a destroying deluge.<br />

Could these strange myths contain a record of encounters between<br />

scattered palaeolithic tribes which survived the last Ice Age and an as yet<br />

1<br />

See Chapter Twenty-four for details of flood myths. The same kind of convergence<br />

among supposedly unconnected myths also occurs with regard to precession of the<br />

equinoxes. The mills, the characters who work and own and eventually break them, the<br />

brothers and nephews and uncles, the theme of revenge, the theme of incest, the dogs<br />

that flit silently from story to story, and the exact numbers needed to calculate<br />

precessional motion—all crop up everywhere, from culture to culture and from age to<br />

age, propagating themselves effortlessly along the jet-stream of time.<br />

2<br />

Diodorus Siculus, Book I, 14:1-15, translated by C. H. Oldfather, Loeb Classical Library,<br />

London, 1989, pp. 47-9.<br />

262

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