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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 />

rotation, which is also the angle between the celestial equator and the<br />

ecliptic). This, as we have seen, varies over immensely long periods of<br />

time between 22.1 degrees (the closest point that the axis reaches to<br />

vertical) and 24.5 degrees (the furthest it falls away from the vertical);<br />

2 The eccentricity of the orbit (i.e., whether the earth’s elliptical path<br />

around the sun is more or less elongated in any given epoch);<br />

3 Axial precession, which causes the four cardinal points on the earth’s<br />

orbit (the two equinoxes and the winter and summer solstices) to<br />

creep backwards very, very slowly around the orbital path.<br />

We are dipping our toes into the waters of a technical and specialized<br />

scientific discipline here—one largely outside the scope of this book.<br />

Readers seeking detailed information are referred to the multidisciplinary<br />

work of the US National Science Foundation’s CLIMAP Project, and to a<br />

keynote paper by Professors J. D. Hays and John Imbrie entitled<br />

‘Variations in the Earth’s Orbit: Pacemaker of the Ice Ages’ (see Note 4).<br />

Briefly, what Hays, Imbrie and others have proved is that the onset of<br />

ice ages can be predicted when the following evil and inauspicious<br />

conjunctions of celestial cycles occur: (a) maximum eccentricity, which<br />

takes the earth millions of miles further away from the sun at ‘aphelion’<br />

(the extremity of its orbit) than is normal; (b) minimum obliquity, which<br />

means that the earth’s axis, and consequently the North and South poles,<br />

stand much closer to the vertical than is normal; and (c) precession of<br />

the equinoxes which, as the great cycle continues, eventually causes<br />

winter in one hemisphere or the other to set in when the earth is at<br />

‘perihelion’ (its closest point to the sun); this in turn means that summer<br />

occurs at aphelion and is thus relatively cold, so that ice laid down in<br />

winter fails to melt during the following summer and a remorseless buildup<br />

of glacial conditions occurs. 6<br />

Levered by the changing geometry of the orbit, ‘global insolation’—the<br />

differing amounts and intensity of sunlight received at various latitudes<br />

in any given epoch—can thus be an important trigger factor for ice ages.<br />

Is it possible that the ancient myth-makers were trying to warn us of<br />

great danger when they so intricately linked the pain of global cataclysms<br />

to the slow grinding of the mill of heaven?<br />

This is a question we will return to in due course, but meanwhile it is<br />

enough to observe that by identifying the significant effects of orbital<br />

geometry on the planet’s climate and wellbeing, and by combining this<br />

information with precise measurements of the rate of precessional<br />

motion, the unknown scientists of an unrecognized civilization seem to<br />

have found a way to catch our attention, to bridge the chasm of the ages,<br />

and to communicate with us directly.<br />

6 ‘Variations in the Earth’s Orbit: Pacemaker of the Ice Ages’.<br />

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