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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 />

maps other than those used by Oronteus Finaeus.’ 12<br />

And not only Mercator.<br />

Philippe Buache, the eighteenth-century French geographer, was also<br />

able to publish a map of Antarctica long before the southern continent<br />

was officially ‘discovered’. And the extraordinary feature of Buache’s map<br />

is that it seems to have been based on source maps made earlier,<br />

perhaps thousands of years earlier, than those used by Oronteus Finaeus<br />

and Mercator. What Buache gives us is an eerily precise representation of<br />

Antarctica as it must have looked when there was no ice on it at all. 13 His<br />

map reveals the subglacial topography of the entire continent, which even<br />

we did not have full knowledge of until 1958, International Geophysical<br />

Year, when a comprehensive seismic survey was carried out.<br />

That survey only confirmed what Buache had already proclaimed when<br />

he published his map of Antarctica in 1737. Basing his cartography on<br />

ancient sources now lost, the French academician depicted a clear<br />

waterway across the southern continent dividing it into two principal<br />

landmasses lying east and west of the line now marked by the Trans-<br />

Antarctic Mountains.<br />

Such a waterway, connecting the Ross, Weddell and Bellinghausen Seas,<br />

would indeed exist if Antarctica were free of ice. As the 1958 IGY Survey<br />

shows, the continent (which appears on modern maps as one continuous<br />

landmass) consists of an archipelago of large islands with mile-thick ice<br />

packed between them and rising above sea level.<br />

The epoch of the map-makers<br />

As we have seen, many orthodox geologists believe that the last time any<br />

waterway existed in these ice-filled basins was millions of years ago.<br />

From the scholarly point of view, however, it is equally orthodox to affirm<br />

that no human beings had evolved in those remote times, let alone<br />

human beings capable of accurately mapping the landmasses of the<br />

Antarctic. The big problem raised by the Buache/IGY evidence is that<br />

those landmasses do seem to have been mapped when they were free of<br />

ice. This confronts scholars with two mutually contradictory propositions.<br />

12 Ibid., pp. 103-4.<br />

13 Ibid., p. 93.<br />

27

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