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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 />

Another authority felt that the careful and clever design of this strange<br />

pyramid boat could potentially have made it ‘a far more seaworthy craft<br />

than anything available to Columbus’. 7 Moreover, the experts agreed that<br />

it had been built to a pattern that could only have been ‘created by<br />

shipbuilders from a people with a long, solid tradition of sailing on the<br />

open sea.’ 8<br />

Present at the very beginning of Egypt’s 3000-year history, who had<br />

those as yet unidentified shipbuilders been? They had not accumulated<br />

their ‘long, solid tradition of sailing on the open sea’ while ploughing the<br />

fields of the landlocked Nile Valley. So where and when had they<br />

developed their maritime skills?<br />

There was yet another puzzle. I knew that the Ancient Egyptians had<br />

been very good at making scale models and representations of all<br />

manner of things for symbolic purposes. 9 I therefore found it hard to<br />

understand why they would have gone to the trouble of manufacturing<br />

and then burying a boat as big and sophisticated as this if its only<br />

function, as the Egyptologists claimed, had been as a token of the<br />

spiritual vessel that would carry the soul of the deceased king to<br />

heaven. 10 That could have been achieved as effectively with a much<br />

smaller craft, and only one would have been needed, not several. Logic<br />

therefore suggested that these gigantic vessels might have been intended<br />

for some other purpose altogether, or had some quite different and still<br />

unsuspected symbolic significance ...<br />

We had reached the rough midpoint of the southern face of the Great<br />

Pyramid when we at last realized why we were being taken on this long<br />

walkabout. The objective was for us to be relieved of moderate sums of<br />

money at each of the four cardinal points. The tally thus far was 30 US<br />

dollars at the northern face and 50 Egyptian pounds at the eastern face.<br />

Now I shelled out a further 50 Egyptian pounds to yet another patrol Ali<br />

was supposed to have paid off the day before.<br />

‘Ali,’ I hissed, ‘when are we going to climb the Pyramid?’<br />

‘Right away, Mr. Graham,’ our guide replied. He walked confidently<br />

forward, gesturing directly ahead, then added, ‘We shall ascend at the<br />

south-west corner ...’<br />

7 Traveller’s Key to Ancient Egypt, pp. 132-3.<br />

8 The Ra Expeditions, p. 16.<br />

9 See, for example, Christine Desroches-Noblecourt, Tutankhamen, Penguin Books,<br />

London, 1989, pages 89, 108, 113, 283.<br />

10 A.J. Spencer, The Great Pyramid Fact Sheet, P.J. Publications, 1989.<br />

273

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