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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 />

Site plan of the Giza necropolis<br />

Herodotus saw the monuments in the fifth century BC, more than 2000<br />

years after they had been built. Nevertheless it was largely on the<br />

foundation of his testimony that the entire subsequent judgement of<br />

history was based. All other commentators, up to the present, continued<br />

uncritically to follow in the Greek historian’s footsteps. And down the<br />

ages—although it had originally been little more than hearsay—the<br />

attribution of the Great Pyramid to Khufu, the Second Pyramid to Khafre<br />

and the Third Pyramid to Menkaure had assumed the stature of<br />

unassailable fact.<br />

Trivializing the mystery<br />

Having parted company with Ali, Santha and I continued our walk into the<br />

desert. Skirting the immense south-western corner of the Second<br />

Pyramid, our eyes were drawn towards its summit. There we noted again<br />

the intact facing stones that still covered its top 22 courses. We also<br />

noticed that the first few courses above its base, each of which had a<br />

‘footprint’ of about a dozen acres, were composed of truly massive<br />

blocks of limestone, almost too high to clamber over, which were about<br />

20 feet long and 6 feet thick. These extraordinary monoliths, as I was<br />

later to discover, weighed 200 tons apiece and belonged to a distinct<br />

style of masonry to be found at several different and widely scattered<br />

locations within the Giza necropolis.<br />

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