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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 />

stones being effortlessly levitated by priests or magicians through the<br />

utterance of ‘words of power’? 9<br />

Not for the first time when confronted by the mysteries of the pyramids<br />

I knew that I was looking at an impossible engineering feat which had<br />

nevertheless been carried out to astonishingly high and precise<br />

standards. Moreover, if Egyptologists were to be believed, the<br />

construction work had supposedly been undertaken at the dawn of<br />

human civilization by a people who had not accumulated any experience<br />

of massive construction projects.<br />

This was, of course, a startling cultural paradox, and one for to which<br />

no adequate explanation had ever been offered by an orthodox academic.<br />

The moving finger writes and having writ it moves on<br />

Leaving the underground chambers, which seemed to vibrate at the core<br />

of the Third Pyramid like the convoluted, multi-valved heart of some<br />

slumbering Leviathan, we made our way along the narrow entrance<br />

corridor and into the open air.<br />

Our objective now was the Second Pyramid. We walked along its<br />

western flank (just under 708 feet in length), turned right and eventually<br />

came to the point on its north side, about 40 feet east of the main northsouth<br />

axis, where the principal entrances were located. One of these was<br />

carved directly into the bedrock at ground level about 30 feet in front of<br />

the monument; the other was cut into the northern face at a height of<br />

just under 50 feet. From the latter a corridor sloped downwards at an<br />

angle of 25° 55’. 10 From the former, by which we now entered the<br />

pyramid, another descending corridor led deeply underground then<br />

levelled off for a short distance, giving access to a subterranean chamber,<br />

then ascended steeply and finally levelled off again into a long horizontal<br />

passageway, heading due south (into which also fed the upper corridor<br />

that sloped down from the entrance in the north face).<br />

High enough to stand up in, and lined at first with granite and then with<br />

smoothly polished limestone, the horizontal passageway was almost at<br />

ground level, that is, it lay directly beneath the pyramid’s lowest course<br />

of masonry. It was also extremely long, running dead straight for a<br />

further 200 feet until it debouched in the single ‘burial chamber’ at the<br />

heart of the monument.<br />

As we have already noted, no mummy had ever been found in this latter<br />

chamber, nor any inscriptions, with the result that the so-called Pyramid<br />

of Khafre was wholly anonymous. Latter-day adventurers had, however,<br />

carved their names on to its walls—notably the former circus strongman<br />

Giovanni Battista Belzoni (1778-1823) who had forced his way into the<br />

9 See, for example, Osiris and the Egyptian Resurrection, volume II, p. 180.<br />

10 The Pyramids of Egypt, p. 117.<br />

300

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