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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 />

epiphanies.<br />

Bent almost double, my back brushing against the polished limestone<br />

ceiling, it was with such thoughts in my mind that I began to scramble up<br />

the 26° slope of the ascending corridor, which seemed to penetrate the<br />

vast bulk of the six million ton building like a trigonometrical device.<br />

After I had banged my head on its ceiling a couple of times, however, I<br />

began to wonder why the ingenious people who’d designed it hadn’t<br />

made it two or three feet higher. If they could erect a monument like this<br />

in the first place (which they obviously could) and equip it with corridors,<br />

surely it would not have been beyond their capabilities to make those<br />

corridors roomy enough to stand up in? Once again I was tempted to<br />

conclude that it was the result of a deliberate decision by the pyramid<br />

builders: they had made the ascending corridor this way because they<br />

had wanted it this way (rather than because such a design had been<br />

forced upon them.)<br />

Was there motive in the apparent madness of these archaic mind<br />

games?<br />

Unknown dark distance<br />

At the top of the ascending corridor I emerged into yet another<br />

inexplicable feature of the pyramid, ‘the most celebrated architectural<br />

work to have survived from the Old Kingdom’ 13 —the Grand Gallery.<br />

Soaring upwards at the continuing majestic angle of 26°, and almost<br />

entirely vanishing into the airy gloom above, its spacious corbelled vault<br />

made a stunning impression.<br />

It was not my intention to climb the Grand Gallery yet. Branching off<br />

due south at its base was a long horizontal passageway, 3 feet 9 inches<br />

high and 127 feet in length, that led to the Queen’s Chamber. 14 I wanted<br />

to revisit this room, which I had admired for its stark beauty since<br />

becoming acquainted with the Great Pyramid several years previously.<br />

Today, however, to my considerable irritation, the passageway was barred<br />

within a few feet of its entrance.<br />

13<br />

The Pyramids of Egypt, p. 93.<br />

14<br />

Dimensions from Traveller’s Key to Ancient Egypt, p. 121, and The Pyramids of Egypt,<br />

p. 93.<br />

309

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