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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 />

casual intruder.<br />

Why? To make sure they would never be found? Or to make sure that<br />

they would be found, some day, under the right circumstances?<br />

After all, there had from the beginning been two conspicuous shafts in<br />

the King’s Chamber, penetrating the north and south walls. It should not<br />

have been beyond the mental powers of the pyramid builders to predict<br />

that sooner or later some inquiring person would be tempted to look for<br />

shafts in the Queen’s Chamber as well. In the event nobody did look for<br />

more than a thousand years after Caliph Ma’mun had opened the<br />

monument to the world in AD 820. Then in 1872 an English engineer<br />

named Waynman Dixon, a Freemason who ‘had been led to suspect the<br />

existence of the shafts by their presence in the King’s Chamber above’, 16<br />

went tapping around the Queen’s Chamber’s walls and located them. He<br />

opened the southern shaft first, setting his ‘carpenter and man-of-allwork,<br />

Bill Grundy, to jump a hole with a hammer and steel chisel at that<br />

place. So to work the faithful fellow went, and with a will which soon<br />

began to make a way into the soft stone [limestone] at this point, when<br />

lo! after a comparatively very few strokes, flop went the chisel right<br />

through into something or other.’ 17<br />

The ‘something or other’ Bill Grundy’s chisel had reached turned out to<br />

be ‘a rectangular, horizontal, tubular channel, about 9 inches by 8 inches<br />

in transverse breadth and height, going back 7 feet into the wall, and<br />

then rising at an angle into an unknown, dark distance ...’ 18<br />

It was up that angle, and into that ‘unknown dark distance’, 121 years<br />

later, that Rudolf Gantenbrink sent his robot—the technology of our<br />

species having finally caught up with our powerful instincts to pry. Those<br />

instincts were clearly no weaker in 1872 than in 1993; among the many<br />

interesting things the remote-controlled camera succeeded in filming in<br />

the Queen’s Chamber shafts was the far end of a long, sectioned metal<br />

rod of nineteenth century design which Waynman Dixon and the faithful<br />

Bill Grundy had secretly stuffed up the intriguing channel. 19 Predictably,<br />

they had assumed that if the pyramid builders had gone to the trouble of<br />

constructing and then concealing the shafts, then they must have hidden<br />

something worth looking for inside them.<br />

The notion that there might have been an intention from the outset to<br />

stimulate such investigations would seem quite implausible if the final<br />

upshot of the discovery and exploration of the shafts had been a deadend.<br />

Instead, as we have seen, a door was found—a sliding, portcullis<br />

door with curious metal fittings and an enticing gap at its base beneath<br />

which the laser-spot projected by Gantenbrink’s robot was seen to<br />

16<br />

The Pyramids of Egypt, p. 92.<br />

17<br />

The Great Pyramid: Its Secrets and Mysteries Revealed, p. 428.<br />

18<br />

Ibid.<br />

19<br />

Presentation at the British Museum, 22 November 1993, by Rudolf Gantenbrink, of<br />

footage shot in the shafts by the robot camera Upuaut.<br />

311

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