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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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Chapter 38<br />

Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

Interactive Three-Dimensional Game<br />

Reaching the top of the Grand Gallery, I clambered over a chunky granite<br />

step about three feet high. I remembered that it lay, like the roof of the<br />

Queen’s Chamber, exactly along the east-west axis of the Great Pyramid,<br />

And therefore marked the point of transition between the northern and<br />

southern halves of the monument. 1 Somewhat like an altar in appearance,<br />

the step also provided a solid horizontal platform immediately in front of<br />

the low square tunnel that served as the entrance to the King’s Chamber.<br />

Pausing for a moment, I looked back down the Gallery, taking in once<br />

again its lack of decoration, its lack of religious iconography, and its<br />

absolute lack of any of the recognizable symbolism normally associated<br />

with the archaic belief system of the Ancient Egyptians. All that registered<br />

upon the eye, along the entire 153-foot length of this magnificent<br />

geometrical cavity, was its disinterested regularity and its stark machinelike<br />

simplicity.<br />

Looking up, I could just make out the opening of a dark aperture,<br />

chiselled into the top of the eastern wall above my head. Nobody knew<br />

when or by whom this foreboding hole had been cut, or how deep it had<br />

originally penetrated. It led to the first of the five relieving chambers<br />

above the King’s Chamber and had been extended in 1837 when Howard<br />

Vyse had used it to break through to the remaining four. Looking down<br />

again, I could just make out the point at the bottom of the Gallery’s<br />

western wall where the near-vertical well-shaft began its precipitous 160<br />

foot descent through the core of the pyramid to join the descending<br />

corridor far below ground-level.<br />

Why would such a complicated apparatus of pipes and passageways<br />

have been required? At first sight it didn’t make sense. But then nothing<br />

about the Great Pyramid did make much sense, unless you were prepared<br />

to devote a great deal of attention to it. In unpredictable ways, when you<br />

did that, it would from time to time reward you.<br />

If you were sufficiently numerate, for example, as we have seen, it<br />

would respond to your basic inquiries into its height and base perimeter<br />

by ‘printing out’ the value of pi. And if you were prepared to investigate<br />

further, as we shall see, it would download other useful mathematical<br />

tidbits, each a little more complex and abstruse that its predecessor.<br />

There was a programmed feel about this whole process, as though it<br />

had been carefully prearranged. Not for the first time, I found myself<br />

willing to consider the possibility that the pyramid might have been<br />

1 The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh, p. 25.<br />

316

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