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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 />

designed as a gigantic challenge or learning machine—or, better still, as<br />

an interactive three-dimensional puzzle set down in the desert for<br />

humanity to solve.<br />

Antechamber<br />

Just over 3 feet 6 inches high, the entry passage to the lung’s Chamber<br />

required all humans of normal stature to stoop. About four feet farther<br />

on, however, I reached the ‘Antechamber’, where the roof level rose<br />

suddenly to 12 feet above the floor. The east and west walls of the<br />

Antechamber were composed of red granite, into which were cut four<br />

opposing pairs of wide parallel slots, assumed by Egyptologists to have<br />

held thick portcullis slabs. 2 Three of these pairs of slots extended all the<br />

way to the floor, and were empty. The fourth (the northernmost) had<br />

been cut down only as far as the roof level of the entry passage (that is, 3<br />

feet 6 inches above floor level) and still contained a hulking sheet of<br />

granite, perhaps nine inches thick and six feet high. There was a<br />

horizontal space of only 21 inches between this suspended stone<br />

portcullis and the northern end of the entry passage from which I had<br />

just emerged. There was also a gap of a little over 4 feet deep between<br />

the top of the portcullis and the ceiling. Whatever function it was<br />

designed to serve it was hard to agree with the Egyptologists that this<br />

peculiar structure could have been intended to deny access to tomb<br />

robbers.<br />

2 The Pyramids of Egypt, p. 94.<br />

317

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