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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 />

Orinoco, and the latitude is also quite accurate. Is it possible that these<br />

estuaries have been filled in, and the delta extended this much, since<br />

the source maps were made?’ 20<br />

• Although they remained undiscovered until 1592, the Falkland Islands<br />

appear on the 1513 map at their correct latitude. 21<br />

• The library of ancient sources incorporated in the Piri Reis Map may<br />

also account for the fact that it convincingly portrays a large island in<br />

the Atlantic Ocean to the east of the South American coast where no<br />

such island now exists. Is it pure coincidence that this ‘imaginary’<br />

island turns out to be located right over the sub-oceanic Mid-Atlantic<br />

Ridge just north of the equator and 700 miles east of the coast of<br />

Brazil, where the tiny Rocks of Sts. Peter and Paul now jut above the<br />

waves? 22 Or was the relevant source map drawn deep in the last Ice<br />

Age, when sea levels were far lower than they are today and a large<br />

island could indeed have been exposed at this spot?<br />

Sea levels and ice ages<br />

Other sixteenth-century maps also look as though they could have been<br />

based on accurate world surveys conducted during the last Ice Age. One<br />

was compiled by the Turk Hadji Ahmed in 1559, a cartographer, as<br />

Hapgood puts it, who must have had access to some ‘most extraordinary’<br />

source maps. 23<br />

The strangest and most immediately striking feature of Hadji Ahmed’s<br />

compilation is that it shows quite plainly a strip of territory, almost 1000<br />

miles wide, connecting Alaska and Siberia. Such a ‘land-bridge’, as<br />

geologists refer to it, did once exist (where the Bering Strait is now) but<br />

was submerged beneath the waves by rising sea levels at the end of the<br />

last Ice Age. 24<br />

The rising sea levels were caused by the tumultuous melting of the icecap<br />

which was rapidly retreating everywhere in the northern hemisphere<br />

by around 10,000 BC. 25 It is therefore interesting that at least one ancient<br />

map appears to show southern Sweden covered with remnant glaciers of<br />

the kind that must indeed have been prevalent then in these latitudes.<br />

The remnant glaciers are on Claudius Ptolemy’s famous Map of the North.<br />

Originally compiled in the second century AD, this remarkable work from<br />

the last great geographer of classical antiquity was lost for hundreds of<br />

20 Ibid., p. 69.<br />

21 Ibid., p. 72.<br />

22 Ibid., p. 65.<br />

23 Ibid., p. 99.<br />

24 Ibid.<br />

25 Ibid., p. 164.<br />

32

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