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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 />

like industrial-age drills packing a ton or more of punch and capable of<br />

slicing through hard stones like hot knives through butter?<br />

Petrie could come up with no explanation for this conundrum. Nor was<br />

he able to explain the kind of instrument used to cut hieroglyphs into a<br />

number of diorite bowls with Fourth Dynasty inscriptions which he found<br />

at Giza: ‘The hieroglyphs are incised with a very free-cutting point; they<br />

are not scraped or ground out, but are ploughed through the diorite, with<br />

rough edges to the line ...’ 14<br />

This bothered the logical Petrie because he knew that diorite was one of<br />

the hardest stones on earth, far harder even than iron. 15 Yet here it was in<br />

Ancient Egypt being cut with incredible power and precision by some as<br />

yet unidentified graving tool:<br />

As the lines are only 1/150 inch wide it is evident that the cutting point must have<br />

been much harder than quartz; and tough enough not to splinter when so fine an<br />

edge was being employed, probably only 1/200 inch wide. Parallel lines are graved<br />

only 1/30 inch apart from centre to centre. 16<br />

In other words, he was envisaging an instrument with a needle-sharp<br />

point of exceptional, unprecedented hardness capable of penetrating and<br />

furrowing diorite with ease, and capable also of withstanding the<br />

enormous pressures required throughout the operation. What sort of<br />

instrument was that? By what means would the pressure have been<br />

applied? How could sufficient accuracy have been maintained to scour<br />

parallel lines at intervals of just 1/30-inch?<br />

At least it was possible to conjure a mental picture of the circular drills<br />

with jewelled teeth which Petrie supposed must have been used to hollow<br />

out the lung’s Chamber sarcophagus. I found, however, that it was not so<br />

easy to do the same for the unknown instrument capable of incising<br />

hieroglyphs into diorite at 2500 BC, at any rate not without assuming the<br />

existence of a far higher level of technology than Egyptologists were<br />

prepared to consider.<br />

Nor was it just a few hieroglyphs or a few diorite bowls. During my<br />

travels in Egypt I had examined many stone vessels—dating back in some<br />

cases to pre-dynastic times—that had been mysteriously hollowed out of<br />

a range of materials such as diorite, basalt, quartz crystal and<br />

metamorphic schist. 17<br />

For example, more than 30,000 such vessels had been found in the<br />

chambers beneath the Third Dynasty Step Pyramid of Zoser at Saqqara. 18<br />

That meant that they were at least as old as Zoser himself (i.e. around<br />

2650 BC 19 ). Theoretically, they could have been even older than that,<br />

14 Ibid., pp. 74-5.<br />

15 The Pyramids: An Enigma Solved, p. 8.<br />

16 The Pyramids and Temples of Gizeh, p. 75.<br />

17 The Pyramids: An Enigma Solved, p. 118.<br />

18 Egypt: Land of the Pharaohs, Time-Life Books, 1992, p. 51.<br />

19 Atlas of Ancient Egypt, p. 36.<br />

321

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