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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 3<br />

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

Fingerprints of a Lost Science<br />

We saw that the Mercator World Map of 1569 included an accurate<br />

portrayal of the coasts of Antarctica as they would have looked thousands<br />

of years ago when they were free of ice. Interestingly enough, this same<br />

map is considerably less accurate in its portrayal of another region, the<br />

west coast of South America, than an earlier (1538) map also drawn by<br />

Mercator. 1<br />

The reason for this appears to be that the sixteenth-century geographer<br />

based the earlier map on the ancient sources which we know he had at<br />

his disposal, whereas for the later map he relied upon the observations<br />

and measurements of the first Spanish explorers of western South<br />

America. Since those explorers had supposedly brought the latest<br />

information back to Europe, Mercator can hardly be blamed for following<br />

them. In so doing the accuracy of his work declined: instruments capable<br />

of finding longitude did not exist in 1569, but appear to have been used<br />

to prepare the ancient source documents Mercator consulted to produce<br />

his 1538 map. 2<br />

The mysteries of longitude<br />

Let us consider the problem of longitude, defined as the distance in<br />

degrees east or west of the prime meridian. The current internationally<br />

accepted prime meridian is an imaginary curve drawn from the North Pole<br />

to the South Pole passing through the Royal Observatory at Greenwich,<br />

London. Greenwich therefore stands at o° longitude while New York, for<br />

example, stands at around 74° west, and Canberra, Australia, at roughly<br />

150° east.<br />

1 Maps, p. 107.<br />

2 Ibid.<br />

35

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