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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 />

It would be possible to write an elaborate explanation of longitude and<br />

of what needs to be done to fix it precisely for any given point on the<br />

earth’s surface. What we are concerned with here, however, is not so<br />

much technical detail as the accepted historical facts about humanity’s<br />

growing knowledge of the mysteries of longitude. Among these facts, this<br />

is the most important: until a breakthrough invention in the eighteenth<br />

century, cartographers and navigators were unable to fix longitude with<br />

any kind of precision. They could only make guesses which were usually<br />

inaccurate by many hundreds of miles, because the technology had not<br />

yet been developed to allow them to do the job properly.<br />

Latitude north or south of the equator did not pose such a problem: it<br />

could be worked out by means of angular measurements of the sun and<br />

stars taken with relatively simple instruments. But to find longitude<br />

equipment of an altogether different and superior calibre was needed,<br />

which could combine position measurements with time measurements.<br />

Throughout the span of known history the invention of such equipment<br />

had remained beyond the capacities of scientists, but by the beginning of<br />

the eighteenth century, with rapidly increasing sea traffic, a mood of<br />

impatience and urgency had set in. In the words of an authority on the<br />

period, ‘The search for longitude overshadowed the life of every man<br />

afloat, and the safety of every ship and cargo. Accurate measurement<br />

seemed an impossible dream and “discovering the longitude” had become<br />

a stock phrase in the press like “pigs might fly”.’ 3<br />

3 Simon Bethon and Andrew Robinson, The Shape of the World: The Mapping and<br />

Discovery of the Earth, Guild Publishing, London, 1991, p. 117.<br />

36

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