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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 />

from nowhere.’ 10<br />

Indeed, with their accurate longitudes, Cook’s Pacific maps must be<br />

ranked among the very first examples of the precise cartography of our<br />

modern era. They remind us, moreover, that the making of really good<br />

maps requires at least three key ingredients: great journeys of discovery;<br />

first-class mathematical and cartographic skills; sophisticated<br />

chronometers.<br />

It was not until Harrison’s chronometer became generally available in<br />

the 1770s that the third of these preconditions was fulfilled. This brilliant<br />

invention made it possible for cartographers to fix longitude precisely,<br />

something that the Sumerians, the Ancient Egyptians, the Greeks and the<br />

Romans, and indeed all other known civilizations before the eighteenth<br />

century were supposedly unable to do. It is therefore surprising and<br />

unsettling to come across vastly older maps which give latitudes and<br />

longitudes with modern precision.<br />

Precision instruments<br />

These inexplicably precise latitudes and longitudes are found in the same<br />

general category of documents that contain the advanced geographical<br />

knowledge I have outlined.<br />

The Piri Reis Map of 1513, for example, places South America and<br />

Africa in the correct relative longitudes, 11 theoretically an impossible feat<br />

for the science of the time. But Piri Reis was candid in admitting that his<br />

map was based on far earlier sources. Could it have been from one of<br />

these sources that he derived his accurate longitudes?<br />

Also of great interest is the so-called ‘Dulcert Portulano’ of AD 1339<br />

which focuses on Europe and North Africa. Here latitude is perfect across<br />

huge distances and the total longitude of the Mediterranean and Black<br />

Seas is correct to within half a degree. 12<br />

Professor Hapgood comments that the maker of the original source<br />

from which the Dulcert Portulano was copied had ‘achieved highly<br />

scientific accuracy in finding the ratio of latitude to longitude. He could<br />

only have done this if he had precise information on the relative<br />

longitudes of a great many places scattered all the way from Galway in<br />

Ireland to the eastern bend of the Don in Russia.’ 13<br />

The Zeno Map 14 of AD 1380 is another enigma. Covering a vast area of<br />

the north as far as Greenland, it locates a great many widely scattered<br />

places at latitudes and longitudes which are ‘amazingly correct’. 15 It is<br />

10<br />

Ibid.<br />

11<br />

Maps, pp. 1, 41.<br />

12<br />

Ibid., p. 116.<br />

13<br />

Ibid.<br />

14<br />

Ibid., pp. 149-58.<br />

15<br />

Ibid, p. 152.<br />

38

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