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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 />

the use of sophisticated mathematical techniques of a kind supposedly<br />

unknown in the ancient world 20 (particularly in the deepest antiquity<br />

before 4000 BC when there was allegedly no human civilization at all, let<br />

alone one capable of developing and using advanced mathematics and<br />

geometry).<br />

Charles Hapgood submitted his collection of ancient maps to the<br />

Massachusetts Institute of Technology for evaluation by Professor Richard<br />

Strachan. The general conclusion was obvious, but he wanted to know<br />

precisely what level of mathematics would have been required to draw up<br />

the original source documents. On 18 April 1965 Strachan replied that a<br />

very high level of mathematics indeed would have been necessary. Some<br />

of the maps, for example, seemed to express ‘a Mercator type projection’<br />

long before the time of Mercator himself. The relative complexity of this<br />

projection (involving latitude expansion) meant that a trigonometric<br />

coordinate transformation method must have been used.<br />

Other reasons for deducing that the ancient map-makers must have<br />

been skilled mathematicians were as follows:<br />

1 The determination of place locations on a continent requires at least geometric<br />

triangulation methods. Over large distances (of the order of 1000 miles) corrections<br />

must be made for the curvature of the earth, which requires some understanding of<br />

spherical trigonometry.<br />

2 The location of continents with respect to one another requires an understanding of<br />

the earth’s sphericity, and the use of spherical trigonometry.<br />

3 Cultures with this knowledge, plus the precision instruments to make the required<br />

measurements to determine location, would most certainly use their mathematical<br />

technology in creating maps and charts.’ 21<br />

Strachan’s impression that the maps, through generations of copyists,<br />

revealed the handiwork of an ancient, mysterious and technologically<br />

advanced civilization, was shared by reconnaissance experts from the US<br />

Airforce to whom Hapgood submitted the evidence. Lorenzo Burroughs,<br />

chief of the 8th Reconnaissance Technical Squadron’s Cartographic<br />

Section at Westover Air Base, made a particularly close study of the<br />

Oronteus Finaeus Map. He concluded that some of the sources upon<br />

which it was based must have been drawn up by means of a projection<br />

similar to the modern Cordiform Projection. This, said Burroughs:<br />

suggests the use of advanced mathematics. Further, the shape given to the<br />

Antarctic Continent suggests the possibility, if not the probability, that the original<br />

source maps were compiled on a stereographic or gnomonic type of projection<br />

involving the use of spherical trigonometry.<br />

We are convinced that the findings made by you and your associates are valid, and<br />

that they raise extremely important questions affecting geology and ancient<br />

20 Ibid., p. 225ff.<br />

21 Ibid., p. 228.<br />

40

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