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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 />

features.’ 6<br />

Wind/sand erosion presents a very different profile of sharp-edged<br />

horizontal channels selectively scoured out from the softer layers of the<br />

affected rock. Under no circumstances can it cause the vertical fissures<br />

particularly visible in the wall of the Sphinx enclosure. These could only<br />

have been ‘formed by water running down the wall’, 7 the result of rain<br />

falling in enormous quantities, cascading over the slope of the Giza<br />

plateau and down into the Sphinx enclosure below. ‘It picked out the<br />

weak spots in the rock,’ Schoch elaborated, ‘and opened them up into<br />

these fissures—clear evidence to me as a geologist that this erosional<br />

feature was caused by rainfall.’ 8<br />

Although in some places obscured by repair blocks put in place by<br />

numerous restorers over the passing millennia, the same observation<br />

holds true for the scooped-out, undulating, scalloped coves that run the<br />

entire length of the Sphinx’s body. Again, these are characteristic of<br />

precipitation-induced weathering because only long periods of heavy<br />

rainfall beating down on the upper parts of the immense structure (and<br />

cascading over its sides) could have produced such effects. Confirmation<br />

of this comes from the fact that the limestone out of which the Sphinx<br />

was carved is not uniform in its composition, but consists of a series of<br />

hard and soft layers in which some of the more durable rocks recede<br />

farther than some of the less durable rocks. 9 Such a profile simply could<br />

not have been produced by wind erosion (which would have selectively<br />

chiselled out the softer layers of rock) but ‘is entirely ‘consistent with<br />

precipitation-induced weathering where you have water, rain water<br />

beating down from above. The rocks higher up are the more durable ones<br />

but they recede back farther than some of the less durable rocks lower in<br />

the section which are more protected.’ 10<br />

In his summing up at the AAAS meeting, Schoch concluded:<br />

It’s well known that the Sphinx enclosure fills with sand very quickly, in just a<br />

matter of decades, under the desert conditions of the Sahara. And it has to be dug<br />

out periodically. And this has been the case since ancient times. Yet you still get<br />

this dramatic rolling, erosional profile in the Sphinx enclosure ... Simply put,<br />

therefore, what I’m suggesting is that this rolling profile, these features seen on<br />

the body and in the Sphinx ditch, hark back to a much earlier period when there<br />

was more precipitation in the area, and more moisture, more rain on the Giza<br />

plateau.’ 11<br />

As Schoch admitted, he was not the first geologist to have noticed the<br />

‘anomalous precipitation-induced weathering features on the core body<br />

6<br />

Mystery of the Sphinx.<br />

7<br />

Ibid.<br />

8<br />

Ibid.<br />

9<br />

Ibid.<br />

10<br />

Ibid.<br />

11<br />

AAAS Annual Meeting 1992.<br />

406

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