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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 />

of the Sphinx’. 12 He was, however, the first to have become involved in<br />

public debates over the immense historical implications of this<br />

weathering. His attitude was that he preferred to stick to his geology:<br />

I’ve been told over and over again that the peoples of Egypt, as far as we know,<br />

did not have either the technology or the social organization to cut out the core<br />

body of the Sphinx in pre-dynastic times ... However, I don’t see it as being my<br />

problem as a geologist. I’m not seeking to shift the burden, but its really up to the<br />

Egyptologists and archaeologists to figure out who carved it. If my findings are in<br />

conflict with their theory about the rise of civilization then maybe its time for them<br />

to re-evaluate that theory. I’m not saying that the Sphinx was built by Atlanteans,<br />

or people from Mars, or extra-terrestrials. I’m just following the science where it<br />

leads me, and it leads me to conclude that the Sphinx was built much earlier than<br />

previously thought ...’ 13<br />

Legendary civilizations<br />

How much earlier?<br />

John West told us that he and Schoch had ‘a friendly debate going’<br />

about the age of the Sphinx: ‘Schoch puts the date somewhere between<br />

5000 BC and 7000 BC minimum [the epoch of the Neolithic Subpluvial]<br />

mainly by taking the most cautious view allowed by the data to hand. As<br />

a professor of Geology at a big university, he’s almost constrained to take<br />

a conservative view—and it’s true that there were rains between 7000 BC<br />

and 5000 BC. However, for a variety of both intuitive and scholarly<br />

reasons, I think that the date is much, much older and that most of the<br />

weathering of the Sphinx took place in the earlier rainy period before<br />

10,000 BC ... Frankly, if it was as relatively recent as 5000 to 7000 BC, I<br />

think we’d probably have found other evidence of the civilization that<br />

carved it. A lot of evidence from that period has been found in Egypt.<br />

There are some strange anomalies within it, I’ll admit, 14 but most of it—<br />

the vast bulk—is really quite rudimentary.’<br />

‘So who built the Sphinx if it wasn’t the pre-dynastic Egyptians?’ ‘My<br />

conjecture is that the whole riddle is linked in some way to those<br />

legendary civilizations spoken of in all the mythologies of the world. You<br />

know—that there were great catastrophes, that a few people survived and<br />

went wandering around the earth and that a bit of knowledge was<br />

preserved here, a bit there ... My hunch is that the Sphinx is linked to all<br />

that. If I were asked to place a bet I’d say that it predates the break-up of<br />

the last Ice Age and is probably older than 10000 BC, perhaps even older<br />

than 15,000 BC. My conviction—actually it’s more than a conviction—is<br />

that it’s vastly old?<br />

12 Ibid. The relevant geologists include Farouk El Baz, and Roth and Raffai.<br />

13 Extracts from Mystery of the Sphinx and AAAS meeting.<br />

14 Under the category of anomalies, West made specific reference to the bowls carved<br />

out of diorite and other hard stones described in Part VI.<br />

407

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