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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 Elephantine at Aswan (Seyne) where an important astronomical and<br />

solar observatory was located throughout known Egyptian history. 6 It<br />

seems, that this archaic land, sacred since time began—the creation and<br />

habitation of the gods—was originally conceived of as a geometric<br />

construct exactly seven terrestrial degrees in length.<br />

Within this construct, the Great Pyramid appears to have been carefully<br />

sited as a geodetic marker for the apex of the Delta. The latter, which we<br />

have indicated on our map, is located at 30° 06’ N 31° 14’ E—a point in<br />

the middle of the Nile at the northern edge of modern Cairo. Meanwhile<br />

the pyramid stands at latitude of 30°N (corrected for atmospheric<br />

refraction) and at longitude 31° 09’ E, an error of just a few minutes of<br />

terrestrial arc to the south and west. This ‘error’, however, does not<br />

appear to have resulted from sloppiness or inaccuracy on the part of the<br />

pyramid builders. On the contrary, a close look at the topography of the<br />

area suggests that the explanation should be sought in the need to find a<br />

site suitable for all the astronomical observations that had to be taken for<br />

accurate setting-out, and with a sufficiently stable geological structure on<br />

which to park, for ever, a six-million-ton monument almost 500 feet high<br />

with a footprint of over thirteen acres.<br />

The Giza plateau fits the bill on all counts: close to the apex of the<br />

Delta, elevated above the Valley of the Nile, and equipped with an<br />

excellent foundation of solid limestone bedrock.<br />

Doing things by degrees<br />

We were driving north from Luxor to Giza in the back of Mohamed<br />

Walilli’s Peugeot 504—a journey of just over 4 degrees of longitude, i.e.,<br />

from 25° 42’ N, to the 30th parallel. Between Asiut and El Minya, a<br />

corridor of conflict in recent months between Islamic extremists and<br />

Egyptian government forces, we were provided with an armed escort of<br />

soldiers, one of whom wore plain clothes and sat in the passenger seat<br />

beside Mohamed fondling an automatic pistol. The others, about a dozen<br />

men armed with AK47 assault rifles, were distributed equally between<br />

two pick-up trucks which sandwiched us front and rear.<br />

‘Dangerous people live here,’ Mohamed had confided out of the corner<br />

of his mouth when we had been stopped at a road-block in Asiut and<br />

ordered to wait for our escort. Now, although obviously rattled at being<br />

obliged to match the high speed of the escorting vehicles, he seemed to<br />

relish the kudos of being part of an impressive convoy, lights flashing<br />

and sirens wailing, weaving in and out of the slower traffic on the main<br />

highway from upper to lower Egypt.<br />

I looked out of the car window for a while at the unchanging spectacle<br />

of the Nile, at its fertile green banks and the red haze of the deserts a few<br />

6 Ibid., pp. 179-81.<br />

416

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