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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 />

Why should the Ancient Egyptians have cultivated an almost obsessional<br />

interest in the long-term observation of the stars, and why in particular<br />

should they have kept records of their movements ‘over an incredible<br />

number of years’? Such detailed observations would not have been<br />

necessary if their only interest, as a number of scholars have seriously<br />

suggested, had been agricultural (the need to predict the seasons, which<br />

any country-born person can do). There must have been some other<br />

purpose.<br />

Moreover, how did the Ancient Egyptians get started on astronomy in<br />

the first place? It is not an obvious hobby for a valley-dwelling landlocked<br />

people to develop on their own initiative. Perhaps we should take more<br />

seriously the explanation they themselves offer: that their ancestors were<br />

taught the study of the stars by a god. We might also pay closer attention<br />

to the many unmistakably maritime references in the Pyramid Texts. 34<br />

And there could be important new inferences to draw from ancient<br />

Egyptian religious art in which the gods are shown travelling in beautiful,<br />

high-prowed, streamlined boats, built to the same advanced ocean-going<br />

specifications as the pyramid boats at Giza and the mysterious fleet<br />

moored in the desert sands at Abydos.<br />

Landlocked people do not as rule become astronomers; seafaring<br />

people do. Is it not possible that the maritime iconography of the Ancient<br />

Egyptians, the design of their ships, and also their splendid obsession<br />

with observing the stars, could have been part of an inheritance passed<br />

on to their ancestors by an unidentified seafaring, navigating race, in<br />

remote prehistory? It is really only such an archaic race, such a forgotten<br />

maritime civilization, that could have left its fingerprints behind in the<br />

form of maps which accurately depict the world as it looked before the<br />

end of the last Ice Age. It is really only such a civilization, steering its<br />

course by the stars ‘for ten thousand years’ that could have observed and<br />

accurately timed the phenomenon of equinoctial precession with the<br />

exactitude attested in the ancient myths. And, although hypothetical, it is<br />

only such a civilization that could have measured the earth with sufficient<br />

precision to have arrived at the dimensions scaled down in the Great<br />

Pyramid.<br />

The signature of a distant date<br />

It was almost midnight by the time that we reached Giza. We checked into<br />

the Siag, a hotel with an excellent pyramid view, and sat out on our<br />

balcony as the three stars of Orion’s belt tracked slowly across the<br />

southern heavens.<br />

It was the disposition of these three stars, as archaeo-astronomer<br />

Robert Bauval had recently demonstrated, that served as the celestial<br />

34 The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts, for example pp. 78, 170, 171, 290.<br />

423

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