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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 />

precession. Let’s assume they were able to calculate the declination of<br />

particular star-groups backwards and forwards in time, just as we can<br />

today with computers ... Assuming they could do that then, no matter<br />

which epoch they lived in, they’d have been able to make a model of what<br />

the skies over Giza looked like in 10,450 BC or 2450 BC as required, just<br />

as we could. In other words, if they’d built the pyramids in 10,450 BC they<br />

would have had no difficulty in calculating the correct angles of<br />

inclination for the southern shafts so that they would be sighted on Al<br />

Nitak and Sirius around 2450 BC. Likewise, if they’d lived in 2450 BC<br />

they’d have had no difficulty in calculating the correct site-plan to reflect<br />

the position of Orion’s Belt in 10,450 BC. Agreed?’<br />

‘Agreed.’<br />

‘OK. That’s one explanation. But the second explanation, which I<br />

personally favour—and which I think the geological evidence also<br />

supports—is that the whole Giza necropolis was developed and built up<br />

over an enormously long period of time. I think it’s more than possible<br />

that the site was originally planned and laid out at around 10,450 BC, so<br />

that its geometry would reflect the skies as they looked then, but that the<br />

work was completed, and the shafts of the Great Pyramid aligned, around<br />

2450 BC.’<br />

‘So you’re saying that the ground-plan of the Pyramids could date back<br />

to 10,450 BC?<br />

‘I think it does. And I think that the geometrical centre of that plan was<br />

located more or less where we’re standing now, right in front of the<br />

Second Pyramid ...’<br />

I pointed out the large blocks in the lower courses of the huge edifice:<br />

‘It even looks like it was built in two stages, by two completely different<br />

cultures ...’<br />

Bauval shrugged. ‘Let’s speculate ... Maybe it wasn’t two different<br />

cultures, Maybe it was one culture, or cult—the cult of Osiris, perhaps.<br />

Maybe it was a very long-lived, very ancient cult dedicated to Osiris that<br />

was here in 10,450 BC and was still here in 2450 BC. Maybe what<br />

happened was that some of the ways that this cult did things changed<br />

over time. Maybe they used huge blocks in 10,450 BC and smaller blocks<br />

in 2450 BC ... It seems to me there’s a lot here that supports this notion, a<br />

lot that says “very ancient cult”, a lot of evidence that has just never been<br />

investigated ...’<br />

‘For example?’<br />

‘Well, obviously the astronomical alignments of the site. I’ve been<br />

among the first to start looking into those properly. And the geology: the<br />

work that John West and Robert Schoch have been involved in at the<br />

Sphinx. Here are two sciences—both hard, empirical, evidence-driven<br />

sciences—that have never been applied to these problems before. But<br />

now that we have started to apply them, we’re beginning to get a whole<br />

new reading on the antiquity of the necropolis. And I honestly think we’ve<br />

432

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