04.04.2013 Views

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

right moment. 2<br />

At exactly the right moment, one of those lucky breaks came my way.<br />

The moment was the summer of 1993. I was at a low ebb physically and<br />

spiritually after months of hard travel, and the geophysical impossibility<br />

of actually losing a continent-sized landmass was beginning to undermine<br />

my confidence in the strength of my findings. It was then that I received a<br />

letter from the town of Nanaimo in British Columbia, Canada. The letter<br />

referred to my previous book The Sign and the Seal, in which I had made<br />

passing mention of the Atlantis theory and of traditions of civilizing<br />

heroes who had been ‘saved from water’:<br />

19 July 1993<br />

Dear Mr. Hancock,<br />

After 17 years of research into the fate of Atlantis, my wife and I have finished a<br />

manuscript entitled When the Sky Fell. Our frustration is that despite positive feedback<br />

about the book’s approach from the few publishers who have seen it, the mere mention<br />

of Atlantis closes minds. 3 In The Sign and the Seal you write of ‘a tradition of secret<br />

wisdom started by the survivors of a flood ...’ Our work explores sites where some<br />

survivors might have relocated. High altitude, fresh-water lakes made ideal post-deluge<br />

bases for the survivors of Atlantis. Lake Titicaca and Lake Tana [in Ethiopia, where much<br />

of The Sign and the Seal was set] fit the climatic criteria. Their stable environment<br />

provided the raw materials for restarting agriculture.<br />

We have taken the liberty of enclosing an outline of When the Sky Fell. If you are<br />

interested we will be pleased to send you a copy of the manuscript.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

Rand Flem-Ath<br />

I turned to the enclosure and there, in the first few paragraphs, found the<br />

missing piece of the jigsaw puzzle I had been looking for. It meshed<br />

perfectly with the ancient global maps I had studied—maps which<br />

accurately depicted the subglacial topography of the continent of<br />

Antarctica (see Part I). It made perfect sense of all the great worldwide<br />

myths of cataclysm and planetary disaster, with their differing climatic<br />

effects. It explained the enigma of the huge numbers of apparently ‘flashfrozen’<br />

mammoths in northern Siberia and Alaska, and the 90-foot tall<br />

fruit trees locked in the permafrost deep inside the Arctic Circle at a<br />

latitude where nothing now grows. It provided a solution to the problem<br />

of the extreme suddenness with which the last Ice Age in the northern<br />

hemisphere melted down after 15,000 BC. It also solved the mystery of<br />

the exceptional worldwide volcanic activity that accompanied the<br />

meltdown. It answered the question, ‘How do you lose a continent?’ And<br />

it was solidly based in Charles Hapgood’s theory of ‘earth-crust<br />

displacement’—a radical geological hypothesis with which I was already<br />

familiar:<br />

2 See, for example, Brian Inglis, Coincidence, Hutchinson, London, 1990, p. 48ff.<br />

3 When the Sky Fell, with an Introduction by Colin Wilson and Afterword by John Anthony<br />

West, is published by Stoddart, Canada, 1995.<br />

445

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!