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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 />

Antarctica is our least understood continent [wrote the Flem-Aths in their outline].<br />

Most of us assume that this immense island has been ice-bound for millions of<br />

years. But new discoveries prove that parts of Antarctica were free of ice<br />

thousands of years ago, recent history by the geological clock. The theory of<br />

‘earth-crust displacement’ explains the mysterious surge and ebb of Antarctica’s<br />

vast ice sheet.<br />

What the Canadian researchers were referring to was Hapgood’s<br />

suggestion that until the end of the last Ice Age—say the eleventh<br />

millennium BC—the landmass of Antarctica had been positioned some<br />

2000 miles further north (at a congenial and temperate latitude) and that<br />

it had been moved to its present position inside the Antarctic Circle as a<br />

result of a massive displacement of the earth’s crust. 4 This displacement,<br />

the Flem-Aths continued, had<br />

also left other evidence of its deadly visit in a ring of death around the globe. All<br />

the continents that experienced rapid and massive extinctions of animal species<br />

(notably the Americas and Siberia) underwent a massive change in their latitudes<br />

...<br />

The consequences of a displacement are monumental. The earth’s crust ripples<br />

over its interior and the world is shaken by incredible quakes and floods. The sky<br />

appears to fall as continents groan and shift position. Deep in the ocean,<br />

earthquakes generate massive tidal waves which crash against coastlines, flooding<br />

them. Some lands shift to warmer climes, while others, propelled into polar zones,<br />

suffer the direst of winters. Melting ice caps raise the ocean’s level higher and<br />

higher. All living things must adapt, migrate or die ...<br />

If the horror of an earth-crust displacement were to be visited upon today’s<br />

interdependent world the progress of thousands of years of civilization would be<br />

torn away from our planet like a fine cobweb. Those who live near high mountains<br />

might escape the global tidal waves, but they would be forced to leave behind, in<br />

the lowlands, the slowly constructed fruits of civilization. Only among the<br />

merchant marine and navies of the world might some evidence of civilization<br />

remain. The rusting hulls of ships and submarines would eventually perish but the<br />

valuable maps that are housed in them would be saved by survivors, perhaps for<br />

hundreds, even thousands of years. Until once again mankind could use them to<br />

sail the World Ocean in search of lost lands ...<br />

As I read these words I remembered Charles Hapgood’s account of how<br />

the layer of the earth that geologists call the lithosphere—the thin but<br />

rigid outer crust of the planet—could at times be displaced, moving in<br />

one piece ‘over the soft inner body, much as the skin of an orange, if it<br />

were loose, might shift over the inner part of the orange all in one piece.’ 5<br />

Thus far, I felt I was on familiar ground. But then the Canadian<br />

researchers made two vital connections which I had missed.<br />

4 See Part I.<br />

5 Ibid.<br />

446

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