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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 />

that latitude today. We can go to the tropics and find trees growing in a<br />

warm environment, but we can’t find trees growing in a warm<br />

environment with the light regime these trees had: 24 hours of light in<br />

the summer and 24 hours of dark in the winter.” ’ 3<br />

Exhibit 2<br />

Geologists have found no evidence of any glaciation having been present<br />

anywhere on the Antarctic continent prior to the Eocene (about 60 million<br />

years ago.) 4 And if we go as far back as the Cambrian (c. 550 million<br />

years ago) we find irrefutable evidence of a warm sea stretching nearly or<br />

right across Antarctica, in the form of thick limestones rich in reefbuilding<br />

Archaeocyathidae: ‘Millions of years later, when these marine<br />

formations had appeared above the sea, warm climates brought forth a<br />

luxuriant vegetation in Antarctica. Thus Sir Ernest Shackleton found coal<br />

beds within 200 miles of the South Pole, and later, during the Byrd<br />

expedition of 1935, geologists made a rich discovery of fossils on the<br />

lofty sides of Mount Weaver, in latitude 86° 58’ S., about the same<br />

distance from the Pole and about two miles above sea level. These<br />

included leaf and stem impressions and fossilized wood. In 1952 Dr<br />

Lyman H. Dougherty, of the Carnegie Institution of Washington,<br />

completing a study of these fossils, identified two species of a tree fern<br />

called Glossopteris, once common to the other southern continents<br />

(Africa, South America, Australia) and a giant fern tree of another species<br />

...’ 5<br />

3 Discover The World Of Science, February 1993, p. 17. The fifteen mineralized tree<br />

stumps, presumably the remnant of a much larger forest, range from three and a half to<br />

seven inches in diameter. They were saplings of a well-known genus of seed fern,<br />

Glossopteris [found in much of the southern hemisphere’s coal]. Unlike true ferns, seed<br />

ferns had seeds instead of spores, were often treelike, and are now extinct ... All around<br />

the Mount Achernar tree stumps, Taylor’s colleagues found the tongue-shaped imprints<br />

of fallen Glossopteris leaves.<br />

Deciduous trees are an indicator of a warm climate, and so is the absence of ‘frost<br />

rings’. When Taylor analysed the growth rings in samples from the stumps she found<br />

none of the ice-swollen cells and gaps between cells that arise when the growth of a tree<br />

is disrupted by frost. That means there wasn’t any frost in the Antarctic at that time.<br />

‘In our memory Antarctica has always been cold,’ says Taylor. ‘It’s only by looking at<br />

fossil floras that we can see what potential there is for plant communities. This fossil<br />

forest, growing at 85 degrees latitude, gives us some idea of what is possible with<br />

catastrophic climate change.’ N.B. The trees were killed by a flood or mudflow—another<br />

impossibility in Antarctica today.<br />

4 The Path of the Pole, p. 61.<br />

5 Ibid., pp. 62-3.<br />

454

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