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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 />

cartographers of a lost civilization to have mapped it?<br />

Exhibit 10<br />

The reverse side of the coin. If the lands presently inside the Antarctic<br />

Circle were once temperate or tropical, what about lands inside the Arctic<br />

Circle? Were they affected by the same dramatic climate changes,<br />

suggesting that some common factor might have been at work?<br />

• ‘On the island of Spitzbergen (Svalbard), palm leaves ten and twelve<br />

feet long have been fossilized, along with fossilized marine<br />

crustaceans of a type that could only inhabit tropical waters. This<br />

suggests that at one time the temperatures of the Arctic Ocean were<br />

similar to the contemporary temperatures of the Bay of Bengal or the<br />

Caribbean Sea. Spitzbergen is half way between the northern tip of<br />

Norway and the North Pole, at a latitude of 80 degrees N. Today, ships<br />

can reach Spitzbergen through the ice only about two or at the most<br />

three months during the year.’ 14<br />

• There is firm fossil evidence that stands of swamp cypress flourished<br />

within 500 miles of the North Pole in the Miocene [between 20 million<br />

and 6 million years ago], and that water-lillies flourished in Spitzbergen<br />

in the same period: ‘The Miocene floras of Grinnell Land and<br />

Greenland, and Spitzbergen, all required temperate climatic conditions<br />

with plentiful moisture. The water lillies of Spitzbergen would have<br />

required flowing water for the greater part of the year. In connection<br />

with the flora of Spitzbergen it should be realized that the island is in<br />

polar darkness for half the year. It lies on the Arctic Circle, as far north<br />

of Labrador as Labrador is north of Bermuda. 15<br />

• Some of the islands in the Arctic Ocean were never covered by ice<br />

during the last Ice Age. On Baffin Island, for example, 900 miles from<br />

the North Pole, alder and birch remains found in peat suggest a much<br />

warmer climate than today less than 30,000 years ago. These<br />

conditions prevailed until 17,000 years ago: ‘During the Wisconsin ice<br />

age there was a temperate-climate refuge in the middle of the Arctic<br />

Ocean for the flora and fauna that could not exist in Canada and the<br />

United States.’ 16<br />

• Russian scientists have concluded that the Arctic Ocean was warm<br />

during most of the last Ice Age. A report by academicians Saks, Belov<br />

and Lapina covering many phases of their oceanographic work<br />

14 The Biblical Flood and the Ice Epoch, pp. 109-10.<br />

15 Path of the Pole, p. 66.<br />

16 Ibid., pp. 93, 96.<br />

457

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