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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 />

square miles, and is presently covered by something in excess of seven<br />

million cubic miles of ice weighing an estimated 19 quadrillion tons (19<br />

followed by 15 zeros). 20 What worries the theorists of earth-crust<br />

displacement is that this vast ice-cap is remorselessly increasing in size<br />

and weight: ‘at the rate of 293 cubic miles of ice each year—almost as<br />

much as if Lake Ontario were frozen solid annually and added to it.’ 21<br />

The fear is that when it is coupled with the effects of precession,<br />

obliquity, orbital eccentricity, the earth’s own centrifugal motion, and the<br />

gravitational tug of the sun, moon and planets, Antarctica’s huge, everexpanding<br />

burden of glaciation could provide the final trigger-factor for a<br />

massive displacement of the crust:<br />

The growing South Pole ice-cap [wrote Hugh Auchincloss Brown, somewhat<br />

colourfully, in 1967] has become a stealthy, silent and relentless force of nature—<br />

a result of the energy created by its eccentric rotation. The ice-cap is the creeping<br />

peril, the deadly menace and the executioner of our civilization. 22<br />

Did this ‘executioner’ cause the end of the last Ice Age in the northern<br />

hemisphere by setting in motion a 7000-year shift of the crust between<br />

15,000 BC and 8000 BC—a shift that was perhaps at its most rapid, and<br />

would have had its most devastating effects, between 14,500 BC and<br />

10,000 BC? 23 Or were the sudden and dramatic climate changes<br />

experienced in the northern hemisphere during this period the result of<br />

some other catastrophic agency simultaneously capable of melting<br />

millions of cubic miles of ice and of sparking off the worldwide increase<br />

in volcanism that accompanied the melt-down? 24<br />

Modern geologists are opposed to catastrophes, or rather to<br />

catastrophism, preferring to follow the ‘uniformitarian’ doctrine: ‘that<br />

existing processes, acting as at present, are sufficient to account for all<br />

geological changes’. Catastrophism, on the other hand, holds that<br />

‘changes in the earth’s crust have generally been effected suddenly by<br />

physical forces.’ 25 Is it possible, however, that the mechanism responsible<br />

for the traumatic earth changes which took place at the end of the last Ice<br />

Age could have been a geological event both catastrophic and uniform?<br />

The great biologist Sir Thomas Huxley remarked in the nineteenth<br />

century:<br />

To my mind there appears to be no sort of theoretical antagonism between<br />

Catastrophism and Uniformitarianism; on the contrary, it is very conceivable that<br />

catastrophes may be part and parcel of uniformity. Let me illustrate my case by<br />

analogy. The working of a clock is a model of uniform action. Good timekeeping<br />

means uniformity of action. But the striking of a clock is essentially a catastrophe.<br />

20<br />

Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1991, 1:440; John White, Pole Shift, A.R.E. Press, Virginia<br />

Beach, 1994, p. 65.<br />

21<br />

Pole Shift, p. 77: Twenty billion tons of ice are added each year at Antarctica.<br />

22<br />

H. A. Brown, Cataclysms of the Earth, pp. 10-11.<br />

23<br />

See Part IV.<br />

24<br />

Ibid.<br />

25<br />

Biblical Flood and the Ice Epoch, p. 228.<br />

459

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