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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 />

distant quarries? By what means had they made walls of them, shuffling<br />

the individual blocks around and raising them high above the ground<br />

with such apparent ease? These people weren’t even supposed to have<br />

had the wheel, let alone machinery capable of lifting and manipulating<br />

dozens of irregularly shaped 100-ton blocks, and sorting them into threedimensional<br />

jigsaw puzzles.<br />

I knew that the chroniclers of the early colonial period had been as<br />

perplexed as I was by what they had seen. The respected Garcilaso de la<br />

Vega, for example, who came here in the sixteenth century, had spoken<br />

with awe about the fortress of Sacsayhuaman:<br />

Its proportions are inconceivable when one has not actually seen it; and when one<br />

has looked at it closely and examined it attentively, they appear to be so<br />

extraordinary that it seems as though some magic had presided over its<br />

construction; that it must be the work of demons instead of human beings. It is<br />

made of such great stones, and in such great number, that one wonders<br />

simultaneously how the Indians were able to quarry them, how they transported<br />

them ... and how they hewed them and set them one on top of the other with such<br />

precision. For they disposed of neither iron nor steel with which to penetrate the<br />

rock and cut and polish the stones; they had neither wagon nor oxen to transport<br />

them, and, in fact, there exist neither wagons nor oxen throughout the world that<br />

would have sufficed for this task, so enormous are these stones and so rude the<br />

mountain paths over which they were conveyed ... 19<br />

Garcilaso also reported something else interesting. In his Royal<br />

Commentaries of the Incas he gave an account of how, in historical times,<br />

an Inca king had tried to emulate the achievements of his predecessors<br />

who had built Sacsayhuaman. The attempt had involved bringing just one<br />

immense boulder from several miles away to add to the existing<br />

fortifications: ‘This boulder was hauled across the mountain by more than<br />

20,000 Indians, going up and down very steep hills ... At a certain spot, it<br />

fell from their hands over a precipice crushing more than 3000 men.’ 20 In<br />

all the histories I surveyed, this was the only report which described the<br />

Incas actually building, or trying to build, with huge blocks like those<br />

employed at Sacsayhuaman. The report suggested that they possessed no<br />

experience of the techniques involved and that their attempt had ended<br />

in disaster.<br />

This, of course, proved nothing in itself. But Garcilaso’s story did<br />

intensify my doubts about the great fortifications which towered above<br />

me. As I looked at them I felt that they could, indeed, have been erected<br />

before the age of the Incas and by some infinitely older and more<br />

technically advanced race.<br />

Not for the first time I was reminded of how difficult archaeologists<br />

found it to provide accurate dates for engineering works like roads and<br />

drystone walls which contained no organic compounds. Radiocarbon was<br />

redundant in such circumstances; thermo-luminescence, too, was useless.<br />

19 Royal Commentaries of the Incas, p. 233.<br />

20 Ibid., p. 237.<br />

58

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