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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 />

with new finds which extend the horizons further and further back in<br />

time. So why shouldn’t they one day discover evidence of the penetration<br />

into the Andes, in remote antiquity, of a race of civilizers who had come<br />

from overseas and gone away again after completing their work? That<br />

was what the legends seemed to me to be suggesting, legends that most<br />

of all, and most clearly, had immortalized the memory of the man/god<br />

Viracocha striding the high windswept byways of the Andes working<br />

miracles wherever he went:<br />

Viracocha himself, with his two assistants, journeyed north ... He travelled up the<br />

cordillera, one assistant went along the coast, and the other up the edge of the<br />

eastern forests ... The Creator proceeded to Urcos, near Cuzco, where he<br />

commanded the future population to emerge from a mountain. He visited Cuzco,<br />

and then continued north to Ecuador. There, in the coastal province of Manta, he<br />

took leave of his people and, walking on the waves, disappeared across the<br />

ocean. 7<br />

There was always this poignant moment of goodbye at the end of every<br />

folk memory featuring the remarkable stranger whose name meant ‘Foam<br />

of the Sea’:<br />

Viracocha went on his way, calling forth the races of men ... When he came to the<br />

district of Puerto Viejo he was joined by his followers whom he had sent on<br />

before, and when they had joined him he put to sea in their company and they say<br />

that he and his people went by water as easily as they had traversed the land. 8<br />

Always this poignant goodbye ... and often a hint of science or magic.<br />

Time capsule<br />

Outside the window of the train things were happening. To my left,<br />

swollen with dark water, I could see the Urubamba, a tributary of the<br />

Amazon and a river sacred to the Incas. The air temperature had warmedup<br />

noticeably: we had descended into a relatively low-lying valley with its<br />

own tropical micro-climate. The mountain slopes rising on either side of<br />

the tracks were densely covered in green forests and I was reminded that<br />

this was truly a region of vast and virtually insuperable obstacles.<br />

Whoever had ventured all this way into the middle of nowhere to build<br />

Machu Picchu must have had a very strong motive for doing so.<br />

Whatever the reason had been, the choice of such a remote location had<br />

at least one beneficial side-effect: Machu Picchu was never found by the<br />

conquistadores and friars during their days of destructive zeal. Indeed, it<br />

was not until 1911, when the fabulous heritage of older races was<br />

beginning to be treated with greater respect, that a young American<br />

explorer, Hiram Bingham, revealed Machu Picchu to the world. It was<br />

realized at once that this incredible site opened a unique window on pre-<br />

7 The Ancient Civilizations of Peru, p. 237.<br />

8 Juan de Batanzos, 'Suma y Narracion de los Incas', in South American Mythology, p. 79.<br />

63

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