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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 />

able to count a total of thirty-three angles, every one intermeshed<br />

faultlessly with a matching angle on an adjoining block. There were<br />

massive polygons and perfect ashlars with razor-sharp edges. There were<br />

also natural, unhewn boulders integrated into the overall design at a<br />

number of points. And there were strange and unusual devices such as<br />

the Intihuatana, the ‘hitching post of the sun’. This remarkable artefact<br />

consisted of an elemental chunk of bedrock, grey and crystalline, carved<br />

into a complex geometrical form of curves and angles, incised niches and<br />

external buttresses, surmounted at the centre by a stubby vertical prong.<br />

Jigsaw puzzle<br />

How old is Machu Picchu? The academic consensus is that the city could<br />

not have been built much earlier than the fifteenth century AD. 9<br />

Dissenting opinions, however, have from time to time been expressed by<br />

a number of more daring but respectable scholars. In the 1930s, for<br />

example, Rolf Muller, professor of Astronomy at the University of<br />

Potsdam, found convincing evidence to suggest that the most important<br />

features of Machu Picchu possessed significant astronomical alignments.<br />

From these, through the use of detailed mathematical computations<br />

concerning star positions in the sky in previous millennia (which<br />

gradually alter down the epochs as the result of a phenomenon known as<br />

precession of the equinoxes), Muller concluded that the original layout of<br />

the site could only have been accomplished during ‘the era of 4000 BC to<br />

2000 BC’. 10<br />

In terms of orthodox history, this was a heresy of audacious<br />

proportions. If Muller was right, Machu Picchu was not a mere 500 but<br />

could be as much as 6000 years old. This would make it significantly<br />

older than the Great Pyramid of Egypt (assuming, of course, that one<br />

accepted the Great Pyramid’s own orthodox dating of around 2500 BC).<br />

There were other dissenting voices concerning the antiquity of Machu<br />

Picchu, and most, like Muller, were convinced that parts of the site were<br />

thousands of years older than the date favoured by orthodox historians. 11<br />

Like the big polygonal blocks that made up the walls, this was a notion<br />

9 The Ancient Civilizations of Peru, p. 163.<br />

10 Cited in Zecharia Sitchin, The Lost Realms, Avon Books, New York, 1990, p. 164.<br />

11 Another scholar, Maria Schulten de D'Ebneth, also worked with mathematical methods<br />

(as opposed to historical methods which are heavily speculative and interpretive). Her<br />

objective was to rediscover the ancient grid used to determine Machu Picchu's layout in<br />

relation to the cardinal points. She did this after first establishing the existence of a<br />

central 45° line. In the process she stumbled across something else: ‘The sub-angles<br />

that she calculated between the central 45° line and sites located away from it ...<br />

indicated to her that the earth's tilt ("obliquity") at the time this grid was laid out was<br />

close to 24° o’. This means that the grid was planned (according to her) 5125 years<br />

before her measurements were done in 1953; in other words in 3172 BC.’ The Last<br />

Realms, pp. 204-5.<br />

66

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