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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 />

representations of animals. Or perhaps it would be better to describe<br />

these carvings as representations of odd animals, because they looked<br />

like big, clumsy, prehistoric mammals with fat tails and club feet.<br />

There were other points of interest. For example, the stone figure of<br />

Viracocha had been sculpted with the hands and arms folded, one below<br />

the other, over the front of a long, flowing robe. On each side of this robe<br />

appeared the sinuous form of a snake coiling upwards from ground to<br />

shoulder level. And as I looked at this beautiful design (the original of<br />

which had perhaps been embroidered on rich cloth) the picture that came<br />

into my mind was of Viracocha as a wizard or a sorcerer, a bearded,<br />

Merlin-like figure dressed in weird and wonderful clothes, calling down<br />

fire from heaven.<br />

The ‘temple’ in which the Viracocha pillar stood was open to the sky<br />

and consisted of a large, rectangular pit, like a swimming pool, dug out<br />

six feet below ground level. Its floor, about 40 feet long by 30 feet wide,<br />

was composed of hard, flat gravel. Its strong vertical walls were formed<br />

from precisely dressed ashlar blocks of varying sizes laid closely against<br />

one another without mortar in the joints and interspersed with taller,<br />

rough-hewn stelae. A set of steps was let into the southern wall and it<br />

was down these I had come when I had entered the structure.<br />

I walked several times around the figure of Viracocha, resting my<br />

fingers on the sun-warmed stone pillar, trying to guess its purpose. It was<br />

perhaps seven feet tall and it faced south, with its back to the old<br />

shoreline of Lake Titicaca (originally less than six hundred feet away). 4<br />

Ranged out behind this central obelisk, furthermore, there were two<br />

others, of smaller stature, possibly intended to represent Viracocha’s<br />

legendary companions. All three figures, being severely, functionally<br />

vertical, cast clean-edged shadows as I gazed at them, for the sun was<br />

past its zenith.<br />

I sat down on the ground again and looked slowly all around the<br />

temple. Viracocha dominated it, like the conductor of an orchestra, and<br />

yet its most striking feature undoubtedly lay elsewhere: lining the walls,<br />

at various points and heights, were dozens and dozens of human heads<br />

sculpted in stone. These were complete heads, protruding three<br />

dimensionally out of the walls. There were several different (and<br />

contradictory) scholarly opinions as to their function.<br />

Pyramid<br />

From the floor of the sunken temple, looking west, I could see an<br />

immense wall into which was set an impressive geometrical gateway<br />

made of large stone slabs. Silhouetted in this gateway by the afternoon<br />

sun was the figure of a giant. The wall, I knew, enclosed a parade-ground-<br />

4 Bolivia, p. 156 (map).<br />

79

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