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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 />

24.5°. 3 The sequence in which one angle will follow another, as well as the<br />

sequence of all previous angles (at any period of history) can be<br />

calculated by means of a few straightforward equations. These have been<br />

expressed as a curve on a graph (originally plotted out in Paris in 1911 by<br />

the International Conference of Ephemerids) and from this graph it is<br />

possible to match angles and precise historical dates with confidence and<br />

accuracy.<br />

Posnansky was able to date the Kalasasaya because the obliquity cycle<br />

gradually alters the azimuth position of sunrise and sunset from century<br />

to century. 4 By establishing the solar alignments of certain key structures<br />

that now looked ‘out of true’, he convincingly demonstrated that the<br />

obliquity of the ecliptic at the time of the building of the Kalasasaya had<br />

been 23° 8’ 48”. When that angle was plotted on the graph drawn up by<br />

the International Conference of Ephemerids it was found to correspond to<br />

a date of 15,000 BC. 5<br />

Of course, not a single orthodox historian or archaeologist was<br />

prepared to accept such an early origin for Tiahuanaco preferring, as<br />

noted in Chapter Eight, to agree on the safe estimate of AD 500. During<br />

the years 1927-30, however, several scientists from other disciplines<br />

checked carefully Posnansky’s ‘astronomic-archaeological investigations’.<br />

These scientists, members of a high-powered team which also studied<br />

many other archaeological sites in the Andes, were Dr Hans Ludendorff<br />

(then director of the Astronomical Observatory of Potsdam), Dr Friedrich<br />

Becker of the Specula Vaticanica, and two other astronomers: Professor<br />

Dr Arnold Kohlschutter of the University of Bonn and Dr Rolf Muller of the<br />

Astrophysical Institute of Potsdam. 6<br />

At the end of their three years of work the scientists concluded that<br />

Posnansky was basically right. They didn’t concern themselves with the<br />

implications of their findings for the prevailing paradigm of history; they<br />

simply stated the observable facts about the astronomical alignments of<br />

various structures at Tiahuanaco. Of these, the most important by far was<br />

that the Kalasasaya had been laid out to conform with observations of the<br />

heavens made a very long time ago—much, much further back than AD<br />

500. Posnansky’s figure of 15,000 BC was pronounced to be well within<br />

the bounds of possibility. 7<br />

If Tiahuanaco had indeed flourished so long before the dawn of history,<br />

what sort of people had built it, and for what purpose?<br />

3 J. D. Hays, John Imbrie, N. J. Shackleton, ‘Variations in the Earth's Orbit: Pacemaker of<br />

the Ice Ages’, in Science, vol. 194, No. 4270, 10 December 1976, p. 1125.<br />

4 Anthony F. Aveni, Skywatchers of Ancient Mexico, University of Texas Press, lago, p.<br />

103.<br />

5 Tiahuanacu, II, p. 90-1.<br />

6 Tiahuanacu, II, p. 47.<br />

7 Ibid., p. 91.<br />

84

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