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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 />

elephant-like proboscid complete with tusks and a trunk, uncannily<br />

similar in appearance to the ‘elephants’ of the Gateway of the Sun. 21<br />

I stepped forward a few paces to take a closer look at these elephants.<br />

Each turned out to be composed of the heads of two crested condors,<br />

placed throat to throat (the crests constituting the ‘ears’ and the upper<br />

part of the necks the ‘tusks’). The creatures thus formed still looked like<br />

elephants to me, perhaps because a characteristic visual trick the<br />

sculptors of Tiahuanaco had employed again and again in their subtle<br />

and otherworldly art had been to use one thing to depict another. Thus<br />

an apparently human ear on an apparently human face might turn out to<br />

be a bird’s wing. Likewise an ornate crown might be composed of<br />

alternate fishes’ and condors’ heads, an eyebrow a bird’s neck and head,<br />

the toe of a slipper an animal’s head, and so on. Members of the elephant<br />

family formed out of condors’ heads, therefore, need not necessarily be<br />

optical illusions; on the contrary, such inventive composites would be<br />

perfectly in keeping with the overall artistic character of the frieze.<br />

Among the riot of stylized animal figures carved into the Gateway of the<br />

Sun were a number of other extinct species as well. I knew from my<br />

research that one of these had been convincingly identified by several<br />

observers as Toxodon 22 —a three-toed amphibious mammal about nine<br />

feet long and five feet high at the shoulder, resembling a short, stubby<br />

cross between a rhino and a hippo. 23 Like Cuvieronius, Toxodon had<br />

flourished in South America in the late Pliocene (1.6 million years ago)<br />

and had died out at the end of the Pleistocene, about 12,000 years ago. 24<br />

21<br />

Ibid.<br />

22<br />

See The Calendar of Tiahuanaco, p. 47. Posnansky's work is also replete with<br />

references to Toxodon.<br />

23<br />

Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1991, 11:878.<br />

24<br />

Ibid., 9:516. See also Quaternary Extinctions, pp. 64-5.<br />

89

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