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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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Chapter 12<br />

The End of the Viracochas<br />

Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

We saw in Chapter Ten that Tiahuanaco was originally built as a port on<br />

the shores of Lake Titicaca, when that lake was far wider and more than<br />

100 feet deeper than it is today. Vast harbour constructions, piers and<br />

dykes (and even dumped cargoes of quarried stone at points beneath the<br />

old waterline), leave no doubt that this must have been the case. 1 Indeed,<br />

according to the unorthodox estimates of Professor Posnansky,<br />

Tiahuanaco had been in active use as a port as early as 15,000 BC, the<br />

date he proposed for the construction of the Kalasasaya, and had<br />

continued to serve as such for approximately another five thousand<br />

years, during which great expanse of time its position in relation to the<br />

shore of Lake Titicaca hardly changed. 2<br />

Throughout this epoch the principal harbour of the port city was<br />

located several hundred metres south-west of the Kalasasaya at a site<br />

now known as Puma Punku (literally, the Puma Gate). Here Posnansky’s<br />

excavations revealed two artificially dredged docks on either side of: ‘a<br />

true and magnificent pier or wharf ... where hundreds of ships could at<br />

the same time take on and unload their heavy burdens’. 3<br />

One of the construction blocks from which the pier had been fashioned<br />

still lay on site and weighed an estimated 440 tons. 4 Numerous others<br />

weighed between 100 and 150 tons. 5 Furthermore, many of the biggest<br />

monoliths had clearly been joined to each other by I-shaped metal<br />

clamps. In the whole of South America, I knew, this masonry technique<br />

had been found only on Tiahuanacan structures. 6 The last time I had seen<br />

the characteristic notched depressions which proved its use had been on<br />

ruins on the island of Elephantine in the Nile in Upper Egypt. 7<br />

1 Tiahuanacu, II, p. 156ff; III, p. 196.<br />

2 Ibid., I, p. 39: ‘An extensive series of canals and hydraulic works, dry at present, but<br />

which are all in communication with the former lake bed, are just so many more proofs<br />

of the extension of the lake as far as Tiahuanacu in this period.’<br />

3 Ibid., II, p. 156.<br />

4 Bolivia, p. 158.<br />

5 The Ancient Civilizations of Peru, p. 93.<br />

6 Ibid.<br />

7 For example on the paving blocks above the Nilometer at Elepantine Island, Aswan. I<br />

am indebted to US film maker Robert Gardner for pointing this similarity out to me.<br />

92

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