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Fingerprints of the Gods

Page 68

by Graham Hancock


  a year seems only as a day.’33

  In the Surya Siddhanta, an ancient Indian text, we read, ‘The gods

  behold the sun, after it has once arisen, for half a year.’34 The seventh

  Mandala of the Rigveda contains a number of ‘Dawn’ hymns. One of

  these (VII, 76) says that the dawn has raised its banner on the horizon

  with its usual splendour and reports in Verse 3 that a period of several

  days elapsed between the first appearance of the dawn and the rising of

  30 Ibid., p. 58.

  31 See Part IV.

  32 The Mahabaratha, cited in The Arctic Home in the Vedas, pp. 64-5.

  33 Ibid., pp. 66-7.

  34 Cited in Paradise Found: The Cradle of the Human Race at the North Pole, p. 199.

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  the sun that followed it.35 Another passage states, ‘many were the days

  between the first beams of the dawn and actual sunrise’.36

  Are these eyewitness accounts of polar conditions?

  Although we can never be sure, it may be relevant that in Indian

  tradition the Vedas are believed to be revealed texts, passed down from

  the time of the gods.37 It may also be relevant that in describing the

  processes of transmission, all the traditions refer to the pralayas

  (cataclysms) which occasionally overtake the world and claim that in each

  of these the written scriptures are physically destroyed. After each

  destruction, however, certain Rishis or ‘wise men’ survive who

  repromulgate, at the beginning of the new age, the knowledge inherited by them

  as a sacred trust from their forefathers in the preceding age ... Each manvantara

  or age thus has a Veda of its own which differs only in expression and not in

  sense from the antediluvian Veda.38

  An epoch of turmoil and darkness

  As every schoolboy geographer understands, true north (the North Pole)

  is not quite the same thing as magnetic north (the direction compass

  needles point). Indeed the magnetic north pole is presently situated in

  northern Canada, about 11 degrees from the true North Pole.39 Recent

  advances in the study of palaeomagnetism have proved that the earth’s

  magnetic polarity has reversed itself more than 170 times during the past

  80 million years ...40

  What causes these field reversals?

  While he was teaching at the University of Cambridge the geologist S. K.

  Runcorn published an article in Scientific American which made a

  pertinent point:

  There seems no doubt that the earth’s magnetic field is tied up in some way to the

  rotation of the planet. And this leads to a remarkable finding about the earth’s

  rotation itself ... [The unavoidable conclusion is that] the earth’s axis of rotation

  has changed also. In other words, the planet has rolled about, changing the

  location of the geographical poles.41

  Runcorn appears to be envisaging a complete 180-degree flip of the

  poles, with the earth literally tumbling—although similar palaeomagnetic

  readings would result from a slippage of the crust over the geographical

  poles. Either way, the consequences for civilization, and indeed for all

  life, would be unimaginably dreadful.

  35 Arctic Home in the Vedas, p. 81.

  36 Ibid., p. 85.

  37 Ibid., pp. 414, 417.

  38 Ibid., p. 420.

  39 Pole Shift, p. 9.

  40 Ibid.

  41 Ibid., p. 61.

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  Of course, Runcorn may be wrong; perhaps field reversals can occur in

  the absence of any other upheavals.

  But he may also be right.

  According to reports published in Nature and New Scientist, the last

  geomagnetic reversal was completed just 12,400 years ago—during the

  eleventh millennium BC.42

  This is of course the very millennium in which the ancient Tiahuanacan

  civilization in the Andes seems to have been destroyed. The same

  millennium is signalled by the alignments and design of the great

  astronomical monuments on the Giza plateau, and by the erosion

  patterns on the Sphinx. And it was in the eleventh millennium BC that

  Egypt’s ‘precocious agricultural experiment’ suddenly failed. Likewise it

  was in the eleventh millennium BC that huge numbers of large mammal

  species all around the world vanished into extinction. The list could

  continue: abrupt rises in sea level, hurricane-force winds, electrical

  storms, volcanic disturbances, and so on.

  Scientists expect the next reversal of the earth’s magnetic poles to

  occur around AD 2030.43

  Is this an intimation of planetary disaster? After 12,500 years of the

  pendulum, is the hammer about to strike?

  Exhibit 11

  Yves Rocard, Professor of the Faculty of Sciences at Paris: ‘Our modern

  seismographs are sensitive to the ‘noise’ of limited agitation at every

  point in the earth, even in the absence of any seismic wave. One may in

  this noise discern a man-made vibration (for example, a train four

  kilometers away, or a big city ten kilometers off) and also an atmospheric

  effect (from changing pressure of the wind on the soil) and sometimes

  one registers also the effects of great storms at a distance. Yet there

  remains a continued rolling noise of cracklings in the earth which owes

  nothing to any [such] cause ...’44

  Exhibit 12

  ‘The North Pole moved ten feet in the direction of Greenland along the

  meridian of 45 degrees west longitude during the period from 1900 to

  1960 ... a rate of six centimetres (about two and a half inches) a year.

  [Between 1900 and 1968, however,] the pole moved about twenty feet.

  [The pole therefore] moved ten feet between 1960 and 1968, at a rate of

  42 Nature, volume 234, 27 December 1971, pp. 173-4; New Scientist, 6 January 1972, p.

  7.

  43 J. M. Harwood and S. C. R. Malin writing in Nature, 12 February 1976.

  44 The Path of the Pole, op. cit., Appendix, pp. 325-6.

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  about ten centimetres (four inches) a year ... If both these observations

  were accurate when made, as we have every right to expect in view of the

  eminence of the scientists involved, then we have here evidence that the

  lithosphere may be in motion at the present time [and that it is

  experiencing] a geometrical acceleration of the rate of motion ...45

  Exhibit 13

  USA Today, Wednesday 23 November 1994, page 9D:

  ‘INTERACTIVE IN ANTARCTICA: Students Link With South Pole

  Scientists

  ‘A live remote broadcast from the South Pole featuring Elizabeth Felton,

  a 17-year-old graduate of Chicago public schools, will take place Jan 10.

  Felton will use US Geological Survey data to reposition the copper marker

  designating the Earth’s geographic South Pole to compensate for the

  annual slippage of the ice sheet.’46

  Is it just the ice sheet that is slipping, or is the entire crust of the earth

  in motion? And was it just an ‘unusual interactive education project’ that

  took place on 10 January 1995, or was Elizabeth Felton unknowingly

  documenting the continued geometrical acceler
ation of the rate of

  motion of the crust?

  Scientists do not think so. As we shall see in the final chapter, however,

  the coming century is signalled in a remarkable convergence of ancient

  prophecies and traditional beliefs as an epoch of unprecedented turmoil

  and darkness, in which iniquity will be worked in secret, and the Fifth Sun

  and the Fourth World will come to an end ...

  Exhibit 14

  Kobe, Japan, Tuesday 17 January 1995: ‘The suddenness with which the

  earthquake struck was almost cruel. One moment we were fast asleep, an

  instant later the floor—the entire building—had turned to jelly. But this is

  no gently undulating liquid motion. This is jarring, gut-wrenching

  shuddering of awesome proportions ...

  ‘You are in bed, the safest place in the world. Your bed is on the floor,

  what you used to think of as solid ground. And with no warning the world

  has turned into a sickening roller-coaster ride, and you want to get off.

  ‘Possibly the most frightening part is the sound. This is not the dull

  rumble of thunder. This is a deafening, roaring sound, coming from

  everywhere and nowhere, and it sounds like the end of the world.’

  (Eyewitness report on the Kobe earthquake by Dennis Kessler, Guardian,

  45 Ibid., p. 44.

  46 USA Today, 23 November 1994, p. 9D.

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  London, 18 January 1995. The tremor lasted 20 seconds, registering 7.2

  on the Richter scale, and killed more than 5000 people.)

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  Chapter 52

  Like a Thief in the Night

  There are certain structures in the world, certain ideas, certain intellectual

  treasures, that are truly mysterious. I am beginning to suspect that the

  human race may have placed itself in grave jeopardy by failing to

  consider [the implications of these mysteries.

  We have the ability, unique in the animal kingdom, to learn from the

  experiences of our predecessors. After Hiroshima and Nagasaki, for

  example, two generations have grown to adulthood in awareness of the

  horrific destruction that nuclear weapons unleash. Our children will be

  aware of this too, without experiencing it directly, and they will pass it on

  to their children. Theoretically, therefore, the knowledge of what atom

  bombs do has become part of the permanent historical legacy of

  mankind, whether we choose to benefit from that legacy or not is up to

  us. Nevertheless the knowledge is there, should we wish to use it,

  because it has been preserved and transmitted in written records, in film

  archives, in allegorical paintings, in war memorials, and so on.

  Not all testimony from the past is accorded the same stature as the

  records of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. On the contrary, like the Canonical

  Bible, the body of knowledge that we call ‘History’ is an edited cultural

  artefact from which much has been left out. In particular, references to

  human experiences prior to the invention of writing around 5000 years

  ago have been omitted in their entirety and myth has become a synonym

  for delusion.

  Suppose it is not delusion?

  Suppose that a tremendous cataclysm were to overtake the earth today,

  obliterating the achievements of our civilization and wiping out almost all

  of us. Suppose, to paraphrase Plato, that we were forced by this

  cataclysm ‘to begin again like children, in complete ignorance of what

  had happened in early times’.1 Under such circumstances, ten or twelve

  thousand years from now (with all written records and film archives long

  since destroyed) what testimony might our descendants still preserve

  concerning the events at the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in

  August 1945 of the Christian era?

  It is easy to imagine how they might speak in mystical terms of

  explosions that gave off a ‘terrible glare of light’ and ‘immense heat’.2

  Nor would we be too surprised to find that they might have formulated a

  ‘mythical’ account something like this:

  1 Plato, Timaeus and Critias, Penguin Classics, 1977, p. 36.

  2 The Bhagavata Purana, Motilal Banardass, Delhi, 1986, Part I, pp. 59, 95.

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  The flames of the Brahmastra-charged missiles mingled with each other and

  surrounded by fiery arrows they covered the earth, heaven and space between and

  increased the conflagration like the fire and the Sun at the end of the world ... All

  beings who were scorched by the Brahmastras, and saw the terrible fire of their

  missiles, felt that it was the fire of Pralaya [the cataclysm] that burns down the

  world.3

  And what of the Enola Gay which carried the Hiroshima bomb? How might

  our descendants remember that strange aircraft and the squadrons of

  others like it that swarmed through the skies of planet earth during the

  twentieth century of the Christian era? Isn’t it possible, probable even,

  that they might preserve traditions of ‘celestial cars’ and ‘heavenly

  chariots’ and ‘spacious flying machines’, and even of ‘aerial cities’.4 If

  they did, would they perhaps speak of such wonders in mythical terms a

  little like these:

  • ‘Oh you, Uparicara Vasu, the spacious aerial flying machine will come

  to you—and you alone, of all the mortals, seated on that vehicle will

  look like a deity.’5

  • ‘Visvakarma, the architect among the Gods, built aerial vehicles for the

  Gods.’6

  • ‘Oh you descendant of the Kurus, that wicked fellow came on that alltraversing automatic flying vehicle known as Saubhapura and pierced

  me with weapons.’7

  • ‘He entered into the favourite divine palace of Indra and saw thousands

  of flying vehicles intended for the Gods lying at rest.’8

  • ‘The Gods came in their respective flying vehicles to witness the battle

  between Kripacarya and Arjuna. Even Indra, the Lord of Heaven, came

  with a special type of flying vehicle which could accommodate 33

  divine beings.’9

  All these quotations have been taken from the Bhagavata Purana and

  from the Mahabaratha, two drops in the ocean of the ancient wisdom

  literature of the Indian subcontinent. And such images are replicated in

  many other archaic traditions. To give one example (as we saw in Chapter

  Forty-two), the Pyramid Texts are replete with anachronistic images of

  flight:

  3 Ibid., p. 60.

  4 Dileep Kumar Kanjilal, Vimana in Ancient India, Sanskrit Pustak Bhandar, Calcutta,

  1985, p. 16.

  5 Ibid., p. 17.

  6 Ibid., p. 18.

  7 Ibid.

  8 Ibid.

  9 Ibid., p. 19.

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  The King is a flame, moving before the wind to the end of the sky and to the end

  of the earth ... the King travels the air and traverses the earth ... there is brought

  to him a way of ascent to the sky ...10

  Is it possible that the constant references in archaic literatures to

  something like aviation could be valid historical testimony concerning ther />
  achievements of a forgotten and remote technological age?

  We will never know unless we try to find out. And so far we haven’t

  tried because our rational, scientific culture regards myths and traditions

  as ‘unhistorical’.

  No doubt many are unhistorical. but at the end of the investigation that

  underlies this book, I am certain that many others are not ...

  For the benefit of future generations of mankind

  Here is a scenario:

  Suppose that we had calculated, on the basis of sound evidence and

  beyond any shadow of a doubt, that our civilization was soon to be

  obliterated by a titanic geological cataclysm—a 30° displacement of the

  earth’s crust, for example, or a head-on collision with a ten-mile-wide

  nickel-iron asteroid travelling towards us at cosmic speed.

  Of course there would at first be much panic and despair.

  Nevertheless—if there were sufficient advance warning—steps would be

  taken to ensure that there would be some survivors and that some of

  what was most valuable in our high scientific knowledge would be

  preserved for the benefit of future generations.

  Strangely enough, the Jewish historian Josephus (who wrote during the

  first century AD) attributes precisely this behaviour to the clever and

  prosperous inhabitants of the antediluvian world who lived before the

  Flood ‘in a happy condition without any misfortunes falling upon them’:11

  They also were the inventors of that peculiar sort of wisdom which is concerned

  with the heavenly bodies, and their order. And that their inventions might not be

  lost—upon Adam’s prediction that the world was to be destroyed at one time by

  the force of fire, and at another time by the violence and quantity of water—they

  made two pillars, one of brick, the other of stone: they inscribed their discoveries

  upon them both, that in case the pillar of brick should be destroyed by the Flood,

  the pillar of stone might remain and exhibit these discoveries to mankind; and

  also inform them that there was another pillar of brick erected by them ...12

  Likewise, when the Oxford astronomer John Greaves visited Egypt in the

  seventeenth century he collected ancient local traditions which attributed

  the construction of the three Giza pyramids to a mythical antediluvian

  king:

  10 The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts, p. 70, Utt. 261.

  11 The Complete Works Of Josephus, Kregel Publications, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1991,

 

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