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    Fingerprints of the Gods

    Page 4
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      The Piri Reis Map seems to contain surprising collateral evidence in

      support of the thesis of a geologically recent glaciation of parts of

      Antarctica following a sudden southward displacement of the earth’s

      crust. Moreover since such a map could only have been drawn prior to

      4000 BC, its implications for the history of human civilization are

      staggering. Prior to 4000 BC there are supposed to have been no

      civilizations at all.

      At some risk of over-simplification, the academic consensus is broadly:

      • Civilization first developed in the Fertile Crescent of the Middle East.

      15 Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings, 1966 ed., p. 189.

      16 Ibid., p. 187.

      17 Ibid., p. 189.

      18 Einstein's foreword to Earth's Shifting Crust, p. 1

      20

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      • This development began after 4000 BC, and culminated in the

      emergence of the earliest true civilizations (Sumer and Egypt) around

      3000 BC, soon followed by the Indus Valley and China.

      • About 1500 years later, civilization took off spontaneously and

      independently in the Americas.

      • Since 3000 BC in the Old World (and about 1500 BC in the New)

      civilization has steadily ‘evolved’ in the direction of ever more refined,

      complex and productive forms.

      • In consequence, and particularly by comparison with ourselves, all

      ancient civilizations (and all their works) are to be understood as

      essentially primitive (the Sumerian astronomers regarded the heavens

      with unscientific awe, and even the pyramids of Egypt were built by

      ‘technological primitives’).

      The evidence of the Piri Reis Map appears to contradict all this.

      Piri Reis and his sources

      In his day, Piri Reis was a well-known figure; his historical identity is

      firmly established. An admiral in the navy of the Ottoman Turks, he was

      involved, often on the winning side, in numerous sea battles around the

      mid-sixteenth century. He was, in addition, considered an expert on the

      lands of the Mediterranean, and was the author of a famous sailing book,

      the Kitabi Bahriye, which provided a comprehensive description of the

      coasts, harbours, currents, shallows, landing places, bays and straits of

      the Aegean and Mediterranean Seas. Despite this illustrious career he fell

      foul of his masters and was beheaded in AD 1554 or 1555.19

      The source maps Piri Reis used to draw up his 1513 map were in all

      probability lodged originally in the Imperial Library at Constantinople, to

      which the admiral is known to have enjoyed privileged access. Those

      sources (which may have been transferred or copied from even more

      ancient centres of learning) no longer exist, or, at any rate, have not been

      found. It was, however, in the library of the old Imperial Palace at

      Constantinople that the Piri Reis Map was rediscovered, painted on a

      gazelle skin and rolled up on a dusty shelf, as recently as 1929.20

      Legacy of a lost civilization?

      As the baffled Ohlmeyer admitted in his letter to Hapgood in 1960, the

      Piri Reis Map depicts the subglacial topography, the true profile of Queen

      Maud Land Antarctica beneath the ice. This profile remained completely

      19 Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings, pp. 209-11.

      20 Ibid., p. 1.

      21

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      hidden from view from 4000 BC (when the advancing ice sheet covered it)

      until it was revealed again as a result of the comprehensive seismic

      survey of Queen Maud Land carried out during 1949 by a joint BritishSwedish scientific reconnaissance team.21

      If Piri Reis had been the only cartographer with access to such

      anomalous information, it would be wrong to place any great weight on

      his map. At the most one might say, ‘Perhaps it is significant but, then

      again, perhaps it is just a coincidence.’ However, the Turkish admiral was

      by no means alone in the possession of seemingly impossible and

      inexplicable geographical knowledge. It would be futile to speculate

      further than Hapgood has already done as to what ‘underground stream’

      could have carried and preserved such knowledge through the ages,

      transmitting fragments of it from culture to culture and from epoch to

      epoch. Whatever the mechanism, the fact is that a number of other

      cartographers seem to have been privy to the same curious secrets.

      Is it possible that all these map-makers could have partaken, perhaps

      unknowingly, in the bountiful scientific legacy of a vanished civilization?

      21 Ibid., pp. 76-7 and 231-2.

      22

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      Chapter 2

      Rivers in the Southern Continent

      In the Christmas recess of 1959-60 Charles Hapgood was looking for

      Antarctica in the Reference Room of the Library of Congress, Washington

      DC. For several consecutive weeks he worked there, lost in the search,

      surrounded by literally hundreds of medieval maps and charts.

      I found [he reported] many fascinating things I had not expected to find, and a

      number of charts showing the southern continent. Then, one day, I turned a page

      and sat transfixed. As my eyes fell upon the southern hemisphere of a world map

      drawn by Oronteus Finaeus in 1531, I had the instant conviction that I had found

      here a truly authentic map of the real Antarctica.

      The general shape of the continent was startlingly like the outline of the continent

      on our modern maps. The position of the South Pole, nearly in the center of the

      continent, seemed about right. The mountain ranges that skirted the coasts

      suggested the numerous ranges that have been discovered in Antarctica in recent

      years. It was obvious, too, that this was no slapdash creation of somebody’s

      imagination. The mountain ranges were individualized, some definitely coastal

      and some not. From most of them rivers were shown flowing into the sea,

      following in every case what looked like very natural and very convincing drainage

      patterns. This suggested, of course, that the coasts may have been ice-free when

      the original map was drawn. The deep interior, however, was free entirely of rivers

      and mountains, suggesting that the ice might have been present there.1

      Closer investigation of the Oronteus Finaeus Map by Hapgood, and by Dr

      Richard Strachan of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, confirmed

      the following:

      1 It had been copied and compiled from several earlier source maps

      drawn up according to a number of different projections.2

      2 It did indeed show non-glacial conditions in coastal regions of

      Antarctica, notably Queen Maud Land, Enderby Land, Wilkes Land,

      Victoria Land (the east coast of the Ross Sea), and Marie Byrd Land.3

      3 As in the case of the Piri Reis Map, the general profile of the terrain,

      and the visible physical features, matched closely seismic survey maps

      of the subglacial land surfaces of Antarctica.4

      The Oronteus Finaeus Map, Hapgood concluded, appeared to document

      ‘the surprising proposition that Antarctica was visited and perhaps

      1 Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings (henceforth Maps), p. 79.

      2 Ibid., p. 233.

     
    ; 3 Ibid., p. 89.

      4 Ibid., p. 90. These maps were made in 1958, International Geophysical Year, by survey

      teams from several different nations.

      23

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      settled by men when it was largely if not entirely non-glacial. It goes

      without saying that this implies a very great antiquity ... [Indeed] the

      Oronteus Finaeus Map takes the civilization of the original map-makers

      back to a time contemporary with the end of the last Ice Age in the

      northern hemisphere.’5

      The Oronteus Finaeus map, showing Antarctica with ice-free coasts,

      mountains and rivers.

      Ross Sea

      Further evidence in support of this view arises from the manner in which

      the Ross Sea was shown by Oronteus Finaeus. Where today great glaciers

      like the Beardmore and the Scott disgorge themselves into the sea, the

      1531 map shows estuaries, broad inlets and indications of rivers. The

      unmistakable implication of these features is that there was no ice on the

      Ross Sea or its coasts when the source maps used by Oronteus Finaeus

      were made: ‘There also had to be a considerable hinterland free of ice to

      feed the rivers. At the present time all these coasts and their hinterlands

      are deeply buried in the mile-thick ice-cap, while on the Ross Sea itself

      there is a floating ice-shelf hundreds of feet thick.’6

      The Ross Sea evidence provides strong corroboration for the notion that

      Antarctica must have been mapped by some unknown civilization during

      the extensively ice-free period which ended around 4000 BC. This is

      5 Ibid., p. 149.

      6 Ibid., p. 93-6.

      24

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      emphasized by the coring tubes used, in 1949, by one of the Byrd

      Antarctic Expeditions to take samples of sediment from the bottom of the

      Ross Sea. The sediments showed numerous clearly demarcated layers of

      stratification reflecting different environmental conditions in different

      epochs: ‘coarse glacial marine’, ‘medium glacial marine’, ‘fine glacial

      marine’, and so on. The most surprising discovery, however, ‘was that a

      number of the layers were formed of fine-grained, well-assorted

      sediments, such as are brought down to the sea by rivers flowing from

      temperate (that is, ice-free) lands ...’7

      Using the ionium-dating method developed by Dr W. D. Urry (which

      makes use of three different radioactive elements found in sea water8),

      researchers at the Carnegie Institute in Washington DC were able to

      establish beyond any reasonable doubt that great rivers carrying finegrained well-assorted sediments had indeed flowed in Antarctica until

      about 6000 years ago, as the Oronteus Finaeus Map showed. It was only

      after that date, around 4000 BC, ‘that the glacial kind of sediment began

      to be deposited on the Ross Sea bottom ... The cores indicate that warm

      conditions had prevailed for a long period before that.’9

      Mercator and Buache

      The Piri Reis and Oronteus Finaeus Maps therefore provide us with a

      glimpse of Antarctica as no cartographer in historical times could

      possibly have seen it. On their own, of course, these two pieces of

      evidence should not be sufficient to persuade us that we might be gazing

      at the fingerprints of a lost civilization. Can three, or four, or six such

      maps, however, be dismissed with equal justification?

      7 Ibid., p. 97.

      8 For a detailed description of the process see Maps, P. 96.

      9 Ibid., page 98.

      25

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      The Mercator map, showing Antarctica’s mountains and

      rivers covered by ice.

      Is it safe, or reasonable, for example, for us to continue to ignore the

      historical implications of some of the maps made by the sixteenthcentury’s most famous cartographer: Gerard Kremer, otherwise known as

      Mercator? Best remembered for the Mercator projection, still used on

      most world maps today, this enigmatic individual (who paid an

      unexplained visit to the Great Pyramid of Egypt in 156310) was reportedly

      ‘indefatigable in searching out ... the learning of long ago’, and spent

      many years diligently accumulating a vast and eclectic reference library of

      ancient source maps.11

      Significantly, Mercator included the Oronteus Finaeus map in his Atlas

      of 1569 and also depicted the Antarctic on several he himself drew in the

      same year. Identifiable parts of the then undiscovered southern continent

      on these maps are Cape Dart and Cape Herlacher in Marie Byrd Land, the

      Amundsen Sea, Thurston Island in Ellsworth Land, the Fletcher Islands in

      the Bellinghausen Sea, Alexander I Island, the Antarctic (Palmer)

      Peninsula, the Weddell Sea, Cape Norvegia, the Regula Range in Queen

      Maud Land (as islands), the Muhlig-Hoffman Mountains (as islands), the

      Prince Harald Coast, the Shirase Glacier as an estuary on Prince Harald

      Coast, Padda Island in Lutzow-Holm Bay, and the Prince Olaf Coast in

      Enderby Land. ‘In some cases these features are more distinctly

      recognisable than on the Oronteus Finaeus Map,’ observed Hapgood,

      ‘and it seems clear, in general, that Mercator had at his disposal source

      10 He left his graffito there. See Peter Tompkins, Secrets of the Great Pyramid, Harper &

      Row Publishers, New York, p. 38, 285.

      11 Maps, p. 102.

      26

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      maps other than those used by Oronteus Finaeus.’12

      And not only Mercator.

      Philippe Buache, the eighteenth-century French geographer, was also

      able to publish a map of Antarctica long before the southern continent

      was officially ‘discovered’. And the extraordinary feature of Buache’s map

      is that it seems to have been based on source maps made earlier,

      perhaps thousands of years earlier, than those used by Oronteus Finaeus

      and Mercator. What Buache gives us is an eerily precise representation of

      Antarctica as it must have looked when there was no ice on it at all.13 His

      map reveals the subglacial topography of the entire continent, which even

      we did not have full knowledge of until 1958, International Geophysical

      Year, when a comprehensive seismic survey was carried out.

      That survey only confirmed what Buache had already proclaimed when

      he published his map of Antarctica in 1737. Basing his cartography on

      ancient sources now lost, the French academician depicted a clear

      waterway across the southern continent dividing it into two principal

      landmasses lying east and west of the line now marked by the TransAntarctic Mountains.

      Such a waterway, connecting the Ross, Weddell and Bellinghausen Seas,

      would indeed exist if Antarctica were free of ice. As the 1958 IGY Survey

      shows, the continent (which appears on modern maps as one continuous

      landmass) consists of an archipelago of large islands with mile-thick ice

      packed between them and rising above sea level.

      The epoch of the map-makers

      As we have seen, many orthodox geologists believe that the last time any

      waterway existed in these ice-filled basins was millions of years ago.

      From the scholarly point of
    view, however, it is equally orthodox to affirm

      that no human beings had evolved in those remote times, let alone

      human beings capable of accurately mapping the landmasses of the

      Antarctic. The big problem raised by the Buache/IGY evidence is that

      those landmasses do seem to have been mapped when they were free of

      ice. This confronts scholars with two mutually contradictory propositions.

      12 Ibid., pp. 103-4.

      13 Ibid., p. 93.

      27

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      The Buache map, with landmasses which show Antarctica very much

      as it would have looked before it became covered by ice.

      Which one is correct?

      If we are to go along with orthodox geologists and accept that millions

      of years have indeed elapsed since Antarctica was last completely free of

      ice, then all the evidence of human evolution, painstakingly accumulated

      by distinguished scientists from Darwin on, must be wrong. It seems

      inconceivable that this could be the case: the fossil record makes it

      abundantly clear that only the unevolved ancestors of humanity existed

      millions of years ago—low-browed knuckle-dragging hominids incapable

      of advanced intellectual tasks like map-making.

      Are we therefore to assume the intervention of alien cartographers in

      orbiting spaceships to explain the existence of sophisticated maps of an

      ice-free Antarctica? Or shall we think again about the implications of

      Hapgood’s theory of earth-crust displacement which allows the southern

      continent to have been in the ice-free condition depicted by Buache as

      little as 15,000 years ago?14

      14 For a fuller discussion of the evidence behind this theory see Part VIII of this book and

      Hapgood's Earth's Shifting Crust.

      28

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      Above left and right Redrawings of the Mercator and Oronteus

      Finaeus maps showing the progressive glaciation of Antarctica. Below

      left Redrawing of the Buache map. Below right The subglacial

      topography of Antarctica, according to modern seismic surveys.

      29

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      An early nineteenth-century Russian map showing that the existence

      of Antarctica was at that time unknown. The continent was

     


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