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    Fingerprints of the Gods

    Page 60
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      14 Under the category of anomalies, West made specific reference to the bowls carved

      out of diorite and other hard stones described in Part VI.

      407

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      This was a conviction I increasingly shared—and, I reminded myself,

      that most nineteenth-century Egyptologists had shared it too.

      Nevertheless the Sphinx’s appearance argued against such intuitions

      since there was no doubt that its head looked conventionally pharaonic.

      ‘If it’s as old as you think it is,’ I now asked John, ‘then how do you

      explain that the sculptors depicted it wearing the characteristic nemes

      head-dress and uraeus of dynastic times?’

      ‘I’m not bothered about that. In fact, as you know, Egyptologists

      contend that the face of the Sphinx resembles the face of Khafre—its one

      of the reasons why they claim it must have been built by him. Schoch and

      I have looked into this very carefully. We think, from the proportions of

      the head relative to the rest of the body, that it’s been recarved during

      dynastic times—and that’s why it looks very dynastic. But we don’t think

      it was ever meant to represent Khafre. As part of our ongoing research

      into these issues we had Lieutenant Frank Domingo, a forensic artist with

      the New York Police Department, come over and do point by point

      comparisons between the face of the Sphinx and the face of Cephren’s

      statue in the Cairo Museum. His conclusion was that in no way was the

      Sphinx ever intended to represent Khafre. It’s not just a matter of it being

      a different face—it’s probably a different race.15 So this is a very ancient

      monument that was recarved at a much later date. Originally it may not

      even have had a human face. Maybe it started out with a lion’s face as

      well as a lion’s body.’

      Magellan and the first dinosaur bone

      After my own explorations at Giza I was interested to know whether

      West’s research had cast doubt on the orthodox dating of any of the

      other monuments on the plateau—particularly the so-called Valley Temple

      of Khafre.

      ‘We think there’s quite a lot of stuff that may be older,’ he told me. ‘Not

      just the Valley Temple but also the Mortuary Temple up the hill, probably

      something to do with the Menkaure complex, maybe even the Pyramid of

      Khafre ...’

      ‘What in the Menkaure complex?’

      ‘Well, the Mortuary Temple. And actually I’m only using the

      conventional attribution of the Pyramids for convenience here ...’

      15 'After reviewing my various drawings, schematics and measurements, my final

      conclusion concurs with my initial reaction: the two works represent two separate

      individuals. The proportions in the frontal view and especially the angles and facial

      protrusion in the lateral views, convinced me that the Sphinx is not Khafre. If the ancient

      Egyptians were skilled technicians and capable of duplicating images, then these

      two works cannot represent the same individual.' Frank Domingo, cited in Serpent

      in the Sky, p. 232. See also AAAS 1992, for Schoch's views on the recarving of the

      Sphinx's head.

      408

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      ‘OK. So do you think it’s possible that the pyramids are as old as the

      Sphinx too?’

      ‘It’s hard to say. I think something was there where those pyramids now

      are—because of the geometry. The Sphinx was part of a master-plan. And

      the Khafre Pyramid is maybe the most interesting in that respect because

      it was definitely built in two stages. If you look at it—maybe you’ve

      noticed—you’ll see that its base consists of several courses of gigantic

      blocks similar in style to the blocks of the core masonry of the Valley

      Temple. Superimposed above the base, the rest of the pyramid is

      composed of smaller, less precisely engineered stuff. But when you look

      at it, knowing what you’re looking for, you see instantly that it’s built in

      two separate bits. I mean I can’t help but feel that the vast blocks on the

      bottom date from the earlier period—from the time the Sphinx was

      built—and that the second part was added later—but even then not

      necessarily by Khafre. As you go into this you begin to realize that the

      more you learn the more complex everything becomes. For example,

      there may even have been an intermediate civilization, which actually

      would correspond to the Egyptian texts. They talk themselves about two

      long prior periods. In the first of these Egypt was supposedly ruled by the

      gods—the Neteru—and in the second it was ruled by the Shemsu Hor, the

      “Companions of Horus”. So, as I say, the problems just get more and

      more complicated. Fortunately, however, the bottom line stays simple.

      The bottom line is the Sphinx wasn’t built by Khafre. The geology proves

      that it’s a hell of a lot older ...’

      ‘Nevertheless the Egyptologists won’t accept that it is. One of the

      arguments they’ve used against you—Mark Lehner did so—goes

      something like this: “If the Sphinx was made before 10,000 BC then why

      can’t you show us the rest of the civilization that built it?” In other words,

      why don’t you have any other evidence to put forward for the presence of

      your legendary lost civilization apart from a few structures on the Giza

      plateau? What do you say to that?’

      ‘First off, there are structures outside Giza—for example the Osireion in

      Abydos, where you’ve just come from. We think that amazing edifice may

      relate to our work on the Sphinx. Even if the Osireion didn’t exist,

      however, the absence of other evidence wouldn’t worry me. I mean, to

      make a big deal out of the fact that further confirmatory evidence hasn’t

      been found yet and to use this to try to scuttle the arguments for an older

      Sphinx is completely illogical. Analogously it’s like saying to Magellan ...

      “Where are the other guys who’ve sailed round the world? Of course it’s

      still flat.” Or in 1838 when the first dinosaur bone was found they would

      have said, “Of course there’s no such thing as a giant extinct animal.

      Where’s the rest of the skeletons? They’ve only found one bone.” But once

      a few people began to realize that this bone could only be from an

      extinct animal, within twenty years the museums of the world were filled

      up with complete dinosaur skeletons. So it’s sort of like that. Nobody’s

      409

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      thought to look in the right places. I’m absolutely certain that other

      evidence will be found once a few people start looking in the right

      places—along the banks of the ancient Nile, for example, which is miles

      from the present Nile, or even at the bottom of the Mediterranean, which

      was dry during the last Ice Age.’

      The problem of transmission

      I asked John West why he thought that Egyptologists and archaeologists

      were so unwilling to consider that the Sphinx might be a clue to the

      existence of a forgotten episode in human history.

      ‘The reason, I think, is that they’re quite fixed in their ideas about the

      linear e
    volution of civilization. They find it hard to come to terms with the

      notion that there might have been people, more than 12,000 years ago,

      who were more sophisticated than we are today ... The Sphinx, and the

      geology which proves its antiquity, and the fact that the technology that

      was involved in making it is in many ways almost beyond our own

      capacities, contradicts the belief that civilization and technology have

      evolved in a straightforward, linear way ... Because even with the best

      modern technology we almost couldn’t carry out the various tasks that

      were involved in the project. The Sphinx itself, that’s not such a

      staggering feat. I mean if you get enough sculptors to cut the stone away

      they could carve a statue a mile long. The technology was involved in

      taking the stones, quarrying the stones, to free the Sphinx from its

      bedrock and then in moving those stones and using them to build the

      Valley Temple a couple of hundred feet away ...’

      This was news to me: ‘You mean that the 200-ton blocks in the Valley

      Temple walls were quarried right out of the Sphinx enclosure?’

      ‘Yes, no doubt about it. Geologically they’re from the identical member

      of rock. They were quarried out, moved over to the site of the Temple—

      God knows how—and erected into forty-foot-high walls—again God

      knows how. I’m talking about the huge limestone core blocks, not the

      granite facing. I think that the granite was added much later, quite

      possibly by Khafre. But if you look at the limestone core blocks you’ll see

      that they bear the marks of exactly the same kind of precipitationinduced weathering that are found on the Sphinx. So the Sphinx and the

      core structure of the Valley Temple were made at the same time by the

      same people—whoever they may have been.’

      ‘And do you think that those people and the later dynastic Egyptians

      were connected to each other in some way? In Serpent in the Sky you

      suggested that a legacy must have been passed on.’

      ‘It’s still just a suggestion. All that I know for sure on the basis of our

      work on the Sphinx is that a very, very high, sophisticated civilization

      capable of undertaking construction projects on a grand scale was

      present in Egypt in the very distant past. Then there was a lot of rain.

      410

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      Then, thousands of years later, in the same place, pharaonic civilization

      popped up already fully formed, apparently out of nowhere, with all its

      knowledge complete. That much we can be certain of. But whether or not

      the knowledge that Ancient Egypt possessed was the same as the

      knowledge that produced the Sphinx I really can’t say.’

      ‘How about this,’ I speculated: ‘The civilization that produced the

      Sphinx wasn’t based here, at least not originally ... It wasn’t in Egypt. It

      put the Sphinx here as some sort of a marker or outpost ...’

      ‘Perfectly possible. Could be that the Sphinx for that civilization was

      like, let’s say, what Abu Simbel [in Nubia] was for dynastic Egypt.’

      ‘Then that civilization came to an end, was extinguished by some sort

      of massive catastrophe, and that’s when the legacy of high knowledge

      was handed on ... Because they had the Sphinx here they knew about

      Egypt, they knew this place, they knew this country, they had a

      connection here. Maybe people survived the ending of that civilization.

      Maybe they came here. ... Does that work for you?’

      ‘Well, it’s a possibility. Again, going back into the mythologies and

      legends of the world, many of them tell of such a catastrophe and of the

      few people—the Noah story that’s prevalent through endless

      civilizations—who somehow or other retained and passed on knowledge.

      The big problem with all this, from my point of view, is the transmission

      process: how exactly the knowledge does get handed on during the

      thousands and thousands of years between the construction of the

      Sphinx and the flowering of dynastic Egypt. Theoretically you’re sort of

      stuck—aren’t you?—with this vast period in which the knowledge has to

      be transmitted. This is not easy to slough off. On the other hand we do

      know that those legends we’re referring to were passed on word for word

      over countless generations. And in fact oral transmission is a much surer

      means of transmission than written transmission, because the language

      may change but as long as whoever’s telling the story tells it true in

      whatever the language of the time is ... it surfaces some 5000 years later

      in its original form. So maybe there are ways—in secret societies and

      religious cults, or through mythology, for example—that the knowledge

      could have been preserved and passed on before flowering again. The

      point, I think, with problems as complex and important as these, is

      simply not to dismiss any possibilities, no matter how outrageous they

      may at first seem, without investigating them very, very thoroughly ...’

      Second opinion

      John West was in Luxor, leading a study group on Egypt’s sacred sites.

      Early the next day he and his students went south to Aswan and Abu

      Simbel. Santha and I journeyed north again, back towards Giza and the

      mysteries of the Sphinx and the pyramids. We were to meet there with

      the archaeo-astronomer Robert Bauval. As we shall see, his stellar

      411

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      correlations provided startling independent corroboration for the

      geological evidence of Giza’s vast antiquity.

      412

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      Chapter 48

      Earth Measurers

      Follow these instructions carefully:

      Draw two parallel straight lines vertically down a sheet of paper, about

      seven inches long and a bit under three inches apart. Draw a third line,

      also vertical, also parallel and of equal length, exactly mid-way between

      the first two. Write the letter ‘S’—for ‘South’—at the top end of your

      diagram (the end farthest away from you), and the letter ‘N’ for ‘North’ at

      the bottom end. Add the letters ‘E’ for ‘East’ and ‘W for ‘West’ in their

      appropriate positions at either side of the diagram, to your left for East

      and to your right for West.

      What you are looking at are the outlines of a geometrical map of Egypt

      incorporating a perspective very different from our own (where ‘North’ is

      always equated with ‘Up’). This map where ‘Up’ is ‘South’ seems to have

      been worked out an enormously long time ago by cartographers with a

      scientific understanding of the shape and size of our planet.

      To complete the map you should now mark a dot on the central of the

      three parallel lines about an inch to the south of (‘up’ from) the northern

      end of the diagram. Then draw two more lines diagonally down from this

      point, respectively to the north-east and north-west, until they reach the

      northern ends of the two outermost parallel lines. Finally link those

      parallel lines directly with horizontal lines running east to west at the

      northern and southern ends of the diagram.

      The s
    hape produced is a meridional rectangle (oriented north-south).

      This rectangle is seven inches long by just under three inches wide and

      has a triangle demarcated at its northern (lower) end. The triangle

      represents the Nile Delta and the dot at the apex of the triangle

      represents the apex of the Delta—a point on the ground at 30° 06’ north

      and 31° 14’ east, very close to the location of the Great Pyramid.

      413

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      Map showing the geometric conception of Egypt, with the Great

      Pyramid at the apex of the Nile delta. The Egyptians traditionally

      thought of south as ‘up’.

      Geodetic marker

      Whatever else it may be, it has long been understood by mathematicians

      and geographers that the Great Pyramid serves the function of a geodetic

      marker (geodetics being the branch of science concerned with

      414

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      determining the exact position of geographical points and the shape and

      size of the earth1). This realization first dawned in the late eighteenth

      century when the armies of revolutionary France, led by Napoleon

      Bonaparte, invaded Egypt. Bonaparte, who had cultivated a deep interest

      in the enigmas of the pyramids, brought with him a large number of

      scholars, 175 in all, including several ‘greybeards’ gathered from various

      universities who were reputed to have acquired ‘a profound knowledge of

      Egyptian antiquities’, and, more usefully, a group of mathematicians,

      cartographers and surveyors.2

      One of the tasks the savants were set, after the conquest was

      completed, was to draw up detailed maps of Egypt. In the process of

      doing this they discovered that the Great Pyramid was perfectly aligned to

      true north—and of course to the south, east and west as well, as we saw

      in Part VI. This meant that the mysterious structure made an excellent

      reference and triangulation point, and a decision was therefore taken to

      use the meridian passing through its apex as the base-line for all other

      measurements and orientations. The team then proceeded to produce the

      first accurate maps of Egypt drawn up in the modern age. When they had

      finished, they were intrigued to note that the Great Pyramid’s meridian

      sliced the Nile Delta region into two equal halves. They also found that if

     


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