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    Fingerprints of the Gods

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      such unanimity existed with regard to Teotihuacan. Neither the Street of

      the Dead, nor the Temple of Quetzalcoatl, nor the Pyramids of the Sun

      and the Moon had ever been definitively dated.23 The majority of scholars

      believed that the city had flourished between 100 BC and AD 600, but

      others argued strongly that it must have risen to prominence much

      earlier, between 1500 and 1000 BC. There were others still who sought,

      largely on geological grounds, to push the foundation date back to 4000

      BC before the eruption of the nearby volcano Xitli.24

      Amid all this uncertainty about the age of Teotihuacan, I had not been

      surprised to discover that no one had the faintest idea of the identity of

      those who had actually built the largest and most remarkable metropolis

      ever to have existed in the pre-Colombian New World.25 All that could be

      said for sure was this: when the Aztecs, on their march to imperial power,

      first stumbled upon the mysterious city in the twelfth century AD, its

      colossal edifices and avenues were already old beyond imagining and so

      densely overgrown that they seemed more like natural features than

      works of man.26 Attached to them, however, was a thread of local legend,

      passed down from generation to generation, which asserted that they had

      been built by giants27 and that their purpose had been to transform men

      into gods.

      21 The Ancient Kingdoms Of Mexico, p. 74; The Traveller’s Key To Ancient Egypt, pp. 11035.

      22 See, for example, Ahmed Fakhry, The Pyramids, University of Chicago Press, 1969.

      23 Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, pp. 230-3.

      24 Ibid.

      25 The Prehistory of the Americas, p. 282.

      26 Mysteries of ‘the Mexican Pyramids, pp. 11-12.

      27 Ibid.

      170

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      Hints of forgotten wisdom

      Leaving the Temple of Quetzalcoatl behind me, I recrossed the Citadel in

      a westerly direction.

      There was no archaeological evidence that this enormous enclosure had

      ever served as a citadel—or, for that matter, that it had any kind of

      military or defensive function at all. Like so much else about Teotihuacan

      it had clearly been planned with painstaking care, and executed with

      enormous effort, but its true purpose remained unidentified by modern

      scholarship.28 Even the Aztecs, who had been responsible for naming the

      Pyramids of the Sun and the Moon (an attribution which had stuck though

      no one had any idea what the original builders had called them) had

      failed to invent a name for the Citadel. It had been left to the Spaniards to

      label it as they did—an understandable conceit since the 30-acre central

      patio of La Ciudadela was surrounded by massively thick embankments

      more than 23 feet high and some 1500 feet long on each side.29

      My walk had now brought me to the western extreme of the patio. I

      climbed a steep set of stairs that led to the top of the embankment and

      turned north on to the Street of the Dead. Once again I had to remind

      myself that this was almost certainly not what the Teotihuacanos

      (whoever they were) had called the immense and impressive avenue. The

      Spanish name Calle de los Muertos was of Aztec origin, apparently based

      on speculation that the numerous mounds on either side of the Street

      were graves (which, as it happened, they were not).30

      We have already considered the possibility that the Way of the Dead

      may have served as a terrestrial counterpart of the Milky Way. Of interest

      in this regard is the work of another American, Alfred E. Schlemmer,

      who—like Hugh Harleston Jr.—was an engineer. Schlemmer’s field was

      technological forecasting, with specific reference to the prediction of

      earthquakes,31 on which he presented a paper at the Eleventh National

      Convention of Chemical Engineers (in Mexico City in October 1971).

      Schlemmer’s argument was that the Street of the Dead might never

      have been a street at all. Instead, it might originally have been laid out as

      a row of linked reflecting pools, filled with water which had descended

      through a series of locks from the Pyramid of the Moon, at the northern

      extreme, to the Citadel in the south.

      As I walked steadily northward towards the still-distant Moon Pyramid,

      it seemed to me that this theory had several points in its favour. For a

      start the ‘Street’ was blocked at regular intervals by high partition walls,

      at the foot of which the remains of well-made sluices could clearly be

      seen. Moreover, the lie of the land would have facilitated a north-south

      28 Ibid., p. 213.

      29 Ibid.

      30 The Ancient Kingdoms of Mexico, p. 72.

      31 Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, pp. 271-2.

      171

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      hydraulic flow since the base of the Moon Pyramid stood on ground that

      was approximately 100 feet higher than the area in front of the Citadel.

      The partitioned sections could easily have been filled with water and

      might indeed have served as reflecting pools, creating a spectacle far

      more dramatic than those offered by the Taj Mahal or the fabled Shalimar

      Gardens. Finally, the Teotihuacan Mapping Project (financed by the

      National Science Foundation in Washington DC and led by Professor Rene

      Millon of the University of Rochester) had demonstrated conclusively that

      the ancient city had possessed ‘many carefully laid-out canals and

      systems of branching waterways, artificially dredged into straightened

      portions of a river, which formed a network within Teotihuacan and ran

      all the way to [Lake Texcoco], now ten miles distant but perhaps closer in

      antiquity’.32

      There was much argument about what this vast hydraulic system had

      been designed to do. Schlemmer’s contention was that the particular

      waterway he had identified had been built to serve a pragmatic purpose

      as ‘a long-range seismic monitor’—part of ‘an ancient science, no longer

      understood’.33 He pointed out that remote earthquakes ‘can cause

      standing waves to form on a liquid surface right across the planet’ and

      suggested that the carefully graded and spaced reflecting pools of the

      Street of the Dead might have been designed ‘to enable Teotihuacanos to

      read from the standing waves formed there the location and strength of

      earthquakes around the globe, thus allowing them to predict such an

      occurrence in their own area’.34

      32 Ibid., p. 232.

      33 Ibid., p. 272.

      34 Ibid.

      172

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      Reconstruction of Teotihuacan, looking down the Way of the Dead

      from behind the Pyramid of the Moon. The Pyramid of the Sun lies to

      the left of the Way of the Dead. Visible in the distance beyond it is

      the pyramid-temple of Quetzalcoatl inside the large compound of the

      citadel.

      There was, of course, no proof of Schlemmer’s theory. However, when I

      remembered the fixation with earthquakes and floods apparent

      everywhere in Mexican mythology, and the equally obsessive concern

      with forecasting future events evident in the Maya c
    alendar, I felt less

      inclined to dismiss the apparently far-fetched conclusions of the

      American engineer. If Schlemmer were right, if the ancient Teotihuacanos

      had indeed understood the principles of resonant vibration and had put

      them into practice in seismic forecasting, the implication was that they

      were the possessors of an advanced science. And if people like Hagar and

      Harleston were right—if, for example, a scale-model of the solar system

      had also been built into the basic geometry of Teotihuacan—this too

      suggested that the city was founded by a scientifically evolved civilization

      not yet identified.

      I continued to walk northwards along the Street of the Dead and turned

      east towards the Pyramid of the Sun. Before reaching this great

      monument, however, I paused to examine a ruined patio, the principal

      feature of which was an ancient ‘temple’ which concealed a perplexing

      mystery beneath its rock floor.

      173

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      Chapter 23

      The Sun and the Moon and the Way of the Dead

      Some archaeological discoveries are heralded with much fanfare; others,

      for various reasons, are not. Among this latter category must be included

      the thick and extensive layer of sheet mica found sandwiched between

      two of the upper levels of the Teotihuacan Pyramid of the Sun when it

      was being probed for restoration in 1906. The lack of interest which

      greeted this discovery, and the absence of any follow-up studies to

      determine its possible function is quite understandable because the mica,

      which had a considerable commercial value, was removed and sold as

      soon as it had been excavated. The culprit was apparently Leopoldo

      Bartres, who had been commissioned to restore the time-worn pyramid

      by the Mexican government.1

      There has also been a much more recent discovery of mica at

      Teotihuacan (in the ‘Mica Temple’) and this too has passed almost

      without notice. Here the reason is harder to explain because there has

      been no looting and the mica remains on site.2

      One of a group of buildings, the Mica Temple is situated around a patio

      about 1000 feet south of the west face of the Pyramid of the Sun. Directly

      under a floor paved with heavy rock slabs, archaeologists financed by the

      Viking Foundation excavated two massive sheets of mica which had been

      carefully and purposively installed at some extremely remote date by a

      people who must have been skilled in cutting and handling this material.

      The sheets are ninety feet square and form two layers, one laid directly

      on top of the other.3

      Mica is not a uniform substance but contains trace elements of different

      metals depending on the kind of rock formation in which it is found.

      Typically these metals include potassium and aluminum and also, in

      varying quantities, ferrous and ferric iron, magnesium, lithium,

      manganese and titanium. The trace elements in Teotihuacan’s Mica

      Temple indicate that the underfloor sheets belong to a type which occurs

      only in Brazil, some 2000 miles away.4 Clearly, therefore, the builders of

      the Temple must have had a specific need for this particular kind of mica

      and were prepared to go to considerable lengths to obtain it, otherwise

      they could have used the locally available variety more cheaply and

      simply.

      Mica does not leap to mind as an obvious general-purpose flooring

      1 Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 202.

      2 Ibid. The Pyramids of Teotihuacan, p. 16.

      3 The Pyramids of Teotihuacan, p. 16.

      4 Encyclopaedia Britannica, 8:90, and The Lost Realms, p. 53.

      174

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      material. Its use to form layers underneath a floor, and thus completely

      out of sight, seems especially bizarre when we remember that no other

      ancient structure in the Americas, or anywhere else in the world, has

      been found to contain a feature like this.5

      It is frustrating that we will never be able to establish the exact

      position, let alone the purpose, of the large sheet that Bartres excavated

      and removed from the Pyramid of the Sun in 1906. The two intact layers

      in the Mica Temple, on the other hand, resting as they do in a place

      where they had no decorative function, look as though they were

      designed to do a particular job. Let us note in passing that mica

      possesses characteristics which suit it especially well for a range of

      technological applications. In modern industry, it is used in the

      construction of capacitors and is valued as a thermal and electric

      insulator. It is also opaque to fast neutrons and can act as a moderator in

      nuclear reactions.

      Erasing messages from the past

      Pyramid of the Sun, Teotihuacan

      Having climbed more than 200 feet up a series of flights of stone stairs I

      reached the summit and looked towards the zenith. It was midday 19

      May, and the sun was directly overhead, as it would be again on 25 July.

      On these two dates, and not by accident, the west face of the pyramid

      was oriented precisely to the position of the setting sun.6

      A more curious but equally deliberate effect could be observed on the

      equinoxes, 20 March and 22 September. Then the passage of the sun’s

      rays from south to north resulted at noon in the progressive obliteration

      of a perfectly straight shadow that ran along one of the lower stages of

      the western façade. The whole process, from complete shadow to

      complete illumination, took exactly 66.6 seconds. It had done so without

      fail, year-in year-out, ever since the pyramid had been built and would

      continue to do so until the giant edifice crumbled into dust.7

      What this meant, of course, was that at least one of the many functions

      of the pyramid had been to serve as a ‘perennial clock’, precisely

      signalling the equinoxes and thus facilitating calendar corrections as and

      when necessary for a people apparently obsessed, like the Maya, with the

      elapse and measuring of time. Another implication was that the masterbuilders of Teotihuacan must have possessed an enormous body of

      astronomic and geodetic data and referred to this data to set the Sun

      Pyramid at the precise orientation necessary to achieve the desired

      equinoctial effects.

      5 The Pyramids of Teotihuacan, p. 16.

      6 Mexico: Rough Guide, p. 217.

      7 Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, p. 252.

      175

      Graham Hancock – FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS

      This was planning and architecture of a high order. It had survived the

      passage of the millennia and it had survived the wholesale remodelling of

      much of the pyramid’s outer shell conducted in the first decade of the

      twentieth century by the self-styled restorer, Leopoldo Bartres. In addition

      to plundering precious evidence that might have helped us towards a

      better understanding of the purposes for which the enigmatic structure

      had been built, this repulsive lackey of Mexico’s corrupt dictator Porfirio

      Diaz had removed the outer layer of stone, mortar and plaster to a depth

      of more than twenty feet from the entire northern, eastern and southern
    />
      faces. The result was catastrophic: the underlying adobe surface began to

      dissolve in heavy rains and to exhibit plastic flow which threatened to

      destroy the whole edifice. Although the slippage was halted with hasty

      remedial measures, nothing could change the fact that the Sun Pyramid

      had been deprived of almost all its original surface features.

      By modern archaeological standards this was, of course, an

      unforgivable act of desecration. Because of it, we will never learn the

      significance of the many sculptures, inscriptions, reliefs and artefacts that

      had almost certainly been removed with those twenty feet of the outer

      shell. Nor was this the only or even the most regrettable consequence of

      Bartres’s grotesque vandalism. There was startling evidence which

      suggested that the unknown architects of the Pyramid of the Sun might

      have intentionally incorporated scientific data into many of the key

      dimensions of the great structure. This evidence had been gathered and

      extrapolated from the intact west face (which, not accidentally, was also

      the face where the intended equinoctial effects could still be seen), but

      thanks to Bartres, no similar information was likely to be forthcoming

      from the other three faces because of the arbitrary alterations imposed

      upon them. Indeed, by drastically distorting the original shape and size of

      so much of the pyramid, the Mexican ‘restorer’ had possibly deprived

      posterity of some of the most important lessons Teotihuacan had to

      teach.

      Eternal numbers

      The transcendental number known as pi is fundamental to advanced

      mathematics. With a value slightly in excess of 3.14 it is the ratio of the

      diameter of a circle to its circumference. In other words if the diameter of

      a circle is 12 inches, the circumference of that circle will be 12 inches x

      3.14 = 37.68 inches. Likewise, since the diameter of a circle is exactly

      double the radius, we can use pi to calculate the circumference of any

      circle from its radius. In this case, however, the formula is the length of

      the radius multiplied by 2pi. As an illustration let us take again a circle of

      12 inches diameter. Its radius will be 6 inches and its circumference can

      be obtained as follows: 6 inches x 2 x 3.14 = 37.68 inches. Similarly a

      circle with a radius of 10 inches will have a circumference of 67.8 inches

     
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