HOLY BIBLE
Scofield
References
Jeremiah B.C. 590
Page 809
8 x 9 + 72 7 + 2 =
9
Chapter 33
Verse
3
x 33 =
99
"Call unto me, and I
will answer thee, and shew thee great and mighty things
which thou know-est not."
That again said the scribe. That again said Zed Aliz Zed
. The scribe writ. That again, again.
Fingerprints Of
The Gods
Graham
Hancock
Page 381
Chapter
41
"Conscious of being
alone, this blessed and immortal being contrived to create
two divine offspring, Shu, god of the air and dryness, and
Tefnut the goddess of moisture: ' I thrust my phallus into
my closed hand. Imade my seed to enter my hand. Ipoured it
into my own mouth. I evacuated under the form of Shu, I
passed water under the form of Tefnut.' 7
Despite such apparently inauspicious beginnings, Shu and
Tefnut (who were always described as 'Twins' and frequently
depicted as lions) grew to maturity, copulated and produced
offspring of their own: Geb the god of the earth and Nut,
the goddess of the sky. These two also mated, creating
Osiris and Isis, Set and Nepthys, and so completed the
Ennead, the full company of the Nine Gods of Heliopolis. Of
the nine, Ra, Shu, Geb and Osiris were said to have ruled in
Egypt as Kings, followed by Horus, and lastly - for
3226
years - by the
Ibis-headed wisdom god Thoth.8"
"
3226
years "
3 x 2 x 2 x 6 =
72
Here, az if a being out of kilter, the Alizzed magiked
up the magic names of Osiris, Iris, and Set, who then
multiplied a truth.
OSIRIS x IRIS x SET
=
72
THE RECURRENT DREAM
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The far yonder scribe again watched in some amaze the Zed
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the letters of their progress. At the throw of the ninth arm
when in conjunction set, the far yonder scribe made record
of the fall
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Added to all, minus none, shared by everybody, multiplied in
abundance.

Fingerprints
of the Gods
Graham Hancock
1995
Page 71
"Osiris, The ancient
Egyptian high god of death and resurrection."
"
He was plotted against by
seventy-two
members of his court, led by his brother- in -law
Set..."
"
Set, out hunting in the marshes, discovered the
coffer, opened it and in a mad fury cut the royal corpse
into fourteen
pieces,"
seventy-two
x
fourteen
72 x 14
1008
Ra and the Eight
Page 273 / 274
"The
precessional numbers highlighted by Sellers in the Osiris
myth are 360, 72 ,30, and 12."
"72 = the number of years required for the equinoctial sun
to complete a precessional shift of one degree along with
the ecliptic;"
On direction from the Alizzed, the scribe returned to the
matter of still waters, still running deep.
Page 421
Chapter 45
Seventeen
centuries of kings
I walked on into the
deeper darkness, eventually finding my way to the Gallery of
Kings. It led off from the eastern edge of the inner
Hypostyle Hall about 200 feet from the entrance to the
temple.
To pass through the gallery was to pass through time itself.
On the wall to my left was a list of 120 of the gods of
Ancient Egypt, together
/ Page 422 /
with the names of their
principal sanctuaries. On my right, covering an area of
perhaps ten feet by six feet, were the names of the 76
pharaohs who had preceded Seti1 to the throne: each name was
carved in hieroglyphs inside an oval cartouche.
This tableau was known as the 'Abydos King List'. Glowing
with colours of molten gold, it was designed to be read from
left to right and was divided into five vertical and three
horizontal registers it covered a grand expanse of almost
1700 years, beginning around 3000 BC with the reign of
Menes, first king of the first dynasty, and ending with
Seti's own reign around 1300BC. At the extreme left stood
two figures exquisitely carved in high relief: Seti and his
young son, the future Ramesses II.
Hypogeum
Belonging to the same class of historical documents as
the Turin Papyrus and the Palermo Stone, the list spoke
eloqently of the continuity of tradition. An inherant part
of that tradition, was the belief or memory of a First, Time
long, long ago, when the gods had ruled in Egypt. Principal
among these gods was Osiris, and it was therefore
appropriate that the Gallery of the Kings should provide
access to a second corridor, leading to the rear of the
temple where a marvellous building was located - one
associated with Osiris from the beginning of written records
in Egypt9 and described by the Greek geographer Strabo (who
visited Abydos in the first century BC) as ' . . . a
remarkable structure built of solid stone {containing} a
spring which lies at a great depth, so that one descends to
it down vaulted galleries made of monoliths of surpassing
size and workmanship There is a canal leading to the place
from the great river . . .' 10
A few hundred years after Strabo's visit when the religion
of Ancient Egypt had been supplanted by the new cult of
Christianity, the silt of the river and the sands of the
desert began to drift into the Osireion, filling it foot by
foot, century by century by century, until its upright
monoliths and huge lintels were buried and forgotten. And so
it remained, out of sight and out of mind, until the
beginning of the twentieth century, when the archeologists
Flinders Petrie and Margaret Murray began excavations. In
their 1903 season of digging
/ Page 423 /
they uncovered parts of a
hall and passageway, lying in the desert about 200 feet
south-west of the Seti I Temple and built in the
recognizable architectural style of the Nineteenth Dynasty.
However sandwiched between these remains and the rear of the
Temple, they found unmistakeable signs that 'a large
underground building' lay concealed.11 'This hypogeum',
wrote Margaret Murray, appears to Professor Petrie to be the
place that Strabo mentions,usually called Strabo's Well.12
This was good guesswork on the part of Petrie and Murray.
Shortage of cash, however, meant that their theory of a
buried building was not tested until the digging season of
1912-13. Then, under the direction of Professor Naville of
the Egypt Exploration Fund, a long transverse chamber was
cleared, at the end of which, to the north-east, was found a
massive stone gateway made up of cyclopean blocks of granite
and sandstone.
The next season, 1913 - 14, Naville and his team returned
with 600 local helpers and diligently cleared the whole of
the huge underground building:
What we discovered [Naville wrote] is a gigantic
construction of about 100 feet in length and 60 in width,
built with the most enormous stones that may be seen in
Egypt. In the four sides of the enclosure walls are cells,
17 in number, of the height of a man and without
ornamentation of any kind. The building itself is divided
into three naves, the middle one being wider than those of
the sides; the division is produced by two collonades made
of huge granite monoliths supporting architraves of equal
size.13
Naville commented with some astonishment on one block he
measured in the corner of the building's northern nave, a
block more than twenty - five feet long.14 Equally suprising
was the fact that the cells cut into the enclosure walls had
no floors, but turned out, as the excavations went deeper,
to be filled with increasingly moist sand and earth:
The cells are connected by a narrow ledge between two and
three feet wide; there is a ledge also on the opposite side
of the nave, but no floor at all, and in digging to a depth
of 12 feet we reached infilterated water. Even below the
great gateway there is no floor, and when there was water in
front of it the cells were probably reached with a small
boat.15
/ Page 424
Diagram ommited. Plan of
the Osireion.
The most ancient
stone building in Egypt
Water, water, everywhere
- this seemed to be the theme of the Osireion, which lay at
the bottom of the huge crater Naville and his men had
excavated in 1914. It was positioned some 50 feet below the
level of the floor of the Seti I Temple, almost flush with
the water-table, and was approached by a modern stairway
curving down to the south-east. Having descended this
stairway, I passed under the hulking lintel slabs of the
great gateway Naville (and Strabo) had described and crossed
a narrow footbridge - again modern- which brought me to a
large sandstone plinth.
Measuring about 80feet in length by 40 in width, this plinth
was composed of enormous paving blocks and was entirely
surrounded by water. Two pools, one rectanular and the other
square, had been cut into the plinth along the centre of its
long axis and at either end stairways led down to a depth of
about 12 feet below the water level. The plinth also
supported the two massive colonnades Naville mentioned in
his report, each of which consisted of five chunky rose -
coloured granite monoliths about eight feet square by 12
feet high and weighing, on average, around 100 tons.16 The
tops of these huge columns were spanned by granite lintels
and there was evidence that the whole building had once been
roofed over with a series of even larger monolithic
slabs.17
To get a proper understanding of the structure of the
Osireion, I found it helpful to raise myself directly above
it in my mind's eye, so that I could look down on it. This
exercise was assisted by the absence of the original roof
which made it easier to envisage the whole edifice in plan.
Also helpful was the fact that water had now seeped up to
fill all of the building's pools, cells and channels to a
depth of a few inches below the lip of the central plinth,
as the original designers had apparently intended it
should.18
Looking down in this manner, it was immediately apparent
that the plinth formed a rectangular island, surrounded on
all four sides by a water-filled moat about 10feet wide. The
moat was contained by an immense, rectangular enclosure
wall, no less than 20 feet thick,19 made of
very large blocks of red sandstone disposed in polygonal
jigsaw puzzle patterns. Into the huge thickness of this wall
were set the 17 cells mentioned in Naville's report. Six lay
to the east, six to the west,
/ Page 426 /
two to the south and
three to the north. Off the central of the three northern
cells lay a long transverse chamber, roofed with and
composed of limestone. A similar transverse chamber also of
limestone but no longer with an intact roof, lay immediately
south of the great gateway. Finally, the whole structure was
enclosed within an outer wall of limestone, thus completing
a sequence of inter-nested rectangles, i.e., from the
outside in, wall, wall moat plinth.
Another notable and outstandingly unusual feature of the
Osireion was that it was not even approximately aligned to
the cardinal points. Instead, like the way of the dead at
Teotihuacan in Mexico, it was oriented to the east of due
north. Since Ancient Egypt had been a civilization that
could and normally did achieve precise alignments for its
buildings, it seemed to me improbable that this apparently
skewed orientation was accidental. Moreover, although 50
feet higher the Seti I temple was oriented along exactly the
same axis - and again not by accident. The question was:
which was the older building? Had the axis of the
Osireion been predetermined by axis of the Temple or vice
versa? This it turned out, was an issue over which
considerable controversy, now long forgotten, had once
raged. In a debate which had many connections with that
surrounding the Sphinx and the Valley Temple at Giza,
eminent archeologists had initially argued that the Osireion
was a building of truly immense antiquity, a view expressed
by Professor Naville in the London Times of 17 March
1914:
This monument raises several important questions. As to its
date, its great similarity with the Temple of the Sphinx {as
the Valley Temple was then known] shows it to be of the
same epoch when building was made with enormous stones
without any ornament. This is character-istic of the oldest
architecture in Egypt. I should even say that we may call it
the most ancient stone building in Egypt.20
Describing himself as overawed by the 'grandeur and stern
simplicity' of the monument's central hall, with its
remarkable granite monoliths, and by 'the power of those
ancients who could bring from a distance and move such
gigantic blocks', Naville made a suggestion concerning the
function the Osireion might originally have been intended to
serve: 'Evidently this huge construction was a large
reservoir where water was stored during the high nile . . .
It is curious that what we may consider as a beginning in
architecture is neither a temple nor a tomb, but a gigantic
pool, a waterwork . . . 21"
"In ...1914 it was 'the most ancient stone building in
Egypt'. . ."
Page 429 / 430
" As Naville observed,
the Osireion's similarity to the Valley Temple at Giza
' showed it to be of the same epoch when building was / made
with enormous stones'. Likewise, until the end of her life,
Margaret Murray remained convinced that the Osireion was not
a cenotaph at all (least of all Seti's) She said,
It was made for the celebration of the mysteries of Osiris,
and so far is unique among all the surviving buildings of
Egypt. It is clearly early, for the great blocks of which it
is built are of the style of the Old Kingdom; the simplicity
of the actual building also points to it being of that early
date.. . ."
"...Apart from the Valley Temple and other cyclopean
edifices on the Giza Plateau, no other building remotely
resembling the Osireion is known from any other epoch of
Egypt's long history. This handful of supposedly Old Kingdom
structures, built out of giant megaliths, seem to belong in
a unique category. They resemble one another much more than
they resemble any other known style of architecture and in
all cases there are question-marks over their identity.
Isn't this precisely what one would expect of
buildings not erected by any historical pharaoh but dating
back to prehistoric times? Doesn't it make sense of the
mysterious way in which the Sphinx and the Valley Temple,
and now the Osireion as well, seem to have become vaguely
connected with the names of particular pharaohs ( Khafre and
Seti I ), without ever yielding a single piece of evidence
that clearly and unequivocally proves those pharaohs
built the structures concerned? "
Page 177

Chapter 22
City of the Gods
The overwhelming
message of a large number of Central American legends is
that the Fourth Age of the world ended very badly. A
catastrophic deluge was followed by a long period during
which the light of the sun vanished from the sky and the air
was filled with a tenebrous darkness. Then:
The gods gathered together at Teotihuacan ['the place of
the gods'] and wondered anxiously who was to be the next
sun. Only the sacred fire [ the material representation
of Huehueteotl, the god who gave life its beginning]
could be seen in the darkness, still quaking following the
recent chaos. Someone will have to sacrifice himself, throw
himself into the fire,' they cried, ' only then will there
be a Sun.'1
A drama ensued in which two deities ( Nanahuatzin and
Tecciztecatl ) immolated themselves for the common good. One
burned quickly in the centre of the sacred fire; the other
roasted slowly on the chambers at its edge 'The gods waited
for a long time eventually the sky started to glow red as a
at dawn. In the east appeared the great sphere the sun,
life-giving and incandescent . . .'2
It was at this moment of cosmic rebirth that Quetzalcoatl
manifested himself. His mission was with humanity of the
Fifth age. He therefore took the form of a human being - a
bearded white man, just like Viracocha.
In the Andes, Viracocha's capital was Tiahuanaco. In Central
/ Page 178 /
Quetzalcoatl's was the
supposed birth-place of the Fifth, Teotihuacan, the city of
the gods.3
The citadel, the
Temple and the Map of Heaven
Teotihuacan, 50
kilometres north -east of Mexico City
I stood in the airy enclosure of the Citadel and looked
north across the morning haze towards the Pyramids of the
Sun and the Moon. Set amid grey-green scrub country, and
ringed by distant mountains, these two great monuments
played their parts in a symphony of ruins strung out along
the axis of the so-called 'Street of the Dead'. The
citadellay at the approximate mid point of this wide avenue
which ran perfectly straight for more than four kilometres.
The Pyramid of the Moon was at its northern extreme, The
pyramid of the Sun offset somewhat to its east.
In the context of such a geometric site, an exact
north-south or east-west orientation might have been
expected. It was Therefore surprising that the architects
who had planned Teotihuacan had deliberately chosen to
incline the Street of the Dead 15 " degrees "30 "minutes
"east of north. There were several theories as to why this
eccentric orientation had been selected, but none was
especially convincing. Growing numbers of scholars, however,
were beginning to wonder whether astronomical alignments
might have been involved. One, for example, had proposed
that the Street of the Dead might have bee'built to face the
setting of the Pleiades at the time it was constructed4
Another Professor Gerald Hawkins, had suggested that a
'Sirius- Pleides axis' could have played a part. 5 And
Stansbury Hagar (secretary of the Department of Ethnology at
the Brooklyn Institute of the Arts and Sciences), had
suggested that the street might represent the Milky
Way.6
Indeed Hagar went further than this, seeing the portrayal of
specific planets and stars in many of the pyramids, mounds
and other structures that hovered like fixed satellites
around the axis of the Street of the Dead. His complete
thesis was that Teotihuacan had been designed as a kind of
'map of heaven': ' It reproduced on earth a supposed
celestial plan of the sky-world where dwelt the deities and
spirits of the dead. '7
Page 180 /
During the 1960s and
1970sHagar's intuitions were tested in the field by Hugh
Hartleston Jr, an American engineer resident in Mexico, who
carried out a comprehensive mathematical survey at
Teotihua-can Harleston reported his findings in October 1974
at the International Congress of Americanists.8 His paper,
which was full of daring and innovative ideas, contained
some particularly curious information about the Citadel and
about the Temple of Quetzalcoatl located at the eastern
extreme of this great square compound.
The Temple was regarded by scholars as one of the
best-preserved archaeological monuments in Central America.
9 This was because the original, prehistoric structure had
been partially buried beneath another much later mound
immediately in front of it to the west. Excavation of that
mound had revealed the elegant six-stage pyramid that now
confronted me. It stood 72 feet high and its base covered an
area of 82000 square feet.
Still bearing traces of the original multicoloured paints
which had coated it in antiquity, the exposed Temple was a
beautiful and strange sight. The predominant sculptural
motif was a series of huge serpent heads protruding
three-dimensionally out of the facing blocks and lining the
sides of the massive central stairway. The elongated jaws of
these oddly humanoid reptiles were heavily endowed with
fangs, and the upper lips with a sort of handlbar moustache.
Each serpent's thick neck was ringed by an elaborate plume
of feathers - the unmistakable symbol of Quetzalcoatl.10
What Harleston's investigations had shown was that a
complete mathematical relationship appeared to exist among
the principal structures lined up along the Street of the
Dead (and indeed beyond it ) This relationship suggested
something extraordinary, namely that Teotihuacan might
originally have been designed as a precise scale- model of
the solar system. At any rate, if the centre line of the
Temple of Quetzalcoatl were taken as denoting the position
of the sun, markers laid out northwards from it along the
axis of the Street of the Dead seemed to indicate the
correct orbital distances of the inner planets, the asteroid
belt, Jupiter, Saturn (represented by the so-called 'Sun'
Pyramid), Uranus (by the 'Moon' Pyramid), and Neptune and
Pluto, by as yet unexcavated mounds some kilometres farther
north.11 /
Page 181 /
If these correlations
were more than coincidental, then, at the very least, they
indicated the presence at Teotihuacan of an advanced
observational astronomy, one not surpassed by modern science
until a relatively late date. Uranus remained unknown to our
own astrono-mers until 1787, Neptune until 1846 and Pluto
until 1930. Even the most conservative estimate of
Teotihuacan's antiquity, by contrast, suggested that the
principal ingrediants of the site-plan (including the
Citadel, the Street of the Dead and the Pyramids of the Sun
and the Moon) must date back at least to the time of
Christ.12 No known civilization of that epoch, either in the
Old World or in the New, is supposed to have had any
knowledge at all of the outer planets - let alone to have
possessed accurate information concerning their orbital
distances from each other and from the sun.
Egypt and Mexico -
more
coincidences?
After completing his studies of the pyramids and avenues of
Teotihuacan, Stasbury Hagar concluded: 'We have not yet
realized either the importance or the refinement, or the
widespread distribu-tion throughout ancient America, of the
astronomical cult of which the celestial plan was a feature,
and of which Teotihuacan was one of the principal centres.
'13
But was this just an astronomical 'cult'? Or was it
something approximating more closely to what we might call a
science? And whether cult or science, was it realistic to
suppose that it had enjoyed 'widespread distribution' only
in the Americas when there was so much evidence liking it to
other parts of the ancient world?
For example, archaeo-astronomers making use of the latest
star-mapping computer programmes had recently demonstrated
that the three world-famous pyramids on Egypt's Giza plateau
formed an exact terrestrial diagram of the three belt stars
in the constellation of Orion.14 Nor was this the limit of
the celestial map the Ancient Egyptian priests had created
in the sands on the west bank of the Nile. Included in their
overall vision, as we shall see in Parts VI and VII, there
was a natural feature - the river Nile- which was exactly
where it should be had it been designed to represent the
Milky Way.15
The incorporation of a 'celestial plan' into key sites in
Egypt and
/ Page 182 /
Mexico did not by any
means exclude religious functions. On the contrary, whatever
else they may have been intended for it is certain that the
monuments of Teotihuacan, like those of the Giza plateau,
played important religious roles in the lives of the
communities they served.
Thus Central American traditions collected in the sixteenth
century by Father Bernardino de Sahagun gave eloquent
expression to a widespread belief that Teotihuacan had
fulfilled at least one specific and important religious
function in ancient times. According to these legends the
City of the Gods was so known because 'the Lords therein
buried, after their deaths, did not perish but turned into
gods. . . '16 In other words, it was 'the place where men
became gods'17 It was additionally known as the place of
those who had the road of the gods',18 and 'the place where
gods were made'.19
Was it a coincidence, I wondered, that this seemed to have
been the religios purpose of the three pyramids at Giza ?
The archaic hieroglyphs of the Pyramid Texts, the oldest
coherent body of writing in the world, left little room for
doubt that the ultimate objective of the rituals carried out
within those colossal structures was to bring about the
deceased pharaoh's transfigeration - to throw open the doors
of the firmament and to make a road' so that he might
'ascend into the company of the Gods'20
The notion of pyramids as devices designed (presumably in
some metaphysical sense) 'to turn men into gods' was, it
seemed to me, too idiosyncratic and peculiar to have been
arrived at independently in both Ancient Egypt and Mexico.
So, too, was the idea of using the layout of sacred sites to
incorprate a celestial plan.
Moreover, there were other strange similarities that
deserved to be considered.
Just as at Giza, three principal pyramids had been built at
Teotihuacan: the Pyramid / Temple of Quetzalcoatl, the
Pyramid of theSun and the Pyramid of the moon. Just as at
Giza, the site plan was not symetrical, as one might have
expected, but involved two structures in direct alignment
with each other while the third appeared to have been
deliberately offset to one side. Finally at Giza, the
summits of the Great Pyramid and the Pyramid of Cephren were
level, even though the former was taller building than the
latter.
/ Page 183 /
Likewise, at Teotihuacan,
the summits of the Pyramids of the Sun and the Moon were
level even though the former was taller. The reason was the
same in both cases: the Great Pyramid was built on lower
ground than the Pyramid of Cephren, and the Pyramid of the
Sun on lower ground than the Pyramid of the Moon. 21
Could all this be coincidence? Was it not more logical to
conclude that there was an ancient connection between Mexico
and Egypt?
For reasons I have outlined in Chapters Eighteen and
Nineteen I doubted whether any direct, causal link was
involved - at any rate within historic times. Once again,
however, as with the Mayan calendar, and as with the early
maps of Antartica, was it not worth keeping an open mind to
the possibility that we might be dealing with legacy: that
the pyramids of Egypt and the ruins of Teotihuacan migh
express the technology, the geographical knowledge, the
observational astronomy (and perhaps also the religion ) of
a forgotten civilisation of the past which had once, as the
Popol Vuh claimed, 'examined the four corners, the
four points of the arch of the sky, and the round face of
the earth'?
There was widespread agreement among academics
concerning the antiquity of the Giza pyramids, thought to be
about 4500 years old.22 No 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 1000BC.
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-Columbian 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
Page 184 /
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."
"... 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 refer-ence to the
prediction of earthwakes,31 on which he presented a paper
/ Page 185
at the Eleventh National
Convention of Chemical Engineers (in Mexico City in October
1971).
Schlemmers 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 north wards 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 facilated a
north-south 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 partioned
sections could easily have been filled with water and might
indeed have served as reflecting pools.." "..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. Schlemmers 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'.
He painted 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
/ Page 187 /
globe, thus allowing them
to predict such an occurrences in their own area'.34
There was, of course, no proof of Sclemmer's theory.
However, when I remembered the fixation with earthquakes and
floods apparent everywhere in Mexican mythology, and the
equally obessive concern with forecasting future events
evident in the Maya calendar, I felt less inclined to
dismiss the apparently far-fetched conclusions of the
American engineer. If Schlemmer were right, if the ancient
Teotihu-canos 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, Ipaused to examine a
ruined patio, the principal feature of which was an ancient
'temple' which concealed a perplexing mystery beneath its
rock floor.
Page 188

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 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 commer-cial value
was removed and sold as soon as it had been
excavated..."
"...There
had 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, archeologists financed by the Viking
Foundation excavated two massive sheets of mica which had
been carefully and purposeively installed at some extremely
remote date by a people who must have been skilled in
/ Page 189 /
cutting and handling this
material. The sheets are ninety feet square and form two
layers. one laid directly on top of the other.3
The scribe, now knowing the score, noted carefully the
page number, then taking a word or two, divided, multipled,
and in addition, noted, that
'ninety
feet
square'
revealed the following, namely, That 90 divided by 12 iz
7.5. That 90 x 90 iz 8100. That 90 + 90 iz
180
and that 90 x 90 x 2 iz
16200
that divided by two iz
1800
and that 1 + 8 iz
9.
THAT iz THAT said Zed Aliz Zed. And so it was.
After such pause for quick breath, Brother Graham again put
pen to paper, the line of which, yon scribe dutifully
copied,word for word.
Page 1 + 8 + 9 =
18
1 + 8 = 9
1 x 8 x 9 =
72
7 + 2 =
9
" Mica is a
not
a
uniform substance 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 aluminium and also, in varying quantities, ferrous and
ferric iron, magnesium, lithium, manganese and titanium. The
trace elements in Teotihua-can'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 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 posesses 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.
The scribe inserts a swift return from the come day go
day record.
Fingerprints Of
The Gods
Graham Hancock
1995
Page
189
1 x 8 x 9 = 72 " The Sun
and the Moon and the way of the Dead
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, and the sun was
directly overhead, as it would be again on 25
/ Page
190
/
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 facade. 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
facilating 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
master - builders of Teotihuacan must have possessed an
enormouse body of astronomic and geodetic data and refferred
to this data to set the Sun Pyramid at the precise
orientation necessary to achieve the desired equinoctial
effects."
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