Magicians of the Gods...
By Graham Hancock
Chapter 19
The Next Lost Civilization?
More than two thousand flood myths that have come down to us from the remote past are eerily
consistent on many points, and on one in particular: the cataclysm was not a random accident, we are
told; we brought it upon ourselves by our own behavior.
Our arrogance and our cruelty toward one another, our noise and strife and the wickedness of our
hearts, angered the gods. We ceased to nurture spirit. We ceased to love and tend the earth and no
longer regarded the universe with reverent awe and wonder. Dazzled by our own success, we forgot
how to carry our prosperity with moderation.
So it was, Plato tells us, with the once generous and good citizens of Atlantis, who in former times
possessed “a certain greatness of mind, and treated the vagaries of fortune and one another with
wisdom and forbearance,” but who became swollen with overweening pride in their own
achievements and fell into crass materialism, greed and violence:
To the perceptive eye the depth of their degeneration was clear enough, but to those whose
judgment of true happiness is defective they seemed, in their pursuit of unbridled ambition and
power, to be at the height of their fame and fortune.
1
If ever a society could be said to meet all the mythological criteria of the next lost civilization—a
society that ticks all the boxes—is it not obvious that it is our own? Our pollution and neglect of the
majestic garden of the earth, our rape of its resources, our abuse of the oceans and the rainforests, our
fear, hatred and suspicion of one another multiplied by a hundred bitter regional and sectarian
conflicts, our consistent track record of standing by and doing nothing while millions suffer, our
ignorant, narrow-minded racism, our exclusivist religions, our forgetfulness that we are all brothers
and sisters, our bellicose chauvinism, the dreadful cruelties that we indulge in, in the name of nation,
or faith, or simple greed, our obsessive, competitive, ego-driven production and consumption of
material goods and the growing conviction of many, fueled by the triumphs of materialist science, that
matter is all there is—that there is no such thing as spirit, that we are just accidents of chemistry and
biology—all these things, and many more, in mythological terms at least, do not look good for us.
Meanwhile, we have made ourselves the possessors of a technology so advanced that it seems
almost like magic, even while we use it constantly in our daily lives. Computer science, the internet,
aviation, television, telecommunications, space exploration, genetic engineering, nuclear weapons,
nanotechnology, transplant surgery … The list goes on and on, yet very few of us are able to
understand how more than a tiny fraction of it works, and as it proliferates the human spirit withers
and we engage in “all manner of reckless crimes, wars and robberies and frauds, and all things
hostile to the nature of the soul.”
2
Suppose for a moment that a cataclysm besets us, a cataclysm so vast that our complex, networked,
highly specialized technological civilization collapses—collapses utterly beyond any hope of
redemption. If such a scenario were to unfold it is likely that the meekest and most marginalized of the
peoples who inhabit our world today—the hunter-gatherers of the Amazon jungle and the Kalahari
desert, for example, who are used to making do with very little and whose survival skills are
exemplary—would be the very ones most likely to make it through and therefore carry on the story of
humanity in post-cataclysmic times.
How would their descendants remember us a thousand or ten thousand years from now? How, for
example, might something that we regard as routine, like our ability to receive 24-hour rolling
television news and hear sound and view images from all parts of the world, and even from outer
space, be recollected in myth and tradition? Might it not be said wonderingly of us, as it was of “the
Forefathers” recalled in the Popol Vuh, the sacred book of the ancient Quiche Maya:
They were endowed with intelligence; they saw and instantly they could see far, they succeeded
in seeing, they succeeded in knowing all that there is in the world. When they looked, instantly
they saw all around them, and they contemplated in turn the arch of heaven and the round face of
the earth. The things hidden in the distance they saw all without first having to move; at once
they saw the world, and so, too, from where they were, they saw it. Great was their wisdom;
their sight reached to the forests, the lakes, the seas, the mountains and the valleys.
3
Yet, in common with so many other memories that seem to hark back to an advanced lost civilization
of prehistoric antiquity, we learn that in due course the “Forefathers” became arrogant and proud and
overstepped their bounds so that the gods asked: “Must they perchance be the equals of ourselves,
their Makers? Let us check a little their desires, because it is not well what we see.”
4 Punishment
swiftly followed:
The Heart of Heaven blew mist into their eyes, which clouded their sight as when a mirror is
breathed on. Their eyes were covered and they could see only what was close, only that was
clear to them. In this way all the wisdom and all the knowledge of [the Forefathers] were
destroyed.
5
It is interesting to note the mechanisms used by the gods to keep our ancestors in their place, as
described in the Popol Vuh:
A flood was brought about by the Heart of Heaven … A heavy resin fell from the sky … The
face of the earth was darkened and a black rain began to fall by day and by night …6 The faces
of the sun and the moon were covered …7 There was much hail, black rain and mist and
indescribable cold …8
All these phenomena very accurately reflect the complex nature of the cataclysm that afflicted the
earth 12,800 years ago at the beginning of the Younger Dryas cold epoch when, as we saw from the
mass of evidence presented in Part II, many scientists are now certain that the earth was struck by
several large fragments of a disintegrating giant comet.
It is my opinion, indeed it is the reason I have written this book, that we need to pay attention to
such accounts, and the universal details that unite them, whether they come down to us from Mexico,
from Peru, from Easter Island, from Mesopotamia, from Ancient Egypt, from ancient Canaan or from Turkey. [ 100% I agree, we are the civilization we seek for better or worse dc]
It is intriguing, for example, against the background of flood and cataclysm it describes, that
the Popol Vuh makes mention of “fish-men,”
9 exactly like the Apkallu Sages of Mesopotamia (“who
had the whole body of a fish, but underneath and attached to the head of the fish there was another
head, human, and joined to the tail of the fish, feet like those of a man”).
10 Exactly like the Apkallu,
too, these fish men reported in the traditions of the ancient Maya possessed magical powers and
“worked many miracles.”
11
It is perhaps not surprising, therefore, that Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent, the civilization
bringer who appears in the Popol Vuh under the name of Gucumatz,
12 should be represented, as we
saw in Chapter One, by an ancient image from La Venta on the Gulf of Mexico in which he holds the
exact same sort of bag or bucket that the Apkallu hold in the Mesopotamian reliefs and that is also
figured on Pillar 43 at Göbekli Tepe in Turkey. La Venta was one of the centers of the mysterious
early civilization of the Olmecs, who left behind sculptures of bearded men with features that do not
look at all like those of native Americans, but resemble the bearded figures shown in the
Mesopotamian Apkallu reliefs and in the statues of Kon-Tiki Viracocha at Tiahuanaco in Bolivia—again hinting at universal symbolism associated with a group of individuals who sought to
disseminate the gifts of civilization all around the world. Moreover, it is widely recognized that the
extraordinary astronomical science for which the Maya are famed was part of a wider body of
advanced knowledge that had been passed down to them by the Olmecs and that the Mayan calendar
itself is probably best understood as one of these Olmec legacies.
As we saw in Chapter Fifteen, a great cycle of the Mayan calendar came to an end on 21
December 2012. It is an end date that was calculated to mark the once-in-26,000-year conjunction of
the winter solstice sun and the center of the Milky Way galaxy—a conjunction that is itself, because of
the diameter of the sun and the limitations of naked-eye astronomy, not so much a precise moment in
time as a window 80 years wide spanning the period 1960–2040. We saw, too, how Pillar 43 at
Göbekli Tepe uses solar and constellation symbolism to depict the exact same window through
which, as any astronomical software program will confirm, the winter solstice sun is still transiting
today.
My intuition is that these devices, both the Mayan calendar and the Göbeklitepe pillar, are an
attempt, using the precessional code, to send a message to the future. I see the lineaments of that
message also in the huge astronomical geoglyph formed by the Pyramids and the Great Sphinx of
Giza. Using the same code, and their relationship to the constellations of Orion and Leo, these
monuments draw our attention to the epoch of the Younger Dryas between 12,800 and 11,600 years
ago and, through the symbolism of the return of the Phoenix, to the epoch that falls half a precessional
cycle later, i.e. once again our own epoch (see Chapter Eleven).
The targeting here is not so precise as that afforded by the Göbekli Tepe pillar and the Mayan
calendar, but then neither is the science by which the impacts that set off the Younger Dryas are dated
to 12,800 years ago. The resolution of the carbon-14 evidence upon which scientists base this
chronology means that a tolerance of plus or minus 150 years must be allowed. In other words, the
Younger Dryas comet—let us, for convenience, refer to it as “the Phoenix”—could have struck the
earth as late as 12,650 years ago (i.e. in 10,635 BC, since I am writing in AD 2015) or as early as
12,950 years ago (i.e. in 10,935 BC).
Bearing in mind that half a precessional cycle is 12,960 years (or 12,954 years in the peculiarly
exact calculations of the return of the Phoenix reported by Solinus
13
), we are therefore being invited
to consider a period that begins in just ten years from the time of writing, i.e. around AD 2025, and
that cannot be considered to have passed safely until AD 2325—i.e. until the full 12,960 years have
elapsed after the latest possible date for “the Phoenix” impacts. The Mayan calendar and Pillar 43 at
Göbekli Tepe, however, refine the calculation, as we’ve seen. If I understand the message correctly,
we’re in the danger zone now and will be until 2040. I’m reminded of the Ojibwa tradition cited in
Chapter Three:
The star with the long, wide tail is going to destroy the world some day when it comes low
again. That’s the comet called Long-Tailed Heavenly Climbing Star. It came down here once,
thousands of years ago. Just like the sun. It had radiation and burning heat in its tail.
The comet burned everything to the ground. There wasn’t a thing left. Indian people were
here before that happened, living on the earth. But things were wrong; a lot of people had
abandoned the spiritual path. The holy spirit warned them a long time before the comet came.
Medicine men told everyone to prepare.
Things were wrong with nature on the earth … Then that comet went through here. It had a
long, wide tail and it burned up everything. It flew so low the tail scorched the earth … The
comet made a different world. After that survival was hard work. The weather was colder than
before …14
Does it sound like scaremongering to suggest that the comet remembered in this, and in so many other
myths and traditions from all parts of the globe, might be about to stage its “Great Return”?
Am I reading too much into recondite ancient monuments and calendars and into the fact that
everywhere, universally, across all cultures, comets have always been regarded with fear and
loathing and as omens of impending doom and destruction?
15 [ not at all, I would say, spot on chap, pretty damn clear dc ]
I’m not sure what the right answer to these questions is. From a personal point of view, as a loving
father and grandfather, I would greatly prefer it if there was no such danger, yet at the same time, if
there is danger, we would be foolish to bury our heads in the sand and pretend that there’s nothing to
worry about and no action we need to take. I’m therefore obliged to point out that the most recent
science on this subject is in complete agreement with the ancient wisdom.
There is danger.
The house of history is built on sand
We are in the midst of a profound paradigm shift regarding how we view the evolution of human
civilization. As noted at the end of Chapter Five, archaeologists have been in the habit of regarding
cosmic impacts, supposedly only occurring at multi-million year intervals, as largely irrelevant to the
200,000-year story of anatomically modern humans. When we believed that the last big impact had
been the dinosaur-killing asteroid of 65 million years ago, there was obviously little point in trying to
relate cosmic accidents on such an almost unimaginable scale in any way to the much shorter time-frame of “history.” But the nightmare scenario raised by the group of scientists behind the Younger
Dryas impact hypothesis, and supported by the mass of compelling evidence reviewed in Part II—namely that a huge, earthshaking, extinction-level event occurred just 12,800 years ago, in our
historical backyard—changes everything … [straight out Truth dc ]
First and foremost, it means the historical timeline taught as “fact” in all our schools and
institutions of higher learning, the slow painful steps from Palaeolithic to Neolithic, the development
of agriculture, the rise of the first cities, and so on and so forth—in short, all the conclusions
archaeology has come to about the origins of civilization—rest on false foundations. For by what
word other than “false” can the underpinnings of the existing historical paradigm be described, when
we now know that they were put in place without taking account of the single biggest cataclysm to hit
the earth since the extinction of the dinosaurs? This cataclysm, moreover, unfolded in a very specific
and very recent period, the Younger Dryas between 12,800 and 11,600 years ago, and was
immediately followed by the first signs of the emergence of civilization at Göbeklitepe in Turkey,
and soon afterward at many other points around the globe.
To recognize, as archaeologists now do, that these early experiments in civilized living all took
place right after the Younger Dryas “punctuation mark,” yet to take no account of the massive
worldwide trauma and destruction unleashed by the cosmic impacts that caused the Younger Dryas, is
a real lapse of scholarship. What is worse, however, is the parallel failure to devote even a moment’s
consideration to the possibility that crucial chapters of the human story—perhaps even a great
civilization of prehistoric antiquity—might have been erased from the historical record by those
impacts and by the floods, the black bituminous rain, the time of darkness and the indescribable cold
that followed. [you know like Us dc]
If our own civilization were to pass through a comparable cascade of giant impacts would we
survive?
All the indications are that we would not and this is why, in my view, the growing recognition of
the reality of the Younger Dryas comet lays a duty upon archaeologists to desist—at the very least—from pouring further scorn upon “Atlantis,” and other rumors of a lost Ice Age civilization that have
come down to us from the past. Rather than doing everything in their power to dismiss, minimize and
ridicule the myths, the anomalous monuments, and the other tantalizing hints, traces and clues of a
great forgotten episode of human history, the evidence of the comet impacts 12,800 years ago requires
that a thorough investigation of these mysteries, drawing on the full resources of science, should be
undertaken for the first time. [ in a 18 year window
Agenda?
Great resistance will have to be overcome before such an investigation can be mounted—and for the
same reasons that James Kennett, Allen West, Richard Firestone and the other leading researchers of
the Younger Dryas impacts have faced resistance from their gradualist, “uniformitarian” colleagues.
As Kennett has observed, the Younger Dryas impact hypothesis challenges existing paradigms across
a broad range of disciplines—not just archaeology, but also paleontology, paleoceanography,
paleoclimatology and impact dynamics.
16
Inevitably when one presents new evidence that treads on so many different toes, there is going to
be opposition. Academic turf wars, however, are one thing; keeping us all in the dark about a real and
present danger that threatens the human future, simply because recognizing the existence of that danger
requires some scholars to abandon long-cherished positions, is quite another. [ People are afraid of the Truth, because one has to be at peace with the Truth dc ]
Yet this is precisely what seems to be involved in the ideological attacks, masquerading as genuine
criticism, that have been made on the work of Kennett, West, Firestone and others—attacks, as we
saw in Part II, that they have repeatedly and amply refuted, but that can be expected to continue so
long as myopic territorialism prevails in science over the rational appraisal of disturbing and, in the
case of the Younger Dryas comet, utterly convincing new evidence.
And there may be more to this than just an academic turf war—indeed something that much more
closely resembles a conspiracy to hide unpalatable truths. As I was researching Magicians of the
Gods, I exchanged a number of emails with Allen West, since I wanted to check facts and he’s the
team member listed as the corresponding author on most of the academic papers about the Younger
Dryas impact. Our discussions became quite wide-ranging and at one point he wrote:
I think your new book will open up the comet hypothesis to a much larger audience and that is
very good for our planet, because this impact topic is not just interesting past history. The
Younger Dryas impact was devastating, but much smaller ones could devastate a city, region, or
country today, and they are much more frequent than publicly admitted by NASA and the ESA
[European Space Agency], though there seems to be growing awareness.
17
Picking up on this issue of the apparently deliberate suppression of information about impacts, and
about the Younger Dryas impacts in particular, I emailed West as follows:
Having seen the shoddy way catastrophist ideas have been treated again and again down the
years, I suppose I should not be surprised by the concerted hostility of your critics, how they
spin things, and their constant crowing about the latest “requiem” for the comet theory—which
turns out to be not a requiem at all but just propaganda basically! But still, I can’t help feeling
there is something odd about the way your critics seem almost deliberately to ignore crucial
evidence that you have presented in order to generate headlines like “study casts doubt on
mammoth-killing impact” or to say things like “for the Syria site the impact theory is out,” when
it isn’t “out” at all!
Is it just that they desperately want the world to be a safe, predictable place and seek to
fulfill their own wish by fudging the facts in their papers? Or is there some other agenda at
work?
18
West’s reply was intriguing:
That certainly is one aspect. One critic complained to me that “Well, if you are right, we will
have to rewrite the textbooks!” As if that were a bad thing … [But], curiously, some of our most
virulent critics are associated with NASA and the government. A NASA employee tells me that
this attitude of opposition to impact threats is entrenched in NASA and is only now slowly
beginning to change. When it became obvious to NASA decades ago that asteroids and comets
are a serious threat, their employees were instructed by top government officials to downplay
the risk. The government was concerned that the populace would “panic” over space rocks and
demand action, when NASA couldn’t do anything about them and didn’t want to admit it. Plus,
trying to mitigate any impact hazards would have used up funding they wanted to put
elsewhere.
19 [ there is the truth, they do not want us to know dc]
The dark traveler
As long ago as 1990, before any of the physical, geological evidence for the Younger Dryas comet
impacts had been discovered, astrophysicist Victor Clube and astronomer Bill Napier warned of the
view:
that treats the cosmos as a harmless backdrop to human affairs, a view which Academe now
often regards as its business to uphold and to which Church and State are only too glad to
subscribe.
20
Such a view, in Clube and Napier’s prescient 1990 opinion, was dangerous in that its effect was to
“place the human species a little higher than the ostrich, awaiting the fate of the dinosaur.”
21
As can be seen from the reactions of some members of “Academe” to the Younger Dryas impact
hypothesis, this view, and what Clube and Napier call the “great illusion of cosmic security”
22
that it
engenders, are still powerful forces in the world today. Much more than the truth about our own past
is at stake, however, for there is a chilling convergence between Clube and Napier’s findings on the
one hand, and the findings of Kennett, West and Firestone on the other, as to what the Younger Dryas
comet really means for humanity.
To understand the implications of this convergence properly it will be necessary to review some
of the discoveries made by Clube, Napier and others in the 1980s and 1990s—discoveries,
remember, that are completely independent of the later work of the Kennett/West/Firestone team on
the Younger Dryas impacts. To cut a long story short, as I’ve already indicated in Chapter Eleven, the
burden of these discoveries is that it is possible—indeed highly probable—that we are not yet done
with the comet that changed the face of the earth between 12,800 years ago and 11,600 years ago.
Clube and Napier’s work, with important contributions also from the late Sir Fred Hoyle, and from mathematician and astronomer Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe, has raised the chilling possibility
that the Younger Dryas comet was itself only a fragment of a much larger, giant comet—once perhaps
as much as 100 kilometers in diameter—which entered the inner solar system about 30,000 years ago
and was captured by the sun and flung into an earth-crossing orbit. It remained relatively intact for the
next 10,000 years.
Then around 20,000 years ago it underwent a massive “fragmentation event”
somewhere along its orbit that transformed it from a single deadly and potentially world-killing
object into multiple objects grading down from 5 kilometers to 1 kilometer or less in diameter, each
and every one of which would still, in its own right, be capable of causing a global cataclysm.
23
The evidence is that it was several fragments on this scale that hit the earth 12,800 years ago,
causing the Younger Dryas,
24
that we crossed the debris stream of the comet again 11,600 years ago
with equally dramatic effects that ended the Younger Dryas,
25 and—finally—that we can expect
further encounters with the remaining fragments in the future.
26 “This unique complex of debris,”
write Clube and Napier, “is undoubtedly the greatest collision hazard facing the earth at the present
time.”
27 [which means that we are in a 18 year window of this debris as of 7/3/22 dc ]
The Taurid meteor stream, so called because it produces showers of “shooting stars” that look to
observers on the ground as though they originate in the constellation of Taurus, is the most familiar
and best-known product of the ongoing fragmentation of the original giant comet. The stream sprawls
completely across the earth’s orbit—a distance of more than 300 million kilometers—cutting it in two
places so that the planet must pass through it twice a year: in late June and early July (when the
“shooting stars” are not visible because they are encountered in daylight) and again from late October
into November when a spectacular “Halloween firework” display is put on.
28
Since the earth travels
more than 2.5 million kilometers along its orbital path every day, and since each passage takes
approximately twelve days, it is obvious that the Taurid stream is at least 30 million kilometers
“wide” or “thick.” Indeed, what the earth encounters during these two periods is best envisaged as a
sort of “tube” or “pipe” of fragmented debris—a bit like a huge doughnut. The geometrical term for
such a shape is a “torus.”
“Shooting stars” are harmless—nothing more than tiny meteors burning up in the atmosphere—so
why should we be in the least bit concerned about a meteor stream? In the case of the fifty or so
distinct and separate meteor streams that have now been discovered by astronomers—the Leonids,
the Perseids, the Andromedids, etc—the answer to this question is that in most cases there is
probably no danger and nothing to fear. Since most of the particles that they contain are indeed tiny,
they represent no threat to the earth.
But it is quite a different matter with the Taurids. As Clube, Napier, Hoyle and Wickramasinghe
have demonstrated, the Taurid stream is filled to overflowing with other much more massive material,
sometimes visible, sometimes shrouded in clouds of dust, and all of it flying through space at
tremendous velocities and intersecting the earth’s orbit twice a year, regular as clockwork, year in
year out. Among the massive, deadly members of the Taurid family are Comet Encke, which is
estimated to have a diameter of around 5 kilometers. But Comet Encke is not alone. According to
Clube and Napier there are also:
between one and two hundred asteroids of more than a kilometer diameter orbiting within the
Taurid meteor stream. It seems clear that we are looking at the debris from the breakup of an
extremely large object. The disintegration, or sequence of disintegrations, must have taken
place within the last twenty or thirty thousand years, as otherwise the asteroids would have
spread around the inner planetary system and be no longer recognizable as a stream.
29
In addition to Comet Encke, there are at least two other comets in the stream—Rudnicki, also thought
to be about five kilometers in diameter, and a mysterious object named Oljiato, which has a diameter
of about 1.5 kilometers.
30
Initially believed to be an asteroid, this extremely dark, earth-crossing
projectile sometimes shows signs, visible in the telescope, of volatility and outgassing and most
astronomers now regard it as an inert comet that is in the process of waking up.
31 Comet Encke itself
is known to have been inert for a long period, until it suddenly flared into life and was first seen by
astronomers in 1876.
32
It is now understood to alternate regularly, in extended cycles, between its
inert and volatile states.
Clube and Napier’s research had convinced them that an as yet undetected companion to Comet
Encke is orbiting at the very heart of the Taurid meteor stream.
33 They believe that this object is of
exceptional size, that it is a comet, and that like Encke and Oljiato it sometimes—for very long
periods—shuts itself down.
This happens when pitch-like tars that seethe up continuously from its
interior during episodes of outgassing become so copious that they coat the entire outer surface of the
nucleus in a thick, hardening shell and seal it off completely—perhaps for millennia.
34
On the outside
all falls silent after the incandescent “coma” and tail have faded away and the seemingly inert object
tears silently through space at a speed of tens of kilometers per second. But, at the center of the
nucleus, activity continues, gradually building up pressure. Like an overheated boiler with no release
valve, the comet eventually explodes from within, breaking up into fragments that can become
individual comets, every one of which threatens the earth.
Calculations indicate that this presently invisible object at the heart of the Taurid stream might be
as much as 30 kilometers in diameter.
35 Moreover, it is thought likely that other large fragments
accompany it. According to Professor Emilio Spedicato of the University of Bergamo:
Tentative orbital parameters which could lead to its observation are estimated. It is predicted
that in the near future (around the year 2030) the earth will cross again that part of the torus that
contains the fragments, an encounter that in the past has dramatically affected mankind.
36
Rebirth
The year 2030 is, of course, exactly in the window of danger indicated by the Mayan calendar and
Pillar 43 at Göbekli Tepe. The dinosaur-killing asteroid 65 million years ago was only 10 kilometers
in diameter, yet it set off a global firestorm and changed the world forever. A collision with an object
30 kilometers in diameter would—at the very least—mean the end of civilization as we know it, and
perhaps even the end of all human life on this planet.
Its consequences, as noted in Chapter Eleven,
would certainly be orders of magnitude greater than the Younger Dryas impacts 12,800 years ago that
had a thousand times the combined explosive power of all the nuclear devices stockpiled in the world
today and that left us as a species with amnesia, obliged to begin again like children with no memory
of what went before.
However, it doesn’t have to be like that. First and foremost, the universe might spare us. Imagine
crossing that torus is a bit like crossing a six-lane freeway, on foot, wearing a blindfold. Luckily for
you, however, there’s not much heavy traffic on the road, so though you have to cross the freeway
twice a year you usually don’t bump into much. What makes some crossings more risky than others,
however, is the fact that the big trucks and other heavy traffic do have a tendency to cluster and bunch
in places. Effectively what Clube and Napier have done with their calculations, backtracking the
orbits of known objects in the Taurid “freeway,” is to issue a warning that now and for the coming
decades, our crossings carry a greatly enhanced risk of a series of collisions with some very
menacing “heavy traffic.”
The evidence that just such a series of collisions occurred between 12,800 years ago and 11,600
years ago and that fragmentation of the progenitor giant comet that gave rise to all the Taurid objects
was the cause, should, at the very least, focus our minds. No longer are we dealing with something
that only happens at intervals of multiple millions of years, but rather with what appears to be a
cataclysmic process that is still unfolding within the framework of historical time.
Even so, we need not give up hope, nor waste a single moment of our precious lives embracing
gloom and doom. While I am convinced a civilization flourished during the Ice Age and had mastered
advanced sciences that seemed like magic to more primitive cultures, I do not believe that it followed
our own particular path of technological development. That path has many negative consequences, but
it equips us with abilities that the lost civilization clearly lacked—in particular, the ability to
intervene in our immediate cosmic environment and to deflect or destroy asteroids and comets that
threaten the very survival of humanity.
What it will take is the recognition that we are, after all, one species, one people, one family, and
that rather than waste our energies on murderous feuds in the name of “God,” or “country,” or
political ideology, or selfish greed, the time has come for love and harmony to displace fear and
turmoil in every aspect of our lives, so that that we can secure the human future. If we are to do this,
we will have to stop seeking out our own reflections in the mirror and learn to look up into the
cosmos instead, we will have to banish hatred and suspicion and learn to pool our resources, our
intelligence and our talents in a grand effort for the redemption of mankind.
We will, in short, have to awaken to the full mystery of the magnificent gift of consciousness and
realize we must not squander it an instant longer.
For this, too, was the promise of the Mayan calendar—that we who are alive today will find
ourselves at the threshold of a new age of human consciousness. If we can bring that age to birth, with
all it implies, then preventing the remaining fragments of the Younger Dryas comet from devastating
the earth will be child’s play and in the process we will have discovered, perhaps for the first time in
more than 12,000 years, who we really are.
It is our choice.
It always has been.
Nothing stands in our way but ourselves.
1.
Overview of Gobekli Tepe with Enclosure D in the foreground.
2.
Enclosure D with the enigmatic Pillar 43 at left.
3.
The author with Professor Klaus Schmidt at Gobekli Tepe in 2013. Professor Schmidt (at left of
picture) passed away in 2014.
4.
Eastern central pillar, Enclosure D
. Pillar 43 in Enclosure D at Gobekli Tepe. This early photograph was taken by the excavator, Klaus
Schmidt. Subsequently the lower part of the pillar showing the scorpion was reburied.
Enclosure B at Gobekli Tepe.
The author with Danny Natawidjaja at Gunung Padang.
Overview of the principal terraces at Gunung Padang. In this form the site has been known to
archaeology for a century. But only when geophysical survey work began in 2011 was it realized that
there are hidden structures and much earlier layers of construction beneath the terraces.
The author with Randall Carlson at Dry Falls.
. Wallula Gap, “the gathering of the waters,” scabland and the “Twin Sisters” in the background.
The giant current ripples of Camas Prairie,
some more than fifty feet high.
“Boulder Park,” Washington State. Huge boulders of 10,000 tons and more were carried here in
icebergs by the cataclysmic floods at the end of the Ice Age.
Mount Ararat viewed over the
ruins of Zvarnots Cathedral, Armenia.
Entrance passageway and stone door—Derinkuyu underground “city,” Turkey
. The Temple of Horus at Edfu, Upper Egypt
source notes more pics
1 comment:
I admire the scholastic account of ancient histories which I enjoyed.
My contribution is based on metaphysical knowledge of the foundations for the next New Age, in which the records of the sacrifices by Alien Adepts ensure the preservation of the Earth from any threats of cataclysmic nature.
This story is also of how the Earth was saved from several attempts to take over during the post war period of World War.
My website ( kasselmain.com) has some features of interest.
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