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Wednesday 30 January 2019

The Isles line, - The perpendicular cross to the St. Michael line at Avebury

Pic. 1, Avebury Henge & Silbury Hill


 Another post, another picture of Avebury Henge! It does seem, at least from the vantage point of this blog, that this monument is the centre of the universe! But, yes, Avebury is also the centre-point of the study featured in this short post.
 The previous post dealt with a placement of the St. Michael/Mary alignment & focused on some "coincidence" events that happen along the south-west half. This post deals with a major "coincidence" event, also on that line & also involving Avebury Henge, with multiple "coincidences".
 Probably the most difficult aspect of alignment study to accept is the fact that some features that appear in line are completely natural such as hills, tors, river mouths, islands, promontories etc.  Readers of previous posts might also have picked allusions towards the harmony of counterparts such as in the previous post I mention that,  Rough Tor is cup shaped & Brown Willy is obelisk shaped & that the alignment passes through the most female part of Rough Tor & the most male part of Brown Willy (see post 3, https://ancientwhisperspenwith.blogspot.com/2019/01/the-st-michaelmary-alignment-my.html ) I fully understand how fanciful this may sound but it is something I see time & time again; the unification of the cup shape (Cove, chalice, receiver, yoni etc) with the probe shape (Obelisk, wand, transmitter, lingham etc.).
 This post features a unification of two islands from a major river mouth to a mountain top that passes through the practical centre of the Avebury Henge mechanism ( see previous post;https://ancientwhisperspenwith.blogspot.com/2018/11/avebury-geometry.html) perpendicularly to the St. Michael/Mary alignment.
 As can be seen in the satellite image below, Avebury Henge lies at the centre of the St. Michael/Mary alignment as it passes over mainland England (& Cornwall!) & it has a perpendicular (at right [90 deg.] angles) cross alignment with a line connecting The Isle of Wight with the Isle of Man that runs through Avebury.


Sat. image 1, St. Michael/Mary alignment at right angles to the Isle of Man-Isle of Wight line crossing at Avebury Henge

 The satellite images below shows these lines crossing at the practical centre of the Avebury Henge mechanism - equidistant between the Cove (marker) & the Obelisk, passing the same distance either side of these features.


Sat image 2,  St. Michael/Mary line crossing the Isles line at Avebury centre

 Notice in the satellite image above that the northern & westernmost lines pass through the apertures in the henge-bank.
 With the St. Michael/Mary alignment set at closer to 60 deg. as oppose to the traditional 63 deg. which we established in the previous post, the angles of the crossing alignments seem to me to be pretty perfect right angles, anyone is free to check, of course.


Sat. image 3,  Isles line passing either side of the Cove & the Obelisk (marker) & crossing the Michael/Mary line


 If we look closer at the Isles ends of the crossing line we see first that the line hits the highest point of;

The Isle of Man, - Snaefell Mountain


Sat image 4,  Isles line, Isle of Man



Pic. 2,  Snaefell Mountain, Isle of Man


Sat image 5,  Isles line terminus on the triangulation station placed on a natural cairn next to a transmitter tower on the summit of Snaefell Mountain

 Our starting point on the Isle of Man is pretty precise; on a triangulation station on the very summit of Snaefell Mountain. It is set into a natural rocky outcrop. This is the highest point of the whole island.


Pic. 3,  Snaefell Mountain triangulation station on a natural rocky cairn


Pic. 4,  mountain range, Isle of Man, Snaefell Mountain in the centre


Pic.5,  Snaefell mountain


Isle of Wight, the mouth of the Medina estuary

 Then if we take a look at the other end we find that the line not only runs through the Isle of Wight, but enters it through the mouth of the Medina river.


Sat. image 6,  the Isles line at the mouth of the river Medina


 Sat image 7,  the Isles line at Cowes at the mouth of the Medina.




Pic. 6,  the Medina estuary, the entrance to the island




Pics. 7 & 8,  the Medina estuary


Pic. 9,  boats on the Medina


 So we have the highest point of the Isle of Man connected to the entrance to the Isle of Wight by a perpendicular cross to the Michael/Mary line that runs through the practical centre of Avebury Henge (as established in post 1. of this blog; https://ancientwhisperspenwith.blogspot.com/2018/11/avebury-geometry.html) - "coincidences" galore!
 Avebury is harmonising many counter features of Snaefell Mountain & the mouth of the Medina here; one is high & dry/ one is low & wet, one is exposed/ one is enclosed, one is air/ the other is water. one is a protrusion/ the other is a recession etc.
 The name of the northern isle, "Man" speaks for itself & "Wight" has more than a passing relationship with the female; the Moon, Venus, milk, a symbol of female virginity & "The White Lady" is a name used for many female deities etc. in many religions & mythologies.
 The Isle of Man is long & set at an angle but to say it's shape was phallic is probably going a bit too far, the "coincidental" fact that it has a transmitter tower on it's highest point is not lost on me though (transmitter, wand, Obelisk, lingham).
 The Isle of Wight is definitely not cup shaped (receiver, chalice, Cove, yoni) but the whole shape of the island can suggest it is offering the mouth of the Medina , it's entrance, to the mainland.


Sat. image 8,  the Isle of Wight.


 The line coming from the Isle of Wight (female) enters Avebury Henge from the south-east, then runs through the southernmost inner circle that has the Obelisk (marker) as it's central feature (the male circle) before running through the practical centre.
 The line that comes from the Isle of Man (male) enters Avebury Henge from the north-west, runs through the northernmost inner circle that has the Cove as it's central feature (the female circle) before running through the practical centre.
 Here we have the island with most "male" characteristics ending up being called "Man" whilst the Tintagel-Bodmin Moor-Jersey line (https://ancientwhisperspenwith.blogspot.com/2019/01/the-st-michaelmary-alignment-my.html) runs through two prominent hills on Bodmin Moor, the one with the most "male" characteristics ends up being called "Brown Willy" - perhaps that hilarious double-entendre is a "coincidence" event in itself even though it has a Cornish excuse; (Cornish; bron = hill, wenilli = swallows")

 I will study the line running between the Isles more closely as it seems to run through many significant places at first glance of the map, including right through the middle of Gloucester. I will either add my findings to this post or dedicate another post to this subject at a later date, depending on the length of the report.


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