New Stonehenge Landscape Triangle
Tuesday, August 12, 2008 at 09:43AM My brother, Robin Heath, has just published a new discovery of his concerning Stonehenge. Formerly Robin found the significance of the Station Stone rectangle as showing the solar year in lunar month encoded within an intermediate hypotenuse of the 12:13:5 triangle. This triangle was then found by him, times 2500 in size, to form a right angle at Lundy Island, Stonehenge at the apex, and Prescelli source of the bluestones at the end of the 13 side. This intermediate hypotenuse was on Calvey Island. The base line was directly east west.
Because Robin's "bluestone triangle was scaled to the station stone rectangle then the metrology was related, again, to astronomical megalithic yards. Now the new triangle is the earlier "Pythagorean" triangle of 3:4:5, the first such triangle in lowest numbers. Its hypotenuse points towards the vastly significant megalithic complex of Anglesey Island in northern Wales and is defined by a site directly north of Stonehenge, Arbor Low, on the latitude of Anglesey. The metrology is closely connected, thus making the two triangles and these sites a coherent manifestation of linkage within the megalithic sites of southern Britain.
This important extension of relationship can be read at a new site designed to accept material that does not fit with the conventional view of such things and yet is founded on hard evidence, i.e. numbers and observations.
the site is www.astro-archaeology.org - all contributions considered on their focus on facts
Richard Heath | Comments Off |