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The Pyramids and the Sphinx.
Archaeoastronomers are in some ways remarkably conservative. Their own ideas about science in ancient society are rejected by many astronomers and most archaeologists; in consequence, they refuse to entertain any more controversial notions, such as a previously unknown civilisation on Earth, or extraterrestrial visitors. I suggested to the 1996 Edinburgh International Science Festival that we organise a seminar on 'Heresies in Archaeoastronomy', examining the ideas that were too controversial even for archaeoastronomers to consider. Prof. Archie Roy gallantly agreed to introduce it, and not surprisingly it drew a capacity audience. Naturally, Alan Evans was there to present his paper on the Ecliptic meridian.20
Another participant was Robert Bauval, whose book "The Orion Mystery"21 suggested that the three giant pyramids of Giza not only incorporated star alignments in their so-called 'air-shafts' (Fig. 8), but represented the stars of Orion's Belt mapped on to the landscape. When Alan Evans checked their findings, he found that the same shaft which marked the meridian transit of Alnitak, the left-hand star of Orion’s Belt, also marked the transit of the Galactic Centre. So of the two galactic alignments marked at Stonehenge, one was incorporated into the Step Pyramid and the other into the Great one.
Robert had now collaborated with Graham Hancock on a new book, "Keeper of Genesis", based on the possibly great age of the Sphinx. The apparent evidence of water erosion suggests that the Sphinx and its flanking temples were built as long ago as 10,500 BC, when Egypt last had a wet climate towards the end of the Ice Age.22 The Vernal Equinox was then in the constellation Leo, and Robert and Graham suggest that the Sphinx was built to face its counterpart in the sky. Furthermore, the orientation of the Belt stars to the Milky Way corresponds to the Pyramids' in relation to the Nile - not when they themselves were built, but when the Sphinx was carved out 8000 years before.
In 10,500 BC, as far as we know, the Nile delta was inhabited only by hunter-gatherers, wholly lacking the technology to carve out the Sphinx and build the temples in 200-ton blocks. In a previous book Graham Hancock tried to get round this by suggesting a world-spanning civilisation, unknown to us, which lasted over 8000 years and was based on the coast of Antarctica.23 It used to be thought that the Antarctic coast was ice-free during the Ice Age in the northern hemisphere; however, that idea had been attacked by the early 1980's15 and more recent Antarctic surveys continue to stack up evidence against it. And it's very hard to believe that such a world-spanning, long-lasting civilisation would leave so little evidence behind.
Graham couldn't attend the Edinburgh seminar, but he and Robert were both in Glasgow three weeks later and I was able to arrange a continuation, in which we went to the planetarium at the College of Nautical Studies. First I showed them what Alan Evans and I had discovered, and when they saw the galactic alignment at Stonehenge I, Robert Bauval made an extraordinary remark, which I'll come back to in a moment.
Then, holding the date c.2700 BC, we shifted to the latitude of Giza, and verified Robert's calculations for "The Orion Mystery". It had never occurred to him to do so in this way, and he was as moved as I had been at seeing the layout of the ancient skies for himself - especially since everything he had calculated was confirmed. So too were the "Keeper" calculations for 10,500 BC, Leo, Orion and the Sphinx, when we moved the setting back to that date. When the Sun rose below Leo at the Vernal Equinox in 10,500 BC, Orion was on the meridian, and the orientation of the Belt stars to the Milky Way matched that of the Giza pyramids to the Nile 8,000 years later. Whatever its significance, that claim is true: we saw it with our own eyes, re-enacted.
But when I showed the galactic orientation of Stonehenge I, and explained what it might mean in terms of an ET landing, Robert's show-stopping remark was, "It's the same at Giza in 10,500 BC, we just didn't know what it meant." Now the time had come to verify that. Once again, if it was true at all, it would be true once a day, every day, at that latitude and date. So, just by letting the stars wheel on, we verified it at once. At Giza, in 10,500 BC, due to the effect of precession, the same galactic relationship existed as at Stonehenge c.2840. Once a day, the sky took up the same Fig. 6 configuration, with the galactic pole in the zenith and the plane of the Milky Way coinciding with the horizon. We saw it for ourselves: like a galactic 'compass rose' at each location, but separated by eight millennia in time.
But in that case, what was happening then at Stonehenge?
We kept the date at 10,500 BC, and the custodian took the planetarium 'back up' to the latitude of Stonehenge. Having no idea what to look for, once again we just let the stars wheel freely around, through a normal day. And Epsilon Boötis went through the zenith! It was doing that daily in 10,500 BC, when the galactic alignments were in force at Giza, and the effect of precession on it, over the next 8000 years, was to bring it back to the Stonehenge zenith, as an optical marker for the same galactic alignments at Stonehenge itself when Stonehenge I was created. Unless it's all coincidence, it can only mean that the events of 2840-2500 BC represented a return to both sites. And the first, 10,500 BC date goes along with the 'approximately 13,000 years ago' given by Arcturus's position in that first map of my 1973 'translation', fig. 1(A). If that map meant anything, it would have to be as a time marker, not a navigational reference as I thought.
It still isn't Category A evidence, the artefact of indisputably extraterrestrial origin, nor the Category B anomaly that leads us to it. In this context, Category C might stand for 'circumstantial'. But I can't believe that all those circumstances are coincidental; these multiple high-tech astronomical alignments are, in my opinion, the best evidence for Past Contact ever put forward. The synergistic combination of our research with Bauval and Hancock's has convinced me that we're on the track of something big.
It left two questions to answer:
1. What about the Green Children?
In the September 1996 Analog I suggested Past Contact in 12th century England. Is there a connection? There's one I pointed out in that article. The latter half of the 12th century AD featured the most violent solar activity since the Bronze Age, indicated by aurorae, carbon-14 ratios, tree-rings etc.24 And that previous peak was a triple one, between 2700 and 1800 BC, covering the building of Avebury, the Pyramids, Stonehenge II and Stonehenge III. It may be coincidence; but it's interesting that it was the case in both historical periods which I'd consider candidates for Contact events.
Even more remarkably, however, Alan Evans discovered that during the crucial years of the 12th century, between the Second Crusade and the fall of Jerusalem to Saladin, Jerusalem too had the same galactic alignment as Stonehenge I and Giza in 10,500 BC. At that point, the three enquiries – in the three very different areas of ancient positional astronomy, mediaeval history and the 1920s radio echoes – are actually three aspects of the same enquiry. It’s still circumstantial, all of it, but it looks as if it may add up to something very significant.
2. So what about the Space Probe?
Optical searches of the Lagrange points in the late 1970s found nothing. But in April 1995 Dr. Duncan Steel drew attention to the discovery, at Kitt Peak in Arizona, of a most unusual asteroid designated 1991 VG. In December 1991 it passed Earth at a distance of only 485,000 miles. Its diameter was estimated at 9-19 metres, assuming that it was made of one of the more common asteroidal rocks. However, observations at closest approach suggested "strong, rapid brightness variations which can be interpreted as transient specular reflections from the surfaces of a rotating spacecraft".25
During the space age 1991 VG would have passed only twice before, in February-March 1975 and in mid-1958 - possibly 1959, if the 1975 approach altered the orbit. Nothing that big was launched in 1958-59, nor in 1975; the European Helios 1 was launched in December 1974, but its carrier's upper stage did not escape from the Earth into orbit round the Sun. Perhaps, instead, 1991 VG was orbiting Earth then, until it was 'discovered' and moved away before anything more serious happened.
But when it comes backin 2017, let's hope that a major attempt is made to look at it. The solar-sailing 'Comet-chaser' Gordon Ross and I suggested here would be ideal,26 but it can be done by conventional means: NEAR, the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous, is to orbit the asteroid Eros shortly, and Europe's Rosetta probe is to do the same with a short-period comet after 2000; NASA's Deep Space 4 will reach Comet Tempel in 2006, and a Japanese probe will reach asteroid Nereus the same year. 1991 VG should be next on the list.
References.
1. Duncan Lunan, 'Space Probe from Epsilon Boötis?', Analog XCII, 5, 66-84, January 1974.
2. - , 'Long-Delayed Echoes and the Extraterrestrial Hypothesis', Journal of the Society of Electronic and Radio Technicians, 10, 8, 180-182, September 1976.
3. Ronald N. Bracewell, 'Manifestations of Advanced Civilisations', in John Billingham, ed., "Life in the Universe", MIT Press, 1981.
4. James Strong, "Flight to the Stars", Temple Press, 1965.
5. George Sassoon, 'A Correlation of Long-Delay Radio Echoes and the Moon's Orbit', Spaceflight, 16, 7, 258-265, July 1974.
6. Anthony T. Lawton, Sydney J. Newton, 'Long Delayed Echoes: the Search for a Solution', Spaceflight 16, 5, 181-187, May 1974.
7. Robert A. Freitas, Jr., Francisco Valdes, 'A Search for Natural or Artificial Objects Located at the Earth-Moon Libration Points', Icarus 42, 442-447 (1980); 'A Search for Objects near the Earth-Moon Lagrangian Points', Icarus 53, 453-457 (1983).
8. James R. Wertz, 'Interstellar Navigation', Spaceflight, 14, 206-216, June 1972.
9. Duncan Lunan, "Man and the Stars", Souvenir Press 1974; US editions "Interstellar Contact", Henry Regnery Co., 1975, "The Mysterious Signals from Outer Space", Bantam, 1977.
10. Gerald S. Hawkins, "Stonehenge Decoded", Souvenir Press, 1966.
11. A.Thom, "Megalithic Sites in Britain", Oxford University Press, 1967; "Megalithic Lunar Observatories", OUP, 1971; (with A.S. Thom), "Megalithic Remains in Britain and Brittany", OUP, 1978.
12. Duncan Lunan, 'Solar Events at Sighthill', Griffith Observer, 50, 6, 2-11, 20, June 1986.
13. J. Gall Inglis, Arthur P. Norton, "Star Atlas", 14th edition, Gall & Inglis, 1959.
14. Dates for the various construction phases at Stonehenge remain in some dispute; Aubrey Burl, "Prehistoric Avebury", Yale University Press, 1979, puts the earliest construction around 2800 BC, as do the Thoms (ref.19), with no further work until c.2150 BC. Some recent reports compress the building into one continuous process; yet there seems to be clear evidence for an interruption, during which the Stonehenge I ditch silted up, although its discoverer put the event strangely far back, dating it at 3100 BC, well before the starting dates given elsewhere. (Christopher Chippendale, 'Life around Stonehenge', New Scientist, 101, 1404, 12-17, 5 April 1984).
15. Fred Hoyle, "Ice", Hutchinson, 1981.
16. Sean O'Neill, 'Totem Poles Give Pointer to Siting of Stonehenge', The Daily Telegraph, 28 June 1996.
17. Robert Dawson Scott, 'Silent Power from a Time of the Ancients', The Daily Telegraph, 10th January 1997.
18. Nigel Hawkes, 'Stonehenge Dating Dispels Icesheet Theory', The Times, 5 December 1994.
19. A. Thom, A.S. Thom and A. Thom, 'Stonehenge', Journal for the History of Astronomy, 5, 13, 71-90 (June 1974).
20. A.C. Evans, 'The Three Dimensional Grid', paper presented at 'Heresies in Archaeoastronomy', Edinburgh International Science Festival, 16th April 1995.
21. Robert Bauval & Adrian Gilbert, "The Orion Mystery", Heinemann, 1994.
22. Robert Bauval & Graham Hancock, "Keeper of Genesis", Heinemann, 1996.
23. Graham Hancock, "Fingerprints of the Gods", Heinemann, 1995.
24. John A. Eddy, 'The Case of the Missing Sunspots', Scientific American, 236, 5, 80-88 & 92, May 1977; 'The Maunder Minimum', Science, 192, 4245, 1189-1202 (18th June, 1976.)
25. Duncan Steel, 'SETA and 1991 VG', The Observatory, April 1995; 'Of Asteroids and Aliens', The Skeptic, 15, 1, 9-10 (1995).
26. Duncan Lunan, 'Keep Watching the Skies!', Analog, CXIV, 12, 70-84, October 1994.
27. I.E.S. Edwards, "The Pyramids of Egypt", Penguin, 1947.