SOME INTERESTING DISCOVERIES

Leys on Mars?
Of the photographs sent back to Earth by the space probe Mariner-lV, the best is No.11, which shows craters in the region known as Atlantis. What has not been noticed, however, are a series of very prominent "bright spots" which appear to be on the Martian surface, but are absent on any similar pictures of the Moon. When these were aligned with the natural features, a pattern very similar to that of leys emerged.

None of these alignments had more than three points, which would obviously in the ordinary way have invalidated them, but they are very interesting because they form an exact isosoeles triangle with a perpendicular, similar to the one in Britain, but of different proportions. The right angle between the base and the perpendicular seems to be precisely accurate, as do the corner angles, both 33o

Stonehenge - Discovery on Discovery.
A great number of amazing discoveries have been made about this famous stone circle on Salisbury Plain. It is the centre of a number of leys, and the positioning of its stones and "Aubrey Holes" seems to have been made with mathematical precision. It has been known for some time that one of the stones was positioned in relationship to the midsummer sunrise, but only recently has it been found, by Fred Hoyle, one of the world's leading astronomers, that the stones can be used for predicting eclipses. Since then Mrs. Carey of Warminster has found what she believes to be carvings on the stones (see The Real Stonehenge and Avebury, link below), and Tony Wedd has found that the angles the stones form are most complex, and from them a seven-point star can be computed. Also Stonehenge ties in with Doug Chaundy's "White Horse Triangle" leys.

Visible Ley goes through Mystery Village
One of the few examples of a ley that is readily visible from the air (the actual alignment, as opposed to just single sites) is the one reproduced in Plate 5 of Men among Mankind by Brinsley Le Poer Trench (published by Neville Spearman). This forms a very good ley on the map, and I was amazed to find on looking at the map after reading The Scoriton Mystery by Eileen Buckle (also published by Neville Spearman) that the ley passes through the centre of the village of Everleigh, talked about at some length in Miss Buckle's book.

Salisbury Star Map
On taking just the long barrows separately from all the other sites on Salisbury Plain, Doug Chaundy found that they fell in a pattern almost exactly the same as that of the stars in the northern sky. Ursa Minor is particularly visible. But who could have built such vast patterns, and why? They could never be seen either from the ground or the air; you need a map to see them. Yet they are there. (See Enigmas of the Plain).

The White Horse Triangle.
Since making his discovery about the Star Map, Doug Chaundy has found that four of the White Horse carvings on Salisbury Plain (Uffington, Oldbury, Milk Hill and Pewsey) formed themselves into the now-familiar pattern of on isosceles trinngle with a perpendicular. All the lines are good leys, and there is also a second triangle - this one a right-angled one - linking the original triangle with the Westbury White Horse. When extended, the lines forming these triangles seem to go through all the sighting points of landed or near-landed UFO5. This includes, among many other places, Scoriton, Coniston, Caerphilly (landing in 1909) Cuildford (landing June 1967), Everleigh and Warminster. Lines also go to Glastonbury and Prescelly (where the bluestones of Stonehenge came from) and Stonehenge.

Jimmy Goddard, 1966

Home Page - The Great Isosceles Triangle
Page 2 - A Basis for Leys and Orthotenies in Britain
Page 3 - The Mysteries of Leys and Orthoteny

Links
Flying Saucers, Landscape Energies and Lost Technology - The Tony Wedd Site
The Real Stonehenge and Avebury
The Truth about the Ley System

Fringe Archaeology