Friday, February 24, 2006

The Nebra Sky Disk Revisited - LexiLine Journal 391

Although I have clearly deciphered the Nebra Sky Disk as marking a solar eclipse

- see http://www.megaliths.co.uk/nebraskydisk.pdf

there is no end to preposterous attempts by people with no experience in astronomical decipherment trying to come up with other solutions.

One of the more ridiculous attempts has now been presented here
http://archlsa.de/aktuelles/presse-daten/1LDA%20Halle.pdf
by counting the number of objects on the disk and claiming that this is signficant for calendration, which is nonsense. There is no precedent for this kind of confused calculation anywhere.

Modern astronomers think that ancient astronomers thought the way that they think today. Thankfully, that was not the case. People in ancient days had a clear, straightforward approach to things, both in their astronomy as well as in their art. The mangled, convoluted explanations proposed by mainstream astronomers are of our troubled and tangled era, and not of the era of nearly 4000 years ago.

We repeat that the decipherment of the Nebra Sky Disk is determined by the fact that the Sun is NOT in the solar boat, where it is found only by night, according to the clear evidence of the Latvian Dainas. Hence, the Nebra Sky Disk can only represent the day sky and thus it can only be the representation of an eclipse, since the stars, sun and moon are all visible at the same time.

On to the next mystery.

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