Sometimes we just need to listen carefully. Definitely in regard to Karnak.
Egyptian priests told Herodotus, a careful listener, that four times since Egypt had become a kingdom “the Sun rose contrary to his wont; twice he rose where he now sets, and twice he set where he now rises.”
This evidence, and much else, was interpreted by
Tags: alignment, Amon-Re, Ancient Egypt, archaeoastronomy, Gerald Hawkins, Herodotus, inversion, Karnak, Khonsupakerod, Middle Kingdom, New Kingdom, Norman Lockyer, orientation, Serabit el Khadim, Tanis, temples, Theban Hills, Velikovsky, venus
A key component of Immanuel Velikovsky’s Venus theory was his contention that close passages of Venus caused Earth to topple over four times during the Bronze Age catastrophes. Now we have a Revised Venus Theory that corrects inadequacies of the original theory and provides a cause of the inversions as well as approximate dates (2200, 1628, 1210, and 820 BC), an array of new evidence, and a link to the great mass extinctions of prehistory. Viktoria Nagudi interviews Kenneth J. Dillon of Scientia Press.
Theory of the Reversing Earth
Tags: Archer Yi, Bronze Age catastrophes, Immanuel Velikovsky, Karnak, magnetic reversals, Peter Warlow, Re Horakhty, Venus theory