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Posted by computerbreak | Jan 25, 2012 @ 05:42 AM | 4,330 Views


The Sine Wave Alignment of Sacred Sites
A perfect circle bisecting the Earth describes the alignment of sacred energetic sites: a hoop of light. To the southeast of the Sphinx, directly east of the smallest pyramid is the massive limestone wall that defines an angular alignment not observed elsewhere in the Giza complex. The Wall of the Crow is a 600’ long by 30’ high megalithic wall undercut by a portal with a lintel that is among the largest fitted stones on the Giza plateau.
The interlocking masonry of this entrance to the plateau is highly reminiscent of the stonework found in the Andes, especially the megalithic site of Saqsaywaman, in modern day Peru at the ancient Inca capital of Cuzco. Giza’s gigantic Wall of the Crow does not share the pyramidal alignment to the geographic poles, but is angled 5° north of due east. The wall defines a division of two hemispheres along a circumference line around the Earth ’as the crow flies’, passing through Giza’s antipode in the Pacific Ocean at 30°S 149°W. Along that straight line path lay the Angkor temples of Cambodia to the east and the Nazca lines of Peru to the west, an alignment described as the Sine Wave of ancient sites by Jim Alison. The Wall of the Crow begins and ends at nodal points of the Magnetic Resonance structure, revealing the intimate relationship between the invisible resonance patterns and the layout of the limestone pyramid complex at Giza. As well, its
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