Sunday, March 19, 2017

Blue Cosmic Eagle/ Blue Self-Existing Hand - Solar Jaguar Moon of Intention, Day 6





An artist’s rendering of what Cahokia may have looked like.
An artist’s rendering of what Cahokia may have looked like.
Courtesy University of Houston

Cahokia Mounds Mark Spring Equinox:
The keepers of Cahokia Mounds will host a spring gathering to celebrate the vernal equinox

Spring is coming on Monday, March 20, 2017 at 6:29 a.m. EDT. But the Cahokia Mounds in Illinois aren’t waiting until then to commemorate the vernal equinox: The state park will host a sunrise service on Sunday March 19 to mark the advent of rebirth across Turtle Island.

The Spring Equinox Sunrise Observance will be from 6:45 a.m. to 7:45 a.m. at the reconstructed Woodhenge, according to the Cahokia Mounds website Cahokiamounds.org.

Back when Paris and London were thought to be the center of the world, and long before Europeans ever conceived of these shores, Cahokia in 1250 was a city easily as populous as the British capital. Lying in the floodplain that is the meeting ground for the Missouri and Mississippi rivers near St. Louis, Cahokia was centered around Monks Mound, which eclipsed the pyramids at Giza and rivaled that of the Pyramid of the Sun at Teotihuacan. Indeed, the city was the “largest pre-Columbian archaeological site north of Mexico; it is also the earliest of the large Mississippian settlements,” says UNESCO in its World Heritage website description. “It is the pre-eminent example of a cultural, religious, and economic center of the prehistoric Mississippian cultural tradition.”

People started settling in the area as far back as 700 A.D., with Cahokia gradually developing into an urban center whose heyday fell between 1100 and 1200, according to Cahokiamounds.org. By the late 1300s it had been abandoned entirely. Named a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982, it had already been on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places since 1966.

Woodhenge, a calendar of posts that line up with the rising sun at certain times of the year, is where the equinox event will be. Events there coincide with both the spring and fall equinoxes, as well as the two solstices. There were several such calendars at Cahokia, and they were key to agricultural planning.

“The most spectacular sunrise occurs at the equinoxes, when the sun rises due east,” reported Indian Country Media Network. “The post marking these sunrises aligns with the front of Monks Mound, where the leader resided, and it looks as though Monks Mound gives birth to the sun.”*




MEN


Kin 195: Blue Cosmic Eagle


I endure in order to create
Transcending mind
I seal the output of vision
With the cosmic tone of presence
I am guided by the power of self-generation.


To counteract the blind destructive nature of war and aggression, the cosmic spiritual force evolves itself through souls who seek transcendence from conflict altogether.*



*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2016-2017.






The Sacred Tzolk'in 





Manipura Chakra  (Limi Plasma)





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