background preloader

Metro Tokyo

Eclipses Every five and a half months, when the Sun is near one of the moon's nodes, eclipses can occur. New moons become dramatic solar eclipses, when the Moon comes between the Earth and the Sun and blots out the Sun's light. Full moons become lunar eclipses, where the Moon is obscured by the Earth's shadow. These "failures of the Light" have instilled awe over the centuries and have long been known as times of critical transformation. Eclipses are about change, sometimes radical change. Also, eclipses are stronger and more long lasting in their effects than normal new or full moons. All of these eclipses (and more, going back to 1990), have been captured and made into HCW remedies for people who seriously want to work with these powerful energies. See the Current Transits for interpretations of individual eclipses. Information Listed on each Eclipse The eclipse information listed below contains the following data for each eclipse: 1995 to 1999: 2000 to 2004: 2005 to 2009: 2010 to 2014:

History in the year 803 on the eclipse of June 1 2011 Lea la versión en castellano aquí This second approach to the energies of the June 1 2011 eclipse focuses on the one initiated by Saros 118 cycle on May 24 803. Decided to go in-depth on this date after gathering some pieces of official history and verifying the following: Defined the powers of the Western world for the next 1,200 years Incubated the most outstanding milestones in coming centuriesPower dynamics from then are still reproducing today But also, because based on the above mentioned, once again I found what’s written in heavens for this New Moon and Solar Eclipse of June 1 2011 comes out. When the intention to approach all returns for this eclipse cycle was started to look for historical patterns, it was not possible to even complete the last return due to lack of time. We cannot know (hope it’s temporary) what happened on May and less on the 24th. Carolingian Family Tree | Berlin Lybrary | Photographer: Tilo Brandis | click on image for more info Read also:

City of Poseidon A muddy dig in the Corinthian coastal plain yields the remains of an ancient Greek city swallowed by the sea. It's 8:30 in the morning at Dora Katsonopoulou's house in Nikolaiika, Greece. On a normal day, she would already be at the excavation site where the crew of her Helike Project is hard at work. But this morning she is on the phone, dealing with trouble. A mile away, in a 15-foot-deep pit, project archaeologists have been uncovering a large Early Bronze Age house more than 4,000 years old. Katsonopoulou is a stylish woman with wavy red hair and the indomitable will of a general laying siege. Katsonopoulou has been eager to find Helike since she was a child growing up nearby, and while others have looked in vain, she and her partner, Steven Soter, codirector of the small Helike Project, have been closing in on its remains. It was only natural that Helike would be the center of a Poseidon cult, for this region is one of the most active earthquake zones in Europe. Further Reading Share

Related: