A major nuclear power plant in South Carolina
caught fire Sunday, which led to the shutdown of a reactor. Officials state
that the fire has been extinguished and there has been no release of
radioactive materials.
One out of three nuclear reactors at the Oconee
Nuclear Station, located on Lake Keowee, in the state of South Carolina, was
shut down after a transformer unit caught fire following an explosion,
WYFF4.com reported. The incident happened at around 3:30 PM, and has been
classified as an "unusual event," later elevated to "alarm"
status. No radioactive material was released, according to statements by
officials. http://sputniknews.com/news/20160308/1035928879/US-nuclear-power-station-shut-down-explosion-fire.html
The incident
occurred on Sunday, March 6 when Sun and Saturn formed a sharp square aspect. A
chart for the mundane event at Seneca where the Oconee Nuclear Station is
located has a Sun-Saturn-Jupiter T-square straddling the meridian. The Ascendant [8sa] is conjunct the “nuclear
axis” which is also the position of the upcoming Mars station on April 17 at [8sa54].
What is the Nuclear Axis?
The first self-sustaining nuclear
chain reaction occurred, in a makeshift laboratory on a squash court in Chicago
(December 2, 1942, at 3:25 pm CWT). A rare conjunction of Saturn and Uranus in
Gemini was rising. This was closely
opposed by a conjunction in Sagittarius, including the Sun and Mercury.
Repeated nuclear events over the past
58 years have led some astrologers to describe these degrees across early
Gemini-Sagittarius as "the nuclear axis," which is highly sensitive
to transits. One critical degree in this axis appears to be Saturn's location
at the time of the first chain reaction, 8 degrees 56 minutes of Gemini. http://www.stariq.com/pagetemplate/article.asp?PageID=1116
A chart drawn
for the moment of the accident is shown here. Notice that the Sun-Saturn-Jupiter
T-square once again makes hard aspects to the meridian.
And finally let
us not forget that the event has occurred just three days before a solar
eclipse which places a Uranus-Pluto square on the horizon axis. Among other
things, Ebertin links Uranus-Pluto to “accidents”.
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