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“The Great Storm Bird” from Africa

 


 

The Great Storm Bird

 

Dust from Africa here the next 10 days. Will help keep things quiet it looks like this next week, especially in the Caribbean. Should make it to the US even and make some nice sunsets.https://x.com/tropicalupdate/status/1804316627703361763

  

In the NASA image of the dust storm, the origin appears to be around the co-ordinates 17N0 latitude and 5W0 longitude (extreme right of the graph). Shown here are charts for (a) total solar eclipse of April 8 (b) the Full Moon of 22 June at these co-ordinates

 

 


 The eclipse is placed very significantly on the descendant with the South Node [15li] conjunct the Ascendant [16li] conjunct stars of Corvus, the Raven. Among events Diana Rosenberg links this area to “high winds, air contamination” 

These stars were part of an archaic Chaldean lunar mansion whose patron god was Im-dugud-khu, “The Great Storm Bird” or “Storm Bird of the Evil Wind” and China’s Celestial Chariot T’ien-Tche governed wind. Records show that they were transited at the 1864 Bay of Bengal cyclone that killed 50,000, the 1881 typhoon that hit Haipong, China, killing thousands; at the Winter Solstice of 1886, the beginning of a terrible North American winter that caused “The Great Die-up”, hundreds of thousands of cattle, buried in blizzards froze to death; at New York city’s record snow of 1947; in 1970 when a huge cyclone hit Ganges delta with winds upto 150 kmph and a 50-ft high sea wave : about 300,000 to 500,000 were killed, thousands more died later of typhoid and cholera; in 1977 when after 4 snowstorms in 2 months, Buffalo, NY was hit by the the 17-hour “Great Blizzard of 77; in 1979 when 3 twisters combined into one giant tornado and hit Wichita Falls; in 1991 when “Tornado Alley” was hit by several twisters some with winds clocking 450 kmph and many others [1].

 


The Full Moon of June 22 has the same stars of Corvus on the descendant so that above also applies. 

[1] Secrets of the Ancient Skies; Diana K. Rosenberg (v.2, p.82)


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