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Celtic door arch at Roquepertuse with niches for heads.
A cephalophore is a saint who is depicted as carrying his or her own head....There are many cephalophores; France alone boasts one hundred and thirty-four. Perhaps the French prediliction for cephalophores reflects some Gallic racial memory of ancestral Celts who were notorious head-hunters.
originally posted by: Wifibrains
Hi op. nice thread. I love looking at aincient symbols and artefacts, pondering over the meaning of the mysterious.
The first picture, V rod, looks to me like a depiction of the souls travel down to earth and back up again... The knotted area could represent the quantum space/connection of the material realm.
I think it has something to do with rebirth, Wifi is saying cosmic ray and Log is saying day/night duality, which is similar to life/death etc. Is a cosmic ray death-related or would it have another meaning, Wifi?
(Scientist at Nottingham uni)
"The bridge that forms and connects the two regions has to be stable.
The way you have to do it is to have some form of very exotic matter.
It has to have negative energy, essentially a negative mass.
The general idea is you have to do something a bit unusual for them to exist."
originally posted by: Wifibrains
Nothing can escape the infinity of a black hole.
Nothing moves faster than light!
[According to Einstein's theory of special relativity, published in 1905, nothing can exceed the speed of light. That speed, explained Einstein, is a fundamental constant of nature: It appears the same to all observers anywhere in space.]
originally posted by: Wifibrains
a reply to: Logarock
For some reason I just don't think that is what these symbols represent.
I still think the z rod is related to cosmic ray and the double disk has something to do with either a seperation or connection... Both? That is what it says to me!
A simple cross or four spoke wheel would be used as a symbol for the seasonal quarters/equinox/solstice surely?
For a period during spring, at the right time in the morning the sun can be seen shining straight through the archway of St Michael’s Tower. I planned this image very carefully, working out when would be the best date range to try the picture. The sun needed to reach the right height at the right time to be positioned in the middle of the entrance to the tower. Luckily a window of clear skies coincided with the right time of year so I was able to successfully photograph my idea.
originally posted by: Wifibrains
a reply to: Logarock
Reminds me of the double slit experiment but with one slit.