I
saw the crop circle
Devils Den, nr Clatford, Wiltshire. Reported 20th July.
And
is reminds me of a symbol I found earlier at
http://www.symbols.com
Maybe it can inspire someone
14:2 ·
A
variation of the preceding entry sign
consists
in fact of two interconnected
,
that is
spirals with clockwise
rotation (from the centre seen).
,
made up not by lines but by rows of dots, has been found
engraved on an amulet of mammoth tooth which is 24,000 years
old, and thus must have been engraved by Cro-Magnon mammoth
hunters. The sign
,
often used to denote the
sun, is at the
centre of the amulet, with two
on
each side of it.
During the Bronze Age
was
an often used graphic structure for decorations of artefacts
of all types.
In
ancient
Greece
it was common on vases and amphoras, and often signified
water or the
sea.
By
looking it up I saw this one, to me connected to
Honey Street, Nr Alton Barnes, Wiltshire.
Reported 4th
July.

08:3 ·
In
Anglo-Saxon meteorology several dots together can mean
different types of rain.
The ideogram consisting of three points arranged
triangularly is used in mathematics and geometry between
other signs, and then means
thus,
consequently,
because of, or
therefore.
In British meteorology it has been used to denote
continuous moderate
raining.
The same sign tattooed on the skin between the forefinger
and the thumb is known as
hobo dots in
Sweden, and probably has a protective significance. The
three hobo dots
are said to be symbols of
faith, hope and love.
Compare with
in
Group 26.
On US maps
is
sometimes used to signify a
ruin. In other
contexts the sign has been used to represent
silver.
Dots
arranged in a triangular form was a common sign in alchemy
for sand or
gravel. This
triangle
of dots
often was crowned with a cross, like in
.
According to Diderot's Encyclopedia three dots in a
triangular arrangement meant
oil, but oil
normally was represented by signs like
.
Both
signs are connected to water…. A coincidence
John Broeckaert (NL)
Picture of the day July 31, 2008 is
the July 20, 2008 Crop Circle called Devil's Dan, I
think.
HERE
W. Nathan Saunders