DAMON ELKINS

During his appearance on coast to Coast with George Noory, Lloyd Pye discussed for the first time new research being conducted by Damon Elkins (www.damonelkins.com). Damon has spent years researching and formulating theories about Intervention, Sumer, Nibiru, the Anunnaki, and the work of Zecharia Sitchin. The following pictures will complement and illustrate the specific areas of Damon's discussed on Coast to Coast. Some pictures may take a little time to load, please be patient. To read the full article by Damon Elkins, CLICK HERE, or visit Damon's NEW website www.damonelkins.com

Click one of the following to view:

OUR POSITION IN THE GALAXY

FARNESE ATLAS

BABYLONIAN STAR MAP

TEMPLE OF DENDERAH

 

This is our Galaxy, the Milky Way, note the axis' running through it, and the positioning of the sphere in the lower part of the image, to the right of center. That is the area of our solar system.

 

This is a closer view of our position in the Milky Way, again note the axis. Now you are positioned outside the sphere. We sit in the middle of that sphere, looking out, so when we look at most star maps, even spherical ones, we are looking at the view from INSIDE the sphere.

 

 

This is the Farnese Atlas. It is a statue of the Greek god Atlas, holding the "sky" in the shape of a globe on his shoulders. On the globe are depicted the various constellations, but what is significant is their position in the "sky." This statue is believed to have originated around 200 BC, yet the constellations are lined up exactly as they would be if you were looking up at them from Ancient Athens in the year 1BC. For a more detailed explanation, CLICK HERE.

 The artist who created the globe somehow knew how the constellations would look from inside the sphere (where Earth is) at that point in time, then imagined them as they would look from outside the sphere, far out in space, and depicted them that way. Bear in mind, this sculpture was constructed in a time when science believed the earth was flat and the center of the universe. How did the artist know these things?

 

Rear view of Farnese
 Atlas

 

 

The images on this Babylonian clay disc, estimated to be from around 1000BC, represent a sky map. The disc, or "planisphere" shows galactic center and anticenter, and a view of the heavens from below Earth, out in space, looking past Earth. How did these "primitive" people know these things?

 

This is an illustration showing the markings on the Babylonian clay disc (above).

 

 

This is the ceiling of the Temple of Denderah in Egypt, one of the first temples dedicated to the Sky goddess, Hathor (the female figure to the right of the image is Nut, the sky goddess). The green colored symbols in the circle to the left represent the constellations of the eliptic, shown with the axis through them. This relates to Damon Elkins' work establishing the orbital path of Nibiru. For more information READ HIS ARTICLE, or visit Damon's NEW website www.damonelkins.com

 

This is an expanded view of the ceiling, fully colored to make it easier to see. Again, all of the constellations are represented in as close to their positions in the sky as stylistically possible within the boundaries of the artwork. What makes this significant is that this is not how the constellations look from Earth. This is how they look from space, looking past Earth towards the galactic pole. One symbol, the Bird on what looks like a bat lying horizontally in the middle far right of the picture, does NOT represent a constellation. This again relates to Damon Elkins' work establishing the orbital path of Nibiru. For more information, READ HIS ARTICLE, or visit Damon's NEW website www.damonelkins.com

 

 

The Positions of the Constellations on the Farnese Atlas Globe

"Skyglobe" is a Shareware program that has the ability to display the constellations in their positions in the sky as we would see them at various points in time. CLICK FOR A FREE DOWNLOAD

"In SkyGlobe, if you set time to winter solstice 1 BC 6:13 am, and place of viewing to Athens, your view to the south is as seen on the right half of the composite sketch. Then resetting the time to 6:13 pm, you see what is on the left half. In those views the equator is on the horizontal and the ecliptic is at the equator on right and left of both views. On the celestial sphere globe shown in the sculpture, the relative location and orientation of the constellations are "reversed" to the view we see from the "inside" of the sphere.

In short, the hemisphere seen at 6:13 pm can be reversed (becoming convex) and overlaid onto the hemisphere seen at 6:13 am (concave) resulting in a composite "sphere" just as one sees a transparent celestial sphere globe.
Reversing both layers is like turning the globe 180 degrees so that you see the other side.....just as you physically see the sphere on the shoulders in the sculpture."

-Damon Elkins

 

All Original Material Copyright 2007

© Lloyd Pye, © Damon Elkins