Symbol 14:10

14:10 ·
A more circular and
closer drawn version of the above entry sign
is
seen on many neolithic rock carvings. Until recently the meaning of
this ideogram eluded researchers, but things have now changed. On
rock carvings in Scandinavia one often finds signs which look like a
strange type of boats or sleighs with short vertical lines on them.
They have hitherto been interpreted as representing people. Together
with them a lot of small, round signs, and the ideogram
, can be seen. Why would people, thousands of years ago,
hire rock carvers to work for long hours with the carving of these,
seemingly rather meaningless pictures of ships or sleighs together
with small, round signs and
, in hard rock, as if
they were messages important enough for posterity to be made to last
thousands of years? Why did neolithic men think these pictures should
be conveyed over eons to posterity?
A breakthrough in the understandning of these strange ideograms
seems to have been made in 1991. An archaeologist got the idea that
the small, round signs on those rock carvings could be signs for stars
in the sky. He fed the structures of some of the rock carvings into a
computer and had the computer to compare them with representations of
the constantly changing structure of the constellations of the
brightests stars of the sky, century for century for some thousands of
years. What he found was that the rock carvings were documentations of
the configurations of the visible planets and the brightest of the
fixed stars at times of total solar eclipses.
Thus the sign
might mean the eclipsed sun.
Compare with the American Indian ideogram
in Group 54, and with
in Group 42.



