planetmotion
Well-known member
This popped into my inbox and I couldn't resist sharing, as it got me thinking not just about the last degree of the Sun in Scorpio, but how Jupiter conjunct Pluto makes everything so dramatically huge! And how Mars rex is often about digging up the past history, especially in a (wide) water trine between Mars, Uranus, Nodes, and the Sun.
A truly fascinating find:
This note about the anaretic is from:
chiron-communications
[FONT=Verdana, Helvetica, Arial]Hmmm – This news was released today, just as the Sun reached 29 degrees of Scorpio – the Anarectic degree -- a planet's final opportunity to express itself through the energy field of the sign!
FYI, S.
[/FONT]Man-sized sea scorpion claw found
Source: BBC News
Wednesday, 21 November 2007
Man-sized sea scorpion claw found
The immense fossilised claw of a 2.5m-long (8ft) sea
scorpion has been described by European researchers.
The 390-million-year-old specimen was found in a Germany
quarry, the journal Biology Letters reports.
The creature, which has been named Jaekelopterus
rhenaniae, would have paddled in a river or swamp.
The size of the beast suggests that spiders, insects, crabs
and similar creatures were much larger in the past than
previously thought, the team says.
Read more: at the bbc 's website
:33:
(apologies am not permitted to post url's as I am new to the forum)
A truly fascinating find:
This note about the anaretic is from:
chiron-communications
[FONT=Verdana, Helvetica, Arial]Hmmm – This news was released today, just as the Sun reached 29 degrees of Scorpio – the Anarectic degree -- a planet's final opportunity to express itself through the energy field of the sign!
FYI, S.
[/FONT]Man-sized sea scorpion claw found
Source: BBC News
Wednesday, 21 November 2007
Man-sized sea scorpion claw found
The immense fossilised claw of a 2.5m-long (8ft) sea
scorpion has been described by European researchers.
The 390-million-year-old specimen was found in a Germany
quarry, the journal Biology Letters reports.
The creature, which has been named Jaekelopterus
rhenaniae, would have paddled in a river or swamp.
The size of the beast suggests that spiders, insects, crabs
and similar creatures were much larger in the past than
previously thought, the team says.
Read more: at the bbc 's website
:33:
(apologies am not permitted to post url's as I am new to the forum)