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View Full Version : Astral Walker: 2012 nexus event and the gathering


Vanhalla
2009-01-01, 21:54
http://projectcamelot.net/astralwalker.html

I heard about this sometime back in November but never got around to reading it.
It was a thread created by Astralwalker over at Projectavelon, Project Camelot has now made a free pdf (330p) that contains all of the information of that thread.

I've only read the first part so far.
Some of it I knew about, and a lot of it I didn't know about.

It is interesting I found this today because he was talking about "Hunab Ku" which to the Mayans represented the Supreme Creator and the source from which consciousness comes.

No images exist of Hunab Ku because the Ultimate Force that cyclically influences life in the Galaxy through the Galactic Core cannot be made into a visual form.

He says there is a high possibility that the black hole in the center of the Milky Way represents a portal into a higher Universe which possesses a completely different reality.

I said that was interesting because of the synchronicity that occurred. Yesterday I was learning about ascended masters and their role in relation to the planetary logos, this morning, a few hours before I found this I was reading about the cosmic master (part of the cosmic hierarchy that is spawned from the rays leaving the prisim that was hit by the Light of the Cosmic Logos) Averan whose home is in the center of the galaxy. He works with the light of creation, disseminateing it out into the planets of this galaxy. I was meditating upon that concept then a few hours later I find this e-book.

This book has a vast amount of information pertaining to 2012 and this mysterious energy that is ever increasing.


Also as a bonus, there is another free book in that link.

countdown2chaos
2009-01-02, 00:08
Thanks for sharing Vanhalla, I read the front page, interesting; I'll have to dive into the book sometime later this week though too busy to read it right now. However, point out anything noteworthy you've read so far so I can see exactly what I'm gonna get into reading. ;)

Vanhalla
2009-01-02, 18:44
I own the book "Cosmos: A Field Guide", it normally costs 50 euro, but I found it in the bargin books section at Boarders for $20 a long time ago.
Lots and lots of awesome pictures and information.

I was reading about the Milky Way galaxy and the galactic core this morning. I wrote down some notes as I read, paraphrasing what was said in the book, I'll share what I wrote down with you guys because it is very interesting and I think everyone deserves to know this stuff.

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/31TFHBAT97L._SL500_AA240_.jpg

http://www.cbc.ca/quirks/archives/06-07/images/MilkyWayGalaxyNASA.jpg

100,000 light years in diameter
For the most part a few thousand light years thick.
Takes the form of a thin disk with an ovoid bulge.

http://tbn1.google.com/images?q=tbn:f6eBc87BQs9z2M:http://cseligman.com/text/galaxies/milkyway051004.jpg

Spiral arms wrap around this disk originating in the core.
Spiral arms are inhabited by star-forming nebulae and open clusters, hot and brilliant young stars. http://www.sitterson.net/fellows/M45_640X511.jpg
The space between are filled with nebuae and more sedate - long lived stars.

The sun sits midway between the Orion and Perseus spiral arms. Above and below the galactic plane is a rough spherical region called the halo. Here dwells runaway stars and lost planets. However, globular clusters (huge balls of hundreds of thousands of aging stars) live here too.
http://www.news.wisc.edu/newsphotos/images/SALT_PR47TUC_05.jpg

The Galaxy spins about its center, each star following its own orbit around the core. When you think of a hiearchy in the form of a spiral, the old, out dated image of hiearchy vanishes and a new, more relevant for the age we are in appears.

The sun lies approximately 26,000 light years from the center of the galaxy and moves along its orbit at about 780,000 KPH (485,000 Mph) completing a circuit every 230 million years.
100,000 X .5 = 50,000
It looks like we are in the center of the galaxy (in relation to the center) after all.
[take that carl sagan!]

Distant stars move slower, taking longer to complete there orbits. Those closer to the hub move far more quickly.
Stars in the hub are not flatened into a single plane and can be far more eliptical, and far more crowded together. The ovoid shape is the end result of all these varied overlapping orbits.

Towards the core, space becomes increasingly crowded with stars, nebulae, and exotic objects. Huge star clouds block our view of this region, but by looking beyond the visual spectrum, the veil can be lifted.

The closer to the center, the faster the orbit. This pattern makes sense because the stars are moving like a planet around a vast concentration of mass. This pattern continues into the hub, so something very dense and massive must be in the center.

Although black holes are "just a theory", a giant black hole is the only candidate for what this could be.

Fortunately the Milky Way's Supermassive black hole is a sleeping giant. Probably born in the early days of the universe from the collapse of a vast gas cloud that became dense enough to wrap an event horizon around itself. The black hole has swept the region of gas, dust, and stars long ago. Anything that survives in this region of space is far enough and fast enough to avoid being pulled to its doom. The only evidence of its presence is its gravitational effect and the faint glow of radio waves from gas and dust as its heated to extreme temperatures and sucked in.

http://www.seedmagazine.com/news/uploads/BlackHole.jpg

http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/207940main_bh_spin_665x322.jpg

Beyond its grasp lie several brilliant star clusters, containing some of the most massive stars in the galaxy. So massive in fact that they should have blown them selves apart in the process of formation (according to current ideas of star birth). The best explanations is that they are stellar cannibal.

http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/screen/opo9930b.jpg

http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/large/opo9930c.jpg

350 light years from the center lies a pair of gas clouds that emit high-energy gamma radiation.

Between them lies the Great Annihilator (huge black hole). Thought to weigh as much as 100 suns (rich diet of gas clouds or merged with several smaller black holes) the Annihilator blasts out twin jets of anti-matter particles. Where these streams meet with normal matter, they are literally annihilated, disappearing in a last of gamma radiation.

http://regmedia.co.uk/2006/05/11/gamma_ray_burst_host_galaxies.jpg

http://news.softpedia.com/images/news2/Gamma-Ray-Burst-Brightest-in-the-Universe-2.jpg

http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2003/0203long/0203long_xray_jet_label.jpg

The Great Annihilator is a dwarf replica of the central black hole. It reminds us how much more violent our galaxy's heart was in the past when it still had material to feed on.


http://lh3.ggpht.com/_cWUkQgWmIyU/RxKh3baT0mI/AAAAAAAAADs/ZaV02-LpKco/astronomyGalaxyM82GalacticShower.jpg

dummy
2009-01-02, 20:29
thanks a lot