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rangler said:Rigmover,
I did break it down to a smaller post now,thanks for the suggestion,
and will post the rest later
as needed, I was just adamant about staying on thread with the data here.
Certain people want to stray from the topic, this aint no history hunter thread
this is Treasure Signs and Symbols 101, Please let keep the focus.
In true Jesuit tradition, one sign is used to mean one or two different
things...example
Ⓒ2005-all rights reserved-rangler
The owl and the rabbit-see em?
1. The M stands for Roman Numeral 1000
2. The M stands for the Owl of Minerva
3. The M stands for Travel On, simulated mountain range
They did like the concept of the Trinity, so when you decode one sign
remember there are likely a couple more subtle meanings.......
rangler
rangler said:Ris,
I continue to research the Epsilon idea, some say in certain context, that is means, 'minimum' as in the 'cost is epsilon' , also it is the 5th letter of the Greek Alphabet...so
this would be a good stand in for the number 5 if it was a distance...and the metal silver..
so some uses inside the code are possible...add this to the fact that most sign have a 'trinity' aspect - that is 3 meaning attached to some signs...
now all we need is a actual photo of it in use...if your paranoid of posting the pic you have, make a crude drawing in paint.net to show the concept..
thanks for your input,
always like to push the envelope of known signs and symbols..
rangler
Ris said:Twisted, how are you determining which corner is #1, which is #2, and which is #3? By the shape of the triangle?
Shortstack said:Poorfarm:
The horse's eye, in that close up photo, is very interesting. It sure looks detailed. I wonder how it was shaped and to WHAT actual shape.
That blazed area on the tree trunk might be a running rabbit that has his ears up and alert. What do ya think?