Abstract

An analysis of more than 375 ancient locations in the Levant was performed to assess the alignment of sites and structures relative to the current and former locations of the geographic pole. A small fraction of the sites had clear rectilinear features/structures suitable for aerial analysis. Of those about a third of the sites are oriented either along cardinal directions or in directions of solstices or lunar standstills. The remainder (almost twice as many) appear to be aligned relative to the directions of former poles in Hudson Bay, the Norwegian Sea, northern Greenland, and the Bering Sea, which according to Charles Hapgood’s theory of earth crustal displacement, suggests the possibility that these sites may have been first established 12,000 to 130,000 years ago.

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