According to a page at haati:
And now it can be added: The glyph which has a parallel position in A, number 16 counted from Aa2-33, is Aa2-48 - where 24 * 8 = 192:
And 2 * 48 = 96 is half 192. Adding another 96 glyphs to Aa2-48 will move us to number 90 + 48 + 96 = 234 (counted from Aa1-1), viz. to Aa3-59, a glyph which is locted 5 glyphs earlier than the 'cosmic tree producing an egg':
Aa3-64 could refer to day number 182 (= half 364), in which case Aa3-59 will represent a.m. of day 360 / 2 = 180 and Rogo in Aa3-67 a.m. of day 184. Counting 2 glyphs per day would also make Aa2-48 refer to day (90 + 48) / 2 = 69. According to the structure of G, where 1 glyph stands for 1 day, it would correspond to Ga1-5:
Vaero in Aa2-45 clearly refers to a cardinal point. Aa2-45 together with Aa2-46 define it as day number 68 and both glyphs illustrate a gap in time. Metoro expressed it clearly at Aa2-49: ma te nuku vae, i.e. the nuku season (autumn or winter) is leaving (vae). Day 68 in G is a vaha mea glyph, the red opening at the beginning of spring. In Aa2-45 this idea is illustrated by the opening in front at the bottom of vaero. |