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The arms of this 'man' (GD15) resemble bird's wings. There were 'bird-men' on Rapa Nui. Though I don't think GD15 represents such a 'bird-man'. But the wings presumably signify birdlike properties. Gods can fly, men cannot (except rarely and then only by the help of gods).

Struggling with how to write about GD74 in my dictionary, I have decided to write about the Rapa Nui 'bird-men' in that connection. GD74 has the same type of winglike arms as GD15.

In Tihuanacu condor heads were used as astronomical signs. I am rereading Posnansky and he has found that the solstices (geographically seen = the Tropics of Cancer and Capricornus) were indicated by big crowned condor-king heads.

Inside the tropics sun sometimes is at zenith, outside never. I think about my ideas about the zenith bird (GD11). In Hancock 3 there is a picture of a benben stone and a hieroglyph sign very close to the 'Staicase Sign' associated with the benben stone.

Everything is reflected in everything; a great tangle of ideas:

"The subject has the nature of a hologram, something that has to be present as a whole to the mind.1

1 In optics, 'hologram' is the interference patterns of light with itself; i.e., every part of an image is displayed at every point, as if every point looked at every source of light."

 (Hamlet's Mill)