TAHUA
 

39   But even on Easter Island the night side of the sky had to be at the opposite side of the sunny side. Which means the star watchers ought rather to try to see Argo Navis in their high summer (December-January) rather then in midwinter.

Ora, December, January. Ora nui, November, October.

MAY 17 (*57) → 2 * 29 = 58 19 (322 - 183) 20 ( 136 + 4)
Ga2-27 (→ 3 * 19 = 57) Ga2-28 Ga2-29 Ga3-1 (60)
July 20 (136 + 65) 21 22 / 7 (*123) 23 (204)
IDEALLY CLOSE TO THE FULL MOON:
NAOS = ζ Puppis ρ Puppis (*122.0) TEGMINE = ζ Cancri RAS ALGETHI
NOV 16 (320) 17 (*241) 18 (322) → 9 *  27 = 243
Jan 19 (*304) 20 21 22
MAY 21 (*61) 22 23 24 (144)
Ga3-2 (61) Ga3-3 Ga3-4 Ga3-5 (64)
July 24 (*125) 25 26 27 (208)
IDEALLY CLOSE TO THE FULL MOON:
 BRIGHT FIRE = λ Cancri ('125.4) AVIOR = ε Carinae ('126.4) ο URSAE MAJORIS ('127.4) *128
NOV 20 21 (325) 22 23
Jan 23 24 25 (*310) 26

And then the phenomenon of less heat in the air beyond midsummer would mean accumulating rain clouds.

... The life-force of the earth is water. God moulded the earth with water. Blood too he made out of water. Even in a stone there is this force, for there is moisture in everything. But if Nummo is water, it also produces copper. When the sky is overcast, the sun's rays may be seen materializing on the misty horizon. These rays, excreted by the spirits, are of copper and are light. They are water too, because they uphold the earth's moisture as it rises. The Pair excrete light, because they are also light' ... 'The sun's rays,' he went on, 'are fire and the Nummo's excrement. It is the rays which give the sun its strength. It is the Nummo who gives life to this star, for the sun is in some sort a star.' It was difficult to get him to explain what he meant by this obscure statement. The Nazarene made more than one fruitless effort to understand this part of the cosmogony; he could not discover any chink or crack through which to apprehend its meaning. He was moreover confronted with identifications which no European, that is, no average rational European, could admit. He felt himself humiliated, though not disagreeably so, at finding that his informant regarded fire and water as complementary, and not as opposites. The rays of light and heat draw the water up, and also cause it to descend again in the form of rain. That is all to the good. The movement created by this coming and going is a good thing. By means of the rays the Nummo draws out, and gives back the life-force. This movement indeed makes life ...

... It was 4 August 1968, and it was the feast day of Saint Dominic, patron of Santo Domingo Pueblo, southwest of Santa Fe. At one end of the hot, dusty plaza, a Dominican priest watched nervously as several hundred dancers arranged in two long rows pounded the earth with their moccasined feet as a mighty, collective prayer for rain, accompanied by the powerful baritone singing of a chorus and the beat of drums. As my family and I viewed this, the largest and in some ways the most impressive Native American public ceremony, a tiny cloud over the Jémez Mountains to the northwest got larger and larger, eventually filling up the sky; at last the storm broke, and the sky was crisscrossed by lightning and the pueblo resounded with peals of rolling thunder ...

Late in January they could in principle also have observed the first star in Itzam-Yeh = Ursa Major, viz. ο (the little egg):

However, Easter Island is located so far down in the south that such observations could not occur.

We can compare the design of Ga3-4 with that of Gb4-3:

MAY 23 (143 = 207 + 64) *260 FEBR 7 (403 = 467 - 64)
Ga3-4 (63) Gb4-3 (323)
July 26 (207) → 22 / 7 - 1 April 12 (365 + 102 = 467)
Jan 24 Oct 11 (467 - 183 = 284)
NOV 21 (325) AUG 8 (220 → π)

... The secret sense of 22 - sacred numbers were never chosen haphazardly - is that it is the measure of the circumference of the circle when the diameter is 7. This proportion, now known as pi, is no longer a religious secret; and is used today only as a rule-of-thumb formula, the real mathematical value of pi being a decimal figure which nobody has yet been able work out because it goes on without ever ending, as 22 / 7 does, in a neat recurring sequence [3.142857142857 ...]. Seven lustra add up to thirty-five years, and thirty-five at Rome was the age at which a man was held to reach his prime and might be elected Consul ...

 

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