North Star - God C

If The Earth Were Hit by a Meteorite. . . .

Listening to Star Date, an informative program on the radio by the University of Texas at Austin, I heard this evening that if a meteorite would hit us, it would have to be almost as large as the moon in order to shift us even a few degrees off our rotation.

Apparently, astronomers have never sand-blasted a glass to etch a design or a ping-pong ball to see if it would turn in the air. There is a lot to be learned from simple ordinary tasks before one begins to explore the universe. Sand-blasting is not an important task, nor a very difficult one, except when one is cleaning the sides of buildings. For glassware or ping pong balls, it is an artistic endeavor or something that is just plain fun.

What do glasses or ping pong balls have to do with astronomy? By nature, very little. Yet, the first time I questioned the action of a fallen meteorite, I was told that a meteorite was comparatively no larger than a grain of sand (the meteor) against a ping-pong ball (the earth). I was told that it would have absolutely no effect on the small plastic ball.

It was not until I heard the radio program that I remembered the sand blasting equipment for etching glasses that I had used many years ago. Many grains of sand, blown against glass objects onto a masked area, produced a very attractive icy white scarring. They did not move the glasses being etched.

This would prove that astronomers have been correct in their assumption that a simple meteorite, even a fairly large one like the one found in China carved into the shape of a ox1, would not affect the earth, except to add a hole in the ground and some extra weight.2 Extra weight our builders put on every time they build a skyscraper or large building. However, in the architect's world, this weight is only shifted from one (or several) location(s) of the world to another.

Drawing out the iconography of several Mexican Codices, I discovered that the North Star moved out of its house and was replaced by another star form. The glyphs that accompanied this transition showed a small bar or pole behind the ear of the North Star glyph face. I was reminded of the story of the Monkey King in China. In the Oriental story, this anthropomorphic figure stole a very large pole from the God under the Sea and tucked in magically into his ear to be used (full size) when needed.

This scenario was almost the same as that which I drew out in the Codex. The Messenger God (D) of the Night (the Moon (?)) informed God C (the North Star) that he had to move. The replacement star form was aided by another God (F) of War doing honor to a shell-like bodiless creature called the God of Death. The text glyph of the North Star is drawn with a pole (or fire stick) behind his head.

During the Middle Ages, 0°00'00" was 22° 54' west of Lisbon, or in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. From where did the Chinese get the story? It is said to have arrived from across the Eastern Sea together with the T'ang Dynasty rulers. The Chinese are practical people. They do not believe in unexplainable magic, but they do believe in magicians who are experts in their field. Sun Wu Kong (the Monkey King from the East) then had to be a great magician who could make a large item become small and return it to its natural state at will.

So much for the story line. Astronomy, on the other hand, does not tell stories about monkey shaped stars. They are even more practical than the Chinese people. If a meteorite would fall to earth (and between 1,000 and 10,000 tons per year land regularly2), then it would have to be a very large asteroid or a heavenly body almost as large as our moon in order for it to affect our world.

The astronomers forgot about the ping-pong ball. Even 10,000 tons of meteorites landing one at a time on our earth does not affect its rotation, but if there was a constant barrage of "sand" on a specific path across the face of our planet, then one can expect some sort of a shift off the normal axis. Many myths around the world mention a great northwest wind. Some cultures created a god of this event, others just ignored it as bad weather. The Chinese version shows the winds coming from the Monkey King (the North Star in Maya and Aztec cultures). The Meso-American cultures created gods called in Aztec Quetzalcoatl (as Ehécatl) and in Maya Kulkulkan, with a separate star form known as God C.

The rest of the world has only myths to substantiate the event, but the North Americans have the geology of the land which infers that this meteorite fall-out, which came from the Northwest, dropped fragments from Alaska, in a southeast direction through the Carolinas and as far away as the Southwestern coast of Africa. We cannot believe it because it occurred before our present memories and written histories.

We have all the evidence. We have all the technical data, so we know that our written histories are absolute. There never was any great meteorite fall-out that could possibly shift our world out of kilter. The event had to occur 65 million years ago, give or take a few thousand.

The question that remains, is if the above date is true, then why do we know there was a shift in the earth? Is it only through geomagnetic finds? And even if the geomagnetism is correct, why are there inscriptions in the Americas that tell us about this "war of the heavens?"

Confirmation of this stellar event is also in most mythologies and/or religions in the world. Yet, our superior knowledge of the earth hinders our understanding of the event--an event that did not happen within our lifetime. Who were the ancient observers of this event? And where is the full story written?

The question that remains is: What would happen if the earth were peppered by a multitude of meteorites along a given path? Can we guesstimate the result with our technology?


  1. China Daily, October 29, 1985, p. 3, Four ton rock in shape of crouching ox worshipped for centuries in a Buddhist temple in South Shandong district is identified as a stone iron (siderolite) meteorite. has nickel- iron and silicates in it. It crashed to earth about 1000 years ago before the T'ang Dynasty (618 - 907). The Temple of the Iron Ox was built around it in the Yuan Dynasty (1271 - 1368) in Junan County. Only 64 such meteorites known in world. Historical records mention several meteorites fell in Junan county. It is near Kaifeng.
  2. Family Circle, May 15, 1990, p. 10 Ask a Silly Question. . .Q. Does the earth weigh any more now than it did 50 years ago? A. Every year 1,000 to 10,000 tons of meteors and other particles from space bombard the earth. But our experts would only quesstimate that the earth weighs 75,000 to 540,000 tons more than it did in 1940.


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