The discharge instability of the axial current feeding the Earth’s magnetic field was commonly interpreted in rock art lore as the abstract “anthropomorph”, the “lizard”, the “turtle”, the “stick man”, the “squatter”, the man with a staff, or “Kokopelli”. Other ancient cultures remembered the axial current as a tree, a bird, a dragon, or a snake.29

 

                                            

   Petroglyphs, La Cieneguilla Site                                                                                                             Petroglyphs, Mimbres Valley

 

 

According to Peratt,30 petroglyphs or pictographs such as ladders, caterpillars, centipedes, and abstract lattices or nettings record a plasma configuration that was “...about to undergo an intense transformation that could [have been] deadly for humans exposed to its radiation.”31 These specific rock art symbols became prehistoric icons representing extreme transformation. 

 

 

                                                                

     Mogollon Red pictographs, Spirit Canyon                                                                                        Mogollon Red pictographs, Trail to the Past

 

 

Peratt32 concluded that petroglyphs were produced during twilight and at dawn when it’s dark enough to see Auroras and plasma spirits, and bright enough to focus on creating art.

 

Early Paleolithic rock art displaying chevrons, curved wavy lines and triangles are recognized as signs of Earth goddess worship.33

 

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