zoidberg
Well-Known Member
There are lots of Tides Data Tables. Some of them even fit onto a smartphone. How about this....
Yesterday we looked at the Aubrey Holes as a lunar–eclipse calculator — a machine for predicting when Sun, Moon and nodes line up.
Update: The Stonehenge “Computer” Just Got Even More Interesting![]()
Today we push it one step further.
And suddenly Stonehenge looks even more like the work of a maritime civilisation.
The same 56-hole system that can spot eclipse seasons also tracks the geometry that controls:
We’ve adapted the model — and it works better for tides than eclipses.![]()
This isn’t speculation — it’s physics:
- spring & neap tides
- super-tides (perigean spring tides)
- the 18.6-year nodal tide cycle
- dangerous surge periods in estuaries
- windows where long-distance sea travel is safest
And what does the 56-hole Aubrey computer track?
- Syzygy (Sun–Moon in line) → biggest tides
- Moon near a node → tides get more extreme
- Moon at perigee → extreme spring tides
- Node drifting through its 18.6-year cycle → multi-decade tide shifts
Syzygy. Nodes. Declination. Long cycles.
Exactly the ingredients of a tidal-risk predictor.
When you map the four-marker system onto modern tidal behaviour:
So what did we discover?![]()
In other words:
- It predicts tidal danger windows better than eclipse windows.
- It gives advance warning of super-tide eras.
- It flags seasonal periods when sailing is safe or hazardous.
- It creates a multi-decadal memory of flood cycles — vital in a wetland world.
It works more accurately as a maritime computer than as an eclipse oracle.![]()
Plato describes a civilisation that:
Now look at Plato again…![]()
A machine that tracks:
- travelled by boat to all the known world,
- lived on low-lying islands,
- relied on precise knowledge of water, tides and weather,
- and possessed “advanced knowledge” that later peoples lost.
…is exactly the kind of tool a maritime “Atlantis-era” society would create.
- tidal extremes,
- safe sailing seasons,
- 18.6-year surge cycles,
- and long-distance navigation windows…
If Stonehenge Phase 1 was built in a water-rich Mesolithic landscape (as the archaeology actually shows), then this interpretation makes far more sense than any farming calendar ever did.![]()
It’s becoming clear:
Stonehenge wasn’t built for wheat.
It was built for water.
And its first phase looks like the world’s oldest tidal navigation computer.
Credit: Robert John Langdon