
Striations in an electrical
discharge tube filled with hydrogen.
The left portion is 45.7 centimetres
long, the right one 44.4 centimetres.
The small tube terminates in a
point, the large one in a ring. In
the image on top, the point is
positively charged, producing 62
disc-shaped strata in the small tube
and 12 saucer-shaped ones in the
large one. Below, the point is
negatively charged, producing 54
disc-shaped strata in the small tube
and 13 saucer-shaped ones in the
large one. The strata in the small
tube were blue, but at times, with a
large current, carmine. Copied from
photographs, obtained in
respectively 15 and 10 seconds. ©
Warren de la Rue and Hugo W. Müller,
1878
Shots in the Dark Part One
Mar 25, 2011
The mythical landscape is
replete with structures alien to the
familiar terrestrial environment
today.
The term "anomaly" is hardly
appropriate for such forms, as it
falsely suggests that they
constitute a minority. Instead, it
would be more accurate to say that
puzzling apparitions dominate the
scene conjured up in traditional
tales. One example of such a
mysterious object is the so-called
chain of arrows or spears, a
concatenation of arrows, or
spearheads, each lodging in the butt
of the one preceding it, that is
suspended from the sky downwards.
Countless myths tell how one or a
group of mythical beings brought
this curious formation into being,
usually in the bygone days of
"creation." For example, the Kaurna
tribe, of the Adelaide Plains of
South Australia, told that a certain
Monana “was one day throwing large
spears in various directions, east,
west, north, south; when, having
thrown one upwards, it did not
return to the earth. He then threw
another, and another, and so
continued throwing; each spear
sticking fast to the former one
until they reached the ground …”
The lowest segment, required to link
the formation to the surface of the
earth, tends to be described as
crescentic in form, such as a hook,
a bow or the upper half of a bird’s
beak. Thus, in traditions from the
Kutenai, of Idaho, Montana, and
British Columbia, “a chain of
arrows” is formed by the primordial
animals, “which Raven completes by
putting his beak in the nock of the
last arrow.”
Some traditions intimate that the
arrowheads or their correlates,
having lodged together, were
securely fastened to each other so
as to form a veritable "rope" or
"chain." The transition may be
accompanied by a shaking of the
string. In an account from the
Kwā´g˙uł, of northern Vancouver
Island, a chain of arrows was
fabricated by a certain
L!ē´sElag˙iɛla alias
"Born-to-be-the-Sun":
“… he strung his bow, and
Born-to-be-the-Sun shot (his arrow)
against the upper world. Then he
shot another arrow, and still
another one, and yet another. Now he
had shot all the four arrows.
Born-to-be-the-Sun had not looked up
long when the arrows came sticking
one into the other and struck the
ground. They began to stretch out.
Then Born-to-be-the-Sun took them
and shook them, and they became a
rope.”
In some accounts, the loosely
embedded constituents of the column
subsequently undergo a physical
transformation at the expense of the
flexibility that typifies a rope or
chain; a solid, collinear structure
results when a vertical cross-bar
strings the superimposed
constituents of the cable together
and flattened extensions emerge from
both sides. For instance, a Kutenai
story-teller spoke of “the
arrows, which are transformed into a
mountain”, identified as Mount
Baker, near Cranbrook, British
Columbia.
More frequently, the "freezing" of
the arrows is stated to have
produced a "ladder" or a "stairway."
The Tlingit, of the extreme
northwestern coast of British
Columbia, report that the son of a
great chief woke up to find the
chain of arrows he had produced
transformed: “After a while he
awoke, found himself sleeping on
that hill, remembered the arrows he
had shot away, and looked up.
Instead of the arrows there was a
long ladder reaching right down to
him.”
The Menik Kaien and the Kintak Bong
are two non-Malay groups of
Malaysia, who narrate that a certain
Tapern “made a ladder up to heaven
by shooting a series of darts from
his blow-pipe into the air. The
first of these stuck into a black
cloud, and the others ranged
themselves in order below …”
Countless other illustrations of the
genre spell out how one or more
mythical entities proceeded to
ascend to the sky or descend to the
earth along a string of arrows or
spears, how war ensued between this
party and the creatures of the sky,
how the connecting cable was
eventually severed and how this
precluded any further traffic
between the realms above and below
it, leading to the current division
between the stars and the birds in
the sky and the people and other
animals on earth.
Variations on this story proliferate
in the Americas and also circulate
in parts of Oceania. In Africa,
heaped-up trees or pillars take the
place of the arrows, as do stacked
mountains or storeyed mountains in
Eurasia. How is this theme to be
explained?
(To be continued)
Rens Van Der Sluijs
http://mythopedia.info
Books by Rens Van Der Sluijs:
The Mythology of the World Axis
The World Axis as an Atmospheric
Phenomenon
New
DVD
The Lightning-Scarred
Planet Mars
A video documentary that could
change everything you thought you
knew about ancient times and
symbols. In this second episode of
Symbols of an Alien Sky, David
Talbott takes the viewer on an
odyssey across the surface of Mars.
Exploring feature after feature of
the planet, he finds that only
electric arcs could produce the
observed patterns. The high
resolution images reveal massive
channels and gouges, great mounds,
and crater chains, none finding an
explanation in traditional geology,
but all matching the scars from
electric discharge experiments in
the laboratory. (Approximately 85
minutes)
Video Selections
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