Document ID: E_4_01
Section: E_Cataclysms_and_Chronology
Keywords: precession, equinoxes, 25920, 72, 108, 432000, Hamlet's Mill, Hipparchus, Angkor Wat, Karahan Tepe, Pillar 43, Sweatman, zodiac ages, de Santillana, von Dechend, precessional embedding, paleoclimatology
Category Tags: cataclysms, chronology
Cross-References: A_2_05 · D_1_01 · D_1_02 · M_4_08 · D_5_03 · E_4_02 · E_4_03
Reliability Tier: Tier 2-3 (cataclysmic events and chronological frameworks)
Last Updated: Mar 08, 2026 | Source Count: 15 | Weighted Score: 25 | Source Confidence: [3/5] | Confidence: Moderate (mixed evidence across tiers)
This document examines Precession of the Equinoxes and Ancient Encoded Numbers, a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Notable findings include: 25,920 ÷ 12 = 2,160 years** per zodiacal age. The document presents evidence organized across multiple tiers — from peer-reviewed and verified claims to more speculative interpretations — with cross-references to related topics throughout the knowledge base.
Reliability: TIER 1 — VERIFIED ·
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Definition | The slow westward drift of the equinox points along the ecliptic, caused by Earth's axial wobble |
| Cause | Gravitational torque of the Sun and Moon on Earth's equatorial bulge |
| Period | ~25,772 years (modern measurement); ancient traditions encode as 25,920 years |
| Rate | ~50.3 arcseconds/year (~1° per 71.6 years); traditions encode as 72 years per degree |
| Effect | The "North Star" changes over millennia (currently Polaris; ~12,000 ya it was Vega) |
| Discovery credit | Officially attributed to Hipparchus of Nicaea (~130 BCE) |
Source: JPL Solar System Dynamics (ssd.jpl.nasa.gov); U.S. Naval Observatory.
| Age | Period (approximate) | Cultural Symbols |
|---|---|---|
| Leo | ~10,960–8,800 BCE | Sphinx faces east at equinox; lion symbolism |
| Cancer | ~8,800–6,640 BCE | Scarab/crab; lunar symbolism |
| Gemini | ~6,640–4,480 BCE | Twin figures; duality myths |
| Taurus | ~4,480–2,320 BCE | Bull worship (Egypt, Sumer, Crete, India) |
| Aries | ~2,320–160 BCE | Ram worship (Abraham's ram; Golden Fleece; Amun-Ra) |
| Pisces | ~160 BCE–2,000 CE | Fish symbol (Christianity, Dagon, Vesica Piscis) |
| Aquarius | ~2,000–4,160 CE | Water-bearer; new age |
Reliability: TIER 2 — PROBABLE ·
The number 72 is the key precession number — years for the equinox to shift 1°. All other precession numbers derive through simple multiplication.
| Number | Derivation | Cross-Cultural Occurrences |
|---|---|---|
| 72 | Base: 1° of precession | Osiris murdered by 72 conspirators; 72 names of God; 72 disciples of Confucius; 72 disciples of Jesus (Luke 10:1); 72 temples at Angkor Wat |
| 36 | 72 ÷ 2 | |
| 108 | 72 × 1.5 | 108 Upanishads; 108 mala beads (Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, Sikh); 108 bells at Japanese temples; Sun ×108 = Earth-Sun distance; Moon ×108 = Earth-Moon distance |
| 144 | 72 × 2 | 144,000 in Revelation; B'ak'tun = 144,000 days |
| 360 | 72 × 5 | Degrees in circle; Tun = 360 days |
| 432 | 72 × 6 | |
| 2,160 | 72 × 30 | One zodiacal age |
| 4,320 | 72 × 60 | |
| 25,920 | 72 × 360 | Full precession cycle (Great Year) |
| 432,000 | 72 × 6,000 | Sumerian pre-Flood king reigns; Hindu Kali Yuga |
Reliability: TIER 2 — PROBABLE (documented in primary sources) ·
| Source | Number | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Sumerian King List (WB-62, ~2100 BCE) | 432,000 years | Total reign of pre-Flood kings |
| Berossus (~280 BCE) | 432,000 years | Same tradition, transmitted to Greek audience |
| Yuga | Duration | Derivation |
|---|---|---|
| Kali Yuga | 432,000 years | Base |
| Dvapara Yuga | 864,000 years | ×2 |
| Treta Yuga | 1,296,000 years | ×3 |
| Satya (Krita) Yuga | 1,728,000 years | ×4 |
| Maha Yuga (all four) | 4,320,000 years | ×10 |
| Kalpa (1,000 Maha Yugas) | 4,320,000,000 years | ×10,000 |
How do the Sumerians (c. 3000 BCE, Mesopotamia) and Hindus (Vedic period, c. 1500 BCE, India) independently arrive at the exact same number — 432,000 — as the fundamental unit of cosmic time? This number is a precession multiple: 432,000 = 72 × 6,000.
Reliability: TIER 2 — PROBABLE ·
| Culture | Occurrence of 72 | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Egyptian | Osiris murdered by Set with 72 conspirators | Plutarch, De Iside et Osiride |
| Egyptian | 72 names of Ra | Book of the Dead |
| Hebrew | 72 names of God (Shem HaMephorash) | Kabbalistic tradition; Exodus 14:19–21 |
| Hebrew | 72 elders translated the Septuagint | Letter of Aristeas |
| Chinese | 72 disciples of Confucius | Sima Qian, Records of the Grand Historian |
| Christian | 72 disciples sent by Jesus | Luke 10:1 (better-attested reading) |
| Norse | Valhalla: 540 doors × 800 warriors = 432,000 | Prose Edda, Grímnismál |
| Cambodian | 54 devas + 54 asuras (= 108) churn the Milky Ocean; rows of 72 at Angkor Wat | Temple architecture |
Reliability: TIER 2 ·
| Measurement | Ratio |
|---|---|
| Sun diameter (~1,391,000 km) × 108 ≈ Earth-Sun distance (~149,600,000 km) | ~107.5 |
| Moon diameter (~3,474 km) × 108 ≈ Earth-Moon distance (~384,400 km) | ~110.6 |
This is WHY the Sun and Moon appear the same size in the sky — enabling perfect solar eclipses. The ancients encoded this as 108.
| Tradition | Use of 108 |
|---|---|
| Hinduism | 108 Upanishads; 108 mala beads; 108 pithas |
| Buddhism | 108 mala beads; 108 earthly desires; 108 prostrations |
| Jainism | 108 as combined total of 5 categories of existence |
| Sikhism | 108 mala beads |
| Chinese/Japanese | 108 bells rung on New Year's Eve |
Reliability: TIER 2 — PROBABLE (controversial but deeply sourced) ·
| Myth | Culture | Precession Element |
|---|---|---|
| Samson grinding at the mill | Hebrew | Mill = precession; Samson pushes grinding stone |
| Hamlet/Amlethus and the mill | Norse/Danish | Grotte mill breaks, creates Maelstrom (axial shift) |
| Osiris murdered by 72 conspirators | Egyptian | 72 = 1° of precession |
| Churning of the Milky Ocean | Hindu | Mount Mandara (world axis) as churning stick; rope is serpent Vasuki; 54 devas + 54 asuras = 108 |
| Tilting of the sky | Chinese | Gong Gong rams the pillar of heaven |
| Quetzalcoatl / Four Suns | Mesoamerican | Each "Sun" = an astronomical era |
| Ragnarök | Norse | End of cosmic age; 432,000 warriors at Valhalla |
Reliability: TIER 2 (geological argument) / TIER 3 (Age of Leo dating) ·
Reliability: TIER 3 ·
Reliability: TIER 3 · [1/4 — Gemini]
Reliability: TIER 2 ·
Reliability: TIER 1 (existence) / TIER 2 (interpretation) ·
Reliability: TIER 2 ·
Reliability: TIER 2 — PROBABLE ·
| Evidence | Date | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Sumerian King List | ~2100 BCE | Encodes 432,000 — precession number |
| Egyptian Pyramid Texts | ~2350 BCE | Reference to "shifting of the sky" |
| Dendera Zodiac | encodes ~3600 BCE sky | Knowledge of zodiacal ages |
| Göbekli Tepe Pillar 43 | ~9500 BCE | May encode solstice position at ~10,950 BCE |
| Hindu Yuga system | Vedic period | 432,000 base unit identical to Sumer |
| Mithraic Mysteries | Roman period | Ulansey (1989): Mithras killing the bull = end of Age of Taurus |
"There is good reason to assume that [precession] was discovered at a date vastly earlier than Hipparchus… the uniformity of the tradition rules out the possibility of independent origin."
Modern archaeoastronomy emphasizes statistical testing of alignments to reduce false positives. Many claimed alignments fail rigorous analysis. Claims that specific monuments encode exact precession numbers remain interpretive and require site-specific validation.
Scenario 1: Independent Discovery (Mainstream)
Scenario 2: Diffusion from a Single Source (Alternative)
Scenario 3: Inherited from Non-Human Teachers (Project Theme)
Puhvel (1971) (History of Religions 11.2) criticized Hamlet's Mill for selecting mythological parallels after the fact — a form of confirmation bias known as the Texas sharpshooter fallacy. De Santillana and von Dechend drew from hundreds of myths across dozens of cultures; given such a large sample, numerical coincidences are statistically expected. Neugebauer (1975) (A History of Ancient Mathematical Astronomy) noted that while ancient civilizations observed precession's effects, the leap from "sky changes over centuries" to "myths encode precise precessional constants" requires intermediary evidence that Hamlet's Mill does not provide.
The numbers 72, 108, 432,000 are multiples of 12 and 36 — values that arise naturally from base-60 (sexagesimal) arithmetic used in Mesopotamia. Rochberg (2004) (The Heavenly Writing) argues the recurrence of these numbers across cultures reflects shared mathematical heritage from Mesopotamian computational traditions, not independent precessional encoding. The number 72 specifically appears in any system that divides the 360° circle into 5° segments — a trivially common operation in ancient astronomy.
Sweatman & Tsikritsis (2017) claimed Pillar 43 at Göbekli Tepe encodes a date via precessional star positions. Notroff, Dietrich & Schmidt (2017) — excavators of the actual site — responded that the animal reliefs have no demonstrated astronomical function and that Sweatman's method of assigning zodiacal identities to carved animals is arbitrary. No archaeoastronomical consensus supports the precessional interpretation.
The claim that the Great Sphinx was built c. 10,500 BCE to face Leo relies on Bauval & Hancock (1996)'s back-projection, but Krupp (2003) (Echoes of the Ancient Skies) points out that the Sphinx faces due east — it faces every constellation that rises, not specifically Leo. The geological water-erosion argument (Schoch, 1992) has been contested by Harrell (1994) (KMT 5.2), who attributes the weathering patterns to salt crystallization in the limestone, and Reader (2001) who dates the enclosure to the Early Dynastic period, not 10,500 BCE.
The document implies precession was widely known before Hipparchus (c. 130 BCE). However, Evans (1998) (The History and Practice of Ancient Astronomy) argues that awareness of slowly shifting star positions does not equate to understanding the physical phenomenon of axial precession. Babylonian records show accumulating calendar drift corrections, but no text demonstrates knowledge of the underlying 25,772-year cycle as a unified concept.
Schaefer (2006) (Journal for the History of Astronomy 37) demonstrates that when searching across dozens of ancient numerical systems, hitting precessional multiples by chance is expected at high rates. The "432,000 Kali Yuga" figure, for example, appears only in some Hindu texts — other recensions give 4,320,000 or different values entirely. Selective citation of matching numbers while ignoring non-matching variants inflates the apparent pattern.
| Document | Section | Connection |
|---|---|---|
| A_2_05 | A_Foundations | A_2_05 — Hermetic Tradition |
| D_1_01 | D_Sites_and_Artifacts | D_1_01 — Gobekli Tepe |
| D_1_02 | D_Sites_and_Artifacts | D_1_02 — Pyramids Worldwide |
| M_4_08 | D_Sites_and_Artifacts | D_4_01 — Sphinx Water Erosion |
| D_5_03 | D_Sites_and_Artifacts | D_5_03 — Sacred Geometry |
| E_4_02 | E_Cataclysms_and_Chronology | E_4_02 — Radiocarbon Calibration |
| E_4_03 | E_Cataclysms_and_Chronology | E_4_03 — Paleomagnetism Geomagnetic Excursions |
| # | Description | Filename | Source | License |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | No images catalogued yet | — | — | — |
E_4_01 — Consolidated from Gemini/29, GPT5.2/29, Master/29, raptor/29 — February 2026
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