Years ago when I got into the assassinations and masonry and whatever,
in old books I ran across the Mason Dixon line information for these men
were astronomers and of course, from the information provided by Kris,
etc., you see the connection re charting routes, etc.

So men who laid out Washington DC in such a manner had to be astronomers
for sure.......like Mason and Dixon......and everything was done for a
reason.....to leave a lasting imipression?

Like Chartres Cathedral - France, a certain day in July light flashes at
a certain point by design.

Anybody have any idea what happened to the lost gold of the Knights
Templar

Book I had as I recall was called Stellers Masonic Astrology - for I was
into murders being connected to astrology - the testaments and the stars
in late sixty period when I ran across Mason Dixon stuff.
-
Job's Coffin has always been a wonder to me....for all the sons of Job
were killed by spies? (Sabeans)

Saba


Mason-Dixon Line

Facsimile of Map of the United States in North America, 1783, published
by Thomas Kitchen, London. Used by permission


British astronomers Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon surveyed the
boundary separating Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware from 1764 to
1767.

They defined the Delaware - Pennsylvania boundary as an arc of a 12-mile
circle centered upon Newcastle. The Maryland - Pennsylvania boundary
originates where Delaware's western border lies tangent to the arc.
Mason and Dixon proceeded west from the tangent point along a line
parallel to, but 15 miles south of, 40� North latitude, emplacing a
limestone monument every mile.

The location of the boundary was settled after a long dispute between
the patent holders of the territories later to become the State of
Maryland and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The original patents
established the boundary at the 40th parallel, but William Penn
contested the boundary when earlier surveyors discovered that the
boundary placed the city of Philadelphia in Maryland.

Boundary monument on the Mason-Dixon line. Source: United States
Geological Survey

A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy

A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy



A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy

http://www.gis.psu.edu/geog121/surv/kitchen.html


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