The ancient sites around the world are very precisely positioned on a global coordinate system (grid) in relation to the position of the Great Pyramid at Giza.
The positions of the sites are given in the geometry of their construction. A very ancient system of numbers was used in the system.
The Code system is quite like the cartographic system still used today . . . which was probably handed down to us from very ancient times. In both the old and new reckoning systems, the earth is divided into 360 degrees
around the equator for longitude coordinates, and latitude coordinates are reckoned at 90 degrees, from the equator to either Pole. Each degree is further divided into 60 “minutes,” and each minute is divided into 60 “seconds.” Thus, by giving the degrees, minutes, and seconds of East or West longitude and same for the North or South latitude, we can “locate” any point on the earth, similar to the way we give two street addresses to locate a place in our cities and towns. The big difference between the two systems is that today we use Greenwich, England as the starting point (zero degrees), or “Prime Meridian,” for the longitude coordinates, whereas the ancients used the Great Pyramid of Giza…
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