Tomb of Seti I The tomb of Seti I, also known as KV17, is located in the Valley of the Kings. The pharaoh Seti I died in 1279 BC. His tomb was discovered by the archaeologist and explorer Giovanni Belzoni in 1817. Coordinates 25.740031, 32.601998 Description Seti I had many buildings built, which included the Temple of Seti I in Abydos. The tomb KV17 consists of 17 chambers, corridors, and side rooms and is considered one of the largest. There is a well near the entrance of the tomb; the corridor descends into the tomb and is designed similarly to other tombs. Decorations are found throughout most of the tomb. The tomb and side chambers are on the level of the well, with a further corridor that ends in a room at a lower level. (The measurements used are given in official documents) Total area of tomb: 649.04 sq m / 2373 sq cubits Burial chamber width: 13.19 ft / 25.22 cubits Distance to burial chamber: 290 ft / 88.382 m / 169 cubits Distance to the end of the tomb: 570 ft / 173.74...
Gors Fawr Stone Circle
Gorsedd Fawr Stone Circle is a stone circle in Wales. The name means "great wasteland".
The circle is thought to date from Neolithic times. It is about 20 meters wide with 17 stones on its circumference and a further stone outside.
A further pair of stones can be located to the northeast. These are 36° apart and 75° and 80° from the primer stone on the circle.
Coordinates
51.931630,-4.714521
If pairing the stones both horizontally and vertically, then two sets of numbers are produced. If assuming the vertical numbers align as primers, then the horizontal set can be put into sets of four with three 1's. These three 1's can be used as cubed root.
Horizontal
121111121211111
47°
Vertical
21111112111111
4°
1211×1112×1211×111=
111×1121×2111×1121=
³√(1121×2111×1121)=1384
1384.3−1985=600
600.6÷1000=0.6006
0.6006×1.55=0.931
As this number is in latitude decimals, the 71° aligns with the 12 and the 10th stone clockwise. The 10th stone suggests 1/10, giving 4.71° for the longitude. The 4° is from the difference.
Conclusion
When pairing off stones, one stone aligns at 47° and may suggest a direction marker, but when considering the coordinates, it suggests pairing the whole integers and decimal numbers.
The number 1384 produced from the pairing does not suggest a year, so a possible date could be from the 10th and 12th stones as 1210.
The stone circle uses 1985 coordinates and primer to suggest only that a stone circle was built at the location aligned to 1985.
On January 11, 1210 AD, at 18:39:15 UTC, a lunar eclipse occurred.
The eclipse belongs to Saros 121 and is number 10 of 82 eclipses in the series.
From the circle using the 11th stone, it is possible to align so as to include the 11th stone and align at 6:40 p.m., as well as 10 and 82. The two stones toward the northeast could also represent ten and eighty-two.
Also considering that in 1210 BC there were five partial or lunar eclipses. One in particular occurred on January 7th 1210 BC at the time of 23:08:43. Although the eclipse on January 11th 1210 AD matches some numbers, the one on January 7th BC matches the number produced. The 9:31 matches the 2nd eclipse from 1210 BC, as February 6th at 9:05:31.
From this, it is suggested that this circle was built to include lunar eclipses from 1210 BC but is also connected to 1210 AD. The build date would have been 1210 BC.

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