Interestingly, Olympia Brown attended Antioch College, located at 39°48′00″N which is almost perfectly aligned with Waconda Springs, located at 39.4983° N.
Look what's right next to Antioch College. Orators Mound at 39°48′16″N. In 1908, forty-one different earthworks were known in Greene County.[2] One of these is located atop the cliffs near a large natural spring called the "Yellow Spring", close to the village of Yellow Springs.
The village takes its name from a nearby natural spring whose waters are rich in iron, leaving a yellowish-orange coloring on the rocks. Now included within the nearby Glen Helen Nature Preserve,[19] in the mid-19th century, it became the center of a resort. In this period, many individuals traveled to areas of such springs, believing the waters had medicinal benefits.
I wonder if there is yet another connection with the name Glen Helen. The Waconda Springs were flooded by the construction of the Glen Elder dam. The Glen Elder dam was constructed in November 1964 and Glen Helen was designated a US National Landmark in 1965.
Dave Chapelle lives in Yellow Springs and it was recently in the news because of him. Yet again, Greene County appears to be near a terminal moraine. I can confirm that a terminal moraine exists an hour away, in Ross County. I can't tell if there are any closer than that.
“Dr Leonti Thompson, a psychiatrist at Napa State Hospital 15 miles north of Vallejo, has found a number of different meanings in the killer’s crossed-circle “signature.” In one primitive culture it represents the earth; in another, the ancient notion of the four elements that make up the world: earth, air, fire and water. Still, another symbol, the “X”, represented water in the alphabet of the legendary continent of “Mu”. ‘And the killings took place near water,’ Thompson notes speculatively.”
Have you read the creation story of the Wandjina? Has similarities to the Mound-Builders and Ho-Chunks.
Curiously, like many other ancient civilizations worldwide, the “wandjinas” symbol was a feathered serpent.
A winged serpent is the same thing as a water panther in the Southeaster Ceremonial Complex cosmology, because the constellation Scorpio (who is in the sky during the summer season, when Orion is absent) was thought to be a serpent with wings, and when it went below the horizon during the winter, it was believed that the winged serpent lost his wings because he went underwater, where he no longer needed them, and became a water panther.
Look what's right next to Antioch College. Orators Mound at 39°48′16″N. In 1908, forty-one different earthworks were known in Greene County.[2] One of these is located atop the cliffs near a large natural spring called the "Yellow Spring", close to the village of Yellow Springs.
The village takes its name from a nearby natural spring whose waters are rich in iron, leaving a yellowish-orange coloring on the rocks. Now included within the nearby Glen Helen Nature Preserve,[19] in the mid-19th century, it became the center of a resort. In this period, many individuals traveled to areas of such springs, believing the waters had medicinal benefits.
I wonder if there is yet another connection with the name Glen Helen. The Waconda Springs were flooded by the construction of the Glen Elder dam. The Glen Elder dam was constructed in November 1964 and Glen Helen was designated a US National Landmark in 1965.
Dave Chapelle lives in Yellow Springs and it was recently in the news because of him. Yet again, Greene County appears to be near a terminal moraine. I can confirm that a terminal moraine exists an hour away, in Ross County. I can't tell if there are any closer than that.
/u/ThetruthSpreadsinNY u/Blue-collar745 u/BTFO
There is a dam at Glen Helen in Yellow Springs, although it is not very large
https://www.wyso.org/news/2016-01-24/why-are-the-springs-yellow-wyso-curious-dips-a-toe-into-glen-helens-famous-spring
https://live.staticflickr.com/2582/4077891035_01a00431d5_b.jpg
James Churchward seems to have written "the sacred symbols of mu" in 1933. Look at what this website says about the Zodiac Killer water theory
https://ostellovolante.wordpress.com/2020/08/06/zodiac-and-his-references-to-the-water/
A winged serpent is the same thing as a water panther in the Southeaster Ceremonial Complex cosmology, because the constellation Scorpio (who is in the sky during the summer season, when Orion is absent) was thought to be a serpent with wings, and when it went below the horizon during the winter, it was believed that the winged serpent lost his wings because he went underwater, where he no longer needed them, and became a water panther.