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Pinpointing the date when the sun’s north and south poles began reversing in Year 2000 is the most spectacular prediction the TimeStar made in the first four years of its life. Between 1996 and 2000 the TimeStar repeatedly identified the 13-day windows in which Class X solar flares were possible; and this indicated that TimeStar windows were tracking a baseline solar cycle. Thirteen (13) days is a base factor for the movement of light around the sun’s equator.
After predicting the windows in which all Class X flares had occurred for three years, the cycle suddenly changed. A class X solar flare in June, 2000 was the first eruption of that magnitude that had occurred outside of the window the TimeStar had predicted since 1997, alerting me to the need for close observation to find what could have caused the change.
August, 2000 should have been a period of very large solar eruptions based on the previous years of experience. However, solar eruptions reached extraordinarily low levels in August before a large solar flare erupted in September, 2000. A new pattern was emerging of low solar activity during 13-day windows when flares had been high in previous years and large solar eruptions during 13-days windows when activity had been low in previous years.
The pattern of solar eruptions reflected in the glyphs of the ancient calendar had exactly reversed; and the only thing that seemed to explain the new pattern was a reversal or north and south poles of the sun. In September, 2000 I posted a message to the TimeStar egroup that the only thing that might explain the reversal of the glyph pattern in the TimeStar was a reversal of the sun’s north and south poles.
NASA announced that the sun’s north and south poles were well into their months-long process of reversing in a February 15, 2001 article. Scientists had already noticed the reversal in October, 2000, according to the article. This meant that the TimeStar had been one month ahead of NASA’s scientists, thus affirming the TimeStar’s basic premise. A developing system merging ancient wisdom with new technologies, the TimeStar’s applications are still coming into view.
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