Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter - No 01
This first issue of the Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter, dated July 1977, serves as a giveaway at the Ley Moot and accompanies issue 2 of Ancient Skills & Wisdom Review. It is inten
Magazine Collection
AI-generated English summaries and cover images of Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter (Paul Screeton) from the Archives for the Unexplained (AFU) in Norrköping, Sweden. Each entry summarises the complete contents of an issue — articles, sighting reports, interviews, key people, locations, and dates.
This first issue of the Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter, dated July 1977, serves as a giveaway at the Ley Moot and accompanies issue 2 of Ancient Skills & Wisdom Review. It is inten
This issue of the Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter focuses on the Letwell Zodiac in South Yorkshire, detailing its five moated sites and their alignment. It describes individual moat
This issue of Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter (No. 3) highlights the 'Earth Spirit' exhibition by Jill Bruce and Bruce Lacey, detailing their performances and a booklet on the Glast
This issue of the Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter (No. 4) focuses on the Maltwood Fund for Archaeological Research in Somerset, detailing grants awarded in 1978 and the advisory com
This issue of Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter focuses on terrestrial zodiacs, particularly the Cuffley Zodiac discovered by Steve Hamilton in Hertfordshire. It details how landscape
This issue of Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter focuses on the Glastonbury Zodiac. Sam Wildman challenges Katherine Maltwood's dating of the zodiac to 2700 B.C., arguing based on clot
This issue of Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter delves into the study of terrestrial zodiacs, exploring their potential origins and connections to folklore and mythology. Articles dis
This issue of Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter features an article by Peter M. Hughes on a potential terrestrial zodiac in North-West Hertfordshire, analyzing geometric patterns of p
This is the final issue of the Terrestrial Zodiacs Newsletter, published in January 1981. The editor, Paul Screeton, cites a lack of submitted material and a general downturn in in